For the first time in the history of the NBA play-in tournament, a No. 10 seed has advanced to the playoffs.
The No. 10 seed Miami Heat knocked off the No. 8 seed Atlanta Hawks in overtime by a score of 123-114.
MIAMI GRABS THE EAST'S FINAL SPOT
— NBA on TNT (@NBAonTNT) April 19, 2025
The @MiamiHEAT become the first 10-seed from the #SoFiPlayIn to make the #NBAPlayoffs! pic.twitter.com/4CRSqXrVdx
The Heat had a lead as large as 17 points before being outscored by nine in the fourth quarter and having to go into overtime.
In the overtime period, Davion Mitchell stepped in an enormous way for Miami.
He came out on fire, knocking down two three-pointers in the first two minutes of overtime and propelling Miami out to a seven-point lead.
DAVION MITCHELL ON BOTH ENDS
— NBA (@NBA) April 19, 2025
Hits back-to-back threes and then forces a charge! #SoFiPlayIn overtime on TNT pic.twitter.com/m49kzOwPVU
After the Hawks once again battled back and cut the game down to six points, Mitchell once again hit a huge three-pointer in a clutch moment to give the Heat a nine-point lead and put the game out of reach.
Mitchell scored just one point in the first half before scoring 15 in the second half and overtime.
First the offensive board... then the CLUTCH triple to seal it
— NBA (@NBA) April 19, 2025
Mitchell lifts the @MiamiHEAT into the #NBAPlayoffs presented by Google! https://t.co/q4whJ36VFr pic.twitter.com/VA4DeRWiwl
Miami will now travel to Cleveland and take on the No. 1 seed Cleveland Cavaliers for the first matchup between the two teams in playoff history.
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Since winning their first title in franchise history in 2023, the Denver Nuggets have been eliminated in the second round of the playoffs in back-to-back years, and Michael Porter Jr. recently explained the reasons behind their early exits. According to Porter, losing Kentavious Caldwell-Pope to free agency was a big blow to the team, and he also admitted that the Denver Nuggets weren’t as motivated to win the Larry O’Brien trophy during their title defense in 2024. “To repeat and do that again is definitely harder than the first time, because your offseason is shorter. You’re celebrating the championship, you’re probably not taking as good care of your body,” Porter explained on Glory Daze with Johnny Manziel. “I felt like we were focused, but we weren’t as motivated as the year we won it. And then, KCP wasn’t on the team anymore. I felt like that played a big part, and then we lost to Minnesota in game seven,” he added. Denver Nuggets News: Michael Porter Jr. receives wild text from Nikola Jokic after Brooklyn Nets trade After spending the first seven years of his NBA career with the Denver Nuggets, Michael Porter Jr. has moved to the Brooklyn Nets, as he was traded in exchange for Cameron Johnson and a future first-rounder. As he said goodbye to his Denver Nuggets teammates, Porter recently revealed the one advice Nikola Jokic gave him before going to Brooklyn, especially as the former recently opened up about his struggles with dealing with women. “Wrap it up out there. Make sure you wear a condom out there,” Porter said about Jokic’s text.
The No. 1 priority for NFL teams in the preseason is to get out of the games without major injury. The Pittsburgh Steelers may have failed with that one on Thursday night against the Carolina Panthers. Defensive lineman Derrick Harmon, the team's first-round pick in the 2025 NFL Draft, had to be carted to the locker room with a knee injury while also looking visibly upset as he was taken back. The team announced almost immediately that he would be out for the remainder of the game with a knee injury. Head coach Mike Tomlin provided an update after the game: Defensive line was a top priority for the Steelers this offseason, especially after their playoff loss to the Baltimore Ravens where they allowed nearly 300 rushing yards to end their season. Along with Harmon, they also selected Iowa's Yahya Black in this year's class to help try to beef up their line. Harmon is expected to play a major role in this year's defense and was already in a starting position. With star defensive lineman Cameron Heyward holding in as he tries to get a new contract from the team, that puts even more importance on Harmon's ability to make an impact. He has had a strong training camp, and after a quiet first preseason game, he really took a big leap forward in the team's second game, recording a sack against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. If Heyward returns, and if Harmon's injury is not serious, the Steelers would have the potential to have a really strong defensive line with those two joining rising star Keeanu Benton. Right now, though, those are a lot of "ifs," especially as it relates to the availability for Heyward and Harmon for the team's season opener.
Joint practices in the NFL can be really heated. Just take for example the one involving the Green Bay Packers and the Seattle Seahawks on Thursday, with fights erupting on the field between players from both sides. Even though it’s just a practice session with nothing significant on the line, the competitive juices of players can get in the way and spark fiery moments on the field. If anything, at least no one appears to have been seriously hurt from the multiple altercations reported. However, Packers right tackle Zach Tom was reportedly tossed out of the field after throwing punches at a couple of Seahawks players. Despite all the chaos that transpired between the Packers and the Seahawks, Seattle head coach Mike Macdonald had great things to say about Green Bay. Seahawks head coach sends message to Matt LaFleur, Green Bay Packers Brady Henderson of ESPN noted that Macdonald started his session with the media after the practice, “by thanking Packers coach Matt LaFleur and the organization for hosting them.” In any case, Macdonald felt good overall about his players. “It’s hard to tell what happened, who said what,” Macdonald shared. “Look, you want your guys to defend their [teammates]. There’s a line. Whether we go past the line, I don’t think we did, which is good. Our guys stayed composed. But some of these things do tend to happen, and however it gets started … hopefully it’s not our guys, but people are going to react to a certain extent. I think our guys handled it pretty well.” The Packers and the Seahawks will still see each other on the field this offseason, as they are scheduled to play in their 2025 NFL preseason finale on Saturday at Lambeau Field.
The Blackhawks have officially announced a seven-year extension for pending RFA forward Frank Nazar. The deal will pay him an AAV and cap hit of $6.59M for a total value of $46.13M. It’s a gargantuan commitment to the 21-year-old Nazar considering his lack of NHL experience. The 2022 No. 13 overall pick lands the richest total-value contract in league history for someone with 56 or fewer career appearances, which is Nazar’s tally entering the 2025-26 campaign. Nazar, who still has one year left on his entry-level contract before his extension will kick in for 2026-27, has yet to spend an entire season on the NHL roster. Last year was his first full run in the pros after two years at the University of Michigan, but he made his NHL debut in the final three games of 2023-24 after signing his ELC. He did not make the Blackhawks’ opening night roster but, after recording 11 goals and 24 points in 21 games for AHL Rockford, was recalled in mid-December shortly after Chicago’s coaching change and never looked back. He faltered out of the gate, recording only one assist and a -5 rating through his first 10 appearances while averaging 14:44 of ice time per game. But under interim head coach Anders Sörenson, who had overseen his early-season success in Rockford, he was extended some patience. That paid off in the long run as Nazar built confidence, including a four-game point streak in January and a run of nine points in eight games in April to end the season. All told, Nazar finished the season with a 12-14–26 scoring line 53 games — ninth on the team — and averaged nearly 16 minutes per game. While size concerns (5-foot-10, 190 pounds) created some detractors about his ability to hold down his natural center position in the NHL, he saw a fair amount of time as Chicago’s second-line middleman behind Connor Bedard. His most common deployment (107 minutes) amid an astronomical 91 different line combinations used by the Hawks last year was at 2C between Tyler Bertuzzi and Teuvo Teräväinen, although he did also see some time up on Bedard’s wing. Nazar was seen as a top-10 threat in the 2022 class, but after slipping to Chicago and missing most of his freshman year at Michigan due to injury, there were warranted doubts about his development path. He silenced them quickly with a point-per-game sophomore showing for the Wolverines and has made about as good an adjustment to pro hockey as can be expected, given the lack of quality veteran support on the Hawks’ NHL roster. A long-term bet at what’s even now a conservative second-line price point in 2025 could pay incredible dividends for the Blackhawks if he remains a long-term top-six piece, even if it’s on the wing, as the cap increases and they reward the other pieces of their young core with long-term deals. There’s also an incredible risk factor for someone still relatively early on their development track with less than a full season’s worth of NHL experience. The only recent comparable for someone with his experience is Wild superstar Kirill Kaprizov, who signed a five-year, $45M contract after his rookie season (55 GP). Kaprizov, however, had far more professional experience after coming up through Russia’s KHL and was two years older than Nazar is now, making him a more projectable player. Kaprizov also took home the Calder Trophy that year and had twice the offensive output Nazar did. As such, the Blackhawks are betting hard on Nazar being a long-term solution, either as a wingman for Bedard or as a second-line center behind him. There’s certainly reason for optimism – he’s developed well and is coming off a spectacular World Championship showing with the United States that earned him a spot at their Olympic orientation camp. He’ll be under contract through the 2032-33 season and can walk to unrestricted free agency upon expiry. Getting Nazar’s extension out of the way now isn’t just about him, though. Chicago has two other big-ticket RFAs next summer — Bedard and new No. 1 goalie Spencer Knight — who will take serious resources to extend. They still have barely over $40M in allocated cap hits for 2026-27, though, leaving them with virtually unlimited spending power under a projected $104M cap. Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet first reported the Blackhawks were signing Nazar to a seven-year extension. Bleacher Report’s Frank Seravalli reported a more accurate cap hit in the $6.6M range.
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