NBA gets OK to explore Las Vegas, Seattle expansion

The NBA Board of Governors gave the league approval to begin exploring bids for potential expansion teams in Las Vegas and Seattle on Wednesday.

Field Level Media

The bidding process is expected to generate offers in the $7 billion to $10 billion range for each franchise, ESPN reported.

"Today's vote reflects our Board's interest in exploring potential expansion to Las Vegas and Seattle -- two markets with a long history of support for NBA basketball," said NBA commissioner Adam Silver. "We look forward to taking this next step and engaging with interested parties."

A proposal to begin the expansion talks required a positive vote from at least 23 of the NBA's 30 team governors. The league did not break down the final voting numbers from the ongoing meetings in New York.

Formal vetting of potential buyers is typically a months-long process involving detailed financial forensics. The NBA has hired investment bank PJT Partners as a strategic adviser "to evaluate prospective markets, ownership groups, arena infrastructure, and the broader economic implications of expansion."

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Previous reports said the new teams could be ready to begin play by the 2028-29 season.

Seattle was home to the NBA's SuperSonics from 1967-68 through 2007-08, winning a championship in 1979. The franchise relocated and became the Oklahoma City Thunder, winning a second title last season.

NBA events have been held for years in Las Vegas, including the annual Summer League, but no NBA franchise has ever anchored in Nevada. The WNBA's Las Vegas Aces have called the city home since 2018 and have won three of the last four championships.

The league last expanded in 2004, and a realignment might be necessary to accommodate two new teams. A current Western Conference team -- Minnesota, Memphis and New Orleans are logical solutions -- could be placed in the East to make the transition to 32 teams work.

--Field Level Media

NBA gets OK to explore Las Vegas, Seattle expansion

The NBA Board of Governors gave the league approval to begin exploring bids for potential expansion teams in Las Vegas...
Is the old Jayson Tatum back? How the Celtics star has looked in his return so far

Who doesn't love a good return, am I right? Your favorite artist making new music, a superhero saving the day, a TV couple finally answering the "Will they or won't they get back together?" question. There's a joy that comes with it. It's like anything is possible. Jon Snow rose from the dead, Snooki went back to the Jersey Shore house, order has been restored.

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Basketball, of course, has had its fair share too. From "Here comes Willis!" to Magic Johnson at the 1992 All-Star Game to "I'm back," etc., etc.

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The latest entry is, of course, Jayson Tatum, who went froma ruptured Achilles in May 2025toplaying NBA basketball in March 2026. That feat alone should be applauded, the effort and determination to make it happen should be celebrated.

The thing about a return, though, is the second that moment sticks there is a harsh reality of: "What's next?" The games stack and that adrenaline is replaced with a reminder of expectations. Those expectations could be accelerated by the Boston Celtics being the No. 2 seed in the Eastern Conference, or because of the All-NBA form Tatum was in pre-injury. With a (small) sample size, how do we evaluate a player who wasn't likely to return, on a team that wasn't expected to doall of this?

The reintegration of Jayson Tatum

The Celtics are 6-2 in games that Tatum has played in, so hopefully we can throw a bow on the Jaylen Brown/Tatum discourse for a beat. There's a familiarity that exists, but also reintegration that must take place.

All season long the Celtics' roster has understood the assignment. Offensively, without Tatum, we saw ball movement in the half-court, an effort to get to drive-and-kick, off-ball movement and (of course) a lot of 3s. Very little of that has to go away with Tatum returning, and to a degree it gives Tatum more margin for error. As he works to find his rhythm and confidence, it could help nothavingto make every single play.

Something that flies under the radar is what the Celtics' offense can do as far as opening up shots and opportunities for Tatum.

Jaylen Brown has had an incredible season, but notice the decision defenses have to make when Brown looks to attack. A wing iso with Tatum one pass away opens doors. You're either opening up a driving lane (that Brown ismore than willingto attack) or committing to help and opening a kick to Tatum for a shot. This can make the —checks shooting splits— misses from Tatum feel a little louder, but that type of shot quality and pressure feels like something Boston would live with day in and day out.

Using Brown and Tatum in action together also has value, but we can be honest, most defenses are going to switch. Since Tatum's return, I've been watching the "wave effect." Stick with me.

The added pressure point is when a defense has to be concerned with one of them on one side of the floor and that flows into the other attacking on the other side. A quick dribble-handoff to Brown is going to draw nail help, leading to an advance pass to Tatum, who now can attack a tilted defense. It's a subtle way for Boston to find a blend and get the best of both worlds.

Flashes of the 'Old Tatum'

According to the tracking data fromNBA.com, Tatum averaged 10.3 drives per game last year. He's at 9.7 per game since he's returned. Why is this important? One, it points to him being a similar type of player as when he left. Two, whenever a player returns from injury, I'm looking at how much theywantto drive the basketball. It's an indicator of how they are feeling in that moment.

Tatum has been willing and it feels important because of how much of a rhythm player he is. One of my favorite basketball riddles is, does the shot set up the drive or does the drive set up the shot? The easiest ways to see flashes of the "Old Tatum" is when he's had his strongest drives. The patience is still there, the craft is still there, but it can sometimes be a fight between the mind and the body.

There are moments where you can see Tatum revving up for a drive and trying to find the footwork to set up a finish or work through contact. There are also moments where the footwork is on point, the grace returns and rhythm is a dancer. The willingness to drive speaks volume and the flashes of confidence feel just as important as the result.

Boston has tried to help Tatum by setting higher screens for him to get downhill and get some momentum to get to a pull-up 3 or get downhill into the paint. The Celtics have worked to flow into an action when Tatum trails in transition and a big is positioned ready to screen for him. If the ball advances to him, it's a pick-and-roll with him on the move. If it doesn't, it's flare screen with him moving into space. It appears intentional to allow him to rev up in a natural flow.

One thing that has also stood out on tape has been the passing from Tatum since he's returned. He grew as a playmaker pre-injury, but to return and get right back to reading defenses is impressive. He's been quick, decisive and on-target once he sees how defenses are helping.

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What Tatum adds to the Celtics

Tatum's return has brought an added bonus to the Celtics: a pressure point. Boston has used Tatum as a screener (or has had someone screen for him) to try to create an advantage. This is not a new tactic for the Celtics, but it does carry a little more weight if an initial action fails or if they can get to it within the flow of the offense. Tatum as a screener has been most impactful in matchups where a team doesn't want to switch a specific defender onto him. One moment of hesitation can open up a shot for Tatum or others.

Tatum has shown he still has a knack for doing the little things as an on-ball screener. Sometimes he's screening wide, getting enough of a push so the defense can't get under, and working toward the elbow.

Other times, he's slipping in the path of a defender before they can complete the switch, opening a roll to the rim.

Boston will still have people screen for Tatum to attack matchups in a more "traditional" way. The key again is to keep pressure on a defense.

A little thing that Tatum does is work to make a quick decision to secure a coverage. You can see below against Phoenix, Sam Hauser screens for him to get Collin Gillespie in action. He takes one dribble right and thenimmediatelygoes back left. That combined with Hauser working to roll the other way secures the switch. Tatum is able to get in the paint, force more help and open up a kick to Derrick White.

It can be easy at times to think of screening to attack matchups as just an "on ball" type of action, but it can be just as powerful off ball. Boston has worked to go to elbow action to get Tatum involved as a screener, a disguise to get defenses to potentially give a switch without giving away what it truly wants to attack.

Tatum will set a back screen and immediately look to slip and dive toward the post. It's a test of what a defense wants to do and how it will react. It's another leverage play on Tatum as a pressure point, a hope that a defense either is not clean at the first level, or that the weakside reacts to Tatum closer to the basket.

What can get lost in the reintegration process is the impact a player can still have without stuffing every single part of the box score. Boston has to continue to work to figure out how to best use Tatum. He adds layers to the offensive attack and the Celtics can get to those without changing what they've done.

Joe Mazzulla was recently quoted as saying Tatum is "giving the game what it needs," and I think that speaks volumes. Tatum's presence can impact their formula and winning without altering much of the attention to detail they've shown throughout the year.

How Tatum has looked on defense

Lastly, I do want to mention Tatum's defense because it was one of the bigger question marks I had upon his return. Not in a pure 1v1 type of way, but how would he fit into the Celtics' defensive context. The way they guard requires multiple efforts, working to help and recover to yours, closing back out to the perimeter and containing.

One of my favorite parts of watching the Celtics' defense this year has been the different ways they show help and collapse on drives. Sometimes it's sudden. Sometimes it's subtle. Sometimes it's sneaky; the closer you get to the basket, the more jerseys you see.

For the most part, Tatum has fit in and done his job. What that lacks in neon lights, it makes up for in honest work. Just because a seasoning isn't bold doesn't mean it's not getting the job done. Tatum has had good reps on the weakside, has worked to get to the right spot, has been ready to switch and work to contain dribble penetration.

What will get interesting is seeing how and when teams look to attack him. It's not so much that the Celtics (or Tatum) have worked to hide him, more so human nature. Tatum has been willing to switch, but do teams try to up the ante? I'm curious about teamsmakingTatum make multiple efforts, getting him to guard multiple actions or guard on the move. Is that something teams will poke at while there is still some rust? Would that benefit Tatum going into the playoffs?

At the end of the day, the most important thing basketball-wise is piecing all of this together. There is a mental aspect that we as observers, analysts, fans can't grasp. And that mental aspect can loom around the corner, or linger in the present and bring doubt about the future. It's hard to imagine a world where Jayson Tatum came back and didn't want to get right back to being Jayson Tatum.

The trick is balancing that, but also understanding that coming back is still impacting success in winning. Progress over perfection, giving your best and understanding that may look different each day. For Tatum it has to be about building on the flashes, stacking the moments on top of each other and moving forward.

The Celtics and Tatum are both better off having each other to rely on. The question may be how far that will take them, but there is no doubt they have a chance to make a louder noise together.

Is the old Jayson Tatum back? How the Celtics star has looked in his return so far

Who doesn't love a good return, am I right? Your favorite artist making new music, a superhero saving the day, a TV c...
US suspends anti-smog fuel rules in bid to ease pump prices

By Jarrett Renshaw

Reuters

HOUSTON, March 25 (Reuters) - President Donald Trump's administration announced on Wednesday it will temporarily suspend federal anti-smog regulations on seasonal ‌gasoline blends to combat higher pump prices since the start ‌of the war on Iran.

The move by the Environmental Protection Agency will allow retailers to sell ​less expensive formulations of gasoline, including mixtures that include 15% ethanol – known as E15 – that are typically not permitted during warmer months.

The waiver takes effect for 20 days starting May 1, and can be extended if needed, the agency ‌said.

"We foresee potential for ⁠a disruption to the American fuel supply," EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin said at a press conference on the sidelines of ⁠the CERAWeek energy conference in Houston, at which he announced the waiver.

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An EPA press release said the move allows nationwide sales of E15 and will also "remove all ​federal ​impediments to selling E10, gasoline blended with ​10 percent ethanol, across the ‌country." E10 is already widely available year-round.

Analysts said the change could shave several cents per gallon off retail prices. The U.S. average price for a gallon of regular gasoline is running just over $3.98, up more than a dollar from a month ago, according to data from AAA.

Global oil prices have ‌surged since the start of the U.S. ​and Israeli war against Iran as the conflict ​blocks shipments through the Strait ​of Hormuz, the conduit for a fifth of world crude ‌and liquefied natural gas supply.

The White ​House is trying ​to contain the economic and political fallout from the war. It has already announced a release of crude oil from U.S. emergency stockpiles ​and the easing of ‌sanctions on both Russia and Iran to make more of their ​oil available to the market.

(Writing by Richard Valdmanis; Editing by Costas ​Pitas, Chizu Nomiyama and Nia Williams)

US suspends anti-smog fuel rules in bid to ease pump prices

By Jarrett Renshaw HOUSTON, March 25 (Reuters) - President Donald Trump's administration announced on Wedn...
Biden admin's top civil rights lawyer joins NAACP as Trump attacks on voting rights escalate

The former assistant attorney general for civil rights under President Joe Biden, Kristen Clarke, is joining the National Association for the Advancement of Color People (NAACP) as general counsel, according to the organization.

CNN Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division speaks during a news conference Thursday, December 5, 2024, in Memphis, Tennessee. - George Walker IV/AP/File

Clarke was previously the top civil rights lawyer at the Justice Department where she led the Civil Rights Division. Her move to the NAACP comes as the Justice Department under President Donald Trump has been redoubling its efforts aroundelections and voting rights.

"The move comes as the Trump Administration works to erode democratic institutions and dismantle civil rights protections. To meet the moment, the NAACP is expanding its own capabilities and ramping up its investment in its legal advocacy efforts by hiring the former senior Justice Department official to fight back," the NAACP said in the news release about Clarke's hire.

Clarke started her career at the Justice Department as a trial attorney for the civil rights division in 2000. In 2006, she was hired by the NAACP Legal Defense Fund to focus on the organization's work with voting rights and election law. During her time at the NAACP, Clarke worked on several cases defending the Voting Rights Act.

She went on to work on civil rights issues for the state of New York and in courts across the country.

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"The NAACP has stood on the front lines of justice for over a century, and I'm deeply honored to join this historic organization at this critical moment in our democracy," Clarke said in a statement announcing her new role as NAACP general counsel.

The Justice Department's Civil Rights Division is less active during Republican administrations, but the Trump administration has used it to reverse policies that promote diversity, equity and inclusion and enforce its own agenda.

As of last April, Clarke's successor, Harmeet Dhillon, had slashed the Civil Rights Division byroughly 70%since assuming the role in order to prioritize goals of the Trump administration.

She said at the time she intended to replace those lawyers so the department could focus on efforts that included rooting out anti-Christian bias, antisemitism and what she called "woke ideology," among other things.

CNN reached out to the Justice Department for comment.

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Biden admin’s top civil rights lawyer joins NAACP as Trump attacks on voting rights escalate

The former assistant attorney general for civil rights under President Joe Biden, Kristen Clarke, is joining the National...
'He liked the fear in our eyes', Epstein survivors tell BBC

Joanna Harrison never wanted to speak about the abuse she faced at the hands of convicted sex offenderJeffrey Epstein.

BBC

Like many survivors, she says Epstein's assault filled her with shame and embarrassment. But after her name was unintentionally made public in the release of millions of files by the US government, she told BBC Newsnight's Victoria Derbyshire she felt she had to speak out.

"It gets to a point where you're being suffocated and you need to breathe, and I feel this is my way of trying to breathe," Harrison said.

BBC Newsnight brought Harrison and four other Epstein survivors together for the first time in the same room. During the hours-long discussion that followed, there were supportive gestures and, as they studied photos of themselves from the time when they first met Epstein, there were tears.

In the wide-ranging interview, the survivors told their stories of grief and anger. Some revisitedEpstein's infamous private island, Little St James, while others recounted "eerie" moments at his New Mexico ranch.

They said they believed thepowerful figureswith whom he associated himself would most likely have known what was going on.

Survivor's identity thrust into spotlight

Millions of documents related to the various investigations of Epstein werereleased by the US Department of Justice, but some of the unredacted material failed to obscure the identity of his victims.

Harrison was one of those people whose name was made public.

She told BBC Newsnight she never wanted the files to be released, fearing she would lose her anonymity.

"It's not normal to see your abuser's face every day for six years on TV," Harrison said.

She recounted meeting Epstein in Florida when she was 18, and like other survivors, she said everything began with a massage.

"Everything seemed normal," Harrison said. "When he began to masturbate, I completely froze. I don't think I said two words in the car in the ride home."

She later recounted Epstein raping her on his birthday.

Speaking publicly for the first time, Harrison said she doubted she and other survivors would ever get justice now that Epstein was dead. "I have questions I'll never get an answer to."

Five countries in five days with Clinton, Spacey and Maxwell

Chauntae Davies shared never-before-seen images with BBC Newsnight of her time travelling with Epstein on his private plane to Africa.

The pictures included Epstein's co-conspirator Ghislaine Maxwell as well as actor Kevin Spacey and former President Bill Clinton. Spacey and Clinton were travelling on a humanitarian trip to promote Aids prevention.

"I described it in my journal at the time as the most eclectic group of people that you could put together... it was almost like a camp feel because you were travelling to five different countries in five days," she said. On the plane they ate snacks, played cards and told stories.

"It was very much a once-in-a-lifetime trip, and unfortunately, it had to be tainted by what was happening behind closed doors," she said.

Davies has said she was raped by Epstein on his private island after being hired to give him massages.

A woman, Ghislane Maxwell, with a short haircut smiles and stands behind a white podium to her left a man, Kevin Spacey, has a cell phone on his right ear. He is wearing a navy shirt and blue jeans.

The trained massage therapist recalled during the Newsnight discussion that she gave Clinton a neck and back massage at an airport in Portugal while the plane refuelled. At the time, she said she wrote in her journal that the former president was humble, kind and charismatic.

Bill Clinton, an older man with short grey hair, stands close to a young woman, Chauntae Davies. Clinton is in a black short-sleeve t-shirt that has the Air Jordan logo on it. Davies is wearing a light-washed jean jacket. They are inside a plane.

The former president was asked about this interaction with Davies when he sat for a deposition in front of the US House Oversight Committee in February. He told the committee he wished Davies had told him about Epstein's wrongdoing.

But Davies said she never considered telling Clinton: "I was never going to speak about this with anyone."

"What would he have done, really? Could [Clinton] have stopped it?" Davies wondered about Epstein's wrongdoing. "I guess we'll never know."

At one point, while in Portugal with Clinton, Davies recalled helping the former president buy jewellery for his daughter, Chelsea.

Chauntae Davies, with blonde shoulder-length hair, wearing a navy jumper, looks straight ahead. A blue and purple cityscape sits in the background.

Clinton has repeatedly said he did not witness Epstein's abuse. His name crops up hundreds of times in the Epstein files. Appearing in documents related to Epstein does not imply any wrongdoing.

Spacey has publicly called for the release of all the Epstein files, saying: "For those of us with nothing to fear, the truth can't come soon enough."

Epstein's 'eerie' New Mexico ranch

Earlier this year, allegations surfaced in justice department files about Epstein that prompted the US state of New Mexico to re-open a criminal probe into his Zorro Ranch.

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The state previously shelved its initial investigation into the ranch in 2019 following a request from federal prosecutors in New York.

"That's where the majority of the assaults happened. I have my darkest memories from Zorro Ranch," Davies said.

When she recalled what it felt like to be there, she told BBC Newsnight she had felt "trapped".

"It had a cold, dark, eerie feeling in there," Davies said.

Lisa Phillips, another survivor who spoke to BBC Newsnight, echoed that sentiment about the ranch. "I remember being like 'this place is really creepy', it just had that feel to it," she said.

Davies said she believes there is a lot more to uncover about what happened at Zorro Ranch.

'I like to have things on people', Epstein told survivor

Epstein loved to brag about his well-connected and well-appointed friends, Davies said.

She said he bragged about lending money to Sarah Ferguson, the former Duchess of York. "It wasn't a secret," Davies told BBC Newsnight.

There were framed photos of Ferguson with her former husband, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, and their daughters at Epstein's property, Davies said.

Phillips, a fashion model at the time, also spoke about Epstein's connections to Mountbatten-Windsor and retold a story of her friend, who has not spoken publicly and wants to remain anonymous, allegedly being instructed to have sex with Mountbatten-Windsor.

She said her friend went to Epstein's Upper East Side New York City apartment in 2003 where she was directed to go into a room and have sex with a man whom she said was Mountbatten-Windsor.

Mountbatten-Windsor has consistently denied all wrongdoing.

Lisa Phillips with wavy black hair, looks straight ahead. She wears a black top. A blue and purple cityscape sits in the background.

Phillips told BBC Newsnight she later asked Epstein why he had made her friend have sex with Mountbatten-Windsor. She said Epstein smirked and replied: "I like to have things on people."

"He liked the fear in our eyes," she said of Epstein's abuses. "I think he liked that we were frozen and scared and didn't know what to do, and I think he got off on that."

In the Newsnight interview, Phillips called on the UK police to speak to her about what she knows about her friend's alleged assault and Mountbatten-Windsor's involvement.

Mountbatten-Windsor was arrested in February on suspicion of misconduct in public office. The probe centres on accusations he shared confidential, sensitive information Epstein while serving as a UK trade envoy.

The survivors who spoke to BBC Newsnight said they do not believe Epstein killed himself.

"We knew him, we knew the kind of person he was," Phillips said.

Epstein was found dead in his prison cell on 10 August 2019 while he was being held at the Metropolitan Correctional Center, in New York, on sex trafficking and conspiracy charges ahead of trial.

It was ruled a suicide by the New York medical examiner.

'I don't smile the same way now' - Epstein's lasting impact

Jena Lisa Jones and Wendy Pesante both met Epstein when they were 14. The women were friends then and, years later after surviving Epstein's abuse, still are.

"When you go through something like that so young it kind of distorts your reality for a long time," Pesante said. "You shouldn't have the mindset of a sex worker at 14."

At one point during the interview, all five survivors were given photos of themselves at the age they were when they met Epstein.

"I don't smile the same way anymore," Harrison said, looking at the image of her 18-year-old self.

Phillips looked at the photo of herself in a light-pink ensemble, on a boat, and realised Epstein's island was in the background.

"I was enjoying my life, and I had no idea what was about to happen to me," she said of herself in the image. "This is not what I looked like when I left the island."

UK users can watch the full interview on Newsnight on BBC Two at 22:30 GMT and later onBBC iPlayer

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'He liked the fear in our eyes', Epstein survivors tell BBC

Joanna Harrison never wanted to speak about the abuse she faced at the hands of convicted sex offenderJeffrey Epstein....

 

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