Donovan Mitchell's 39-point half lifts Cavs level with Pistons at 2-2

Donovan Mitchell scored an NBA-playoff-record-tying 39 points in the second half and finished with 43, powering the Cleveland Cavaliers to a 112-103 victory over the visiting Detroit Pistons in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference semifinals on Monday.

Field Level Media

The Cavaliers, who tied the best-of-seven series 2-2, put together a 24-0 run spanning halftime to stun the top-seeded Pistons. It was the most consecutive points in a playoff game in franchise history.

Mitchell matched the mark for points in a half by Eric "Sleepy" Floyd of the Golden State Warriors against the Los Angeles Lakers on May 10, 1987, in the West semifinals.

Mitchell had just four points at halftime due to 1-of-8 field-goal shooting. After the break, he made 12 of 18 field-goal attempts, 3 of 7 3-point tries and 12 of 13 free throws in 17 minutes.

"I apologized to the group (at halftime)," Mitchell said postgame on NBC. "... Trying to set the tone early in the offense, and I didn't do that in the first half. I came in and told my guys, 'It's on me,' But I tried to make a statement in the second half."

Cavaliers coach Kenny Atkinson added, "Incredible performance, really, by Donovan. A big-time second half for Don. When Donovan starts to get in the open court, that's when he's at his best."

The seven-time All-Star logged 21 points in the third quarter for the fourth-seeded Cavaliers. Game 5 of the series is Wednesday in Detroit.

The Pistons won the first two games at home, while Cleveland was a 116-109 victory on Saturday.

Advertisement

James Harden had 24 points and 11 assists while Evan Mobley added 17 points, eight rebounds and five blocked shots for Cleveland, which is 6-0 at home this postseason.

Caris LeVert scored 24 points off the bench for Detroit, while Cade Cunningham had 19 points, six assists and five turnovers. Tobias Harris recorded 16 points, eight rebounds and five assists, and Paul Reed had 15 points.

"Donovan Mitchell was killing us, and that's pretty much it," Reed said. "It's about us figuring out what adjustments we need to make. Hopefully, we can come out and play with more urgency."

The Cavaliers held the Pistons scoreless for 6:34 after Harris made a hoop with 31.1 seconds left in the first half, turning a 56-50 deficit into a 74-56 lead. Mitchell scored the first eight points of the second half, putting his team ahead for good.

"Just not great execution, defensively or offensively," Harris said. "It was a really bad third quarter for us, which was a huge disappointment.

"We've just got to step up to the moment and understand it's the second round and display the urgency that needs to be played every game in the playoffs. Every game, it gets more and more aggressive."

Detroit completed a 23-5 run early in the second quarter, fueled by 10 points from LeVert to go up 28-21. There were nine lead changes and three ties in the first half, which ended with the Pistons leading 56-52 despite committing 10 turnovers.

--Field Level Media

Donovan Mitchell's 39-point half lifts Cavs level with Pistons at 2-2

Donovan Mitchell scored an NBA-playoff-record-tying 39 points in the second half and finished with 43, powering the Cleveland Cavaliers...
Former Warriors president agrees to interim role with 76ers

ThePhiladelphia 76ersmade waves around the league Tuesday evening, agreeing topart wayswith their president of basketball operations Daryl Morey. Although the 76ers pulled off an upset in the first round of the NBA playoffs against the Boston Celtics, it wasn't enough for Morey to keep his job another season.

USA TODAY

In six seasons with Philadelphia, the 76ers were 270-212 under Morey. After Morey's departure, the team acted quickly to bring on former Golden State Warriors general manager and president of basketball operations Bob Myers.According toShams Charania of ESPN, Myers will lead the search for a new head executive while overseeing the franchise in the meantime.

Advertisement

This will be Myers' first job with an NBA team since departing the Warriors organization after 12 seasons at the end of the 2022-23 campaign. Since then, Myers has served as an analyst on ESPN.

This article originally appeared on Warriors Wire:Former Warriors president agrees to interim role with 76ers

Former Warriors president agrees to interim role with 76ers

ThePhiladelphia 76ersmade waves around the league Tuesday evening, agreeing topart wayswith their president of basketball operations Da...
Snoop Dogg fans baffled to learn wholesome origin of stage name after 36 years

Despite maintaining a public presence for more than 36 years, fans ofSnoop Doggare surprised to discoverthe rapper and actor's birth name,along with the heartwarming story behind his stage name.

The Mirror MIAMI, FLORIDA - MAY 02: Snoop Dogg performs at Amex x CARBONE BEACH 2026 in Miami Beach, FL on May 02, 2026 in Miami, Florida.  (Photo by John Parra/Getty Images for Amex x Carbone Beach)

It's quite typical for celebrities to adopt a stage name for their work in the entertainment world. While these names frequently derive from variations of their given names or middle names, others take a more imaginative route when selecting the name they wish to be recognized by. This practice is particularly common among singers, as their names become their trademark and persona, while simultaneously helping to maintain boundaries between their private lives and public image.

One prominent rapper and actor who opted for a stage name throughout his entertainment career is Snoop Dogg, whorecently acquired a soccer team in Wales.. And while he initially performed as 'Snoop Doggy Dogg', he eventually condensed it to 'Snoop Dogg', which remains how millions of supporters worldwide recognize him, even 35 years into his professional journey.

However, some admirers have been astonished to discover the rapper's actual name, as it took them nearly three decades to uncover. This was true for one individual, who posted toReddit's'Today I learned' community to reveal their discovery.

"TIL Snoop Dogg's real name is Cordozar Calvin Broadus Jr. His "Snoop Dogg" nickname came from his mother who thought he looked like Snoopy from the Peanuts," the post's title stated, as they proceeded to reference the rapper's Wikipedia entry.

Snoop Dogg has openly shared how his mother inspired his iconic stage name. During an appearance on theKelly Clarksonshow, he explained the origins of his moniker.

"How did you end up going by Snoop?" Kelly asked the rapper, questioning whether the nickname initially began as 'Snoopy'.

Advertisement

"As a kid, I watched Charlie Brown, and I watched Snoopy so much, my mother was like 'you watch him so damn much, you're starting to look like him'," Snoopy revealed in the interview.

He continued: "And I swear to you, my whole life, I have had 50 years with my mother, and she never called me by my real name a day in her life. She called me Snoopy, Snoopy, Snoopy, that's it. That's all."

Snoop Dogg's mother, Beverly Tate, tragically passed away on October 24, 2021, aged 70, following a battle with an undisclosed illness. Snoop Dogg announced her death on social media, calling her an "angel" and subsequently honoring her memory during his shows.

Viewers quickly flooded the comments section with reactions, with many applauding his mother for the distinctive nickname.

"Even though this is the first time I'm hearing, about how Snoop Dogg got his stage name, and listening to his story I had a feeling that's how he'd gotten the name, because it makes sense," one viewer wrote.

Another commented: "So cute he went with his mom's given nickname.

"I had NO IDEA that WHERE SNOOP DOG CAME FROM!!!!" another revealed, while a fourth person commented: "Awe love this. Momma snoop must be the cutest. super vibe Momma Snoop."

Snoop Dogg fans baffled to learn wholesome origin of stage name after 36 years

Despite maintaining a public presence for more than 36 years, fans ofSnoop Doggare surprised to discoverthe rapper and actor's birt...
Geoffrey Smith, much-loved Michigan-born presenter of Radio 3’s Jazz Record Requests

Geoffrey Smith, who has died aged 82, was a genial and extraordinarily knowledgeable Radio 3 presenter, primarily of jazz programmes; his scholarly embrace of the genre and his roots in the Midwest made him one of the network’s most cherished voices, and his distinctive “hel-low” became as established a vocal signature as Alistair Cooke’s “Good morning”.

The Telegraph Smith: as a presenter he had ease and erudition

For more than 20 years, until 2012, Smith was the presenter of Jazz Record Requests, a weekly show which handed the content over to listeners, but which was also very much a vehicle for his own taste.

Smith regarded jazz as “America’s classical music”, and he was steeped in its pantheon. Jazz Record Requests, broadcast late on a Saturday afternoon before moving to a Sunday slot in 2019, was where the listener went in the pleasurable certainty of hearing the likes of Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald, Dizzy Gillespie, Sidney Bechet, Thelonious Monk and Lester Young, and of having their understanding of the music deepened by Smith’s lightly worn expertise. The show had been launched in 1964 by Humphrey Lyttelton, whose undogmatic, friendly style helped to establish a sense of a community of like-minded people which was nurtured by his successors.

The pleasure of Jazz Record Requests lay as much in Smith’s voice and delivery as it did in the music. Born and brought up in Michigan, he was possessed of an ease and an erudition that added up to its own kind of music. He honed his scripts so that they acquired a rhythm appropriate to the show. His great gift was somehow to transport the listener back to the 1950s and to a low-lit table at a club like Birdland in midtown Manhattan just as Count Basie was striking up.

“I used to get such a pleasure out of shaping it, and the sense it created of ‘we’re all in this together’, ” he told The Daily Telegraph’s Ivan Hewett in 2014. “It may have been this person’s birthday or that person’s anniversary that prompted the request, but that was really just an excuse to share their love of this great music.”

Smith: the essence of jazz lay in its having no borders; it was the sound of freedom

Nicholas Kenyon, Radio 3 controller during the 1990s, said of Smith that “he could give anyone a lesson in presentation skills”, and for all that he had come to the network via an unusual route, he was the supreme embodiment of its civilised values.

Although the jazz genre stems ultimately from pain, one critic observed, it was hard to listen to Smith’s Jazz Record Requests without feeling happy.

After ceding the JRR presenter’s chair to Alyn Shipton, Smith ended his Radio 3 career with his own, more personal, show, Geoffrey Smith’s Jazz, which ran from 2012 to 2019, albeit in the graveyard slot of midnight on a Saturday, with each edition focusing on a different artist and introduced, as ever, with his familiar “ Hel-low…” He viewed the eventual axing of the programme with equanimity, saying: “I’ve had a fine time.”

Though synonymous with the US tradition, Smith was a champion of other greats, among them the British pianist Stan Tracey and the French-born violinist Stephane Grappelli, whose biography he wrote. The essence of jazz, Smith believed, lay in its having no borders. It was the sound of freedom.

He also presented classical music programmes on Radio 3 – including Building a Library and Record Review – and in the clearest expression of his enthusiasm for the musical culture of his adopted homeland, he became an authority on Gilbert and Sullivan. His book The Savoy Operas: A New Guide to Gilbert and Sullivan was published in 1985.

Advertisement

Geoffrey John Smith was born on August 23 1943 to Earl Willard Smith and Marian Kay Smith, née Eisele. Music ran deep in the family: “My father played stride piano but he also played Schubert,” he recalled. The atmosphere young Geoffrey grew up in “resembled a Rodgers and Hammerstein musical”, and at the age of 12 he discovered jazz.

After leaving Bay City’s Central High School he played drums with “groups ranging from Dixieland to big bands to a very free New York quartet” while attending the University of Michigan and then the University of Wisconsin, but found himself out of step with the times and with the dominance of rock music.

“I was a conscientious objector to the 1960s,” he said. The convulsions America was experiencing as a result of the Vietnam War did not help, and when, in 1970, the jazz trumpeter Miles Davis released his fusion album Bitches Brew, Smith decided that the jazz game was up, and he sold his drum kit.

He visited London for the first time in the summer of 1971. Two years later – “figuring that a town with five symphony orchestras and a National Health Service was a pretty good place to be” – he and his flautist wife Lenore Ketola, from whom he was later divorced, came back and made it their home.

Having established himself as a music critic, Smith gained his entrée to Radio 3 when his Grappelli book, published in 1987, led to a commission the following year to make a series about him. He became the regular presenter of Jazz Record Requests in 1991 on the death of Peter Clayton.

There was, Smith recalled, a hard core of requesters to the programme: “There’s a Dave Taylor in Lincolnshire who was always writing to me. The funny thing is that when I invited Humphrey Lyttelton to be the studio guest on the 40th-anniversary show, I asked him if he could remember the most persistent writer to the show. He said, ‘Oh yes, there was this chap called Dave Taylor…’ ”

Smith’s last major contribution to Radio 3 was a week-long series of essays in late 2020 called Jazz Among the British in which he explored the differences between US and UK jazz and reflected on the transatlantic ties that certain American artists – notably Duke Ellington – had forged.

He continued to write, spending 30 years as the music critic of Country Life, and had poetry published in magazines including Encounter and The Tablet.

Geoffrey Smith is survived by his second wife Janette Grant and his son from his first marriage.

Geoffrey Smith, born August 23 1943, died April 2 2026

Geoffrey Smith, much-loved Michigan-born presenter of Radio 3’s Jazz Record Requests

Geoffrey Smith, who has died aged 82, was a genial and extraordinarily knowledgeable Radio 3 presenter, primarily of jazz programmes; h...
Luke Kennard, referring to the Lakers' March run:

Advertisement

USA TODAY

Benjamin Royer:Luke Kennard, referring to the Lakers' March run: "Our group was really close and connected through it all.And you don't always get that in the NBA, and I think just kind of shows how special this group is."

This article originally appeared on Hoops Hype:Luke Kennard, referring to the Lakers' March run: "Our …

Luke Kennard, referring to the Lakers' March run: "Our …

Advertisement Benjamin Royer:Luke Kennard, referring to the Lakers' March run: "Our group was really close and connected...
Chiefs to open 2026 NFL season with 'Monday Night Football' matchup vs. Broncos

The Kansas City Chiefs will open the 2026 NFL season back in primetime. The Chiefs will appear on the first “Monday Night Football” game of the year, where they will take on the division-rival Denver Broncos, according to ESPN.

Yahoo Sports

The location of the contest has yet to be determined, however.

Advertisement

It hasn’t been that long since both teams squared off. The Chiefs and Broncos last played in Week 17 last season, with Denver pulled off the 10-6 victory.

This story will be updated.

Chiefs to open 2026 NFL season with 'Monday Night Football' matchup vs. Broncos

The Kansas City Chiefs will open the 2026 NFL season back in primetime. The Chiefs will appear on the first “Monday Night Football” gam...
Weightlifter Aaron Williams reflects on meeting with Chiefs Coach

This week, Chiefs Wire's Ed Easton Jr. spoke with Team USA Weightlifter Aaron Williams.

USA TODAY

In his interview with Easton Jr., Williams discusses his recent offseason workout withKansas City Chiefslinebacker Jack Cochrane at USA Weightlifting's National Team Camp at the Olympic and Paralympic Training Center in Colorado Springs. He also reflected on meeting the Chiefs' head strength and conditioning coach/director of sports science, Ryan Reynolds, and his favorite NFL team.

"Ryan (Reynolds) was awesome. He was there, of course, and he had a blast. He was willing to let us give him some pointers here and there. " He's also very receptive," said Williams. "It shows that whenever you have a successful program, everyone tends to take in information rather than block it out and go with what they know." So it was really cool to see, also at the very high level of the NFL, that even your strength coaches are willing to take in information and then maybe even use it later on down the road for other athletes as well."

Reynolds watched Cochrane during his weightlifting workout, and is entering his 11th NFL season with the Chiefs. Williams opened up about his love for football growing up, including his favorite NFL team.

Advertisement

"It's going to sound a little cheesy, but I grew up in Germany, and the only reason that I actually wanted to play football is because my dad played football, so he would be the reason that I really wanted to play football, and then he's a Dallas Cowboys fan," said Williams, "I was a Pittsburgh Steelers fan, so I don't know where we went wrong. He thought he was raising a Cowboys fan, but that was my favorite team to watch whenever I was playing football."

The USA Weightlifting Athlete Identification & Recruitment Initiative is not grassroots development and is not intended for mass participation. Its purpose is to support the high-performance pipeline by identifying outlier athletes—often nearing the end of high school or collegiate eligibility—who may be capable of transitioning into weightlifting and becoming difference-makers at the highest level of the sport.

For more information, visit the USA WeightliftingAthlete Identification & Recruitment Initiativeand learn more about Williams on hisWeightlifting profile.

This article originally appeared on Chiefs Wire:Weightlifter Aaron Williams reflects on meeting with Chiefs Coach

Weightlifter Aaron Williams reflects on meeting with Chiefs Coach

This week, Chiefs Wire's Ed Easton Jr. spoke with Team USA Weightlifter Aaron Williams. In his interview with Easton Jr., Wil...

 

MN JRNL © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com