Sports
Rockets edge Wizards 123-118 behind Şengün, Durant heroics
The Houston Rockets overcame a late surge by the Washington Wizards to claim a 123-118 victory Monday night at Capital One Arena, fueled by standout performances from Alperen Şengün and Kevin Durant.
Şengün poured in 32 points with 13 rebounds, while Durant added 30 points, seven assists, six boards, and a perfect 11-for-11 from the free-throw line in a rare appearance near his Maryland home this season.
Houston established control early, capitalizing on Washington’s inside struggles.
The Wizards hit 12 of 19 three-pointers in the first half but managed just 6 of 28 on two-point attempts, giving the Rockets a 60-51 halftime lead.
Amen Thompson and Durant fueled a decisive third-quarter run, expanding the lead to 18.

Though Washington rallied with a 38-point fourth quarter, including big contributions from Bilal Coulibaly (23 points) and Sharife Cooper (21), Houston held on, sealing the win with clutch free throws and Şengün’s finishing inside.
Rising stars shone alongside Houston’s veterans.
Thompson contributed 22 points and 12 rebounds, showcasing the athleticism that makes him one of the league’s top young forwards.
Rookie Reed Sheppard recorded his first career double-double with 19 points, 10 assists, seven rebounds, and six steals, tying a Rockets rookie record for steals in a game since James Harden.
Şengün’s versatile scoring, 13 of 20 from the field, including crafty post moves, and rebounding anchored Houston’s interior presence and control of the glass.
For the Wizards, injuries and roster transitions remain central.
Trae Young, expected to debut Thursday against Utah after limited action with Atlanta due to knee and quadriceps injuries, was ejected in the third quarter after leaving the bench during a scuffle between Houston’s Tari Eason and Washington’s Jamir Watkins.
Washington coach Brian Keefe had anticipated Young’s near-term return, but the ejection highlighted ongoing integration challenges for the All-Star guard.
Other Wizards contributions included Coulibaly’s efficient scoring and Cooper’s dynamic playmaking off the bench.
Rookie center Julian Reese, brother of WNBA star Angel Reese, made his NBA debut, starting and logging 28 minutes despite fouling out with two points.
Houston shot 48% from the field, 35% from three, and dominated inside the paint 64-48.
Turnovers and free throws played a critical role: Washington committed 18 miscues, leading to 24 points for Houston, while the Rockets went 28-of-32 from the line.
Looking ahead, Houston hosts the Golden State Warriors Thursday, aiming to continue their push in the Western Conference standings. The Wizards visit Orlando Tuesday, trying to integrate Young and build momentum for the remainder of a season focused on youth development.
Sports
Fatih Terim’s legacy set in stone with museum project in Adana
Born in Adana and revered across Türkiye as “The Emperor,” Fatih Terim is set to receive one of the country’s most ambitious football tributes after Sarıçam Mayor Bilal Uludağ confirmed that a major sports museum and multi-purpose complex bearing Terim’s name will be built in Adana under the direction of Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) leader Devlet Bahçeli.
The project, officially titled the Fatih Terim Sports Museum, will rise in Sarıçam as a sweeping cultural and sporting landmark dedicated to preserving the life and legacy of one of Turkish football’s most influential figures. Construction is expected to begin in September, with the complex targeted to open in 2027.
Speaking about the initiative, Uludağ described the museum as both a symbol of loyalty and a long-term investment in Turkish sporting culture, saying the project was designed to ensure Terim’s journey and achievements are passed on to future generations.

Few figures have shaped Turkish football as profoundly as Terim. Born and raised in Adana, he began his football journey with Adana Demirspor before evolving into a commanding defender and later one of the most decorated managers in Turkish football history.
His managerial legacy became inseparable from Galatasaray, where he built dynasties, captured eight Süper Lig titles and led the Istanbul giants to sustained domestic and European success.
Beyond silverware, Terim became a defining symbol of Turkish football culture through his fiery touchline presence, emotional leadership style and ability to develop generations of players and coaches.
His influence stretched far beyond club football during multiple spells with the Turkish national team, where he oversaw some of the country’s most memorable international campaigns.
The new complex aims to capture every layer of that legacy.
Designed as far more than a traditional museum, the venue will combine football history with active sporting infrastructure.
Alongside the museum itself, the site will include a sports park, congress center and indoor sports halls capable of hosting 37 separate sporting disciplines, transforming the area into a year-round sporting and cultural destination.
Visitors entering the museum will immediately be immersed in a football-inspired atmosphere.
The entrance has been designed to resemble the tunnel entrances of professional stadiums, allowing fans to experience the sensation of “walking onto the pitch” from the moment they step inside.
At the heart of the museum will stand three giant domes inspired by the shape of a football, with each section representing a distinct phase of Terim’s life.
The first dome will focus on Terim’s roots in Adana and the formative years that shaped his football identity.

The section is expected to feature memorabilia from his youth, early playing career and the local football culture that fueled his rise from neighborhood pitches to the national stage.
Personal belongings, archival material and symbolic objects tied to his early life will help trace the beginning of a career that later transformed Turkish football.
The second dome will center on Terim the manager, chronicling the era that elevated him into a national icon.
His championship-winning reigns with Galatasaray, his achievements in European competitions and his time leading the Turkish national team will form the core of the exhibition.
The section is expected to showcase trophies, match memorabilia, tactical archives and visual recreations of defining moments that cemented his “Emperor” status among supporters.
The third dome will shift the focus away from football and present a more personal portrait of Terim.
Visitors will be introduced to his family life, personal philosophy and the values that shaped him away from stadium lights and media attention.
Organizers hope the section will reveal the human side of a figure often associated with intensity, discipline and relentless ambition.
Uludağ said the project represents a bridge between generations, ensuring younger visitors can understand how a footballer from Adana became one of the most recognizable sporting figures in Turkish history.
Sports
Ronda Rousey’s MMA reinvention fuels Carano comeback fight
Ronda Rousey removes a framed newspaper from the wall and smiles as she reads headlines celebrating a dominant victory over Gina Carano, a fight that has yet to take place.
Later that week, Rousey and her team stage a full dress rehearsal at her temporary training base in Las Vegas for her MMA comeback. Dressed in fight-night gear, she moves through her warmup before simulating a full cage walk with loud music and flashing lights, an elaborate visualization drill designed to prepare her 39-year-old body and migraine-prone mind for fight night.
“It just makes everything really special and fun,” Rousey told The Associated Press (AP). “It’s so nice that everything is considered.”
The mental work is part of a broader overhaul of her training as she prepares to face fellow MMA pioneer Gina Carano on Saturday night at Intuit Dome in Inglewood, California.
Nearly a decade after she left the sport at the peak of her fame and what she has described as the lowest point of her personal happiness in MMA, Rousey now has a cadre of top-tier coaches and support staff, a world-class training setup and full mental support for her return.
That is notable because Rousey became arguably the most famous athlete in women’s combat sports history despite having a fraction of the coaching help and outside-the-cage structure given to many top fighters.
Rousey previously trained out of a storefront fight club in Glendale, California, with Edmond Tarverdyan, a coach to whom she remained intractably loyal while the sport questioned his knowledge and suitability, to the point where Rousey’s mother, AnnMaria De Mars, publicly called him an idiot.
When asked how she looks back on her years with Tarverdyan, Rousey said: “We accomplished a lot, but I think we went as far as we could together.”
Many years later, Rousey has experienced what is possible outside those self-imposed boundaries, and she hopes to show it against Carano.
When Rousey began to explore the possibility of an MMA return last year, her husband, former UFC heavyweight Travis Browne, encouraged her to team up with his longtime trainer, Ricky Lundell. Rousey initially did not like Lundell in their first encounters, but the enthusiastic coach quickly won her over.
When they got to work, Rousey recognized everything she did not have in her first run in the sport.
She is receiving innovative coaching from a team led by Lundell, the accomplished grappler and jiu-jitsu athlete who has coached Jon Jones and Frank Mir. The upgrades in Rousey’s physical training setup are also significant, with access to a modern array of machines, sparring partners and recovery equipment. Lundell even converted his garage to install a sauna, a five-person cold tub and a hyperbaric chamber.
Lundell and his team provide data she had never seen before, including written debriefs of every training session. They hold regular video calls to analyze her progress. She says she now understands more about her strengths and weaknesses than ever before.
“He always keeps me in a great mind space,” Rousey said. “He keeps it very positive while still challenging me and giving me what I need. I’ve never seen a coach that’s so organized. A lot of training camps are very disjointed, and there’s a lot of egos pushing against each other. Ricky is really great at team building and keeping everybody on the same page and coordinated.”
The fake newspaper, which is changed for each of her training trips to Las Vegas from her family farm in Riverside County, California, is a motivational device. It is also a positive affirmation of Rousey’s work.
Most importantly, it represents the kind of structured support she says she rarely had when she felt alone and overwhelmed and fought from darker mental places.
“It takes so much off my shoulders that was on me before,” Rousey said. “It just makes everything as easy and enjoyable as possible.”
When Rousey lost her final two UFC fights and realized she needed to prioritize her health, including her increasing susceptibility to concussions, she left the spotlight of the cage for acting and professional wrestling, followed by marriage and children.
“I had to allow my body to rest and heal,” Rousey said.
Rousey spent years away from competition but not away from her sport.
She says she found a sense of mental peace and maturity that deepened her connection to martial arts, which has been central to her life since her mother taught her judo three decades earlier. She still keeps her skills sharp with occasional workouts, though she describes them as secondary to overall fitness and a healthier mental approach.
“As a martial artist, I’m not just memorizing moves,” Rousey said. “I’m learning concepts and philosophy, and those things never go away or change. You still develop them over time. If anything, they get more solidified into what you actually are, instead of superfluous little tricks that take up bandwidth when you’re training for a fight.”
Rousey recalled a conversation with filmmaker Taika Waititi in which he described his screenwriting process: He writes a script, sets it aside, then writes it again from memory, keeping only what he remembers most clearly.
“That’s how I think of martial arts,” Rousey said. “The core of what matters, the core of the philosophy, is what always sticks. That’s always in there.”
Sports
Perez ruffles feathers with explosive Madrid rant, omits liability
Real Madrid president Florentino Perez delivered a fiery and deeply divisive defense of his leadership on Tuesday, refusing to resign after one of the club’s most turbulent seasons in recent memory while lashing out at critics, journalists, referees and rivals during an extraordinary press conference that lasted more than an hour.
The 79-year-old president, who has overseen one of the most successful eras in the history of Real Madrid, called an emergency media appearance at the club’s Valdebebas training complex amid growing unrest following a trophyless campaign that exposed fractures across the squad, coaching staff and boardroom.
Instead of offering a detailed roadmap for rebuilding the side after a disastrous 2025-26 season, Perez used much of the session to defend his legacy, attack the media and reject mounting speculation that his time at the helm could be nearing an end.
“I am not going to resign,” Perez declared at the outset, dismissing rumors of his departure before announcing snap presidential elections years ahead of schedule.
The move came just days after arch-rivals Barcelona sealed the La Liga title with a 2-0 Clasico victory over Madrid, a result that symbolized a painful campaign in which the Spanish giants fell far below expectations domestically and in Europe.
Madrid finished second in La Liga and exited the Champions League after a quarterfinal defeat to FC Bayern Munich.
Their struggles were compounded by dressing-room tensions, managerial upheaval and public frustration from supporters who watched a star-studded squad unravel.
Perez, however, showed little appetite for discussing footballing failures in depth.
“I’m not here to talk about sporting matters,” he repeatedly told reporters when questioned about coaches, transfers or internal conflicts.
The president instead launched into lengthy attacks on journalists and media outlets he accused of orchestrating campaigns against him and the club.
He singled out several reporters by name, accused sections of the press of spreading “fake news,” and portrayed himself as the target of coordinated hostility from figures linked to rival clubs and institutions.
He also revived longstanding grievances against referees, La Liga and the ongoing Negreira scandal involving alleged payments made by Barcelona to a former refereeing official.
Perez described the case as “the biggest corruption scandal in football history” and claimed Madrid had been denied titles and points over the years.
At one point, Perez insisted his administration should have won “14 league titles” rather than seven since his return to power in 2009, suggesting refereeing decisions had repeatedly cost Madrid success.
The combative tone of the appearance stunned many observers, particularly as the president largely sidestepped criticism of decisions made under his own leadership.
Much of Madrid’s instability this season stemmed from issues tied directly to Perez’s sporting project.
The club’s heavy reliance on superstar recruitment, highlighted by the arrival of Kylian Mbappe, reportedly increased player influence inside the dressing room and contributed to tensions with coaching staff.
Former coach Xabi Alonso lasted only months before leaving amid reports of disagreements with senior players and the board, while interim boss Álvaro Arbeloa struggled to steady the team.
Rumors linking Jose Mourinho with a dramatic return intensified before the press conference, although Perez refused to engage with speculation.
“We are not at that stage,” he said when asked about Mourinho.
Off the field, Madrid’s season spiraled further with reports of dressing-room altercations and player unrest.
Midfielder Federico Valverde was reportedly hospitalized following an altercation involving teammate Aurelien Tchouameni, while other incidents involving senior players fueled concerns over discipline and squad harmony.
Supporters also turned on several stars during the campaign. Both Vinicius Junior and Mbappe were booed at the Santiago Bernabeu as frustration mounted over poor performances and a perceived lack of cohesion.
Yet Perez framed the criticism directed at him as unfair given his record at the club.
Under his leadership, Madrid have won 37 football titles and seven Champions League crowns across two presidential spells, transforming the club into a commercial powerhouse while modernizing the Bernabeu and expanding global revenues.
“Why do they want to get rid of me?” Perez asked during the press conference. “Let them stand for election.”
Backlash
The defiant appearance triggered immediate backlash across Spain.
Former Madrid president Ramon Calderon reportedly described Perez’s behavior as “grotesque” and “dictatorial,” while critics accused the veteran president of refusing to accept responsibility for the club’s decline this season.
Analysts and supporters were equally baffled by the lack of concrete solutions regarding the team’s future, especially with Madrid facing a crucial summer that could define the next phase of the club’s modern era.
Questions remain over the managerial position, squad balance and whether Perez’s model of assembling superstar talent can still guarantee stability and sustained success in an increasingly demanding football landscape.
Sports
LeBron James faces uncertain offseason after Lakers’ playoff exit
After the Los Angeles Lakers were defeated by the Oklahoma City Thunder in the second round of the playoffs, LeBron James enters an offseason defined by uncertainty, with the NBA icon weighing whether to remain in Los Angeles, join another team or consider retirement.
With his 23rd NBA season complete, the league’s all-time leading scorer faces one of the biggest decisions of his career.
Moments after the Lakers’ 115-110 defeat in Monday’s Western Conference semifinal series, the 41-year-old said he was not ready to decide his future.
“I don’t know what the future holds for me, obviously,” the 22-time All-Star told reporters. James added that he plans to “recalibrate” with his family and spend time with them before making any decision about the next step in his career.
Numbers have been declining
As James left the floor Monday after posting 24 points and a game-high 12 rebounds, some wondered whether it was his last appearance in the NBA.
At 41, it is no surprise James is no longer producing at the level he once did, averaging 20.9 points per game this season while playing a supporting role behind Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves. His scoring output has declined since the 2021-22 season, when he averaged 30.3 points per game.
James, who owns the longest career in NBA history, said he has “always been in love with the process” of playing basketball, from showing up to morning practices to “giving everything I got.”
The native of Akron, Ohio, was selected first overall in the 2003 NBA Draft by the Cleveland Cavaliers and steadily rose to stardom, earning MVP honors in 2009 and 2010.
He took his talents to the Miami Heat in 2010, winning back-to-back championships in 2012 and 2013 before returning to the Cavaliers in 2014.
In 2016, he led Cleveland to a championship, ending the city’s 52-year professional sports title drought.
He left the Cavaliers for a second time in 2018 to join the Lakers, where he won a fourth title in 2020.
Return to L.A. still an option
James could re-sign with the Lakers, though head coach JJ Redick cautioned that a decision would likely come in the next two months.
“I haven’t even thought about that,” Redick said postgame. “We’ll deal with the offseason in the offseason, which is the next two months.”
It is hard to imagine a team that would not welcome the chance to add James, but any suitor would need to give him a compelling reason to leave. Widely considered one of the greatest players of all time, with 43,440 career points, he will likely want to finish his career in contention.
His eldest son, Lakers guard Bronny James, said he has “no clue” about his father’s plans.
“He looks like he can play another however many years, but he’s been in the league longer than he’s been out of it,” said the 21-year-old. “It’s insane. I think he should think about it, and whatever he feels happy with, do that.”
Sports
Turkish football rocked as TFF sends 10 Süper Lig clubs to PFDK
The Turkish Football Federation’s (TFF) legal board has referred 10 Süper Lig clubs and several club officials to the Professional Football Disciplinary Board (PFDK) following a fiery weekend of league action marked by crowd trouble, offensive chants and a string of disciplinary flashpoints across Türkiye’s top flight.
The most serious cases emerged from Gençlerbirliği’s heated clash against Kasımpaşa S.K., where both clubs and multiple officials were swept into disciplinary proceedings after a stormy encounter in Ankara.
Gençlerbirliği S.K. were referred over allegations of irregular spectator entry under Article 49 of the Football Disciplinary Regulations, while several club officials also landed in trouble for breaching accreditation and competition directives.
Club executive Ali Ekber Düzgün was sent to the PFDK with a provisional suspension for alleged unsporting conduct, while officials Ümit Utaş, Hüseyin Şen, Hakan Acar and Mehmet Doğru were all cited for actions deemed contrary to federation regulations.
Recep Baylan was also referred with precautionary measures attached over violations linked to Süper Lig competition statutes.
Kasımpaşa’s disciplinary file proved equally extensive. The Istanbul side were charged with collective unsporting conduct after 10 of their players received yellow cards during the match, an incident that underlined the tense atmosphere surrounding the contest.
Kasımpaşa executive Ceyhun Kazancı faces multiple allegations, including breaching directives, unsporting behavior, insults and threats, with the federation imposing a provisional suspension pending the disciplinary process.
Head coach Emre Belözoğlu was also referred for alleged unsporting conduct, alongside team masseur Rahman Karaağaç.
League leaders Galatasaray S.K. were referred after their match against Antalyaspor over offensive chanting, crowd disturbances and an alleged breach of sporting equipment regulations.
Rivals Beşiktaş J.K. were cited for offensive chants following their high-profile showdown with Trabzonspor, while Fenerbahçe S.K. were referred over both crowd misconduct and offensive supporter behavior during their trip to Konyaspor.
Elsewhere, Samsunspor, Kocaelispor, Göztepe S.K., Eyüpspor, Çaykur Rizespor and Kayserispor were all referred to the PFDK over offensive and abusive chanting by supporters during weekend fixtures.
Sports
Neymar’s Brazil future hinges on fitness, not emotion: Ancelotti
Carlo Ancelotti will deliver Brazil’s World Cup squad on Monday with the weight of a football nation resting on one decision: whether Neymar still belongs at the center of the Selecao’s future.
For months, the debate has consumed Brazil. It is no longer simply about talent. Nobody questions that. The real question is whether Neymar’s body can still survive the demands of a modern World Cup campaign.
At 34, the forward remains Brazil’s all-time leading scorer and one of the country’s most iconic football figures. But years of injuries, interrupted seasons and inconsistent availability have turned what once felt automatic into the toughest call of Ancelotti’s early reign.
Speaking to Reuters at the Brazilian Football Confederation headquarters in Rio de Janeiro, the veteran Italian admitted the decision has become one of balancing emotion with practicality.
“When you have to choose, you have to consider many things,” Ancelotti said. “Neymar is an important player for this country because of the talent he has always shown. But he has had problems and is working hard to recover.
“He has improved a lot recently and is playing regularly. It is not such an easy decision for me. We have to weigh up the pros and cons carefully.”
The dilemma captures the wider challenge facing Brazil ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup. The five-time champions are chasing a sixth title under one of the most decorated managers in football history, but Ancelotti is determined to build a side based on intensity, discipline and collective balance rather than reputation.
That philosophy places Neymar under the microscope.
After returning to Santos in an emotional homecoming earlier this year, the former Barcelona and Paris Saint-Germain star has shown flashes of the creativity that once made him the centerpiece of Brazilian football.
There have been goals, assists and moments of brilliance, but there have also been lingering concerns over whether he can maintain elite intensity over a full tournament.
Ancelotti’s tactical demands are unforgiving. His system requires forwards to press aggressively, track back defensively and sustain relentless movement without the ball. Neymar’s football intelligence remains elite, but durability remains the lingering uncertainty.
“He has improved his fitness a lot in recent matches,” Ancelotti said. “He has played some very good matches lately. His fitness has improved. He can maintain a high intensity in a match. But there are matches and matches.”
The Italian’s calm handling of the situation reflects a managerial career built on navigating pressure and superstar egos. Ancelotti remains the only coach to win league titles in all five of Europe’s major leagues and has collected a record five Champions League trophies as a manager.
Still, even he knows few squad calls carry the emotional weight of Neymar in Brazil.
Inside the dressing room, support for the forward remains strong. Several players have publicly backed Neymar’s inclusion, while fans remain deeply divided between loyalty to a national icon and fears that sentiment could weaken Brazil’s title chances.
“I know full well that Neymar is much loved, not only by the public but also by the players,” Ancelotti said.
“This is also a factor, because we have to consider the atmosphere that will surround Neymar’s call-up. He’s very well-liked, he’s very much loved.”
Yet Ancelotti made it clear that affection alone will not secure Neymar a place on the plane.
“The decision will be 100% professional,” he said. “I will only take into account how he is performing as a footballer. Nothing else.”
The coach insists he has faced no outside pressure despite intense public scrutiny surrounding the issue. In Brazil, Neymar’s future has become a national conversation stretching beyond football circles, reflecting his enduring status as one of the country’s defining sporting figures.
For Ancelotti, though, the greater concern is not the internal harmony of the squad but the storm outside it.
“The atmosphere is a very positive, very clean one,” he said. “No matter which player is in the squad, it will remain positive and clean right to the end.
“But I can’t control the external atmosphere and what the media says.”
Brazil’s attacking depth gives Ancelotti alternatives. Vinicius Junior, Rodrygo, Raphinha and teenage sensation Endrick represent the new generation expected to lead the nation into the tournament across the United States, Canada and Mexico.
That reality makes Neymar’s situation even more delicate. His inclusion would offer experience, creativity and the possibility of one final World Cup chapter for a generational star. His omission would signal a ruthless commitment to fitness, energy and tactical efficiency.
Either way, Monday’s announcement will define the early tone of Brazil’s World Cup campaign.
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