04/15/25 - The News

Tuesday, April 15, 2025

Warriors dispel play-in struggles, advance to face Rockets

April 15, 2025 0

 With 3.4 seconds left, Stephen Curry waved his arms to get the Chase Center crowd on its feet.



The Golden State Warriors superstar was finally getting out of the play-in tournament, and it was time to celebrate. Curry scored 37 points, and Jimmy Butler delivered his best game for Golden State with 38 points to lift the Warriors past the Memphis Grizzlies 121-116 on Tuesday night.

"Just a sense of relief that we have something to look forward to now," Curry said.

For Curry and the Warriors, the win was their first in four play-in games. After two-plus months of chasing a postseason berth, the Warriors secured the seventh seed and a first-round date against the second-seeded Houston Rockets.

"We desperately needed to win this game and get four days [off]," Golden State coach Steve Kerr said. "Our guys have basically been playing knockout games for about three weeks. One high-level game after another.

So to get this one, it took 83 games, but we are right where we want to be. Which is back in the playoffs and we got a chance."

Golden State will a familiar foe in Houston. This is the fifth time the franchises have faced each other in a playoff series. The Warriors won all four previous matchups, which took place between 2015 and 2019. Two of the series were in the Western Conference finals in 2015 and 2018, the latter which Golden State won in seven games.

"I was just telling Draymond [Green], 'It's wild,'" Curry said. "We've been in a playoff series in Houston for a decade. It's crazy to think about. I know this is a brand new version of the Rockets team, but we're excited for the challenge."

The Warriors went 3-2 against the Rockets in the regular season, with Houston winning their in-season NBA Cup matchup 91-90 on Dec. 11.

Houston's other win came at Chase Center on Apr. 6 when the Rockets came out aggressive and physical against a Warriors team that was finishing a four-game slate in six days after facing the Grizzlies, Lakers and Nuggets.

Butler has been playing on a different level since that loss to Houston. In two games that have basically been playoff-caliber contests against the LA Clippers on Sunday and the Grizzlies in the play-in game, Butler scored a combined total of 68 points while shooting an identical 12-of-20 from the field in each game.

He helped Golden State jump out to a 20-point lead midway through the second quarter Tuesday. Memphis came all the way back to take a 96-94 lead with 11 minutes remaining. Desmond Bane scored 30 points, and Ja Morant, who rolled his ankle in the third quarter but came back in the fourth, had 22 points for the Grizzlies.

But Curry scored 15 points in the final 7:02, including two 3-pointers in the span of 50 seconds with under two minutes left.

The Warriors were 0-3 in play-in games prior to Tuesday. They lost in their previous play-in game last season at Sacramento to see their season end.

"It's just a reminder that it's not guaranteed," Curry said of making the postseason. "I don't care how talented you are. You look around the league, you could argue more talented teams that we have that are on the outside looking in.

"So you appreciate the moments. That's why we have been talking for the last two months [about] how important it is to play meaningful games. And now we have a series that's going to be full of meaningful games."

And those will be with Butler, who is in "Playoff Jimmy" form with the true postseason beginning Sunday in Game 1 at Houston. This is why the Warriors traded for Butler, who has rejuvenated Curry, Green and Kerr and changed the trajectory of a team that was 25-26 on Feb. 6.

"Whenever I talk to Steph, Dray, Steve and Mike [Dunleavy Jr.] before I even got here, I was telling them I can help," Butler said. "Now, I don't know in what manner that I can help, but we're going to make the playoffs.

"I feel like I can give any team, for sure this one, a chance to win. And they believe it. I believe it."

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2025 WNBA Draft picks, grades: Paige Bueckers selected No. 1 by Dallas Wings

April 15, 2025 0

 Paige Bueckers led the UConn women’s basketball team to its 12th national title last week and has been on a worldwide tour ever since. Now the WNBA awaits.



Bueckers brought the NCAA championship trophy back home to Storrs, Connecticut, caught up with Savannah Guthrie and Willie Geist on the “Today” show and crashed Jimmy Fallon’s “The Tonight Show” in New York City.

Next was the 2025 WNBA draft, where Bueckers was taken with the No. 1 overall pick Monday night by the Dallas Wings.

Just eight days after the 2024-25 women’s college basketball season concluded with the Huskies defeating the South Carolina Gamecocks, the next generation of superstars are set to enter the league, and many of them were at The Shed at Hudson Yards in New York City to hear their name called during the draft. 

USA TODAY Sports chronicled every pick of the 2025 WNBA Draft and issued our grades for the first round. Scroll below for a recap.

2025 WNBA draft grades: Who aced the night?

WNBA teams across the country added new talent to their rosters Monday night at the 2025 WNBA draft ahead of regular-season openers on May 16. Spectacular names like UConn's Paige BueckersUSC's Kiki IriafenLSU's Aneesah Morrow and TCU star Hailey Van Lith were called, along with so many other phenomenal athletes. Meghan L. Hall of For The Win (part of the USA TODAY Network) graded each first-round pick as they were revealed. See here grades below, and click here for her full analysis:

1. Dallas Wings: Paige Bueckers — Grade A+

  • Bueckers is a slam-dunk pick. She's the most efficient player in the draft and the most pro-ready.

2. Seattle Storm: Dominique Malonga — Grade A

  • French center Dominique Malonga is one of the smoothest post-players in the entire 2025 draft class

3. Washington Mystics: Sonia Citron — Grade B+

  • Citron’s numbers aren’t flashy on the court, but what she does very well is score when asked (including from beyond the arc) and get after it defensively.

4. Washington Mystics: Kiki Iriafen — Grade B

  • Iriafen should provide immediate depth and rim protection to the Mystics frontcourt.

5. Golden State Valkyries: Justė Jocytė — Grade B+

  • Jocytė, 19, has a high basketball IQ that is far beyond most players her age.

6. Washington Mystics: Georgia Amoore — Grade C

  • While Amoore plays much larger than her 5-foot-6 size, it’s a cause for concern at the WNBA level.

7. Connecticut Sun: Aneesah Morrow — Grade B+

  • At 6-foot-1, Morrow is a board master, grabbing everything within her reach.

8. Connecticut Sun: Saniya Rivers — Grade A

  • Rivers' length and size give her a rare combination and make her a prime candidate to be a guard or a forward.

9. Los Angeles Sparks: Sarah Ashlee Barker — Grade B+

  • Barker’s March Madness performance against Maryland — when she finished with 45 points in double overtime — catapulted her to the top of draft boards.

10. Chicago Sky: Ajša Sivka — Grade C+

  • Chicago could stash Slovenian forward Ajša Sivka for later use, and she helps a roster that wants to be in win-now mode but is still somewhat rebuilding.
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