Tyrese Haliburton's historic triple play inspired by dad's returnNew Foto - Tyrese Haliburton's historic triple play inspired by dad's return

Tyrese Haliburton just dropped one of the all-time great playoff performances, and — for the first time in several weeks —he did it in front of his father. Looking to deliver a crushing blow to the Knicks,Haliburton's Pacers outran New York130-121in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals to claim a 3-1 lead. And it was Haliburton's historic triple-double that sparked Indiana to the victory. Haliburton became the first player in NBA playoff history to record a 30-point, 15-assist, 10-rebound triple-double without committing a single turnover. He finished with 32, 15 and 12 — a career high in rebounds. He also became the first player in Pacers history with multiple playoff triple-doubles. ANALYSIS:Knicks' generous mood giving Pacers free pass to NBA Finals MORE:Shawn Kemp pleads guilty to second-degree assault charge from 2023 shooting "I feel like we making up stats at some point to make me look better," Haliburton joked after the game when asked to contextualize his performance. "I'm just trying to play the right way, man, I just want to impact winning. … I'm just trying to do that to the best of my ability. We're building something special here. We're having a lot of fun with what we're doing. I feel like I'm at the forefront of that with a lot of these guys." Attending his first game since he was told to stay away from home and road Pacers games following an on-court incident with Milwaukee Bucks star Giannis Antetokounmpo during the first round of the NBA playoffs, John Haliburton saw his son put on a show. "I just wanted to put on a good performance," Haliburton said. "I wanted to win the game. Obviously my dad being here is special. Growing up, my dad was reffing a lot on the weekends, so he didn't get to come to many of my games growing up, so when he would come to my games, I would want to play well. So with him being in the building, of course I wanted to play well." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Tyrese Haliburton, inspired by dad, has triple-double for ages

Tyrese Haliburton's historic triple play inspired by dad's return

Tyrese Haliburton's historic triple play inspired by dad's return Tyrese Haliburton just dropped one of the all-time great playoff p...
NFL OTAs tracker: Kirk Cousins, James Cook and Kyle Pitts among big names not participating in voluntary workoutsNew Foto - NFL OTAs tracker: Kirk Cousins, James Cook and Kyle Pitts among big names not participating in voluntary workouts

NFL OTAs are underway, and a number of players are gathering with teammates to get ready for the start of the 2025 NFL season. While attendance is voluntary at this point in the offseason, a number of prominent players decided to skip the first day of those workouts for various reasons. Atlanta Falcons quarterback Kirk Cousins is among the biggest namenot present at OTAson Tuesday. Cousins is seeking a trade after he was benched in favor of Michael Penix last season. Cousins hasn't come out and vocally requested a trade, but there are rumors he wants to start next season and is willing to waive his no-trade clause to get that opportunity elsewhere. While Cousins did show up for team workouts in April, he was a no-show Tuesday, increasing speculation he prefers to join another team ahead of the regular season. Cousins is far from the only big-name player not taking part in OTAs on Tuesday. Below is a list of some of the most prominent players who opted against attending their team's workouts. After two straight seasons with over 1,200 scrimmage yards, Buffalo Bills running back James Cook wouldlike a new contract. Cook, 25, is entering the final year of his rookie contract, and is hoping to secure a long-term extension before hitting the free-agent market. Cook dropped some hints during the offseason that he's seeking roughly $15 million per year as part of his next deal. That would make him the third-highest paid running back in football, behind Saquon Barkley and Christian McCaffrey. Cook is set to make roughly $5 million next season unless he's able to secure a contract extension ahead of the regular season. The Falcons also opened OTAs without tight end Kyle Pitts in attendance. Pitts, like Cook, is entering the final year of his rookie deal. Pitts is set to make roughly $10 million in 2025 after the team picked up his fifth-year option. Pitts discussed the importance ofsecuring his next contractduring an appearance on Cam Newton's podcast in the offseason, though hasn't gone to the same lengths as Cook to vocalize his demands. It's unclear whether Pitts' absence is contract-related, though the fact that he's set to be a free agent after the 2025 NFL season makes his lack of attendance notable. The Cincinnati Bengals appear determined to anger any player seeking a new contract. Trey Hendrickson might be the biggest name on the team still waiting for a new deal, but first rounder Shemar Stewart is also a part of that group. While both thelength and salaries of rookie contractsare essentially set, Stewart appears to be at an impasse with the team overlanguage in his offer, per Pro Football Talk. The specific language in question wasn't included in recent deals handed out by the Bengals, including the one given to receiver Tee Higgins or the one given to last year's first-round pick Amarius Mims, according to PFT. Stewart is present at OTAs, but he is not taking part in workouts since he hasn't signed his deal yet. Haason Reddick, who signed a one-year, $14 million deal with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in March, was not present at the start of OTAs on Tuesday. Buccaneers head coach Todd Bowles was asked about the situation Tuesday, saying he believes the team will see Reddick "one of these days." OTAs are voluntary, so Reddick — who missed multiple games last season after a contract holdout with the New York Jets — is not obligated to be there. The team reportedly did not put an incentive in his contract that encouraged him to show up, per PFT. A number of Bucs veterans — including Mike Evans and Chris Godwin — were not present at voluntary OTAs. Reddick's absence received more attention given his holdout last season and the fact that's he's new to the team. Twenty-four different teams held OTAs on Tuesday. Eight other teams will begin OTAs on Wednesday, so there could be more big-name players who decide to stay home due to contract-related issues.

NFL OTAs tracker: Kirk Cousins, James Cook and Kyle Pitts among big names not participating in voluntary workouts

NFL OTAs tracker: Kirk Cousins, James Cook and Kyle Pitts among big names not participating in voluntary workouts NFL OTAs are underway, and...
Arizona's rural groundwater deal stalls as legislative session nears endNew Foto - Arizona's rural groundwater deal stalls as legislative session nears end

PHOENIX (AP) — Arizona's governor and the GOP-controlled Legislature are at odds over regulating groundwater pumping in the state's rural areas — and time is running out. Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbsstood with local Republican leadersat the start of this year's session, optimistic that Republicans in the Legislature would embrace her proposal to create rural groundwater management areas. But almost four months later, talks have stalled and frustration has mounted as both sides try to find a solution to conserve water that's increasingly becoming more scarce amid a prolonged drought. Negotiators have not met since early April, Hobbs' office said. Around the same time, Republicans and some interest groups grew frustrated with a separate proposal by the Arizona Department of Water Resources to slash overdraft in the Willcox Basin by a percentage that is "unattainable," said Sen. Tim Dunn, one of the Republican negotiators. Overdraft refers to when groundwater extraction exceeds what is being replenished. Hobbs has said that if lawmakers adjourn — typically in the summer — with no deal, she will take matters into her own hands. Disagreements as water supplies dwindle Water basins in rural Arizona are largely unregulated, and Democrats and Republicans have different visions on how to slow depletion. Negotiators, including staff from the governor's office and bipartisan lawmakers, have clashed over proposed mandates for reducing groundwater pumping from aquifers. Republicans who introduced their own plan say the one from Democrats is too high. Democrats say the GOP proposal isn't high enough. Both sides also disagree on the makeup of local councils that would govern groundwater usage, the water basins that would be included and the pathway for future regulation. Meanwhile, underground water supplies continue to shrink to the point that some wells in rural areas have gone dry. Residents are faced with the choice of drilling deeper, hauling water or moving, said Sarah Porter, director of the Arizona State University Kyl Center for Water Policy. Managing the groundwater won't reverse the decline but can slow it, she said. Arizona's regulatory framework for managing groundwater was first enacted in 1980 and largely centers on the state's most populous areas, including Phoenix and Tucson. Porter said the active management areas were designed to apply to growing cities and are too burdensome to replicate in rural areas where agriculture is at the heart of local economies. The Arizona Department of Water Resources has proposed a separate reduction in overdraft in the Willcox Basin, which caused uneasiness among Republicans and others who say that could jeopardize businesses in rural Arizona. For years, legislators on both sides of the aisle have failed to get proposals to manage groundwater in rural Arizona to the governor's desk or signed into law. In 2022, voters approved a ballot measure to establish an active management area in Douglas, a rural city on Arizona's southeastern edge. In recent months, Hobbs used executive authority to create another in the Willcox Basin, another rural community north of Douglas. 'Negotiations are going nowhere' Bipartisan negotiators have not met in several weeks on a framework that would significantly broaden the scope of the Groundwater Management Act, according to multiple people. "I think it's pretty clear that the rural groundwater negotiations are going nowhere," said Democratic state Sen. Priya Sundareshan, one of the legislative negotiators. In a Tuesday statement, Hobbs accused GOP legislators of refusing to come to the negotiating table. Emails obtained by The Associated Press show frustration from Hobbs' office over what the deputy chief of staff, Jennifer Loredo, describes as a "unilateral" move by Republicans to decide who is invited to the negotiating table. "After zero response for a month, you have now proposed to significantly increase the number of stakeholders, and instead of reciprocating our request for input, you sent out a calendar invite to this group of external parties," Loredo said in an email addressing the GOP negotiators. Dunn said since the last negotiating meeting he's been meeting regularly with people on what language they might find agreeable despite sour moods over the water resources proposal for the Willcox Basin and the little time lawmakers have left to make a deal. He said he would like to call another meeting with Hobbs' office and Democratic legislators soon but said the water resource's proposal doesn't bode well for talks in the Legislature. "If that's their end game, we can't get there," Dunn said. Philip Bashaw, CEO of the Arizona Farm Bureau, which has been involved in crafting the GOP rural groundwater bills the past two years, said the water resources' proposal further frustrated negotiations on the bills and fueled anxiety. "It definitely took a lot of the air out of the balloon, that's for sure," Bashaw said.

Arizona's rural groundwater deal stalls as legislative session nears end

Arizona's rural groundwater deal stalls as legislative session nears end PHOENIX (AP) — Arizona's governor and the GOP-controlled Le...
Who are the GOP senators balking at Trump's tax bill?New Foto - Who are the GOP senators balking at Trump's tax bill?

WASHINGTON – PresidentDonald Trumpis hoping to celebrate a major legislative win later this summer by signing into law amassive billwith implications for every American, including extending his first term tax cuts and following through on a campaign pledge to eliminate taxes ontips and overtime. But to do that, Trump will need toconvince a handful of vocal membersof his own partyin the Senatewho want major changes to the version thatpassed the Houseon May 22. All eyes will be on Republican Sens. Josh Hawley of Missouri, Susan Collins of Maine, Rick Scott of Florida and Ron Johnson of Wisconsin – among others – who are pushing for changes to the bill's approach to Medicaid, green energy subsidies, and overall spending. The upper chamber will soon begin working on the legislation that would extend income tax cuts, implement changes to Medicaid and food stamps, funnel more money toward immigration enforcement and more. They're not likely to take the House's version as-is – and some senators are already drawing red lines that GOP leadership will have to navigate as they seek to meet the goal of passing it by July 4. "The goal of the House effort has been to pass one big, beautiful bill. It's rhetoric, it's false advertising," Johnson said on May 22, hours after the House bill passed. "The goal should have been reduce average annual deficits. We have to focus on spending." Trump over the weekendencouraged senatorsto make changes – which, he said, "may be something I'd agree with" – despite House SpeakerMike Johnsonurging senators "not to meddle with ittoo much" to make it possible to pass it again through the House. More:The 5 House Republicans who didn't vote for Trump's sweeping tax bill Senate Majority Leader John Thune, too, will have to deal with a narrow margin in order to get the bill across the finish line: He can lose only three Republican votes and still get the majority necessary to pass it presuming no Democrats cross party lines to support the legislative package. Senators have plenty they're looking to change, from Medicaid to overall spending cuts. Here are the main sticking points so far. The House-passed legislation would add an estimated$3.8 trillionto the national debt over the next 10 years, fueled by a permanent extension of the 2017 income tax cuts that Trump signed into law during his first term. The bill also includes temporary tax breaks for tips, overtime, seniors and buyers of American-made cars. There is also a boosted child tax credit, among other benefits. More:Treasury bond yields are surging as the Trump tax bill progresses. Here's why it matters. Some fiscal conservatives in the Senate say they can't sign off on legislation that would add to the country's national debt, which is alreadymore than $36 trillion, and that there are enough of them to block the legislation. "I think we have enough to stop the process until the president gets serious about the spending reduction and reducing the deficit," Johnson said May 25 on CNN. "We have witnessed an unprecedented level of increased spending," the Wisconsin Republican added. "This is our only chance to reset that to a reasonable pre-pandemic level." Sens. Rick Scott, R-Florida, and Mike Lee, R-Utah, have similarly said they want to seedeeper spendingcuts in the final package. Scott is pushing for the GOP to "completely eliminate" the renewable energy provisions of former PresidentJoe Biden's Inflation Reduction Act, while Lee says there are federal benefits for undocumented immigrants that need to be eliminated. Sen. Rand Paul, R-Kentucky, has also raised concerns that the package raises the debt ceiling by $4 trillion – a provision that is necessary to prevent the U.S. fromdefaulting on its debtsometime in August. "Conservatives do need to stand up and have their voice heard,"Paul said. The House-passed legislation also would make major changes to Medicaid, saving $625 billion from the low-income healthcare program while pushing an estimated 7.6 million Americansoff coverage. Among the changes would bea new requirementfor able-bodied adults without children to prove that they're working, volunteering, or going to school for 80 hours per month, along with more frequent eligibility checks. Multiple senators have raised concerns about the House's cuts to the program.Maine's Collinshas saidthe bill's language goes beyond "waste, fraud and abuse," as GOP leadership has suggested. More:'Don't f--- around with Medicaid': Trump works to clear out GOP opposition to policy bill Sen. Jim Justice, R-West Virginia, who has also been wary of the lower chamber's changes to Medicaid, doesn't like a portion of the bill that limits states from raising money to pay for their part of Medicaid spending through health-care-related taxes known as "provider taxes." Drawing the ire of Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Missouri, is a requirement in the House bill for people who earn between 100 percent and 138 percent of the federal poverty level to pay up to $35 per service, which iscurrentlya salary of $35,365 to $44,367 annually for a family of four. Sens.Jerry Moran, R-Kansas, andLisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, have also said they're worried about the impact of Medicaid cuts on their constituents. House Republicans from primarily Democratic states like California, New York and New Jersey pushed for an increased cap on state and local tax deductions, also known as SALT, which allows people to write off a portion of their local taxes from what they owe the federal government. The 2017 tax law capped that deduction at $10,000. The new bill would raise that cap to $40,000 for people who make less than $500,000 per year. More:The White House's tax bill will consider SALT (again). What could that mean for you? But in the Senate, there are no blue-state Republicans pushing for similar changes. Some may seek to strip it out to decrease the bill's price tag. "There's not one Republican in the United States Senate" who cares about the SALT tax issue, Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-North Dakota,told reporters, adding that getting a majority in the House "does matter... and we want to be cognizant about that." The House bill would cut off many renewable energy tax credits for projects beginning 60 days after the bill passes. It would also rescind several other climate change-related provisions of the IRA, including a $7,500 tax credit for electric vehicles. It would pull back unspent money for several grant and loan programs at the Energy Department and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, delay methane fees for oil and gas companies, repeal additional rules encouraging the adoption of electric vehicles, and accelerate permitting for fossil fuel projects. While senators like Scott of Florida want to further strip down the IRA's green energy boosters, another group of senators thinks the changes go too far. Murkowski, Moran, and Sens. John Curtis, R-Utah and Thom Tillis, R-North Carolina, sent aletter to Thunein early April warning that rolling back the IRA's renewable energy tax credits could create major disruption to American businesses. Contributing: Savannah Kuchar This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:These Republican senators are balking at Trump's tax bill

Who are the GOP senators balking at Trump's tax bill?

Who are the GOP senators balking at Trump's tax bill? WASHINGTON – PresidentDonald Trumpis hoping to celebrate a major legislative win l...
FedEx Cup finale at East Lake goes to a 72-hole shootout where everyone starts from scratchNew Foto - FedEx Cup finale at East Lake goes to a 72-hole shootout where everyone starts from scratch

DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) — The PGA Tour voted to overhaul the season-ending Tour Championship so that all 30 players start from scratch and the low score on a tougher East Lake course wins the FedEx Cup. The change is effective this year, with more tweaks still in the works. The announcement Tuesday evening followed a PGA Tour board vote and a meeting of the Player Advisory Council that has been trying for more than six months to find a solution. The primary goal was to get rid of the staggered start that none of the players seemed to like. Since 2019, the leader of the FedEx Cup going to East Lake started at 10-under par before the tournament even began. That gave him a two-shot lead over the No. 2 player, and a staggered from there until the last five players who qualified for the 30-man field were at even par. Now it will effectively be a 72-hole shootout — everyone starts at even par, just like any other tournament — with FedEx Cup going to the winner. "We want the Tour Championship to be the hardest tournament to qualify for and the FedEx Cup trophy the most difficult to win," said Scottie Scheffler, the No. 1 player in the world who won his first FedEx Cup title last year. He serves on the PAC. "Shifting the Tour Championship to a more straight-up format with a tougher course setup makes it easier for fans to follow and provides a more challenging test for players — which brings out the best competition." Still to be announced is the prize fund. Scheffler received a $25 million bonus for winning the FedEx Cup last year. The tour indicated the bonus money would be distributed more evenly to account for all 30 players — regardless of their position in the standings — have the same chance of winning. Scheffler won last year at 30-under par for a four-shot victory over Collin Morikawa. Scheffler, the No. 1 seed the last three years, had a raw total of 264. Morikawa shot 262, but he was the No. 7 seed and thus gave Scheffler a six-shot head start. The tour said it leaned on feedback from its fans to help determine what would make the most compelling finale. "The Player Advisory Council led a thorough process to respond to what our fans are asking for: The most competitive golf in the world, played for the highest stakes, in the most straightforward and engaging format," PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan said. The format revealed Tuesday is similar to the LPGA's season finale, which features a 60-player field and offers $4 million to the winner over 72 holes. Key components of the Tour Championship change is eliminating the starting strokes. That should make Xander Schauffele happy. Twice he had the low score over 72 holes (one time a tie) and watched someone else leave with the trophy. More difficult to define is setting up East Lake as difficult as possible. The tour said fans wanted to see scores closer to par, and the rules officials will be in charge of adjusting the setup to encourage more risk-and-reward moments. Most curious about the announcement was the objective to make the Tour Championship the hardest to reach. It already is difficult to finish among the top 30, and that will be the field size this year when it is held on Aug. 21-24. The PAC is studying qualifications for future years that could include a smaller field and a greater reward for how players perform from the season opener in Hawaii through the BMW Championship, which precedes East Lake. Tour official since last August had been kicking around the idea of match play, which rarely performs well on television and in person with only two players competing at the end. They also were trying to create brackets to mimic other sports. Ultimately, they settled on 72 holes of stroke player on a tougher golf course with everyone knowing what's at stake. ___ AP golf:https://apnews.com/hub/golf

FedEx Cup finale at East Lake goes to a 72-hole shootout where everyone starts from scratch

FedEx Cup finale at East Lake goes to a 72-hole shootout where everyone starts from scratch DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) — The PGA Tour voted to overha...

 

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