Dallas, TX
Wings’ Paige Bueckers could team up with Caitlin Clark in WNBA All-Star Game
Dallas Wings point guard Paige Bueckers will be chosen for her first All-Star Game in her rookie season, and the format is taking a bit of a change.
Instead of having the WNBA All-Stars face off against Team USA ahead of the Olympics, the league will divide into two with Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark and Minnesota Lynx forward Napheesa Collier serving as captains.
The two captains will then choose between Bueckers and the other seven All-Star starters to form their starting lineups.
READ MORE: Dallas Wings star responds to excerpt from upcoming Caitlin Clark book
Clark and Collier will have to choose between Bueckers, Aliyah Boston (Indiana Fever), Allisha Gray (Atlanta Dream), Sabrina Ionescu (New York Liberty), Nneka Ogwumike (Seattle Storm), Satou Sabally (Phoenix Mercury), Breanna Stewart (New York Liberty) and A’ja Wilson (Las Vegas Aces) to fill out their starting fives.
Then, the captains will have to pick their reserves, which include Sonia Citron (Washington Mystics), Skylar Diggins (Seattle Storm), Rhyne Howard (Atlanta Dream), Kelsey Mitchell (Indiana Fever), Kelsey Plum (Los Angeles Sparks), Courtney Williams (Minnesota Lynx), Gabby Williams (Seattle Storm), Jackie Young (Las Vegas Aces), Kiki Iriafen (Washington Mystics), Angel Reese (Chicago Sky), Alyssa Thomas (Phoenix Mercury) and Kayla Thornton (Golden State Valkyries).
Bueckers and the rest of the All-Stars will learn their fate when Clark and Collier draft their teams tomorrow on ESPN’s WNBA Countdown at 6 p.m. CT. The WNBA All-Star Game is scheduled for Saturday, July 19 at 7:30 p.m. CT from inside Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana.
READ MORE: Dallas Wings rookie joined Caitlin Clark in WNBA history against Phoenix Mercury
Stick with WingsGameday for more FREE coverage of the Dallas Wings throughout the 2025 Season.
Dallas, TX
Cowboys’ 3rd-year CB ‘ready’ for PUP activation to ‘ball out’ in secondary
The Dallas Cowboys have been receiving good news in the secondary all week.
All-Pro cornerback Trevon Diggs is expected to return to action in Week 14, while fellow All-Pro DaRon Bland avoided serious injury on Thanksgiving Day. The same goes for starting safety Malik Hooker, who was in and out of the game due to back spasms.
Now, another Cowboys cornerback with starting experience is ready to return to the field and contribute down the final stretch.
MORE: Matt Eberflus has been true catalyst behind Cowboys’ 3-game surge
Third-year cornerback Josh Butler, who started the season on the PUP list, took to social media to share the message that he has been “ready since Week 6,” but he’s just trusting the process.
“Been a year. Been ready since Week 6 and healthy,” Butler wrote on X. “I just want to ball with the gang. This team so fun. Trusting in God but I’m ready. Let’s go Cowboys.”
Butler began the 2024 season on the practice squad, but was promoted to the active roster on November 18. He played in five games, starting three, before suffering a torn ACL in Week 13 against the New York Giants.
If Butler is activated and returns to the roster, the Cowboys’ secondary will be as healthy and deep as it has been in the past few seasons. Because Butler is on the PUP list, he would not count as one of the team’s two remaining IR-return spots. He would simply need to be added to the roster.
MORE: Brian Schottenheimer shares secret making Cowboys hottest team in NFL
An intriguing CB option
During his brief action in 2024 under defensive coordinator Mike Zimmer, Butler showed a lot of promise. Butler recorded five pass deflections, one sack, and 21 total tackles in his five games.
While the Cowboys’ defense has been thriving since the addition of Quinnen Williams, cornerback remains one of the biggest weaknesses.
There is undeniable depth at defensive tackle, defensive end, at linebacker with the addition of Logan Wilson, and even at safety now that the starters are healthy. But cornerback is an area where the team should consider all options.
If Butler is ready to go and a roster spot is available, he would be an intriguing option for the team to consider.
— Sign up for the Cowboys Daily Digest newsletter for more free coverage from Dallas Cowboys on SI —
Dallas Cowboys’ NFC East hopes get lifeline ahead of crucial NFL playoff push
Cowboys-Lions opening Week 14 odds continue underestimating Dallas
4 winners & 1 loser from Cowboys impressive Week 13 win vs Chiefs
4 huge takeaways from Cowboys’ shocking Week 13 win vs Chiefs
Jerry Jones’ wild Micah Parsons-Quinnen Williams trade claim refuted by Jets insider
Meet Camille Sturdivant: Star of Dallas Cowboys Cheerleader Netflix doc
Dallas, TX
Lakers Announce Full Starting Lineup Ahead of NBA Cup Game vs Mavericks
The Los Angeles Lakers have unveiled their full first five ahead of their Emirates NBA Cup showdown against the Dallas Mavericks.
More news: Former NBA Executive Urges Lakers to Fire Rob Pelinka Next
Thanks to starting center Deandre Ayton’s announced return from a right calf contusion that cost him the Lakers’ 135-118 Tuesday win against the LA Clippers (Jaxson Hayes started capably in his stead), Los Angeles will have access to head coach JJ Redick’s preferred starting unit once again.
Lakers Starters Revealed
With Ayton manning the middle, the Lakers will start five-time All-NBA First Team superstar point guard Luka Doncic (who was, until February, a Maverick) and shooting guard Austin Reaves in the backcourt, plus small forward Rui Hachimura and 21-time All-NBA power forward LeBron James in the frontcourt.
The Mavericks, meanwhile, will be bringing back the 10-time All-Star big man who served as the centerpiece of their misguided Doncic deal last season.
More news: Former All-Star Confident Lakers’ Austin Reaves Will Land Massive Offseason Deal
For Dallas, former 2020 Lakers champ Anthony Davis is set to return from a lingering calf injury, although it is Marc Stein of The Stein Line reports that Jason Kidd will be playing Davis on a minutes restriction.
Latest Lakers News
For more news and notes on the Los Angeles Lakers, visit Los Angeles Lakers on SI.
Dallas, TX
Stream of visitors shows Dallas is wise to invest in its water park
Pool season ended in September, but we welcome a splash of good news anytime. And how’s this for a headline? Dallas has started work to replace a 20-year-old water feature at the popular Bahama Beach Waterpark in Red Bird — with the expectation that the new amenities will be ready by summer 2026.
As our newsroom colleague María Ramos Pacheco reported earlier this year, the $2.5 million upgrade for the water park is coming from a federal Community Development Block Grant and from the city’s Parkland Dedication Program Fund.
This water park is exactly the kind of aquatic facility that Dallas should be investing in. City Hall faced resistance this year over the closure of several community pools, but as we’ve written previously, those facilities’ days were numbered. With sparse attendance and with parts dating back decades and no economical replacements, to keep those pools open was to pour taxpayer money down the drain.
Today, communities across North Texas gravitate toward “spraygrounds,” aquatic centers and waterparks, which are larger facilities that combine pools with amenities such as lazy rivers, tubes and tall slides.
Bahama Beach Waterpark opened to much fanfare in 2005, and it remains a crowd favorite to this day. Annual attendance was 50,000 a decade ago and has risen to 76,000, Park and Recreation Director John Jenkins told us. The water park is also one of the city’s most cost-effective aquatic facilities. Bahama Beach, which charges a modest admission fee and also receives rental income, generates about $1.3 million in annual revenue and recovers 70% of its costs.
The latest upgrade will replace Coconut Grove, a playground styled like a water fortress featuring slides, pulleys and water buckets. It will be replaced by a bigger installation including 16 decks, more than 55 water features and new slides. It will also bring back the huge water-dumping bucket that is as much a hit with adults as it is with children.
This upgrade follows a more substantial overhaul in 2021, when the city invested $5.9 million to create an area dedicated to families with small children, including new restrooms.
“This is what folks want,” Jenkins said. “They want to have this type of amenity in their communities.”
The water park isn’t just for kids and their parents. Summer programming includes water aerobics classes for seniors.
Jenkins told us that the city has contracted with a company to seek corporate sponsorship opportunities for the park system, not including Fair Park and city parks with separate management. The park director said the city wants to keep fees affordable for families and is looking to sponsorships to generate more revenue and cover its costs at Bahama Beach.
Dallas residents vote with their feet, and they love their water park. City Hall is wise to keep its sole water park in great shape and to recognize that a commitment to Bahama Beach is a much-needed investment in southern Dallas.
-
Science1 week agoWashington state resident dies of new H5N5 form of bird flu
-
New York1 week agoDriver Who Killed Mother and Daughters Sentenced to 3 to 9 Years
-
Business4 days agoStruggling Six Flags names new CEO. What does that mean for Knott’s and Magic Mountain?
-
World1 week agoUnclear numbers: What we know about Italian military aid to Ukraine
-
Politics2 days agoRep. Swalwell’s suit alleges abuse of power, adds to scrutiny of Trump official’s mortgage probes
-
Northeast1 week agoCamelot or Cringe?: Meet JFK’s grandson turned congressional candidate for the scrolling generation
-
Ohio3 days agoSnow set to surge across Northeast Ohio, threatening Thanksgiving travel
-
Detroit, MI1 week agoThompson: Detroit Riverfront Conservancy leadership has a lot to prove