
Дакота Джонсон вийшла на вулиці Нью-Йорка у прозорій сукні (фото)

Tyrese Haliburton was not at his best during the Indiana Pacers’ 123-107 Game 2 loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder on Sunday night. Haliburton, after being the hero of Game 1, felt invisible in the first half of Game 2, scoring just three points on 1-5 shooting from the field as the Pacers went down […]
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OKLAHOMA CITY — Oklahoma City Thunder fans watched their team avenge Tyrese Haliburton and the Indiana Pacers’ shocking Game 1 victory with a 118-103 blowout win led by Shai Gilgeous-Alexander in Game 2. Haliburton’s game-winning shot with 0.3 seconds left in the series opener topped a 12-3 Pacers run that erased a 15-point deficit. Led […]
The post Thunder’s Shai Gilgeous-Alexander opens up about ‘punches thrown’ in Game 2 win appeared first on ClutchPoints.
Jackie Chan has achieved in Hollywood what many actors could only dream of. He emerged as a known action star in the industry after coming from a different film industry, armed with only broken English. The Western audiences became familiar with Jackie Chan after the crazy edge-of-the-seat action thriller, Rumble in the Bronx. He later became […]
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KILKENNY boss Derek Lyng hailed hero Huw Lawlor as the Cats romped to SIX Leinster titles in a row.
Lawlor produced a performance for the ages as they bagged Bob O’Keeffe against Galway at Croke Park.
The O’Loughlin Gaels clubman halted countless Tribes attacks and was the launchpad for the Cats to score at the other end.
Goals from Mossy Keoghan in each half and one from stalwart TJ Reid, 37, booked Kilkenny’s seventh All-Ireland semi-final in a row.
Lyng gushed at Lawlor’s heroics and saluted their overall performance as they finished with 10 different scorers.
He said: “He was excellent, and it gives a lift to everybody around him as well, that confidence that you have in a full back.
“It’s brilliant. It’s a brilliant skill to have – somebody that can attack the ball and just pluck it from the sky like that.
“I thought overall the effort, not just from Hugh, from everybody that was involved was excellent.
“I thought our work rate was very good, and maybe it dipped a little bit there, but I thought a bit of resilience there to take back the game under our control near the end was very positive as well.”
But Lyng knows they were far from their best yesterday – with huge tests to come. Kilkenny fired 11 wides in the game, and eight of those were in the first half alone.
They led by 13 points but a 1-6 Galway flurry without reply decimated their lead to four, before Keoghan lashed in their third goal.
And he hopes they can find the gear they need to land their first All-Ireland in a decade ahead of the semis on July 5/6.
He said: “We’re Leinster champions, and that was the objective, but at the same time, we know we’ve a lot of work to do.
“I think it’s probably taken for granted that we’re going to go out and win these games, but a huge amount of work goes into it, particularly from the players.
“They do it all, and we’ve been working very hard at that. We’ve been tested in different games, at different stages.
“We lost to Wexford, and Dublin we would have been disappointed with a spell in that game as well, and likewise today.
“So, regardless of who we were playing, we know we’re going to have to find another gear or two for the next day, and that’s the reality of it.
“But that’s something we’ll go after, and we’re looking forward to that, but we took this campaign very seriously and we got our reward today.”
Meanwhile Galway boss Micheál Donoghue cursed their luck – and their failure to score from play for 25 minutes in the second half.
Cathal Mannion’s frees were all they could manage until their late revival thanks to Brian Concannon’s goal.
And Donoghue knows the Cats were a class apart as they head into an All-Ireland quarter-final against Laois or Tipperary.
He said: “I think from our point of view, in terms of the way we wanted to play, we just didn’t from the start of the game. You have to give all the credit to Kilkenny, they showed the great experience that they have.
“When we did get it going and working it through the lines, we were better. Look, we have huge belief and trust in the group.
“The disappointing thing is when you see what they did do for a 10-minute, 12-minute period in the game, that’s the positives we’re taking out of and that’s what we’ll try and build on as we move forward.”
LIMERICK boss John Kiely expressed pride in his troops after they fell agonisingly short in their mission to become a Seven Domination Army by conquering Munster yet again.
Kiely’s side made history last year as the first team ever to claim the Mick Mackey Cup for six consecutive seasons.
But provincial supremacy is now Cork’s following a riveting final on Saturday night that was decided on penalties.
Barry Murphy, Tom Morrissey and Declan Hannon failed to convert their attempts in a shootout that concluded with Pat Ryan’s Rebels bagging their first Munster title since 2018.
Kiely lamented: “Penalties are penalties. There’s no dress-rehearsal for this. There’s no practising for this. It’s just put your best foot forward and you’re taking a shot on behalf of the group.
“It’s not on the lads. I thought Declan, Tom and Barry manfully put their hands up to take these penalties and as far as we’re concerned.
“It was our Limerick senior hurling team who lost rather than Barry, Declan or Tom – that’s for sure.”
For the first time in history, the outcome of a Championship final at Liam MacCarthy Cup level was settled by a penalty shootout.
The Limerick gaffer added: “I think everybody would agree it’s in normal play that a game should be finished. But listen, these are the rules, these are the procedures and we have to go with that.
“Fair play to Cork. They took the penalties when it came around.
“In fairness to Pat, Pat has done a fantastic job with that Cork team and to come down here and get a win is a serious achievement in a Munster final and we have to acknowledge that.”
Cork advanced to the All-Ireland semi-finals by becoming the first team to win a Munster decider in their opponents’ backyard since their 2006 crop did so against Tipperary.
For Limerick, a quarter-final on the weekend of June 21-22 is next.
Kiely said: “All told, I just have to be super proud of our lads. The effort they put in was just incredible. We’ve won six out of seven Munster finals. That record I think will stand a long time.
“We have a great record in extra-time. I thought we played exceptionally well. I thought we were a better team in extra-time.
“I think we created 14 scoring chances to their eight in extra-time, so I thought we had enough done to win the game in that extra-time period.
“That’s the end of the Munster Championship for us. I’m very, very happy with our performance levels right throughout the Munster Championship.
“We’ll reset, we’ll take a little breather now for the next few days and I’ve no doubt the men in that dressing room will regroup, dust themselves down and will really want to push forward now and be the very best that they can be in the remainder of this Championship.”
In the immediate aftermath of the game – which saw Cork’s Darragh Fitzgibbon force the penalty shootout by pointing a last-gasp ‘65 – Kiely felt it was ‘difficult to understand’ the amount of additional time played by referee James Owens.
The Wexford official stepped up from his role as line umpire in extra-time after Thomas Walsh went down with the cramp.
Kiely said: “We’ll have to go back and have a look at it and see exactly what were the major turning points. But there’s no doubt that Thomas Walsh getting injured had a big impact on the game.”