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Indiana Pacers stun Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 1 despite Donovan Mitchell breaking Michael Jordan playoff record

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The Indiana Pacers stunned the Cleveland Cavaliers on the road 121-112 to take Game 1 of the Eastern Conference semifinals on Sunday night.

Indiana raced out to an 11-point advantage at the end of the first quarter and held a lead for the majority of the game. It wasn’t until the Pacers led by 12 midway through the third quarter after an Aaron Nesmith three-pointer that the Cavaliers began to rally.

But after clawing back the deficit and taking the lead, the Cavs came up against an inspired Tyrese Haliburton down the stretch. The guard led the Pacers on a 20-10 run to close the game, including a clutch three-pointer – only his second on six attempts on the night – and a crucial block.

“We’re definitely the heavy underdog, but we’re trying to control what we can,” Haliburton said, per the Associated Press. “It gives us a lot of momentum for sure, but this is the best team in our conference. They don’t lose much.”

Haliburton finished with 22 points, 13 assists, three rebounds, three blocks and a steal in an all-around performance, while all five of Indiana’s starters, plus Bennedict Mathurin off the bench, scored in double figures.

Andrew Nembhard had a team-high 23 for Indiana, including five-of-six from three-point range, to go with six assists.

“We had an exceptionally good shot-making night, but the key word is aggression,” Indiana coach Rick Carlisle said. “We’ve got to be in attack mode to beat this team.”

Indiana won despite a record-breaking Game 1 from Donovan Mitchell.

The Cavaliers guard had a game-high 33 points for his eighth-straight series opener scoring at least 30 points, breaking Michael Jordan’s previous record of seven.

Cleveland was without Darius Garland for a third straight game due to a toe injury, but got 20 points, 10 rebounds and two steals from Defensive Player of the Year Evan Mobley and 21 points off the bench from Ty Jerome, who continues to impress in these playoffs.

The Cavs couldn't get it done despite Mitchell's record.

It was poor shooting from distance that ultimately cost the Cavs in Game 1, with the team going 9-of-38 from deep, including 1-of-11 from Mitchell.

“We missed a lot of good looks, and then when you miss shots, that’s when they get going in transition,” Mitchell said, per AP. “The biggest thing is, when the shots aren’t falling, how do you respond? But when a team like this runs like that, it makes it tough.”

Game 2 is in Cleveland on Tuesday.

Steph Curry scored 14 of his 22 points in the fourth quarter to lead the Golden State Warriors down the stretch to a 103-89 Game 7 win over the Houston Rockets.

However, it was Buddy Hield that lead the team in scoring on the night with a game-high 33 points on an absurdly efficient 12-of-15 shooting, including 9-of-11 from three to tie the record for most threes made in a Game 7.

It was quite the remarkable turnaround for Hield, who had zero points on 0-of-4 shooting in 17 minutes in Game 6.

The Warriors are the seventh No. 7 seed in NBA history to advance to the semifinals, per AP.

Curry finished the night with 22 points, 10 rebounds, seven assists, two steals and two blocks, while Jimmy Butler had 20 points, eight rebounds and seven assists.

Fred VanVleet came up big for the Rockets in Games 5 and 6 but scored just 17 points in Game 7 on an all-around poor shooting night for the team.



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Scottie Sheffler ties PGA Tour record to claim first victory of 2025 at the CJ Cup Byron Nelson

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Scottie Sheffler tied a PGA Tour record to claim his first victory of 2025 with a blistering win at the CJ Cup Byron Nelson at TPC Craig Ranch in McKinney, Texas, on Sunday.

The world No. 1 equaled the PGA Tour’s 72-hole scoring record of 253, matching the mark set by Justin Thomas at the 2017 Sony Open and Ludvig Åberg at the 2023 RSM Classic. He also broke the CJ Cup 72-hole record of 259 set by Steven Bowditch in 2015.

Scheffler closed out his victory with a final-round 63 to finished at 31-under for the tournament, eight shots clear of second-placed Erik van Rooyen.

The American called the dominant victory “very special,” explaining afterwards that he grew up coming to watch the tournament and even made his PGA Tour debut at the CJ Cup.

“This is a golf course where you can kind of make a run, and I knew that I couldn’t just coast to the finish line today,” the 28-year-old told reporters afterwards. “I knew I had to put together a good round.

“Let’s say I played super safe today and shot even par, Erik would have chased me down there. I knew I had to get out and make some birdies. Did a good job on the front nine and was able to play some consistent golf here. I made the mistake on 3, but responded really well with a bunch of birdies after that. All together, a good week.”

Scheffler, who moved to Texas as a boy, was playing in front of a home crowd at the CJ Cup.

Scheffler entered Sunday’s final round with an eight-shot lead and nobody came within six shots of him over the final 18 holes as he put in an inspired display to remain atop the leaderboard.

The only downside on a successful outing in Texas was missing an opportunity to break the record outright after he carded a bogey on the par-three 17th and a par on the final hole to mean he had to settle for a share of the historic mark.

Thomas, who first set the record, humorously texted CBS analyst Colt Knost when Scheffler was on the 17th: “Tell Scottie to just make bogey-par and tie my 72-hole record, please … 31-under is just fine. Take pride in that.”

The victory is Scheffler’s 14th on the PGA Tour but first of the year. In the past three years combined, he had already won 10 times before May, including two Masters victories.

Having missed last year’s CJ Cup for the birth of his first child Bennett, Scheffler held his son as he celebrated the victory and fought back tears as he addressed the crowd.

When asked afterwards why emotions caught up to him, Scheffler explained that this tournament is ingrained in him as a golfer – TPC Craig Ranch is close enough to his house that Scheffler slept in his own bed during the duration of the tournament.

“When I think about this tournament, I think about a lot of different stuff. I grew up coming to watch it,” he said. “This was my first start on the PGA Tour when I was in high school. The girl I was dating at the time is now my wife. We have one son. My sister was caddying for me at the time. She was here today. She has two kids.

“My family was all able to be here, and it was just really, really special memories, and I think at times it all comes crashing down to me at once. We have a lot of great memories as kids coming to watch this tournament. I just dreamed to be able to play in it, and it’s more of a dream to be able to win it.

“I never really got this far to be honest with you. I always just dreamed of playing golf on the PGA Tour. I would come out on the driving range and watch these guys practice, hitting their brand-new range balls. That’s all I wanted to do was come out here and play a golf course that was in great shape and compete on the best golf courses in the world against the best players.

“It really is a lifetime of hard work and sacrifice from a lot of the people that I have around me, and my family is obviously the starter for that.”



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Madrid Open: Aryna Sabalenka defeats Coco Gauff to win record-equaling title

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World No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka won a record-equaling Madrid Open title on Saturday, defeating the USA’s Coco Gauff 6-3, 7-6 (3) in the final.

With the win, Sabalenka equaled Petra Kvitova’s record three titles in Madrid, and secured her 20th career title. It also further consolidated her spot as world No. 1, following a dominant start to the year in which she has reached four consecutive finals, and won a tour-leading 31 matches.

Meanwhile, Gauff, who could have leapfrogged over Iga Świątek to take the world No. 2 spot with a win, remains the No. 3 seed in the rankings.

“It’s always incredible to come back to Madrid, I love this place, I’m always excited to play in front of you all,” Sabalenka said in her on-court interview afterward, thanking the crowd for its support.

Belarus' Aryna Sabalenka, right, poses with her trophy after winning Coco Gauff during their 2025 WTA Tour Madrid Open tennis tournament singles final match at the Caja Magica in Madrid, on May 3.

She enjoyed a near-perfect start to the match, her powerful ground strokes overpowering Gauff as she won 17 consecutive points early on to take an ultimately unassailable first-set lead.

Though Gauff settled into the match, she could not recover that deficit and was left to launch her challenge in the second set. A perfectly executed passing shot ensured that Gauff broke Sabalenka early in the second and she eventually served for the set at 5-4 to level the match.

Sabalenka raced to a 0-40 lead but Gauff clung on, saved one break point and on the next, the racquet slipped out of Sabalenka’s hands as she scampered around the court.

That gave Gauff an opening and she took it, engineering a set point but Sabalenka once again snuffed out any chance, and later broke back. Ultimately, despite Gauff’s best efforts, the set went to a tiebreak which Sabalenka won, wrapping up the match.



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Katie Ledecky breaks 800m freestyle world record almost a decade after last setting it

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Katie Ledecky produced a scintillating swim to break yet another world record on Saturday, this time in the women’s 800m freestyle, lowering the mark she set almost a decade ago at the 2016 Rio Olympics.

She recorded a time of 8:04.12 at the TYR Pro Swim Series Fort Lauderdale, shaving six-tenths of a second off her previous record and finishing almost 20 seconds ahead of her closest competitor. She now holds the top ten times ever recorded in the event.

For almost 13 years, Ledecky has dominated long-distance freestyle swimming, setting record after record that no one else can touch, often competing against only herself.

But it had been seven years since the American’s last world record; her powers were waning, people presumed, leaving her still able to collect titles but without setting the impossibly fast times that defined her earlier career.

Still, her recent results suggested Ledecky was close to reaching those heights again. On Wednesday, she set the second fastest ever time in the women’s 1500m freestyle, completing the distance in 15:24.51, before her world record on Saturday.

“I can’t stop smiling, it’s been like that all week though, so it’s not really new,” she said after the race, per USA Swimming. “It’s been so many years in the making to do it tonight. It’s been an incredible night.”

“The crowd was amazing tonight; I couldn’t have done it without that. I flipped at the 750, and it was loud in here, and I just told myself I’m not letting this opportunity go to waste and started sprinting.”

Katie Ledecky broke the world record she set at the 2016 Rio Olympics.

As Ledecky touched the wall and looked up at the screen to see her time, the crowd erupted, knowing she had broken the record. A fraction of a second later, Ledecky celebrated as well, smashing the water with her hands and raising a fist in triumph.

And on the same day, her compatriot Gretchen Walsh became the first woman to complete the 100m butterfly in less than 55 seconds, recording a time of 54.60 to lower the world record she set earlier that day.

Ledecky noted after her own record that “tonight is the first (record) I’ve done when another American has done it. Hats off to Gretchen for getting us rolling this morning and starting a world record party.”



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