Kawhi Leonard's 45 points with bloodied nose lead Clippers to 6th straight win, 118-101 over Jazz

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) — Kawhi Leonard scored 45 points, James Harden added 20 and the Los Angeles Clippers recovered from blowing a 21-point lead to beat the Utah Jazz 118-101 on Thursday night, extending their winning streak to a season-best six games.

Leonard was the only Clippers starter on the floor for much of the fourth quarter. He singlehandedly matched Utah's points in the period (20), with blood on his nose from what appeared to be a scratch.

Los Angeles hit seven straight 3-pointers, with Leonard making four, to pull away. Nicolas Batum finished with 14 points and went 4 of 6 from 3-point range.

The Jazz rallied despite being without three starters. They were led by reserve Kyle Anderson with 22 points — his first 20-point game in nearly three years — and Brice Sensabaugh with 20. Anderson's eight rebounds were a season high. Cody Williams had 18 points, while Isaiah Collier added 16 points and 10 assists.

The game was tied six times in the third period, when Utah took its first lead.

The Clippers outscored Utah 28-7 to start the game. The Jazz missed their first six shots and had one rebound in the first six minutes.

Utah outscored the Clippers 33-22 in the second — when Leonard scored LA's first nine points — to trail 53-50 at halftime.

Utah played without Keyonte George (illness), Lauri Markkanen (knee) and Jusuf Nurkic (toe). The Jazz have dropped six of eight.

The Jazz had 58 points in the paint and their bench outscored the Clippers' reserves 51-40.

Jazz: Visit the Golden State Warriors on Saturday.

Clippers: Host the Boston Celtics on Saturday.

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

Kawhi Leonard's 45 points with bloodied nose lead Clippers to 6th straight win, 118-101 over Jazz

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) — Kawhi Leonard scored 45 points, James Harden added 20 and the Los Angeles Clippers recovered fr...
Ole Miss-Georgia Sugar Bowl thriller ends with delayed celebrations as officials demand last second be played

Ole Misshad to delay the celebration for their 39-34 Sugar Bowl victory over Georgia multiple times on Thursday night.

After kicking a go-ahead field goal with six seconds left, Ole Miss was awarded a safety on its final kickoff when Georgia's return team tried a cross-field lateral that hit the pylon. Players and coaches began to rush the field in celebration, before having to return to the sideline as officialsdemanded Georgiakick off with one second remaining.

Georgia then recovered an onside kick, falling on the ball to preserve the final second. Ole Miss players and coaches again began to celebrate, believing the game had ended there.

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Kewan Lacy

Ole Miss Head coach Pete Golding was even doused in a Gatorade bath. However, officials again demanded the final second be played, and stadium staff even began to push the winner's stage onto the field, before having to push it back to clear space for the final play.

Georgia ran one more play in which they executed numerous laterals before the play fizzled after dozens of seconds, before Ole Miss could finally celebrate their CFP victory.

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The win sent Ole Miss (13-1, CFP No. 6 seed) on to asemifinal against Miamiin the Fiesta Bowl next Thursday.

Kicking off on the heels of two lopsided CFP quarterfinals at the Orange and Rose bowls, the Sugar Bowl provided drama until the end.

Former Espn Star Blasts Ole Miss After Pete Golding Revealed As Lane Kiffin's Chosen Successor

After seeing a 21-12 halftime lead turn into a 34-24 deficit with 9:02 to play,Georgia (12-2, CFP No. 3 seed)rallied to tie it, first driving for Gunner Stockton's 18-yard TD pass to Zachariah Branch before Peyton Woodring's short field goal tied it with 55 seconds left in regulation.

Ole Miss quarterback Trinidad Chambliss responded by setting up the winning kick with a 40-yard pass to De'Zhaun Stribling on third down from Mississippi's own 30-yard line. A few plays later, kicker Lucas Carneiro, who'd already broken Sugar Bowl records with field goals of 55 and 56 yards, hit from 47 and sprinted triumphantly toward the Ole Miss sideline as the Rebels jubilantly swarmed around him.

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Trinidad Chambliss

Harrison Wallace III caught nine passed for 156 yards and one TD, Stribling finished with seven catches for 122 yards, Kewan Lacy rushed for 98 yards and two TDs, and the Rebels outgained the Bulldogs 473 yards to 343.

Stockton passed for 203 yards and one touchdown, and also ran for two scores.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Original article source:Ole Miss-Georgia Sugar Bowl thriller ends with delayed celebrations as officials demand last second be played

Ole Miss-Georgia Sugar Bowl thriller ends with delayed celebrations as officials demand last second be played

Ole Misshad to delay the celebration for their 39-34 Sugar Bowl victory over Georgia multiple times on Thursday night. ...
University of Alabama vs University of Mississippi (Michael Chang / Sports Illustrated via Getty Images)

Hours before a College Football Playoff quarterfinal began Thursday, 74-year-old Nick Saban sat on an ESPN stage constructed inside the Rose Bowl, in the corner of an end zone, in Pasadena, California.

Since Saban retired from Alabama in 2024, having won more national championships than any coach in college football's modern era, and began working as a television commentator, his perspective on game days has changed.

But as the playoff's results have proven, his influence on what takes place between the lines remains as strong as ever.

Miami, Oregon, Indiana and Ole Miss are the last four teams standing in the College Football Playoff, and all have one thing in common: Their head coaches once worked for Saban.

nick saban couch (Kyusung Gong / AP file)

Led by Mario Cristobal, Miami soundly defeated reigning national champion Ohio State in a playoff quarterfinal Wednesday. In the semifinals next week the Hurricanes will face Ole Miss, where former Alabama defensive coordinator Pete Golding was promoted to the top job last month — only after another former Saban assistant left the school.

In the other semifinal, Oregon, whose coach, Dan Lanning, spent 2015 as an Alabama graduate assistant, will face Indiana, led by coach Curt Cignetti, a member of Saban's first Alabama staff from 2007 to 2011.

Even if Ole Miss had lost, the playoff's semifinals would have been represented by all-former Saban assistants, anyway, because their opponent was Georgia, whose coach, Kirby Smart, was Saban's longest-tenured coordinator at Alabama.

Famous for his difficult-to-impress demeanor, high standards and competitiveness — heonce complainedthat winning one national title had cost him a week on the recruiting trail — Saban created and obsessively followed a "process" to team-building, in which no detail was too small. The principles that earned Saban one title at LSU and six more at Alabama rubbed off on his assistants.

"It was real important part of my journey," Cignetti told reporters this week, before Indiana's 38-3 quarterfinal demolition of Alabama, Saban's old program, on Thursday.

"Learned a lot from Coach Saban in terms of organization, standards, stopping complacency," Cignetti said. "I wouldn't be where I am today without my time under Nick."

An education like no other

Cristobal had already been a head coach by the time he worked as Alabama's offensive line coach and recruiting coordinator from 2013 to 2016. Yet receiving what heonce describedas a "football PhD" under Saban reshaped how Cristobal thought about leading a program.

The Crimson Tide won one championship and played for another during Cristobal's time on staff, and when he became Oregon's coach in 2018, Cristobalexplicitly modeledevery detail of the team's offseason — from how they lifted weights, to how he defined staffers' job descriptions — off of his experience at Alabama.

His time in Tuscaloosa has carried over to Miami, too.

"That's how you win games this time of year when you can dominate the line of scrimmage and your guys have done that tremendously," Saban told Cristobalduring ESPN's "College GameDay"on Thursday, the morning after Miami's win.

"Well, I mean, it was one of greatest lessons under you at Alabama, right?" Cristobal replied. "You used to tell us all the time, 'Mass kicks a--.'"

Alabama v Arkansas (Wesley Hitt / Getty Images)

Ole Miss's matchup with Georgia was the clearest illustration of Saban's continued influence over the sport, two years after he left the sidelines. When Lane Kiffin was deciding whether to remain as the coach at Ole Miss or bolt for LSU a month ago,he called Saban, his old boss at Alabama, for advice.

"So, there's the reason I'm here," Kiffin said during his introductory news conference in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

To replace Kiffin, Ole Miss immediately promoted Golding, who while working as Saban's defensive coordinator from 2018 to 2022 hadrecruited with the pitch,"Hey, I work for the greatest coach of all-time."

Then Golding, in his second game as head coach, pulled the upset on higher-seeded Georgia and Smart.

Beating Alabama using lessons from Alabama

Lanning spent 2015 as a graduate assistant at Alabama before eventually working for Smart at Georgia. Lanning has said he was struck by Saban's willingness to take input from anyone with a good idea, regardless of their place on his staff's hierarchy, and how strictly he kept to a daily routine.

That could make Saban feel "robotic,"Lanning said last year. But his boss was also adaptable enough to change his style to incorporate successful trends.

"There are a lot of people that have come from (Saban's coaching) tree, some have had a lot of success and some have not," Lanning said. " I feel like the ones that maybe haven't had as much success, they tried to be Nick. You know, Nick was Nick. You know, Nick, Coach Saban was himself every day.

"And that's something I appreciate and learned from him that whenever you get your opportunity, you've got to be you. But you've got to be the definition of consistency if you want to last in this profession."

Saban had a long history with Cignetti when he hired him in 2007 as Alabama's receivers coach and recruiting coordinator. Cignetti's father, Frank, was the coach at West Virginia when he hired Saban as an assistant in 1978. By 2009, Alabama won its first national title in 17 years thanks to recruits Cignetti helped land.

When Cignetti left Alabama in 2011 to become a head coach at a school in Division II, two rungs lower on the NCAA ladder and a world away from Alabama's prestige, Saban has said he thought Cignetti was making a career mistake. But Cignetti won quickly there and worked his way up the ladder by replicating quick turnarounds at his next three schools, too, before landing at Indiana in 2024.

Head Coach Curt Cignetti of the Indiana Hoosiers. (Brian Rothmuller / Icon Sportswire / Getty Images)

As a school in the NCAA's four most-powerful conferences, it was a big opportunity — but also a historically difficult job. The Hoosiers entered this season with the most losses in the history of the NCAA's Football Bowl Subdivision, and hadn't won a postseason game since 1991.

Yet Thursday, from his sideline perch in Pasadena, Saban watched Cignetti's team hand Alabama, 38-3, its most lopsided postseason loss in school history to continue one of the most remarkable coaching feats in college football history. The victory was both emphatic and symbolic as a longtime college football "have-not" physically and strategically dominated a Crimson Tide program that has long epitomized championships. After Saban's 2024 retirement Alabama chose as his successor Kalen DeBoer, a highly successful coach — but not a Saban disciple.

"I probably think about (working for Saban) every single day, to be quite honest, because it had such a big impact in my growth and development," Cignetti said this week.

"I think philosophically, the program that we run here is probably a lot more the same than different than Alabama," he said. "There's probably not a day that goes by where I don't draw from those experiences."

A legendary coach retired. Two years later, Nick Saban's influence still rules college football.

Hours before a College Football Playoff quarterfinal began Thursday, 74-year-old Nick Saban sat on an ESPN stage constructed inside the Ro...
Durant leads Rockets past Nets for fourth straight victory

NEW YORK (AP) — Kevin Durant had 22 points and a season-high 11 assists, Amen Thompson scored 23 points and the Houston Rockets beat the Brooklyn Nets 120-96 on Thursday night for their fourth straight victory.

Alperen Sengun had 20 points, six rebounds and six assists after a two-game absence for the Rockets, who started fast in both halves to win in Brooklyn for the first time in seven years. Tari Eason finished with 15 points and nine rebounds, and Jabari Smith Jr. and Reed Sheppard each scored 14 points.

Sengun was 8 for 12 from the floor after sitting out two games with a left calf injury.

Cam Thomas scored 21 points for the Nets, who dropped their second straight after winning three in a row for the only time this season. Ziaire Williams added 14.

HEAT 118, PISTONS 112

DETROIT (AP) — Norman Powell scored 36 points and Bam Abdebayo added 15 points and 14 rebounds as Miami extended their winning streak to four games with a win over Detroit.

Cade Cunningham had 31 points, 11 assists and eight rebounds for Detroit and Marcus Sasser scored 18.

Detroit trailed by 22 in the second half and was still down 114-103 with two minutes left, but scored six straight points to make it a five-point game. Powell missed and Javonte Green hit a 3-pointer to get the Pistons within two with 46.4 seconds to play.

Jaime Jaquez Jr. hit a short jumper to make it a two-possession game, though, and Ausar Thompson's turnover forced the Pistons to start fouling. Powell hit a pair of free throws — his first points of the fourth quarter — to clinch it.

Jaquez scored 19 points for the Heat and Andrew Wiggins added 17.

76ERS 123, MAVERICKS 108

DALLAS (AP) — Tyrese Maxey had 34 points, 10 assists and eight rebounds, Joel Embiid scored 22 points and Philadelphia beat Dallas.

Rookie guard VJ Edgecombe, the one-and-done player from Baylor playing 100 miles from his college campus for the first time, scored 23 points two nights afterhitting a 3-pointer in the final seconds of a 139-136 overtime victoryat Memphis.

Oft-injured Anthony Davis returned for Dallas after missing two games with a sore adductor muscle. The 10-time All-Star finished with 13 points and eight rebounds as the Mavs matched their season worst with a fourth consecutive loss.

Rookie No. 1 overall pick Cooper Flagg scored 12 points for the Mavericks, who were led by Max Christie's 18 points.

CELTICS 120, KINGS 106

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Jaylen Brown had 29 points and 10 rebounds, and Boston pulled away down the stretch to beat the Sacramento.

Brown shot 11 of 25, including 1 for 9 from 3-point distance, but made six free throws and added four assists before fouling out late in the fourth quarter.

The four-time All-Star has been on a scoring tear lately, pouring in 20 or more points in 12 of his last 15 games.

Payton Pritchard had 16 points and six assists as Boston improved to 3-1 on its five-game trip. Sam Hauser hit five 3-pointers to finish with 15 points. Anfernee Simons also scored 15.

DeMar DeRozan led Sacramento with 25 points. Dennis Schroder scored 18 and Keon Ellis added 16. The Kings (8-26) have lost four of five and nine of 11.

CLIPPERS 118, JAZZ 101

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) — Kawhi Leonard scored 45 points, James Harden added 20 and Los Angeles recovered from blowing a 21-point lead to beat Utah, extending their winning streak to a season-best six games.

Leonard was the only Clippers starter on the floor for much of the fourth quarter. He singlehandedly matched Utah's points in the period (20), with blood on his nose from what appeared to be a scratch.

Los Angeles hit seven straight 3-pointers, with Leonard making four, to pull away. Nicolas Batum finished with 14 points and went 4 of 6 from 3-point range.

The Jazz rallied despite being without three starters. They were led by reserve Kyle Anderson with 22 points — his first 20-point game in nearly three years — and Brice Sensabaugh with 20. Anderson's eight rebounds were a season high. Cody Williams also had 18 points, while Isaiah Collier had 16 points and 10 assists.

Durant leads Rockets past Nets for fourth straight victory

NEW YORK (AP) — Kevin Durant had 22 points and a season-high 11 assists, Amen Thompson scored 23 points and the Houston ...
Last-minute field goal lifts Ole Miss past Georgia, into CFP semis

Since the regular season ended, Ole Miss dominated the college football news cycle with its off-field buzz regarding the Lane Kiffin saga.

Under new head coach Pete Golding, the No. 6 Rebels are thriving with an "us against the world" mentality.

Ole Miss earned the biggest win in school history on Thursday, as Lucas Carneiro drilled a tiebreaking 47-yard field goal with six seconds left, propelling the Rebels to a 39-34 victory over No. 3 Georgia in a College Football Playoff quarterfinal at the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans.

Golding, unlike Kiffin, wasn't a household name until recently, but now the former defensive coordinator has Ole Miss two wins away from a national championship.

"I think you've got to have the right guys," Golding said of his team. "I think they've got to be tough, they've got to be competitive. I think they've got to love football. I think you've got a lot of guys on other teams that don't love football. If there's one thing about this group, it's that they love football."

Trinidad Chambliss threw a 40-yard pass to De'Zhaun Stribling on third-and-5 with 26 seconds left, leading to Carneiro's third field goal of the game.

A backwards pass on Georgia's ensuing kickoff return struck the end-zone pylon, resulting in a safety with one second left.

Chambliss threw for 362 yards and two touchdowns and Kewan Lacy rushed for 98 yards and two scores for Ole Miss (13-1), which will face No. 10 Miami in a semifinal game at the Fiesta Bowl on Jan. 8 in Glendale, Ariz.

The Rebels' remarkable postseason run hasn't come without its fair share of obstacles, but Chambliss and company aren't thinking big-picture quite yet.

"We're not really focused on destiny or anything like that," said Chambliss, who was selected as the Sugar Bowl's offensive MVP. "We just want to play ball and have fun. A lot of people did doubt us before the season, and they still doubted us when our coach left. We just want to play ball and have fun, and I think that's showing right now."

Ole Miss' Harrison Wallace III made nine receptions for 156 yards and a touchdown, and Stribling hauled in seven catches for 122 yards.

Gunner Stockton threw for 203 yards and a touchdown for Georgia (12-2), which saw its second straight season end in the quarterfinals in New Orleans. A disappointing finish for the Bulldogs also marks their third consecutive campaign without a semifinal appearance.

Ole Miss outgained Georgia 473-343 and held coach Kirby Smart's team to a 3-for-13 mark on third downs.

"(The Rebels) made more plays than we did, and I've got to be honest, that's part of football," Smart said. "They outexecuted us, outcoached us, but I enjoyed that game and the atmosphere. I'm proud of our team. I'm sick that we lost."

After Georgia held a nine-point halftime lead, Bulldogs kicker Peyton Woodring had a 55-yard field-goal attempt come up short with 8:33 left in the third. From there, Lacy's 7-yard touchdown rush cut the Rebels' deficit to 21-19.

Facing a fourth-and-5 from its own 30-yard line, Georgia had Landon Roldan connect with Lawson Luckie for 16 yards on a fake punt. Woodring's 37-yarder then put the Bulldogs ahead by five.

Ole Miss took its first lead of the second half as Lacy's 5-yard touchdown rush was followed with Chambliss' two-point conversion pass to Wallace, giving the Rebels a 27-24 edge with 11:29 left in the fourth.

Georgia took another gamble on its next drive, going for it on fourth-and-2 from its own 33-yard line. Stockton was sacked, leading to Chambliss' 13-yard touchdown pass to Wallace, pushing Ole Miss' lead to 34-24 with 9:02 remaining.

The Bulldogs pulled within three as Stockton's 18-yard touchdown pass to Zachariah Branch stamped a 75-yard scoring drive that lasted just 1:59.

After forcing a punt, Georgia faced a fourth-and-9 on its 48, and Stockton connected with Branch for 16 yards. A pair of Ole Miss pass-interference penalties set Georgia up with a first-and-goal from the 8-yard line, but the Rebels held the Bulldogs to a game-tying 24-yard field goal from Woodring with 56 seconds left.

Carneiro made field goals from 55 and 56 yards in the first quarter, both setting the Sugar Bowl record. The first-year transfer from Western Kentucky is 5-for-5 on field goals in Ole Miss' two postseason wins, and Golding understands how important the redshirt junior is to the Rebels' present and future.

"A lot of people think Lucas is the best kicker in the country, so a lot of people want Lucas. So I've been meeting with Lucas a lot lately," Golding said of retaining Carneiro. "We felt he was the best kicker in the country coming out of Western Kentucky last year, and he's done an unbelievable job. ...

"We've got all the confidence in the world in him."

--Field Level Media

Last-minute field goal lifts Ole Miss past Georgia, into CFP semis

Since the regular season ended, Ole Miss dominated the college football news cycle with its off-field buzz regarding...

 

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