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    One N.B.A. Team Walked Out. A Generation of Athletes Followed.

    LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. — George Hill is hardly the biggest star in professional basketball. But he was the one who took the lead when a handful of players on the Milwaukee Bucks began talking about the police shooting of Jacob Blake a few days earlier in Wisconsin.The players, led by Hill, implored their teammates not to play in their playoff game on Wednesday, believing they had a responsibility to make a statement about the how the police treat Black people.What they envisioned — a one game, on-the-fly protest — instead inspired one of the broadest political statements across sports leagues that the United States had ever seen: walkouts involving hundreds of athletes in professional men’s and women’s basketball, baseball and soccer, as well as one of the world’s biggest tennis stars.LeBron James, basketball’s most famous athlete, said on Twitter that change “happens with action and needs to happen NOW!” President Trump, who had previously attacked the league and had publicly sparred with James, who plays for the Los Angeles Lakers, said people were “a little tired of the N.B.A.”By Thursday afternoon, the N.B.A. players had pledged to return to play, according to three people who were part of the discussions and spoke on condition of anonymity because final details of a comeback had not been worked out.“We are hopeful to resume games either Friday or Saturday,” a league spokesman, Mike Bass, said in a statement.But the players’ message was still echoing — within and well beyond the world of sports, perhaps to greater effect than ever before.More baseball, hockey and basketball games were called off on Thursday, along with football practices and other events as athletes urged greater focus on conversations about racism and police brutality.Basketball players, especially women, have been at the forefront of discussions and demonstrations about social injustice for years. That has morphed amid the police killings of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, and the shooting of Blake, a Black man who was shot in the back multiple times by the police in Kenosha, Wis., as he tried to enter his vehicle.Following their walkout, Bucks players, led by Hill and his teammate Sterling Brown, called for elected officials in Wisconsin to take concrete steps to hold the police officers accountable for how they treated Blake.“For this to occur, it’s imperative for the Wisconsin state Legislature to reconvene after months of inaction and take up meaningful measures to address issues of police accountability, brutality and criminal justice reform,” Hill said.The walkouts drew the attention of several prominent political figures. Among the first to weigh in was former President Barack Obama, who has personal relationships with several N.B.A. players. He praised the Bucks in a tweet on Wednesday “for standing up for what they believe in.”The reaction from the White House was much more critical.Along with Trump’s comments, Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law and one of his senior advisers, said on CNBC, “I think that the N.B.A. players are very fortunate that they have the financial position where they’re able to take a night off from work without having to have the consequences to themselves financially.”The players’ action, as impactful as it has been, has also come with some of its own challenges. At a private players’ meeting hours after the walkout, some players expressed frustration with the Bucks for surprising the union, their opponents and the league with their protest, according to two people who attended the meeting but were not authorized to discuss the details publicly.Then, after the protest spread and inspired some players to reconsider playing at all this season, the Bucks quickly backed resuming play, rankling some rival players, including James, according to the people.Several N.B.A. and W.N.B.A. players have increased their social justice efforts in recent months. James and other top athletes formed More Than a Vote to protect voting rights and reach out to Black voters. Stephen Curry, the Golden State Warriors guard, appeared in a video at the Democratic National Convention in support of Joseph R. Biden Jr., the party’s presidential nominee. Renee Montgomery, who plays for the W.N.B.A.’s Atlanta Dream, skipped the season altogether to focus on social justice efforts.Recently, the entire Atlanta team and others in the league publicly endorsed an opponent of Senator Kelly Loeffler, a Republican from Georgia who is a co-owner of the Dream, because she criticized the Black Lives Matter movement and the W.N.B.A. players’ social activism.Earlier this month, the N.B.A.’s owners, many of them billionaires, said they would donate $300 million over 10 years — roughly $1 million per year for every team — to a fund “dedicated to creating greater economic empowerment in the Black community,” according to a news release. In a Thursday afternoon video conference, N.B.A. players — the Lakers’ James among them — asked for an greater commitment from the owners, with the Charlotte Hornets’ owner Michael Jordan joining the call as much as an advocate for the players as an ownership peer.Tilman Fertitta, the owner of the Houston Rockets, said on CNBC that he did not think that the stoppage was directed at the league’s owners.“I think they just needed a pause,” Fertitta said Thursday. “They’ve been playing every other day. These are our partners, OK? We’re 50-50 partners. And if we do well, they do well. And if the league doesn’t do well, none of us do well. And they realize that.”With basketball games called off on Thursday, the prior day’s insurgency led professional and college teams in other sports to hurriedly scratch their plans, too.In baseball, at least seven games were postponed. The Mets and Marlins stood on the field at game time for 42 seconds of silence; 42 was the number worn by Jackie Robinson, who broke baseball’s color barrier in 1947. The players then retreated to their clubhouses, leaving behind a “Black Lives Matter” T-shirt over home plate.Ron Rivera, the coach of the professional football team in Washington, a franchise with a troubled history on race, said the day would be reserved for “reflection instead” of football. The New York Jets, the Indianapolis Colts and the Green Bay Packers were among the teams that also canceled practices.Troy Vincent, the N.F.L.’s head of football operations and the highest ranking Black person at the league office, spoke tearfully on ESPN Radio about his fears for his three sons and his support for the athletes who sat out games.“I’ve got a 22-year-old and a 20-year-old and a 15-year-old that I’m trying to prevent from being hunted, and their teachable moment and I’m trusting my Lord, trusting him,” Vincent said. “I’m just — I’m proud of what the guys and the women are doing.”Boston College, Kentucky and South Florida abandoned plans for football practices on Thursday, unsurprising moves toward the end of an unusually vibrant off-season of activism by college athletes.“What happened to Jacob Blake is history repeating itself,” Max Richardson, a linebacker at Boston College, wrote on Twitter. “These countless tragedies are reoccurring. There can be no more ignorance. Changes WILL come.”Playoff hockey games that were scheduled for Thursday and Friday were also postponed.It was not always clear how long the various teams and players would keep their sports activities on pause.Four baseball teams that had protested on Wednesday resumed play on Thursday, and Naomi Osaka, a Black woman who has won two Grand Slam titles, said she would play in the Western & Southern Open’s semifinals on Friday. Osaka had planned to quit the tournament because there were “more important matters at hand,” but she relented after tennis officials agreed to delay matches by a day.By the end of Thursday, some in sports said they were already turning to political action beyond demonstrations. Mike Krzyzewski, the men’s basketball coach at Duke, told a rally of athletes that his players would register to vote later in the day.“This thing can be won, and your generation is the generation that’s going to do it,” he said without endorsing any particular candidate. “I grew up a long time ago in the ’60s. I thought it was headed in the right direction. Damn, I was wrong. I want to be right.”Marc Stein reported from Lake Buena Vista, Sopan Deb from New York and Alan Blinder from Atlanta. Reporting was contributed by Ken Belson, Gillian R. Brassil, Christopher Clarey, Matthew Futterman, Shauntel Lowe, Ben Rothenberg and David Waldstein. More

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    Milwaukee Bucks Boycott Prompts Wave of Games Halted in Protest

    LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. — Athletes from the N.B.A., W.N.B.A., Major League Baseball and Major League Soccer took their boldest stand yet against systemic racism and police brutality, boycotting games on Wednesday in response to the police shooting of a Black man in Kenosha, Wis. The moves dramatically escalated a season of athletes demonstrating for social justice as some expressed doubts about continuing to play amid widespread social unrest.The wave of boycotts and postponements was sparked by Milwaukee Bucks players’ responding to the shooting of Jacob Blake by refusing to come out of their locker room on Wednesday afternoon for a playoff game against the Orlando Magic. Two more N.B.A. playoff games scheduled for Wednesday night were quickly postponed, inspiring players in other leagues to follow the Bucks’ lead and causing numerous professional basketball, baseball and soccer games to be called off because athletes would not participate.Players from the N.B.A. and the W.N.B.A. have long been at the forefront of protests against racism and police brutality — efforts that have broadened in recent months after the police killings of George Floyd, a Black man in Minnesota, and Breonna Taylor, a Black woman in Kentucky, and as the leagues took an extended hiatus because of the coronavirus pandemic.Then on Sunday, the police in Kenosha, Wis., shot Blake, 29, in the back several times as he tried to get into his vehicle.The shooting prompted numerous N.B.A. players and coaches to express frustration and anger that the various measures they have been taking for weeks to support the Black Lives Matter movement, such as kneeling during the national anthem and wearing jerseys bearing social justice messages, were having little impact. Some also began to question, as the Nets’ star guard Kyrie Irving did in June before the 2019-20 season resumed, whether providing entertainment through basketball was actually diverting public attention away from the broader social justice movement.Fueled by that frustration, Milwaukee’s players stunned league officials by organizing Wednesday’s boycott, a walkout that had virtually no precedent in N.B.A. history.Milwaukee’s George Hill gave a glimpse of the Bucks’ mind-set on Monday when he openly questioned whether the league’s return had successfully amplified the players’ messaging.“We shouldn’t have even come to this damn place to be honest,” Hill said. “I think coming here just took all the focal points off what the issues are.”On Wednesday night, more than three hours after Milwaukee’s game against Orlando had been scheduled to start, Hill and his teammate Sterling Brown, read a team statement.“We are calling for justice for Jacob Blake and demand the officers be held accountable,” Hill said. “For this to occur, it’s imperative for the Wisconsin state Legislature to reconvene after months of inaction and take up meaningful measures to address issues of police accountability, brutality and criminal justice reform.”A joint statement issued by the Bucks’ three main owners — Marc Lasry, Wes Edens and Jamie Dinan — expressed support for Milwaukee’s players. “We will continue to stand alongside them and demand accountability and change,” the team owners said.A meeting Wednesday night was open to players and coaches from the 13 teams still at Walt Disney World to determine next steps — in essence to decide how soon, or even if, the N.B.A. playoffs should resume.Players from the Boston Celtics and Toronto Raptors were already deep into discussions about boycotting the teams’ second-round series opener Thursday when the Bucks staged their boycott. A league spokesman, when asked about Thursday’s three scheduled games, said no determination had been made about the N.B.A.’s upcoming schedule.Also Wednesday, players for the W.N.B.A.’s Washington Mystics arrived for their game against the Atlanta Dream on Wednesday night wearing T-shirts that spelled out Jacob Blake’s name and appeared to have holes in the back to signify bullet holes. Some W.N.B.A. players, including Renee Montgomery of the Atlanta Dream, had already opted out of their seasons specifically to work toward social justice causes.In Major League Baseball, three games were called off because of the players: the Milwaukee Brewers hosting the Cincinnati Reds, the San Diego Padres playing the Seattle Mariners, and the San Francisco Giants-Los Angeles Dodgers game.Five matches in Major League Soccer were postponed Wednesday after players objected to playing, while a sixth match — Nashville at Orlando in front of a reduced-capacity crowd — went ahead, a sign of how the situation was still evolving.And several athletes opted individually to not play, including the tennis star Naomi Osaka, who said she would not play in a scheduled semifinal at the Western & Southern Open in New York, a tuneup for the United States Open that begins next week.“Before I am an athlete, I am a Black woman,” Osaka said on Twitter. “And as a Black woman I feel as though there are much more important matters at hand that need immediate attention, rather than watching me play tennis.The Brewers and Reds — in a league that has been typically slower than others to respond to social issues — chose not to play after meetings between players on both teams. The words “JUSTICE EQUALITY NOW” appeared on multiple scoreboards at Miller Park as some players spoke with one another on the field.“Our community and our nation is in such pain, tonight we wanted 100 percent of the focus to be on issues that are much more important than baseball,” said Brewers reliever Brent Suter, the team’s representative for the players’ union.In San Diego, Mariners players voted unanimously against playing and their Padres counterparts obliged. The Mariners have the most Black players of any team in M.L.B., a league that has seen the number of Black players dwindle to about 8 percent over the decades.“For me, and many of my teammates, the injustices, violence, death and systemic racism is deeply personal,” said Mariners outfielder Dee Gordon, one of 10 Black players on the team’s opening day roster.“Instead of watching us, we hope people will focus on the things more important than sports that are happening,” Gordon added in a post on Twitter.The N.B.A. has been operating out of Walt Disney World near Orlando, Fla., since July 7, when 22 of the league’s 30 teams began residing in the league’s so-called bubble, designed to prevent the infiltration of the coronavirus. The league had suspended its season March 11 because of the pandemic.Orlando’s players were already on the floor warming up for Wednesday’s scheduled 4 p.m. tipoff, but Bucks players refused to join them for Game 5 of the teams’ first-round playoff series. Orlando’s players ultimately decided to leave the floor with just under four minutes before the game once it became apparent that the game would not go ahead. The referees soon followed suit.Many other players spoke out on social media as the boycotts began, including the Los Angeles Lakers superstar LeBron James.“We demand change,” James said on Twitter, writing in all caps. “Sick of it.”James Wagner, Andrew Das and Sopan Deb contributed reporting. More

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    Damian Lillard Out for Game 5 of Lakers-Blazers Series

    Want more basketball in your inbox? Sign up for Marc Stein’s weekly N.B.A. newsletter here.LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. — The Portland Trail Blazers’ Damian Lillard, one of the standout performers of the N.B.A. restart at Walt Disney World, will sit out Wednesday’s Game 5 against the Los Angeles Lakers because of a sprained right knee, an injury that could end his season.Portland must win on Wednesday to avoid elimination in the best-of-seven series after the Lakers responded to a Game 1 defeat by winning the next three games by a combined 51 points.The severity of Lillard’s injury, sustained Monday night in the third quarter of Portland’s 135-115 defeat, was confirmed Tuesday afternoon by a magnetic resonance imaging exam after a postgame M.R.I. proved inconclusive.Lillard averaged 37.6 points in Portland’s eight seeding games before the playoffs to earn honors as the player of the seeding games by a unanimous vote of media members. (The New York Times did not participate in voting.) Led by Lillard’s scoring outbursts, which included games of 61 and 51 points, Portland nabbed the No. 8 seed and bumped the Memphis Grizzlies down to ninth, forcing the first-ever playoff play-in. The Blazers then claimed the last playoff spot in the West with a 126-122 victory over Memphis on Aug. 15.Lillard scored 34 points in the Blazers’ Game 1 victory over the top-seeded Lakers, but he dislocated the index finger on his left (non-shooting) hand in Game 2, then injured his knee on an awkward landing in Game 4 on Monday. Lillard finished with just 11 points that night in more than 26 minutes as the Lakers, who scored the game’s first 15 points, cruised to a 20-point rout.The N.B.A. restart began July 30 after a layoff of more than four months, followed by just three weeks of full-speed practices and scrimmages. This caused many teams to fear that players were facing an increased risk for soft-tissue injuries — a fear that is proving increasingly prophetic.All eight first-round matchups have been affected by injuries that high-profile players sustained in the bubble.Other prominent players who either sustained season-ending injuries in Florida or were still trying to recover from recent injuries: Philadelphia’s Ben Simmons (knee), Indiana’s Domantas Sabonis (foot), Boston’s Gordon Hayward (ankle), Houston’s Russell Westbrook (quad strain), Dallas’ Kristaps Porzingis (knee), Toronto’s Kyle Lowry (ankle) and the Los Angeles Clippers’ Patrick Beverley (calf). More

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    Toronto Raptors’ Nick Nurse Named N.B.A. Coach of the Year

    LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. — Nick Nurse was announced as the winner of the N.B.A. Coach of the Year Award on Saturday after leading the defending champion Toronto Raptors to another 50-win season, this time without Kawhi Leonard.Nurse, who has the Raptors on the verge of the second round of the playoffs, was a runaway winner, receiving 90 first-place votes from a panel of 100 sportswriters and broadcasters. He finished with 470 points. (The New York Times did not participate in voting.)Milwaukee’s Mike Budenholzer was second after leading the Bucks to the best record in the suspended season, earning 147 points. Oklahoma City’s Billy Donovan (134) was third.Toronto’s Nick Nurse beats out Milwaukee’s Mike Budenholzer and Oklahoma City’s Billy Donovan in media voting for NBA Coach of the Year … pic.twitter.com/nTvm9Amw8l— Marc Stein (@TheSteinLine) August 22, 2020
    Nurse led Toronto to its first title last year in his rookie season, becoming the only coach to win an N.B.A. championship and a G League championship. He won titles in 2011 and 2013 at the N.B.A.’s minor league level.Toronto’s celebration last year was just winding down when Leonard decided to join the Los Angeles Clippers.The Raptors hardly missed a beat Leonard, who had been named the most valuable player of the N.B.A. finals. They rolled to a 53-19 record and the No. 2 seed in the Eastern Conference. They have a 3-0 lead over the Nets and will try to finish off the sweep Sunday.Nurse is 111-43 in two seasons. He has more than validated the Raptors’ decision to fire Dwane Casey in 2018, even though Casey had won the Coach of the Year Award that season after guiding Toronto to a 59-23 record.But the Raptors kept getting overrun by LeBron James and Cleveland in the playoffs. Masai Ujiri, the team president, decided to part ways with Casey, the franchise’s career leader in victories, and promote Nurse, who had been an assistant for five years.Nurse has already nearly caught Casey for the Raptors’ record for playoff wins by going 19-8 over the last two seasons. Casey was 21-30. More

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    The Top-Seeded Lakers Set Things Right With a Game 2 Win

    Earlier this week, after the Los Angeles Lakers lost their opening game of the N.B.A. playoffs to the Portland Trail Blazers, Anthony Davis found himself the object of LeBron James’s attention. Davis had struggled for the Lakers on Tuesday night in Game 1 of their first-round series, so James gave him a pep talk.“I didn’t feel like I performed to the level that I needed to, and he let me have my moment and kind of get on myself,” Davis said, “and then he talked to me and said I was fine. He said it was one game, and as a guy who’s won multiple championships and been in these situations before, he knows what to expect.”By Thursday, in the long hours ahead of Game 2, James knew enough to leave Davis alone.“He didn’t say one word,” Davis said. “He kind of knew. He saw the look on my face from the beginning.”James has played with supremely talented teammates over the course of his career, winning championships with Dwyane Wade in Miami and another with Kyrie Irving in Cleveland. But there are certain things that Davis can do — equipped as he is with his 6-foot-10 frame and his tap-dancer feet — that are nearly peerless.The Lakers are chasing a championship, and Davis’s performance in their 111-88 win over the Blazers on Thursday night was one that his team needed. He finished with 31 points and 11 rebounds in just 29 minutes. He drained three of his four 3-point attempts. He also played suffocating defense as the Lakers won their first playoff game in — wait for it — eight years.“A.D. is one of those unicorns,” James said.The Lakers had been scuffling along through the league’s restart at Walt Disney World, playing a brand of basketball that was mediocre at best: porous defense, lackluster shooting. And to be clear, their touch from the perimeter remains a concern. On Tuesday, they shot just 14 of 38 from 3-point range, which actually counted as progress.But they still employ Davis and James, and those two can compensate for many flaws.“When you put in the work, the results will happen,” James said. “If you didn’t put in the work, that’s when you get worried.”In some ways, it was one of James’s more muted postseason efforts. He finished with 10 points, 7 assists and 6 rebounds. But he also looked and sounded more animated than he had since the Lakers arrived in the bubble. He screamed at virtual fans in an empty arena. He pleaded with the officials. He encouraged his teammates, reminding them that they were “built different.”“We played with a sense of desperation,” Davis said.Afterward, James pointed to the season that the Lakers had endured, rattling through the various events — some tragic — that had befallen them. There was the Lakers’ preseason trip to China, after which James waded into a geopolitical storm involving a rival general manager. There was the death of Kobe Bryant in a helicopter crash. There was the coronavirus pandemic that suspended the season. Even now, the Lakers are without Avery Bradley, their top perimeter defender, who opted out of the restart, and Rajon Rondo, who broke his thumb but appears to be nearing a return.“And so on and so on,” James said. “It just feels like three or four different seasons.”James has been cagey about his experience in the bubble, alluding at one point to an off-the-court distraction. In an interview with TNT this week, he declined to elaborate other than to say it had nothing to do with the Lakers. At the same time, he has been vocal about social justice issues, and posted a series of photos of himself reading Malcolm X’s autobiography.But there is basketball, too, and James recognizes the opportunity in front of him: How many more will come his way? With Davis, the Lakers have a chance.“He’s been staying in my ear about everything, especially through the playoffs right now,” Davis said.The game could not have gone worse for Portland. For weeks, they had been the restart’s most captivating attraction — beginning with their spirited run through the seeding games and continuing through Game 1 of their series with the Lakers. No player had been more dynamic than Damian Lillard, who had 34 points and 5 assists in Tuesday’s win.On Thursday, though, Lillard was still on the court in the midst of a blowout when he reached out to try to strip the ball from Davis — a hustle play that had consequences. Lillard, who shoots with his right hand, grimaced as he left the game with a dislocated left index finger. He finished with 18 points while shooting 1 of 7 from 3-point range. Los Angeles outscored Portland by 29 points when Lillard was on the floor, but he was not the only player on his team who looked exhausted.As for his injury, Lillard said he would be back for Game 3 on Saturday.“Oh, I’m playing,” he said.For his part, James offered up a lot of the usual postseason platitudes: that it was only one game, that the Lakers were not getting ahead of themselves, that they had merely focused on executing their “game plan.” All of which was true, of course.But they also leaned on Davis to deliver a message: that the Lakers are not about to go away quietly. More

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    Minnesota Timberwolves Win the N.B.A. Lottery

    The N.B.A. draft lottery was delayed three months. The Minnesota Timberwolves are certainly feeling like the wait was worthwhile.The Timberwolves won the lottery Thursday night, giving them the No. 1 pick. The lottery was conducted virtually because of the pandemic, with N.B.A. officials doing the drawing in Secaucus, N.J.Golden State holds the No. 2 pick, Charlotte got the No. 3 pick and Chicago will pick fourth. The Hornets and Bulls both bucked the odds to move into the upper echelon. The Knicks will have the No. 8 pick.The Timberwolves were 19-45 this season, marking the 14th time in 15 years that they missed the playoffs and finished with a losing record. And a month ago, Glen Taylor — who has owned the franchise since 1994 — said he “will entertain” offers for the Timberwolves and the W.N.B.A.’s Minnesota Lynx.It’ll be Minnesota’s first time holding the No. 1 pick since 2015.Chicago had a 32 percent chance of moving into the top four spots, and Charlotte and about a 26 percent chance. They leapfrogged four teams that had better top-four odds — Cleveland, Atlanta, Detroit and the Knicks.For now, the delayed draft — originally set for late June — is scheduled for Oct. 16. The N.B.A. has been hoping for a Dec. 1 start to the 2020-21 season, though Commissioner Adam Silver said on the ESPN telecast of the draft lottery that the December date now “is feeling a little bit early to me.”Without fans at games, the league and its teams are without a major revenue stream. There have been talks about starting next season with one or multiple bubbles, like the one where the league is playing now at Walt Disney World in Lake Buena Vista, Fla., but the league is hoping it doesn’t come to that.“Our No. 1 goal is to get fans back in our arenas,” Silver said on the telecast. “My sense is, in working with the players association, if we could push back even a little longer and increase the likelihood of having fans in arenas, that’s what we would be targeting.”So not only is it unclear which player is going when — but it’s also unclear when anyone will see their N.B.A. debuts.Unlike a year ago, when Zion Williamson was clearly going to be the first selection, there is no consensus No. 1 pick. Top candidates include Georgia’s Anthony Edwards, Memphis’ James Wiseman and LaMelo Ball — the brother of New Orleans guard Lonzo Ball.Edwards, a 6-foot-5 guard, averaged 19.1 points in 32 games for Georgia in his lone college season. Wiseman, a 7-foot-1 center, played in only three games for Memphis and averaged 19.7 points before giving up what had been a lengthy fight with the N.C.A.A. over his eligibility. Ball, a 6-foot-7 guard, averaged 17 points in 12 games while playing in Australia’s top pro league this past season.Cleveland got the fifth pick, followed by Atlanta, Detroit, the Knicks, Washington, Phoenix, San Antonio, Sacramento and New Orleans at No. 13.Memphis, which had 200-to-1 odds of winning the No. 1 pick and was 97.6 percent certain of finishing 14th, ended up in exactly that spot — a pick that will now be conveyed to Boston as part of a 2015 trade. It means the Celtics could have three first-round picks on draft night, barring any moves by Boston beforehand.The rest of the first-round order, starting with the No. 15 pick and going to No. 30, as of now is: Orlando, Portland, Minnesota, Dallas, the Nets, Miami, Philadelphia, Denver, Utah, Milwaukee, Oklahoma City, Boston, the Knicks, the Los Angeles Lakers, Toronto and Boston. More

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    Video Appears to Show Deputy Initiated Altercation With Masai Ujiri

    OAKLAND, Calif. — A new video released by the lawyers for Masai Ujiri, the Toronto Raptors’ president, appears to show that an Alameda County sheriff’s deputy initially shoved him twice leading to an altercation moments after the Raptors had defeated the Golden State Warriors in the 2019 N.B.A. finals.The Raptors had just won their first title by winning Game 6 at Oracle Arena in Oakland on June 13, 2019, when Ujiri moved toward the court to join his celebrating team.Alan Strickland, an Alameda County sheriff’s deputy, claimed in a federal lawsuit filed in February that he stopped Ujiri because he didn’t provide the proper credential, leading to a shoving match that was partially captured on video. Strickland accused Ujiri of hitting him “in the face and chest with both fists,” trying to go around him and repeatedly ignoring orders to stop.Video released Tuesday by Cotchett Pitre & McCarthy, the law firm representing Ujiri, from Strickland’s body camera shows Ujiri walking while pulling credentials out of his suit’s breast pocket and Strickland aggressively shoving him twice shortly before Ujiri shoves him back. The footage ends shortly after that.The Raptors said in a statement they stand by Ujiri, adding that the video showed Strickland’s accusations were “baseless and entirely without merit.” Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment, which owns the Raptors and the Toronto Maple Leafs of the N.H.L., also supported Ujiri.“We believe this video evidence shows exactly that — Masai was not an aggressor, but instead was the recipient of two very violent, unwarranted actions,” the team said.“While Masai has the full backing of Raptors and M.L.S.E. as he fights this injustice, we are aware that not all people have similar support and resources. This is a spurious legal action that M.L.S.E., the NBA, and especially Masai should not be facing,” it added.In a counterclaim filed Tuesday, Ujiri’s lawyers said the footage shows Strickland was “undeniably the initial aggressor” in the confrontation and that the new evidence will vindicate Ujiri’s rights “as a victim of unreasonable force, assault, and battery at the hands of Mr. Strickland,” the East Bay Times reported.Mastagni Holstedt, a law firm that represents Alameda County sheriff’s deputies, did not respond to a request for comment.In a statement Wednesday, sheriff’s spokesman Sgt. Ray Kelly, a sheriff’s spokesman, said the department had closed out its part in the case last July. Kelly distinguished between the public case, which ended with a citation hearing last November, and the private matter of Strickland’s suit against Ujiri.“There’s been a snippet of video released publicly that doesn’t tell the story of the entire investigation,” Kelly said. “That story will have to come out through the process. We stand by our original statements.”Kelly confirmed that Strickland remains employed by the department and said the deputy is on leave recovering from injuries sustained during the incident. More

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    Knicks Among 8 N.B.A. Teams Allowed to Create Home City Bubbles

    The eight N.B.A. teams that did not qualify for the season’s restart at Walt Disney World in Florida can create bubbles and hold voluntary group workouts at their team facilities beginning in mid-September, the league and its players’ union announced on Tuesday.The provision applies to teams like the Knicks and the Golden State Warriors, who were no longer in contention for the playoffs when the N.B.A. suspended its season on March 11 because of the coronavirus pandemic. The league resumed play in July with 22 teams in an isolated campus at Disney World near Orlando, Fla., that has thus far not yielded any positive coronavirus tests after players and staff left quarantine.The announcement by the league is an indication that the N.B.A. has faith in its approach and feels comfortable expanding it, even as the pandemic continues to affect lives daily in the United States. Like the Florida restart, this plan would be implemented in phases, including a quarantine period before workouts. It would require players and staff to stay “in a campuslike environment under controlled conditions,” according to the statement released by the N.B.A., and to undergo daily testing for the coronavirus.The eight teams affected are the Knicks, Warriors, Minnesota Timberwolves, Cleveland Cavaliers, Atlanta Hawks, Detroit Pistons, Chicago Bulls and the Charlotte Hornets. The league said that all eight teams could also invite up to five players who currently are not signed to a league contract but were assigned to the team’s G League affiliate.The news release said that it would be up to the teams to create campus environments in their own home cities and that it is not mandatory for players to attend. This new agreement would open the door for teams to have intrasquad scrimmages and group conditioning sessions.It is not clear where the home city campuses would be. The Knicks declined to comment. The team recently hired Tom Thibodeau as its newest head coach.In the plan for the Florida restart, the N.B.A. allowed 22 teams to take part: the eight teams slated for the playoffs in each conference, as well as six teams that were within six games of the eighth seeds in their conferences. They played eight seeding games to complete the regular season and to determine which 16 teams made the playoffs and where they would be seeded. The playoffs began Monday. More