Natasha Howard scores 26 and Fever beat Dream 81-76 despite Caitlin Clark not making a 3New Foto - Natasha Howard scores 26 and Fever beat Dream 81-76 despite Caitlin Clark not making a 3

ATLANTA (AP) — Natasha Howard scored 26 points and the Indiana Fever overcame Caitlin Clark's cold long-distance shooting to beat the Atlanta Dream 81-76 before a sellout crowd on Thursday night to split a two-game series this week. Atlantawon 91-90at Indiana on Tuesday night. Clark missed each of her five 3-pointers. That ended a streak of 140 games, including the WNBA regular season and playoffs and the bulk of her college career at Iowa, with at least one 3. The last time Clark was held without a 3 was Jan. 13, 2022, when she went 0 for 6 against Purdue during her sophomore season. Clark and teammate Aliyah Boston each went to the bench with four fouls early in the third quarter. Clark finished with 11 points with six assists. Kelsey Mitchell's 3-pointer gave Indiana a 76-75 lead. Clark found Boston for a layup, only her second field goal, that extended the lead to 79-76. Rhyne Howard led Atlanta with 24 points. Clark saidbefore the gameshe was enjoying the NBA Indiana Pacers' playoff run. She said she took video of herself at she reacted to Tyrese Haliburton's jumper that sent Game 1 of the Pacers' Eastern Conference finals against the New York Knicks into overtime before Indiana took the138-135 winon Wednesday night. Sophie Cunningham scored nine points in her debut for Indiana after missing the first two games with a right ankle sprain. Coach Stephanie White said Cunningham was cleared to play with no restriction on her minutes. The Dream announced guard Jordin Canada, out with a right knee injury, will resume basketball activities "in the coming weeks." The Dream moved the game to State Farm Arena, home to the NBA's Atlanta Hawks, and said shortly before tipoff that the 16,888-seat venue was sold out. The Dream's normal home, Gateway Center Arena, holds only 3,500. ___ AP WNBA:https://apnews.com/hub/wnba-basketball

Natasha Howard scores 26 and Fever beat Dream 81-76 despite Caitlin Clark not making a 3

Natasha Howard scores 26 and Fever beat Dream 81-76 despite Caitlin Clark not making a 3 ATLANTA (AP) — Natasha Howard scored 26 points and ...
Sam Bennett, Panthers roll to 2nd road rout of HurricanesNew Foto - Sam Bennett, Panthers roll to 2nd road rout of Hurricanes

The Florida Panthers are two wins away from advancing to the Stanley Cup Final for a third straight season following a dominant effort on Thursday. Yet even after a 5-0 win over the Carolina Hurricanes in Raleigh, N.C., gave Florida a 2-0 lead in the Eastern Conference finals, the defending NHL champions aren't resting on their laurels. The best-of-seven series shifts to Sunrise, Fla., for Game 3 on Saturday and Game 4 on Monday. "We got what we wanted, but still obviously lots of work to do," Panthers center Sam Bennett said. "We're not gonna relax or sit back now. We know it's gonna get more difficult for sure." Bennett recorded two goals and an assist, Matthew Tkachuk had a goal and an assist, and Carter Verhaeghe added three assists for Florida on Thursday. Gustav Forsling and Aleksander Barkov also scored, and Aaron Ekblad and Evan Rodrigues each notched two assists. Panthers goalie Sergei Bobrovsky made 17 saves for his third shutout of the postseason. "He's incredible every night," Bennett said. "His composure in the net and his focus, game in, game out, he's always dialed in. He makes the big save when he needs to and gives our team so much life, so much momentum." Panthers winger Sam Reinhart left the game in the first period after sustaining a lower-body injury on a hit from Carolina center Sebastian Aho. "We'll get him looked at tomorrow," coach Paul Maurice said of Reinhart. Carolina goalie Frederik Andersen allowed four goals on 16 shots before he was replaced by Pyotr Kochetkov to start the third period. Andersen yielded all of the Panthers' goals in a 5-2 defeat on Tuesday. Kochetkov turned aside four of the five shots he faced. "Sometimes it's easier to recover from a game like that because there's nothing good out of it," Hurricanes coach Rod Brind'Amour said. "... There was nothing good on this game for us. We're going to have to learn from it. Everybody has to be better." Forsling gave Florida a 1-0 lead at 1:17 of the first period, taking a short feed from Tkachuk to the top of the slot and snapping it past Andersen's glove. Tkachuk made it 2-0 at 11:41 of the first. Verhaeghe retrieved a pass behind the net and cut out to the front to try to beat Andersen, but his shot slid under Andersen's stick and across the crease to Tkachuk for the tip-in. Bennett deflected Verhaeghe's shot on a power play to push the margin to 3-0 at 15:50 of the first. "Obviously we've got to figure out how to win a period," Brind'Amour said. "I think we came out with the right intentions but trying to do too much, and then we're not doing the things we do as a team that normally helps us. ... "I didn't know what I was watching in the first period, and that didn't go well. I said the other day, the margin here is tight. We're not going to beat this team if we're not on the same page." Aho appeared to get Carolina on the board 51 seconds into the second period, but the Panthers challenged for offside. After a video review, the goal was overturned. "The offside was so important that got called back," Maurice said. "It's 3-0, but at 3-1 with 39 minutes left, you've got a problem. That was a really pivotal moment." The Hurricanes had one of their few chances with 3 1/2 minutes remaining in the middle period, but Seth Jarvis' pass attempt to William Carrier during an odd-man rush was denied by a diving stick block from Forsling. That prompted repeated chants of "Shoot the puck" from the crowd, with Carolina stuck on seven shots on goal. Bennett's second goal of the night extended the gap to 4-0 with 39 seconds left in the second frame. Verhaeghe looped around the net and the puck rolled off his stick over to Bennett on the other side, where he put a snap shot past Andersen's left skate. "In big moments, we seem to have a lot of guys that rise to the occasion," Verhaeghe said. Barkov deflected Ekblad's shot past Kochetkov's glove on a power play at 13:49 of the third period for the final tally. "It's not easy," Hurricanes captain Jordan Staal said. "We've got a long road ahead of us, but there's no quit in this team. It just takes one. We'll focus on this next game and we'll go from there." --Field Level Media

Sam Bennett, Panthers roll to 2nd road rout of Hurricanes

Sam Bennett, Panthers roll to 2nd road rout of Hurricanes The Florida Panthers are two wins away from advancing to the Stanley Cup Final for...
Trump will sign nuclear power orders on Friday, energy chief Wright saysNew Foto - Trump will sign nuclear power orders on Friday, energy chief Wright says

(Reuters) -U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright said that President Donald Trump will sign executive orders on Friday aimed at boosting nuclear power. Reuters reported on Thursday that Trump would sign orders that aim to jumpstart the nuclear energy industry by easing the regulatory process on approvals for new reactors and strengthening fuel supply chains. (Reporting by Rami Ayyub; Editing by Mark Porter)

Trump will sign nuclear power orders on Friday, energy chief Wright says

Trump will sign nuclear power orders on Friday, energy chief Wright says (Reuters) -U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright said that President D...
Trump's image of dead 'white farmers' came from Reuters footage in Congo, not South AfricaNew Foto - Trump's image of dead 'white farmers' came from Reuters footage in Congo, not South Africa

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump showed a screenshot of Reuters video taken in the Democratic Republic of Congo as part of what he falsely presented on Wednesday as evidence of mass killings of white South Africans. "These are all white farmers that are being buried," said Trump, holding up a print-out of an article accompanied by the picture during a contentious Oval Office meeting with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa. In fact, the video, published by Reuters on February 3 and subsequently verified by the news agency's fact check team, showed humanitarian workers lifting body bags in the Congolese city of Goma. The image was pulled from Reuters footage shot following deadly battles with Rwanda-backed M23 rebels. The blog post showed to Ramaphosa by Trump during the White House meeting was published by American Thinker, a conservative online magazine, about conflict and racial tensions in South Africa and Congo. The post did not caption the image but identified it as a "YouTube screen grab" with a link to a video news report about Congo on YouTube, which credited Reuters. The White House did not respond to a request for comment. Andrea Widburg, managing editor at American Thinker and the author of the post in question, wrote in reply to a Reuters query that Trump had "misidentified the image." She added, however, that the post, which referred to what it called Ramaphosa's "dysfunctional, race-obsessed Marxist government", had "pointed out the increasing pressure placed on white South Africans." The footage from which the picture was taken shows a mass burial following an M23 assault on Goma, filmed by Reuters video journalist Djaffar Al Katanty. "That day, it was extremely difficult for journalists to get in ... I had to negotiate directly with M23 and coordinate with the ICRC to be allowed to film," Al Katanty said. "Only Reuters has video." Al Katanty said seeing Trump holding the article with the screengrab of his video came as a shock. "In view of all the world, President Trump used my image, used what I filmed in DRC to try to convince President Ramaphosa that in his country, white people are being killed by Black people," Al Katanty said. Ramaphosa visited Washington this week to try to mend ties with the United States after persistent criticism from Trump in recent months over South Africa's land laws, foreign policy, and alleged bad treatment of its white minority, which South Africa denies. Trump interrupted the televised meeting with Ramaphosa to play a video, which he said showed evidence of genocide of white farmers in South Africa. This conspiracy theory, which has circulated in far-right chat rooms for years, is based on false claims. Trump then proceeded to flip through printed copies of articles that he said detailed murders of white South Africans, saying "death, death, death, horrible death". (This story has been refiled to fix a typo in paragraph 3) (Reporting by Stephanie Burnett, Milan Pavicic, Nellie Peyton and Cooper Inveen; Writing by Nellie Peyton; Editing by Silvia Aloisi and Daniel Wallis)

Trump's image of dead 'white farmers' came from Reuters footage in Congo, not South Africa

Trump's image of dead 'white farmers' came from Reuters footage in Congo, not South Africa JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - U.S. Preside...
Scottie Scheffler opens Colonial with an eagle and trails tour rookie John Pak by 5 shotsNew Foto - Scottie Scheffler opens Colonial with an eagle and trails tour rookie John Pak by 5 shots

FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) —Scottie Schefflerand John Pak enjoyed the same start to the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial with eagles on their respective first holes. The world No. 1couldn't keep up with the PGA Tour rookie from there. Four days after winning histhird major at the PGA Championship, Scheffler opened his attempt at three consecutive victories with a 2-under 68 Thursday. Pak shot 63 for a three-shot lead over nine players, J.J. Spaun the highest-ranked among them at 27th. Tommy Fleetwood and 2023 British Open champion Brian Harman were among a group of nine players four back of Pak, and Scheffler headlined the 15 players who were five strokes behind. Defending champion Davis Riley, who is playing the first two rounds with Scheffler, had two double bogeys on the front nine and shot 3-over 73 on the cozy course made famous by Ben Hogan, the only player to win Colonial in consecutive years (1946-47 and 1952-53). Riley is coming off a runner-up finish to Scheffler at the PGA. The others at 4 under with Spaun were Patrick Rodgers, Ryo Hisatsune, Matti Schmid, Beau Hossler, Bud Cauley, J.T. Poston and Ben Griffin. Jordan Spieth, Scheffler's fellow hometown favorite and former Texas Longhorn, shot 69 with birdies on two of his final four holes. Scheffler opened the second of what he considers his hometown events by holinga putt for eagle from off the greenon the par-5 first hole and a 23-footer for birdie on No. 2. The Dallas resident played the final 16 holes in 1 over, missing enough fairways and greens to prevent a run at Pak, who finished several hours earlier. The first of Scheffler's consecutive wins came three weeks ago at his hometown CJ Cup Byron Nelson, which he led wire-to-wire foran eight-shot victorywhile tying the tour scoring record of 253. Scheffler will have to come from behind this time, just as he did in the PGA Championship at Quail Hollow, where he faced the same first-round deficit before surging into the lead in the third round and repelling a Sunday charge from Jon Rahm. Scheffler skipped some of his prep work in the interest of rest and recovery, then showed up on the eve of Colonial at Game 1 of the NHL's Western Conference final. The Dallas Starsbeat Edmonton 6-3with a big third-period rally. "It was fun going to the hockey game last night," said Scheffler, who will have an early tee time Friday. "I was able to still get home and get a decent amount of rest. Waking up the time I'm going to be waking up tomorrow, I'm going to need a little bit of extra rest. Just get home and get ready for tomorrow." Scheffler hit just five fairways on a warm and windy afternoon, and even found trouble with one of those when he delicately tried to shoo a bug off his ball at the par-4 15th after caddie Ted Scott's towel-waving attempt to create enough breeze didn't work. Scheffler's approach landed 30 feet away, and he two-putted for par. "On a day where I didn't hit a lot of fairways on a golf course where you have to hit a lot of fairways, I posted a decent score," Scheffler said. "Anything under par around here in these conditions isn't a bad score. Obviously, I wish it was a little bit lower, but overall I feel decent about the position I'm in." Starting on the par-4 10th, Pak holed a 147-yard approach. He added five birdies in a bogey-free round. The 26-year-old Korn Ferry Tour graduate, and one-time winner on the PGA Tour Canada, is the fifth rookie to hold a first-round lead in an individual event this year. The New Jersey-raised Pak found all the motivation he needed when his New York Knicks blew a 14-point lead in the final three minutes ofa 138-135 loss to the Indiana Pacersin Game 1 of the NBA's Eastern Conference finals. "I'm a die-hard Knicks fan, and that was historically one of the worst losses I've ever seen in my life," said Pak, who has one top-25 finish among seven made cuts in 12 events this year. "There was a fire lit under me, yeah, this morning. I was a little (mad) about that." Joel Dahmenmade a hole-in-oneon the 186-yard 13th when his tee shot stopped about 25 feet behind the hole, spun back and went in. The 37-year-old's first career ace was followed by seven bogeys as he shot 74. "Nine years out here, that's a lot of par-3 attempts," Dahmen said. "A lot have looked good, and to finally go in was pretty cool." ___ AP golf:https://apnews.com/hub/golf

Scottie Scheffler opens Colonial with an eagle and trails tour rookie John Pak by 5 shots

Scottie Scheffler opens Colonial with an eagle and trails tour rookie John Pak by 5 shots FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) —Scottie Schefflerand John ...

 

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