Connect with us

Latest

Cavs’ James Harden gives head-scratching take after getting swept by Knicks

Published

on

Knowing when to accept defeat is one of the toughest things a professional athlete will have to deal with in their career, and after a sweep at the hands of the New York Knicks, Cleveland Cavaliers star James Harden refused to believe that his opponents were the better team.

The Knicks finished off the Cavaliers in Game 4 with a 130-93 win. Harden had 12 points, missed each of the six 3-pointers he attempted, turned the ball over five times and was minus-19 on the floor. Harden was asked how much better the Knicks were than the Cavs.

ZERO BS. JUST DAKICH. TAKE THE DON’T @ ME PODCAST ON THE ROAD. DOWNLOAD NOW!

“I can’t even answer that question, honestly. Yeah, it’s 4-0, but I don’t think we had a chance as far as our best shot from the standpoint of the circumstances. Obviously, they dominated us 4-0, but I don’t know if I could, necessarily, answer that question, just because, genuinely, I do feel like we are the better team. But series wise, we didn’t show it.”

Cleveland showed absolutely zero proof of that statement.

The team only managed to eclipse 100 points twice in the series, reaching at least 100 points in the first game in overtime after the Knicks came back from down more than 20 points to tie the game and win in the extra period.

The series wasn’t really close after that.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

Harden may be one of the most prolific scorers of all time, but his attempts at winning a championship have been futile. ESPN Insights noted that Harden has played 191 playoff games without winning a championship, only two behind Karl Malone all time.

Harden has a $42.3 million player option going into the offseason, but isn’t expected to re-sign with the Cavaliers.

Team owner Dan Gilbert shared an assessment of the season on social media.

“We took a step ahead this spring, but we are nowhere near where we need to be,” he wrote on X. “I can’t thank the fans enough for the support this year. We will dig in all summer and do everything we possibly can to take the next step. We will grind until we get there.”

The Cavaliers now face an uncertain offseason with the potential to add pieces to another run at a championship or blow up the team and start from scratch.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Continue Reading

Latest

Best Music From ’90s And 2000s Dominate The American Music Awards

Published

on

Nostalgia surged with an epic Goo Goo Dolls singalong
Continue Reading

Latest

Massie positions himself for potential political future after primary defeat: ‘I won’t be going away silently’

Published

on

Rep. Thomas Massie — who lost the Republican primary in Kentucky’s 4th Congressional District to President Donald Trump-backed challenger Ed Gallrein — is leaving the door open to the possibility of running for office again in the future.

“I filed with FEC for the 2028 House race. This allows me to raise funds to continue my political operations supporting my position as a current office holder and as a potential candidate for federal office,” the congressman wrote in a Monday post on X.

“I haven’t made a final decision about which office to seek, if I run,” he added.

OUSTED MASSIE SIDES WITH TRUMP ON IRAN DEAL AMID GOP BACKLASH, CONFIDENTLY EXCLAIMS, ‘HECK YES!’

Speaking at a University of Louisville College Republicans event on April 6, Massie said, “If I lose on May 19, I am not doing any more government ever.”

In a statement provided to Fox News Digital on Tuesday, Massie said, “I’m keeping every option open, and there’s still an undisclosed paid social media campaign to rewrite history and diminish the platform the Epstein class gave me when they spent tens of millions of dollars to buy the seat. I won’t be going away silently.”

Gallrein, a former Navy SEAL, decisively won the GOP U.S. House primary in Kentucky, defeating Massie, an incumbent who has served in Congress since late 2012.

MTG SAYS GOP’S FUTURE ‘DESTROYED’ AFTER TRUMP-BACKED PRIMARY CHALLENGER DEFEATS THOMAS MASSIE

“There’s a quiet all out war for the future of our country. Let us not misdirect our precious resources. I do not believe I lost due to fraudulent votes, mail-in ballots, hacking, or mistabulated results. I respect those who want to make sure, but I won’t be requesting a recount,” Massie wrote in a post on X last week.

“Meet the Press” moderator Kristen Welker asked Massie on Sunday if he is considering a 2028 presidential run.

TRUMP-BACKED CANDIDATE ED GALLREIN CALLS KENTUCKY WIN A ‘DAVID VS. GOLIATH’ VICTORY AFTER DEFEATING MASSIE

“I will not rule out anything. And right now I’m not gonna rule in anything,” he said, later noting, “I think I will stay engaged in some way or shape. Maybe it’s from the outside. I’ve been exposing what’s going on Washington D.C. for years” he said, noting that he’ll “keep doing it.”

Continue Reading

Latest

Knicks fans send NYC into chaos after franchise reaches first NBA Finals since 1999

Published

on

Knicks fans completely took over New York City after the franchise returned to the NBA Finals for the first time since 1999.

The New York Knicks swept the Cleveland Cavaliers on Monday night with a 130-93 blowout victory to punch their ticket to the NBA Finals. Jalen Brunson, Karl-Anthony Towns and the Knicks overwhelmed Cleveland from the opening quarter and never looked back.

NEW YORK KNICKS SWEEP CAVALIERS TO REACH FIRST NBA FINALS SINCE 1999 AFTER DOMINANT GAME 4 BLOWOUT

As predicted, Knicks fans stormed New York City streets on Memorial Day to celebrate the franchise’s first Finals berth since 1999.

Videos poured out from Manhattan intersections, packed bars outside Madison Square Garden and booming “WE WANT WEMBY” chants outside MSG.

Fans carried brooms through Manhattan streets in anticipation of a Cavaliers sweep, climbed atop traffic lights while NYPD officers ordered them down and unleashed the kind of basketball pandemonium NYC has waited decades to experience again.

Even Radio City Music Hall erupted with Knicks chants as the city collectively lost its mind Monday night.

NEW YORK CITY TEMPORARILY CO-NAMES CITY STREETS AFTER KNICKS PLAYERS DURING PLAYOFF RUN

For two-and-a-half decades, the Knicks largely operated as the NBA’s perpetual hype machine, always discussed and rarely dangerous.

Madison Square Garden stayed packed, celebrities still lined the baseline and the fan base never disappeared, but the Knicks were mostly surviving on history.

Fans who grew up in the 1990s and beyond knew more about Patrick Ewing, John Starks and the Knicks’ bruising playoff wars with Michael Jordan’s Bulls, Reggie Miller’s Pacers and Pat Riley’s Heat than actual postseason success of their own.

KNICKS, PACERS TO REKINDLE EPIC RIVALRY THAT FEATURED SOME OF NBA’S MOST ICONIC MOMENTS

What followed were years of failed eras and false hope.

There was Stephon Marbury, the Isiah Thomas years and Carmelo Anthony’s brief window, yet the Knicks still couldn’t break through.

Knicks superstar Jalen Brunson transformed the franchise’s identity and gave New York the closer it spent years chasing.

KNICKS PICK MIKE BROWN AS FRANCHISE’S NEXT HEAD COACH AFTER TOM THIBODEAU’S SHOCKING DISMISSAL: REPORT

Karl-Anthony Towns stretched defenses all postseason, while Mikal Bridges, Josh Hart and OG Anunoby helped turn the Knicks into one of the league’s nastiest two-way teams.

The breakthrough did not happen overnight. Knicks team president Leon Rose doubled down after New York lost to the Indiana Pacers in six games during the 2025 postseason, making the controversial decision to move on from Tom Thibodeau and hire Mike Brown.

Many viewed the coaching change as a risky pivot that could backfire. Instead, Brown turned the Knicks into a legitimate Finals threat.

KNICKS KNOCK OFF DEFENDING NBA CHAMPION CELTICS TO ADVANCE TO FIRST CONFERENCE FINALS IN 25 YEARS

After surviving a grueling six-game series against Atlanta in the opening round, including an early 2-1 deficit, New York powered through Philadelphia and then steamrolled Cleveland.

Cleveland folded early Monday night.

Now, New York braces for a potential showdown with either the reigning champion Oklahoma City Thunder or Victor Wembanyama’s rising San Antonio Spurs.

The Knicks and the chaos surrounding them may become the story of the NBA Finals.

Send us your thoughts: [email protected] / Follow along on X: @alejandroaveela 

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2026 Political Signal