Tag Archives: secondround

Joel Embiid suffered LCL sprain and could wear brace in Sixers’ second-round series, sources confirm – The Philadelphia Inquirer

  1. Joel Embiid suffered LCL sprain and could wear brace in Sixers’ second-round series, sources confirm The Philadelphia Inquirer
  2. Joel Embiid Has A Sprained LCL, Will Be Re-Evaluated During the Week Crossing Broad
  3. Latest on Embiid, early look at Celtics matchup in Round 2 | Sixers Talk Podcast NBC Sports Philadelphia
  4. Orthopedic surgeon explains timeline, risks, and treatment for Joel Embiid’s knee injury PhillyVoice.com
  5. Joel Embiid’s knee sprain looms large over Eastern Conference pecking order Liberty Ballers
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Michael Chandler predicts second-round knockout of Conor McGregor: ‘That’s my Mystic Mike take’ – MMA Fighting

  1. Michael Chandler predicts second-round knockout of Conor McGregor: ‘That’s my Mystic Mike take’ MMA Fighting
  2. Dana White Reacts To Conor McGregor Return vs. Michael Chandler On ‘TUF 31,’ Talks Fedor Retirement MMA Junkie
  3. Gordon Ryan offers to help coach The Ultimate Fighter: McGregor vs. Chandler MMA Mania
  4. McGregor returning as reality TV show coach before fight Hong Kong Standard
  5. Michael Chandler issues statement on TUF, Conor McGregor fight: ‘The competition starts right now’ Bloody Elbow
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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With no first- or second-round pick in 2023, John Lynch needed to give his scouts a pep talk

An “eff them picks” approach has plenty of consequences. Among other things, it potentially renders the efforts of a team’s college scouts less relevant.

On Friday, 49ers G.M. John Lynch suggested that trading away early-round picks makes the work of the scouts even more important to the cause.

“After practice today, we’ll get on a Zoom with all our college scouts and just this morning trying to anticipate, are they excited, are they bummed because here goes all their guys,” Lynch told reporters. “My message is going to be, this is all the more reason we have to make these picks count. We’re fortunate that some different avenues, minority coaches that brought us some picks. I think that empowers you to do something like this because you have a couple of [compensatory] threes, and you’ll get more in the future with things of that nature. But ultimately, you weigh everything and because of our belief in our team and what we feel we can do and what [Christian McCaffrey] does for us as a football team, you try to make a move like this, and it broke our way.”

The 49ers received a pair of third-round compensatory draft picks in 2023, resulting from the 2020 hiring of Robert Saleh to coach the Jets and Martin Mayhew to be the G.M. of the Commanders and the 2022 hiring of Mike McDaniel by the Dolphins. (The hiring of Saleh and Mayhew in the same cycle resulted in a third-round pick in 2021, 2022, and 2023.) They also have a fifth-round pick, two seventh-round picks, and likely another pick or two as a result of net free-agent losses earlier this year.

But the first-round pick is gone, thanks to the Trey Lance trade. And the second-round pick (along with a third-round pick and fourth-round pick) have been sent to Carolina for McCaffrey.

It’s a far cry from Mike Ditka’s Ricky Williams draft in 1999, when the Saints sent their whole slate of picks to trade up for the Texans running back. The 49ers will still have work to do on draft weekend. And the reduced inventory of picks will make it more important that each lottery ticket they scratch becomes a winner.

With no first- or second-round pick in 2023, John Lynch needed to give his scouts a pep talk originally appeared on Pro Football Talk

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With no first- or second-round pick in 2023, John Lynch needed to give his scouts a pep talk

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An “eff them picks” approach has plenty of consequences. Among other things, it potentially renders the efforts of a team’s college scouts less relevant.

On Friday, 49ers G.M. John Lynch suggested that trading away early-round picks makes the work of the scouts even more important to the cause.

“After practice today, we’ll get on a Zoom with all our college scouts and just this morning trying to anticipate, are they excited, are they bummed because here goes all their guys,” Lynch told reporters. “My message is going to be, this is all the more reason we have to make these picks count. We’re fortunate that some different avenues, minority coaches that brought us some picks. I think that empowers you to do something like this because you have a couple of [compensatory] threes, and you’ll get more in the future with things of that nature. But ultimately, you weigh everything and because of our belief in our team and what we feel we can do and what [Christian McCaffrey] does for us as a football team, you try to make a move like this, and it broke our way.”

The 49ers received a pair of third-round compensatory draft picks in 2023, resulting from the 2020 hiring of Robert Saleh to coach the Jets and Martin Mayhew to be the G.M. of the Commanders and the 2022 hiring of Mike McDaniel by the Dolphins. (The hiring of Saleh and Mayhew in the same cycle resulted in a third-round pick in 2021, 2022, and 2023.) They also have a fifth-round pick, two seventh-round picks, and likely another pick or two as a result of net free-agent losses earlier this year.

But the first-round pick is gone, thanks to the Trey Lance trade. And the second-round pick (along with a third-round pick and fourth-round pick) have been sent to Carolina for McCaffrey.

It’s a far cry from Mike Ditka’s Ricky Williams draft in 1999, when the Saints sent their whole slate of picks to trade up for the Texans running back. The 49ers will still have work to do on draft weekend. And the reduced inventory of picks will make it more important that each lottery ticket they scratch becomes a winner.

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Lakers To Acquire Second-Round Pick From Orlando

The Lakers will trade into the second round of tonight’s draft by acquiring the 35th pick from the Magic in exchange for cash and a future second-rounder, tweets ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski.

Orlando will receive L.A.’s second-round pick in 2028, sources tell Khobi Price of The Orlando Sentinel (Twitter link).

The Lakers had been trying to land a draft pick and are now in position to grab any projected late first-rounders who slide a few spots. Wendell Moore, Christian Braun and Caleb Houstan may be names to watch, according to Kevin O’Connor of The Ringer (Twitter link).

The trade leaves the Magic with picks No. 1 and 32.



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Artur Beterbiev captures third light heavyweight title with second-round TKO of Joe Smith Jr.

NEW YORK — Artur Beterbiev vs. Joe Smith Jr. was billed as a can’t-miss action fight, and the ESPN main event delivered for as long as it lasted — even if it was never competitive.

Beterbiev scored three knockdowns of Smith en route to a second-round TKO to capture a third light heavyweight title on Saturday before 4,537 at Hulu Theater at Madison Square Garden.

Boxing’s only champion with a 100% knockout record, Beterbiev floored Smith in the closing seconds of the opening round with a counter right hand.

The 175-pounders continued to slug it out in Round 2, and Beterbiev’s power and shot placement proved to be too much. The 37-year-old dropped Smith with a left hook and, moments later, the Long Island, New York, native was on the canvas again after a flurry of punches.

Smith, 32, never attempted to regain his senses. Instead, he tried to punch his way out of trouble. Beterbiev (18-0, 18 KOs) made him pay one final time with a left uppercut followed by a right uppercut as the referee jumped in before Smith could fall a fourth time. The time of the stoppage was 2:19. Smith (28-4, 22 KOs) was transported to a local hospital for observation.

“I want to be [a] good boxer one day maybe, that’s why today was a little bit better than the past, I hope,” said Beterbiev, ESPN’s No. 1 light heavyweight. “Joe’s a little bit open and more easy for me to get him. Two fighters both have good punch and both tried to get [there] first. This time I’m lucky; I get there first.”

Beterbiev beat Smith to the punch from the opening bell. There was no feeling-out period between the two dangerous punchers, and for a little more than five minutes, the fight lived up to the hype.

Smith was the aggressor and tried to pin Beterbiev in the corner, but the Russian, who fights out of Montreal, was able to use Smith’s pressure against him. He often took one step backward and fired a counter shot that met its mark, but Smith wasn’t dissuaded.

After all, Smith has beat the odds time and time again. There was his first-round KO of Andrzej Fonfara in 2016 that announced his arrival and his KO of Bernard Hopkins later that year that sent the legend through the ropes and into retirement.

The longtime construction worker kept on improving. He fought through a broken jaw in a loss against Sullivan Barrera and was able to wobble Dmitry Bivol in a title-fight loss. Afterward he defeated Jesse Hart and scored a career-best victory with a stoppage of former champion Eleider Alvarez in 2020.

And when he got his second crack at a title, Smith came through with a majority-decision victory over Maxim Vlasov last April to pick up a light heavyweight title.

But against Beterbiev, Smith was no match. Through 18 fights, no one has been able to hang with Beterbiev. Not Marcus Browne, the Olympian Beterbiev hammered into submission in December, nor Oleksandr Gvozdyk, who Beterbiev stopped in his only other unification fight.

Now, Beterbiev is primed for a fight with Anthony Yarde, the 30-year-old Englishman who came oh-so-close to stopping Sergey Kovalev in a 2019 title fight. There’s no deal in place, but the plan is for Beterbiev to defend his three titles vs. Yarde in London, sources tell ESPN, with Oct. 29 the target date.

“He’s a beast,” Yarde (22-2, 21 KOs) told ESPN. “He hits very hard. I’m a beast, too. That’s why I think it’s such an exciting matchup.”

An undisputed light heavyweight title fight with Bivol, who upset Canelo Alvarez in May, will likely have to wait.

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One Burning Question for Every NBA Second-Round Series

After a rare (and somewhat surprising!) night off, the second round of the 2022 NBA playoffs resumes Friday night. With four Game 3s on tap this weekend, let’s take a look at the biggest matchup, schematic, and strategic questions hanging over every series, starting in the City of Brotherly Love:

Heat-76ers: How much can Joel Embiid really change this series?

With Philadelphia’s best player sidelined by a broken orbital bone and concussion, the biggest question heading into this series was whether James Harden could turn back into the sort of no. 1 offensive option he’s been for most of the last decade, including in non-Embiid minutes during the regular season. Now that we know the answer appears to be “no,” or at least “not right now”—18 points and seven assists per game, shooting 39.3 percent from the floor and 25 percent from 3-point range—all eyes turn to Embiid: When he might be able to join the series, and just how large a difference he might be able to make when (if?) he does.

The big fella’s timeline remains up in the air. Before Game 2, John Clark of NBC Sports Philadelphia reported that Embiid was “progressing well” and that there’s “real hope” he could return for Game 3. During the game, though, Chris Haynes reported that Embiid had only just resumed being able to look at the screen of his cell phone without the brightness bothering him as he recovers from his concussion. After Miami’s 119-103 win, Sixers coach Doc Rivers told reporters that Embiid still had “so many steps to go through [and] I don’t think he’s cleared any of them right now,” and said at practice on Thursday that he “still has hurdles to get over”—casting plenty of doubt as to whether the MVP finalist could secure a clean enough bill of health to perform under the bright lights in time for Friday night. The Sixers have officially listed Embiid as out for Game 3, but they could still change that designation before tipoff.

Even a limited version of Embiid would provide a huge boost for the Sixers, who have been forced to cycle through a host of bad options in the middle without him. The return of the NBA’s scoring champ would restore a semblance of order and balance to an offense that’s been producing at league-worst levels without him, and alleviate the pressure on Harden, Tyrese Maxey, and Tobias Harris, who have accounted for nearly 61 percent of Philadelphia’s total field goal attempts, 63 percent of its assists, and 63 percent of its fouls drawn in the series. Having Embiid around as a release valve would also make it tougher for Miami to send extra defenders and double-teams at Harden—a key part of Erik Spoelstra’s defensive strategy, and one reason the former MVP has attempted only 28 shots through two games. I’m not sure Embiid’s presence alone will suddenly get every Sixer to stop bricking the jumpers Harden’s creating—Philly’s just 4-for-18 from deep on the Beard’s feeds through two games—but shit, it couldn’t hurt!

Honestly, just vaporizing DeAndre Jordan’s floor time would represent some massive addition by subtraction for Philly, which has been outscored by 31 points in the plodding vet’s 31 minutes across two games, and has actually outscored Miami by a point in 65 minutes with him on the bench. Merely playing the Heat about even won’t be good enough to take four of the next five games, though; the Sixers need Embiid to be the kind of game-wrecker who can dominate anybody in the post, foul out opposing frontcourts, knock down trail 3s, and helm a top-five defense.

That’d be a tall enough order under the best of circumstances against the top-seeded Heat, who held Embiid to 23.7 points per game—nearly seven points below his average—on 21-for-50 shooting (42 percent) during three meetings during the regular season, and whose swarming defense excels at forcing Embiid to play in a crowd:

Expecting him to overwhelm Bam Adebayo, Jimmy Butler, and Co. while likely playing with a mask—something he found cumbersome and uncomfortable when he had to do it against Miami in 2018—and through the torn thumb ligament he suffered against the Raptors, though? And to hit the ground running at full speed after spending nearly 10 days away from almost all basketball-related activity? Even for a player as great as Embiid, that feels awfully optimistic. And yet, if the doctors clear him and he suits up, that’s exactly what the Sixers will ask of him. At this point, with a sub-1-in-10 chance at surviving the second round, what other choice do they have?


Suns-Mavericks: Can Dallas find any answers for Phoenix’s offense?

After falling into an 0-2 hole against the West’s no. 1 seed, Dallas head coach Jason Kidd again bemoaned the lack of production from Mavericks not named Luka Doncic. While it’s true that Jalen Brunson and Spencer Dinwiddie combining for 41 points on 46 shots through two games is less than ideal, the Mavericks’ offense—their intentionally very, very Luka-centric offense—has been more or less fine in this series, averaging 116.9 points per 100 possessions outside of garbage time—a rate that would’ve finished no. 2 in the NBA during the regular season.

The problem is on the other end of the floor, where the Dallas defense finds itself hanging precariously over the Hellmouth on seemingly every possession: Phoenix has scored 135 points-per-100 outside of garbage time through two games, shooting 62.3 percent on 2-pointers, 45.3 percent on 3-pointers, and 92.3 percent on free throws … as a team.

The Mavericks won more regular-season games and advanced past Round 1 for the first time since winning the 2011 NBA title in large part because of the advancements Kidd was able to coax on the defensive end. Dallas moved from the bottom third into the top 10 in points allowed per possession, defensive rebounding rate, and opponents’ free throw rate and effective field goal percentage, with Dorian Finney-Smith and Reggie Bullock taking on the toughest one-on-one assignments buoyed by a teamwide commitment to quicker rotations, sharper closeouts, and more disciplined execution. And none of it’s meant a goddamn thing against a Suns team with the talent, skill, versatility, and savvy to pinpoint an opposing defense’s weakness and just hammer it until it breaks open.

Case in point: the fourth quarter of Game 2, in which Phoenix turned a six-point game into a 20-point blowout with ruthless ease, thanks to Chris Paul’s gift for manipulating coverages to manufacture good looks, and Devin Booker’s ability to rise up and rain fire:

In the competitive portion of that fourth quarter, Dallas really managed only one good defensive possession, which resulted in a turnover … and which they promptly squandered, with Luka turning the ball over, sending the Suns out on a fast break that ended with Paul lofting a lob to Mikal Bridges for a dunk. On just about every other possession over an eight-minute stretch with the game and home-court advantage on the line, the Suns created wide-open or extremely comfortable looks. This is the residue of design: the system that Monty Williams has crafted, implemented by players who can think, move, and execute at an elite level, no matter what coverage an opponent throws at them.

Stay in drop coverage, and the Suns will step into the space you’re conceding and cook you: Among 123 players to take at least 150 pull-up jumpers this season, Paul, Bridges, and Booker finished third, fifth, and 13th in field goal percentage, respectively, according to Second Spectrum, while Deandre Ayton is shooting a blistering 63.4 percent on non-restricted-area 2-pointers. Switch pick-and-rolls to try to take away those pull-ups, and now you’ve got to worry about Paul and Booker hunting your weak link, or Booker taking a smaller defender to Mamba Academy in the mid-post, or Ayton getting a deep seal in the paint before going up over the top for a layup or a soft-touch floater.

Try to trap or blitz Paul and you’re almost assuredly drawing dead, daring one of the greatest passers in NBA history to slip a pocket pass through to his rolling big man or swing it to a pressure-release wing on the opposite side who can trigger a four-on-three attack. Try to junk things up by going zone—something Dallas only did about two possessions per game during the regular season—and there are Paul and Booker to shoot you out of it, cutters slicing through it to collapse it, and Ayton (and Bismack Biyombo and JaVale McGee) rising up for lobs over the top of it.

Phoenix has dusted Dallas when it has gone big with Maxi Kleber or Dwight Powell in the middle. When the Mavs have gone small, eschewing centers in favor of playing Finney-Smith at the 5, the Suns have scorched them. They have been surgical and shocking, leaving Doncic and the rest of Dallas’s defenders licking their wounds and looking for answers … that are starting to seem like they might not exist.

It’s up to Kidd to prove otherwise—to come up with something beyond just hoping some non-Luka Maverick starts scoring so he can fight fire with fire against a Phoenix offense that’s generating exactly what it wants, whenever it wants it. If he can’t, then no matter what heroics Luka might have in store back at home, the only question left in the series might be how much time Phoenix gets off before Grizzlies-Warriors wraps up.

Celtics-Bucks: Can Giannis Antetokounmpo solve Boston’s defense again?

I took an in-depth look at the state of play in Celtics-Bucks after Game 2, so I won’t belabor the issue. My guess is that both sides came away from the first two games in Boston feeling pretty good: Milwaukee because it was able to steal home-court advantage, shut down the Celtics’ interior scoring, and force Ime Udoka’s team to rely on a new franchise playoff record for 3-pointers (and Jaylen Brown’s brief ascension to another plane of existence) to beat them; and Boston because, for the most part, they’ve been able to keep the reigning Finals MVP under wraps.

Antetokounmpo controlled Game 1 with his leveled-up passing, dishing 12 assists as he leveraged the additional help the C’s shaded his way. In Game 2, though, Boston was able to limit both his scoring (28 points, but 11-of-27 shooting) and his playmaking (seven assists, but none for 3-pointers, and six turnovers) largely by keeping those help defenders at home and entrusting the Giannis matchup to old nemesis Al Horford and new foe Grant Williams. They’ve done the job: According to NBA Advanced Stats’ matchup data, the two-time MVP has shot a combined 14-for-40 against Horford and Williams, who’ve used their strength and lateral quickness to push Antetokounmpo off of his spots and force him to finish through tough contests.

The Bucks need more from everywhere: More of Jrue Holiday in isolation, more secondary off-the-bounce creation from Grayson Allen and Pat Connaughton, more perimeter shot-making from Bobby Portis and Wesley Matthews (a combined 3-for-16 from deep through two games), and more floor time from Brook Lopez, limited by foul trouble to just 25 minutes in Game 2. But with Khris Middleton continuing to work his way back from an MCL sprain that will keep him sidelined through at least games 3 and 4, what Milwaukee needs most is for its best player to give them more than 52 points on 52 shots and not allow Boston to guard him with a 35-year-old and a 6-foot-6 dude straight up without sending help. What Milwaukee needs most is for Giannis to do what he does best: see a coverage, internalize it, find the right angle of approach, and battering-ram the shit out of it until the other team breaks down.

We’ve seen him do it before: to the Suns last July, to the Heat a few weeks before that, and, a couple of years prior, to an earlier iteration of the Celtics, led by a younger model of Horford. Milwaukee’s chances of keeping its title defense alive likely depend on whether he and Coach Bud can do it again.

Grizzlies-Warriors: Can Golden State make Ja Morant pay on defense?

Following Morant’s 47-point masterpiece in Game 2 to level the series, my Ringer colleague Kevin O’Connor looked at how the Warriors have been guarding Ja, and wondered whether Steve Kerr might consider blitzing the newly minted Most Improved Player rather than surrender the soft switches on which he’s feasting. Perhaps just as big an issue, though, is whether Golden State commits to attacking Ja.

The Warriors have made Morant—a slight 6-foot-3 and 174 pounds, regarded by a number of metrics as one of the weaker defensive guards in the NBA—defend 34 screens through two games, per Second Spectrum. The Grizzlies have held up well overall on those plays, with secondary defenders using active hands and quick feet to plug up gaps, and conceding just 0.87 points per chance. On about half of those possessions, though, the Warriors have decided to attack elsewhere rather than focusing in on Morant: They’ve gone directly at him on only 17 of those screens, and you can count the times they’ve tried to get him out in deep water and isolate him on one hand. Which is kind of wild, when you consider that Patrick Beverley—who, delightful as he is, isn’t exactly Stephen Curry or Jordan Poole when it comes to off-the-bounce scoring—took Ja one-on-one 20 times in Round 1, producing a healthy 1.16 points per chance in the process.

To some degree, that’s a credit to coach Taylor Jenkins and the rest of the Grizzlies’ defense, stocked with long-armed, attentive, and capable players who allow Morant to slide out of compromising positions. And to some degree, it’s about the fundamental precepts of Kerr’s offense—fluidity, ball and body movement, an egalitarian approach based on the concept that everybody’s more invested and engaged when everybody’s touching the rock—skewing away from a strategy that would emphasize the kind of screen-and-roll hunting that we see so much of in the postseason these days.

Sometimes, though, just going at the guy who’s not that good a defender can open up some pretty good stuff for an offense that’s stunningly scored at a bottom-five clip through these first two games:

The question of how much the Warriors should be trying to hunt Morant ties closely to another big question: Just how healthy will Desmond Bane’s sore lower back be after three days off?

The second-year shooting guard was arguably Memphis’s best player in Round 1, averaging 23.5 points, 4.2 rebounds, and 2.2 assists in 38 minutes per game while shooting a torrid 49.1 percent from 3-point range on more than nine attempts a night. He’s the Grizzlies’ most reliable floor spacer for Morant’s drives, and their most dangerous catch-and-shoot threat to cash in on the kickouts he creates. He’s a viable secondary playmaker, which could be vital if the Warriors start blitzing Morant’s pick-and-rolls and Memphis needs a release valve, and a stout perimeter defender who has held Klay Thompson to 2-for-10 shooting through two games, according to NBA Advanced Stats. His top-tier two-way play becomes particularly important for Memphis now that Dillon Brooks has been suspended for Game 3 after injuring Gary Payton II with a flagrant foul early in Game 2.

If Bane’s back doesn’t loosen up, and he’s not capable of averaging more than the seven points on 29 percent shooting that he’s mustered through two games, the Grizzlies’ offensive ceiling drops precipitously. (Some good news on that front: The return of center Steven Adams from a stint in health and safety protocols, which could help bolster Memphis’s offensive rebounding and second-chance opportunities, which the Grizz capitalized on better than any team during the regular season.) If he’s not able to move effectively enough to keep tamping down on Thompson, or to deal with spot duty on Steph or Poole, the Grizzlies’ defense becomes much more vulnerable as well. If he’s not healthy enough to pose a scoring and playmaking threat when Golden State goes small with its three-guard lineup, it would give Poole a safer hiding spot and make it tougher for Morant to go into search-and-destroy mode on switches.

Sprinkle in the inherent variance that comes with Jaren Jackson Jr.’s trick-or-treat, foul-trouble-avoidance-dependent game, and if Bane can’t go, the pressure on Morant to turn in more superhuman performances on the order of Game 2 ratchets up considerably. And if Memphis’s best chance of getting a win in Golden State is Ja going into the phone booth and coming out wearing a cape, then it might make sense for Kerr to grit his teeth, push pause on his principles for a minute or two, and just simplify things: Put the ball in the hands of Steph and Poole, call Ja’s man up top, and let the chips fall where they may.



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Todd McShay mock draft: Who 49ers select with 2022 second-round pick

There’s plenty of speculation surrounding who the 49ers will select first in the 2022 NFL Draft, and one recent mock speculates that San Francisco will use its second-round selection to plan for future needs. 

After trading up in last year’s draft to select quarterback Trey Lance, the 49ers will enter the draft later than most teams with their first pick at No. 61 in the second round. But the organization has a knack for finding valuable players at any draft position (see George Kittle).

With several key players headed into the final year of their contracts this season, including big names like Deebo Samuel and Nick Bosa, who will certainly be paid, the 49ers could utilize the draft to make sure they have depth at other positions that will be impacted by impending free agency.

The team’s secondary was a point of concern last season, so it would make sense to draft a much-needed boost to the defensive backfield.

ESPN’s NFL draft expert Todd McShay predicted San Francisco will do just that in his two-round mock draft released Tuesday, where he had the 49ers selecting a safety ahead of Jimmie Ward’s final contract year.

No. 61 overall: Nick Cross, S

The Maryland defensive back started all 13 games for the Terps as a junior in 2021, where he tallied the team’s second-most tackles (66) and led the defense with three interceptions and two forced fumbles. Cross also had three sacks last season and is a three-time Honorable Mention All-Big Ten.

 

ESPN has Cross ranked No. 5 at his position and No. 53 overall, and he ran a 4.34 40-yard dash at the NFL Combine with a vertical jump of 37 inches and broad jump of 130 inches.

“Welcome to the draft, San Francisco! With Jimmie Ward entering the final year of his deal, the Niners might look to the secondary here,” McShay said. “At 6-foot and 212 pounds, Cross has great size, center fielder speed and plenty of versatility.”

Along with future uncertainty surrounding Ward, safety Jaquiski Tartt remains a free agent after starting 14 games for San Francisco last season and posting a career-high 66 tackles. Even though the 49ers recently signed safety George Odum to a three-year contract, Cross could join the team and develop alongside safety Talanoa Hufanga, who the 49ers selected No. 180 overall in the fifth round of the 2021 draft. With Tarvarius Moore also on the team, a Cross pick at No. 61 would provide plenty of depth at safety.

RELATED: Jimmy G’s best-case scenario with trade options drying up 

NFL.com analyst Lance Zierlein gave Cross the NFL comparison of Washington Commanders safety Kamren Curl and described the 20-year-old as the “bouncer” of Maryland’s defense, with enough aggression and explosiveness to throw opponents out of the club. 

“He is a chase player who seeks to make a statement upon impact and has impressive stopping power near the line or as an open-field tackler,” Zierlein said. “He’s a tight-hipped, linear mover, so flipping and flying are not his strong suit. He’s capable of matching with most flavors of tight end and will be most comfortable in coverages that allow him to play with a downhill trigger. He has the temperament, size and toughness to become an eventual starter in the league.”

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NBA Trade Rumors: Lakers offered Hawks two second-round picks for Cam Reddish

Two things are true of the Los Angeles Lakers with less than a month until the NBA trade deadline: they need help and they have very little means to get it. That doesn’t mean they’re not going to try, though.

In fact, according to a report from Fred Katz and Chris Kirschner of The Athletic, the Lakers made an offer for Cam Reddish before the Atlanta Hawks agreed to trade the 22-year-old forward to the New York Knicks on Thursday:

“Recently, The Athletic learned that the Lakers had offered two second-rounders for Reddish. Still, the Hawks believed a team would eventually offer the first-round pick they sought. They asked for Knicks rookie Quentin Grimes, the No. 25 selection during this past summer’s draft, during negotiations, but the Knicks turned them down, sources said.”

The package that the Hawks accepted for Reddish included former No. 9 overall pick Kevin Knox II and a 2022 first-round pick via the Charlotte Hornets. The Lakers could have offered the Hawks a more talented player than Knox, but not one as young as the 22-year-old forward. They also didn’t have an expendable first-round pick like the Knicks did.

The good news is that not landing Reddish doesn’t mean much for the Lakers. As intriguing of a prospect as he may be, he’s still a raw talent and the Lakers aren’t really in a position to give Reddish the playing time he needs to develop into an impactful rotation players. The Hawks weren’t in that position either, which is they moved on from him.

The bad news is that the Lakers’ failure to land Reddish is probably indicative of what’s to come for the team at the trade deadline. While the Lakers may have just enough assets to get opposing general managers to answer the phone, they’re not in a position to get into a bidding war due to their lack of draft capital and tradable salary.

That’s not to say the Lakers won’t make a trade at the deadline, but it’s going to take a lot more than two second-round picks for them to get someone that will really move the needle for them.

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Bol Bol trade: Nuggets send big man to Pistons for Rodney McGruder, second-round pick, per report

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The 2022 NBA trade deadline is just over a month away on Feb. 10, and the action is starting to heat up. We’ve already seen multiple deals this month, including the Rajon Rondon moving from the Los Angeles Lakers to the Cleveland Cavaliers. Now, there’s another deal to discuss. On Sunday, the Denver Nuggets agreed to send young big man Bol Bol to the Detroit Pistons in exchange for Rodney McGruder and a 2022 second-round pick (via the Brooklyn Nets), according to Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN. 

Bol, the son of former NBA player Manute Bol, was initially seen as a potential lottery pick coming out of college. However, he slid all the way to No. 44 overall in the 2019 NBA Draft, where he was selected by the Nuggets. 

The 7-foot-2 Bol had been with the Nuggets ever since, but has not been able to earn any significant playing time. So far this season, he’s appeared in 15 games, averaging 2.4 points and 1.4 rebounds. On a young, rebuilding Pistons team, Bol may get a bigger opportunity. At the very least, he’s worth a look for the Pistons; they need as much talent as they can get right now. 

As for the Nuggets, they clearly didn’t see a future for Bol so it made sense to trade him before he hit free agency this summer. McGruder is a veteran guard who has been bounced around since entering the league in 2016, and should be able to give them some extra depth in the backcourt. It also never hurts to add an extra second-round pick, especially for a team like the Nuggets that has had success late in the draft. Reigning MVP Nikola Jokic was a second rounder, as was Monte Morris, who has become an important part of their rotation. 

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