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Aldridge: Spurs are far from contending, but Wemby's defense is on a rapid ascent

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Aldridge: Spurs are far from contending, but Wemby's defense is on a rapid ascent

PHILADELPHIA — A few weeks ago, Joel Embiid said he wondered if Victor Wembanyama knew what he wanted.

“I think, first of all, he has to figure out where he wants to play, whether he wants to be a guard or a big or whatever,” the 76ers big man said. “It’s not necessarily whether he wants to be a guard or a big; it’s what he wants to become. Do you want to become KD, or do you want to become me? Not KD, or like a version of those guys — you want to combine everything. Right now, I just feel like everything kind of feels a little forced in the way that he’s playing, which is not bad. Because the only way to get better is to play through it and learn. That’s the only way. You make a lot of mistakes, and you learn.”

Wembanyama’s learning.

The San Antonio Spurs’ rookie center is processing how to wreck NBA offenses at a seemingly geometric rate. He’s become a defensive terror since the Spurs moved him from power forward to center midway through December, providing the league with a glimpse of what the future might hold, even in the five-out, zero-in version of most NBA offenses. Positionless Basketball, meet Space-Inhaling Defender. And meet a rookie who is, already, incredibly good at defending without fouling.

“Am I surprised? No,” Wembanyama said after blocking six shots in the Spurs’ win Saturday over the Washington Wizards.

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“Especially as a young player, as a rookie, and with a coach like ours, it starts on defense,” he said. “Growing up in Europe, to gain your spot in (a) professional roster at 15 or 16, you’ve got to play your ass off on defense. So it’s going back to that role as a new guy in the league — it feels good in some way to have that tough role sometimes.”

And there’s a clear cleave in Wembanyama’s impact: pre-Tre-Jones-at-point-guard, and post-Tre-Jones-at-point-guard.

In San Antonio’s first 19 games, the Spurs conducted an experiment of sorts, putting second-year forward Jeremy Sochan on the ball, playing Wembanyama at power forward and starting Zach Collins at center. There was a methodology to the decision; San Antonio wanted to use the first quarter of the season to just let Wembanyama play and adjust to the NBA game. It’s not that the Spurs didn’t care about winning or losing, but … they didn’t really care about winning or losing. There was a bigger picture to consider.

And the Spurs lost 18 in a row between Nov. 5 and Dec. 13.

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NBA Rookie Rankings: Wemby’s role change, Jaquez’s versatility and more

During that stretch, Wembanyama shot 42 percent from the floor and 26 percent from 3. His assist-turnover ratio was .872. Spurs opponents were shooting 39 percent on 3-pointers; and 54 percent on 2s. And San Antonio gave up an average of 121.5 points per game, losing by an average of 13.1 points per game.

But, soon afterward, Gregg Popovich moved Collins to the bench and put Jones in the starting lineup at the point. He moved Sochan back to power forward and put Wembanyama in at center. The skies cleared.

Wembanyama is shooting 51 percent from the floor since mid-December, including 34 percent on 3s. His assist-turnover ratio is 1.24.

But the Spurs’ defense also has picked up, dramatically. They were tied for 28th in the league in defensive rating (120.5) in November. They were 21st in the league (118.6) in December. Through 11 games in January, they’re 15th (115.6). Wembanyama is blocking 3.5 shots per game in that stretch. And their net rating is down to minus-5.9 from minus-13.1. They’re just 5-15 in that stretch, and Embiid scored 70 points against Wembanyama and the Spurs on Monday, setting the 76ers’ team record for points in a game. Of course, the Spurs are still one of the worst teams in the league. But they’re also the youngest. And their defensive numbers overall are moving, pretty significantly, in the right direction. It’s a start.

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Wembanyama is ninth in the league in Dunks and Threes’ Estimated Defensive Plus-Minus, at plus-3.0. That’s 14 spots ahead of Oklahoma City’s Chet Holmgren, Wembanyama’s chief rival for NBA Rookie of the Year. He is ninth in Dunks and Threes’ defensive rebound percentage (29.5). And Wembanyama leads the league in blocked shots per game (3.2).

“Some of the stuff he does, I’ve told y’all from the beginning, you can’t wrap your head around it,” Spurs guard Devin Vassell said Monday. “You’ve never seen nothing like it. I keep saying, he makes the game easier for us, and we’ve got to make it easier for him. Defensively, we’ve got to make that impact. If we’re funneling people to the basket, we know he’s going to go and erase it. So we’ve got to make sure we’re cracking back to his man to make sure he doesn’t get the rebound, or whatever the case may be.”

There are the garden-variety swats of guys coming down the lane, trying to adjust mid-flight to this 7-foot-4 mantis, unfurling. There are highlight-reel blocks against star players — at the start of games, as Wembanyama doled out here to Ja Morant, and in crunchtime, as applied here to Giannis Antetokounmpo. And there are the blocks that defy logic or most anything you’ve seen defensively in the last 60 years. Yes, I know he did these kinds of things at Metropolitans 92 last season. But, with all due respect, there is a bit of a difference in talent between the LNB Pro A League and this one.

I mean … what is this?

Here’s another angle. He’s not looking at the ball he’s about to block:

Washington’s Marvin Bagley is 6-11. The mean height of 18-year-old men in the United States, as of 2014, was just above 5-8. Anyone 6-1 or taller is, among men 20 and older, in the 95th percentile of all men in the U.S., according to height. Bagley is a statistical anomaly.

What, then, is Wemby?

“Normally, I could just go up and just go over people, because I’m 6-11,” Bagley said. “But guys like that, you’ve got to kind of be a little more crafty with it, or create something for yourself or your teammates.”

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The way the game is played today, you’d probably construct someone with Wembanyama’s frame to challenge shots — long and agile, with an incredible ability, as Philadelphia coach Nick Nurse noted, to change direction. Nurse was talking about how Wembanyama cuts on offense, but the same principle applies at the other end.

“It goes both ways,” Popovich said, echoing Nurse.

“He (Wembanyama) likes being on the perimeter too, handling the ball a little bit, that sort of thing. It’s a lot easier for him now than it would be (back) in the day when someone would be guiding him all over with their hand and touching him and bumping him. Imagine Isiah (Thomas) or somebody on him. So it’s an easier environment, then, for a perimeter guy. And defensively, he can roam more, the way Joel does. We call them ‘roamers,’ or I do. They don’t specifically guard a guy all the time. Their job is the paint, the rim, changing shots, blocking shots, doing that sort of thing, so people have to change what they’re doing offensively. And then the other players, the complementary players, have to respond, as far as realizing that that guy is going to be leaving and going to the rim all the time.”

What has been among Wembanyama’s most impressive traits is not picking up fouls.

Rookies, and especially rookie big men, have a target on their backs. The league insists its officials call everything, and everyone, the same. Perhaps that’s true on Earth II. But here, rookies usually don’t get the benefit of the doubt.

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Wembanyama, though, has fouled out of only one game so far. With rare exceptions — Monday’s game against the 76ers being one — he doesn’t pick up a lot of primary defender fouls, as happened when Embiid went to the basket and took the 20-year-old along for the ride. He only averages 2.4 fouls per game.

Popovich had fun with me last weekend when I asked how Wembanyama’s D had evolved since the start of the season. (The guess here is he doesn’t want to be viewed as having “taught” defense to Wembanyama, who was instructed by one of the game’s great coaches in Vincent Collet — Wembanyama’s coach at Metropolitans 92 and the coach of the French national team that Wemby will be on this summer at the 2024 Olympics in Paris.)

“I say, ‘Stick your hands somewhere else, and stop fricking fouling,’” Popovich said. “That’s between the ears. You tell everybody how to do it, how to trace and how to do this, what’s appropriate, what’s an inappropriate foul. Some guys get it; some guys don’t. He’s smart, he gets it, and he’s figured it out.”

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Victor Wembanyama at the halfway point: The good, the bad and the unbelievable

Sochan has to be part of this too, if the Spurs are going to get defensive traction in the coming years. He was taken ninth in the first round in 2022 as someone who loves getting “cheeky,” as he put it before the draft, with opponents. He doesn’t care if he gets dunked on; he keeps talking. And playing.

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“I think that gets under people’s skin,” Jones said.

Now at his normal position, Sochan needs to be able to handle the fours Wembanyama can ignore. That’s probably what the second half of the season will be about.

“I think it’s scary. Scary. As we get older, more mature, our bodies become more mature, it’s going to be scary,” Sochan said. “I think it’s going to be hard to score on us. And I think it’s going to allow us to win a lot of games, so I think it’s exciting. I feel like as the season’s gone on, me and Vic, we’ve become closer, on and off the court. It’s become great. … It’s just talking, just knowing … instincts too. Sometimes defense isn’t about the X’s and O’s; it’s about instincts. Just reading, reading and reacting. Sometimes I get beat, and it’s him helping me. Or it’s the other way. Or steals. Or rebounds, because he’s blocking everything.”

On Wednesday, Holmgren and the Thunder came to San Antonio. With a potential MVP at Holmgren’s side in Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, with one of the league’s most diverse and difficult offenses, along with a team defense that is ahead of schedule, OKC showed just far the Spurs have to go — even as Wembanyama added another pelt to his collection.

The education continues, the learning curve always stretching out into the distance.

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— The Athletic’s Josh Robbins contributed to this story.

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(Photo of Victor Wembanyama blocking a shot against the Trail Blazers: Steph Chambers / Getty Images)

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2026 World Cup Quarterfinal Odds: Which Squads Will Make Final 8?

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2026 World Cup Quarterfinal Odds: Which Squads Will Make Final 8?

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Winning two knockout stage games? That means you’re really in the running to win the World Cup.

Let’s check out the updated odds for which countries will make it to the quarterfinals at FanDuel Sportsbook as of July 1.

This page may contain affiliate links to legal sports betting partners. If you sign up or place a wager, FOX Sports may be compensated. Read more about Sports Betting on FOX Sports.

To Reach Quarterfinals

France: -1250 (bet $10 to win $10.80 total)
Argentina: -425 (bet $10 to win $12.35 total)
Morocco: -260 (bet $10 to win $13.85 total)
Brazil: -240 (bet $10 to win $14.17 total)
England: -175 (bet $10 to win $15.71 total)
Spain: -140 (bet $10 to win $17.14 total)
Colombia: -105 (bet $10 to win $19.52 total)
USA: +105 (bet $10 to win $20.50 total)
Mexico: +140 (bet $10 to win $24 total)
Norway: +160 (bet $10 to win $26 total)
Portugal: +175 (bet $10 to win $27.50 total)
Canada: +180 (bet $10 to win $28 total)
Belgium: +185 (bet $10 to win $28.50 total)
Switzerland: +195 (bet $10 to win $29.50 total)
Senegal: +370 (bet $10 to win $47 total)
Algeria: +550 (bet $10 to win $65 total)
Egypt: +650 (bet $10 to win $75 total)
Ghana: +750 (bet $10 to win $85 total)

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The USA is currently one of the favorites to reach the World Cup quarterfinals (Getty Images).

Here’s what to know about this oddsboard. 

Recent History: The quarterfinals are kinda a given for France, at least in recent years. The French have made it to at least the quarterfinals in five of the last seven World Cups, and they have made the final in four of the last seven years, winning the tournament twice. Les Bleus are now heavy favorites at -1250 to beat Paraguay and get back to the quarterfinals.

The Host Nations: Before this summer, Canada had never won a World Cup match in two tournament appearances. But that has all changed. Canada is through to the Round of 16 after beating South Africa in the Round of 32. As for Mexico, it has recorded four straight scoreless wins to start the tournament for the first time in its nation’s history. El Tri will look to get back to the quarterfinals for the first time in 40 years after dominating Ecuador in the Round of 32. After its win over Ecuador, Mexico jumped from +290 to +140 to make the quarters. The U.S. looks to replicate the other two host nations’ knockout stage performances against Bosnia and Herzegovina on Wednesday.

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Walter Alston, Dave Roberts and everyone in between: The 10 managers in L.A. Dodgers history

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Walter Alston, Dave Roberts and everyone in between: The 10 managers in L.A. Dodgers history
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Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda celebrates after the Dodgers beat the Montreal Expos to win the NL pennant in 1981.

(Associated Press)

Years as manager: 1976-1996

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Record: 1,599-1,439, .526 win pct

After serving as the team’s third base coach for four seasons, Lasorda took over as manager late in the 1976 season when Alston announced his retirement. He led the Dodgers to the National League pennant in his first two full seasons, losing both times to the Yankees in the World Series. He won his first World Series in 1981, knocking off the Yankees, and rallied his team to a surprise title in 1988 in which the Dodgers beat the heavily favored Athletics. Lasorda was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1997, his first year of eligibility.

A fiery and vibrant presence who spent 71 years with the Dodgers, Lasorda managed nine players who won the NL rookie of the year award. The Dodgers also opened the Japanese player pipeline on his watch. Hideo Nomo, the first Japanese big leaguer to permanently relocate to the U.S., joined the Dodgers in 1995. Three decades later, the team features Shohei Ohtani and Yoshinobu Yamamoto on its star-studded roster.

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LeBron James Next Team Odds: Warriors, Cavaliers, Heat In Mix

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LeBron James Next Team Odds: Warriors, Cavaliers, Heat In Mix

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Back in January, the odds that King James would retire before the beginning of the 2026-27 season were slightly longer than the odds that he would give it another go.

But as of now, it looks like LeBron will, in fact, give it another go but with a team other than the Lakers.

Here are the latest odds for where James could land next season at DraftKings Sportsbook as of June 30.

This page may contain affiliate links to legal sports betting partners. If you sign up or place a wager, FOX Sports may be compensated. Read more about Sports Betting on FOX Sports.

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LeBron James Next Team Odds

Golden State Warriors: -115 (bet $10 to win $18.70 total)
Los Angeles Lakers: +105 (bet $10 to win $20.50 total)
Cleveland Cavaliers: +600 (bet $10 to win $70 total)
Miami Heat: +1000 (bet $10 to win $110 total)
New York Knicks: +3000 (bet $10 to win $310 total)
Detroit Pistons: +3000 (bet $10 to win $310 total)
Dallas Mavericks: +3000 (bet $10 to win $310 total)
San Antonio Spurs: +3500 (bet $10 to win $360 total)
Milwaukee Bucks: +4000 (bet $10 to win $410 total)
Brooklyn Nets: +4000 (bet $10 to win $410 total)
Washington Wizards: +5000 (bet $10 to win $510 total)

NBA free agency begins on June 30 at 6 p.m. ET. However, hours before its official start, LeBron James’ agent, Rich Paul, made a jaw-dropping announcement. 

According to ESPN reporting, Paul notified the Lakers that the franchise could move on without LeBron because he plans to play elsewhere for the 2026-27 season.

James played for the organization for eight years — the longest he’s played for any other team. While in L.A., King James broke the all-time scoring record, won an NBA title and earned his fourth NBA Finals MVP.

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The imprint he’s left on the league in his more than 20 years has been immeasurable.

Where will LeBron land next season now that his time in Los Angeles is over?

In addition to his tenure in Los Angeles, he’s played for the Cavaliers and the Heat, winning titles with all three franchises. He won Rookie of the Year, has four regular-season MVPs and is a 22-time All-Star.

James has averaged 26.8 points, 7.5 boards and 7.4 assists over the course of his career.

During the 2025-26 season, he helped lead the Lakers to a 53-29 record in the regular season. The team secured the No. 4 seed in the Western Conference and defeated Houston 4-2 in the first round. 

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Eventually, Los Angeles got bounced by Oklahoma City in the conference semifinals, 4-0, which marked LeBron’s last dance in Hollywood.

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