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NBA news: Knicks players given street names in NYC for playoff run

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The New York Knicks are taking over the streets of New York City, literally. 

New York City Mayor Eric Adams announced on Wednesday that some city streets will be co-named as Knicks players in a press release. 

The renaming of the streets came ahead of Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals between the Knicks and Indiana Pacers on Wednesday night.

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One of the street signs NYC DOT is temporarily installing as the New York Knicks advance to the 2025 Eastern Conference Finals. (NYC DOT)

The Knicks stunned the Boston Celtics and defeated the reigning champions in six games and advanced to their first conference final in 25 years. 

“The Knicks embody the spirit of New York – resilient, passionate, and unstoppable,” Adams said in a statement

“On the path to a championship, we recognize the hard work and determination that has gotten this team to the Eastern Conference Finals and we’re celebrating this team by temporarily co-naming our city streets so all New Yorkers can celebrate their Knicks pride. Nearly 8.5 million New Yorkers, and millions more, are behind the New York Knicks as they continue this incredible journey.”

The streets will be co-named for as long as the Knicks are still in the playoff hunt. Each sign is blue and orange and features the player’s name and jersey number.

Last season, the Pacers eliminated a Knicks team that was decimated by injuries in seven games in the Eastern Conference semifinals.

All 15 players on the Knicks roster received a street name:

KNICKS, PACERS TO REKINDLE EPIC RIVALRY THAT FEATURED SOME OF NBA’S MOST ICONIC MOMENTS

Mikal Bridges and Miles McBride celebrate

New York Knicks forward Mikal Bridges (25) and guard Miles McBride (2) celebrates after a basket in the second half during game four of the second round for the 2025 NBA Playoffs against the Boston Celtics at Madison Square Garden on May 12, 2025.  (Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images)

Precious Achiuwa Place – 6th Avenue and West Washington Place

OG Anunoby Alley – 6th Avenue and West 8th Street

Mikal Bridges Block – 7th Avenue and West 25th Street

Jalen Bruson Boulevard – 7th Avenue and West 11th Street

Pacome Dadiet Drive – 6th Avenue and West 4th Street

Josh Hart Street – 6th Avenue and West 3rd Street

Ariel Hukporti Street – 7th Avenue and West 55th Street

Tyler Kolek Lane – 7th Avenue and West 13th Street

Miles “Deuce” McBride – 6th Avenue and Minetta Lane

Cam Payne Place – 6th Avenue and Bleecker Street

Mitchell Robinson Road – 7th Avenue and West 23rd Street

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Jalen Brunson celebrates

New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson (11) celebrates his three point shot against the Boston Celtics during the fourth quarter of game six in the second round of the 2025 NBA Playoffs at Madison Square Garden on May 16, 2025.  (Brad Penner-Imagn Images)

Landry Shamet Circle – 7th Avenue and West 44th Street

Karl-Anthony Towns Square – 7th Avenue and West 32nd Street

PJ Tucker Terrace – 7th Avenue and West 17th Street

Delon Wright Circle – 6th Avenue and Houston Street

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Allegheny County Court of Common Pleas election results

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Some 22 candidates are seeking a spot on the Allegheny County Court of Common Pleas, and eight will be chosen to take seats on the bench at the end of this year. And while voters make the final choice in November, the primary election Tuesday will go a long way toward shaping the future of the county bench.

The eight candidates endorsed by the Allegheny County Democratic Committee appear to have edged out other competitors for the Democratic primary: Amanda Green-Hawkins, Dan Miller, Quita Bridges, Julie Capone, Anthony DeLuca, Heather Schmidt Bresnahan, Jaime Marie Hickton and Matthew V. Rudzki.

In heavily Democratic Allegheny County, they go into November with a strong advantage.

Judicial candidates are permitted to seek the nomination of both parties, and four candidates won the nod from GOP voters without securing a spot on the Democratic ticket.

Those candidates who did not top the Democratic ticket — Michele Santicola, Jackie Obara, Sarra Terry and Alyssa Cowan — will still appear on the ballot in November as Republicans. And they may be joined by at least one more Republican. An unusually large number of write-in votes — more than 28,000 — were cast on the Republican side, a spike that often reflects a concerted effort to place a candidate on the fall ballot.

The fact that the GOP ticket contains only six named candidates, leaving two vacant, means that Republicans could place up to two new names on the November ballot using the write-in option. But it generally takes county officials a few weeks to tabulate write-ins, so it was not immediately apparent what impact such a gambit would have.

But according to a Republican source, the surge in write-in ballots reflects a conservative grassroots effort to displace some of the more liberal cross-filed Democrats on the ballot by putting forward more conservative alternatives.

Those seats amount to nearly one-fifth of the Common Pleas Court’s 43 judgeships — and combined with a similar number of vacancies filled in 2021, this year’s election will mark an ongoing generational shift on the bench. Among those hoping to be part of it are public defenders, county prosecutors, a state lawmaker and several magisterial district court judges.

Still, local voters could be forgiven if they didn’t recognize all of the names on the ballot before them Tuesday.

“There’s no doubt that judicial races perhaps fly a little bit under the radar for people’s attention,” said state Rep. Dan Miller, a Mt. Lebanon Democrat who is running for the seat. “It does take a level of analysis that for some people [who say], ‘It’s a judge spot. I may never be in court.’ [They’re] not feeling as connected to the question as they would for a legislative one perhaps.”

Still, he said, the posts are “arguably more important than ever right now.”

Common Pleas Court handles cases ranging from criminal charges to child custody disputes, addressing civil disputes and the disposition of wills. They are assigned into one of four divisions — criminal, civil, family and orphans’ court — by the court’s president judge. They are elected to 10-year terms, after which they face an up-or-down vote to serve another 10 years. They earn an annual salary of $227,411.

Quita Bridges, a top vote-getter in the Democratic primary, and Alyssa Cowan, who will appear on the GOP ballot in November, are already Common Pleas judges, having been nominated earlier this year by Gov. Josh Shapiro (and later confirmed by the state Senate) to fill vacant seats. Both ran by asking voters to keep them on the bench, a request that suggests a judge is a familiar face even if voters can’t place their name.

Judges are supposed to be above politics, and in Pennsylvania, candidates are permitted to file on both the Republican and Democratic ballots, as a half-dozen candidates did this spring. (The others ran solely as Democrats: No candidates ran on only the Republican ticket.)

But the sheer volume of candidates, and the generally low profile of judicial contests, means that the endorsements of outside groups like the region’s labor council or the Allegheny County Democratic Committee loom large. And as happened in 2021, a coalition of progressive organizations assembled a “slate of eight” to press the cause of justice reform.

All of that is in addition to the Allegheny County Bar Association’s recommendations, which are based on area lawyers’ estimations of each candidate’s experience, ability, and temperament.

Six of the top eight finishers in the Democratic primary were endorsed by the region’s labor council, with four also endorsed by the progressive “slate of eight.” Perhaps most instructive to voters was the Allegheny County Democratic Committee, which backed all eight top-place finishers.

Miller, who has served for a dozen years in the legislature and is no stranger to election contests, says judicial races have a different feel. For one thing, he said, “the numbers and scale are different” in a race that stretches across a county of 1.2 million people rather than a state House district.

“The scope of the conversations are greater and you’re trying to connect with as many people as possible,” he said.

What’s more, he said, although there are more candidates than positions open, “You’re really not running against anyone.”

In most races, he said, “The decision tends to be binary: Who’s a Democrat, who is a Republican? In this type of race, there tends to be many more factors on the line.”

Chris Potter contributed to this report.





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Zeldin, Dems get into heated argument over climate grants

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EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin sparred angrily Wednesday with a top Senate Democrat over the cancellation of hundreds of agency grants awarded during the Biden administration.

During the hearing of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, Zeldin and ranking member Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) descended into a shouting match over the mechanics of how those cancellations were decided.

“You guys are going to have to start getting your story straight,” Whitehouse said after citing sworn court filings that he said contradicted Zeldin’s claims that every canceled grant was first individually reviewed.

“I conducted an individual review of everything and that concept doesn’t work for you,” Zeldin said, his voice rising as the two men repeatedly talked over each other. “You don’t care about wasting money, but the Trump administration does, senator.”

After Whitehouse then asked him to back up that assertion by providing his schedule, Zeldin replied, “I’m here telling you that I was reviewing this stuff and working on it almost every single day”.

“The problem with your assertion here today is that it is belied by your own employees’ sworn statements in court,” Whitehouse countered.

The heated exchange ended soon after when Whitehouse’s time to speak expired, but it underscored the bitterness over the Trump administration’s efforts to take back billions of dollars in grants awarded by EPA and other agencies during former President Joe Biden’s tenure.

While Zeldin on Wednesday portrayed those decisions as an effort to safeguard taxpayer money, Democrats and other critics view them as part of a politically driven campaign to strip legitimate recipients of congressionally appropriated funds.

In a court filing in one lawsuit last month, a senior EPA official disclosed that the agency was ending 781 Biden-era grants awarded to reduce disparities in pollution exposure under the umbrella of environmental justice as well as to cut greenhouse gas emissions from the construction sector. That total was almost twice the number contained in an earlier EPA news release.

Wednesday’s hearing was the last — and by far the stormiest — of four appearances by Zeldin before House and Senate panels this month, ostensibly to discuss the Trump administration’s proposal to slash EPA’s core budget by more than half next year.

The grants controversy later prompted another shouting match between Zeldin and Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.).

After Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) had earlier told Zeldin at length that his legacy would be more cancer, Zeldin replied, “I understand you were an aspiring fiction writer.”

When the hearing ended, EPW Chair Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) took the unusual step of asking spectators in the mostly full room to remain seated while Capitol Police escorted Zeldin and a small contingent of aides out through a back room.



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Allegheny County Election Results: Pennsylvania Primary 2025

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Allegheny County Primary Election Results: Commitment 2025

Now back to our election coverage. Less than an hour ago, the AP projecting Corey O’Connor as the winner over incumbent Mayor Ed Gay. The race called within this last hour. Reporter Sheldon Ingram is talking with Corey O’Connor right now. Let’s listen in. Money on *** national search for. Thank you so much for your time. Thank you guys. Alright, thank you. We’ll hear more from O’Connor later in this broadcast. Yeah, definitely to Pittsburgh South side, where incumbent mayor Ed Gay is holding his watch party and conceded just before 11 o’clock. Reporter Kayleigh Gunterson has been there all night. Kayleigh, what has been the reaction since this projected loss? Well Chris and Mike, it was certainly disappointing. He was very obvious about that. He said, you know, it was *** hard loss, but he did urge his supporters in the room to not take this as *** defeat, but just to further light their fire for the movement that he says his administration created over the past *** little over 3 years. He did come out first though and congratulate Corey O’Connor. Listen to what he said. So of course we gonna congratulate Corey O’Connor. Of course we gonna do that. Because let me tell you what you’ve helped to build. The level of scrutiny and pressure you know about it that I went through in this administration has never been through. And for us to be able to stand tall and change the game in the midst of multiple storms in order to move this city forward. Mayor Gay did not talk about his record so much or the things that he says his administration has accomplished over the last few years, but he really just handed out *** lot of thank yous and gratitude to the people who supported him throughout this race. He mentioned the young people who went door to door knocking, trying to reach voters, more young people than he had seen, you know, in this city in the past, involved in that kind of work. He also talked to. *** movement launched under this campaign that his campaign described as *** multiracial, multi-generational movement. They noted that this is the same movement that got Congresswoman Summer Lee elected and county executive Sarah Emerao, so they said despite this loss, that movement remains, and they feel that it is stronger than ever. Now Gainey, afterwards we got to talk to him one on one. We got to ask him about. Some of the things that may have gone wrong in this campaign to end up with this result, some of the things that he felt they did well, and of course *** lot of the things that he’s very proud of from his record. You can hear directly from him tomorrow morning right here on Channel 4. For now I’ll send it back to you guys. All right, Kayleigh, thank you. We do want to get back to Sheldon Ingraham. Sheldon, we just saw you speaking with Corey O’Connor. Uh, what was he saying? Well, Corey O’Connor said *** lot. Corey O’Connor said *** lot to us tonight. First of all, he said that. He still has to win the election in the fall, but the number one priority for Corey O’Connor, as he just spoke with us, is first trying to address the city’s financial crisis, beefing up the police department to make it large enough to serve the people of Pittsburgh and finding *** new police chief, and he also stressed that he wants to bring more transparency. To the role of mayor, so he’s very excited about winning the Democratic nomination tonight and at this gathering, this watch party, it was an enormous crowd here. He was supported by several unions throughout the city as well as *** lot of prominent business owners here in the city of Pittsburgh. He also had the support. Here in the group of political leaders such as State Senator Wayne Fontana and State Representative Dan Franco, there are *** number of city council people here supporting him as well. Bobby Wilson, Teresa Smith, as well as Anthony Cargill. So he has the support of *** lot of people, and they were very happy to see him win this nomination. After he spoke to the crowd, he spoke with us, but here’s *** little bit of what he said with the audience um as soon as he took the podium to accept this nomination. I entered this race with *** simple message that Pittsburgh deserves better. I looked around the city as *** father of two young kids, and I was concerned, concerned about the rise in crime, concerned about the lack of growth and opportunity, concerned about the looming financial crisis. I want my kids to raise their families here like my wife Katie and I are doing. I want you to raise your kids and your grandkids here because our message has always been that Pittsburgh should be every family’s first choice. And so that was what Bobby Corey O’Connor spoke with us earlier. Now his father served as mayor of Pittsburgh. He only served briefly for six months before unfortunately passing away. I asked him what did he learn from his father during his time as *** city council member and his short time during mayor. He says that he learned that neighborhoods and families in Pittsburgh matter first, and that is how he was carrying out. His campaign again he told me earlier today that if he is elected mayor of the city of Pittsburgh, he wants to address the city’s financial crisis. He wants to address the police department of finding *** new chief, building up the force that there are enough police officers to serve the city, and he wants to develop *** culture of transparency in the office of mayor. Also, he says that he and current mayor. are friends, and they spoke this evening and they will have more conversations in the future about the transition of power if Corey O’Connor is elected mayor of Pittsburgh in the fall. We’re now reporting live, Sheldon Negro on Pittsburgh’s Action News for. All right, Sheldon, thank you. And as you heard earlier in the broadcast, the AP projected Tony Moreno, the winner of the Republican primary, securing more than 1000 more votes than His opponent Thomas West reporter Jordan Syoppa is live at Moreno’s watch party in Jordan, *** celebratory night for the former Pittsburgh police officer. Yeah, Mike Tony Moreno taking home the win tonight. He delivered *** victory speech about an hour ago saying he spoke to Thomas West’s, uh, campaign who congratulated him. Now Moreno’s message tonight it’s time to take back, uh, bring back accountability and transparency to the city of Pittsburgh. Now the former Pittsburgh police officer said tonight it’s also time to build public safety back to the strength and pride it deserves and vowed to clean Pittsburgh streets. Moreno has hopes Pittsburgh could be the headquarters of artificial intelligence, data storage, and bitcoin mining, in turn creating. More jobs in the city. Moreno was the first Republican to announce his candidacy in the mayoral race, making his second bid for Pittsburgh, marking his second bid for Pittsburgh mayor. Moreno lost the race to Pittsburgh Mayor Ed Ganey in 2021. This November, he’s up against Corey O’Connor. We’re going to Make sure our public works is built. We’re gonna make sure the Columbus statue is recognized and taken care of. We’re gonna make sure our parks are taken care of. We’re gonna make sure our money is spent appropriately. We’re gonna make sure everybody in the communities are living the lives that they want to live. It doesn’t matter what party you represent. This is the lives of Pittsburghers that we’re dealing with here. Now, uh, Moreno, uh, congratulated O’Connor and Gainey on his historic term as mayor, but he said it’s time to move on from that part of history, reporting live in Brookline. I’m Jordan Sao of Pittsburgh’s Action News for. Jordan, thank you again on the Republican side, Thomas West conceded about one hour ago. Tony Moreno claiming victory. Here’s what West had to say. I love the city and our best days are ahead if we allow them to be ahead, and I just want to say that I will be *** part of moving the city forward. I don’t know what capacity, but I am looking forward to having better days in the city of Pittsburgh. And again, I want to thank everyone for coming out and like I said, hold your elected leaders, no matter who they are accountable. It has to happen. More election coverage still ahead. Stay tuned for our conversation with election experts breaking down the results of tonight’s races. *** severe weather alert day tomorrow we’ll have heavy rain off and on in the morning and then again as we go into the afternoon and evening hours, the potential for some thunderstorms later on and rainfall amounts 1 inch up to 3 inches of rain that could lead to some flooding. There is *** flood watch that is in effect. We’ll talk all about that, cover how much rain is going to fall in your neighborhood. That’s coming up in just *** few minutes. Welcome back. Heavy rain expected in our area tomorrow impacts to both your morning and evening commutes. Our severe weather alert day forecast in just *** few minutes. But right now, more commitment 2025 coverage. Incumbent Mayor Ed Ganey conceding that in the Democratic primary tonight. Yeah, we want to go back to reporter Kayle Gunderson. She has been there at, uh, Gainey’s watch party all night, and Kaylee, we’re told you are now joined by Ed Gay right now. Yes, Mayor Gainey joining me. He’s trying to get *** sip of water, so he, he might have to wait just *** minute. Um, all right, just tell me, how, how are you feeling after conceding this race? I feel good I feel good. I feel very good. Did you see this room tonight? I feel good. It was packed with *** lot of supporters. It was packed with the city that we wanna see. I mean, you know, you’ve seen it yourself, young, old, black, white, Latinos, straight LGBTQIA. Jew, Palestine, Christian, Muslim, that’s the city that we’ve been talking about and we’re gonna continue to push that narrative. And you have about 6 months left then in office. What do you want your legacy to be as Pittsburgh’s mayor? The ability to bring people together from multiple different backgrounds and ethnics and races and building *** city where everybody believes that they belong, that won’t stop in office or out of office. It won’t never stop. It’s *** city that we started and you’ve seen it tonight. I’ve never seen *** multiracial multigenerational gathering like that in all my political career. It was amazing. Is there anything you can say in this campaign that went wrong, anything you think got us to the result we have tonight? No, it was about again I kept saying it was about do you want change for tomorrow or do you want to hold on to yesterday? That’s what this battle was about, you know, um, you’ve heard them ask me about the negative ads and what I thought about them and I told you it was not my intent to go negative. It was my attempt to remain positive. I can’t change the game and be the same person. You know what I mean if you’re gonna do things that’s gonna move people forward then the messages has to be more positive and that’s what we did we went on the positivity and that was the difference in the race, the negativity versus the positivity. What was your message tonight to voters supporters as they, you know, prepare to welcome *** new mayor? Oh, thank you and be kind. Anything else you want to say? That’s it. That’s it. Two things right there. Thank you so much, Mayor. Thank you. All right, that was Mayor Gainey, as you heard, and we got to talk to him also, uh, right after he got off the stage when that reaction was so very fresh, learning that he had lost this primary election to Corey O’Connor. He thank thanked him, congratulated him from the stage, also shared some more thoughts. More than what you just heard right there about the campaign and about what’s next, and his last 6 months in office, so we’ll have that for you, of course, on WTAE.com reporting live in the South Side, Kaylee Gunderson, Pittsburgh’s Action News for. All right, Kayleigh, thank you there. Well, *** short time ago, Corey O’Connor spoke to reporter Sheldon Ingram. Here’s what he had to say after declaring victory in the Democratic primary. We got to get through the fall, but you know I think there’s *** lot on there looking at the finances, you know, working with our larger corporations so that they work with us, our nonprofits, you know, investing in our fleet, getting *** chief of police, obviously we have to hire staff as well, so there’s *** lot to do, but we have to win in the fall. So we want to get some insight on all of this. Anchor Shannon Peran has been talking with political experts here in Pittsburgh about this primary election. Shannon, this is the first time in *** long time that Republicans have fielded two candidates in *** primary for Pittsburgh mayor, right? That’s right. The last time there was *** Republican mayor in Pittsburgh. FDR was president in 1933. The former chair of the Allegheny County Republican Committee visited our studios tonight to tell me tonight’s win by Tony Moreno shows his party is gaining momentum in *** heavily blue town. So the fact that we had *** Republican candidate in the last cycle and now we have 2 in an actual primary this cycle shows that we’re making progress. We’re still not where we want to be, but we are making progress and we will be able to give the voters *** choice in November as to the future direction of the city of Pittsburgh. Professor Doctor Kristen Kuy, for some insight into this very interesting primary in the city of Pittsburgh for the first time in *** long time, like you said, we’ve got the Republicans fielding two candidates in *** primary. What does that mean in *** town where the Democrats outnumber the Republicans more than 5 to 1? Is it going to impact what the issues are that we talk about in the fall? I think the fact that you have *** Republican challenger against *** New Democratic candidate will mean that there’s going to be *** lot of issues looked at. We’re not running on an incumbent record right now. You’re going to have two candidates who are fresh to the game and we’ll be able to see what their visions are, and each candidate is going to be able to challenge the other on what their ultimate idea is for how the city of Pittsburgh should be run. And you think the same issues of pocketbook issues, public safety are going to be tops. Absolutely, um, people usually care about the same issues regardless of the office or the candidates that are running and so people want to see that their concerns are being met and especially, you know, we just voted out an incumbent mayor in the primary it’s going to be looking at what he did that voters were disappointed in that didn’t get him reelected as well. All right, Doctor Kristin Kopy here with us tonight giving us some expert analysis we’re gonna send it back to you in the studio.

Allegheny County Primary Election Results: Commitment 2025

RESULTS: MAIN PAGE | PITTSBURGH MAYOR | ALLEGHENY COUNTY | ARMSTRONG COUNTY | BEAVER COUNTY | BUTLER COUNTY | FAYETTE COUNTY | GREENE COUNTY | LAWRENCE COUNTY | WASHINGTON COUNTY | WESTMORELAND COUNTYWith many races across Allegheny County on Election Day, Pittsburgh’s Action News 4 has you covered. Below you’ll find only contested results as they come into the newsroom, from county races to municipalities and the Pittsburgh mayoral race.Below you will find the following categories: Pittsburgh’s Mayoral RacePittsburgh Special Election QuestionsAllegheny County JudgesAllegheny County Council Municipalities A – HMunicipalities M – WPITTSBURGH MAYORAL RACEPittsburgh voters will decide on a new mayor in November after Pittsburgh Mayor Ed Gainey was defeated on the democratic ticket by Allegheny County Controller Corey O’Connor.”Your voices, and your calls for accountable leadership and growth have been heard in this democratic primary,” O’Connor said during his victory speech at Nova Place in Pittsburgh Tuesday night.O’Connor said that as the November election approaches, he will continue to work with the people of Pittsburgh to ensure it becomes a place in which families feel safe to settle.On the Republican ballot, retired police officer Tony Moreno defeated Pittsburgh business owner Thomas West.Moreno said he will now be one step closer to helping the Pittsburgh community come together as one and make the region safer for everyone.”We’ve won twice, and this next one, we are going to speak the community’s voice for them,” Moreno said. “It’s time to bring back accountability and transparency in the city of Pittsburgh.”He continued, saying, “We’re going to build our public safety back to the pride that it deserves.”For more on O’Connor’s win, click here.For more on Monreno’s win, click here.If you don’t see results above, click here.PITTSBURGH SPECIAL ELECTION QUESTIONSALLEGHENY COUNTY – JUDGE RACESALLEGHENY COUNTY COUNCIL RACESALLEGHENY COUNTY – MUNICIPALITIES A THROUGH HALLEGHENY COUNTY – MUNICIPALITIES M THROUGH W

RESULTS: MAIN PAGE | PITTSBURGH MAYOR | ALLEGHENY COUNTY | ARMSTRONG COUNTY | BEAVER COUNTY | BUTLER COUNTY | FAYETTE COUNTY | GREENE COUNTY | LAWRENCE COUNTY | WASHINGTON COUNTY | WESTMORELAND COUNTY

With many races across Allegheny County on Election Day, Pittsburgh’s Action News 4 has you covered. Below you’ll find only contested results as they come into the newsroom, from county races to municipalities and the Pittsburgh mayoral race.

Below you will find the following categories:

  • Pittsburgh’s Mayoral Race
  • Pittsburgh Special Election Questions
  • Allegheny County Judges
  • Allegheny County Council
  • Municipalities A – H
  • Municipalities M – W

PITTSBURGH MAYORAL RACE

Pittsburgh voters will decide on a new mayor in November after Pittsburgh Mayor Ed Gainey was defeated on the democratic ticket by Allegheny County Controller Corey O’Connor.

“Your voices, and your calls for accountable leadership and growth have been heard in this democratic primary,” O’Connor said during his victory speech at Nova Place in Pittsburgh Tuesday night.

O’Connor said that as the November election approaches, he will continue to work with the people of Pittsburgh to ensure it becomes a place in which families feel safe to settle.

On the Republican ballot, retired police officer Tony Moreno defeated Pittsburgh business owner Thomas West.

Moreno said he will now be one step closer to helping the Pittsburgh community come together as one and make the region safer for everyone.

“We’ve won twice, and this next one, we are going to speak the community’s voice for them,” Moreno said. “It’s time to bring back accountability and transparency in the city of Pittsburgh.”

He continued, saying, “We’re going to build our public safety back to the pride that it deserves.”

For more on O’Connor’s win, click here.

For more on Monreno’s win, click here.

If you don’t see results above, click here.

PITTSBURGH SPECIAL ELECTION QUESTIONS


ALLEGHENY COUNTY – JUDGE RACES


ALLEGHENY COUNTY COUNCIL RACES


ALLEGHENY COUNTY – MUNICIPALITIES A THROUGH H


ALLEGHENY COUNTY – MUNICIPALITIES M THROUGH W



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Timberwolves need Naz Reid and their bench to show up more than they did in Game 1

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The Athletic has live coverage of Timberwolves vs Thunder in Game 2 of the 2025 NBA Western Conference finals.

OKLAHOMA CITY — Naz Reid may be the most beloved sixth man in the league. Maybe ever. Tattoos with his name adorn the calves, wrists, fingers and even the inside of lower lips of fans all over Minnesota. A beach towel with his name on it is one of the most treasured giveaways the Timberwolves have ever promoted. Wolves fans use his name as a greeting, a farewell, a congratulation or a battle cry.

Naz Reid.

The church of Naz was built upon a divine development story. From undrafted rookie free agent to Sixth Man of the Year. From a 265-pound plodder to a 240-pound panther. His combination of outside shooting, low-post footwork and a handle that belongs on the old And1 mixtapes means that Anthony Edwards is the only Timberwolves player who can rival his popularity in the market.

That is the Naz Reid the Timberwolves need in their return to the Western Conference finals. That is the player who gave the Oklahoma City Thunder so many problems in the regular season, averaging 22.5 points and 11.0 rebounds in the four games. That is not the player the Wolves got in Game 1.

Reid scored just four points in nearly 28 minutes, going 1 of 11 from the field, 0 of 7 from 3-point range and turning it over three times in Minnesota’s 114-88 loss to the Thunder. The Wolves were outscored by 21 points when Reid was on the floor.

There were myriad other reasons the Wolves fell flat in the opener, from Donte DiVincenzo and Nickeil Alexander-Walker combining to shoot 6 of 25 from the field (including 5 of 21 from 3), the Thunder defense refusing to let Julius Randle beat them and limiting Edwards’ role, 19 Wolves’ turnovers that led to 31 points for OKC and the frustrating whistle granted to Thunder star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.

We start with Reid because of how important he is to these Wolves. There is a different sizzle about them when Reid is rolling, his braids trailing behind him like a cape as he weaves his way to the rim. Edwards may be the most confident player on the team, but Reid gives them their swag with his deep bag of tricks that he goes to when he enters the game, usually midway through the first quarter.

The Wolves went 8-2 in the first two rounds of the playoffs in part because Reid was largely on his game. He shot 43.5 percent from deep against the Golden State Warriors in the second round and 50 percent on 3s against the Los Angeles Lakers in the first round, giving the Wolves that scoring punch off the bench that they sorely needed. He figured to be an antidote when the Thunder went smaller with a five-out lineup that would put pressure on Wolves center Rudy Gobert. Reid did grab eight rebounds and dish out four assists, but that was nothing compared to what the Wolves are used to seeing from him.

“Just a rough night,” Reid said. “I don’t remember the last time I shot like that. It comes and goes. I’m not too concerned. As long as I impact the game in other categories as well, that’s how you stay on the floor.”

The Wolves’ bench has been one of their biggest strengths all season. Coach Chris Finch likes to say that he has eight starters, with DiVincenzo and NAW rounding out the trio. Finch’s faith in them has been validated by this trip to their second conference finals in as many seasons. But the bench failed them in Game 1. DiVincenzo was 3 of 12 on 3s. Alexander-Walker was 2 of 9 from deep.

They are going to get open looks in this series because the Thunder prefer to load up on the paint to keep Edwards out of there. They all have to hit shots at a high clip to open driving lanes for Edwards and Randle.

“We had good looks. We just have to make shots,” DiVincenzo said. “Myself, I have to make a couple shots and it loosens up the defense for Ant. It’s a domino effect. But for the most part we got the looks that we wanted, and we just have to take care of the ball and limit them to one shot.”

The Wolves were one of the best 3-point shooting teams in the league during the regular season, hitting 37.7 percent. But the Thunder’s defense sped them up considerably, forcing them to shoot earlier in the clock and rush their mechanics to avoid the intense defensive presence on the perimeter. Minnesota became the first team in conference finals history to attempt at least 50 3s in a game. But it made only 15 of them. Randle was 5 of 6 on 3s while the rest of the team went 10 of 45.

“There are a lot of good shots out there. We gotta clean things up a little bit,” Finch said. “Sometimes the passes were late. Sometimes we weren’t quite shot-ready. Sometimes we need to turn them into other plays. But I did think we got a number of really good looks and couldn’t connect when the game was turning against us.”

The Wolves led 48-44 at halftime but were outscored 70-40 in the second half. A game that felt winnable early quickly disintegrated, and now they have to recalibrate much like they did after losing Game 1 to Golden State in the second round. The one major difference: The Thunder did not lose their best player the way the Warriors lost Steph Curry.

“They were aggressive. That’s who they are,” Reid said. “That’s kind of their identity. We knew that going into the game. We just let it get the best of us today. We know better. We’ve got to be better. The beauty of it is, you play in two days.”

Some other takeaways from Game 1:

OKC’s defense smothers Randle in the second half

The game was playing out much like the rest of the playoffs for the Wolves in the first half. Minnesota struggled to get going offensively, but Randle made enough shots to keep it afloat. He erupted for 20 points in the first half, going 5 of 6 from 3 while his teammates went 5 for 22.

But Oklahoma City ramped up the pressure in the second half and really made it difficult for Randle and Edwards to get clean looks. The Thunder were willing to live with DiVincenzo or Reid or Alexander-Walker beating them from 3 if they got hot. They just loaded up on Randle in the second half, holding him without a field-goal attempt for the first seven minutes of the third quarter. He took just five shots in the second half and scored eight of his 28 points.

“That’s on me. I gotta get him the ball,” Finch said. “I gotta get him more involved to start the second half.”

Edwards went a quiet 5 of 13 from the floor. He left the game briefly with what appeared to be a sprained ankle but returned and gutted it out. Edwards said the ankle did not affect him, but it looked like his mobility was not quite what it has been.

“I’ve definitely gotta shoot more,” said Edwards, who finished with 18 points. “I only took 13 f—ing shots. But I would say probably just get off the ball a little more, play without the ball. I think that will be the answer.”

Randle (five turnovers) and Edwards (four) combined for nine of the team’s 19 turnovers. The Thunder scored 31 points off the mistakes, which cannot happen in a series like this.

“I’m always going to hold myself accountable,” Randle said. “Five turnovers, it’s way too much. I can’t do that. We can say it’s misses and makes and it is a miss-and-make league, but regardless, we’ve got to defend at a high level and especially on the road. Especially on the road.”

Gobert plays sparingly

This series sets up as an intriguing one for Gobert. For the first time in these playoffs, the Wolves are playing a team with legit size in the frontcourt. The Lakers and Warriors both very much preferred to play small. When they tried to go big with a traditional center like Jaxson Hayes or Quentin Post, it didn’t last long.

Gobert was able to thrive in those series with his defense. There were stretches where he did not play, but he came up big in both closeout games, including 27 points and 24 rebounds to send the Lakers packing in Game 5. On Tuesday night, Gobert played just 21 minutes and picked up two points and three rebounds, shockingly terrible statistics for such an important player.

Part of his paltry playing time was attributable to two fouls in the first two minutes of the game. Finch said he thought the second foul was questionable, but it forced him to sit Gobert for the remaining 10 minutes of the quarter. When he returned, he could not find a place in which to be effective against Isaiah Hartenstein, Chet Holmgren and Jalen Williams.

“I just wanted to go with a more small and skilled lineup when we got down to see if I could change the complexion of the game,” Finch said.

Gobert’s absence opened the floodgates for the Thunder, who shot 62 percent from the floor and were 8 of 13 from 3 in the second half to pull away. The Wolves also managed just 20 points in the paint, their lowest season total, and were out-rebounded 46-42.

Gobert needs to punish the Thunder on the glass if the Wolves are going to stick with him. Three rebounds won’t cut it.

The frustration of SGA’s game

The Wolves did a phenomenal job on Gilgeous-Alexander in the first half, holding him to 2-of-13 shooting. But SGA shot seven free throws in the first four minutes of the game, a display of foul-baiting that frustrated the Wolves to no end.

The Timberwolves know all about Gilgeous-Alexander’s … tactics. Target Center invented the “Free Throw Merchant!” chant earlier this season and Edwards wasn’t having it in the first quarter when SGA was consistently falling to the ground. After one of several stumbles, Edwards tossed the ball at Gilgeous-Alexander while he was on the ground, picking up a technical foul.

Jaden McDaniels fouled out of the game, and Finch and assistant Micah Nori were in regular dialogue with officials James Capers, Tyler Ford and Mark Lindsay. Even Mike Conley, who has never been assessed a technical foul in his 18-year career, was making his voice heard.

“I got out of character a couple of times,” Conley said. “And we talked about that at length throughout the playoffs, keeping our heads, keeping our focus on the game. We’ve got to be better. We expected it. We know what’s to come. It’s going to be those kinds of games where you feel like you didn’t do something, and they did the same thing and it just wasn’t called the same. But it happens, and we’ll be better.”

Finch has shown a willingness to be critical of officiating in the past, but he said after the game that the Wolves just have to find a way to play through it.

“There was a lot of frustration out there,” Finch said. “We talked about that before the series started. We have to be able to put that to the side and get on with a next-play mentality.”

Gilgeous-Alexander is one of the craftiest players in the league, and one of the league’s biggest foul-baiters.

Gilgeous-Alexander is going to get calls. He’s going to fall to the floor. That’s part of his game. As frustrating as it can be to experience, the Wolves have to find a way to better channel their emotions. The Thunder, albeit the younger team, showed more maturity in handling calls they did not like. It wasn’t the difference in the game, but it will be something that has to improve the rest of the way.

(Photo of Naz Reid and Chet Holmgren: Nate Billings / AP)





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These Knicks were built in Jalen Brunson’s image

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NEW YORK — Jalen Brunson’s trophy room is not robust. Somewhere, hanging around the home, is the game ball from his career-best 60-point performance last season. His parents collect the rest of his awards.

Brunson’s Clutch Player of the Year trophy — an elegant, glass prize that looks like a vase with a gold jump shooter floating in the middle — arrived from the NBA weeks ago with an error: His name wasn’t engraved in it. The New York Knicks had to send the award back to fix the mistake. Brunson has since received the corrected version of it, with “Jalen Brunson” properly etched onto the keepsake.

Of course, it’s unclear if Brunson will keep it. Even in its infancy, it’s already laying around, not displayed prominently at the Brunson household.

It is Brunson’s brand not to care about the awards. And yet, the two-time All-Star can identify one piece of prime memorabilia hanging on the wall at his parents’ place, an item that never actually belonged to him.

“Whenever I’m at the house I see the finals jersey hanging up on the wall,” Brunson said. “And it’s pretty cool to see.”

The proprietor of that jersey is Brunson’s father, Rick, a player for the Knicks the last time the team made the NBA Finals, an eventual loss to the San Antonio Spurs in 1999. Now, Jalen has the same organization four wins short of the playoffs’ last round. And once again, the same team stands in the way.

When the Knicks take the court Wednesday night against the Indiana Pacers, they will play their first conference finals game since 2000. That time, the Pacers beat them in six games. The season before, the year of Brunson’s finals jersey, remains a chapter out of Knicks lore: A six-game victory over Indiana that included the famed Larry Johnson four-point play to become the first No. 8 seed to make the Finals.

Today, Brunson is a series away from returning the Knicks, one of the league’s least successful franchises over the better part of two decades, to the big stage. This — not the Clutch Player of the Year or the fifth-place MVP finish in 2024 or the 40- or 50- or 60-point games — was the plan all along.

Brunson signed a three-year extension last summer not for the money. The new contract does not kick in until 2025-26, but had Brunson waited until the upcoming summer to re-sign after the expiration of his current deal, he could have received max money in free agency. Instead, he took a cheaper extension, which locked in long-term security for both sides.

The All-Star point guard could guarantee direct deposits for three seasons beyond this one, protecting against any extreme (though unlikely) circumstances that could have hurt his open-market value. Meanwhile, the Knicks hold onto the greatest free-agent signing in franchise history, the man who came over from the Dallas Mavericks in 2022 — and they do it on a team-friendly number.

Effects of the new collective bargaining agreement are already rippling across the NBA. The Denver Nuggets have struggled to build around their core because of second-apron fears. The Milwaukee Bucks and Phoenix Suns are too expensive to improve substantially, and are facing the prospect of potentially dealing off stars. The Boston Celtics, because of one injury to Jayson Tatum, have to rethink their entire future, just because of the severe restrictions on expensive teams nowadays.

The Knicks don’t have to worry about that, at least not for a couple of years.

Brunson pointed to reasons other than money after signing the deal. He had studied the CBA and understood its ramifications. New York’s best chance to win not just for a year or two but to extend a championship window would come if its top-tier contributors could provide financial relief. So he did that.

He received the title of team captain upon his re-commitment, an intuitive decision. The Knicks go as Brunson does. Somehow, each New York squad ends up absorbing bits and pieces of his personality.

In years past, the locker room has soaked up his attention to detail, his dedication to marginal value.

“He’s a great student of the game,” Knicks head coach Tom Thibodeau said.

The Pacers, who beat an injured Knicks squad in the second round last season, won’t be an easy matchup. Indiana guard Andrew Nembhard is a physical, crafty defender used to manning tough assignments every night. Wing Aaron Nesmith is strong in the chest, long and battled Brunson after the Pacers started using him more on the point guard in Game 3 of last spring’s series.

Indiana doesn’t concede the 3-point arc. It plays with pace. Center Myles Turner is a chore in the paint.

Then again, Brunson rejoices in chores.

He lives in tight spaces, able to slither out of them with a pivot or a hesitation. He can barely dunk and isn’t an end-to-end sprinter but stops as fast as anyone else in the league, planting on a foot and changing directions as inertia carries defenders in other directions.

When the Knicks need a bucket, Brunson tends to walk into it.

Over the past month, this version of the Knicks has reclassified itself. A group that was inconsistent throughout the regular season now defines itself with an in-your-face mental fortitude, the same one that drips from Brunson.

During a hard-fought, first-round series against the Detroit Pistons, a six-gamer that felt like it went seven, the Knicks fought back from fourth-quarter deficits in all four of their wins. Come the final stretch, they rely on Brunson, who averaged a league-leading 41.5 points per 36 minutes during close-and-late situations (defined as games within five points with five-or-less minutes to go) in the regular season and has somehow upped that average to 46.1 in the playoffs.

“It’s great we have someone who has a calming demeanor like that, especially in those moments you’re talking about,” Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns said. “J.B. was the Clutch Player of the Year for a reason.”

But that’s not the trophy Brunson cares about most.

He drained the first-round, series-winner over defensive menace Ausar Thompson against Detroit, crossing Thompson into Flint, Mich., before strolling into a 3-pointer. The Knicks throttled back from down 20 points during each of Games 1 and 2 against Boston. In Game 4, they overcame a 14-point, second-half deficit. Brunson caught fire that night, matching heroic shot for heroic shot with Tatum. But those Boston comebacks and the 38-point shellacking to end the Celtics’ season weren’t only because of Brunson’s late-game valiance.

Mikal Bridges has taken over crunch time. OG Anunoby has locked in defensively. Josh Hart has made games ugly, just how he likes it, hustling after every loose ball in existence. Mitchell Robinson is back to full health with an exclamation point. Miles “Deuce” McBride is a point-of-attack defender and shooter.

The Pacers are exhausting, owners of a top-10 defense since early December. They never stop moving, don’t turn the ball over, cut until they’ve fully scrambled a defense, boast depth down the bench and just wrecked the Bucks and Cleveland Cavaliers to race to the conference finals. But as Celtics lead executive Brad Stevens said in his end-of-season news conference this week, the Knicks are “peaking,” too.

They have a chance to make a physical win over Detroit and a persistent one over Boston matter even more.  And if they do, maybe Brunson can keep a jersey for his wall.

(Photo illustration: Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic; Tim Nwachukwu / Getty Images)



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Detroit Tigers activate catcher Jake Rogers from 10-day IL

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ST. LOUIS — The Detroit Tigers activated catcher Jake Rogers from the 10-day injured list and designated catcher Tomas Nido for assignment ahead of Tuesday night’s game against the St. Louis Cardinals.

The 30-year-old Rogers has missed the last 38 games since being placed on the injured list with a strained left oblique on April 8.

Rogers is in manager A.J. Hinch’s lineup Tuesday night batting ninth and catching left-hander Tarik Skubal.

“It feels good,” Rogers said. “I’ve been missing the boys and missing the game. It felt good to get back into it last week down in Toledo and it feels good to be here in St. Louis.”

Rogers has four hits in 18 at-bats this season and went 5 for 15 in a five-game rehabilitation assignment with Triple-A Toledo. Last season, he played in 102 games, finishing with 10 home runs, 36 RBIs and 22 walks.

Nido went 11 for 35 in 11 games with Detroit and pitched 1 2/3 scoreless innings of relief in Monday night’s 11-4 loss to the Cardinals in St. Louis.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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NBA Postseason Players Power Ranking: The 10 best players in conference finals

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Welcome to the NBA’s changing of the guard.

We’re down to four teams, the NBA’s conference finals, and the old guard is out. No LeBron James, Stephen Curry, Giannis Antetokounmpo, Kevin Durant (his team didn’t even make the postseason), or even a Jayson Tatum in sight.

There is still plenty of star power — the next generation is rising. Here are the top 10 players still playing as the NBA conference finals begin.

1) Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (Oklahoma City)

If he wasn’t going to be on top of these power rankings before, he cemented his grip on the top spot Sunday with 35 points to lead the Thunder in a close-out Game 7 — the best performer stepped up on the biggest stage.

” You know who this is? The MVP,” Chet Holmgren said, standing next to Gilgeous-Alexander in the team’s walk-off interview after the win.

SGA is averaging 29 points, 6.4 assists and 5.9 rebounds a game in the playoffs, all while playing high-level defense and pitching in 1.5 steals a night. This is the best player on the best team remaining, and he is the best player left in the postseason.

2) Jalen Brunson (New York)

Sometimes a player wins one of the NBA’s postseason awards, then goes out in the playoffs and shows exactly why — Jalen Brunson was voted the NBA’s Clutch Player of the Year and has more than lived up to that in these playoffs.

Brunson is averaging 28.8 points and 7.7 assists a game for the Knicks this postseason, he is the engine of their playoff offense. The Knicks’ offense falls off a cliff when Brunson is not on the court (New York has a 97.1 net rating when he is off the court this postseason, 18.7 points less than when he is on). Brunson has secured his Knicks legend status, which will only grow if he can lead New York to the NBA Finals.

3) Anthony Edwards (Minnesota)

We have been able to watch Edwards grow throughout these playoffs, to figure out the mental side of the game and take a step forward with each game. Golden State has a quality defense that threw different looks at him, and you could see him figuring out how to handle and attack them in real time. Edwards continues down the path to becoming one of the true faces of the league.

These playoffs, Edwards is averaging 26.5 points, 8 rebounds, and 5.9 assists a game, shooting 38.5% on 3-pointers (and taking 9.1 a game). Edwards is not done being tested by strong defenses — Lu Dort, Alex Caruso and the Oklahoma City Thunder are on another level, and Edwards being able to take care of the ball will be a key stat in that series.

4) Tyrese Haliburton (Indiana)

The focus coming into the last round was all the stars on the Cleveland Cavaliers, but while they stumbled through the series it was Haliburton who was the best player on the floor. Through the playoffs, he is averaging 17.5 points, 9.3 assists, and 5.5 rebounds a game, but the numbers (especially his 33.8% shooting from 3) don’t tell the story — he is the conductor of a high-paced symphony of an offense. Also, he’s been as clutch as Brunson this postseason.

And don’t forget this one:

5) Julius Randle (Minnesota)

Minnesota is in the Western Conference Finals because Julius Randle outplayed Draymond Green in the last round.

“I lost my matchup,” Green said after the Timberwolves eliminated the Warriors. “Julius was incredible. He played great basketball. Honestly, some of the shots he was taking were shots you want him to take, and he made them. He made the shots. At the end of the day, the game comes down to shotmaking and he made the shots. So I got to give Ju a lot of credit.”

Randle is averaging 23.9 points, 5.9 rebounds, and 5.9 assists a game this postseason. It took most of the regular season for Randle and Rudy Gobert to figure out how to fit next to each other, but they do now and the Timberwolves are a threat because of it.

6) Karl-Anthony Towns (New York)

Towns has already had a strong playoffs, averaging 19.9 points and 11.3 rebounds a game. With Mitchel Robinson healthy, the Knicks have two dominant bigs on the floor, which has been a big part of what has fueled them to this point.

Towns’ biggest days may be ahead of him: He averaged 30.3 points and 12 rebounds a game against the Pacers this season, having some of his best nights of the regular season, including a 40-point, 12-rebound game after the All-Star break. He will need to do that again if the Knicks are going to advance.

7) Pascal Siakam (Indiana)

Siakam is arguably the most underrated player in the NBA, and he has experience on this stage that his team needs. Don’t forget that he has a ring from Toronto. Siakam knows what is required in order to win at this level, and how to do so next to a red-hot superstar.

Siakam is averaging 18.8 points and 6.2 rebounds a game these playoffs, numbers close to what he did during Toronto’s title run (19 points and 7.1 rebounds), plus he is a quality defender who gives Rick Carlisle options in slowing New York’s attack.

8) Jalen Williams (Oklahoma City)

Williams has been incredibly inconsistent this postseason, but when the Thunder have needed him most he has stepped up, like his 24 points and +35 performance in Game 7 against Denver. For the playoffs, Williams is averaging 21.6 points, 5.3 rebounds and 5.1 assists a game. The Thunder need Williams to be more consistent in this series and especially in the NBA Finals (if they advance).

9) Myles Turner (Indiana)

Myles Turner was tough against the Cavaliers. Going up against a physical and impressive front court of Jarrett Allen and Evan Mobley, Turner was the best big on the floor — and often the most physical — in helping spark the Indiana win. Turner is averaging 16.5 points and 6 rebounds a game, but most importantly, 2.5 blocked shots a game. He has been a force in the paint and needs to be again when facing Brunson and friends.

10) Chet Holmgren (Oklahoma City)

Much like Jalen Williams, Holmgren has not been consistent or efficient as the Thunder need this postseason (which is why this spot almost went to Andrew Nembhard of the Pacers), but he’s done just enough to earn it. Holmgren is averaging 15.7 points and 9.7 rebounds a game, plus 2.2 blocks a night in these playoffs. He’s a big presence in the paint who needs to have a big series against the size of Minnesota if OKC is to advance.





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Tina Charles’ Return Draws Clear Response From Connecticut Sun

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Tina Charles is back, and the Connecticut Sun didn’t hold back their feelings. The MVP took the court once again in a Sun jersey for the first time since 2013 on Sunday against the Washington Mystics.

After playing for UConn from 2006 to 2010, Charles was the overall No. 1 pick in the 2010 WNBA draft, selected by the Sun. She played for three seasons with the Sun before moving to the New York Liberty from 2014 to 2019. Then, she played for the Mystics in 2021.

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In February 2022, Charles signed with the Phoenix Mercury, in the hopes of winning a WNBA championship title, but the team struggled and wasn’t in title contention through the first 18 games of the 2022 season. In June of that year, she ended her contract with the Mercury and signed with the Seattle Storm.

Due to personal reasons, Charles took a break from the WNBA during the 2023 season, but came back in 2024 to play for the Atlanta Dream. Then in 2025, the center went back to the Sun.

New York Liberty guard Natasha Cloud drives past Connecticut Sun center Tina Charles for a layup in the first quarter at Barclays Center.Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

Connecticut opened its 2025 WNBA season with a narrow 90–85 loss to the Mystics at Mohegan Sun Arena on Sunday. Despite a strong performance from Charles, who posted a double-double with 23 points and 10 rebounds, the Sun couldn’t hold off a late surge from the Mystics.

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On Sunday afternoon, 55 minutes into the game, the Sun’s official X account posted two candid pictures of Charles with the caption, “she’s back like she never left.”



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SpaceX launches 23 Starlink satellites to orbit on brand-new Falcon 9 rocket after abort (photos)

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A brand-new SpaceX rocket just earned its wings.

A Falcon 9 rocket lifted off from Florida’s Cape Canaveral Space Force Station Tuesday (May 20) at 11:19 p.m. EDT (0319 GMT on May 21), carrying 23 of the company’s Starlink broadband satellites to low Earth orbit (LEO).

That was a day later than originally planned; SpaceX attempted to launch the mission on Monday night (May 19), but that try was aborted just before liftoff, for reasons that the company did not immediately explain.

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launches 23 Starlink satellites from Florida on May 20, 2025. (Image credit: SpaceX)

Tuesday’s launch was the first ever for this Falcon 9’s first stage, according to a SpaceX mission description. That’s a rarity for the company, which is known for its pioneering rocket reuse.



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