NBA Summer League 2025: When will Bronny James, LA Lakers play next?New Foto - NBA Summer League 2025: When will Bronny James, LA Lakers play next?

Bronny Jamesis back with theLos Angeles Lakersfor a second year of Summer League action, which began play on Sunday, July 6. James completed his rookie season, playing on the Lakers' main roster and the South Bay Lakers as a two-way player. He saw limited action for the Lakers, averaging 3.4 points, 0.8 assists and 0.7 rebounds in 6.7 minutes per game. He started just one of the 27 games he played. James and the Lakers have already started their exhibition season for the offseason, competing in the California Classic on Sunday with a 103-83 victory over theMiami Heat. It remains unclear what James' role or expected playing time will be throughout the summer. James played shot 3-of-7 from the field, finishing with 10 points, two rebounds and a steal in 11 minutes as a starter for the Lakers on Sunday. He shot 2-for-5 from the 3-point line and went 2-for-2 from the free throw line. BRONNY JAMES THROWS IT DOWN 😤Year 2 Bronny loading 🔥pic.twitter.com/fkoloStQLH — Bleacher Report (@BleacherReport)July 6, 2025 Game:Los Angeles Lakersvs.San Antonio Spurs Date:Tuesday, July 8 Location:Chase Center (San Francisco) Start time:10 p.m. ET TV: ESPN Stream: ESPN+ This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:When will Bronny James, Lakers play in NBA Summer League next?

NBA Summer League 2025: When will Bronny James, LA Lakers play next?

NBA Summer League 2025: When will Bronny James, LA Lakers play next? Bronny Jamesis back with theLos Angeles Lakersfor a second year of Summ...
Nationals finally move on firing Mike Rizzo, Dave Martinez. Good luck with that.New Foto - Nationals finally move on firing Mike Rizzo, Dave Martinez. Good luck with that.

In firing their president of baseball operations and their manager in a startlingSunday night massacre,Washington Nationalsownership exhibited something not readily apparent in the highest reaches of the organization. A pulse. This has been Dead Franchise Walking for the better part of several years, a ballclub seemingly on autopilot as longtime general manager Mike Rizzo aimed to assemble a roster and install a player development infrastructure despite a less than thorough buy-in from ownership, while manager Dave Martinez lauded the boys for battling, coached up the kids and flailed at the buttons of a bullpen where his options often boiled down to Uh Oh and Not Him. All the while, Rizzo and Martinez operated in a realm not unlike the kids on "Peanuts," free to go about their business while unseen and rarely heard adults lurked in the background. The biggest difference between Charlie Brown and Lucy is that Rizzo and Martinez delivered this franchise aWorld Series championship in 2019, the apex of an eight-year run of contention that spanned four managerial regimes and rewarded a bevy of grizzled baseball men from field to dugout to front office. Turns out it was the beginning of the end. TheViejoswho claimed the '19 title only got older, the club returning from the pandemic with a reigning World Series MVP,Stephen Strasburg, who'd soon turn into a $245 million sunk cost due to maddening and sad health concerns. Who'd have to wear the final five years of Patrick Corbin's $140 million contract as Corbin's slider flattened and fastball fizzled, the cost of doing business for one championship season. Cue six years of nondescript misery, best evidenced by the number of days spent over .500: 2020: 0 2021: 4, the last on June 30. 2022: 0 2023: 0 2024: 2, the last on May 10. 2025: 0 Through it all, Rizzo and Martinez took on the air of permanent caretakers, that they delivered one World Series title and doggone it, they'd do it again. This brew of conviction and swagger reached a zenith in July 2022, when Rizzo pulled off an epic baseball trade,dealing Juan Sototwo-plus years before free agency for what would turn out to be a bountiful return: All-Stars James Wood, CJ Abrams and MacKenzie Gore, plus two more promising youngsters in Robert Hassell III and Jarlin Susana. It wasa somber day, the beloved and just 23-year-old Soto gone in an instant, the final curtain falling on the championship club and Rizzo was asked if he could live with being known as the guy who traded Juan Soto. "I was the guy who signed him, too," Rizzo said, his gleaming championship ring dangling off a finger. Touché. Yet as the years rolled on, and Wood and Abrams and Gore bubbled up to the big leagues, that moment was less the building block of something great and more Rizzo's last great act. He was undercut by his inability to, in the final 10-plus years of his tenure, install a drafting and player development infrastructure to keep the talent pipeline moving. Since drafting Anthony Rendon sixth overall in 2011, the Nationals were largely a developmental black hole, save for guys who found greater success – see Lucas Giolito, Nick Pivetta, Erick Fedde – after the Nationals flipped them elsewhere. Yet Rizzo had perhaps the most unusual gig in the industry. The Lerner family, to put it gently, did things differently – sometimes a lot differently – than any other franchise in the game. Contracts - or deadlines to pick up options - for employees like Rizzo did not always land on the typical industry calendar but rather in the middle of the year, when baseball operations staffs are, you know, just a little bit busy. While Rizzo's confidence never withered, there was the near-constant specter of an expiring contract at hand, creating doubt for baseball ops employees and players alike. The franchise was mildly obsessed - and, truthfully, ahead of the curve - with deferring money in contracts. That could work out in cases like their late strike to get Max Scherzer in the fold, yet backfire in others, making their efforts to retain players like Harper seem unserious. A wave of homegrown stars, from Harper to Trea Turner to Soto to Rendon (whew!) found riches and, often, success elsewhere. And it took years for ownership to realize running a ballclub was not like another real estate asset; a conveyor belt of veterans – both uniformed and in baseball operations - complained over the years about missing essentials in the clubhouse, to needless expense report scrutiny and postseason travel arrangements that fell well below industry standard. Most recently, the club was well in the minority in failing to invest in the most cutting-edge training toolavailable to hitters, hardly dispelling the appearance the club was behind in analytics-oriented areas. Sure, perhaps it was past time for Rizzo and Martinez to go, if only for the life cycle those jobs tend to take on. Yet Sunday is still a very dark day for Nationals fans. Why? Well, the Lerners will now be tasked with hiring a new GM/president of baseball operations, a task they've never really taken on in the two decades they've owned the ballclub. They inherited Jim Bowden from the period in which the Expos/Nationals were wards of the state, operated by MLB, and decided, strangely, to keep him on. It wasn't until he became embroiled in a bonus-skimming, age-falsification scandal thatBowden resignedin March 2009. Enter Rizzo. A scout's scout, he was the highest-ranking man standing and hit the ground running, touched by the baseball gods with Strasburg and Harper available with the top overall pick in consecutive years (a bit of fortune impossible today with the draft lottery). Yet in Rizzo, ownership had a nice, self-contained unit: He was free to run baseball operations – quite well, for many years – so long as he accepted the Faustian bargain of mitigating ownership's, um, idiosyncrasies. Always willing to take a bullet – he might as well have been Sonny Corleone at the toll booth – Rizzo was able to keep the franchise running at a high level even if things didn't flow as naturally as other organizations. So, what now? Thanks to the lottery's bouncing balls, the Nationals will choose first in the July 15 draft, under the guidance of interim GM Mike DeBartolo. For now, baseball operations minus Rizzo remains largely intact in advance of that day. After that, there are little guarantees, the only on-field tension seemingly whether the Nationals can avoid 100 losses for the second time in four years. Lerner must hire a general manager and manager, and hopefully has learned from the time the family was a signature away from hiring Bud Black, only to discover managers don't workunder one-year contracts. Meanwhile, questions about the group's long-term commitments linger, what with a failed multi-year effort to sell the team, only for Lerner to pull the team off the market in February 2024. It was an extended period of flux, somewhat conveniently aligning with a down cycle in on-field performance yet producing anew questions of whether the club will commit to major free agents when the time comes to contend in earnest. The team will also be TV free agents, with the long-awaitedMASN settlementgiving the franchise agency in its broadcast future. A TV home, a head of baseball ops, a new dugout chief? That's an awful lot for an ownership group to take on. Sunday, they signaled that getting better was a bigger priority than mediocrity cloaked in stability. It was probably the right call. Now, the hard part arrives. And while the Nationals might have been too wedded to the good old days, it's an open question whether they have the chops to ensure it doesn't get any worse. The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast.Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Nationals' Sunday night massacre with Rizzo and Martinez finally fired

Nationals finally move on firing Mike Rizzo, Dave Martinez. Good luck with that.

Nationals finally move on firing Mike Rizzo, Dave Martinez. Good luck with that. In firing their president of baseball operations and their ...
U.S. deports men from Asia and Latin America to South Sudan after legal sagaNew Foto - U.S. deports men from Asia and Latin America to South Sudan after legal saga

The Trump administration said it deported a group of eight men convicted of serious crimes in the United States to the conflict-ridden African country ofSouth Sudan, following alegal sagathat had kept the deportees stuck in amilitary base in Djiboutifor weeks. Assistant Department of Homeland Security Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said the deportation flight carrying the deportees landed in South Sudan just before midnight Eastern time on Friday. A photo provided by the department showed the deportees, with their hands and feet shackled, sitting inside an aircraft, guarded by U.S. service members. The deportations to South Sudan — a country plagued by armed conflict and political instability that the U.S. government warns Americans not to visit — mark an unprecedented new frontier in President Trump's government-wide crackdown on illegal immigration. None of the deportees is from South Sudan. They hail from Cuba, Mexico, Laos, Myanmar, Sudan and Vietnam, and were ordered deported from the U.S. after being convicted of crimes, including murder, homicide, sexual assault, lascivious acts with a child and robbery. The high-profile legal battle over the fate of the men culminated when two federal judges on Friday denied a last-ditch attempt by immigration rights advocates to halt the deportations, saying their hands were tied by recent orders from the U.S. Supreme Court. The deportations signify a major political victory for the Trump administration, which has sought to convince countries around the world — irrespective of their human rights record — to accept deportees who are not their citizens, including those convicted of serious crimes. "A district judge cannot dictate the national security and foreign policy of the United States of America," said McLaughlin, the DHS spokeswoman. "This Independence Day marks another victory for the safety and security of the American people." The deportations have also alarmed human rights advocates, who fear the men could face jail time, torture or other harms in South Sudan. They've argued the deportations to South Sudan are designed to punish the men for their crimes, even though they have already served criminal sentences in the U.S. "The U.S. State Department warns Americans against all travel to South Sudan, yet deported these men there without any due process," said Trina Realmuto, an attorney for the National Immigration Litigation Alliance, which tried to halt the deportations. "Make no mistake about it, these deportations were punitive and unconstitutional." It's unclear exactly how the deportees will be treated in South Sudan. A Justice Department attorney told a federal judge Friday that South Sudan informed the U.S. it would offer the men a temporary immigration status, but the lawyer could not confirm whether they would be detained. The Trump administration has said in court filings that South Sudanese officials have made assurances that the deportees will not face torture. The men's deportation was made possible by a Supreme Court order earlier this week. At the request of the Trump administration, theSupreme Court on Thursdayclarified the scope of an earlier order it had issued to pause a lower court ruling barring deportations to third-party countries without a degree of due process and notice. That April lower court ruling by U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy in Massachusetts had required the Trump administration to give detainees sufficient notice and a chance to be interviewed by a U.S. asylum officer before any deportation to a country where they did not hail from. That case thwarted several deportation efforts, including a plan to send detainees to Libya. When he learned of the administration's plan to deport the eight men to South Sudan in May, Murphy blocked that effort, mandating the U.S. to retain custody of the detainees and to offer them a chance to contest their deportation. The administration transferred the detainees to the Camp Lemonnier naval base in Djibouti, whereU.S. officials described dangerous conditions, including concerns about malaria, rocket attacks, inadequate security protocols and triple-digit outdoor temperatures. But theSupreme Court last monthsuspended Murphy's ruling from April. And on Thursday, it said Murphy could no longer require the government to allow the detainees in Djibouti to contest their deportation, since the order underpinning that requirement had been paused. Hours later, immigrant rights advocates asked a different federal judge, Randolph Moss in Washington, D.C., to halt the deportations to South Sudan. He did so on Friday, but only briefly before saying the request should be handled by Murphy. Moss expressed concern about risks to the men's "physical safety" and said the U.S. government should not be in the business of inflicting "pain and suffering" on people who have already served their sentence, even for a "terrible crime." But he said his hands were tied, telling the advocates they needed to ask Murphy for any intervention. Later on Friday, Murphy denied the advocates' request, saying the Supreme Court orders were "binding." Death toll rises as desperate search for Texas flash flood survivors continues Sabrina Carpenter on the biggest misperceptions about her How Lady Liberty became a beacon for immigrants

U.S. deports men from Asia and Latin America to South Sudan after legal saga

U.S. deports men from Asia and Latin America to South Sudan after legal saga The Trump administration said it deported a group of eight men ...
Hundreds greet Nepal's ex-king on his birthday as support for the ousted monarch growsNew Foto - Hundreds greet Nepal's ex-king on his birthday as support for the ousted monarch grows

KATHMANDU, Nepal (AP) — Hundreds of supporters of Nepal's former king lined up outside his residence to greet him on his 74th birthday Monday as support for the ousted monarch grows in the Himalayan nation. Gyanendra Shah, who makes very few public appearances, allowed his supporters inside his house for three hours. Supporters lined up outside with flower garlands, bouquets, cards, gifts and various food items which are traditionally offered during special occasions in Nepalese culture. "Bring king back to the throne and save the country. We love our king more than our lives," chanted the loyalists, many wearing traditional attire. Nepal abolished the monarchy and turned the nation into a republic in 2008, bringing in a president as the head of the state. There has been growing demand in recent months for Shahto be reinstated as king and Hinduism to be brought back as a state religion. Royalist groups accuse the country's major political parties of corruption and failed governance and say people are frustrated with politicians. "People were looking for change and they removed the king hoping that it would be beneficial for the country, but that was very untrue and the political parties repeatedly betrayed people's trust," said retired worker Kula Prasad Bhattarai, who stood in line for hours outside the king's residence. "The politicians have damaged our nation," said Divesh Singh Hamal, another supporter. "We need to bring the king back or else our country will be finished." Gyanendra was a constitutional head of state without executive or political powers until 2005, when heseized absolute power. He disbanded the government and parliament, jailed politicians and journalists and cut off communications, declaring a state of emergency and using the army to rule the country. Support for the ousted monarch has risen in recent months. Tens of thousands of protesters demanding the restoration of the monarchy and the former king be made head of statedemonstrated in May. In March, at least two people died when another rally turned violent as supporters of the ex-kingclashed with riot police. Massive street protests in 2006 forced Gyanendra to give up his authoritarian rule, and two years later the parliament voted to abolish the monarchy. Gyanendra, who left the royal palace to live as a commoner, has not commented on the calls for the restoration of the monarchy. Despite growing support, the former king has little chance of immediately returning to power.

Hundreds greet Nepal's ex-king on his birthday as support for the ousted monarch grows

Hundreds greet Nepal's ex-king on his birthday as support for the ousted monarch grows KATHMANDU, Nepal (AP) — Hundreds of supporters of...
Farrell selects strongest British and Irish Lions squad for Brumbies game to avoid 2013 repeatNew Foto - Farrell selects strongest British and Irish Lions squad for Brumbies game to avoid 2013 repeat

CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — British and Irish Lions coach Andy Farrell has selected his strongest squad of the Australian tour so far for Wednesday's game against the Brumbies, determined to avoid a repeat of the 2013 loss to the Canberra-based Super Rugby club. England lockMaro Itojereturns as captain in a second-row partnership with Ireland's Joe McCarthy in a starting lineup that includes a number of first-choice picks for the test squad. Scotland flyhalf Finn Russell will start against at No. 10 in a halves pairing with Jamison Gibson-Park. Ireland centers Bundee Aki and Garry Ringrose will start in the midfield and Blair Kinghorn will make his first start of the tour at fullback in a back three with Tommy Freeman and James Lowe. Australia-born Ireland winger Mack Hansen is among the reserves for the game against his old Super Rugby franchise. Joining him on the bench are Englad backrower Henry Pollock and England flyhalf Marcus Smith. The Brumbies have been the best performing of the Australian Super Rugby clubs, reaching the semifinals last month. "In 2013 the Brumbies beat the British and Irish Lions in Canberra and this year they were the leading Australian team in Super Rugby, so we are fully aware of the challenge in front of us," Farrell said. "It will also be a special occasion for Mack Hansen as he returns to his home town and gets the opportunity to play for and represent the Lions against some of his old teammates." The Brumbies will be well below full strength, with players involved in the Australian team preparing for the three-test series that starts July 19. Prop Lington Ieli, flanker Rory Scott, scrumhalf and captain Ryan Lonergan, center David Feliuai and winger Corey Toole will all start after being involved in the Wallabies camp before being released to train with the Brumbies last week. The Lions are 3-0 since a 28-24loss to Argentinain a warmup in Dublin before the traveling Down Under for their nine-game tour. After wins overWestern Forcein Perth,Queensland Redsin Brisbane and New South WalesWaratahsin Sydney, the Lions will play the Brumbies in Canberra on Wednesday before taking on the combined AUNZ invitational squad on Saturday in their final preparation for the test series. ___ Squads: British and Irish Lions: Blair Kinghorn (Scotland), Tommy Freeman (England), Garry Ringrose (Ireland), Bundee Aki (Ireland), James Lowe (Ireland), Finn Russell (Scotland), Jamison Gibson-Park (Ireland); Jack Conan (Ireland), Tomm Curry (England), Ollie Chessum (England), Joe McCarthy (Ireland), Maro Itoje (England, captain), Tadhg Furlong (Ireland), Dan Sheehan (Ireland), Ellis Genge (England). Reserves: Replacements: Ronan Kelleher (Ireland), Andrew Porter (Ireland), Will Stuart (England), Josh van der Flier (Ireland), Henry Pollock (England), Alex Mitchell (England), Marcus Smith (England), Mack Hansen (Ireland). Brumbies: Andy Muirhead, Ben O'Connell, Ollie Sapsford, David Feliuai, Corey Toole, Declan Meredith, Ryan Lonergan (captain); Tuaina Taii Tualima, Rory Scott, Tom Hooper, Cadeyrn Neville, Lachie Shaw, Rhys van Nek, Lachlan Lonergan, Lington Ieli. Reserves: Liam Bowron, Cameron Orr, Feao Fotuaika, Lachie Hooper, Luke Reimer, Harrison Goddard, Jack Debreczeni, Hudson Creighton. ___ AP rugby:https://apnews.com/hub/rugby

Farrell selects strongest British and Irish Lions squad for Brumbies game to avoid 2013 repeat

Farrell selects strongest British and Irish Lions squad for Brumbies game to avoid 2013 repeat CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — British and Irish ...
Oscar Piastri says he'll fuel his F1 title charge with 'frustration' at race-deciding penaltyNew Foto - Oscar Piastri says he'll fuel his F1 title charge with 'frustration' at race-deciding penalty

SILVERSTONE, England (AP) — Oscar Piastri aims to use the "frustration" he feels at the penalty whichcost him victoryat the British Grand Prix as motivation to win more races as he chases theFormula 1title. Piastri was reluctant to join in the celebrations for McLaren's fourth one-two finish of 2025 after a 10-second penalty imposed for sharp braking behind the safety car meant he finished behind teammate and title rival Lando Norris in Sunday's race. He leads Norris by eight points at the halfway point of the season. McLaren rejected Piastri's request over the radio for the team to cancel out the effect of the penalty by asking the drivers to swap places. It would have put the Australian driver back into the lead and potentially deprived Norris of an emotional first home win. "Lando didn't do anything wrong, so I don't think it would have been particularly fair to have swapped, but I thought I'd at least ask," Piastri said Sunday. "It doesn't change much for the championship. I feel like I did a good job today. I did what I needed to. That's all I need, and I will use the frustration to make sure I win some more races later." McLaren's dilemma Piastri added that he "knew what the answer was going to be" before he messaged the team, but was searching for "a small glimmer of hope." McLaren team principal Andrea Stella said the only way that Piastri would have stayed in front on Sunday would have been if the safety car came out and both McLarens stopped for fresh tires. In that event, Norris would have waited behind Piastri. "Oscar is a very fast, very strong, very determined driver. He proved that," Stella added. "It didn't lead to a win, but I'm sure it will lead to many more wins." It isn't the first time McLaren has had to deal with an awkward radio situation. Piastri's first career win at the Hungarian Grand Prix last year came when the teamordered a swapwith Norris because of pit strategy. Norris only obeyed after a lengthy wait. Inconsistent penalties Once again, F1 is debating whether the rules are enforced consistently. Piastri argued that slowing up the field before a restart is "well within the rules," a tactic he'd used earlier in the same race without incident. "I don't really get it," he said. The stewards ruled that slowing from more than 135mph to 32mph was "erratic braking" and it forced Red Bull's Max Verstappen, who was second behind Piastri at the time, to take evasive action. That left Red Bull team principal Christian Horner reviving his complaint that Mercedes' George Russell had deserved a penalty for slowing behind the safety car at theCanadian Grand Prixlast month. On that occasion, Russell braked and Verstappen, who was second, briefly overtook as he was caught unawares. Russell went on to win, with Verstappen finishing second. Red Bull's post-race protest interrupted Mercedes' victory celebrations and further strained the relationship between the teams. "I wasn't surprised to see him get a penalty. That was what you would expect," Horner said of Piastri's penalty. "It was probably more surprising that George didn't get one in Montreal, to be honest with you." Piastri, too, suggested punishing one incident but not the other seemed inconsistent. "Going back to Canada, I think you had to evade more there than you did today," Piastri said. "So I'm a bit confused, to say the least." ___ AP Auto Racing Writer Jenna Fryer contributed to this report. ___ AP auto racing:https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing

Oscar Piastri says he'll fuel his F1 title charge with 'frustration' at race-deciding penalty

Oscar Piastri says he'll fuel his F1 title charge with 'frustration' at race-deciding penalty SILVERSTONE, England (AP) — Oscar ...
Tesla shares fall as Musk's 'America Party' riles investorsNew Foto - Tesla shares fall as Musk's 'America Party' riles investors

LONDON (Reuters) -Tesla shares fell over 3% on Monday, under pressure from investor concerns about the focus of boss Elon Musk after he announced he would form a new U.S. political party, marking a new escalation in his feud with President Donald Trump. Tesla stock fell over 3% in Frankfurt, pointing to another decline once premarket trading gets underway following the three-day weekend for Independence Day. Veteran tech analyst Dan Ives of Wedbush said Musk was Tesla's "biggest asset" and his decision to dive deeper into politics would likely put the company's shares under pressure. "Tesla needs Musk as CEO and its biggest asset and not heading down the political route yet again...while at the same time getting on Trump's bad side," Ives said in a note on Sunday. "It would also not shock us if the Tesla board gets involved at some point given the political nature of this endeavour depending on how far Musk takes it." Trump on Sunday called Musk's plans to form the "America Party" "ridiculous," launching new barbs at the tech billionaire and saying the Musk ally he once named to lead NASA would have presented a conflict of interest given Musk's business interests in space. (Reporting by Amanda Cooper; Editing by Alun John)

Tesla shares fall as Musk's 'America Party' riles investors

Tesla shares fall as Musk's 'America Party' riles investors LONDON (Reuters) -Tesla shares fell over 3% on Monday, under pressur...

 

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