Pelicans' Herb Jones agrees to 3-year, $68 million extensionNew Foto - Pelicans' Herb Jones agrees to 3-year, $68 million extension

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — New Orleans Pelicans forward Herb Jones has agreed to three-year, $68 million contract extension. Jones' agent, Mark Bartelstein of Priority Sports, confirmed the terms of the deal to The Associated Press on Thursday night. Jones is under contract through the 2028-29 season, with a player option for 2029-30. The 26-year-old former Alabama star has become a valuable role player after the Pelicans made him a second-round pick in 2021. In addition to averaging 10.1 points, 3.8 rebounds and 2.5 assists over his first four NBA seasons, Jones has made a name for himself as a defensive stopper. Jones was named to the 2023-24 All-Defensive first team, and has averaged at least 1.4 steals each season he's been in the league. Though Jones missed most of last season due to shoulder/labrum injuries and played in just 20 games, he was a productive player when healthy. ___ AP NBA:https://apnews.com/hub/nba

Pelicans' Herb Jones agrees to 3-year, $68 million extension

Pelicans' Herb Jones agrees to 3-year, $68 million extension NEW ORLEANS (AP) — New Orleans Pelicans forward Herb Jones has agreed to th...
Netflix's 'Quarterback' series showcases a Kirk Cousins who is longing to return to the VikingsNew Foto - Netflix's 'Quarterback' series showcases a Kirk Cousins who is longing to return to the Vikings

At one point during the second season of the Netflix "Quarterback" series,Kirk Cousinsis relaxing at home with his wife Julie, and he invokes a metaphor for his feelings about moving on from theMinnesota Vikingsafter the 2024 season. "I heard somebody describing it as when you see someone dating the person you used to date in like high school or college," Cousins said. "You're like, 'I used to throw toJordan AddisonandJustin Jeffersonand now someone else is enjoying doing that.' That's interesting." Cousins went on, delving into his Week 14 game during the 2024 season, when hisAtlanta Falconstraveled to face Minnesota for the first time since he'd left the Vikings in free agency. "I was asked by the broadcasting group for the game, 'What about Atlanta made you want to leave Minnesota?' And I said, 'That question is the wrong question. I didn't want to leave Minnesota. There was nothing about anywhere that made me want to leave Minnesota. We wanted to be in Minnesota.' But it became clear that we were gonna be there year to year — and that's what we didn't want. At that point we said, 'All right, we need to look elsewhere. If that's our only option, then we'll be back.' And when we said, 'Well, we looked around and we found there's an opportunity that would be a longer commitment. Would you be interested in giving us that longer commitment?' They said, 'No, we're good with our offer.' I said, 'OK, you made my decision really easy.'" There's plenty to unpack in the Netflix series for all three participants — Cousins, theDetroit Lions' Jared Goffand theCincinnati Bengals' Joe Burrow. But perhaps nothing overshadows the many layers of regret and career derailment that Cousins' storyline brought to the table. It's a storyline he clearly softened a bit when offered the opportunity to speak about signing a four-year, $180 million contract with Atlanta, before watching the Falcons shockingly draftMichael Penix Jr.with the eighth overall pick in the draft just weeks after Cousins committed to the organization. Cousins said he felt "misled" when the draft-day stunner unfolded. That's a diplomatic phrase. Everything I have heard from talking to those close to Cousins is that the more accurate descriptor — and more acidic — is that he was lied to. He signed in Atlanta believing he was going to be the unquestioned starter who absolutely wouldn't need to worry about a creeping rookie first-round pick waiting in the wings. And that's exactly what happened. Now we have the missing nuance to how the 2024 season unfolded, which saw Cousins suffer an arm issue inWeek 10 against the New Orleans Saints, followed by a spiral of clearly injured play, a loss of arm strength, pressing to dig himself out of a hole and finally, succumbing to one of the worst periods of his career that led to a demotion … when he likely should have taken a sustained period to rest his elbow rather than try to hold his job against a Penix takeover. There's a lot of layers in here that illustrate the complexity of navigating the career of a mid-30s quarterback who is trying to squeeze everything out of his remaining years. With Cousins, a cascading set of circumstances presented themselves, putting him in position to have one of the worst cases of buyer's remorse as a free agent, and now entering the 2025 season wanting to be somewhere else but also trapped by the guaranteed salary the Falcons still owe him. Without doing a full play-by-play of Netflix series, here are the most important points of the Cousins journey that are laid out: He believes the Vikings were honest about their plans in their 2024 free-agent negotiations — which they apparently told him included a limited commitment and drafting a young QB to groom — and that led him to lean into the Falcons' opportunity … which he clearly now thinks is a scenario where the team lied to him about its intentions to do the same thing as the Vikings. Cousins regretted leaving the Vikings once the Penix pick was made, with multiple instances where both he and his wife framed Minnesota as a place their family never wanted to leave. Once Cousins was in the saddle as Atlanta's starter and with Penix behind him, his standing on the depth chart remained on his mind. So much so, when he suffered his throwing-arm injury against the Saints in Week 10 — and debatably should have sat down for the best of the team — he instead pushed himself to stay in the lineup out of fear of losing his job. This isn't even a guess. At one point, Cousins references reading a book from Saints legend Drew Brees that espoused the notion of never letting a backup QB get onto the field, out of the sheer fear of losing a job. Taken into wider context, it's not hard to surmise that Cousins very likely should have sat down with his injury. Instead he kept himself in the lineup to limit the potential of losing his starting job. The Netflix series went on to present a very real representation of what can happen with quarterbacks who play with injuries. Cousins' limitations set the stage for some turnovers, gaffes that set the stage for him pressing to reverse his plummet. Things inevitably got worse and then began to infect his confidence and decision-making. In turn, Atlanta's QB decision suddenly became more justifiable. Cousins was playing the worst football of his career, thanks to a combination of health, pressure, decisions and confidence. This is how a $180 million QB loses his job to a rookie. There are a few ways you can look at what unfolded in Atlanta. On one hand — and this is very pro-Cousins — the throwing arm injury he suffered in 2024 and reality that he was still working through his Achilles tear from the previous season is suggestive that Cousins' careerhasn'tgone over the waterfall quite yet. When his precipitous decline occurred in 2024 and observers said he didn't look right physically, it gave credence to his issues being a temporary health problem rather than the cliff-dive of age. On the other hand, you can suggest this is what the Falcons created when they drafted Penix. They signed a veteran to a massive deal and gave him an in-house problem to worry about that would ultimately impact his thinking. Effectively, you could argue Atlanta put Cousins into a position that he had to worry more about his starting job than whether his injury was adversely impacting the team. And in the wake of being put into that position, Cousins chose his own football mortality as a starter over what might have been best for the Falcons when he suffered his injury. Heading into 2025, it's mostly just a dissection for posterity: whatnotto do when you sign a major veteran free-agent quarterback. But because of the Netflix series, it's notjustthat. We now know that Cousins regrets signing with the Falcons. Yes, we can debate whether his signing was all about guaranteed money and if he still would have signed the deal if he knew the Falcons planned to draft a quarterback. Given Cousins' career of being a first-team All-Pro when it comes down tolocking in guaranteed money, you can make the argument that even if both the Vikings and Falcons had told him they were drafting a first-round quarterback, he still would have chosen Atlanta simply because it offered more guaranteed money. But there remains an underlying vibe that comes out the Netflix series. Cousins and his wifeclearlystill have an affinity for their experience in Minnesota. It was showcased when they both seemed to be white-knuckling his return to play the Vikings in 2024 and how he would be accepted by their fan base. The couple appeared to harbor some resentment for how everything unfolded in Atlanta. There's little doubt that Cousins' time with the Vikings was a core experience that he deeply regrets ending. And it stands to reason that he'd be open to returning there — a reality that was supported this offseason when both his camp and the Vikings considered him an "on the radar" player to back upJ.J. McCarthyin 2025. While I have no doubt Cousins would love to get another shot as a starter almost anywhere in the league — maybe even in Atlanta — I also believe he'd ask his agent to move heaven and earth to get him back to Minnesota if for some reason McCarthy's debut doesn't go as planned in 2025. That's one of the clearest storylines in this season of "Quarterback." Cousins didn't want to leave Minnesota, and regrets taking money and security over established happiness. Now he's a backup in Atlanta trying to find his way back to that place. There's nothing saying the Vikings would want to entertain a Cousins return if things went sideways with McCarthy early in 2025. But the message is definitely out there. Cousins is pining for his ex. And all he needs is any opportunity to get a second chance to put it all back together.

Netflix's 'Quarterback' series showcases a Kirk Cousins who is longing to return to the Vikings

Netflix's 'Quarterback' series showcases a Kirk Cousins who is longing to return to the Vikings At one point during the second s...
Moscow's top diplomat to visit North Korea as Pyongyang gets pulled deeper into Russia's war on UkraineNew Foto - Moscow's top diplomat to visit North Korea as Pyongyang gets pulled deeper into Russia's war on Ukraine

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov is set to visit North Korea this weekend, in a sign of deepening relations between Moscow and Pyongyang as North Korea gets pulled deeper into Russia's war in Ukraine. Lavrov "will make a visit to the Democratic People's Republic of Korea on July 11-13 for the talks that will be held as part of the second round of strategic dialogue between the top diplomats," foreign ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova said, according to Russian state media agency TASS. North Korea's state news agency, KCNA, also reported Wednesday that Lavrov would be visiting "at the invitation of" Pyongyang's foreign ministry. Lavrov's trip comes at a crucial time for Russian-North Korean relations, with Pyongyangset to deploy an additional 25,000 to 30,000 soldiersto assist Moscow's scaled-up assault on Ukraine, according to Ukrainian intelligence – adding to the estimated 11,000 soldiers Pyongyang sent last year. It also comes as the US has grown increasingly frustrated with Russia. US President Donald Trump has accused his counterpart Vladimir Putin of throwing "bullsh*t" at peace talks, and pledged more support for Ukraine. The trip could further strengthen an alliance that has the potential to reshape not only the war in Ukraine but the security dynamic in Asia. While in North Korea, Lavrov will likely sit down with his North Korean counterpart Choe Son Hui, who visited Moscow for the first round of strategic talks in November 2024, according to TASS. At the time, Lavrov praised what he called "very close contacts" with the North Korean military and intelligence services. It's possible Lavrov could also meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. Despite sustaining heavy battlefield losses, North Korea has become increasingly integrated into Russia's war. An estimated 4,000 North Korean soldiers have been killed or wounded in Russia,according to Western officials. On the ground in the Russian border region of Kursk, where North Korean soldiers helped repel Ukraine's incursion last year, the reclusive state's soldiers are reportedly living in dugouts, fighting – and dying – alongside Russian troops. Satellite images obtained by CNN showed cargo planes and troop transport ships moving between North Korea and Russia, hinting at major military logistics underway. Facing shortages on the front line, even as its own factories work round-the-clock, Russia has become reliant on North Korea for additional weaponry. Training manuals for North Korean artillery have been translated into Russian, in a sign of both the ubiquity of the weapons and the increasing interoperability between Moscow's and Pyongyang's armed forces. A report from 11 UN member states last month said that Pyongyang sent at least 100 ballistic missiles and 9 million artillery shells to Russia in 2024. Russia has intensified its aerial assault on Ukraine in recent weeks, launching a record 728 drones and 13 missiles Wednesday. On Thursday, Russian drones attacked the capital Kyiv from all directions in anapparent new tacticthat tested Ukraine's strained defenses. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Moscow’s top diplomat to visit North Korea as Pyongyang gets pulled deeper into Russia’s war on Ukraine

Moscow's top diplomat to visit North Korea as Pyongyang gets pulled deeper into Russia's war on Ukraine Russian Foreign Minister Ser...
Security, trade in focus as Australia PM Albanese heads to ChinaNew Foto - Security, trade in focus as Australia PM Albanese heads to China

By Kirsty Needham SYDNEY (Reuters) -Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese leaves for Shanghai on Saturday on an official visit to China where regional security tensions and efforts to grow economic ties are likely to dominate talks. Australia's exports to China, its largest trading partner, span agriculture and energy but are dominated by iron ore, and Albanese will travel with executives from mining giants Rio Tinto, BHP and Fortescue and hold business events in three cities over six days. "The relationship in China means jobs in Australia, it's as simple as that," Albanese told reporters on Friday. Albanese's second visit to Beijing, where he will meet President Xi Jinping, comes after Canberra stepped up screening of Chinese investment in critical minerals and as U.S. President Donald Trump rattles the global economy with sweeping import tariffs. Albanese is yet to meet Trump, after scheduled talks at the G7 were cancelled when the U.S. president left early. The United States, Australia's major security ally, is reviewing the AUKUS nuclear submarine partnership amid concern selling submarines to Australia could weaken U.S. deterrence to China. Foreign Minister Penny Wong warned in a speech in Malaysia on Thursday that China continues to project military power regionally with an objective to change the balance of power, saying Beijing's nuclear and conventional military build-up was "worrying". AUKUS contributed to "collective deterrence in our region," she said. Richard Maude, an Asia Society non-resident fellow and former Australian intelligence chief, said Albanese needed to expand the economic relationship with China but also "get through the visit in a way that makes clear to Australia's close partners and to the Australian public that Australia is talking clearly and frankly to China about aspects of China's behaviour that concern us". The Chinese navy held live-fire exercises in the Tasman Sea between Australia and New Zealand with no advance warning in February, and there have been tense encounters between Australian and Chinese military aircraft in the disputed South China Sea. While Beijing is keen to move ties forward, its proposals for cooperation on artificial intelligence, for example, have already met with a cool response, said Maude, who wrote Australia's 2017 foreign policy white paper. Australia's two-way trade with China was worth A$312 billion last year, or a quarter of all Australian trade. Ties have stabilised since 2020 when China imposed unofficial bans on A$20 billion in Australian exports. Direct engagement with Chinese leaders was important for Australia's security, Albanese told reporters on Friday. "We cooperate where we can and we disagree where we must, and we're able to have those honest conversations about some of the disagreements that are there," he said. Treasurer Jim Chalmers has said economic ties with China are a priority, but also complex. Australia's increased screening of Chinese investment in critical minerals, renewable energy and key infrastructure is likely to be raised by Beijing, company executives told Reuters, although on Tuesday Chalmers said Australia would not ease its scrutiny. "The government understands it is not in Australia's national interest to further increase China's stranglehold on the critical minerals supply chain," said Maude. Geoff Raby, a former Australian ambassador to China, said China would probably raise its ambition to join the 11-member regional trade pact, the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), which Australia chairs. "The most harmful thing is to adopt policies that force China to become more isolationist or which encourage those domestic forces in China who favour more inward-looking policies," Raby said. Albanese will meet businesses in Shanghai on Monday, before travelling to Beijing for an annual leaders' dialogue with Premier Li Qiang, and a company roundtable, and then head to the southwestern Chinese city of Chengdu. (Reporting by Kirsty Needham in Sydney; Editing by Kate Mayberry)

Security, trade in focus as Australia PM Albanese heads to China

Security, trade in focus as Australia PM Albanese heads to China By Kirsty Needham SYDNEY (Reuters) -Australian Prime Minister Anthony Alba...
Cooper Flagg vs. Bronny and more Summer League takeaways + State of basketball in LANew Foto - Cooper Flagg vs. Bronny and more Summer League takeaways + State of basketball in LA

How did Cooper Flagg fare in his NBA Summer League debut? KOC breaks down the Mavericks' matchup against the Lakers, with Dallas edging out Los Angeles 87-85. He shares more of his observations from around the league, including Herb Jones' contract extension with the New Orleans Pelicans. Then, KOC is joined by Jason Timpf from Hoops Tonight and Daman Rangoola from Stratechery to discuss the state of basketball in Los Angeles. Is LeBron James' silence towards Deandre Ayton a sign he wants out of LA? And which Western Conference team is most likely to take out the OKC Thunder in next year's playoffs? (0:26) - Biggest takeaways from day 1 of NBA Summer League (5:30) - What's going on with Lebron and the Lakers? (23:43) - Are the Clippers or Lakers in a better position to win this season? (32:58) - Which team is best poised to come out of the West next season? 🖥️Watch thisfull episode on YouTube Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family athttps://apple.co/3zEuTQjor atYahoo Sports Podcasts

Cooper Flagg vs. Bronny and more Summer League takeaways + State of basketball in LA

Cooper Flagg vs. Bronny and more Summer League takeaways + State of basketball in LA How did Cooper Flagg fare in his NBA Summer League debu...
Cubs' Pete Crow-Armstrong 3rd player in MLB history with 25 homers, 25 steals before All-Star breakNew Foto - Cubs' Pete Crow-Armstrong 3rd player in MLB history with 25 homers, 25 steals before All-Star break

Pete Crow-Armstrong's breakout season continues to look more impressive by the day. The third-year star hit his 24th and 25th home runs of the year in theChicago Cubs'8-1 winover theMinnesota Twinson Thursday. With his 25th homer, Crow-Armstrong became the third player in MLB history to reach 25 home runs and 25 stolen bases before the MLB All-Star break. He joins Bobby Bonds and Eric Davis as the only others to achieve that feat. Crow-Armstrong, 23, reached the 25/25 mark in 92 games. Davis got to 25-25 in 69 games during the 1987 season (he had 27 homers and 33 steals in 74 games by the All-Star break), and Bonds did so in 91 games in 1973 (he was at 25 homers and 28 steals in 97 games), according toMLB.com's Sarah Langs. Alfonso Soriano also got to 25-25 in 91 games in 2002 but had 20 homers and 23 steals at the All-Star break that season. Shohei Ohtani,baseball's first 50-50 batterlast year, must have been at 25-25 by the All-Star break, right? Almost, but not quite. He had 26 homers and 23 stolen bases at the halfway point. Crow-Armstrong first went deep on Thursday with a two-run shot offChris Paddackin the third inning, crushing a 93.5 mph fastball left out over the plate to center field. After walking in the fifth, the Cubs center fielder then led off the seventh by lifting anAnthony Misiewiczcurveball in the middle of the strike zone to the right-center-field seats. PCA AGAIN!Pete Crow-Armstrong mashes No. 25 on the year 😤pic.twitter.com/wtp4GlG66v — MLB (@MLB)July 10, 2025 Including Thursday's two-home-run performance, Crow-Armstrong has five multi-homer games this season. He has more than doubled the 10 home runs he hit last year in his first full season as a major leaguer. And he'll almost certainly surpass the 123 games and 410 plate appearances he totaled last season. Adding a double in the ninth, Crow-Armstrong finished 3-for-4 with two homers and three RBI on Thursday. He's batting .271/.309/.560 with 25 homers, 67 RBI and 27 steals with three games left to play before the All-Star break. The Cubs finish with a weekend series at theNew York Yankees. PCA's 25 homers are tied for sixth in MLB with teammateSeiya Suzuki. PCA's 70 RBI rank seventh, and his 27 steals are third in the league. Mets fans will surely appreciate mentioning that Crow-Armstrong was the team's first-round pick (No. 19 overall) in the 2020 draft, and hewas traded to the Cubsfor Javier Baez and Trevor Williams in 2021. Crow-Armstrong will start his first MLB All-Star Game on Tuesday,elected to the lineup by fans.

Cubs' Pete Crow-Armstrong 3rd player in MLB history with 25 homers, 25 steals before All-Star break

Cubs' Pete Crow-Armstrong 3rd player in MLB history with 25 homers, 25 steals before All-Star break Pete Crow-Armstrong's breakout s...
South Korea, US and Japan hold aerial drill in demonstration of strength against North KoreaNew Foto - South Korea, US and Japan hold aerial drill in demonstration of strength against North Korea

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Top South Korean, U.S. and Japanese military officers urged North Korea to cease all unlawful activities that threaten regional security, as the three nations flew advanced warplanes fora joint exercisein a show of force against the North. The development came Friday asRussian Foreign MinisterSergei Lavrov was to travel to North Korea amid booming military and other cooperation between the two countries that have raised concerns among their neighbors. During their regular meeting in Seoul on Friday, the chairmen of the joint chiefs of staff from South Korea, the U.S. and Japan discussed North Korea'sdeployment of troopsto Russia to support its war against Ukraine and Russia's potential transfer of military technology to North Korea in return. "They urged the DPRK to immediately cease all unlawful activities to destabilize the Korean Peninsula, the Indo-Pacific, and beyond, and pledged to continue working together to respond to the DPRK's threats," the three top military officers said in a joint statement. DPRK stands for the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, North Korea's formal name. North Korea and Russia have grown sharply closer in recent years, with North Korea supplying thousands of troops andammunitions to Russiain return for economic and military assistance. Seoul, Washington and their partners worry Russia might provide North Korea with sensitive technologies that can enhance its nuclear and missile programs as well. The three joint chiefs of staff — South Korea's Kim Myung-soo, the United States' Dan Caine and Japan's Yoshida Yoshihide — discussed various ways to deepen their cooperation in order to ensure peace and stability in the region, according to the joint statement. Also Friday, the three countries staged a trilateral aerial drill in international waters off South Korea's southern Jeju island. The training, which involves America's nuclear-capable B-52H bomber, is meant to improve the deterrence and response capabilities against North Korea's advancing nuclear and missile programs, according to South Korea's Defense Ministry. In recent years, South Korea, the U.S. and Japan have been expanding or restarting their regularmilitary training exercisesto cope with North Korea's enlarging nuclear arsenal. North Korea views such U.S.-led drills as invasion rehearsals and often responds with missile tests. Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister, was to begin a three-day trip to North Korea on Friday, according to North Korean and Russian state media reports earlier this week. Russia's Tass news agency, citing Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova, reported Wednesday that Lavrov's North Korea trip was part of the second round of "strategic dialogue" with his North Korean counterpart Choe Son Hui. Lavrov and Choe's earlier meeting took place in November in Moscow. Some South Korean analysts said Lavrov may discuss arranging a visit by North Korean leader Kim Jong Un to Russia.

South Korea, US and Japan hold aerial drill in demonstration of strength against North Korea

South Korea, US and Japan hold aerial drill in demonstration of strength against North Korea SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Top South Korean, U.S...

 

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