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NBA finals: Knicks face Spurs in Game 5 with chance to clinch first title since 1973 – follow live | NBA finals
Key events
Knicks 28-35 Spurs, 4.06, 2nd quarter
The Knicks have gone on a 10-2 run over the past two and a half minutes that has trimmed the San Antonio lead to seven points. Brunson is leading the charge, quelle surprise, peeling off seven straight for New York with a three-pointer and a pair of mid-range jumpers.
Knicks 12-33 Spurs, 6.41, 2nd quarter
The referee overturns the call on Wembanyama and rules that Towns committed an offensive foul. That means Wembanyama is back down to one foul and Towns has two. Towns stays in the game, unlike in Game 4 when he was benched with a second foul early in the first quarter. A Harper 14ft pull-up jumper makes it 33-18, but Hart answers with a three-pointer to pull the Knicks within 12 points. The Knicks are shooting just 7-for-32 (21.9%) from the floor, but 5-for-12 (41.7%) from beyond the arc.
Knicks 15-31 Spurs, 8.29, 2nd quarter
The Spurs stretch their lead to 15 before Towns finally hits an 18ft turnaround jumper for New York’s first points since 1.00 left in the first. Wembanyama answers with a three from the wing that ignites the crowd, but he’s whistled for his second personal foul moments later. Spurs coach Mitch Johnson is going to challenge this one.
Knicks 13-26 Spurs, 10.34, 2nd quarter
A Julian Champagnie three is sandwiched by two more blocked shots by Wembanyama, already his fourth and fifth of the night. The Spurs are doubling up the Knicks, whose nightmarish shooting night continues. San Antonio’s suffocating defense is dialed in.
End of 1st quarter: Knicks 13-23 Spurs
The Knicks shot 4-for-22 in the first period, finishing with more turnovers (six) than field goals (four). Their 13 points are the fewest they’ve scored in any quarter throughout their postseason run. New York did not score a single point in the paint, going 0-for-8 in the lane during the first quarter while San Antonio outscored them 12-0 inside.
Dylan Harper changed the game off the bench. The rookie entered with 7:49 left and immediately sparked the Spurs, scoring seven points on 3-for-3 shooting, including a three-pointer that pushed the lead to six. He led all scorers except Brunson after one.
Despite shooting 18.2%, New York only trail by 10. That’s probably the most encouraging stat for the Knicks. It’s not easy to go a quarter with four made baskets, six turnovers and zero paint points and remain within striking distance.
Knicks 10-18 Spurs, 1.40, 1st quarter
Brunson cans an 11ft step-back jumper to stop the bleeding, but the Knicks have 10 points with less than two minutes to go in the opening period. They’ve made 3-of-20 shots from the floor.
Knicks 8-18 Spurs, 3.06, 1st quarter
Harper makes back-to-back buckets and Johnson follows with a three. Another seven-point burst for the Spurs and they have a double-digit lead in the first quarter for the fifth straight game in these finals.
Knicks 8-11 Spurs, 5.51, 1st quarter
Wembanyama follows a pair of made free throws with a tip dunk, then Harper makes it seven unanswered for the Spurs to give them a 11-5 lead. Anunoby answers with a corner three and New York only trail by three at the first TV timeout despite shooting 2-for-12 (16.7%) from the floor so far.
Knicks 5-4 Spurs, 8.08, 1st quarter
An incredible defensive start for Wembanyama, who has three blocked shots in the first four minutes. He’s also opened the scoring for the Spurs with a transition dunk that ignites the home crowd. Brunson hits a wide-open three and Champagnie answers with a put-back lay-up. Anunoby drains a pair of free throws to give the Knicks an early lead, but both teams have been frigid in the early stages, shooting a combined 3-for-14 from the floor.
Starting lineups
New York Knicks
PG Jalen Brunson – 6ft 2in, 190lb, Villanova
SG Mikal Bridges – 6ft 6in, 209lb, Villanova
SF Josh Hart – 6ft 4in, 215lb, Villanova
PF OG Anunoby – 6ft 7in, 240lb, Indiana
C Karl-Anthony Towns – 7ft 0in, 248lb, Kentucky
San Antonio Spurs
PG De’Aaron Fox – 6ft 3in, 185lb, Kentucky
SG Stephon Castle – 6ft 6in, 215lb, Connecticut
SF Devin Vassell – 6ft 5in, 200lb, Florida State
PF Julian Champagnie – 6ft 8in, 217lb, St John’s
C Victor Wembanyama – 7ft 4in, 230lb, Metropolitans 92 (France)
It’s national anthem time at the Frost Bank Center. Four-time Grammy nominated country singer Mickey Guyton does the honors. Starting lineups to come and we should be under way any minute now.
One reason the Knicks’ run has resonated so deeply beyond basketball is that it has arrived at a moment when many Americans seem desperate for a distraction. In her Saturday essay for the Guardian, Ankita Rao argues that New York’s improbable march to the brink of a championship has offered a rare escape from the relentless churn of politics and bad news – and a reminder of the communal joy sports can still provide.
Stars – they’re just like us! A healthy chunk of Madison Square Garden’s celebrity row has migrated south with the Knicks one win away from a drought-busting title.
Last week, we took in Game 1 from a place rarely included in the story of New York’s basketball obsession. Before the team moved to the brink of a first title since 1973, the Guardian was granted access to a Knicks watch party inside the Rikers Island jail complex, where thousands of people in custody gathered to experience the NBA finals alongside the rest of the city.
For a few hours, the routines and realities of life behind bars gave way to the same hope, anxiety, superstition and disbelief that have defined this postseason run.
While Knicks fever spilled into bars, restaurants and living rooms and outdoor gatherings across the five boroughs, it also reached one of New York’s least visible and most scrutinized institutions.
The result is a portrait of New York at a singular sporting moment, seen through the eyes of people who are rarely included in the story of the city celebrating itself.
The atmosphere is building in and around San Antonio’s Frost Bank Center, where fans of both teams are showing their colors less than half an hour before tipoff.
The Knicks may be one win from a championship, but they have already conquered another corner of American culture: fashion. From Taylor Swift’s viral “Stevie Knicks” shirt to Timothée Chalamet’s courtside fits, Knicks fandom has become as much a style statement as a sporting allegiance. If you’re wondering how a 53-year title drought turned into the hottest look of the summer, we’ve got two reads for you.
As the series shifts back to San Antonio for Saturday’s Game 5, the mood around the Knicks remains euphoric after Wednesday’s astonishing comeback from 29 points down. But the aftermath of that victory has produced almost as many headlines as the game itself.
New York police said 56 people were taken into custody following post-game unrest around Madison Square Garden, where authorities estimated roughly 10,000 fans gathered after the final buzzer. Ten officers were injured, including one who was struck in the head by a glass bottle. Police said charges ranged from assaulting an officer and disorderly conduct to weapons possession.
The disorder extended beyond the streets surrounding the Garden. Video circulating online showed Spurs star Victor Wembanyama being jeered by fans as he returned to his Manhattan hotel after the game, with an egg tossed in his direction as security escorted him inside. Wembanyama had already spoken out earlier in the week after videos emerged appearing to show Spurs supporters being harassed in the city.
The French star struck a largely defiant tone on Friday as San Antonio attempted to regroup from the largest comeback victory in NBA finals history. “We’re over it. It’s the playoffs,” Wembanyama said of the collapse, adding that the hotel incident “doesn’t bother me”.
No single play can explain how a team squanders a 29-point lead in the NBA finals. But when historians look back on Game 4, they will probably start with De’Aaron Fox racing toward the basket with a one-point lead and less than 15 seconds remaining. Instead of forcing the Knicks to foul, Fox attacked the rim. OG Anunoby blocked his lay-up attempt. Moments later, the Knicks had completed the largest comeback in finals history. Here’s our closer look at the decision that changed everything.
Preamble
For more than half a century, New York has waited for this. Through blackouts and bankruptcies, dynasties and rebuilds, celebrities courtside and coaches on the hot seat, the Knicks have spent 53 years searching for a championship. Tonight, they are one victory from ending the wait.
Standing in their path is a San Antonio Spurs team still trying to process what happened 72 hours ago.
Game 4 looked over long before it was finished. The Spurs led by 29 points midway through the third quarter and appeared to have wrestled control of the NBA finals back from New York. Then everything unraveled. The Knicks stormed back with the largest comeback in finals history, erasing the deficit before OG Anunoby’s putback with 1.2 seconds remaining delivered a stunning 107-106 victory and a commanding 3-1 series lead.
The result left the basketball world asking two questions. How did San Antonio let it happen? And can the Spurs possibly recover?
History is not on their side. Only one team has ever rallied from a 3-1 deficit to win an NBA finals series. Yet this matchup has been far closer than the standings suggest. Through four games, the Knicks have outscored San Antonio by only eight points. Three contests have been decided in the final seconds. The margins separating triumph and disaster have been razor thin.
That is only part of what makes tonight’s potential closeout game so compelling.
The Knicks have arrived in Texas with a chance to end one of the longest championship droughts in American professional sports and begin preparations for a parade through Manhattan. The Spurs return home convinced they have been good enough to win every game in this series and determined to force a trip back to New York.
One side is chasing history. The other is trying to prevent becoming a footnote in it. Game 5 tips off at 7.30pm local time or 8.30 in New York, roughly an hour from now.
Bryan will be here shortly. In the meantime here’s what Victor Wembanyama had to say about Wednesday’s historic collapse by San Antonio.
Victor Wembanyama says the San Antonio Spurs have shaken off the biggest single-game collapse in NBA finals history and are ready to face the New York Knicks on Saturday.
The Knicks overcame a 29-point deficit to hand the Spurs a crushing 107-106 victory in Game 4 of the series and can win their first title since 1973 with victory in San Antonio.
“There were a thousand ways we could have not lost that game,” Wembanyama told reporters at practice on Friday. “It felt like there was a time to process this, to really dwell on it, but not any more. We’re over it. It’s the playoffs. There’s no time to regret things for too long.”
That, he added, also goes for having had eggs thrown at him and a water bottle tossed at the team bus in New York.
“I didn’t really think much of it,” he said. “Obviously it’s not good at all. But it doesn’t bother me.”
UK News
A £350 swimming pool fee ruined our easyJet holiday | Consumer rights
My partner and I paid £2,150 for a week’s all-inclusive break in Marrakech with easyJet Holidays.
We chose the Jaal Riad Resort Hotel because of its pool and spa. When we arrived, we were told that use of the heated pool cost £24 a person an hour, the Jacuzzi £24 for 20 minutes, and the hammam was £16 for 20 minutes.
Nowhere were these extra fees listed when booking. EasyJet Holidays rejected my complaint and referred me to a line buried at the bottom of the list of facilities that said charges may apply. We were planning on using the pool regularly but could not afford it. If we had known, we would have booked elsewhere.
DP, Cambridgeshire
Hidden charges can hugely inflate the cost of holidays. Resort fees are the most pernicious – some hotels charge up to £50 a person a day for facilities whether or not they are used.
Then there’s the daily tourist tax levied via the accommodation provider during the stay in some countries, and ancillary fees for upgraded wifi for sun loungers.
EasyJet Holidays makes a big deal of the pool – it’s a prominent photo on the webpage for the hotel.
No asterisk refers potential bookers to the crucial caveat that a couple, wishing to avail themselves once a day during a week’s stay, would have to pay almost £350 extra.
Even the eagle-eyed who alighted on the paragraph of small print at the bottom of the page, would be none the wiser.
Only after declaring that the facilities are subject to height and weight restrictions, seasonal availability, opening times, and age and dress code, does it mention that they “may” attract additional charges. These are not listed.
This is potentially unlawful, according to consumer lawyer Gary Rycroft.
“The facilities were prominently marketed as part of the holiday experience, and extra charges were not clearly disclosed before purchase,” he says. “Under the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers (DMCC) Act 2024, businesses must not omit material information that would influence a consumer’s decision about whether to enter into a contract.”
EasyJet is defensive. “We always strive to make it clear that use of hotel facilities may incur additional charges,” it told me.
The company said then that it was reviewing the description to “further highlight that the use of the spa facilities is chargeable”, although, at the time of writing, three weeks later, the webpage remained unchanged. It has also now offered a £500 goodwill payment.
As the holiday season begins, you need to read the small print to avoid nasty surprises.
We welcome letters but cannot answer individually. Email us at consumer.champions@theguardian.com or write to Consumer Champions, Money, the Guardian, 90 York Way, London N1 9GU. Please include a daytime phone number. Submission and publication of all letters is subject to our terms and conditions.
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Nearly 400 workers at Glasgow Airport have accepted offers from bosses at ICTS and Menzies Aviation.
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Middle East crisis live: US and Iran reach peace deal as European leaders warn Tehran ‘must never acquire a nuclear weapon’ | US-Israel war on Iran
Key events
How much sticking power will the “great deal” – as Trump has described it – have given that so many details are yet to be addressed?
Speaking to Australian Associated Press, Kylie Moore-Gilbert, an expert on Middle Eastern politics who spent more than two years in an Iranian prison, said the pause in fighting would probably be temporary because of unaddressed sticking points.
The agreement failed to deal with Tehran’s ambitions to build nuclear weapons, its use of proxies in the region, its missile program and human rights abuses, she said.
Every single reason cited for this war by the Trump administration … has not been addressed,” she said.
All those sticking points remain, and we can expect that the Islamic Republic will continue in its intransigence and resist coming to any kind of arrangement or agreement on those points.
This is just kicking the can down the road to the next conflict.”
World leaders react to the peace deal
News of the deal has sparked comment from leaders around the globe, including in France, Qatar, the UK, Turkey, Japan and Australia.
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Qatar’s foreign ministry expressed its “full support for all efforts and initiatives aimed at enhancing regional security and stability’”.
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Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan stressed “the need to avoid rhetoric, provocations, and actions that could escalate tensions in the period leading up to the signing of the agreement, and to remain vigilant against possible sabotage.”
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French President Emmanuel Macron called for “the urgent and unconditional reopening of the Strait of Hormuz,” adding that France and the UK were “ready to support”.
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British prime minister Keir Starmer said “toll-free freedom of navigation must now be restored in the Strait of Hormuz,” adding that the UK was ready “to offer support on mine clearance.” “It remains the UK’s firm and longstanding position that Iran must never have a nuclear weapon,” he added.
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Australian prime minister Anthony Albanese and foreign minister Penny Wong called for “continued restraint and constructive engagement”. “Iran must address longstanding concerns about its nuclear program and the threat it poses to international security,” they said in a joint statement.
Crude prices plunge, stocks surge on US-Iran peace deal
News of the US-Iran peace deal has been greeted by global markets with a sigh of relief.
The strait of Hormuz – a vital maritime chokepoint through which roughly 20% of the world’s crude oil supply transits – was effectively closed by Tehran soon after US-Israel strikes on Iran kicked off the conflict on 28 February, roiling global markets for months.
Writing on Truth Social on his 80th birthday, President Trump said:
“ I hereby fully authorize the toll free opening of the Strait of Hormuz, and, simultaneously herewith, authorize the immediate removal of the United States Naval blockade. “Ships of the World, start your engines. Let the oil flow!”
Crude prices tanked as much as 5% Monday, with West Texas Intermediate approaching $80 a barrel for the first time since the start of March. Brent was down more than 4% at about $83.60
Asian equities surged, led by Tokyo and Seoul, which piled on more than 5% apiece.
It’s been an eventful day, with the most substantial development we have seen so far in reaching a peace deal.
The tentative agreement comes more than three months after the US and Israel launched strikes Iran. But a lot of questions remain.
This helpful explainer addresses what we know, and don’t, so far.
Opening summary
Hello and welcome to our live coverage of events in the Middle East, with the US and Iran agreeing to a tentative deal to end the war.
There are still many details to be ironed out after an MoU is expected to be signed in Geneva on Friday.
Here is what we know so far.
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The US and Iran have reached a tentative peace deal to end the war, although many critical questions and details, including the reopening of the strait of Hormuz, and the future of Iran’s nuclear program, remain unanswered.
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The agreement was first announced by Pakistan’s prime minister, Shehbaz Sharif, who has been acting as a mediator. Minutes later, Donald Trump confirmed the deal, writing: “The Deal with the Islamic Republic of Iran is now complete. Congratulations to all!”
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Trump subsequently said the “Great Deal” would bring peace and security to the region and claimed the strait of Hormuz would be reopened. “The Leaders of the Region have, for the first time, found a President who can help them achieve real Peace,” he said in a post on Truth Social. “With the opening of the Strait upon the signing of the Deal on Friday, for purposes of mine removal, oil will flow on both ends again for the Region, and the World!”
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In televised comments, Iran’s deputy foreign minister Kazem Gharibabadi said the agreement with the United States puts an “immediate end” to the countries’ war. He said the end of the war had been declared on all fronts, including Lebanon.
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However, how the strait of Hormuz will be managed seems uncertain, with Iran’s state media Mehr saying that an MoU expected to be signed in Geneva on Friday stipulates that it will be carried out under “Iranian arrangements”.
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In a call to the New York Times, Trump claimed that under the deal the strait would be “permanently toll free”.
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Trump also insisted that if Iran failed to reach a final nuclear accord with the US, he would restart military attacks on Tehran or make the US “the guardian of the Middle East” in return for 20% of the region’s revenues.
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Some, such as Republican senator Lindsey Graham have expressed concern about the differing substance from US and Iranian negotiating teams.
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Leaders in Europe, Japan, and Australia have welcomed the deal, while the UN chief António Guterres hailed it as a “critical step”.
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Asian markets have responded positively to news, with benchmarks in Tokyo and Seoul gaining more than 5% early Monday. Oil prices fell more than $3 a barrel.
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There has been no immediate reaction to the announcement from Israel, which has said it was not party to the planned US-Iran deal. The agreement was sealed despite an Israeli strike on Lebanon on Sunday that drew criticism from both Iran and Trump.
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