SALT LAKE CITY Donovan Mitchell tried to walk it off, but he could hardly stand.
Early in the third quarter, Mitchell rolled his right ankle on an awkward fall after Edmond Sumner had swung his leg under the Jazz All-Star guard as he was landing.
Mitchell sat up, took a breath and got to his feet. Almost immediately, though, he was bent over looking for support as he appeared to almost collapse near the Indiana bench. Mitchell had to be practically carried back to the locker room.
The good news: The Jazz called it simply an ankle sprain. X-rays were negative and Mitchell will undergo an MRI Friday night with optimism that it will not be too serious.
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Dallas Mavericks star Luka Doncic expressed frustration with his team s effort after Friday night s 120-101 loss to the Jazz gave the Mavs seven losses in their past nine games.
January 26, 2021
Shaquille O’Neal is no stranger to speaking his mind about what he thinks of current NBA players. Whether it’s James Harden’s departure from the Houston Rockets to Utah Jazz guard Donovan Mitchell, the Hall of Fame center and current “Inside the NBA” analyst regularly voices his opinion about today’s players.
His latest target was Mitchell, who he said “doesn’t have what it takes to get to the next level” as he interviewed him post-game after a Jazz win against the New Orleans Pelicans. But while the 24-year-old guard chose to take the high road against the four-time champion big man, a Utah state legislator made it clear on which side they were.
Michael & Peter Formanek –
Dyads (Out Of Your Head): “Michael and Peter Formanek started making music and improvising together before Peter started school. Regular visits to their home from friends and colleagues like Tim Berne, Jim Black, Marty Ehrlich and many others only served to normalize this as being an essential part of human interaction. During much of their time living in Baltimore and as Peter began to study music formally (first on guitar then on saxophones and woodwinds), it was just part of daily life to have musicians come by to play, rehearse, or just hang out. This eventually turned into regular groups and collaborations that performed in local venues in and around Baltimore. For Peter’s eighteenth birthday they played a night of Michael’s music at the Cornelia Street Cafe with a lineup of Tim Berne and Peter Formanek on saxophones, Jacob Sacks on piano, Jim Black on drums, and Michael Formanek on bass. Peter went to University of Michigan in Ann Arbor in 2