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LeBron James not expected to consider significant pay cut, per report, and that poses …

LeBron James has earned more money playing in the NBA than anyone else in league history. According to Spotrac, his career on-court earnings top $528 million, but at select points in his career, he has been willing to leave money on the table in order to help his team compete for championships. Most notably, James […]

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LeBron James not expected to consider significant pay cut, per report, and that poses ...

LeBron James has earned more money playing in the NBA than anyone else in league history. According to Spotrac, his career on-court earnings top $528 million, but at select points in his career, he has been willing to leave money on the table in order to help his team compete for championships.

Most notably, James took less than the max to join the Miami Heat in 2010. That allowed them to not only sign Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh, but also retain key reserve Udonis Haslem and use the mid-level exception to bring in Mike Miller. He began taking the max again when he returned to the Cleveland Cavaliers in 2014, in part to support other players around the league. James taking less gave owners leverage to ask other stars to do the same, so for the next 10 seasons, he made max money. 

Last offseason, however, he was reportedly open to taking a meaningful pay cut in the neighborhood of $15 million in order to help the Lakers sign one of a handful of free agents. Those players were, reportedly, Jonas Valančiūnas, Klay Thompson, James Harden and DeMar DeRozan. The Lakers pursued Thompson and came up short. James wound up taking a smaller pay cut, around $2.7 million, to help the Lakers stay under the second apron.

This summer, the Lakers are theoretically operating under far more favorable basketball circumstances thanks to their midseason acquisition of Luka Dončić. They just lost in the first round to the Minnesota Timberwolves due in large part to their limited depth and versatility. If they get this offseason right, they could factor seriously into the championship picture. They will not, however, expect to receive a similar offer of financial help from James this offseason. According to The Athletic’s Sam Amick and Jovan Buha, James is not expected to consider a similar pay cut to the one offered last year.

The choice is largely in his hands. He has a player option for roughly $52.6 million next season, so if he wants to pull in max money, he has the ability to do so unilaterally. In terms of pure merit, James is probably still worth a max salary as well. He’s expected to make an All-NBA team when they are announced later this postseason, and has never missed an All-Star Game as a Laker.

But keeping James at this price point severely restricts the Lakers when it comes to player acquisition. With him earning this much, they are all but assured to be operating above the first apron. That means they can’t access the full mid-level exception of around $14.1 million to use in free agency and trades this summer. Instead, they would be limited to the taxpayer mid-level exception of around $5.7 million. Teams above the first apron also cannot acquire players via sign-and-trade, nor can they absorb more money in a trade than they send out.

In other words, a number of possible moves would likely be off of the table if James does not take a pay cut.

Now, it’s only May 2. James has until June 29 to make up his mind. It is possible that some move the Lakers engineer compels him to reconsider. This offseason just isn’t full of the sort of big-name veterans James aimed for last summer. Thompson, Harden and DeRozan are former All-Stars. Those just aren’t the sort of players that the Lakers need right now. Between himself, Dončić and Austin Reaves, the Lakers have more than enough shot-creation at the moment.

What they need are players to do the dirty work. They need a starting center and probably a backup as well, and if Anthony Edwards showed them anything in the first round, it’s how badly they need a defensive-minded guard.

James might have been willing to leave money on the table for the sake of acquiring someone like Thompson because he views him as a contemporary, someone worthy of sacrificing for. The kinds of players the Lakers would target this year just don’t come with quite as lofty a reputation. Nickeil Alexander-Walker is nowhere near as accomplished as Thompson, but he makes much more sense within the context of this current Laker roster.

Without that extra spending room, Rob Pelinka will have to get creative in reshaping the Laker roster to make a run at the 2026 championship. He will either have to find the sort of role players the Lakers need with one hand tied behind his back from a team-building perspective, or he will need to somehow convince James to reconsider a pay cut before the end of June.

Either way, the Lakers have their work cut out for them this offseason. The Timberwolves showed them how far away they are from true championship contention, and they are going to need every possible tool at their disposal if they are going to bridge that gap.

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Mooney and Pater named to SEC Community Service Team

Story Links BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – The Southeastern Conference announced the 2024-25 track and field/cross country Community Service Team on Thursday. The conference names a community service team for each of its 22 league-sponsored sports, highlight athletes from each school who give back to his or her community through superior service efforts. Brighton […]

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BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – The Southeastern Conference announced the 2024-25 track and field/cross country Community Service Team on Thursday. The conference names a community service team for each of its 22 league-sponsored sports, highlight athletes from each school who give back to his or her community through superior service efforts.

Brighton Mooney and Logan Patete of both the cross country and track and field programs were named to the Community Service teams as the two representatives for Texas.

Mooney is one of the most active community service members of the program and helped with Longhorn Halloween on campus where athletes interact with the community during trick-or-treat. She also spent time with STEMX Girl Day with UT Austin Nutritional science/Davis Lab and Sprouts Healthy Communities Foundation.

Patete has worked with the Rise to Vote group on campus to help with voter registration and civic engagement presentation. Both Mooney and Patete engaged with local Austin children at the Special Olympic Field Day on campus and also helped read to a local elementary school. Patete is also preparing to go to the Dominican Republic over the summer with Courts for Kids to help build up communities with other Texas athletes.



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OU track and field sending 15 to NCAA Outdoor Championships | Sports

The Oklahoma track and field teams will have 15 combined athletes in the NCAA Outdoor Championships. The OU men’s team will have seven representatives, while the women’s team will have eight. The NCAA Outdoor Championships are held in Eugene, Oregon on June 11-14 at historic Hayward Field. × This page requires Javascript. Javascript is […]

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The Oklahoma track and field teams will have 15 combined athletes in the NCAA Outdoor Championships.

The OU men’s team will have seven representatives, while the women’s team will have eight. The NCAA Outdoor Championships are held in Eugene, Oregon on June 11-14 at historic Hayward Field.


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T&F’s Brown and Ezekiel Remain on Bowerman Watchlist Ahead of NCAA Outdoor Championships

NEW ORLEANS – In the week prior to the final meet of the 2025 season at the NCAA Outdoor Championships, Baylor track & field’s Alexis Brown and Nathaniel Ezekiel remain on the Bowerman Watch List, the organization announced on Thursday afternoon.   This marks Ezekiel’s sixth update in a row that the senior Nigerian has […]

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NEW ORLEANS – In the week prior to the final meet of the 2025 season at the NCAA Outdoor Championships, Baylor track & field’s Alexis Brown and Nathaniel Ezekiel remain on the Bowerman Watch List, the organization announced on Thursday afternoon.
 
This marks Ezekiel’s sixth update in a row that the senior Nigerian has been represented while this is Brown’s second update to be named. Overall, 27 athletes and 19 programs were represented on this year’s women’s watch lists, the most athletes in award history. On the men’s side, 25 athletes and 20 programs were represented on this year’s watch lists.
 

The Bowerman is bestowed to collegiate track & field’s top male and female athlete for the year. The Bowerman Advisory Board, and ultimately, The Bowerman Voters, are instructed to consider performances inclusively from the collegiate indoor track & field and outdoor track & field seasons only.
 
Brown punched two tickets to the NCAA Outdoor Championships, set to take place in Eugene, Ore. at the historic Hayward Field from June 11-14, in women’s long jump and the 4×100 relay. Brown is the current national and second-best world outdoor leader in the long jump with a historic 7.03 meters, 23’0.75″, mark. The Kennedale, Texas, native is just the third collegiate woman to jump past seven meters and is the second-best American collegiate ever in the event. Brown is looking to sweep the NCAA Indoor and Outdoor titles, as she won the Indoor Championships earlier in the year.
 
In the 4×100, Brown takes part as the third leg in the relay team. Altogether, the squad ranks No. 2 in the NCAA with a season-best time of 42.73.
 
Ezekiel also punched two tickets to Eugene in the 400 meter hurdles and the 4×400 relay. In the 400mH, Ezekiel posted two different NCAA all-time historic performances at the Big 12 Outdoor Championship in Lawrence, Kan. He started his week by breaking his own Championship meet during the preliminary round (47.90) before he won the gold medal with a time of 47.89 seconds. Both times are now the seventh and eighth fastest times in NCAA history. At the NCAA West Preliminaries, Ezekiel finished second in his heat to punch his ticket.
 
In the 4×400 relay, Ezekiel holds strong as one could say the best anchor leg in the nation. At the West Prelims, Baylor sought to finish top three in their heat to automatically qualify to Eugene. When Ezekiel received the baton, BU was in sixth. Ezekiel went on to run an insane 43.70-second split, passing three teams to help the Bears run a season-best time of 3:05.33 and grab the third automatic qualifying time from the second heat.
 
Semifinalists for the Bowerman award are slated to be announced Wednesday, June 25 (women) and Thursday, June 26 (men). Finalists will be announced the week of Monday, June 30.



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Chargers Haas, Kuzma, and Marshall win major awards as All-G-MAC honorees announced

Story Links 2025 Men’s Outdoor Track and Field All-G-MAC Teams 2025 Women’s Outdoor Track and Field All-G-MAC Teams At the end of another successful outdoor track and field season, both the Hillsdale College men’s and women’s teams brought home major honors as the Great Midwest Athletic Conference announced its All-G-MAC teams on […]

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2025 Men’s Outdoor Track and Field All-G-MAC Teams

2025 Women’s Outdoor Track and Field All-G-MAC Teams

At the end of another successful outdoor track and field season, both the Hillsdale College men’s and women’s teams brought home major honors as the Great Midwest Athletic Conference announced its All-G-MAC teams on Thursday.

On the men’s side, junior Ben Haas was named the G-MAC Outdoor Field Athlete of the Year. Haas also was the Indoor Field Athlete of the Year for the G-MAC and cemented his honor by becoming Hillsdale’s first double NCAA DII national champion on the men’s side by capturing the national title in the hammer throw with a winning mark of 66.31 meters on May 22nd in Pueblo, Colorado. The hammer throw title adds to Haas’ 2025 indoor weight throw national title, which the junior captured in March with a program and G-MAC record-setting mark of 22.89 meters on the biggest stage.

Haas was a double champion at the G-MAC Outdoor Championships in early May, winning titles in both the hammer throw and the shot put. He holds the Hillsdale school records in the weight throw, hammer throw, and indoor and outdoor shot put.

On the women’s side, two athletes won major G-MAC awards. Freshman Allison Kuzma was named the G-MAC Freshman of the Year for Outdoor Track, after a sensational finish at the NCAA DII national championships in Pueblo, Colorado on May 22 that saw her place third in the nation in the 10,000m run with a time of 35:02.50. A breakout star from Zeeland, Michigan, Kuzma dominated the 10K race at the G-MAC Championships in early May, winning the race by nearly 90 seconds over second place to add a second G-MAC title to her indoor 5,000m crown. Kuzma also finished second at the G-MAC Cross Country championships in the fall.

Along with Kuzma, senior Nicole Marshall was Hillsdale’s third-ever recipient of the Elite 26 award, honoring the athlete with the highest cumulative GPA competing in the G-MAC Outdoor Championship meet. Marshall graduated with a perfect 4.0 from Hillsdale and a degree in Biochemistry in the spring, serving as her class’ Valedictorian at the commencement ceremony. A multi-time placer in the G-MAC both indoors and outdoors, Marshall is heading to medical school in the fall to become a doctor.

Both Haas and Kuzma were among the eight Charger men and women to earn All-G-MAC honors for their performances this spring. On the men’s side, senior Richie Johnston earned first team All-G-MAC honors after repeating as the conference champion in the 3,000m steeplechase, while junior Connor McCormick earned second team honors for his runner-up finish in the pole vault.

On the women’s side, juniors Tara Townsend in the pole vault, Anna Roberts in the 3,000m steeplechase, and Averi Parker in the discus all received first team honors along with Kuzma after capturing G-MAC titles in their respective events. Senior Marilyn Popplewell also earned second team All-G-MAC honors for her runner-up finish in the javelin at the G-MAC Outdoor Championships.

 



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Long Beach To Host Swimming Competition For 2028 Paralympics

For the first time since the Olympics and Paralympics started being held in the same city in 1988, there will be two different venues for the swimming competitions. On Tuesday, organizers for the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics and Paralympics unveiled the plan for Paralympic venues, with the swimming competition scheduled to be held in Long […]

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For the first time since the Olympics and Paralympics started being held in the same city in 1988, there will be two different venues for the swimming competitions.

On Tuesday, organizers for the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics and Paralympics unveiled the plan for Paralympic venues, with the swimming competition scheduled to be held in Long Beach.

A temporary outdoor aquatics center will be built on a lot adjacent to the Long Beach Convention & Entertainment Center for the Paralympic swimming competition.

The swimming venue for the Olympic Games will be at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles.

Events for Paralympic swimming will take place in backstroke, breaststroke, butterfly and freestyle. Mixed medley relays will be held also.

Competitors will compete in heats based on disability classification, which will have them either diving into the pool or starting a race directly in the water.

It will be the first time that different swimming venues will be used for the Olympics and Paralympics since 1984, but that was also the last year that the two events were held in different cities. The Paralympics were split between Stoke Mandeville, England and Long Island, New York, while the Olympics were in Los Angeles.

China won the most medals during swimming at the 2024 Summer Paralympics with 54 (22 gold, 21 silver, 11 bronze). The United States won 30 medals, 10 of them gold.

In addition to swimming, Long Beach will also host blind football, canoeing, climbing, rowing shooting and sitting volleyball during the Paralympics.

“The Paralympic venue plan ensures that Los Angeles’ first-ever Paralympic Games will take place in incredible existing stadiums and arenas across the region while creating the best possible experience for athletes and fans across the 560 events with accessibility top of mind,” LA 2028 CEO Reynold Hoover said in a press release.





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‘I feel like I deserve it’: JaMeesia Ford and Gamecock Track and Field ready for NCAA Nationals

COLUMBIA, S.C. (WOLO) — South Carolina track and field is heading to Track Town, USA, aka Eugene, Oregon, thanks in large part to JaMeesia Ford. At the East Regionals, the Gamecocks punched 16 tickets to NCAA track nationals between their men (5) and women (11). “I think we’re prepared to do something very special out […]

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COLUMBIA, S.C. (WOLO) — South Carolina track and field is heading to Track Town, USA, aka Eugene, Oregon, thanks in large part to JaMeesia Ford.

At the East Regionals, the Gamecocks punched 16 tickets to NCAA track nationals between their men (5) and women (11).

“I think we’re prepared to do something very special out there,” Head Coach Tim Hall said.

Many of those tickets, earned by sophomore JaMeesia Ford, who’s competing in the 100m, 200m, 4 x 100m and 4 x 400m relays.

“Well JaMeesia fits into the one percentile of athlete’s that you’re lucky to to be able to coach or be a part of throughout your coaching career,” Hall said.

At the SEC championship, ford won all four events.

“SEC that’s the hardest conference in college,” Ford said. “So I feel like going into nationals with the conferences all together it’s all a fast race. So I’ll say I’m prepared and I know what’s coming for me.”

Her goal for Nationals?

“Get all first place in all my events again,” Ford said. “I think I would be the first person to do that at Nationals.”

Ford, the 2025 Commissioner’s Trophy winner, is quickly becoming a household name in colligate track and field, but is getting used to the distractions of big time events.

“I don’t try and let that affect me because it is a great feeling just to be in that stadium seeing all the tracks fans and stuff,” Ford said. “The distractions? I try not to let it get to me because I get overwhelmed with all the celebrations and stuff. I have to remember to stay calm, keep going and yeah.”

Ford says their record setting relay teams have come a long way in a year.

“I feel like we’re more prepared, we are 10 times… 100 times better than we were last year,” Ford said. “We were such a young team last year now we’re getting more experience every time we run a race. We’re just ready.”

Coach Hall said Ford and the whole Gamecock team has been training for this moment all year.

“She’s ready, they’re ready for the task, Hall said. “We started that process in August. We’re ready.”

Ultimately, Ford and her team have one focus: winning.

“It would mean a lot to me just seeing all the hard work that I put in even from last year ash the Olympic trials, I feel like I deserve it. Me and my teammates as well,” Ford said.

“I’m looking forward to, having fun with my teammates and holding up a trophy.”





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