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Browsing: mindset
You never know what could be on the horizon in the pro wrestling world. The uncertainty is certainly mounting for AEW, because their television home was just the subject of a huge sale. Now, the company is very much in a wait and see period, and they may be waiting for a while.
Sean Ross Sapp reported on Fightful Select that he spoke with sources in AEW who predicted the outcome involving Netflix and WBD before it became public the following day. At this time, there is no information on AEWâ€s future with WBD, and most people contacted do not expect any major developments in the near future.
Netflix entered exclusive negotiations to acquire Warner Bros. Discoveryâ€s studio and streaming assets, including HBO Max, in a deal valued at roughly $82.7 billion. The agreement would place major franchises such as Harry Potter, Game of Thrones, and DC properties under Netflixâ€s control. The transaction requires regulatory approval, which may take a year or longer.
The development is fascinating, especially within the pro wrestling industry. After all, AEW currently airs on Warner Bros. Discovery platforms.
Netflix is already in business with WWE through a 10-year, $5 billion agreement with TKO Group that began in January 2025. The deal makes WWE RAW exclusive to Netflix. The agreement also includes international rights to SmackDown, NXT, and PLEs. So, it will be very interesting to see what Netflix does with AEW when the time comes.
Netflix buying WBD could be a game changer in many ways. It may also put a lot of people out of work, since most mergers see people lose their jobs as part of redundancies. WWE went through the same thing when they merged with UFC under the TKO umbrella.
Only time will tell what happens in this situation, but we will have all the updates you need here at Ringside News. With so much going on in this deal, it looks like AEWâ€s future is up in the air.
Whatâ€s your take on WBDâ€s deal with Netflix? Do you believe that AEWâ€s television home will have to change? Let us know what you think in the comments section!
Tim BontempsNov 29, 2025, 01:19 AM ET
- Tim Bontemps is a senior NBA writer for ESPN.com who covers the league and what’s impacting it on and off the court, including trade deadline intel, expansion and his MVP Straw Polls. You can find Tim alongside Brian Windhorst and Tim MacMahon on The Hoop Collective podcast.
NEW YORK — Giannis Antetokounmpo isn’t used to losing this way.
Though Antetokounmpo maintained his form in his return to the court Friday — putting up 30 points, 15 rebounds and 8 assists in 28 minutes — it wasn’t enough to prevent the Bucks from falling 118-109 to the New York Knicks for Milwaukee’s seventh straight loss.
The Bucks hadn’t lost seven in a row since March 2014 — Antetokounmpo’s rookie year, when the team went 15-67. After Friday’s game, he made an impassioned plea for his team to get its “competitive spirit” back and begin to turn around its season.
“Nobody should have a personal agenda. Nobody should worry about what they want from themselves,” said Antetokounmpo, who sat out the previous four games because of a groin strain. “Worry only about winning mentality. Winning mindset. The more we can win the games, the more everything takes care of itself.”
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Antetokounmpo spoke about some things he felt needed to change for Milwaukee (8-12), which is 11th in the Eastern Conference and two games out of a play-in spot, to get back on track.
“Can I make an excuse that we’ve played a lot of games and guys are tired and it’s a huge load on people? Yeah,” Antetokounmpo said. “Can I also make an excuse that’s human nature when [Kevin Porter Jr.] goes down and myself goes down, it’s human nature to think that you got to carry a load. … Maybe it’s a scoring load, maybe you got to make plays, maybe you think it is your opportunity to get more shots. … But that’s not how you win games. That’s not how you build culture.
“At the end of the day, you got to come in, do your job, do what you’re paid to do, defend … do the little things. And sometimes, when you worry about doing the little things, all the other things add up. If you’re so concerned about scoring the ball and get yourself going offensively and that doesn’t work for you, now you feel like you cannot do nothing.”
Antetokounmpo also said some of his teammates are getting frustrated after missing shots, and they’re letting that affect the rest of the game.
“You cannot worry about one shot or two shots that you miss, which took four seconds out of the game to dictate 47 minutes, 56 seconds of the game,” Antetokounmpo said. “So, we got to get back to that mindset. We got to get into the mindset that we got to compete. We got to get to the mindset that this is not a one-man show, that we have to do it together.
“We got to move the ball. We got to find open 3s, we got to run. We got to create spacing. Our spacing sometimes, it’s shaky. The more space we have, the more we can attack, the more Ryan Rollins can get in the paint, the more I can get in the paint, the more we can create open 3s for guys to shoot.”
Antetokounmpo played his first game since sustaining his groin injury in a loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers on Nov. 17. He was playing Friday with a minutes restriction, which might have contributed to the narrow defeat.
Nearly everyone on the Bucks said they needed to improve their offensive rebounding, while avoiding fouls and turnovers. Those issues resulted in Milwaukee taking 13 fewer shots and eight fewer free throws than New York (12-6) on Friday.
“We’re outshooting teams … but it’s the turnovers, the offensive rebounding and it’s the fouls,” Bucks coach Doc Rivers said. “It’s a numbers game, and we have to win that game. Especially with Giannis [on the court], if we win [the numbers game], we’re going to win the game.
“Obviously, he was on a minute restriction tonight, which was really difficult in a game like tonight. We lost the lead when we took him off the floor for the most part, but we got to do what we got to do to try to get him back healthy.”
Antetokounmpo and the Bucks return home to play the Brooklyn Nets in the second half of a back-to-back set Saturday. He said he felt good Friday night and hoped to increase his playing time against the Nets.
“I know how the protocol is,” Antetokounmpo said. “I know when you come back with my injury, there’s got to be a minute restriction, no matter what you want to do. It doesn’t matter what kind of game it is. Would I want to play more? Yes. Could I play more? I don’t know. But I know one thing for sure: Tomorrow, I will play more minutes, and I’m going to try to help the team win.”
New York City FC head coach Pascal Jansen said his team will adopt a ‘bulletproof’ mentality when facing Inter Miami in the Eastern Conference final on Saturday night at Chase Stadium, shutting out the impact stars like Lionel Messi may have on the environment surrounding the game.
After taking over ahead of the 2025 season, Jansen has led NYCFC to within one game of a second MLS Cup title.
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“When I stepped into our dressing room trying to lead this project, from day one what I mentioned to my guys in the dressing room and my staff was to establish a bulletproof mindset. So, it doesn’t matter where you play or who you play or when you play, you have to be able to focus on what needs to be done,” Jansen told ESPN this week.
“So, you focus on your own job, and you focus on your own responsibilities and always stay true to your own identity. No matter who you play.
“And this is like the X-factor, of course, because Messi is who he is and has a huge impact on the league in general. It’s mainly because it’s very positive.
“But can you imagine when you’re on pitch playing against a legend like Messi and the quality that he still has in his game that you might be overwhelmed and forget about your job and your responsibilities and be as competitive as you should be in order to get the result that we are looking for as a team.”
Pascal Jansen has led NYCFC to within one game of MLS Cup in his first season with the club. Jacob Kupferman/Getty Images
NYCFC has yet to beat Inter Miami this season, drawing 2-2 in the opening game of the 2025 MLS campaign at Chase Stadium in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, before falling 4-0 at Citi Field in September.
Despite previous results, Jansen insists the team has grown since last facing Miami and will now look to be a more threatening opponent.
“It’s going to be a tough game,” he said. “But for us, if you focus on Miami, we’ve played them twice. The first game was the opener in the season, which was very interesting for me because it was my first game in MLS to see what it’s about playing against a team with Messi and what kind of effect that has on a team and the environment, the fans or the officials, or whatever goes on or even on your own team or your own players.
“Those lessons in those two games have been massive for us in order to evolve ourselves going forward as a team in the league, but also in particular going into game number three, because now with a few changes again on Miami’s side and the growth that we’ve shown throughout the season, we will be able to have a better matchup than we did in game number one and two. But, again, the margins will be very small.”
NYCFC qualified to the playoffs by concluding the MLS campaign in fifth place in the East, before defeating Charlotte FC in the Round One series and reigning Supporters’ Shield winners Philadelphia Union in the conference semifinals to clinch a ticket to the conference final.
Miami, meanwhile, has cruised through the playoffs, with back-to-back 4-0 wins over Nashville SC and FC Cincinnati after entering as the East’s third seed. With a roster featuring Messi, as as well as fellow former Barcelona stars Luis Suárez, Sergio Busquets and Jordi Alba, there is little doubt who the favorites are heading into Saturday’s confrontation,
When asked if he minds being labeled the underdog, Jansen reiterated the importance of his team’s mental toughness.
“I have no problem with [being called an underdog],” he said. “They can call it whatever they like. It’s all part of the bulletproof mindset approach. So I don’t care what anybody says or in what position they put us if it’s the underdog or the favorite. It’s all the noise outside. It’s all outside the world.”
The winner of the Eastern Conference final will go on to face either San Diego FC or the Vancouver Whitecaps at MLS Cup on Dec. 6.
Keegan Murray shines thanks to new mindset in Kings’ OT win vs. Timberwolves originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
The difference a two-way wing like Keegan Murray can make.
Behind Murrayâ€s 26 points and a career-best 14 rebounds, the Kings, 18 games later, picked up consecutive wins for the first time in the 2025-26 NBA season, edging past the Minnesota Timberwolves 117-112 in overtime on Monday night at Golden 1 Center.
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In October, Murray tore the UCL in his left thumb during a preseason game against the Portland Trail Blazers and underwent surgery, forcing him to miss the first 15 games of the season.
In that span, the Kings racked up a poor 3-12 record, including an eight–game losing skid. It appeared as if there were no possible remedies to Sacramentoâ€s ailment.
Insert, Murray, who early on in his third season, is proving why the Kings shelled out a five-year, $140 million extension for his services.
“It makes a big difference having Keegan Murray back,†veteran DeMar DeRozan told NBC Sports Californiaâ€s Kyle Draper, Morgan Ragan and Deuce Mason on “Kings Postgame Live.â€
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“One of our best players. A guy that could go out and do everything. He changed the dynamic of the floor, so having him out there definitely helps.â€
Sacramento now has won two of the three games that have featured Murray. The 25-year-old is back. The Kings are back.
But perhaps more importantly, Murrayâ€s long-awaited two-way aggressiveness and fierce mentality are here.
“I think I just had a really good offseason,†Murray told reporters. “I got away from Sacramento a little bit. I feel like I just unlocked a different mindset going into this year.
“Obviously, I couldnâ€t start this season. Obviously, I missed a month to start. For me, itâ€s just finding my rhythm back and each game Iâ€m feeling more comfortable on the court. So, aggression is not really an issue for me this year.â€
Murray drilled a wide-open 3-pointer to give the Kings a 110-107 lead with two minutes left in overtime, helping Sacramento overcome a once 10-point deficit with 3:04 minutes left in the fourth quarter.
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DeRozan, who surpassed Alex English in the leagueâ€s all-time scoring list, posted a team-high 33 points.
Malik Monk added 22 points off the bench for the Kings, while Precious Achiuwa registered 10 points and seven rebounds for Sacramento.
With a menacing Murray on the floor, purple beams await the Kings.
Teoscar Hernández does not lack for emotion. He plays with joy, with exuberance, with delight.
The Dodgers know he can hit. We all do. If the emotion dissipates, so can the performance.
Hernández could have been the goat Saturday night, in what would have been the Dodgers†first loss in this postseason. Instead, he hit the game-winning home run, nearly levitated around first base, and became an October hero yet again.
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In the Dodgers†16 postseason games last year, he hit three home runs and drove in 12 runs. In the Dodgers†three postseason games so far this year, he has hit three home runs and driven in nine.
You might fret about his uneven defense. You might second guess a defensive play that put the Dodgers deeper into an early hole.
Allâ€s well that ends well, as evidenced by his three-run home run that powered the Dodgers to a 5-3 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies in the National League division series opener.
“For me, anything that happened before a big moment like that, it’s in the past,†Hernández said.
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“I try to put it in the trash and just focus on the things that I need to do.â€
In the second inning of what was then a scoreless tie, the Phillies put runners on first and second with none out. Catcher J.T. Realmuto pummeled a Shohei Ohtani fastball into right-center field, where Hernández approached the ball but did not appear to accelerate as the ball skipped past him.
If Hernández had cut the ball off, Realmuto would have had a single, and the Phillies would have scored two runs in the inning. Instead, Realmuto had a triple — matching his season total — and he later scored a third run in the inning.
“I would argue that he wasnâ€t not trying,†Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said of Hernández. “But, yeah, that’s a ball that you don’t want Realmuto to have a triple.â€
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On Twitter, former Dodgers pitcher Brett Anderson posted — and then deleted — this: “If Iâ€m Shohei Iâ€m going to need Teoscar Hernández to try a little harder.â€
Hernández said he did not get a good angle toward the hard-hit ball. Roberts did credit Hernández with a defensive adjustment on a later ball, shading the line to keep Bryce Harper to a single rather than an extra-base hit that could have driven home a run for the Phillies.

Teoscar Hernández follows through on his three-run home run in the seventh inning of Game 1 against the Philadelphia Phillies. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
The Dodgers minimized Hernándezâ€s defensive exposure last year by playing him most often in left field, with Mookie Betts in right field. This year, with Betts at shortstop and the Dodgers declining to add a right fielder at the trade deadline, Hernández has played right field all season.
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The only major leaguer to play more innings in right field this season and finish lower in defensive runs saved: the Phillies†Nick Castellanos, who got into Saturdayâ€s game only after Harrison Bader suffered a groin injury.
Make no mistake, though: Hernández is here to hit. The Dodgers awarded Hernández a three-year, $66-million contract last winter, well aware that designated hitter would not be an option because of that Ohtani guy.
As Dodgers catcher Will Smith explained Saturday to a reporter wondering whether he might spend more time as a DH in the future: “We’ve got a pretty good DH. I think we’re pretty set on that.â€
Hernández was neither hitting nor fielding well for much of the second half, causing Roberts to say at the start of September that he had urged his right fielder to “get in the fight.†In the last week of August, he even benched Hernández for one day.
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Said Roberts then: “I think weâ€ve lost a little bit of that edge over the last couple months. For me, I want to see that edge, that fight, that fire, and Iâ€ll bet on any result.â€
In September, Hernández put up a .769 OPS, his best for any month since the first one. In the Dodgers†first postseason game, he hit home runs in consecutive at-bats.
On Saturday, in their third postseason game, he stepped to bat in the eighth inning with two on, two out, and the Dodgers trailing by one run — and the Phillies had scored one extra run when he could not run down that Realmuto triple.
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Hernández homered. He smiled. He skipped.
“It was a great moment,†Ohtani said.
In his face, we saw joy.
Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
Katie Moon has won golds at 4 of the 5 World Champs and Olympics since 2021. At the Paris Games she scored silver. Moon says itâ€s all about how she directs her thoughts on the runway. (KEVIN MORRIS)
COMPETING SUCCESSFULLY in the pole vault at the very highest of levels is all about mastering pressure. No one knows that better than Katie Moon, and no woman has been as successful at it in recent years.
Moon, at 34, has now won 3 WC golds in a row, an unprecedented feat. Add that to the Cleveland nativeâ€s Olympic gold in â€21 and her silver last year, and it is clear that she is putting together a career that will be regarded as legendary, if it isnâ€t already.
With her return to Tokyo, where she won her Olympic gold — then in a nearly empty stadium, this time in front of a packed venue — Moon painted the perfect picture of triumph under fire, pushed to the absolute limits by AR holder Sandi Morris to claim a clutch victory by soaring 16-¾ (4.90).
Flush with joy, and with the weight of the season finally off her shoulders, she joined the T&FN Tours banquet to share her experience with the superfans present in an interview with NBCâ€s Paul Swangard. She shared additional comments made to our editor, Sieg Lindstrom.
The secret, said Moon, has been a steady progression of solid training and coaching, both in the physical act of leaping high in the sky and the mental side of trying to beat others at the game. “Year by year weâ€ve just built on not just me as an athlete physically getting stronger, getting faster, getting better technically, but really just becoming more mentally sound on the runway, telling myself what I want to do in high pressure situations,†she explained.
“And that just comes with repetition and years of having [Brad Walkerâ€s] good coaching and he really just taught me how to think on the runway. And so in those high-pressure moments, all Iâ€m thinking about is how Iâ€m going to clear the bar and not, ‘Donâ€t mess this up, this is huge.â€
“It really is just keeping it very tunnel vision because itâ€s very easy to mess it up. But, yeah, it really is a testament to him and just the way heâ€s coached me. And year by year, I feel that Iâ€ve been able to build on my confidence with him.â€
The progression of the bar in Japan was, some felt, a bit on the aggressive side, opening at 14-7¼ (4.45) before jumping to 15-3 (4.65), then 15-7 (4.75), with 5cm increments after that. Not a problem for Moon.
“I personally love an aggressive progression because it just takes the guesswork out of, ‘OK, do I pass this bar? Do I come in a little bit higher?†You know, the way that it was was kind of perfect. And so I love that progression. Some people thought maybe it was a little too aggressive, but I think that people are going to step up and challenge and youâ€re going to be able to clear things that maybe you didnâ€t think you could on an opening height or on a second bar. It was a good progression to get me set up for those higher bars.â€
The breeze helped her as well: “It was a little bit of a headwind a lot of the night, which normally we donâ€t like the wind working against us, but in this instance, I do think it helped me get just a little bit more out of my poles. I kept my standards all the way back, so where our hips peak over the bar, we could choose how close or far back it is. I kept them all the way back the entire competition. I was on one pole for the first jump and then stayed on the next pole the rest of the competition.
“For those last two [jumps], I was coming down on it. I think I just wanted to make that pole and so I was just shorting the bottom a little bit, trying to get back really clean, really tight, and as a result, I didnâ€t cover the distance like I should have. And so that third final attempt [the winning vault] I really just tried to marry the two, like just cover the ground and get back tight.â€
At this point, Moon could teach a master class in handling the pressure. She explained, “The consistency really comes from the way my coach taught me how to think on the runway. I think thereâ€s a misconception that I had that youâ€ve just got to shut your brain off and just go. And the reality is the best athletes know how to think in high-pressure situations. They donâ€t under think and just go totally blank, but they donâ€t over-think it and make it more complicated than it is. But that took time and years and repetitions of every jump, every practice, everything, just focusing exactly on my cues and telling my body what I wanted it to do so that when we got in those high-pressure situations — I was still very nervous.â€
Battling against longtime rival Morris is what made the competition complete: “Sandi is incredibly talented. She cleared 4.85 [15-11] on a first and put me in a position where I had to clear a 4.90 [16-¾]. I mean, she did her job. She showed up, she competed. She is a competitor and I knew coming into this meet, I said to my husband, ‘I have to go in with the mindset that I have to clear 4.90 to win. I just know that itâ€s going to take that.â€
“I think you just have to go in thinking itâ€s going be higher than what it is. And it usually is that anyways. But if thereâ€s anybody that I want to duke it out with, itâ€s an American athlete. And Sandi, her resonance speaks for itself. So Iâ€m just so happy to see her back on the podium.â€
For the past year Moon has been training in Tulsa, being coached remotely by Walker, who is now in Canada. The switch to the new arrangement, she says, has gone smoothly. “Anytime you make a big transition, you never really know how itâ€s going to go, but I felt very confident in my decision. I know that technically Iâ€ve learned most of what I can from Brad. I will continue working with him until I retire, but I had gotten to a place where I knew that I could do the majority of it away from him and still feel comfortable and confident. And I knew that I couldnâ€t sacrifice being away from my husband and more importantly, my dog.â€
She describes her canine companion, Finn, as “a mix of like pit bull, bulldog, like a Rottweiler. Heâ€s a little bit of everything.†But itâ€s her husband, Hugo, an assistant rowing coach at Tulsa, who is perhaps a more crucial cog to the coaching.
“Brad sends all of my work, my training plans, and then during vault sessions, I will either have my husband send him the [videos] as Iâ€m doing them, or at the end of the session, Iâ€ll just send him everything and weâ€ll just debrief after that.â€
Her husband, she says, “He can see whatâ€s happening. He canâ€t always tell me the right change to make, but I can at least talk to him. Heâ€s seen enough jumping and again with coaching he has that critical eye. He can see body movement and flow of energy and so itâ€s great because he understands it enough to be a good voice. Heâ€s helped me win a couple big meets in the past when my coach couldnâ€t be there.â€
The arrangement clearly is paying dividends. “My headspace and my mental game has been the most positive itâ€s ever been.â€
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Jeff Hollobaugh is a writer and stat geek who has been associated with T&FN in various capacities since 1987. He is the author of How To Race The Mile. He lives in Michigan where he can often be found announcing track meets in bad weather.
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