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Valkyries first WNBA expansion team to reach playoffs in inaugural season
SAN FRANCISCO — The Golden State Valkyries made history Thursday night as they became the first WNBA expansion franchise to make the playoffs in its inaugural season.
The Valkyries clinched the berth after beating the Dallas Wings 84-80 at Chase Center.
“A lot of people didn’t believe in us, (and) it lights a fire in us,” forward Janelle Salaun said. “It’s a good thing. It’s better to start as the underdog and prove it to everyone. I know the girls on this team have (always) been in this position. It’s something that we are used to, and we did it as a group.”
Veronica Burton squared up against 2025 No. 1 draft pick Paige Bueckers as the game clock ticked down to under 30 seconds left in the game and Golden State up by just two points.
Burton started working toward her right, dragging Bueckers inside the 3-point line with her. Burton tried to shake her, and as Grace Berger reached as the help defender, Burton fought through the contact and threw up a circus shot.
“I kind of blacked out,” Burton said, laughing.
As the ball went in, she punched the air, and Ballhalla erupted as the Valkyries went up four, all but deciding the game.
“I don’t even know what I was feeling. … I was just trying to get a bucket when it mattered in crunch time,” Burton said. “I wasn’t looking for the foul, I was just looking to finish. … It was a huge help having everyone instill a bunch of confidence in me.”
Burton finished with 15 points on 5-of-10 shooting and five assists. Salaun led the team with 19 points, and Carla Leite had 15 points on 6-of-8 shooting and a plus-28 net rating.
After the final buzzer, the players gathered at center court and put on T-shirts that read “Playoffs 2025.” Fans refused to leave the stands, dancing to Rihanna’s “This Is What You Came For.” Salaun grabbed the arena mic and yelled, “Let’s Goooo,” and inside the locker room, players doused each other with water.
Valkyries coach Natalie Nakase watched the celebration from what she considered a healthy distance, knowing she would let the team have this moment, but tomorrow it would be right back to the film room.
Golden State has just three games remaining on its regular-season schedule — two against the league-leading Minnesota Lynx — and each is crucial to secure seeding and not fall to the seventh or eighth spot in the standings.
“I know, I’m a party pooper,” Nakase said.
She added: “We’re not done yet. Maybe after the season, after this is all done, I’ll reflect … I’ve got to stay present. I’ve got to stay where my feet are … and I think that’s why we’ve been able to do what we do, because we stay present. I don’t really allow them to celebrate. They can obviously enjoy this, but I also keep them humble. Y’all want to continue to make strides? Then let’s stay focused.”
Despite being a “start-up” team, the Valkyries have been confident in themselves since they reported to camp in April. With a roster made up of former sixth women and role players, international stars and young rookies, the common conclusion was that it would take time — at least a season — for Golden State to find its footing. That’s how most other expansion teams start out, like when the Atlanta Dream joined the WNBA in 2008 as the league’s last expansion team.
But the Valkyries made it clear they were writing their own story and did not want to be compared to expansion teams before them. They used the doubt as fuel.
“I told the girls this: We picked you guys for this reason — to do things for the first (time),” Nakase said.
Golden State has broken several records throughout its first season. First, it became the first team in women’s sports history to eclipse 15,000 season-ticket deposits. It led the league in attendance, selling out all 22 of its home games in Chase Center, which seats over 18,000. Now, it’s the first expansion team competing in the playoffs.
“This is awesome, honestly,” Burton said. “It’s a testament to all of the work that we put in, a testament to the belief that our coaching staff had in us; Ohemaa [Nyanin], the front office, all of them. To do it with the group that we did, we’re just enjoying it, soaking it in. Obviously, there is a long road ahead of us, but (we’re) able to sit and enjoy it.”
Because of a scheduling conflict, the Valkyries will not play their first home playoff game at Chase Center. Instead, Game 2 will be hosted at the SAP Center in San Jose, 48.4 miles from San Francisco.
“We can’t control it,” Burton said. “We have faith in our fans that they are going to continue to show out for us. Wherever we play, we’re going to bring our basketball. We’re confident, we’re excited for the opportunity to compete. Regardless of where we’re at, we’re going to show up.”
Who the Valkyries will face in the first round is still up in the air. They currently sit in the sixth seed, one game behind the New York Liberty. The Seattle Storm are a game and a half behind the Valkyries in seventh. The Dream, Phoenix Mercury and Las Vegas Aces are in a heated race from the second, third and fourth seeds.
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New York Knicks vs. Atlanta Hawks Live Score and Stats – April 30, 2026 Gametracker
Jalen Brunson can continue to build on his reputation as a big-time player if he finds a way to carry the New York Knicks into the second round of the playoffs.
Led by Brunson, the Knicks hold a 3-2 lead over the Atlanta Hawks in their best-of-seven, first-round Eastern Conference series and will try to clinch the series on Thursday in Atlanta.
Brunson scored 39 points with eight assists and a game-high plus-23 rating in Tuesday’s 126-97 romp over the Hawks in New York. The veteran is averaging 28.2 points and 5.8 assists in five playoff games. He’s scored 26-plus points in four of the five contests and continues to provide matchup problems for Atlanta.
“We’ll keep putting different guys on him, changing matchups, trying to do anything we can to make it hard on him,” Atlanta coach Quin Snyder said. “I have tremendous respect for him as a player and a leader, and his ability to create for himself and then create for his teammates. It’s not easy.”
Little has worked.
“We’re just trying to move him around as much as we can so they can’t catch a rhythm with him,” Knicks coach Mike Brown said.
It all worked for the Knicks on Tuesday. Karl-Anthony Towns had 16 points and 14 rebounds, and OG Anunoby added 17 points and 10 rebounds.
“OG and KAT were monsters,” Brown said. “They were phenomenal.”
The Knicks know, though, how elusive that fourth win in a playoff series can be.
“We just understand what the situation is. The toughest game to win is the one that ends someone’s season,” Towns said. “We’ve got to be super disciplined. We have to execute at the highest level that we have in this series. We have to be ready for a really tough game.”
The Knicks produced a tough-guy effort on Tuesday. They were able to make the game more physical, the style New York prefers against the more finesse game Atlanta desires.
“We’ve just got to play through it. We can’t let their physicality take us out of what we want to do,” Atlanta center Onyeka Okongwu said. ” … We’re not really playing like ourselves. We’re not running. We’re not moving the ball. We’re not spacing. The things that we did to get us to this point of the year, we’re not doing well enough. So we have to do that on Thursday.”
Atlanta failed to have a player reach 20 points in Game 5, with Jalen Johnson scoring 18 and Dyson Daniels adding 17. CJ McCollum, the hero of Atlanta’s Game 2 win in New York, was 3-of-10 shooting with six points.
The Hawks flew the white flag of surrender when they cleared the bench trailing by 24 with 4:09 remaining.
The physicality has really seemed to bother Johnson. He is averaging 19.2 points, 7.6 rebounds and 5.0 assists in the playoffs, compared to 22.5 points, 10.3 rebounds and 7.9 assists during the regular season.
“They did what they were supposed to do, protecting home court,” Snyder said. “Their defense never really let us establish consistently how we need to play to beat them. We have to be more committed to imposing our will on the offensive end. Really moving and passing, you can feel possessions where that occurs, and that’s when we’re efficient or have success.”
–Field Level Media
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Pittsburgh-area native JJ Wetherholt hits game-tying HR for Cardinals at PNC Park
PITTSBURGH — JJ Wetherholt has been to PNC Park plenty of times, but he’d never had a night like Monday.
The Cardinals’ rookie second baseman hit a game-tying homer during a four-run ninth inning as the Redbirds rallied for a 4-2 victory in the opener of a four-game series. St. Louis ended its four-game losing streak.
Growing up in the northern Pittsburgh suburb of Mars, Pa., Wetherholt was a big Pirates fan and idolized outfielder Andrew McCutchen. There was also a time, as a child, when Wetherholt was late to his own party at PNC Park because his friend’s father couldn’t find a parking space close to the stadium.
Wetherholt played collegiately at West Virginia and took part in three Backyard Brawls against Pitt, which are played annually at PNC Park.
Yet it was a different situation for Wetherholt on Monday night. It marked Wetherholt’s first time in Pittsburgh as a Major League player.
The Cardinals trailed, 2-0, entering the ninth inning, but Pedro Pagés and Wetherholt hit back-to-back homers off Dennis Santana to tie the score. José Fermín then hit a two-run go-ahead double into the left-field corner.
“I really was just really trying to get on base and was able to put a good swing on the ball,” Wetherholt said. “It was good to come through, but it was a great team win.”
Four Pirates pitchers combined to hold the Cardinals without a baserunner through 6 2/3 innings before Alec Burleson’s two-out infield single off Evan Sisk in the seventh broke up the perfect-game bid.
Burleson hit a ground ball that third baseman Nick Gonzales backhanded. However, Burleson beat the throw to first.
Opener Mason Montgomery and Justin Lawrence pitched one inning each, and Wilber Dotel worked the next four innings. Sisk pitched two-thirds of an inning before he was relieved by Isaac Mattson following Burleson’s hit.
“It says a lot that our guys were able to stay engaged and steal this game,” manager Oliver Marmol said. “That’s one of the great things about this team. Our guys always keep fighting.”
“It’s crazy,” Wetherholt, St. Louis’ No. 1 prospect, said before the game. “It’s kind of a goofy experience, but it’s such an honor to be here. Playing against the team you grew up rooting for will always hold a special place in your heart.
“For me, I feel like it’s just how many games I’ve watched here, so I feel like I know this park better than any other park. Just being here as a kid and playing here a little bit in college was super cool. The backdrop of the city you grew up in, to be able to play in a ballpark like that is special.”
Wetherholt stayed on the field and took pictures with his family for about 15 minutes after the game.
“The cool part is when he hit the home run … all his family sitting in that one section all went crazy,” Marmol said. “That’s something you don’t forget.”
Wetherholt, 23, is hitting .238/.359/.429 with six home runs and 14 RBIs in 28 games. He is living up to being ranked the game’s No. 5 prospect.
“He’s had an incredible season,” Marmol said. “I think we’ve talked quite a bit about his success early, not only offensively, but defensively, on the bases, his demeanor, what he brings to the club. There are a lot of positives there, especially for a young kid.”
“He’s gone about his business as if he’s been here for several years, which is cool to see. That, his understanding of the game and his hunger is a great combination. He’s confident enough of who he is as a person and a player, but never comfortable enough to not want to see what’s next.”
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Jayson Tatum does something no Celtics player has ever done in NBA Playoff game
Jayson Tatum is the first player in Celtics franchise history to record 30+ points, 10+ assists, and 5+ made three-pointers in a postseason game.
Boston Celtics forward Jayson Tatum made history in the team’s 128-96 Game 4 win against the Philadelphia 76ers on Sunday.
Tatum scored 30 points (8/16 FG, 5/10 3PT, 9/9 FT), grabbed seven rebounds, and dished out 11 assists, becoming the first player in Celtics franchise history to record 30+ points, 10+ assists, and 5+ three-pointers in a postseason game.
With 30 points scored on Sunday, he also passed Klay Thompson and James Worthy on the all-time NBA playoff scoring list and is now tied for 28th place with Russell Westbrook at 3,035 points.
In the current playoff series against the 76ers, Tatum is averaging 24.8 points, 9.3 rebounds, and 8.5 assists per game.
The Celtics, meanwhile, after a win in Game 4, now hold a commanding 3-1 lead and will have a chance to finish out the series on Tuesday in Boston.
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