Sports
One more shock for england team, important fast bolor is out of the series – SUCH TV
A side strain ended England fast bowler Jofra Archer’s Ashes campaign on Wednesday while the beleaguered tourists dropped batter Ollie Pope for the fourth test against Australia.
Surrey seamer Gus Atkinson will replace Archer in an England side down 3-0 in the five-test series and will be playing for pride in Melbourne and Sydney.
“Warwickshire’s Jacob Bethell comes into the side and will bat at number three,” the touring side said in a statement ahead of the Boxing Day test.
Archer has been arguably England’s best player on this tour, taking nine wickets, including a five-wicket haul in Adelaide, and scoring valuable lower-order runs including a maiden fifty in the same match.
The injury casts doubts over Archer’s availability for the Twenty20 World Cup in February-March.
“The effort that he’s put in over these three games has been exceptional,” captain Ben Stokes said of the speedster on Tuesday.
“There were a lot of question marks around his ability or whatever it may be coming out to Australia, and he’s put in a great effort for the team.”
Pope, whose 46 in Perth remains his highest score in six Ashes innings on this tour, paid the price for his poor run of form, but opener Ben Duckett managed to retain his place for the fourth test despite faring worse.
Duckett has tallied 97 runs in six innings with a highest score of 29.
As if another botched Ashes campaign was not bad enough for them, England team director Rob Key said they would look into reports that players drank excessively during a break between the second and third Ashes tests this month.
An emotional Stokes on Wednesday said the mental well-being of his players was his main priority amid the media scrutiny of their performance and behaviour on the tour.
England XI for fourth test: Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Jacob Bethell, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Ben Stokes (captain), Jamie Smith (wicketkeeper), Will Jacks, Gus Atkinson, Brydon Carse, Josh Tongue
Sports
Hawaii, Cal players brawl as Rainbow Warriors pull off incredible comeback victory
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The Hawaii Rainbow Warriors’ comeback win in the Hawaii Bowl over the California Golden Bears on Wednesday night was marred by a fight near the end of the game.
Golden Bears quarterback Jaron-Keawe Sagapolutele tried to answer Hawaii’s go-ahead score with one second left in the game. He fired a pass to wide receiver Trond Grizzell, who tried to pitch the ball back to a teammate but lost it. Jacob De Jesus picked up the loose ball and tried to lateral the ball to another teammate but Hawaii defender Virdel Edwards II recovered the bouncing ball to end the game.
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California Golden Bears Hawaii and Hawaii Rainbow Warriors players brawl at the end of the Hawaii Bowl at the Clarence T.C. Ching Athletics Complex on Dec. 24, 2025 (Marco Garcia/Imagn Images)

A fight breaks out between the California Golden Bears Hawaii and Hawaii Rainbow Warriors players at the end of the Hawaii Bowl at the Clarence T.C. Ching Athletics Complex on Dec. 24, 2025. (Marco Garcia/Imagn Images)
Behind the recovery, California’s QuaRon Adams and Hawaii’s Brandon White began to mix it up. A fracas began as Hawaii players and coaches rushed to the field to celebrate the win. It took a few minutes for the brouhaha to end.
Hawaii won the game, 35-31, coming back from a 21-point deficit.
Backup quarterback Luke Weaver threw a 22-yard touchdown pass to Nick Cenacle with 10 seconds left to take the lead. He came into the game after Micah Alejado took a hard hit on the previous play.
GEORGIA COACH KIRBY SMART PUSHES BACK ON TRANSFER PORTAL HYPE, STRESSES PRACTICE OVER PUBLICITY
Alejado was 32-of-46 with 274 yards and three touchdowns. Hawaii wide receiver Pofele Ashlock had 14 catches for 123 yards for two touchdowns. The Rainbow Warriors scored 22 points in the fourth quarter.
“These boys just keep continuing to fight through adversity and I love them for that. They learn the hard way, but they learn how to do it and that’s what’s important,” Chang said.

Hawaii head coach Timmy Chang in the first half during an NCAA football game against Arizona on Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025, in Tucson, Arizona. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri, file)
Cal’s Sagapolutele was 28-of-39 with 343 passing yards, a touchdown pass to De Jesus and a rushing touchdown. Kendrick Raphael and Anthony League each had rushing touchdowns.
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Hawaii finishes the season 9-4 and Cal dropped to 7-6.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Sports
NFL Pro Bowler Dak Prescott’s Christmas wish includes greater say in Cowboys front office decisions
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Dak Prescott will be heading to the NFL Pro Bowl for the fourth time in his career.
On Tuesday, the Dallas Cowboys quarterback was named one of three NFC quarterbacks selected for the league’s showcase of the year’s top players. Several of Prescott’s teammates — wide receiver George Pickens and offensive lineman Tyler Smith — will join him in the San Francisco Bay Area during Super Bowl LX week for the Pro Bowl festivities. Defensive tackle Quinnen Williams and kicker Brandon Aubrey also received nods.
The Cowboys, however, will not be competing in the big game — or the postseason at all, for that matter. Dallas dropped a third game in a row in Week 16 to fall to 6-8-1 on the season. The Cowboys have been eliminated from playoff contention.
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Dallas Cowboys’ Dak Prescott responds to questions during a news conference after the team’s NFL football game against the Cleveland Browns in Cleveland, Sunday, Sept. 8, 2024. (AP Photo/David Richard)
Despite his Pro Bowl nod, Prescott emphasized the importance of winning over personal accolades.
“It’s cool. It’s something good within the season. Understanding every year I work my tail off to try to be the best quarterback I can for this team. Ultimately, I feel like I’m judged off of wins,” he said. “I didn’t get it done this season. However, the individual numbers, performance record, allowed an individual accolade, but that’s 100% still a team deal.”
COWBOYS STAR IMPLORES TEAMMATES TO GIVE GENEROUS BONUS TO STAFF MEMBERS: ‘DON’T BE CHEAP’
Prescott then gave his teammates credit for their contributions to his on-field successes.
“When you’re the quarterback of this team, to be able to put up numbers like that, you’ve got to have receivers like George, CeeDee, Ferg, the rest of the guys. And you’ve got to have a great offensive line. … My success, that accolade, is 100% with each and every one of those guys in there. It’s pretty cool to be a Pro Bowler, but at the end of the day, it’s not what we’re going for.”
Longtime Cowboys owner and general manager Jerry Jones shouldered blame for the team’s three-decade championship drought.

Quarterback Dak Prescott (4) and Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones (right) before the game against the San Francisco 49ers at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California, on Aug.10, 2019. (Kyle Terada/USA TODAY Sports)
“I’ll admit that the Cowboys’ management has played a big role (in the 30-year Super Bowl drought),” Jones said after last Sunday’s loss. “But seriously, I’m very disappointed that the way we’re structured, and my role, puts us here tonight. I’m tremendously disappointed.”
Prescott will turn 33 before next season kicks off. Considering more football is behind him than in front of him, the veteran signal-caller hinted he wants a more vocal role in the team’s front office decision-making going forward.

Dak Prescott (4) of the Dallas Cowboys looks on prior to the game against the Washington Commanders at AT&T Stadium on Jan. 05, 2025 in Arlington, Texas. (Sam Hodde/Getty Images)
“We won’t be back here in this spot. I feel like the last few times I’ve probably said that were playoff losses, right? So each year has its own troubles. … I’m going to do my damnedest just controlling what I can, and you know as you get older, having more input, having more say-so and being asked more questions from the front office, maybe there’s a little bit more that I can do,” Prescott said.
“It’s not just physically or me getting better at my game. Maybe it’s speaking up and saying that, ‘This will help, or I think this can help.’ So, whatever it takes, I’m going to do my damnedest and make sure that I’m influencing and encouraging everybody else around me — not just players — to do the same.”
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This offseason, the Cowboys front office will weigh re-signing wide receiver George Pickens and running back Javonte Williams. Determining where Tyler Smith will play along the Cowboys’ offensive line next season is another key personnel decision this offseason.
The Washington Commanders host the Cowboys at 1 p.m. ET on Christmas Day.
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Sports
‘I love it and hate it’: Miracles, nightmares and more tales of NBA Christmas
CHRISTMAS DAY GAME memories are a blur for Doc Rivers.
Since 1984, Rivers has played or coached on Christmas a total of 17 times. As he recounted two stories about his favorite Christmas moments, the Milwaukee Bucks head coach naturally turned to the Boston Celtics–Los Angeles Lakers rivalry — but he wasn’t completely sure whether one of the memories was actually on Christmas.
Rivers, the former Boston head coach, told one of his favorite tales: He famously collected $100 from every member of the Celtics’ traveling party on a road trip and stashed the money in the ceiling of the visitors locker room at the Lakers’ home arena. (Rivers’ legendary motivational tactic actually took place after a February regular-season game against the Lakers in 2010, and the Celtics returned to collect that money in the NBA Finals).
He also thought it was possible that the time Kobe Bryant and Phil Jackson’s Lakers came out in retro short shorts against Rivers’ Celtics could’ve happened on Christmas. (It was on Dec. 30, 2007, close enough to blend into Christmas). The Celtics and Lakers did play each other on the holiday in 2008.
What Rivers does remember in exact detail is the “love-hate” nature of playing on the holiday.
“I’ve had a lot of Christmas games,” Rivers explained to ESPN. “It’s different. I love it and hate it at the same time because having time with your family, it’s so important.
“But also, there’s nothing better. It’s the most favorite game to win. On a Christmas afternoon, when you finish that game and you win — you come home with your family. It’s just an amazing day. I’ve had some great ones.”
The 10 teams that play on the marquee holiday stage must fit their Christmas Day family traditions around their game-day routine at home or sacrifice opening gifts with loved ones on Christmas if they are on the road.
That is why when the Golden State Warriors — who will be playing for a 13th consecutive time on Christmas against the Dallas Mavericks at Chase Center — are on the road Dec. 25, they will have family members fly and join them on the trip. While LeBron and Bronny James have the opportunity to play together on Christmas again, the Lakers’ father-son duo still has to schedule the James family’s festivities around their matchup.
The NBA tries to make working on the holiday feel as celebratory as possible by giving the coaches and players a present, like a nice leather wallet, a bag or an electronic gift.
“You wake up in Room 736 and you forget that it’s Christmas,” Warriors head coach Steve Kerr told ESPN of what it’s like to play a road game on Christmas. “And you look at your text from Eric Hausen [Warriors vice president of team operations] saying, ‘Merry Christmas.’ And you’re like, ‘Oh yeah, it’s Christmas.’ You go down for your meeting in the third-floor ballroom, and everybody says ‘Merry Christmas’ and you do the scouting report and it’s just bizarre.
“You go to the arena, there’s always a gift from [NBA commissioner] Adam Silver, which is nice. And then you play and everybody in the arena is festive because they’re coming from their Christmas morning and you’re thinking about your own family and wishing you were at home. But that’s the deal. That’s what we sign up for.”
Players and coaches who have games on Christmas agree with Kerr and Rivers that it’s an honor. But playing on the holiday, especially on the road, can also leave some feeling like the Grinch.
“We do a huge dinner if it’s an afternoon game,” Rivers said. “If it’s the last game of the day, it’s just a s—ty day. As far as you spend time waiting around during the day at home and then you go to the game.”
As this Christmas approaches, stars and coaches share with ESPN their Christmas tales, yuletide feelings and even gripes about playing on Santa’s day.
Jump to a tale:
A James Family Christmas
The Kerr Nightmare (on) Christmas
A Green Christmas Miracle
All I want for Christmas is a PJ
Mitchell’s Holiday Special

BRONNY JAMES, 21, doesn’t remember a time when he didn’t watch his father play on Christmas. Like Bronny, an entire generation has grown up watching LeBron James play a record 19 times on Dec. 25 since his 2003 debut season, including the past 18 Christmas Days.
That also means the James family has shared their patriarch with the world every holiday.
“You just tried to hope that game was home so we could have him home for Christmas,” Bronny told ESPN. “But we always go home to our house and open presents in the morning. If he’s not there, then we’ll wait or do it the day before. So, it’s always been kind of like a coin flip. But we try to make it happen [on Christmas Day] as much as possible.”
Last Christmas was historic: The father-son duo became the first to be teammates for a game on the holiday. While Bronny did not play, he watched Dad outshine Stephen Curry at Golden State with 31 points, 10 assists, 4 rebounds, 2 steals and 1 block.
“I’d much rather be at home with my family,” LeBron said Saturday. “But it’s the game. It’s the game I love. It’s the game I watched when I was a kid on Christmas Day, watching a lot of the greatest to play the game. It’s always been an honor to play it. Obviously, I’m going to be completely honest, I would like to be home on the couch with my family all throughout the day. But my number is called, our numbers are called, so we have to go out and perform. And I look forward to it.”
No matter what day the James family celebrates Christmas every year, Zhuri, the youngest daughter, always gets the festivities started.
“Zhuri will be up at 6 in the morning and already downstairs waiting for us,” Bronny said. “We’ll come down like an hour later, and she’ll be mad that we’re so late. Just sitting there staring at the presents.”
LeBron has the most points (507), second-most assists (137) and sixth-most rebounds (143) on Christmas Day, but it has come at the price of having to fit the family’s Christmas celebration around the games.
“I never really was bummed out [too much],” Bronny said. “I mean, I was, kind of, but I knew why. So it wasn’t really a problem for me, and we always found a way to celebrate it somehow when he was back. But of course, every family wants to be together on Christmas. It was difficult sometimes. Especially for my mom [Savannah], just having to plan something else.
“… My siblings and my mom are always together on Christmas. But just having to plan something else to where we can all be together at the same time. It’s just something extra that a lot of people don’t got to deal with that. So it was definitely a little stressful on the whole family, but we made it happen.”
Whenever LeBron, 40, decides to retire and end his Christmas streak, perhaps Bronny will have to go through what his father has had to do almost every Christmas of his playing career.
“Time is about to come where I might be the one away and these guys are going to be home [without me],” Bronny said. “So, it’s something that we got to figure out.”
OVER THREE DECADES later, one of the best finishes to a New York Knicks–Chicago Bulls game is still a Christmas nightmare for Kerr.
With 3.3 seconds left on the clock and the Bulls clinging to a 100-97 lead in Chicago on Dec. 25, 1994, Anthony Mason sent his full-court inbounds heave sailing straight to Kerr, who was to the right of the basket. The then-Bulls shooter jumped to catch the basketball but was worried he was going to fall and be called for a travel.
So he tried tapping the ball to a teammate.
“I threw it right to [Knicks guard] Hubert Davis,” Kerr told ESPN, still disgusted with himself all these decades later. “And he made a 3 to send it to overtime. It was the biggest mistake I’ve ever made. It was a huge gaffe. It was just dumb.
“One of the biggest nightmares of my career.”
1:21
Flashback: Steve Kerr slaps ball to Knicks’ Hubert Davis for tying 3
On Dec. 25, 1994, Bulls guard Steve Kerr tapped a long inbounds pass away, but it went to Knicks guard Hubert Davis for a tying triple.
Fortunately for Kerr, Scottie Pippen saved him with one of the best Christmas performances. Pippen scored all seven of Chicago’s points in overtime and had two game-clinching blocks at the end to hold off the Knicks 107-104. Pippen, who had 36 points, 16 rebounds and 5 steals while playing all 53 minutes, hugged an almost apologetic Kerr after the game.
Michael Jordan, who would come out of retirement later that season, might not have been as forgiving.
“I would’ve been the goat,” said Kerr, who played in five Christmas games. “Not the good GOAT. The bad goat. It worked out, but it was humiliating. It was just the dumbest play. I still don’t quite know why I did it.
“The problem is now every Christmas Day when they start playing [vintage] games on NBA TV, they still show that. I’m like, f—, would you guys leave me alone?”
LIKE SO MANY, Curry’s Christmas tradition growing up was to spend the day watching basketball.
So when it was his turn to play on the Christmas stage, Curry understood the moment.
“It’s a blessing because you understand being one of the 10 teams that play means you’re marketable,” Curry told ESPN. “The experience of playing in the game is fun. … Before the in-season tournament, that was the NBA’s biggest moment before the turn of the calendar year. Definitely felt like a different energy around it.”
This Christmas will mark the Warriors’ 13th consecutive year playing on the holiday, with Curry playing in all but three of them over that span. But until recently, Curry couldn’t find his shot on Christmas. In his first eight Christmas games, Curry shot a combined 35-for-116 (30.2%), including just 10-for-49 (20.4%) from 3. His first two Christmas outings saw him miss 23 of 27 shots.
“I don’t have a favorite,” Curry said when asked about his favorite memory of playing on the holiday. “I have traditionally not played great on Christmas Day, so bringing up great memories.”
One of Draymond Green’s favorite Christmas memories came during his indefinite suspension for striking Jusuf Nurkic in 2023. Green was frustrated, contemplated retirement and had to rediscover his drive for basketball.
But during that 12-game suspension, Green got to spend a truly merry Christmas at home with his kids and family — something he said was good for his soul at the time.
“That was great. It was actually f—ing amazing,” Green told ESPN. “Usually it’s weird because Christmas Day is not like what you remember as a kid, where you spend with your family. We’ve been on the road [five times, once when Green was suspended]. I know my 5-year-old’s first Christmas, I was gone.”
Instead of being with his team in Denver that Christmas in 2023, Green got to open gifts with his kids at home. The only other time he did not suit up when the Warriors played on Christmas came in 2020 when a foot injury kept him on the bench in street clothes in Milwaukee.
Green said that when he has to play on Christmas, he sometimes will “scratch the itch” and let his kids unwrap a gift before fully celebrating once he is home after the game. But even though Green is just one of 10 players to record a Christmas Day triple-double, playing on the holiday can often make him feel as miserable as Scrooge.
“As an NBA player, you want to be on that stage — marquee games and everybody’s watching,” Green said. “But as a human, it f—ing sucks, if I’m honest.
“… I absolutely loved as a kid watching NBA games on Christmas Day. Kobe Bryant and the white [Lakers] jerseys. I loved [Shaquille O’Neal]. … But the NFL has started having games on Christmas Day, so maybe they take Christmas over and we go home.”
2:47
Luka Doncic: My first focus is a championship, not MVP award
Dave McMenamin sits down with Lakers star Luka Doncic to discuss his NBA goals and personal life.
WAKING UP EARLY for a noon tipoff on a regular-season weekend game can be the worst for many NBA players. For Josh Hart, the Knicks’ traditional early start is the perfect time to play on Christmas, especially now that he has two boys who are 2½ years old.
“Now Christmas is magical,” Hart told ESPN. “The best Christmas game is the 12 o’clock because you get the morning obviously consumed about the game, basketball and stuff like that. I love it. You wake up, get some breakfast, head to the Garden, get your work, hopefully get a win, and then you get to celebrate Christmas.”
This will be Hart’s seventh Christmas game. He has played in the holiday game as a Laker, Pelican and now Knickerbocker.
His most memorable Christmas game was with the Lakers when they knocked off the Warriors 127-101 in 2018. It was James’ first Christmas game with L.A., but the star sustained a groin injury in the win. Rajon Rondo stepped in with 15 points, 10 assists and 5 rebounds off the bench.
“We beat that Warriors team with Steph, Klay [Thompson], [Kevin Durant], Draymond,” Hart said. “LeBron got hurt. Rondo turned into Playoff Rondo and kind of led us to that win. He unfortunately broke his [finger]. I gave him an ’09 bottle of Harlan [Estate wine] that he opened on the plane. That kind of really got me into wine.”
The following year had Hart saying “Bah humbug.” After being traded from the Lakers to New Orleans, Hart, Lonzo Ball and Brandon Ingram had the Pelicans on the Christmas stage, but they were the final game of the night against the Denver Nuggets. While the Pelicans won 112-100, they remained in Denver after the game. The Pelicans, like many road teams, opted not to fly until the next day to get some rest rather than arrive home at 3 in the morning.
While the team did fly family members to Denver and had a Christmas party at the hotel the night before the game, Hart said all he and some Pelicans players wanted for Christmas was a private jet to fly them back home to New Orleans after the game.
“The 8:30 [p.m.] game in Denver, it was the worst game,” said Hart, who is 4-2 on Christmas. “We were thinking, how could we get back? We were going to ‘PJ’ after the game to get back home. But the team stayed the night. So yeah, it was by far the worst game of the season.”
IT HAS BEEN four years since Donovan Mitchell last played on Christmas Day.
He scored 33 points and outdueled Jalen Brunson, who had 27 points, in the Utah Jazz‘s 120-116 Christmas win over the Mavericks in 2021.
This Christmas, they will go at it again when Mitchell’s Cleveland Cavaliers visit Brunson’s New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden.
“Man, I love playing on Christmas,” Mitchell told ESPN, barely able to contain his enthusiasm. “It means you are doing something right as a team, right?
“I remember being at my grandmother’s, getting up at 12 and being up until 12, watching basketball all day. So to be a part of that is truly special.”
Mitchell’s routine during his first two Christmas Day games with the Jazz was to keep everything as normal as possible. He prepared like it was a typical game day, and that meant celebrating Christmas either the day before or the day after, which he said is his mother’s birthday.
But with the Cavs-Knicks game tipping off as the first game of the day, Mitchell will get to celebrate and open gifts with his family afterward at his New York area home.
Mitchell, who grew up in the New York and Connecticut area, will be living out a Christmas dream playing at the Garden.
“Just something that I never take for granted,” Mitchell said. “Because not everybody can say they played on Christmas Day, let alone playing Madison Square Garden like we are.
“It’s going to be special.”
ESPN’s Jamal Collier and Dave McMenamin contributed to this story.
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