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Giannis Antetokounmpo returns, Bucks roll to win over Bulls

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Giannis Antetokounmpo returns, Bucks roll to win over Bulls

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Giannis Antetokounmpo had 25 factors and 17 rebounds in his return to motion and the Milwaukee Bucks prolonged their current mastery of the Chicago Bulls with a 126-98 blowout on Tuesday night time.

Antetokounmpo missed the Bucks’ 138-119 loss at Minnesota on Saturday attributable to a sore proper knee. Milwaukee performed with out All-Star ahead Khris Middleton, who was coping with a sore left wrist.

“He took a fall within the Minnesota sport, and it was fairly sore and stiff, so we’ve had it checked out,” Bucks coach Mike Budenholzer stated earlier than the sport. “We really feel prefer it’s quick time period, however we’ll see how he feels the subsequent day or two.”

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Milwaukee Bucks’ Giannis Antetokounmpo drives previous Chicago Bulls’ Javonte Inexperienced through the first half of an NBA basketball sport Tuesday, March 22, 2022, in Milwaukee.
(AP Photograph/Morry Gash)

Jrue Vacation had a game-high 27 factors to associate with seven assists and no turnovers because the Bucks received for the fifteenth time of their final 16 conferences with the Bulls, together with all three matchups this season. Chicago’s lone win throughout that stretch got here within the 2019-20 regular-season finale, when the Bucks rested their starters as a result of they had been locked into the East’s No. 3 playoff seed.

“Jrue was being Jrue,” Antetokounmpo stated. “Jrue was being aggressive, making good selections, getting downhill, getting all people concerned, guarding Zach (LaVine). All people was doing their job. Clearly we knew that Khris wasn’t taking part in, and Khris is a giant a part of our crew and what we do right here, however on the finish of the day, even with the crew that we’ve got, we’re a fantastic crew.”

Brook Lopez had 10 factors and 6 rebounds in 24 minutes for Milwaukee after making his first begin for the reason that season opener. The 7-footer had come off the bench for the Bucks’ final three video games after lacking 67 attributable to a again harm that required surgical procedure.

The Bucks shot 61% from the ground and had seven gamers rating in double figures. The Bulls shot simply 42.4%.

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“Pictures we might need them to take, they made,” Bulls coach Billy Donovan stated. “It was an evening the place they actually, actually had it going. Credit score to them. And it was an evening we simply did not shoot the ball significantly effectively.”

Nikola Vucevic had 22 factors for the Bulls, who opened a five-game journey one night time after a 113-99 victory over the Toronto Raptors. DeMar DeRozan and LaVine added 21 factors every because the Bulls misplaced for the ninth time in 12 video games.

“In some unspecified time in the future, we have to get uninterested in getting our butt kicked like this and flip that swap of understanding, all proper, sufficient is sufficient,” DeRozan stated. “Now it is time to flip it round and present that desperation.”

Milwaukee took command with a 23-4 spurt that started late within the first quarter and continued within the second.

After trailing by 23 late within the second interval, the Bulls lower the result in 64-54 early within the third. However the Bucks regrouped and pulled away once more, finally main by as many as 35.

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Milwaukee’s Serge Ibaka and Chicago’s Tristan Thompson every acquired technical fouls late within the fourth quarter after they acquired into a quick tussle on an inbounds go try.

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Bulls: Patrick Williams remained on a minutes restriction in his second sport again after lacking 65 with a torn ligament in his left wrist. He has performed 18 minutes every of the final two video games. … DeRozan did not have a single free-throw try. He was 17 of 18 from the road the final time the Bulls visited Milwaukee.

Bucks: George Hill was fined $15,000 after getting ejected from Saturday’s loss for shoving Timberwolves guard Patrick Beverley from behind. Beverley, who shoved Ibaka from behind earlier within the altercation, was fined $20,000. … Bulls followers made up a sizeable minority of the gang, so Grayson Allen acquired a mixture of loud cheers and boos at any time when he was launched. It was the Bulls’ first sport again in Milwaukee since Jan. 21, when Allen was ejected for a flagrant foul on Alex Caruso that induced the Bulls guard to overlook 22 video games with a fractured proper wrist. The groups confronted one another in Chicago on March 4.

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UP NEXT

Bulls: At New Orleans on Thursday. The Bulls beat the Pelicans 128-112 in Chicago on Oct. 22.

Bucks: Host the Washington Wizards on Thursday. The Bucks have cut up two earlier conferences with the Wizards.

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What’s in a name (change)? For Josh Hines-Allen, it was about roots and recognition

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What’s in a name (change)? For Josh Hines-Allen, it was about roots and recognition

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — With a 17 1/2-sack season, a second Pro Bowl appearance and a new contract that made him football’s highest-paid outside linebacker, Josh Allen indisputably had become a big name in the NFL. But not exactly like he wanted.

He often was referred to as “the other Josh Allen,” with the more famous one quarterbacking the Buffalo Bills.

The Jacksonville Jaguars pass rusher and his wife, Kaitlyn, watched highlights of this year’s Pro Bowl Games and listened to a commentator refer to “Aidan Hutchinson and Josh … Allen?”

“It was almost like she was confused about who I was,” he says.

She wasn’t the only one. Kaitlyn wanted to know where her husband’s jerseys were being sold and learned they were as difficult to find as disinfecting wipes during the pandemic. The 27-year-old, five-year NFL veteran and father of three had considered changing his name for a couple of years. Now his wife started pushing for it.

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His four older sisters have a different last name, Hines-Allen, incorporating their mother Kim’s maiden name. When Josh and twin brother Isaiah were born, their father, Robert, wanted the boys to be Allens. Kim and Robert divorced when Josh was a baby, and his dad wasn’t around much, so the boys were raised and shaped by Hineses. In his New Jersey neighborhood, Josh was known as “Little Hines.”

So in the offseason, Josh hired a marketing agent and a lawyer. He waited in lines at the courthouse that serves Duval County. There were stacks of forms to fill out. He had to verify the addresses of every place he lived from birth to the present. He was required to identify all his family members, as well as their residences and ages. Changes had to be made to his driver’s license, Social Security information and tax returns.

In July, his marketing team released a video announcing the change, and a new teal nameplate was placed above his locker. It was then that Josh Hines-Allen became who he was intended to be.


A former pro basketball player, uncle Greg “Dunkin’” Hines (left) is a towering figure in Josh Hines-Allen’s life. (Courtesy of Greg Hines)

The new name is about how he hopes to elevate. And it’s about what grounds him.

Morris Hines was a force. Considered a hoops legend on the streets of their New Jersey neighborhood, Morris founded a basketball team at the New Hope Baptist Church in Newark and instilled a love of sports in his descendants, including his grandson Josh. Morris taught Josh to shadowbox. He used to say, “Cut them deep and let them bleed.” Josh has it tattooed on his inner arm. Josh learned to tie a tie from Morris. In fact, he has tied teammates’ ties and taught them the way Morris did it.

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“He’s one of the biggest reasons why I am the way I am mentally and competitively,” Josh says.

Morris’ oldest son, Greg, was more father figure for Josh than uncle. He was also a legendary basketball player and an example of how sports could change a life. “Dunkin’ Hines” was a dominating big man at Hampton University and an inaugural member of the Hampton Athletics Hall of Fame. A fifth-round pick of the Golden State Warriors, Hines never made the NBA but played professionally for 12 years.

At 12, Josh was the only man in the house with Isaiah living in Alabama with relatives. His sisters were driving him crazy by “momming” him.

“It was just pitiful,” he says. “I was already going to school, and then at home they made me go to ‘class’ with them as my teachers. It was just because they wanted to. We had math, science and recess.”

Desperate to get out of his house, Josh moved in with Dunkin’ Hines, who took Josh and his dirty clothes to the laundromat and taught him how to wash, dry and fold them. Josh learned to count the coins they saved in a jar and convert them to cash at an exchange machine. Hines made him feed and clean up after Blazer, his white boxer.

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Josh and Hines imitated the WWE wrestlers Josh watched on “SmackDown” and “Raw,” trying to make the other tap out. At 6-foot-9, 280 pounds, Hines had a significant advantage, which taught Josh to use leverage and his quick, strong hands.

“Those nights were so awesome,” Josh says.

Hines schooled Josh on the basketball court, where he remembers his nephew as an average ballhandler but strong and very athletic for his size, with a knack for rebounds, loose balls and defense. When Josh got frustrated with basketball, Hines signed him up for football for the first time.

When Josh moved in, Hines was a bachelor enjoying the privileges of freedom and fame. He thought Josh needed some religion, so every Sunday morning, they walked to Rising Mount Zion Baptist Church in Montclair, where together, they experienced amazing grace.

“I had no structure, no responsibilities in my life,” Hines says. “That grounding, keeping God in the center of our lives, helped us both out.”

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Josh also looked up to Keith Hines, Greg’s brother and Kim’s twin. Nieces and nephews called Keith “The General” because he didn’t mess around. Basketball was in his blood, too, as The General once scored 59 points in a high school game and then played at Montclair State before becoming a high school coach.

It wasn’t just the men of the family who paved the way for Josh.

Josh’s appreciation for the pageantry of sport grew while sitting in the bleachers at Montclair High watching his sister Torri, who would go on to play at Virginia Tech and Towson. He got chills every time the lights dimmed and Torri and her teammates broke through a poster to dazzling strobes.

“I thought it was the coolest thing, and it kind of made me fall in love with that part of sports,” he says.

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Sister Kyra played basketball at Cheyney University the way Josh plays football. “You didn’t want to mess with her, you know what I mean?” he says. “She was the shortest one of my sisters but the toughest, and I just loved the way she played.”

Myisha, one year older than Josh, played against sixth-grade boys when she was in fourth grade. In high school, she was a McDonald’s All-American. At Louisville, she was first-team All-ACC three times and played on a Final Four team. She won a WNBA championship with the Washington Mystics in 2019 and was voted second-team all-league a year later.

Josh’s entire athletic experience has been about trying to keep pace with Myisha, with whom he could never compete on the basketball court. A year after she was taken 19th in the WNBA draft, he wanted to be drafted higher, which he was (seventh). Now he is determined to win a championship like she did — and to one-up her by being voted first-team all-league.

Myisha and Josh weren’t close when they were young, but their relationship has grown as professional athletes.

“I try to give her motivation, lead her down a good path and help keep her mind right,” Josh says. “She does the same for me.”

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Myisha Hines-Allen (left) won a WNBA championship in 2019 as a member of the Washington Mystics. (Ethan Miller / Getty Images)

Shortly before the Jaguars play the Bills in September, Josh plans to offer fans an opportunity to swap old “Allen” jerseys for new “Hines-Allen” ones at a discounted price. It’s a good week to do it because the game is on a Monday night and the players have a little extra time — plus his opponent is the other Josh Allen.

They’ve never swapped jerseys with one another. They haven’t exchanged phone numbers either or even pleasantries.

“I don’t think he likes me,” Hines-Allen says. “After the first time we played them, he walked right by me, never said anything. By the second time, I didn’t really care.”

If the quarterback is resentful, he has reason. Hines-Allen has helped prevent him from winning both games they’ve played against one another. In the first game, a 9-6 victory in 2021, the Jaguars linebacker sacked and intercepted the Bills quarterback as well as recovered his fumble. And the Jaguars prevailed in the second “Josh Allen Bowl” by a 25-20 score.

Those games weren’t just any games to Hines-Allen.

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“It was kind of like a respect thing — you have to earn the respect,” says Hines-Allen, who vows never to lose to the Bills QB. “I feel like I did, but if we didn’t win, it would have been like, ‘Oh, and you lose to him?’ It definitely brought out a little extra in me because my name is my name. I respect all and want the same thing given to me.”

If Hines-Allen breaks the NFL sack record of 22 1/2 — which he intends to do — more respect will come. He rushes the passer with extreme dynamism and unpredictable gusts, making him about as easy to hold back as a twister. He had 17 sacks in 13 games at Kentucky and 22 1/2 in 12 games at Montclair High. Getting 5 1/2 more than he did in 2023 does not seem unreasonable to him.

His pursuit of the record will be abetted, he believes, by dropping less and rushing more in the scheme run by new Jaguars defensive coordinator Ryan Nielsen. Head coach Doug Pederson envisions Hines-Allen “pushing that 20-plus sack range” with more support from his team.

“He’s one of those guys who shows up early and stays late,” says Pederson, who recently became Hines-Allen’s neighbor when the linebacker bought a house near his coach’s. “He has the determination to be great.”

He hired a chef to prepare his meals and sleeps in a hyperbaric chamber for about five hours every night. He brings the device to road games, along with a specialist to administer intravenous fluids, and his personal physical therapist.

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During his pregame routine, he makes himself the only person in a crowd of thousands by wearing noise-canceling headphones and listening to nothing but silence. He is normally gregarious, with an easy smile and hugs all around. But there is a dark side.

“I’m angry,” he says. “I had a great season last year, but the only thing I got was a Pro Bowl. I’m pissed because y’all think I’m supposed to be happy. I’m pissed because I wasn’t All-Pro. I’m pissed because I wasn’t a nominee for defensive player of the year. I’m pissed because my team didn’t make the playoffs.”

So now there are quarterbacks to pound, honors to earn, triumphs to be had, a legacy to uphold and another to create. And opponents who studied 2023 tape will realize the linebacker across from them is not the same one who wore No. 41 last year.

This is Josh Hines-Allen.

(Illustration: Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic; photo: Cooper Neill / Getty Images)

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Erin Andrews wants anonymous NFL executive who criticized Bills' Josh Allen to 'take ownership'

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Erin Andrews wants anonymous NFL executive who criticized Bills' Josh Allen to 'take ownership'

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Shortly before NFL training camps opened, ESPN released the results of a survey that ranked the best players in the league across 11 different position groups.

Each position ranking featured commentary from NFL executives, coaches and scouts, all of whom remain anonymous. Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen was listed as the third-best player at his position. While Allen’s ranking could certainly be argued, a quote about the Bills star’s position among his peers seemed to stir some controversy.

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One of the unnamed executives described Allen as “one of the more overrated players in the NFL,” which Fox Sports NFL sideline reporter Erin Andrews took issue with. Fox Sports is a unit of FOX Corp., the parent to Fox News and FOX Business.

Josh Allen (Timothy T Ludwig)

Andrews addressed the executive’s remarks on her “Calm Down with Erin and Charissa” podcast, which she co-hosts with Fox Sports’ Charissa Thompson. Andrews challenged the anonymous person to “take ownership” of their opinion.

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“Like, come on, if you’re going to say something like that, say it with your chest. Take ownership,” Andrews said. “‘I’m afraid, so I’m going to say something mean.’ It’s like Twitter. Shut up.”

Erin Andrews on field at Caesars Superdome

Fox Sports NFL sideline reporter Erin Andrews took issue with one anonymous NFL executive’s opinion on Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen. (Erick W. Rasco/Sports Illustrated via Getty Images)

The anonymous executive also suggested that Allen was prone to mistakes and struggled with different aspects that are critical for any player who hopes to excel at playing quarterback.

“Immense talent but he makes a lot of mistakes,” the executive noted. “He’s underdeveloped at winning at the line of scrimmage, tends to lock on to targets, more of a thrower than precision passer, forces throws into traffic.”

Andrews stopped short of sharing her full thoughts on the criticism. “Sources are funny, aren’t they?” Thompson added. “I’ll leave that alone since I get in trouble for being too honest.”

Erin Andrews looks on at an NFL game

Fox Sports NFL sideline reporter Erin Andrews took issue with one anonymous NFL executive’s opinion on Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen. (Andy Lewis/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Almost 80 ballots were submitted, with all of those ranking at least one position group, ESPN reported. While the majority of respondents ranked every position group, follow-up calls and additional voting took place to avoid publishing data that included ties.

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Meanwhile, a nameless “AFC executive” said Allen “leaves you wanting more, a little bit.”

Bills general manager Brandon Beane said the anonymous comments left him frustrated.

“I don’t know where to start. It’s frustrating,” Beane said in July. “You try to ignore this stuff, but Josh is going into year 7 and there’s still the naysayers. I don’t get it. If I was going to use rated, I would say underrated before I would say overrated. And I know I’m biased. He’s our guy, love him every single day.” 

Beane also questioned the validity of the comments.

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“These things that come out there … I know people love the rankings of whoever. But when you don’t put your name to it, and you make comments like that, like, who is this executive? Executive is a loose term. I was probably referred to as an executive well before I should have been. I just say, if you’re not going to put your name on it, we really shouldn’t validate it.”

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Billy Bean, former Dodger and MLB executive, dies at 60

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Billy Bean, former Dodger and MLB executive, dies at 60

Billy Bean, who played parts of six seasons with the Tigers, Dodgers and Padres and was Major League Baseball’s senior vice president for diversity, equity and inclusion, died Tuesday after a year-long battle with Acute Myeloid Leukemia. He was 60.

In 1999, Bean became the second former Major League Baseball player to come out as gay. Glenn Burke was the first.

“Billy was a friend to countless people across our game, and he made a difference through his constant dedication to others. He made Baseball a better institution, both on and off the field, by the power of his example, his empathy, his communication skills, his deep relationships inside and outside our sport, and his commitment to doing the right thing,” MLB commissioner Rob Manfred said in a statement. “On behalf of Major League Baseball, I extend my deepest condolences to Billy’s husband, Greg Baker, and their entire family.”

Bean joined MLB in 2014, hired by then-commissioner Bud Selig as ambassador for inclusion. As a senior advisor to Manfred, Bean’s role focused on player education, LGBTQ inclusion, and social justice initiatives.

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Bean, a Santa Ana native who played at Loyola Marymount, broke into the majors in 1987 with the Tigers. On July 17, 1989, Bean was traded to the Dodgers, with whom he played 51 games. After two seasons in the minors and one playing in Japan, Bean returned to the U.S., playing for the Padres from 1993-95 before retiring.

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