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San Francisco Archdiocese weighs in on Giants Pride Night Bible verse dispute



The Archdiocese of San Francisco is defending the right of Giants players to publicly express their Christian faith after several pitchers found themselves at the center of a national controversy stemming from the team’s annual Pride Night celebration.

In exclusive comments provided to The California Post, the Archdiocese of San Francisco’s spokesman, Peter Marlow, said the debate surrounding Giants pitchers Landen Roupp, JT Brubaker, Ryan Walker and Sam Hentges presents a larger conversation about religious expression in public life.

“The Archdiocese of San Francisco believes that people of faith should not be compelled to hide or suppress their sincerely held religious convictions in public life, including in the world of professional sports,” Marlow said.

Archdiocese of San Francisco defends Giants pitchers’ Bible verse display on Pride Night, citing religious liberty and mutal respect. AP Photo/Scott Marshall

The controversy began during the Giants’ Pride Night game against the Chicago Cubs when Roupp, Brubaker and Walker wrote “Gen 9:12-16” on their rainbow-themed caps. The Bible passage references God’s covenant with Noah and describes the rainbow as a sign of that promise.

Hentges declined to wear the Pride Night cap altogether, opting instead for the Giants’ standard black-and-orange cap.

Afterward, Roupp emphasized there was “no hate at all” behind the gesture.

“It’s just what I stand for,” Roupp said. “I believe in God.”

The reaction quickly extended beyond baseball. Major League Baseball issued warnings to the players for violating uniform regulations that prohibit writing messages on equipment, though the league stressed the warning “had absolutely nothing to do with the content of the message.”

The incident also drew national political attention. Sen. Josh Hawley demanded answers from MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred and Vice President JD Vance criticized the league on social media writing on X: “Trump won. We don’t have to do this anymore.”

Sam Hentges #31 and Drew Gilbert #0 of the San Francisco Giants Getty Images

Meanwhile, the Giants issued a statement apologizing to members of the LGBTQ+ community who felt hurt by the players’ actions while reaffirming the organization’s support for Pride Night.

Marlow said the discussion should not be reduced to assumptions about the players’ motives.

“We understand that some individuals may have been offended by the players’ actions, and we certainly support treating every person with dignity and respect,” Marlow said. “At the same time, we do not believe that a respectful reference to Sacred Scripture should be viewed as inherently hurtful or exclusionary.”

Archbishop of San Francisco, the Most Reverend Salvatore J. Cordileone leads the prayer of commendation during the funeral Mass of archbishop emeritus and Cardinal William Joseph Cardinal Levada San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images
San Francisco Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone, (left) is joined by Vicar for Administration, Father John J. Piderit San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images

He added that the Archdiocese supports both religious liberty and respect for all individuals.

“In a diverse society, respect should be a two-way street,” Marlow said. “Just as individuals with same-sex attraction deserve to be treated with dignity and free from unjust discrimination, people of faith deserve the freedom to express their beliefs peacefully and respectfully without being presumed hostile or hateful.”

Marlow also argued that much of the public conversation has overlooked the religious significance of the Bible passage itself.

“Much of the public discussion has focused on contemporary cultural and political debates, while the religious meaning of the biblical reference itself has received relatively little attention,” he said.

According to Marlow, Genesis 9:12-16 carries deep significance for Christians and Jews alike because it recalls God’s covenant with Noah after the flood and presents the rainbow as a symbol of God’s faithfulness and mercy.

The Archdiocese also pushed back on the notion that faith expressions are out of place in professional sports.

Pride month celebration at Oracle Park Getty Images
JT Brubaker #34 of the San Francisco Giants pitches Getty Images

“Public displays of faith have long been part of American sports,” Marlow said. “Athletes routinely express gratitude to God, wear religious symbols, make the sign of the cross, kneel in prayer, or speak about their faith in interviews.”

“If diversity is truly valued, that diversity should include religious belief and religious expression,” he added. “Athletes should not be asked to check their faith at the clubhouse door.”

As the debate continues, the Giants players have largely maintained that their actions were intended as expressions of personal faith rather than opposition to anyone.

Ryan Walker recently told The California Post that he hoped the attention would encourage people to read the Bible and understand the meaning behind the passage.

Whether the controversy ultimately fades or continues to grow, Marlow said he hopes it leads to a broader appreciation for both religious liberty and human dignity.

“People of faith should be free to express their beliefs respectfully in public life, and all people should be treated with the respect that flows from their God-given dignity.”


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What The Post will remember most from Knicks’ title run



As the Knicks prepare to celebrate their first NBA title in 53 years, The Post’s writers and columnists provide insight into the indelible moments they’ll remember forever from this championship season and legacy this team will leave after an incredible run.

Stefan Bondy

The final buzzer went off for Game 5 and my mind went to two places: Jalen Brunson and my sneakers.

Neither was for sentimental reasons. The sneakers are clean and white, a proud accomplishment I’ve been able to maintain, shockingly, throughout an entire season in airports, snowy slush in Toronto and the sticky floors of every NBA arena.

A league official warned prior to tipoff that the sneakers would certainly be doused by champagne if the Knicks win, and maybe stained with cigar ash or beer or whatever else tends to spray in the locker room celebrations.

I’m not accustomed to these things covering the Knicks for 11 years. Remember — they didn’t celebrate the NBA Cup very enthusiastically.

“Oh yeah,” the NBA PR person said. “RIP to those sneakers.”

Brunson was on my mind for a practical reason. He was the subject of my column that required filing ASAP. And through the typing, it crossed my consciousness — too briefly to put in the story — that I couldn’t recall Brunson’s first game with the Knicks.

When a player of his magnitude joins a team, the first appearance is usually a big deal. We all remember Carmelo Anthony’s “Coming Home” game. Since I was there, the Knicks debuts of Kristaps Porzingis and Derrick Rose are also logged in my memory. They were certainly the subjects of my story those nights.

But Brunson? The outlook of his impact seemed so mediocre that there’s no recollection. As it turned out, Brunson debuted on Oct. 19, 2022, in Memphis. It was a thrilling overtime loss for the Knicks and the hero — the subject of my main story — was … Cam Reddish.

Jalen Brunson #11 drives to the basket against Ja Morant #12 in his Knicks debut in 2022. Getty Images

Brunson had 15 points — fewer than Reddish, Julius Randle and Isaiah Hartenstein. Of the 10 Knicks to play that night, only Brunson and Mitchell Robinson are still on the team.

And for the point guard, it’s been a ride through the impossible, through the humble beginning in Memphis and on to the championship podium. My sneakers? They also shocked the world (my version of it, at least), leaving San Antonio still crispy white.


Zach Braziller

It really didn’t hit me for several minutes after the final horn, when the media was allowed onto the floor. The Knicks chants were deafening, fans of the orange and blue taking over Frost Bank Center.

Then, I saw Patrick Ewing and Allan Houston, two members of the last Knicks team to reach the NBA Finals. They were beaming – two great Knicks who came close, but never got to experience this as players.

It was particularly gratifying for them, because of that trip to the Finals in 1999, against these same Spurs; Ewing couldn’t play, due to a torn left Achilles tendon in Game 2 of the Eastern Conference finals. Houston did all he could, but it wasn’t nearly enough against Tim Duncan, David Robinson and Co.

This championship, the franchise’s first in 53 years, holds great meaning to so many. To fans. To former players. To everyone who has followed this team.

Jeremy Sochan #20 of the Knicks and Patrick Ewing high five after winning the NBA Finals. NBAE via Getty Images

“It means everything to the city,” Ewing said.

Growing up in the city in the 1990s myself, the Knicks owned the sports landscape every spring. Baseball season didn’t really begin until the Knicks’ season was complete. There isn’t a team that unifies everyone quite like the Knicks. We’ve seen that this spring, Knicks fans taking over road arenas in each round. There is a different buzz when the Knicks are this good, when they play this deep into the spring.

It’s why Thursday’s parade figures to be an epic party we haven’t seen in these parts in what feels like an eternity.


Mike Vaccaro

I thought: I’ve been doing this job a long, long time. I’d had the privilege of writing the column nine times after one of the teams we cover has won a championship, either here at The Post or elsewhere at papers in Newark and Middletown, N.Y.

Each one of those columns — five for the Yankees, two for the Giants, one each for the Devils and Rangers — I keep in a safe place, preserved and protected. Maybe someday I’ll make a collage out of them for a wall in my office. Maybe not. But I sleep better knowing I have them safely tucked away.

One thing, though.

Growing up, my father always insisted: “We root for New York in this house.” So while peer pressure later on insisted I needed to declare one or the other in every sport — and I picked the Mets, Jets, Knicks and Islanders — I never rooted against the other teams. And it was a joy to chronicle their titles.

But they weren’t “my” teams.

It’s here I should mention: I genuinely haven’t lost an ounce of sleep over any team since 1993 or so, with the notable exception of the St. Bonaventure basketball team. Whatever devotions I had previously have been channeled into the Bonnies, exclusively, for almost 35 years. Generally I root for me: good stories, early start times, no overtime.

But a few years ago it occurred to me: You know, at some point, I’d really like to write at least one column on the day after one of the teams I grew up rooting for won a title. And when the final seconds bled off the clock, it occurred to me: now I would.

And I vowed to make the thousand or so words that followed worth the wait. Who knows when the next chance might be?


Howie Kussoy

I, like most New Yorkers, am too young to have seen the Knicks’ first two championships.

I spent decades looking at names — Frazier, Barnett, Monroe, Reed, DeBusschere, Bradley — in the rafters of Madison Square Garden, described as less than gods but more than men, representatives of the way the game should be played.

Finally, the torch has passed to another Knicks team guided by selflessness, to a group that was constantly reminded about a 53-year drought and saw it as an opportunity, rather than a burden.

The title celebration was surreal — thousands of Knicks fans taking over San Antonio, players passing around bottles of booze like frat brothers, lining up to take pictures with the Larry O’Brien Trophy — but Game 4 remains at the forefront.

It was the one moment of doubt, when unimaginable joy looked set to be replaced by familiar pain. The Garden was eerily silent — en route to a 29-point deficit — overshadowing six weeks of a dominant, dream-like run. Somehow, that night ended with the Garden’s all-time apex, capped by OG Anunoby’s mind-melting, heart-swelling, series-saving tip-in.

OG Anunoby’s makes an iconic game-winning tip-in during Game 4 of the NBA Finals. Jason Szenes for the New York Post

In the bowels of the building where he first became a champion, Bill Bradley, 82, walked down the hall, smiling, shaking his head in disbelief, speaking to no one in particular — “Incredible” — and for everyone who bleeds orange and blue.

He knew they would be making room in the rafters, that the moment would live longer than those who witnessed it, becoming iconic to the unborn, who one day will look up to the pinwheel ceiling and long to have seen those legends — Brunson, Towns, Anunoby, Hart, Bridges — representatives of the way the game should be played.


Jared Schwartz

I was born in 1999. I was only a few months old when the Knicks lost in the Finals that year. By the time I started making tangible memories, the electric ’90s were well in the past and the Knicks had already established themselves as a perennial laughingstock.

Like so many kids my age, all I had was stories from those older than me. For me, it was my father and grandfather. All I heard was: “It wasn’t always like this,” or “You don’t get how special it is when they’re good.” To me, it felt as close as the stuff I learned in my history textbook in school – it was then, not now.

I am lucky to also have a father in the industry who covered the first half of that magical ’90s era. Back then, they let the reporters sit courtside. He spoke of smelling the burning rubber of their sneakers on the court.

Josh Hart hugs New York Knicks guard Jose Alvarado (front) after the Knicks win the NBA Championship. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

He told stories of waiting around Michael Jordan’s locker – after he repeatedly broke the Knicks’ hearts – and meticulously screwing in his earrings. He reminisced about Patrick Ewing telling everyone to “watch the toes” as they crowded around him. He had endless tales about Pat Riley.

Meanwhile, I was building my fandom around guys like Nate Robinson, Jamal Crawford and Danilo Gallinari. The way longtime MSG PA announcer Mike Walczewski used to yell “Threeeee point goalllll, Daniloooooo Galllllinarrrrrriiii” made him one of my first favorites.

What did I think of when the Knicks won the championship? I thought of Carmelo Anthony hitting those two 3-pointers — at the end of regulation and overtime — against the Bulls on Easter in 2012.

For most of my life, that was the most electric moment I could think of surrounding the Knicks. When I went to college at Wisconsin, and tried explaining to non-New Yorkers what MSG was like, that was the highlight I’d show them. They’d, of course, retort that it was a regular-season game.

So when the final buzzer sounded to end Game 5, I thought of my generation of fans — who now finally have a library of real memories for themselves. Not ones we heard from our parents. Not ones we saw on YouTube.

Ones we saw with our own eyes, in real time. Ones we can trash-talk our out-of-state friends with.

Ones we will eventually pass down to the next generation, just like the ones before us did with theirs. 



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Text of Iran 14-point deal doesn’t satisfy GOP critics: ‘Reagan is rolling over in his grave’



WASHINGTON — GOP skepticism of the preliminary peace deal with Iran mostly only hardened after details of the 14-point plan surfaced, with key Republican lawmakers trashing it publicly.

A senior official had read the 14-point US-Iran memorandum of understanding to reporters Wednesday, confirming key concessions to Iran such as the temporary waiving of oil sanctions, a $300 billion reconstruction fund, and softer language on the Strait of Hormuz.

“Reagan is rolling over in his grave. Iran’s nuclear ambitions were not curbed, and they have learned that threatening the Strait of Hormuz works and will undoubtedly leverage it in the future,” retiring Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) bluntly chided.

Cassidy was bested in his primary last month by a rival backed by President Trump.

Sen. Bill Cassidy called the preliminary Iran deal “the worst foreign policy blunder in decades.” ZUMAPRESS.com

Since then, many observers have described him as being part of the Senate GOP’s “YOLO Caucus” of outgoing Republicans who now feel freer to speak more bluntly about Trump.

“Now, Iran gets to build brand-new infrastructure under this deal. Before the war, the strait was open, Iran was being crushed by sanctions, and 13 service members were still alive,” Cassidy went on.

“Now, 13 Americans are dead, families have paid billions at the pump, sanctions will be lifted, and the bombing has stopped. This is the worst foreign policy blunder in decades.”

President Trump has indicated that all options are on the table with Iran. Jeanne Accorsini/SIPA/Shutterstock

Even before the full text of the 14-point MOU — a document intended to serve as a bridge to more technical negotiations for a full-fledged nuclear deal — became public, it received a cool reception from many Republicans.

Former 2024 GOP presidential hopeful Nikki Haley, who had backed Trump’s Epic Fury attacks on Iran, raised similar concerns as Cassidy about Iran benefiting from the economic relief in the deal.

Many Republicans were skeptical of the preliminary Iran deal, and the text of the agreement largely only exacerbated concerns. Getty Images

“This regime chants death to America, murders our troops, and attempts to assassinate Americans on U.S. soil,” she posted on X. “They believe they have an obligation to destroy us. Now, we plan to unlock billions of dollars and lift sanctions, with the promise of even more money.”

“They will use that money the way they always do— to further their nuclear ambitions and on terrorist proxies against us. It’s a huge mistake to pay to rebuild the threat we just destroyed.”

Fellow alum of the first Trump administration, former Vice President Mike Pence told Fox News’ “America Reports” that the MOU “does smack of the kind of appeasement that our administration rejected in the Obama-Iran nuclear deal.”

Sens. Susan Collins (R-Maine) and Mike Rounds (R-SD) both refrained from weighing in when asked by The Post, citing concerns that they hadn’t seen the actual text yet.

“I think if it is, if it is not approved by Congress, then it’s basically nothing more than a political arrangement, similar to what President Obama did, and it can be undone very quickly,” Rounds told The Post. “I’ll wait and see.”

Sen. Lindsey Graham warmed up to the MOU after speaking with special envoy Steve Witkoff. ZUMAPRESS.com

One past GOP skeptic who appeared to warm up to the MOU was Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC), who cited a call with special envoy Steve Witkoff for his shift in tone.

“After this discussion, it is my opinion that signing the MOU will be beneficial to the United States, in as much as the Strait of Hormuz will begin to open, and the hostilities with Iran will stop,” Graham posted on X.

“Whether or not the United States can reach an acceptable, verifiable deal with Iran regarding its nuclear program and other issues is yet to be determined, but I see little downside to trying,” he added. 

“The economic stability that comes from opening up the Strait and the cessation of hostilities could create a pathway to peace well beyond the Iranian conflict.”

Graham previously expressed concerns about Iran’s understanding of the MOU being different than the Trump administration’s and suggested that Congress should approve it.

Beyond Capitol Hill and GOP luminaries, Trump faced a revolt from elements of the conservative pundit world, who argued that his team got rolled by Iran.

Vice President JD Vance, a key architect of the MOU, has repeatedly stressed that the benefits Iran will receive will be contingent on whether or not the regime holds up its end of the bargain.

“If it works out, I’m going to take the credit. If it doesn’t work out, I’m blaming JD,” Trump quipped about the MOU during a press conference at the G7 meeting in France.



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Tyrese Haliburton’s bride-to-be shares heartbreaking tribute after friend dies on bachelorette trip


Indiana Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton’s fiancée shared a touching tribute on Wednesday honoring her best friend who unexpectedly died during her lavish St. Barts bachelorette trip.

Makenzi Kern died of undisclosed health complications on June 8 – just two days after celebrating her 26th birthday during the Caribbean trip with Haliburton’s bride-to-be, Jade Jones.

Jones posted a lengthy tribute on Instagram recounting some of her favorite moments with Kern over the years.


Jade Jones and Makenzi Kern
Makenzi Kern (left) died during a bachelorette party in St. Barts. Instagram/jadeeejones

“I am forever grateful that I got to love someone as truly special as Kenzi, and to have been loved back by her. Kenz was truly a light in this world, and that light will continue to shine in everyone who was lucky enough to know her. I love you forever until the end of time Kenzi,” Jones wrote.

“You are truly so beautiful inside and out & a once-in-a-lifetime kind of friend. Thank you for always showing up for me, for making me laugh until I cry, and for being such an unforgettable part of my life. I’ll always miss you but I know you’ll be with me, wherever I go. ‘See ya’.”

The pictures included in the post stretched back to their college days. Jones celebrated Kern as her “biggest cheerleader,” both in life and her relationship with Haliburton.


Jade Jones and Tyrese Haliburton
Kern was close friends with Jade Jones (left), fiancée to Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton (right). Getty Images for REFORM Alliance

“I can’t even imagine our wedding day without her there celebrating with us. The day will not be the same without her, but I know she will show us she is there somehow,” Jones added.

Kern’s family does not believe foul play, drugs or alcohol contributed to her untimely death. The exact cause is still unclear.

This is a breaking story. Please check back for updates.



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Tourist stabbed in the stomach at NYC subway station


A Florida woman was stabbed in the stomach after a heated argument inside a busy Manhattan subway station on Wednesday afternoon, authorities and sources said.

An unidentified individual plunged a knife into the 32-year-old tourist on the platform of the 42nd Street-Bryant Park station around 4 p.m., according to the NYPD and sources.


An out-of-service elevator at the 42nd St.-Bryant Park subway station.
A 32-year-old tourist from Florida was stabbed inside the 42nd Street-Bryant Park station on Wednesday. Helayne Seidman

The victim was taken to Bellevue Hospital in stable condition, cops and sources said.

A dispute sparked the stabbing, but it’s unclear whether the victim and attacker knew each other, sources added.

No arrests have been made, while the incident remains under investigation.



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James Dolan’s wild ride to Knicks championship owner


The final seven seconds may have been the hardest of all for James Dolan. There were all those missed free throws, Spurs and Knicks both. There was the surreal transfer, in real time, of Frost Bank Center converting from maybe 60-40 between the fans to 100 percent Knicks, as the locals departed and the invaders crawled lower and lower into the better seats.

There was one more missed free throw, of course.

“The game was still in doubt,” Dolan said, “right to the last seven seconds.”

And even as those last seven seconds played out, even as the clock slow-walked to 0:00 with the Knicks ahead 94-90, even with a world championship occurring in front of his eyes, in living color, Dolan still didn’t believe what he was seeing. Couldn’t believe.

Same as millions of his fellow Knicks fans.

“It was like when you’re in your car on a snowy day,” Dolan said. “When you start skidding down the road and you know you’re going to hit something, but there’s no impact yet, you can’t get out of the way, you can’t move the wheels and you’re just waiting for impact. That’s what it felt like. It was like an out-of-body experience.”

And then it hit. As it surely hit you.

“Oh, my God, this has actually happened!” 

It happened, all right, and Thursday, Dolan and his family will be right in the middle of the Knicks parade, in the middle of the Canyon of Heroes. He will be Grandfather of the Year for his six grandchildren, all of whom will be in the procession.

“For a day, anyway,” he said, laughing.

For much longer than that, Dolan will enjoy what the old Mets broadcaster Bob Murphy used to say about baseball, now true about hoops: It’s a game of redeeming features. The same applies to high-profile owners who’ve absorbed their share of Kniocbarbs and slings and arrows through the years (full disclosure: many of them lobbed by your humble narrator)

But as Dolan spoke to The Post from his office on a half-hour Zoom call Wednesday afternoon, he really did seem transformed. So many images of him across the last quarter century have captured a man who looked less than pleased in the moment. Not now.

Now he looked like the owner of an NBA champion.

“How do you know?” Dolan asked, the smile so deep it couldn’t be chiseled off with sculptor’s tools. “Have you ever seen one before?”

We have now. It recalled a moment 14 years ago, after another conversation with Dolan in another Knicks era, one that was about to go wickedly sideways. He was beginning to hear anger oaths aimed at him from fans every time he stepped into the Garden, and he suggested no other owner had ever faced similar venom from his own fans.

“All due respect,” I told him. “Steinbrenner.”

“Steinbrenner? When he died it was like they were burying a king!”


Comedian Ben Stiller and New York Knicks owner James Dolan sit courtside during Game 2 of the 2026 NBA Finals.
Comedian Ben Stiller and New York Knicks owner James Dolan sit courtside during Game 2 of the NBA Finals. Jason Szenes for the New York Post

By the end, yes. But Steinbrenner had also spent decades listening to his own fans boo him mercilessly, occasionally tossing a few vulgar chants into the mix. Then, at the end, the Yankees started winning and never stopped, although the booing did.

“Maybe they’ll love me when I’m dead!” Dolan roared.

Funny line. But the truth is: Dolan has followed the Steinbrenner blueprint to the letter, learning at age 71 the most basic rule in sports: Winning is the greatest of all deodorants for owners — for years of losing, and petty feuds, and all manner of disputes, for everything. People are happy to move on to Woody Johnson or Steve Cohen or Steve Bob Tisch. They hardly ever talk about you at all when times are good.

“Just the way I like it,” he said.

Besides: nobody ever really had to remind Dolan of the mistakes he’s made across his 27 years in that office. He was as aware of them as anyone. Face it: As easily as you can summon the names of forgotten Knicks like Kelvin Cato and Cleanthony Early and Noah Vonleh, even you spent time — had to — away from the team. When you own the team, you own the bad hires, bad drafts, bad trades. And you die a little with every loss.

“Owning the Knicks,” he said, “is a learning experience.”

He spent years looking for the right guy. And one day, he had him. One day he hired Leon Rose. Seven years later, here we are.

“My ideal operation, like a lot of my other businesses, it’s the same thing: Give me a plan, let’s put together a plan, let’s follow the plan, and I’ll support the plan,” he said. “It’s the same thing with the hockey team. And if you go off plan, come back to me and we’ll talk about it. Once Leon came, he told me in advance what he was going to do and I’d always ask, what can I do to help you? You plan it. I’ll fund it.”

Many of Rose’s deals, he simply nodded. Others, he had to be convinced — “Mostly,” he said, “I was always somewhere in the middle.” But he always landed on the side of trusting a GM who’d earned it unconditionally. It has made all the difference for the Knicks. And for Dolan.

“Did I make mistakes? Of course I did,” he said. “Did I trust people that maybe I shouldn’t have trusted? You go into it as a new owner and if you’re dumb enough, you think you actually know what you’re doing. Believe me, you don’t. And all along, you have everybody whispering in your ear: Do this, do that. You have you guys, the press, telling us where we’re going wrong at every step. And, you can start to feel like a pinball. But …”

He paused.

“The thing is, is to learn. Right? That might be the thing I feel best about is, I felt, I feel, that now after 25 freaking years of doing this, I might actually have learned something.”

Much of the time Rose was building the foundation of what the Knicks became, Dolan was hip deep in the finishing touches on the Sphere, the Las Vegas playpen that has become the must-see stop in the desert. But he and Rose still talked regularly. And a year ago, they made a difficult decision that was divisive in its aggressiveness. They fired Tom Thibodeau.

“We loved Thibs, we really did, I held him in high regard,” Dolan said. “It would not surprise me at all, by the way, if Thibs comes back and coaches a championship team because I think you could still win that way.”


Spike Lee greets New York Knicks owner James Dolan on the floor at the end of the fourth quarter.
Spike Lee greets New York Knicks owner James Dolan on the floor against Game 4 against the Cavaliers. Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

Sometimes you can see the “but” coming a mile away.

“Thibs was kind of old style. Right? Like Red Holzman, right, everything comes through me, and I’ll guide us through. He’s very good at that, but that sort of obviated the need for all these other people. Mike Brown had a different view. He had a different approach. And you look at our team, in the Finals. Everyone was healthy.

There is little argument there. One of the little-discussed but essential parts of last Saturday was this: In Game 101 of the season, the Knicks had no injury report. This is a reality of which Dolan takes admitted pride since his son, Quentin, oversees the team’s health and wellness programs.

And also, indisputably, something Brown discussed at length in his interview last summer, and put into practice this season.

“Everybody was in top form for the Finals,” he said. “And that doesn’t happen overnight. That was very carefully orchestrated and monitored every week. And it really paid off. I mean, if you put it together, the year before, we went into the playoffs, we had a lot of injuries. The somewhat old style of relating to the players, and so on. I mean, I think, actually, that was a huge difference.”

It’s impossible to argue. As is the truth Dolan talked about that day 13 years ago: Winning makes owners bulletproof. If we needed further testimony, there was the video the other day of Dolan addressing his team just before the playoffs. Surely that would have been buried if the Knicks had lost to the Hawks. But they didn’t.

“I certainly didn’t want to screw anything up for them,” he said. “I didn’t want to throw them off kilter or to distract them. It was a bit of a risk, having the talk, but I thought it was worth it. You don’t come this close that often. Start now. Start right now. And so you saw what came out.”

In that moment — also when he appeared on stage Saturday night postgame, resplendent in a bright orange blazer, pumped his fist and said, “Sorry it took so long!” — an odd thing happened. James L. Dolan sounded like you, and every Knicks fan you know. When fans boo owners, as they’ve booed Dolan before, the boo-to-English translation is always this: “You don’t care as much as we care!”

The rest of his days, that’s one sling and one arrow James Dolan will never have to hear again.



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Freddie Freeman homers to lift Dodgers to sweep of Rays



For most of the afternoon, Wednesday’s game played out frustratingly for the Dodgers.

The team’s lineup squandered a couple key early chances, getting just one total run from two bases-loaded opportunities in the bottom of the fourth and fifth.

Shohei Ohtani, making his 12th pitching start of the season as scheduled despite last week’s knee injury, had his worst inning of the season on the mound, with the Tampa Bay Rays batting around to score four runs in the top of the fifth.

Shohei Ohtani, making his 12th pitching start of the season as scheduled despite last week’s knee injury, had his worst inning of the season IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

And with a chance to sweep the Rays within their grasp, the Dodgers appeared to be on the verge of letting it slip away.

This Dodgers team, however, has more margin for error than most. They can hang around, stay within striking distance, and flip the script on a moment’s notice.

Wednesday, it turned out, would become the latest example, with Freddie Freeman keying the club’s eventual 5-4 win with a go-ahead two-run home run in the bottom of the sixth.

The squandered bases-loaded chances didn’t end up mattering. Nor did the season-high four earned runs Ohtani was charged with in a six-inning start.

Instead, once Freeman provided the lead with his 12th home run of the year –– a towering two-run blast against Rays right-hander Kevin Kelly on a center-cut sinker, turning a one-run deficit into a one-run lead –– the club rolled the rest of the way to a third-consecutive one-run win in this series, escaping a bases-loaded jam in the top of the ninth when Alex Vesia struck out Cedric Mullins.

Wednesday, it turned out, would become the latest example, with Freddie Freeman keying the club’s eventual 5-4 win with a go-ahead two-run home run in the bottom of the sixth. AP Photo/Kyusung Gong

What it means

Coming off their first series loss in more than a month to the Chicago White Sox last week, the Dodgers (48-27) bounced back in impressive fashion against the Rays (41-30).

They picked up their first series sweep since the Rockies came to town last month, and their first against a team with a winning record since a trip to the Washington Nationals back in early April. 

At the 75-game mark, they continue to own the most wins in the majors.


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Who’s hot

It was only a month ago that Freeman seemed to be struggling, mired in a mid-May slump that had dropped his season batting average to .254 and OPS to .737.

As he has so often done over his 17-year career, however, Freeman didn’t panic, looked for tweaks to his swing, and trusted his process. 

Ever since, he has rounded back into his perennial All-Star form.

With Wednesday’s go-ahead home run, Freeman is now batting .323 in 27 games since May 19. In that time, he has eight home runs, 14 extra-base hits, 20 RBIs and an OPS over 1.000.

It has helped raise Freeman’s season-long numbers closer to his norm (.279 average, .850 OPS) and catapulted him into the early lead for All-Star Game voting among National League first basemen, as he looks for a 10th career selection to the Midsummer Classic.

Ever since, he has rounded back into his perennial All-Star form. AP Photo/Kyusung Gong

Who’s not

Will Smith is making progress from his neck injury, manager Dave Roberts said before Wednesday’s game, and has been going through on-field activities throughout the week.

However, the catcher is unlikely to be activated from the injured list when he’s eligible on Friday, dashing hopes he would only miss the minimum 10 days as he deals with inflammation in a disc.

“We’re just trying to get him to a place where he doesn’t regress with it once he comes back,” Roberts said. “So I guess he’s not out of the woods yet.”

Up next

The Dodgers will be off on Thursday, before continuing this homestand Friday by opening a three-game series against the Baltimore Orioles. 





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Second suspect arrested in connection to Ohio festival shooting that wounded 12



Police in Ohio have arrested a second suspect in a shooting that wounded 12 people at a crowded neighborhood street festival on June 6.

Ka Nye Taylor, 20, was arrested Wednesday in Columbus, according to the Toledo Police Department. The law enforcement agency said members of the U.S. Marshals Service, Ohio State Highway Patrol and Franklin County Sheriff’s Office assisted in the arrest.

Taylor will be transported to Toledo, where he will face prosecution on 11 counts of felonious assault, according to the department. Court documents do not list an attorney for him. Phone numbers for Taylor or his family members were not available or found in online directories. A message left with a Facebook profile that appears to be Taylor was not immediately responded to.

Ka Nye Taylor was arrested on Wednesday. Toledo Police Department via AP

The other suspect, Eljay Crisp-Carr, 20, was taken into custody on June 11, and also charged with 11 counts of felonious assault. Court documents also do not list an attorney for him.

The gunfire broke out Saturday during the Old West End Festival in Toledo at a park filled with tents, music and food trucks in a neighborhood dotted with Victorian homes. Police said a fight between rival groups apparently escalated and two people shot at each other, although they were not among the wounded.

In a criminal complaint filed in Toledo Municipal Court, there’s a description of a video showing Taylor firing a gun into a crowd of people during an altercation at the festival.

The officer says Taylor is shown firing toward another man who is also shooting.

Elijay Crisp-Carr was arrested on June 11. Lucas County Corrections Center

According to the report, Toledo police used video and NORIS data to identify Taylor, who was interviewed at the scene of the shooting. An eyewitness also identified Taylor.

In a criminal complaint filed in the same court under charges against Crisp-Carr, a detective described video showing him firing indiscriminately into the crowd.

Police treat a person after multiple people were shot at a community festival Saturday, June 6, 2026, in Toledo, Ohio. AP

Toledo police used witness statements, social media and law enforcement photos to identify Crisp-Carr, according to the court filing.

Hundreds of people were attending the annual festival in a historic district of Toledo, a city on the western edge of Lake Erie about 55 miles (90 kilometers) southwest of Detroit.

Organizers canceled the event’s second day because of the shooting.

The violence sent terrified bystanders fleeing while others rushed to help the injured alongside medics and police. The people who were wounded ranged from teenagers to a person in their 60s.



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Relive OG Anunoby’s Knicks NBA Finals Game 4 tip-in



Everything, really, was at stake when the Knicks broke their huddle and returned to the court with 5.7 seconds remaining. Forget the 13-game playoff winning streak. Forget the dominating postseason run that included a 2-0 series lead to start the NBA Finals against the Spurs. Forget the hopes and dreams — the wildest ones possible — of snapping a 53-year title drought.

Because if the Knicks, trailing 106-105 in the final seconds of Game 4 of the Finals June 10, couldn’t score on their final possession, their comeback — a 29-point deficit — would be all for naught.

The Finals would shift back to San Antonio even at two games apiece. The Knicks would’ve botched their home-court advantage, their chance to keep igniting a Garden crowd waiting 27 years for a return to this stage. The momentum of the series would have radically shifted.

Down a point, 5.7 seconds remaining, OG Anunoby — whose life was about to change — was poised to inbound the ball in the frontcourt. Landry Shamet and Mikal Bridges were on the court having replaced Josh Hart and Jose Alvarado. Karl-Anthony Towns was on the left side near the Finals logo. Jalen Brunson, the Knicks’ Captain Clutch, hovered near the paint.



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Baturina fires Croatia level against England



Croatia’s Martin Baturina scores from outside the box to make it 1-1 against England in their group L game at the Dallas Stadium in the Fifa World Cup.



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