Cooper Flagg didn't wilt without Anthony Davis and now Mavs hope they flourish together

DALLAS (AP) — Cooper Flagg followed Anthony Davis' bank shot with a jumper of his own, then blocked a jump hook from Anthony Wiggins at the other end before scoring a contested layup on an assist from Davis.

Just like that, the rookie No. 1 overall pick and the 10-time All-Star combined to sealDallas' 118-108 victory over the Miami Heaton Wednesday night, extending the first winning streak of the season for the Mavericks to three games.

Flagg knew his NBA career would start without help on the court from star guard Kyrie Irving, who isrecovering from an ACL tear last March. The 18-year-old former Duke standout also had to persevere for a month without Davis, who was sidelined with a left calf strain.

A loss in Davis' return at the Los Angeles Lakers last week dropped the Mavericks to 5-15, but they won a night later without him before consecutive victories over Denver and the Heat, two teams that should be playoff contenders.

"When you talk about the stars, he didn't have the two stars on the floor, so he had to endure the best wing defender, and I thought he did an incredible job," coach Jason Kidd said. "When you look at the clutch situations, he responded in a positive way. For an 18-year-old to be leaned on without AD or Kai out there, I thought he responded in a positive way."

While Davis was out, Flagg found himself in the company of LeBron James a couple of times.

In a 118-115 victory over New Orleans last month, Flagg had 29 points, seven rebounds and five assists. James is the only other player with at least 25 points, five rebounds and five assists in a game as an 18-year-old.

With Davis resting on the second night of a back-to-back in a 114-110 victory at the Los Angeles Clippers on Saturday, Flagg became the youngest player in NBA history to score 35 points. He and James are the only 18-year-olds with 30-point games.

"I think I learned a lot throughout that period, and as a team I think we learned a lot as well," Flagg said. "Obviously it wasn't the start we were looking for or hoping to have, but I think it'll give us a lot of gratitude moving forward. If we can find success and we can think back to a really rocky start, I think I grew a lot in that time period as well."

Flagg was 9 of 13 from the field and led Dallas with 22 points against the Heat, and is shooting 57% in the four games since Davis returned. They did get five games together to start the season, but Flagg wasn't quite as assertive then.

Four-time champion and 13-year veteran Klay Thompson has come out of a shooting slump recently, which also has helped ease the burden on Flagg.

Thompson scored 17 points in his relatively new role off the bench against the Heat, and Davis had 17 points and 17 rebounds.

"It's so much better for us when he's out there," Flagg said about Davis. "I think just between him and Klay on the court at the same time, the amount of gravity that those two guys have of just pulling defenses toward them and just creating space out there, it's huge for me."

It's far from a guarantee that Davis can stay healthy, with him missing more games than he has played since the oft-injured forward was acquired in the much-criticized trade that sent superstar Luka Doncic to the Lakers last February.

If Davis stays on the court, Flagg will have part of the formula the Mavs envisioned with title-winning vets easing his transition to the NBA after he essentially turned pro a year earlier than other one-and-done college stars. And that's not even including Irving, who presumably could return sometime after Jan. 1.

"You're going to have to put your best defender on someone and so most of the time that's AD," Kidd said. "So he gets the secondary defender and for him, it's his ability to get to the paint, but also to be able to play off AD, where he doesn't have to do everything like he did here early on, where we were asking him to be the point guard, score, defend, do everything, which he's not afraid of doing, but now he has some help."

Davis illustrated it by combining with Flagg to score the final eight Dallas points to stop a Miami rally close out the Heat.

AP NBA:https://apnews.com/hub/nba

Cooper Flagg didn't wilt without Anthony Davis and now Mavs hope they flourish together

DALLAS (AP) — Cooper Flagg followed Anthony Davis' bank shot with a jumper of his own, then blocked a jump hook from ...
Peterka has 2 goals and 2 assists, Vejmelka gets first shutout of season as Mammoth beat Ducks 7-0

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — JJ Peterka had two goals and two asssists, Karel Vejmelka stopped 27 shots for his first shutout of the season, and the Utah Mammoth beat the Anaheim Ducks 7-0 on Wednesday night to snap a four-game skid.

Clayton Keller had a goal and two assists, Ian Cole added a goal and an assist, and Lawson Crouse, Dylan Guenther and Liam O'Brien also scored for the Mammoth, who are now 5-10-3 since starting season 8-2-0. Jack McBain and Nick Schmaltz each had two assists.

The Mammoth matched their season-high scoring total, set previously in a 7-4 win against St. Louis on Oct. 23.

Ville Husso gave up four goals on 21 shots through two periods, and Vyacheslav Buteyets had 10 saves in the third in his NHL debut for the Ducks, who had won five of their previous eight.

Vejmelka had six saves in the first period, 16 in the second and five in the third for his seventh career shutout and first since Jan. 23 at Minnesota.

O'Brien made it 5-0 at 1:41 of the third as hegrabbed the puck on the right side, spun and fired a shotoff Ducks defenseman Drew Helleson's skate and past the goalie.

Peterka had a power-play goal just past the midpoint of the third for his 12th, and Keller made it a seven-goal lead with 7:08 left for his ninth.

Cole pushed the lead to 3-0 at 5:43 of the second witha shot from the left circlefor the defenseman's second of the season.

Anaheim appeared to get on the board when Mason McTavish scored with 7:07 left in the middle period, but the goal was erased on review after a challenge for offside on the play.

Peterka then made it 4-0 with 5:26 remaining in the period ona tic-tac-toe passing playwith Keller and Schmaltz.

Crouse got the Mammoth on the scoreboard at 5:59 of the first period with abackhander past Husso.

Guenther doubled the lead with 9 1/2 minutes left in the opening period,putting a backhander between the goalie's skatesfor his 10th.

Mammoth: At Vancouver on Friday in the fifth of a six-game trip.

Ducks: Host Washington on Friday in the second of a three-game homestand.

AP NHL:https://www.apnews.com/hub/NHL

Peterka has 2 goals and 2 assists, Vejmelka gets first shutout of season as Mammoth beat Ducks 7-0

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — JJ Peterka had two goals and two asssists, Karel Vejmelka stopped 27 shots for his first shutout o...
Miguel Rojas (72) celebrates with Max Muncy after the Dodgers won Game 7 of the World Series.

This past postseason,Miguel Rojasannounced that 2026 would be the last year of his MLB career.

On Wednesday, he and theDodgersensured he would go out in Los Angeles.

Barely a month removed from Rojas' heroics inthis year's World Series, he and the Dodgers agreed to a one-year, $5.5-million contract for next season, according to multiple people with knowledge of the situation not authorized to speak publicly.

The move marks the Dodgers' first signing of this offseason, bringing back the 12-year veteran and utility infielder in the club's quest for athird consecutive World Series title.

Read more:Plaschke: Thanks for the ride! 13 moments that defined the Dodgers' 2025 World Series title run

After retiring at the end of next season, Rojas will also stay with the organization in a player development role.

El Extrabase first reported the signing.

Back at the beginning of his career, Rojas first broke into the majors with the Dodgers in 2014 before being traded to the Marlins. After eight seasons in Miami, Rojaswas traded back to the Dodgersbefore the start of the 2023 season, and has becomea key veteran voicein the team's clubhouse since.

On the field, Rojas has remained a productive presence, hitting .259 with 18 home runs and 94 RBIs over the last three years. He has also provided value defensively, playing second base, third base and shortstop — and becoming a finalist for the National League's utility player Gold Glove award last season.

No contributions, of course, were more important than what Rojas did in the World Series against the Toronto Blue Jays.

After being drawn back into the lineup for Game 6 of the series, he helped completea game-sealing double-playby picking a throw fromKiké Hernándezat second base.

Thenin Game 7, he hit a season-saving, game-tying home run in the top of the ninth inning, before throwing out a potential winning Blue Jays run at home plate in the bottom half of the inning.

Read more:Shohei Ohtani to participate in World Baseball Classic, but will the Dodgers star pitch?

He did it all while playing though an injury, too, having aggravated an intercostal problem in the team's celebration after Game 6.

Injuries have been a recurring problem for Rojas, dealing with forearm, hamstring and hernia injuries in recent years.

However, his value on and off the field made him a likely candidate to be re-signed this winter.

On Wednesday, he and the team made the reunion official.

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared inLos Angeles Times.

World Series hero Miguel Rojas agrees to return to Dodgers on one-year deal

This past postseason,Miguel Rojasannounced that 2026 would be the last year of his MLB career. On Wednesday, he and theDodgersensured he w...
Child deaths will rise this year as aid cuts reverse progress, says Gates

By Jennifer Rigby

LONDON, Dec 4 (Reuters) - Around 200,000 more children will likely die before their fifth birthday this year than in 2024 as international ​aid cuts undermine decades of progress, the Gates Foundation said on Thursday.

The projected ‌increase would mark the first rise in preventable child deaths this century, Gates said, from an estimated ‌4.6 million in 2024 to 4.8 million this year. Child deaths have roughly halved since 2000.

"For decades, the world made steady progress saving children's lives. But now, as challenges mount, that progress is reversing," said Bill Gates, chair of the eponymous foundation, in a ⁠foreword to its annual Goalkeepers ‌report.

AID CUTS HAVE SPREAD BEYOND THE US

The report tracks progress towards the United Nations sustainable development goals on reducing poverty and improving ‍health. It usually comes out in September but was delayed this year due to the uncertainty over global health funding.

International aid cuts began with the U.S. at the beginning of the year ​but have since spread to other major donors like Britain and Germany. Overall, global ‌development assistance for health fell by just under 27% this year compared to 2024, the report says.

The cuts are a key reason for the reversal in progress on child mortality, Gates said, although other issues, like countries facing mounting debt and fragile health systems, are also factors. Earlier this year, Gates warned that the cuts would ⁠lead to more children dying.

If the cuts are ​permanent, that could mean between 12 and 16 million ​more child deaths by 2045, the report adds, depending on funding levels. This year, the increase in deaths could see them match 2023's ‍number, the latest year ⁠for which the World Health Organization has data.

The figures in the report are based on modelling from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at Washington ⁠University.

Gates urged governments and individuals to step up and focus on innovative new tools as well as ‌proven solutions, like vaccination and investment in primary healthcare, to boost child ‌health.

(Reporting by Jennifer RigbyEditing by Alexandra Hudson)

Child deaths will rise this year as aid cuts reverse progress, says Gates

By Jennifer Rigby LONDON, Dec 4 (Reuters) - Around 200,000 more children will likely die before their fifth birt...
Survivors of U.S. military strike in Caribbean were legitimate targets for second attack, admiral to tell lawmakers

By Idrees Ali and Phil Stewart

WASHINGTON, Dec 4 (Reuters) - A U.S. military commander is expected tell lawmakers on Thursday that survivors of a military strike in the ​Caribbean were legitimate targets for a second attack because their vessel was still believed ‌to contain illegal narcotics, a U.S. official told Reuters.

On September 2, the U.S. military carried out a strike in ‌the Caribbean which killed 11 suspected drug traffickers.

Officials have said that the U.S. military carried out a second strike against their vessel, which has raised questions about the legality of the operation.

Admiral Frank M. Bradley, who was the head of Joint Special Operations Command at the time, will tell lawmakers ⁠in a classified briefing on Thursday ‌that the two survivors were legitimate military targets because they were perceived as capable of continuing drug trafficking, the official said.

Bradley, who now leads U.S. ‍Special Operations Command, will be joined by the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Dan Caine, during the closed-door hearing, the official added.

The Pentagon did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The ​early September strike has drawn bipartisan scrutiny from Congress and concerns about the legality of ‌the administration's moves. So far, there have been 20 U.S. military strikes in the Caribbean and Pacific against suspected drug vessels, killing more than 80 people.

U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said on Tuesday he had watched the first U.S. strike in September on the alleged drug-smuggling vessel in real time, but did not see survivors in the water or the second lethal strike that ⁠he described as being carried out in the "fog of ​war." But he defended Bradley's decision to carry out ​a follow-up strike.

"Admiral Bradley made the correct decision to ultimately sink the boat and eliminate the threat," Hegseth said.

Trump, who told reporters on Air Force One ‍on Sunday that he would ⁠not have wanted the second strike, largely voiced support on Tuesday, while saying he hadn't been aware of the second strike.

U.S. officials have told Reuters that Hegseth has ordered ⁠lethal strikes on drug vessels, including the early September one in question, as part of a broader Trump administration ‌campaign that equates suspected drug traffickers with terrorists despite objections from many legal ‌experts.

(Reporting by Idrees Ali; Editing by Michael Perry)

Survivors of U.S. military strike in Caribbean were legitimate targets for second attack, admiral to tell lawmakers

By Idrees Ali and Phil Stewart WASHINGTON, Dec 4 (Reuters) - A U.S. military commander is expected tell lawmaker...
How 2 killings exposed the depths of cartels' grip in Mexico's Michoacan state

APATZINGAN, Mexico (AP) — On a steamy night, a farmer from a village of modest tin-roofed homes surrounded by rolling lime orchards in westernMexico'scoastal mountains approached Rev. Gilberto Vergara for help.

The drug cartels were extorting him and other growers so heavily that the math no longer worked to harvest all his limes, the burly farmer told him tearfully after Mass. Authorities did nothing, he lamented. Residents were afraid speaking up was a death sentence but staying silent meant starving.

Two recent killings — one of anoutspoken representative of the lime growers, the other apopular mayor standing up to the cartels— have made a long-known truth impossible to ignore: Organized crime controls much of Michoacan and its economy.

Now as U.S. President Donald Trump has launched military attacks against alleged drug-smuggling boats in the Caribbean and the Pacific and has offered to send the U.S. military to Mexico, President Claudia Sheinbaum faces increased pressure to solve a puzzle no other leader has been able to. But years of failed tactics have left residents skeptical that the government will offer a solution.

The priest did not expect much from authorities, but told the farmer he would try to speak to them.

Later, Vergara still in his white cassock, drove home into the darkness of Tierra Caliente along cartel-controlled roads with the risk of land mines planted in the hills or drone attacks.

The cartels "have the state in their hands," the priest said.

'He was fighting for us'

Carlos Manzo, the 40-year-old mayor of Uruapan in western Michoacan, was in his town's central square amid hundreds gathered for Day of the Dead festivities when a teenage gunman shot him seven times despite his 22-person security detail, including National Guardsmen.

The criminals' message was clear: We can get anyone.

Weeks later, the crime scene remained blocked off. Candles and wilted marigolds sat inside. Hundreds of handwritten messages demanding justice hung outside.

Manzo, a former congressman for Sheinbaum's Morena party turned critic, was seen throughout Michoacan as the only politician trying to eradicate the drug cartels. He had run corrupt cops off the local police force, touted arrests of narcos on social platforms and earned a reputation for going into the most dangerous corners to talk to anyone. In October, he appealed to the federal government for help.

"It felt like he was fighting for us," said Imelda Peña, a 42-year-old teacher, who criticized Sheinbaum for her perceived weakness on organized crime, although thepresident strengthened the federal security strategywhen she came to power. "I hope this is a tipping point."

A message that resonated

Uruapan residents called Manzo "the Mexican Bukele" afterEl Salvador's millennial presidentwith ano-holds-barredapproach to his country's street gangs. Some saw Manzo as a potential gubernatorial candidate who could pry Michoacan back from Morena with his own political movement, but his message confronting the cartels resonated nationwide.

Investigators havelinked his killing to the powerful Jalisco New Generation Cartel, but who ordered it and why remains unclear. The gunman was shot when he was already on the ground. Seven of the ninecharged so far in case were Manzo's bodyguards.

The office of Manzo's widow Grecia Quiroz, who became mayor after his death, did not respond to numerous requests for comment.

An hour's drive west of Apatzingan in La Ruana, Guadalupe Mora, another outspoken critic of the government's security policies, stood among his own 20-person security detail, requested after Manzo's killing. His brotherHipólito Mora, founder of farmer self-defense groups more than a decade earlier, was killed two years ago.

"It seems like we made the government and organized crime uncomfortable, that's why they're killing us," Guadalupe Mora said.

Where plans fail

Michoacan has stymied presidents before and has become one of Sheinbaum's biggest challenges. All strategies to pacify the state over the last 20 years have failed while criminal groups have multiplied and renewed their tactics.

At least three of the six drug cartels that the Trump administrationdesignated as terrorist organizations— Jalisco New Generation, United Cartels and The New Michoacan Family — operate here, in addition to a slew of homegrown armed splinter groups, some supported by the Sinaloa Cartel.

They drop bombs from drones, use 3D-printed grenade launchers, hide improvised explosive devices and erect surveillance cameras, according to state officials. They suffocate all economic sectors with extortion, a business as lucrative as drugs.

Manzo's killing set off protests across Michoacan and in Mexico City. In Uruapan, graffiti accused authorities of involvement. The president's popularity threatened to plummet for the first time in just over a year in office.

So she announced an additional 2,000 troops — on top of the 4,300 permanent ones and 4,000 in neighboring states — and government spending that sounded reminiscent of failed plans past.

The difference, the government says, is coordination and intelligence. Cutting the political links of the cartels is the final missing piece.

The U.S. government is watching because Michoacan is a key importer of chemical precursors for synthetic drugs. In the last two months, 17 drug laboratories were dismantled by Mexican authorities. Michoacan also supplies the avocados for Americans' insatiable guacamole habit, made more expensive by extortion.

Immediately after the killing, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau wrote on social platform X: "May his memory inspire prompt and effective action."

Many here say that if it takespressure from Washington to make Mexican authorities act, then so be it.

Security analyst David Saucedo expects a targeted campaign against small but very violent cartels in the state but that could mean strengthening the most powerful Jalisco cartel.

Vergara, the priest, blamed past and current administrations for failing to follow their security policies through.

"Michoacan is the sum ofpast mistakes," Vergara said. "They're not committed enough to implement (their plans) no matter the cost."

'Endless war'

In the orchard blanketed hills, the front lines are constantly shifting as one group arrives, seizes a house for its command post and starts fighting, leaving residents to believe peace will come when one group dominates. Among the crowded field of criminal groups, civilians often have no idea who is who, and confusion multiplies fear.

A woman who requested anonymity for her safety said that various groups fight for control of the area where she lives and until one has it, it's constant fighting.

She fled her home in March with her family and all their neighbors. They were not safe in their tin-roofed homes, even under their beds, she said. They could hear mines explode when animals walked over them, making people afraid to go into the fields.

The woman's family returned when the army arrived, except for her 19-year-old son who she sent to the United States because she feared a cartel would snatch him.

She knows the soldiers will eventually leave and it makes her furious to hear the government say that things are improving. The morning she spoke with the AP an elderly man was wounded when he rode over a mine on a motorcycle.

Loss of leaders

Without these slain leaders standing up to the cartels, residents wonder who will take up this fight.

In some Indigenous communities in the north of the state, such as Sevina, organized crime has arrived in trucks, stormed guard posts and intimidated authorities. Villagers have mounted their own defense and organized forest patrols, after losing faith in federal forces. Success is not guaranteed, even thoughsome neighboring towns achieved it.

Meanwhile, cartels continue stifling the local economy controlling the price of limes in the South despite the recent deployment of 800 soldiers to protect the producers.

The grower who came to see Vergara said he is paid half the amount he needs to produce each kilo of limes, so he and others are taking orchards out of production.

Bernardo Bravo, their representative killed two weeks before Manzo, called it "permanent commercial kidnapping" and organized protests denouncing it. Now the growers have nobody to speak up for them.

"We don't see a resolution," the farmer said. "The criminals are squeezing us tight."

How 2 killings exposed the depths of cartels' grip in Mexico's Michoacan state

APATZINGAN, Mexico (AP) — On a steamy night, a farmer from a village of modest tin-roofed homes surrounded by rolling lim...
Medved revels in Minnesota's upset of Indiana, marking Big Ten debut where he grew up a Gophers fan

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) —Niko Medvedstood in a crowd that swarmed the Williams Arena court after Minnesota upset Indianain his Big Ten debut, beaming during hispostgame television interviewthat was broadcast through the sound system for all the fans to hear.

"I'm where I fell in love with the game," Medved said, glancing toward the seats he used to sit in as a kid as he tried to process the enormity of the milestone on his new job with the program he not only grew up a few miles away from but served as a student manager to launch his coaching career.

Medved turned to yell, "Go Gophers!" at the students who had surrounded him for congratulations and selfies after the 73-64 victory Wednesday night that handed the 22nd-ranked Hoosiers their first loss under their new coach,Darian DeVries.

"What a night," Medved said. "It's really hard to be prouder of a group of young men than I am of these guys."

With injuries sidelining two starters and three reserves, the Gophers (5-4) took the court at far less than full strength. They had three players pick up four fouls apiece. Leading scorer Cade Tyson played the entire game, and Isaac Asuma and Langston Reynolds each played 38-plus minutes.

"You're going to be tired. You're going to be sore. You've just got to make the next play. Hey, guys want to play a lot of minutes, right? That's not too bad."

Minnesota's first month under Medved has hardly been smooth. Three players, including California transfer B.J. Omot, have not been available at all. Starting center Robert Vaihola was sidelined by a knee injury four games ago, and starting point guard Chansey Willis Jr. just had season-ending surgery on his foot after breaking it last week. The Gophers lost last month at Missouri and dropped neutral-site games to San Francisco, Stanford and Santa Clara.

"I told them, 'People are going to count you out,'" Medved said. "We've got to find a way to just be as good as we can be."

Grayson Grove, one of only two players who remained from last season after Medved replaced Ben Johnson, ran down Hoosiers standout Tucker DeVries toblock his dunk attemptwith the Gophers trailing 29-22 late in the first half. That play came early in a stretch of 8:38 without a basket for Indiana that lasted well after intermission, the type of crowd-boosting, statement-making contribution from a redshirt freshman in a limited role that transcends the boxscore column.

Though the attendance was counted at just 8,582, less than 60% capacity in another sign of how much work Medved has to do to make the Gophers relevant again in not only the Big Ten but the robust Twin Cities entertainment market, the fans made their voices heard when it counted. And they had plenty of big plays to cheer for.

"It's not like some magical speech you go into or whatever. You try to empower your guys to believe," Medved said. "They're the ones who are doing the work. They're the ones who are diving on the floor. They're the ones who are fighting through the screens."

DeVries and Medved, two offour new head coachesin the conference this season along with Ben McCollum at Iowa and Buzz Williams at Maryland, both used stops at Drake as stepping stones to the Big Ten. McCollum did, too.

The Hoosiers (7-1, 0-1), who were averaging nearly 90 points per game before this, posted their season-low score. They have another tough test Saturday in Indianapolis against No. 6 Louisville.

"It was going to happen at some point, but the main thing now is now that you've lost one, how do you respond?" DeVries said. "We have a group that's pretty connected. We have some guys who've played a lot of basketball. I expect them to come ready."

Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign uphereandhere(AP mobile app). AP college basketball:https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-pollandhttps://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball.

Medved revels in Minnesota's upset of Indiana, marking Big Ten debut where he grew up a Gophers fan

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) —Niko Medvedstood in a crowd that swarmed the Williams Arena court after Minnesota upset Indianain his B...

 

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