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2026 NBA playoffs second-round odds: Spurs, Cavs favored to advance with Game 6 wins

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Every game the rest of the second round is a potential close-out game for someone. Friday brings a pair of Game 6s that could end the round or lead to a Game 7 or two.

First up, Cleveland tries to take out Detroit, the top seed in the East. Then, San Antonio’s young core can reach a significant milestone by taking out Minnesota on the road.

In both games, the team in position to advance with a win is favored.

This story will be updated throughout the second round as the odds change with the results for every game.

Eastern Conference

No. 1 Detroit Pistons vs. No. 4 Cleveland Cavaliers

Cavaliers lead series 3-2

Game 6: 7 p.m. ET, Friday

Series odds: Cavaliers -320, Pistons +260

Twice it appeared the Pistons were in control of Game 5, but Cleveland kept coming back and finally has its first road win of the playoffs.

Detroit led by 15 midway through the second quarter before the Cavs made a run in the third quarter to take the lead. The Pistons rebuilt a nine-point lead with less than three minutes to go, but the Cavs stormed back again.

Detroit didn’t score in the final three minutes of regulation and took two minutes into overtime to score again. Cleveland scored 13 straight points as part of an 18-2 run that flipped the game and this series on its head.

After that 117-113 overtime win, Cleveland has the lead in this series for the first time after winning three in a row. Now, the Cavs head home, where they are 6-0 this postseason, with a chance to close out the series. The Cavs are favored by 3.5 points in Game 6.

Donovan Mitchell had an off game with 21 points on 7-for-18 shooting (1-for-8 from 3-point range) for Cleveland. James Harden had a star performance with 30 points and Max Strus picked up the slack with 20 points on six made 3-pointers.

Cade Cunningham had 39 points on 27 shots in 48 minutes for Detroit, but no other Piston reached 20 points.

No. 3 New York Knicks vs. No. 7 Philadelphia 76ers

Knicks win series 4-0

The Knicks really have hit overdrive in the last seven games. Since falling behind the Atlanta Hawks 2-1 in the first round, the Knicks have won seven straight games by an average of 26.4 points per game. Sure, that 51-point win in Game 6 in the Hawks is skewing that average a bit, but there are two other wins by 30 or more points in that run, and six of the seven wins were by at least 14.

This is why the Knicks are favored to make the NBA Finals. While the Pistons and Cavs are beating each other up, the Knicks have been on cruise control.

This makes two years in a row in the Eastern Conference finals for New York. Last year didn’t go so well, but Knicks fans will have renewed hope with the way the team has been playing.

The Knicks last made the NBA Finals in 1999.

Western Conference

No. 1 Oklahoma City Thunder vs. No. 4 Los Angeles Lakers

Thunder win series 4-0

This could’ve been a fun series had Luka Dončić been available for the Lakers. It would’ve been a meeting of arguably the two best guards in the league.

Instead, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and the Thunder brushed the Lakers aside with a four-game sweep, and Luka could only watch in street clothes. Monday’s Game 4 was the only competitive game of the series, but that’s hardly a consolation for LA.

The Lakers came back from 12 points down in the third quarter to build a five-point lead on a few occasions in the fourth quarter and led in the final minute, but LeBron James missed a potential go-ahead shot with 20 seconds left, and Austin Reaves missed a potential tying 3-pointer on the next Lakers possession.

While the Thunder are still the clear favorites to win the NBA title, the Lakers have to figure out what to do with their roster. No one got to see what this team could do in the playoffs with its best player, Dončić, which makes evaluating the roster a bit more complicated. Will they run it back or have to retool?

No. 2 San Antonio Spurs vs. No. 6 Minnesota Timberwolves

Spurs lead series 3-2

Game 6: 9:30 p.m. ET, Friday

Series odds: Spurs -1200, Timberwolves +750

The Spurs were heavily favored to win Game 5 and delivered, so much so that they had to essentially blow out Minnesota three times.

San Antonio jumped out to a 24-9 lead, only to see Minnesota get back within two points before the end of the first quarter. The Spurs rebuilt their lead, going up by 18 in the second quarter before Minnesota stormed back to tie the game in the third quarter. San Antonio eventually put away Minnesota for good, winning 126-97. The Timberwolves’ only lead was 5-3.

It was a dominant win in a series that is close on paper, but has never been close in the odds. The Spurs were -425 to advance before Game 5 and are now an overwhelming favorite to advance at -1200. The Spurs are favored by 4.5 points on the road in Game 6.

It wasn’t a full-on Victor Wembanyama revenge game after being ejected in Game 4, but his line was still impressive: 27 points, 17 rebounds, five assists, three blocks. In a display of San Antonio’s depth on the wings, Keldon Johnson had 21 points on 8-for-11 shooting off the bench. The Spurs’ formula is Wembanyama doing his thing plus one or two of their handful of talented wings having good games.

Anthony Edwards had 20 points in 39 minutes for Minnesota. In the nine minutes he wasn’t on the floor, the Timberwolves were outscored by 20 points. Ouch.

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Eight things Michael Carrick must focus on at Manchester United if he takes the job permanently

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Michael Carrick is a step closer to becoming Manchester United’s next permanent head coach after The Athletic revealed that is the recommendation the club’s football leaders.

Carrick took interim charge of United in January following Ruben Amorim’s exit and two games under Darren Fletcher and recovered their league form dramatically to earn qualification for the Champions League next season.

The Athletic reported on Wednesday that the recommendation of the club’s leading football executives to co-owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe is to make Carrick the club’s permanent head coach and that is expected to pave the way for talks over him staying in charge.

Andy Mitten looks at the eight areas Carrick must focus on if he does take over the job permanently to ensure his success as interim continues.


Win football matches

This is, by a distance, the most important thing for Carrick and his team. And the hardest to achieve. Carrick has got into the position to be the clear favourite for the United head coach’s job by winning 10 out of 15 league games and taking his team from seventh to third. That seemed improbable in January, but he’s proved people wrong, overseeing wins home or away against Arsenal, Manchester City, Liverpool, Villa, Brentford and Chelsea — all the main rivals this season.

The dropped points have mostly come against teams lower down: West Ham, Leeds, Newcastle United and Sunderland. Carrick has overachieved with the squad he has, made the best of the players he’s got. Putting them into a 4-2-3-1 system they were used to helped after the Amorim experiment floundered.

The expectation among most fans is that this level of wins should be the norm, as it is at most huge clubs. Fans expect United to be in the top four and if they’re not, there will be complaints. Is this reasonable? If United recruit well this summer, then a top-four finish and a run to the Champions League knockout stages is a reasonable expectation.

If he falls well short of that and United regress, then pressure will build around Carrick’s perceived lack of top-level experience, but people shouldn’t jump on him. Ruben Amorim was well supported by fans, despite his team finishing 15th.


Strengthen coaching staff

In the summer of 2024, Andreas Georgson and Ruud van Nistelrooy joined United as coaches to assist Erik ten Hag. Both were very highly rated internally and externally. Both moved on, Van Nistelrooy to Leicester, Georgson to Tottenham, when Ruben Amorim got the United job. United felt they had lost two excellent coaches but accepted that a manager chooses those around him.

Carrick’s staff could be strengthened further (Photo: Paul ELLIS / AFP via Getty Images)

United will be open to adding another coach to Carrick’s staff. Georgson was a set-piece specialist. This is an area where United are likely to look to add. Carrick trusts the coaches around him: the wily Steve Holland, Jonny Evans, Jonathan Woodgate and goalkeeping coach Craig Mawson. But don’t bet against an addition.


Approve the right signings

It’s another huge summer for United. The last one was a positive for recruitment with the arrival of Matheus Cunha, Bryan Mbeumo, Benjamin Sesko and Senne Lammens. All get a tick by their name for their good first seasons. It’s hoped that all will improve in their second, too.

United want two midfielders, likely three if Manuel Ugarte leaves. These are vital. For all Casemiro’s qualities, too many teams attacked United through the middle and tried to get around him, with varying success. It’s the area of the pitch Carrick knows best.

A goalkeeping backup to Lammens is desired, a left-sided player too. And a forward if Joshua Zirkzee exits, as he could. A defensive leader can wait if the current defenders remain.

United have money but must use it well, as they did last season. The entire budget could be spent on an Elliot Anderson and that wouldn’t be wise. The club are well prepared going into the window, but this isn’t yet the Manchester United of old, where transfer records are broken. This squad is short of mounting a sustained Premier League bid and that’s not going to be sorted in one window after a season of no European football.

Revenues from tickets, sponsorship, commercial and broadcast are all set to increase substantially, but anyone who thinks United will offer the astronomical transfer fees and wages of yore is mistaken.

While he may not identify the targets, every player signed will be with Carrick’s approval.


Making the right calls with returnees

Marcus Rashford, Jadon Sancho, Rasmus Hojlund, Andre Onana are all the biggest names out on loan. Emerging talents Radek Vitek, Toby Collyer and Harry Amass need to be playing first-team football in a top league or the Championship. Some will be sold, or at least up for sale to get money in.

Fortunately, most of the biggest issues will resolve themselves. Rashford’s wages are high, but his stock is higher than a year ago after a successful, title-winning season at Barcelona. Hojlund is contracted to sign for Napoli, having been a success. More income, but still a loss on his transfer fee. Sancho will be out of contract, an extremely costly signing for whom there’s no return, despite him being only 26.

Onana had a decent season at Trabzonspor, who finished third in Turkey. There’s a market for these talents, there’s a much smaller one for their high wages.

Does Carrick foresee more minutes for one of the returning youngsters? That’s one reason for pre-season.

This isn’t all on Carrick, but United need to move men on in a way that they can be considered good deals for the club. That’s the hard bit, since United are not selling from a position of strength with most of the players, more because they’ve not worked out at Old Trafford.


How he projects himself

Carrick is cool, calm and looks the part in his Manchester United suit. He’s a man of integrity, with multiple testimonies to that. He’s confident in his ability, too. When Sanne Lammens made a rare mistake against Liverpool, Carrick simply said: “These things happen”. And they do. He empowers the other coaches to take responsibility and accountability for coaching certain parts of the game.

Carrick backs players in public when they’ve had a bad game because he knows it can come back around, that everyone has an off day. He doesn’t write any player off publicly. To him, he must protect lads he’s got to work with because he knows he might need them all.

Carrick may reveal more of himself in a permanent role (Photo: Mark Cosgrove/News Images/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Carrick’s answers in press conferences could be better, but that’s likely because he’s talking in an interim role. I suspect we’ll see more detail and explanations once his position is permanent, with more of his own opinions, but he’s not going to turn into somebody he isn’t, not someone who bangs his own drum or feeds tabloids a juicy line.

“He’s straight, he doesn’t lie,” is what one source who has worked with him told The Athletic. “And that’s a beautiful thing about him.”


Style of play

The football has been good under Carrick. It could be better. And you could have said the same under any manager. Carrick was a coach before a manager and he still coaches.

He excels at build-up from the back and gives detail and guidance to players on positioning, opponents. He wants players to be brave, to have the technical ability and the togetherness to play from the back. It’s not just about starting attacks, but being authoritative, being better than the other team.

Carrick speaks to his players about angles and connections through patterns of play. In his mind, complex stuff is clear. His ability to talk to players on their level is excellent because he’s spent much of his life on their level.

Carrick has a degree of pragmatism. At Middlesbrough, he told people he’d worked with at Manchester United that he’d needed to adapt because the league was different. He still wanted to be possession dominant and stretch the opposition and have a good structure to protect against counterattacks, but he understands the need for variety, that certain matches and conditions don’t need as much information.

“I love possessing the ball,” he said in an interview as Middlesbrough manager. “That’s what I do by nature and I love for my teams to be that way too. I see the game as an attempt to possess the ball. Not just for the sake of possessing it — I’m just not that interested in stats themselves. It’s just about feeling you’re in control of the game.”


Handling 50-60 games

It’ll be a big shift from one game per week, but Carrick handled this when he was Middlesbrough manager and he handled it when he was part of the staff under Ole Gunnar Solskjaer and United were playing 60 games per season. He also handled it as a player — most of his football career was him at a club playing 50-60 games, two games per week. He’s been there, but not as United’s head coach.

Ruben Amorim asked for full weeks with his players when he arrived. He got this, but the connections between players and the comprehension of his plan didn’t get much better.

More football can have other advantages. Gone will be the slow news weeks when everything gets overanalysed because of a lack of games. More potential incidents, more to talk about can be useful. He absolutely has opinions and a fire in his belly; he just doesn’t always choose to show it publicly. Once bitten, twice shy.


Managing the dressing room

Carrick is popular with players. He’s not a coach who will dump too much information on them and expect them to go for it. He tells them what’s appropriate and tries to frame it in as simple language as possible. Less is more and he’s comfortable with that.

Many managers, including most of the recent Manchester United managers, were not. They wanted to give the players everything, to arm them with all the information. Carrick understands the mental load that a player can take. It’s one reason you’re seeing United players enthusing about him. Those starters get a lot of responsibility.

Those who aren’t getting minutes will almost always be annoyed and, while the United dressing room is much improved on two years ago, there are still a couple of complex characters with big egos who need to be managed well. There will be more games and opportunities next season than this. And that’s in part a reward Carrick’s earned by improving United to get the club back into the Champions League.

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Connections: Sports Edition today: Hints and answers for May 14, 2026, puzzle No. 598

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Need help with today’s Connections: Sports Edition puzzle? You’ve come to the right place.

Welcome to Connections: Sports Edition Coach — a spot to gather clues and discuss (and share) scores.

A quick public service announcement before we continue: The bottom of this article includes the answers — and hints — for the four categories. So if you want to solve the board hint-free, we recommend you play before continuing.

You can access today’s game here.

Today’s difficulty

Game No. 598’s difficulty: 3 out of 5

Connections: Sports Edition hints for May 14, 2026

Scroll below for one answer in each of the four categories.

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Yellow: WRESTLING

Green: BASEBALL

Blue: PROFESSIONAL

Purple: BEAVERS

Connections: Sports Edition answers for May 14, 2026

Scroll below for the full answers to each of the four categories.

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Yellow

Combat sports: BOXING, JUDO, TAEKWONDO, WRESTLING

Green

Types of basketball passes: BASEBALL, BOUNCE, CHEST, OVERHEAD

Blue

LPGA: LADIES, PROFESSIONAL, GOLF, ASSOCIATION

Purple

Members of the Baltimore Orioles: ALONSO, BAZ, BEAVERS, MAYO

What is Connections: Sports Edition?

Connections: Sports Edition is The Athletic’s first-ever game, a daily puzzle designed for players to find connections between 16 words on the game board.

The game’s objective is to group words or objects into four groups of four based on commonalities within each group as quickly as possible. Find the groups without making four mistakes. Each puzzle has exactly one solution, so watch out for words or items that seem to belong to multiple categories!

Category examples:
Sports ____ : Fan, Car, Bar, Radio
U.S. Summer Olympians: Biles, Phelps, Ledecky, Lyles

Each category group is assigned a color, revealed as you solve, ranging from straightforward (yellow) to medium (green) to challenging (blue) to tricky (purple).

Who creates the puzzles for Connections: Sports Edition?

That’s me! My name is Mark Cooper, and I create Connections: Sports Edition and work as a managing editor for college sports here at The Athletic. I was previously The Athletic’s managing editor for breaking news.

The next puzzle will be available at midnight in your time zone. Thanks for playing — and share your scores in the comments!

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Southampton early favourites for Championship play-off final against Hull City

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The Championship play-off final has long been labelled the richest game in football and this year’s showdown between Hull City and Southampton on May 23 is no different, with promotion to the Premier League potentially worth around £200million.

The market already has a firm favourite.

Southampton are 17/20 to secure promotion and 8/11 to win in 90 minutes after extending their unbeaten league run with a dramatic extra-time semi-final victory over Middlesbrough.

Shea Charles’ late cross-shot settled a tie that had already been simmering, due to an ongoing investigation into allegations a Southampton analyst filmed the opposition’s training sessions before the game.

Pending the fallout from that saga, Southampton would arrive at Wembley with momentum, experience and the weight of expectation. The south-coast side also know what it takes to win at this stage, after beating Leeds United in the 2024 play-off final.

Hull, by contrast, are the outsiders at 18/5 for promotion and 16/5 to win inside 90 minutes, but that may suit them perfectly.

They only sealed their play-off place on the final day after overtaking Wrexham, before growing into their semi-final against Millwall and winning 2-0 away from home thanks to goals from substitutes Mohamed Belloumi and Joe Gelhardt.

The pricing suggests bookmakers respect Hull’s threat, even if Southampton are favourites. A draw after 90 minutes is 15/8, while under 2.5 goals is heavily favoured at 1/2.

It points towards a tense final and Championship play-off finals have often been decided by moments. Sunderland beat Sheffield United 2-1 with a late goal in the 2025 final and the early markets imply another tight affair this season.

Southampton’s control and consistency across the second half of the season understandably give them an edge, but Hull’s late surge means they arrive with freedom and less external pressure.

That combination could make Wembley unpredictable, despite Southampton’s pedigree, and leave Hull believing another upset remains entirely possible.

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