Culture
Duke Makes the Final Four in Coach K’s Last Season
SAN FRANCISCO — Spanning a number of generations, Duke Coach Mike Krzyzewski has molded four-year stalwarts and one-and-done sizzling photographs into championship groups, instilled some groups with a floor-slapping toughness and others with a freewheeling offense, and at occasions has appeared to have the ability to bend a referee’s whistle to his will.
Krzyzewski’s neatest trick, although, could also be taking his ultimate staff — and his greenest — to a different Closing 4.
The Blue Devils, seeded second within the West area, saved alive their hopes of sending Krzyzewski right into a retirement with a sixth nationwide championship by turning again fourth-seeded Arkansas, 78-69, within the spherical of 8 on Saturday evening.
As befitting a proficient younger staff that’s hitting its stride on the most opportune time, freshmen Paolo Banchero, who scored 16 factors, and Adrian Griffin, who had 18, spurred Duke. They had been complemented by the defensive anchor, heart Mark Williams, a sophomore, who added 12 factors, 12 rebounds and three blocked photographs.
The victory sends Duke to a Closing 4 for the thirteenth time beneath Krzyzewski — and the primary because the Blue Devils gained the title in 2015. Duke (32-6) will play both its fiercest rival, North Carolina, or the miracle makers from tiny St. Peter’s subsequent Saturday in New Orleans.
As Duke dribbled out the ultimate seconds, guard Wendell Moore wrapped an arm round his coach’s shoulder, and when the buzzer sounded the Blue Devils danced off the bench.
The gamers dumped a bucket of confetti on their coach and he climbed a ladder to snip the final strand of the online beneath one of many baskets.
Krzyzewski, 75, tells his gamers that reaching the Closing 4 is like crossing a bridge, and on the opposite facet is an entree into an unique brotherhood with the Blue Devils’ greatest groups, although he refused to match this staff to others. “Similar to I don’t price my daughters or my grandchildren,” he mentioned.
He additionally intercepted a few questions directed as his gamers — one questioning whether or not they may secretly be rooting for North Carolina to get one other shot on the Tar Heels, and one other to Banchero, who had mentioned earlier this week that the gamers needed to ship Krzyzewski off with a title.
“Sufficient about doing it for the previous man,” Krzyzewski mentioned.
Whereas Duke had earned a excessive seed and had a roster once more dotted with blue-chip prospects, this journey to the Closing 4 was arduous to see coming when the match pairings had been introduced two weeks in the past.
Krzyzewski, who known as the Blue Devils’ efficiency “unacceptable” in a house loss to North Carolina within the regular-season finale, realized he had some work to do to restore the psyche of an exceptionally younger staff — the highest six rotation gamers are 20, 20, 19, 18 and 18.
“I had a very good assembly with myself,” Krzyzewski mentioned on the eve of the sport, emphasizing the management significance of being his personal chief critic. “I mentioned that I’ve bought to do one thing. I’ve bought to assist indirectly, and a part of it was my strategy with them.”
He added: “For those who don’t put fact on the desk and take duty, they you gained’t make the perfect out of the state of affairs that you’re in.”
A staff that regarded fragile, even in advancing to the Atlantic Coast Convention match ultimate, has step by step gained its footing within the N.C.A.A. match. It started with a cushty win over Cal State Fullerton, and continued with late comebacks towards Michigan State and Texas Tech, fueled by impeccable shot making. (The Blue Devils made their ultimate 5 photographs towards Michigan State and their ultimate eight towards Texas Tech, the nation’s high defensive staff.)
Over the past two weeks, Krzyzewski — who was formed as an Military level guard by the unyielding Bob Knight — has given the air of a coach in tune together with his staff. He put level guard Jeremy Roach into the beginning lineup for the primary time in a month to start the match and he has been excellent. Krzyzewski turned to a zone — which as soon as would have been unthinkable — within the second half towards Texas Tech, after which let his younger gamers persuade him to change again to man-to-man within the ultimate minute.
He even bought down on a knee and slapped the ground late towards Texas Tech — and his gamers adopted swimsuit, sending Duke followers right here right into a frenzy.
On Saturday evening, with Roach being harassed by the Hogs protection, Krzyzewski turned early to Trevor Keels, who had been changed by Roach within the beginning lineup and performed a season-low 14 minutes towards Texas Tech. Keels, a freshman with a sturdy construct, steadied Duke’s offense and delivered a 3-pointer on the halftime buzzer to push the result in 45-33.
When the Razorbacks surged within the second half, narrowing the hole to 53-48, Krzyzewski known as timeout to calm his staff. “We had been on the point of get knocked out,” he mentioned.
Krzyzewski made positive the offense ran by way of his greatest participant, Banchero, and signaled “1-2” from the sideline, instructing his protection to change to zone. Banchero, who could be named the regional’s most excellent participant, scored within the submit, handed to A.J. Griffin who drove for one more basket and made two free throws and in a flash Duke had a working margin at 59-48. The Blue Devils additionally scored on their subsequent two possessions.
Arkansas by no means threatened the remainder of the best way.
A 12 months in the past, Krzyzewski had left the impression that he had misplaced his iron grip on this system that he had grow to be synonymous with: an N.B.A. prospect give up at midseason, he snapped at a reporter from the college newspaper, and his staff missed the N.C.A.A. match for the primary time in additional than 1 / 4 century.
No males’s coach has retired after profitable a nationwide championship since 1977 when Al McGuire, who was 48, retired after Marquette gained the title. Two years earlier, John Wood informed his staff after a semifinal victory over Louisville that he would retire following the title recreation, which the Bruins gained towards Kentucky.
Krzyzewski, 75, gave himself a for much longer runway. He took the uncommon step final June of asserting his retirement efficient on the finish of this season. He mentioned he didn’t need to exit the best way he did final season, when Duke was 13-11 and noticed its possibilities of making the N.C.A.A. match vanish when it needed to drop out of the Atlantic Coast Convention match due to a coronavirus outbreak throughout the staff.
The choice to announce it — and assistant Jon Scheyer as his alternative — was to keep away from deceptive recruits who may need requested how lengthy he meant to educate, he mentioned. Nonetheless, the entire season has been one thing of a final waltz tour.
“It wears on you just a little bit as a result of in all places you stroll, everyone seems to be taking an image of you, they’re watching every thing,” Krzyzewski mentioned earlier this week. “Look, that will get previous.”
He added: “However I really feel for my guys. They’ve had stress on them that we’re not placing on them. I inform them on a regular basis, we’re taking part in for us — for you — however then it simply works out. Nobody — it’s not a sinister plan towards us or something, however it simply occurs that means.”
Duke gained the A.C.C. regular-season title for the primary time since 2010, however misplaced Krzyzewski’s ultimate recreation at Cameron Indoor Stadium, towards North Carolina — which soured the postgame celebration that included 96 former gamers — and had been trounced once more within the A.C.C. convention match championship recreation by Virginia Tech.
“All season we’ve been coping with it,” Banchero mentioned earlier this week. “It’s coach’s final one thing each recreation.”
The 2 late-season losses wiped away any alternative that Duke could be a high seed — or the possibility that the Blue Devils would head to Krzyzewski’s hometown Chicago for the spherical of 16, as he had requested in the event that they had been a No. 1 seed.
As an alternative, Duke was slotted into the West area, which has been a graveyard for Krzyzewski’s groups.
The Blue Devils had been positioned within the West six earlier occasions with out reaching a regional ultimate — even in 2011, when as a No. 1 seed they had been tripped up by Arizona within the spherical of 16.
This journey, although, has been a stroll down reminiscence lane.
Krzyzewski spent 4 six-week stints within the early Nineteen Seventies dwelling on the barracks on the Presidio, the previous Military submit that sits within the shadow of the Golden Gate Bridge, when he was taking part in for the All-Military staff that competed in a world navy competitors.
His staff practiced this week on the College of San Francisco, on the identical court docket the place he had practiced usually 50 years in the past. His gamers stunned him by realizing the reply to a pop quiz: who was the perfect participant on the Dons’ back-to-back nationwide championship groups in 1955 and ’56. (Reply: Invoice Russell.)
“I used to be able to dig in on them, however they knew it,” Krzyzewski mentioned.
And when it got here time to take the court docket, the Blue Devils had all of the solutions, too.
Culture
How Tom Brady could buy into the Raiders and why he wants a piece of the NFL pie
Tom Brady, a surefire future Pro Football Hall of Fame inductee and arguably the greatest player in NFL history, could be on the precipice of NFL ownership.
Brady and businessman Tom Wagner, the co-founder of Knighthead Capital Management, came to an agreement with Las Vegas Raiders owner Mark Davis to buy into the franchise last year. Their bid will be discussed at the NFL’s owners’ meetings on Tuesday in Atlanta, according to a league source. The league’s financial committee will review Brady’s bid, with a potential vote to follow.
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Here’s an explainer of how Brady and the Raiders got here:
What is the process for Brady becoming a part-owner of the Raiders?
Brady and Wagner had to reach an agreement with Davis to purchase a minority stake in the franchise, which they did in May 2023. From there, the bid is reviewed by the NFL’s finance committee, which was formed last year and is composed of owners. The committee decides if the bid will proceed to a vote. If it does, the bid must be approved by 24 of the NFL’s 32 majority owners.
What would his ownership share be, and how much is he paying for it?
According to league sources, the agreement between Brady, Wagner and Davis is for a 10 percent stake in the Raiders. CNBC estimated the value of the Raiders to be $7.8 billion last month, but that doesn’t mean Brady and Wagner have to pay $780 million.
That’s because a valuation is based on the estimated price the Raiders would draw if Davis sold the entire stake. The price Brady and Wagner agreed on with Davis has not been disclosed, but it’ll likely be substantially less than 10 percent of the valuation of the Raiders.
How does one pay for, say, a 10 percent share of an NFL team? Does he have to come up with cash, or is it a payout over a longer period?
Brady and Wagner have to pay cash. If they don’t have the full amount on hand, they’ll have to take out a loan.
Why has the process taken so long?
It has taken some time to nail down the final price. According to The Washington Post, the NFL’s finance committee raised concerns last year that Davis was giving Brady and Wagner too much of a discount. The Post reported earlier this month that Brady and Wagner have since increased their offer to “far more money than originally proposed.”
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What would be different for Brady given his TV broadcasting career?
The NFL has already placed restrictions on Brady in his role as a Fox analyst. He’s not allowed access to other teams’ facilities and practices, nor can he attend broadcast production meetings, which usually include meetings with coaches and players ahead of games.
In the scenario that he’s approved as a minority owner, however, the restrictions would increase. According to an ESPN report in August, Brady wouldn’t be able to publicly criticize officials or other teams and could be fined or suspended if the league feels he breaks that policy. He would also have to abide by the league’s gambling and anti-tampering policies, and he would be limited to “strictly social communication” with members of other teams, per the report.
What is Brady’s connection to Raiders owner Mark Davis?
In January 2020, Brady attended UFC 246 and was photographed smiling while talking to Davis, whom he’d previously met, and then-Raiders executive Marcel Reece. The Raiders were moving to Las Vegas, while Brady was coming off what would be his final season with the New England Patriots. With Brady set to become an unrestricted free agent that March, rumors were swirling that he could potentially sign with the Raiders to replace then-starting quarterback Derek Carr.
The Raiders considered pursuing Brady, but then-coach Jon Gruden, who had personnel power, ultimately decided against it and stuck with Carr. Brady went on to sign with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, but the Raiders’ flirtation was the start of a deeper relationship with Davis, who took over as head of the franchise following the death of his father, Al, in 2011.
In May 2022, Brady attended a Las Vegas Aces game. He caught up with Davis, who purchased the WNBA franchise in 2021, and expressed his admiration for what they were building. On the court, the team was thriving and en route to its first WNBA championship. From a fan base perspective, the Aces were regularly selling out games and drawing some of the best attendance numbers in the league.
“I think (Brady) was just really impressed with how far women’s basketball has come,” Davis told The Athletic last year. “And he was also impressed by the excitement and the enthusiasm of the crowd in Las Vegas.”
Shortly after the game, Brady’s representatives reached out to Davis and asked whether he would be willing to sell a minority stake in the Aces. In March 2023, the Aces announced that Brady had reached an agreement with Davis to become a minority owner. The purchase was approved by the WNBA’s other owners in October. The percentage of Brady’s stake and the amount he paid for it remain undisclosed.
“He knew that I was in it, and I think he just felt he wanted to be a part of it,” Davis said. “His people contacted me and we talked about it, and he became a partner.”
In May 2023, Davis told ESPN he had come to an agreement with Brady for the former quarterback to purchase a minority ownership stake in the Raiders.
“We’re excited for Tom to join the Raiders,” Davis told ESPN, “and it’s exciting because he will be just the third player in the history of the National Football League (after George Halas Sr. and Jerry Richardson) to become an owner.”
Why is Brady trying to purchase a share of the Raiders — and not the Patriots, Buccaneers or his hometown San Francisco 49ers?
It all starts with the existing business relationship between Brady and Davis. You can’t buy a stake in a team without an owner being willing to sell a portion of his or her stake and it’s unclear if that would’ve been possible with the Patriots, Buccaneers or 49ers. The Patriots, for one, are 100 percent owned by Robert Kraft and he told Fox Business in February 2023, “I’m never selling it. We’ve set it up so it hopefully stays in the family for many decades to come.”
It’s also possible Brady viewed the Raiders as a more attractive investment. Among the four aforementioned teams, only the Patriots — valued at $7.9 billion — are worth more than the Raiders, per CNBC’s estimation. Their report has the 49ers at $7.4 billion and the Bucs at $6.05 billion.
The report also suggests that the Raiders are generating more revenue than those three other teams. According to CNBC, the Raiders generated $780 million in revenue in the past year, which trails only the Dallas Cowboys ($1.22 billion) and Los Angeles Rams ($825 million). That, plus Davis being willing to sell, is likely part of the reason this came together.
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Does this mean Brady would have any sort of control of the Raiders?
No. To be considered a majority owner by the NFL, someone who buys into the franchise must acquire at least a 30 percent stake. At that point, they could have voting rights and team control. Because Brady and Wagner are purchasing only 10 percent of the Raiders, they won’t have control. That’s another reason why they won’t pay 10 percent of the valuation of the Raiders.
“If somebody buys what’s called a limited partnership share, they pay a much lower valuation because they don’t have any control,” a former NFL executive told The Athletic last month. “They’re basically just passive investors. It’d be like if you were selling the garage of your house. You wouldn’t sell it on a per-square-foot basis. Somebody would pay a lot less because they don’t own the house.”
How many other minority owners do the Raiders have?
Davis and his mother, Carol Davis, are listed as co-owners of the Raiders and own 47 percent of the franchise. That number would drop if Brady and Wagner’s bid is approved, but the Davis family would remain the principal owners. As of 2022, the NFL dropped the minimum percentage of a team that a longstanding owner must control from 5 percent to 1 percent for teams with the same owner for at least 10 years.
When the late Al Davis became principal owner in 1972, he founded a company called A.D. Football Inc. alongside eight partners. The original eight partners have passed, but their heirs became limited partners.
The Raiders 2024 media guide lists six other “interest holders” in the franchise: A. Boscacci, Jill Boscacci Lovingfoss, First Football, Winkenbach Family, Fox Football and Sargent Family.
Could Brady still return to play in the NFL as a part-owner?
No. NFL rules state that employees can’t own equity in a team unless they are family members of the team’s owner.
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What is the Raiders’ succession plan after Mark Davis? Could Brady eventually become the primary owner?
It’s unknown. Mark Davis, 69, has no siblings and is single with no children. Carol Davis is in her 90s. If they still have stakes in the franchise when they die, their ownership stakes could either be passed on to someone else in the family or sold.
Brady could attempt to purchase their stakes in the latter scenario. He could also attempt to purchase their stakes while they’re living — or those of the other limited partners. Not only would he need to cross the 30 percent threshold, but he’d also need to own more shares than Carol and Mark Davis to become the “controlling” owner. If Carol and Mark Davis ever decided to sell, there would likely be suitors beyond Brady.
“It’ll be a real ‘Game of Thrones’ when that happens,” a former NFL executive told The Athletic. “When something’s worth $1,000, there’s not a fight. When something’s worth $10 billion, it gets pretty ugly.”
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(Top illustration: Meech Robinson / The Athletic; photos: Cooper Neill and Ethan Miller / Getty Images and Matthew Pearce / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Culture
How Sabrina Ionescu went from ‘dark days’ of injury to the brink of a WNBA championship
Follow live coverage of Lynx vs. Liberty in Game 1 of the WNBA Finals today
NEW YORK — Sabrina Ionescu could barely walk during last season’s WNBA Finals. The New York Liberty star needed an injection into her aching hip to even take the floor in the early games of the series against the Las Vegas Aces. She struggled to score, and as the Aces were en route to clinching the championship in a one-point victory on the Liberty’s home court last October, Ionescu threw up into a sideline trash can.
The Liberty and Aces were billed as the WNBA’s super-teams last year because of their star power, including Ionescu. But Vegas made a statement and left a lasting scar for Ionescu.
“Losing,” she said, “motivates you.”
The Liberty had room for growth, and Ionescu recognized that included her. Before traveling home to California last fall, she met with New York’s coaching staff. They discussed in detail how she could improve. While she was good with the ball in her hand, they told her she was too easily defended off-ball. They stressed identifying and taking advantage of pick-and-roll situations. They wanted Ionescu to become a better cutter, play with different speeds and attack the basket more.
Once healthy, she got to work with no physical limitations or, apparently, without a ceiling on how hard she’d push herself.
“It’s just about wanting to be better all the time and not really being OK with being complacent,” Ionescu said.
She was in the gym constantly. She worked on her handle and quickness. She added various floaters to her game. She focused on pulling up out of different dribble variations and utilizing her strength. She played five-on-five against current and former Pac-12 players, WNBA players and overseas pros. “Nothing compares to defense and live reps,” she said.
That wasn’t even enough. Ionescu devised challenges to make difficult drills even tougher. Her trainer recalled a catch-and-shoot sequence in which Ionescu was tasked to make 20 deep 3-pointers, requiring the last five be consecutive. Ionescu added that each needed to be all net. After making 13 in a row, she called out that a few had barely grazed the rim. “No absolutely, not. These don’t count,” she said. She started the sequence again.
“Being able to go full blast was a whole different story,” said Breen Weeks, her basketball skills trainer the last two offseasons.
Another time, Ionescu made herself hit five one-dribble, same-handed, same-footed floaters, but she required the last three be banked in off the glass without using her right hand as a guide. “If she didn’t like the height on it, (it) doesn’t count,” Weeks said. “That’s how obsessive she is. That’s how locked in and detailed she is. I call her a cold-blooded competitor.”
Said Ionescu: “I know I can make a shot, but I want to continue to challenge myself to chase perfection. Sometimes that’s with a swish, sometimes that’s with a challenging move.”
Sabrina Ionescu turned up the heat in Game 4 🔥
With 22 points and 5-of-8 from beyond the arc, she lit up the court and energized the Liberty for the WIN #WelcometotheW pic.twitter.com/1zcSvivVlm
— WNBA (@WNBA) October 6, 2024
Taking difficult moments head on has been a theme through the early stages of Ionescu’s career, which has been marked with accomplishments but also injuries and shortcomings. But her competitive obsessiveness this offseason has elevated her game to new heights. She gets downhill more and is now New York’s primary ballhandler, averaging a career-high 18.2 points and 6.2 assists per game, and playing more minutes than ever.
It culminated in guiding the Liberty back to the WNBA Finals and to the doorstep of a franchise peak. Following its loss last season, New York — one of the WNBA’s original teams — is in position to win its first championship, taking on the Minnesota Lynx in Game 1 on Thursday.
“It’s been really rewarding to see my true self come out,” Ionescu said.
Those who know Ionescu best aren’t surprised that she lived in a gym all winter and spring. As a high school sophomore on the way to becoming one of the nation’s top recruits in Orinda, Calif., her coach gave her a key to the school’s gym. She practiced there late into the night so often that the school principal informed Miramonte High School’s janitorial staff to “just leave her alone and let her shoot,” her coach Kelly Sopak said.
When coach Kelly Graves recruited Ionescu to Oregon, he told her the university’s practice facility was open 24/7 for players, but she quickly learned that wasn’t necessarily true. Ionescu was booted out of the facility on her first night on campus by a security guard, the first of many times throughout her college career. “She was the only player that I’ve ever had that’s been kicked out of the practice facility,” Graves said.
That work ethic was vital as Ionescu’s celebrated entry to the WNBA was quickly marred by injuries. Ionescu was the No. 1 pick in the 2020 WNBA Draft, but she suffered a severe ankle sprain in her third WNBA game and she missed the remainder of her rookie season. Ankle pain lingered throughout the 2021 season, and it wasn’t until the 2022 campaign she said she was fully healed. Still, thoughts of injuries remained with her, later recalling those plagued stretches her “dark days.” Finishing an entire season healthy was a goal, in the same way as winning a championship.
“She just competes against herself,” Liberty general manager Jonathan Kolb said.
When the Liberty reconvened in the spring, assistant coach Olaf Lange said he quickly noticed “the flashes were there in training camp.” Liberty head coach Sandy Brondello took note of Ionescu’s improved explosiveness.
By her 14th game, Ionescu had made more floaters than she did in all of 2023. Heading into the finals, 37.2 percent of her shot attempts had been runners or at the rim, up from 26.3 percent last year, according to Synergy Sports. “When she’s aggressive like that it kind of opens things up for everyone else,” Liberty teammate Breanna Stewart said.
Stewart and Jonquel Jones are New York’s lone players with MVP awards on their resumés, but Ionescu is arguably the franchise’s motor. Aces coach Becky Hammon said the 5-foot-11 guard is “what makes (New York) go with her pace, her ability to read, her ability to put defenses in different dilemmas.” Hammon called her the Liberty’s “head of the snake.”
“I love her shooting, everything that she brings to the game. Even just her finishing around the rim, I think has been a bit better,” Hammon said. “It’s tough when you take really, really good players, and they get better.”
It’s why Las Vegas sought to specifically shut her down in Game 3 (Ionescu’s four points were her second-lowest of the season). Stop Ionescu, the Aces believed, and they could get back into the semifinals. Then Game 4 happened. Ionescu scored 12 first-quarter points en route to an eventual team-high 22 to close the door on the Aces’ comeback attempt.
Stopping Ionescu consistently this season has proved challenging, not just statistically, but because of the new confidence she is playing with. “Sometimes early in her career, I thought when she feels the crowd, she just wants to make a play and force the issue,” Lange said. “As of late, she lets it come to her.”
As Sopak watches Ionescu throughout New York’s postseason run, he has had constant flashbacks. He recalled a middle school contest when she hit a late runner off the glass that reminded him very much of a late-game shot over A’ja Wilson in New York’s Game 2 win over the Aces. With the Liberty leading by only one point with 11.6 seconds left, Ionescu approached the free-throw line looking to close out the win. She missed the first free throw, however, and from his home in California, Sopak said, “St. Mary’s–Stockton.”
The meaning dates back to Ionescu’s freshman year of high school, when Ionescu was fouled and went to the line for a one-and-one against what Sopak said was a top-10 program. She missed the front-end, and Miramonte lost by a point. The loss motivated Ionescu to avoid being in that position again.
“You can’t sugar coat it with Sabrina,” Sopak said. He said he told her after that game: “If you’re to be a great player, you’re going to have to be prepared for failure. If you’re not willing to lose that game and take the consequences of it, then you’re never going to win it.”
Ionescu doesn’t shy away from key moments. It’s why Sopak had no doubt she would make the second free throw. She embraces trying to win games, not just avoiding losing them. “She’s not proving anything anymore,” Sopak said.
Over the last three weeks, Ionescu has dapped up Spike Lee, fallen into Carmelo Anthony’s lap and sung with Alicia Keys. She fist-pumped after making 3-pointers, waved her hands to amp up Barclays Center crowds and iced playoff wins at the free-throw line.
Amid all the fanfare and the victories, Ionescu’s drive has been evident. After she tied New York’s franchise playoff-record with 36 points to close out its first-round series with the Atlanta Dream, she sat in a corner of the Liberty locker room and took a rare breath.
“Good f— job,” Ionescu said to her teammates as she fixed her headband. “This game wasn’t perfect, but we played hard. We played hard for 40 minutes and we just chipped away.”
Sabrina Ionescu: “Spike Lee gave me a high five … and I felt like New York was just injected into my veins at that moment. I was like, ‘We’re winning this.’” 😂pic.twitter.com/bnevwhIz0Z
— Dime (@DimeUPROXX) September 25, 2024
Healthy, focused and confident, Ionescu said she’s felt more comfortable with being vocal and showing who she is. “People have been able to see a little bit more of my personality this year, who I am as a person,” she said. “Because I’ve just felt more confident in myself.”
She is in the ear of coaches about what she can do to score and how she wants to help her teammates succeed. At a recent practice, she urged the staff to continue repping out-of-bounds plays instead of taking a water break. Every minute, and every drill, matters.
Winning a ring is paramount, she said. She said she’s thought about what it would feel like to be victorious, and what it would mean for her teammates, for a Liberty franchise that has lost its five prior trips to the finals, and for New York City, which hasn’t won a basketball title since the 1970s.
“I’ve been thinking about a championship since we lost last year,” Ionescu said.
(Illustration: Daniel Goldfarb / The Athletic; Top photo of Sabrina Ionescu: Evan Yu / NBAE, Mitchell Leff / Getty)
Culture
Dominik Hašek vs. the NHL: Why a legendary goalie shunned the Global Series spotlight
PRAGUE — The NHL opened its regular season in Prague last week with two Global Series games between the Buffalo Sabres and New Jersey Devils. Czech hockey legends were prominently featured. Jaromir Jagr dropped the ceremonial first puck ahead of the game on Friday. Patrik Eliáš, the Devils’ all-time leading scorer, was around the team all week and dropped the puck for the second game of the series.
But one Czech hockey great was notably absent. Dominik Hašek, the Hall of Fame goalie who helped lead the Czechs to an Olympic gold medal in 1998 and one of the greatest players in Sabres franchise history, did not attend the games or participate in any promotional materials in the lead-up to the games. Last Thursday, Hašek released a statement on his X account condemning the NHL for allowing Russian players to play in the league while Vladimir Putin continues Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. On Friday afternoon, hours before Jagr dropped that ceremonial first puck, Hašek met with The Athletic to discuss his ongoing issue with the NHL.
Dear citizens, dear hockey fans,
The new season of the NHL will start tomorrow in Prague.
Which, as a person for whom human lives are the first place on the imaginary scale of values, I cannot remain indifferent. Unfortunately, I have to state that this will be the third…
— Dominik Hasek (@hasek_dominik) October 3, 2024
“My motivation is huge,” Hašek said. “I consider everything I do on this topic to be vitally important. What is happening now in Russia, that is, the Russian imperialist war in Ukraine and other crimes connected with it, is very similar to what Hitler did in the 1930s. And we all know how that turned out. This must not happen again. And that is why I am trying to publicly explain to people all over the world what is important and how to act so that the Russian war of aggression does not spread and ends as soon as possible. And of course, the main motivation is saving human lives. For me, human life always comes first.”
Russia escalated the war between the two nations in February 2022 when it launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. That month, the NHL released a statement condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and announcing it had suspended relationships with partners in Russia. Hašek has made his feelings clear since the day Russia invaded. He wrote an email to NHL commissioner Gary Bettman and said he got only a brief response. In the years since, Hašek said the league has made no effort to have a dialogue with him. The NHL declined to comment for this story.
During that time, Hašek has called for the NHL to pay billions of dollars to Ukraine as compensation and was outspoken about Russian athletes being allowed to participate in the Olympics. Russians participating in the NHL serves as an advertisement for what the country is doing and improves morale in Russia, he says.
Hašek also ran for senator in Czechia this year. In September, Hašek failed to advance past the first round of voting. He’s taking the downtime to determine his next step, but he wants to stay involved in politics.
It wasn’t until 1989, when Hašek was 24, that the Czech Republic became separate from the Soviet Union. Hašek is intimately familiar with life under authoritarian rule. He doesn’t want his children to know what that’s like. Hašek has a soon-to-be 3-year-old son, Honza, with his current partner, and two adult children, Michael and Dominika, with his ex-wife. Hašek returned to the Czech Republic after retiring from the Detroit Red Wings to raise his children in his home country.
Hašek also played the final year of his career in the KHL back in 2010-11. Putin has been either the prime minister or president of Russia since 1999, making him the longest-serving Russian leader since Joseph Stalin.
But while Hašek majored in history in college, he didn’t become interested in politics until after his playing career ended. He has since become more outspoken on certain issues, including this one.
Many in Czechia share Hašek’s fears and views, and for hockey fans, it extends beyond the NHL. In 2023, Rytíři Kladno, the Czech Extraliga team owned by Jaromir Jagr, signed goalie Julius Hudacek, who was born in Slovakia but had spent the previous season playing for a Kazakhstan-based team in the KHL. Fans threatened to protest games, and Kladno released Hudacek days later.
This is the second time the NHL has come to Prague since Russia invaded Ukraine. The San Jose Sharks and Nashville Predators played here in 2022, and each team had a Russian player on its roster. While neither the Devils nor the Sabres brought a Russian to the Global Series, Hašek still didn’t want to be part of it. He thinks the NHL needs to speak publicly on the issue and not “bury its head in the sand.”
The NHL’s initial statement after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 said, “We also remain concerned about the well-being of the players from Russia, who play in the NHL on behalf of their NHL Clubs, and not on behalf of Russia. We understand they and their families are being placed in an extremely difficult position.”
The fact the NHL has not changed its position since that statement is disappointing to Hašek.
Russia’s war in Ukraine will likely become a more prominent NHL storyline as Alex Ovechkin chases Wayne Gretzky’s goal record. Ovechkin still has a photo with Putin as his Instagram profile picture and has not made any strong statements against the war. He hasn’t spoken about the war since 2022.
“I’m Russian, right?” Ovechkin said in 2022. “Something I can’t control. It’s not in my hands. I hope (the war)’s going to end soon. I hope it’s going to be peace in both countries. I don’t control this one.”
Hašek said he believes only Russians who condemn the war should be allowed to play in the NHL. However, he understands the difficult position Russian players are in. Hašek lives in a free country and is not an employee of the NHL, which he says gives him the freedom to speak his mind. It is more difficult for those who fear for their safety or their family’s safety, Hašek added. Or even those who could face job loss or other economic repercussions based on their words.
Hašek does not place the blame on the individual Russian players for not speaking out.
“Rules need to be set so that Russian players have an incentive to come out publicly,” Hašek said. “Some players could make the best peace ambassadors. Unfortunately, the NHL does not help the Russian hockey players one bit.”
The New York Rangers’ Russian star Artemi Panarin has been outspoken against Putin in the past. Hašek also cited Boston Bruins defenseman Nikita Zadorov, a Russian who spoke out against the war when he was a member of the Calgary Flames in 2023. He posted “No War” on his Instagram account with the caption “Stop it!!!” He also did a two-hour interview with Russian journalist Yury Dud on YouTube in which he explained his opposition to the war. Hašek felt the NHL didn’t offer him enough support.
“It must be said that this is a topic that people are very afraid to talk about publicly,” Hašek said. “In the Czech Republic, there is great fear of Russia, which our parliament has designated as a terrorist state. With Russia, we have experience in this direction and, unfortunately, also victims. People don’t know how the situation will develop and if Ukraine falls, we are one of the other possible victims.”
Hašek said he would like to hear more ex-players speak out on the topic, because they are no longer dependent on the NHL for work. He knows these aren’t easy situations to navigate. He admitted to what he now views as a mistake of his own last year.
Last season, Hašek came to Buffalo as part of an annual visit to do charity work with his foundation, Hašek’s Heroes. While in town, he went to a Sabres game and participated in the start of the game by banging the drum to excite the crowd. He still loves Buffalo and considers it one of the best hockey towns in the United States. But he realized that even participating in that way went against what he had spoken about. Days later, he apologized on X.
Statement on my participation in the event 01/18/2024 and to the public and the media inquiries: On my annual visit (business, charity) to Buffalo USA, I accepted an invitation from my friends to the @NHL game (1/18/2024). At the same time, (continue)
— Dominik Hasek (@hasek_dominik) January 23, 2024
“I consider my participation in the match and its opening as my huge mistake,” Hašek wrote. “Hereby, I want to apologize to all Ukrainian soldiers and all Ukrainian people who are heroically defending not only their homeland, but also the whole of Europe against the imperialist enemy. And further to the fans who supported me and continue to support me and to everyone whom I disappointed with my act. I find this personal failure of mine very difficult to excuse. I will try even harder to fix it. At this moment, I can promise you that a similar situation will not happen again. And that I will fight to the maximum and help defend everything that the Russian state-controlled terrorist regime attacks. And criticize all those who support it with their actions.”
Last week, Hašek did meet with Sabres coach Lindy Ruff and a few others he knows from his time in Buffalo. He also met with the video team for the Sabres’ website to help them with a project they are doing on his upbringing.
“I have no interest in breaking ties,” Hašek said. “I am interested in helping the NHL as much as possible with my behavior, and nothing is changing about that. Otherwise, of course, I will not participate in any of the two matches, nor anything related to the start of this year’s NHL. The reason is clear. I don’t want to be part of an event that is an advertisement for the Russian war.”
(Photo: Petr David Josek / AP Photo)
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