Lakers' Luka Doncic hurts left hamstring in a blowout loss to Thunder with MRI set for Friday

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic injured his left hamstring on Thursday night and coach JJ Redick said the league's scoring leader will have an MRI on Friday.

Associated Press

Redick said Doncichad an issue with the hamstring in the first half of the 139-97 loss to the Oklahoma City Thunderand was tended to at the break.

"We checked him out, he got work done, he was cleared," Redick said.

Doncic returned to action briefly. On his final play of the game, he spun before trying to go up for a shot against Oklahoma City's Jalen Williams. There was no contact before Doncic stopped, then lay down on the floor while wincing in pain. He left the game for good with 7:39 remaining in the third quarter.

"Those things happen," Redick said.

Williams, an All-Star in 2025, has missed 27 games this season because of a right hamstring strain. He felt badly for Doncic.

"It's very, like, spooky in a way to see it happen to him, and I'm the one guarding him," Williams said.

Williams could have stolen the ball after Doncic let it go, but he chose not to take advantage of the situation.

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"I tried to let it go out of bounds and give them time to figure it out," Williams said. "That injury sucks. So I wish him a speedy recovery. Hope it's not anything serious."

Doncic had scored at least 40 points in five of his previous seven games. He was held to 12 on 3-for-10 shooting against Oklahoma City's relentless defense.

The Lakers trailed 90-58 when Doncic was hurt, so the injury made a bad night worse.

"I mean, it's something you never want to see as a teammate," Lakers forward Jake LaRavia said. "So especially in a game like this, it was tough to see him go down. All the prayers for him ... but yeah, you never want to see that."

Lakers guard Austin Reaves hurt his back during the game, but continued to play. He sat out the fourth quarter with the game out of reach.

"He was in a weird position, stretching for a basketball, loose ball," Redick said. "And he just felt something intercostal, somewhere in his back, in between the ribs. He was able to play through it ... we'll see how he feels tomorrow."

The Lakers will host a rematch with the Thunder on April 7.

AP NBA:https://apnews.com/hub/NBA

Lakers' Luka Doncic hurts left hamstring in a blowout loss to Thunder with MRI set for Friday

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic injured his left hamstring on Thursday night and coach JJ Redic...
Luke Evangelista ends shootout in 8th round, Predators tighten playoff race with 5-4 win over Kings

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Luke Evangelista scored the only goal of the shootout in the eighth round, and the Nashville Predators tightened the Western Conference playoff race with a 5-4 win over the Los Angeles Kings on Thursday night.

Associated Press Linesman CJ Murray (68) drops the puck as Los Angeles Kings right wing Alex Laferriere (14) and Nashville Predators left wing Erik Haula face off during the second period of an NHL hockey game Thursday, April 2, 2026, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Jayne Kamin-Oncea) Los Angeles Kings right wing Taylor Ward (52) handles the puck away from Nashville Predators center Fedor Svechkov (40) during the second period of an NHL hockey game Thursday, April 2, 2026, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Jayne Kamin-Oncea) Nashville Predators defenseman Nicolas Hague (41) looks on as Los Angeles Kings left wing Artemi Panarin (10) takes a shot on goal during the second period of an NHL hockey game Thursday, April 2, 2026, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Jayne Kamin-Oncea) Nashville Predators defenseman Adam Wilsby, left, and Los Angeles Kings right wing Alex Laferriere battle for the puck during the second period of an NHL hockey game Thursday, April 2, 2026, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Jayne Kamin-Oncea) Nashville Predators center Steven Stamkos (91) is congratulated at the bench after scoring a goal during the second period of an NHL hockey game, against the Los Angeles Kings, Thursday, April 2, 2026, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Jayne Kamin-Oncea)

Predators Kings Hockey

Nashville, Los Angeles and San Jose are now even with 79 points apiece for the second wild-card playoff spot in the West, but the Sharks —who beat Toronto 4-1 earlier Thursday— have a game in hand.

Steven Stamkos scored his 37th goal and Jonathan Marchessault ended his 14-game goal drought for the Preds, who snapped their three-game skid despite blowing a three-goal lead. Filip Forsberg and Zachary L'Heureux also scored.

Juuse Saros stopped 29 shots before turning in a perfect eight-round shootout for Nashville.

The first 15 skaters in the shootout all failed to score before Evangelista ended it with a deke and a backhand for his first shootout goal of the season.

Adrian Kempe scored two goals and Joel Armia tied it midway through the third period for the Kings, who have lost six of eight with their season in the balance.

Scott Laughton also scored, and Darcy Kuemper rebounded from a rough beginning to make 31 saves before a strong shootout.

Before the game, the Kings honored retiring captain Anze Kopitar with a ceremony recognizing his 20-year career. The Slovenian centerset the team's career scoring recordlast month.

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Forsberg then scored his 35th goal for Nashville in the opening minute on a stoppable shot, and L'Heureux scored moments later when Kuemper was caught out of his crease.

Kuemper even gave a penalty shot to Nashville late in the first by throwing his stick at the puck, but Ryan O'Reilly couldn't convert. Marchessault got his 12th goal — his first in exactly a month — early in the second.

Kempe finally got the Kings going when Artemi Panarin's 51st assist deflected in off his skate, but Stamkos scored just over two minutes later. After Kempe scored again to secure the fourth 30-goal season of his career, Laughton scored moments later on a rebound.

Armia finally tied it when he drove the net and tapped in Jared Wright's rebound for his 11th goal.

Up next

Predators: At San Jose on Saturday night.

Kings: Host Toronto on Saturday.

AP NHL:https://apnews.com/NHL

Luke Evangelista ends shootout in 8th round, Predators tighten playoff race with 5-4 win over Kings

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Luke Evangelista scored the only goal of the shootout in the eighth round, and the Nashville Predators...
Lakers' Luka Doncic to have MRI on strained hamstring

Lakers superstar Luka Doncic strained his left hamstring in Thursday's loss at the Oklahoma City Thunder and will have an MRI on Friday to determine the extent of his strained injury, Los Angeles coach JJ Redick told reporters after the game.

Field Level Media

Doncic, 27, who leads the NBA in scoring at 33.5 points per game, appeared to hurt his hamstring in the first half, per an ESPN report, then tweaked it again in the third quarter. Guarded by Jalen Williams, Doncic planted his left leg before doubling over in pain and laying down on the court, covering his face with his hands.

Doncic, who scored 12 points on 3-of-10 shooting from the field before exiting, gingerly walked to the locker room on his own with 7:39 left in the third quarter. The Lakers were losing 90-58 at the time en route to a 139-96 setback, snapping their four-game win streak.

"At this point, at this juncture of the season, it's the last thing you want to see," teammate LeBron James told reporters. "When you have an MVP candidate on your team, the last thing you want to see is somebody go down with a hamstring injury. ... So, pray for the best, for sure, and a speedy recovery."

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Doncic, who did not speak to reporters after the game, joined his teammates for their postgame flight to Dallas. Redick said Doncic's hamstring was treated at halftime and the team's medical staff gave the approval for him to return to the court.

"We checked him out," Redick said. "He got work done. He was cleared. I mean, again, we're not going to put a player at risk."

Doncic, who missed four games with a previous left hamstring strain in February, received Western Conference Player of the Month honors for averaging 37.5 points, 8.0 rebounds, 7.4 assists and 2.3 steals per game in March.

A six-time All-Star guard, Doncic has been selected All-NBA first team five times and was the 2018-19 NBA Rookie of the Year.

--Field Level Media

Lakers' Luka Doncic to have MRI on strained hamstring

Lakers superstar Luka Doncic strained his left hamstring in Thursday's loss at the Oklahoma City Thunder and will ...
Lebanon's displaced Shiites face rising hostility as airstrikes fuel fear and evictions

BEIRUT (AP) — When the Israel-Hezbollahwar broke out in early March, Hussein Shuman fled the heavy bombardment of the southern suburbs of Beirut, but he didn't bother trying to rent an apartment elsewhere.

Associated Press File — Smoke rises from Israeli airstrikes in Dahiyeh, a southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, March 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla, File) Special forces police officers deployed amid tensions between people displaced by Israeli strikes and local residents in Beirut neighborhoods, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla) FILE — A child walks past tents sheltering people displaced by Israeli airstrikes in southern Lebanon and Dahiyeh, Beirut's southern suburbs, along the Beirut waterfront in Beirut, Lebanon, Saturday, March 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar, File) Special forces police officers deployed amid tensions between people displaced by Israeli strikes and local residents in Beirut neighborhoods, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla) FILE — A displaced woman who fled Israeli airstrikes in southern Lebanon, carries her belonging as she moves to a better spot to shelter from the rain, past an Arabic anti-war poster that reads,

Lebanon Sectarian Tensions

In areas deemed "safe" because the Lebanese militant group has no presence, he feels that Shiite Muslims like him are not welcome. Residents regard them with suspicion as potential Hezbollah members, and landlords charge exorbitant prices to rent to displaced families.

Instead, the 35-year-old, who works at a perfume company, headed to central Beirut where he set up a small tent where he has been staying, along with his wife, 7-year-old son and 5-year-old daughter.

Shuman even rejected an offer from a friend who invited him to bring his family to the Christian mountain town of Zgharta. He preferred to remain in his tent, even though it has flooded twice in the past two weeks.

"By staying here I have my dignity and respect," Shuman said, sitting on a chair near his tent as a barber gave him an open-air hair cut. "We will not stay in a place where we are going to be humiliated."

In a country full of suspicion, the more than 1 million people — most of them Shiite — displaced as a result of Israel's evacuation orders and airstrikes have limited options.

Some landlords in Christian areas refuse to rent to Shiites. Others demand inflated rents and deposits that few can afford. Fatima Zahra, 42, from Beirut's southern suburbs, said she and her sister sold their finest jewelry to pay the $5,000 the landlord charged up front for two months' rent.

In some Beirut neighborhoods, displaced people who can afford to pay high rents are only allowed to take the apartment after landlords inform the security agencies to check on whether the family has any links to Hezbollah.

Sectarian tensions are a sensitive issue in Lebanon because the country fought a 15-year civil war ending in 1990 that largely broke down along sectarian lines.

Rising tensions

Social frictions have worsened since Israel'stargeted airstrikeskilled Hezbollah officials or members of Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard in predominantly Christian, Sunni and Druze areas, raising fears among the hosts that Hezbollah members are mingling within the civilian population.

The Lebanese are deeply divided over Hezbollah's wars with Israel, with many in the small nation blaming the Iran-backed group for dragging the country into a deadly conflict that has so far left more than 1,200 people dead and over 3,000 wounded. Hezbollah fired missiles into Israel two days after theU.S. and Israel attacked Iranon Feb. 28, triggering the ongoing Middle East war.

The renewed war has caused widespread destruction and paralyzed the economy at a time when Lebanon is still in the throes of a historiceconomic crisisthat broke out in late 2019. The country has not yet recovered from the lastIsrael-Hezbollah war in 2024.

In mid-March, an Israeli airstrike on an apartment in the town of Aramoun killed three people, prompting some local residents to call for the displaced to leave the area.

Days later, an airstrike on the nearby town of Bchamoun also killed three people, including a four-year-old girl, who were displaced from Beirut's southern suburbs, where Hezbollah has a strong presence.

In neither case did Israel announce the intended target of the strikes, but neighbors assumed that someone in the targeted apartments was a Hezbollah member.

"Had we known that they were linked to Hezbollah, we would have kicked them out," an angry man who owns an apartment in the building in Bchamoun said at the scene.

In late March, a missile exploded over the predominantly Christian Keserwan region north of Beirut, with debris falling on different areas. Although the Lebanese army later said that it was an Iranian missile passing over Lebanon that fell, many initially assumed that it was an Israeli airstrike targeting displaced people.

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No one was was hurt by the missile debris, but a group of young men attacked displaced Shiites in the district of Haret Sakher near the coastal city of Jounieh, calling for their eviction, before local officials intervened.

"We don't want them here," shouted a Haret Sakher resident shortly after the strike. He said that some of the displaced refer to their hosts as "Zionists," accusing them of being aligned with Israel because they criticize Hezbollah for dragging the country into the conflict. He added: "We don't want national coexistence."

George Saadeh, a member of Jounieh's municipal council, told The Associated Press that he had called on Haret Sakher residents to avoid any reaction "so that we can preserve civil peace."

In a predominantly Christian area just north of Beirut, plans to house displaced people in an abandoned warehouse near the port were suspended last week after drawing backlash from lawmakers and residents.

Fears of civil conflict

"The Israeli targeting campaign has created a lot of paranoia," said Maha Yahya, director of the Beirut-based Carnegie Middle East Center. "If you see a displaced person, maybe you wonder, 'What if this person is a target?'"

Fearing the tension couldslip out of control, the army has beefed up its presence on the streets.

On Friday, army commander Gen. Rudolphe Haikal toured Beirut and the southern city of Sidon and told troops that they should be "firm in the face of any attempt to undermine internal stability," the army said in a statement.

Police forces, including a SWAT unit, was deployed at major intersections in the capital to preserve peace and prevent any friction between the displaced and locals. Police patrols pass through the tent city by Beirut's coast where Shuman and his family are staying.

An official at the municipality of the predominantly Sunni town of Naameh, just south of Beirut, said that they have received thousands of people displaced from southern Lebanon.

The official said that in order to avoid tensions, they opened a school in one district for displaced Shiites and another in a different neighborhood for people displaced from Sunni border villages.

"There are concerns among people," that conflict could break out said the official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

With the Israeli airstrikes and ground invasion mainly targeting Shiite areas, U.S. ambassador to Lebanon Michel Issa, a Lebanese-American, was criticized for stoking sectarianism. He told reporters in late March that the U.S. had asked Israel for a commitment that Christian villages in southern Lebanon will not be attacked.

"We have asked the Israelis to leave Christian villages in the south alone and they told us that they will not touch Christian villages," Issa said. However, he added, "They (Israelis) said that they cannot guarantee" that the villages would be left alone "if there is infiltration into these villages" by Hezbollah members.

Several Christian villages in southern Lebanon have asked displaced Shiites who were sheltering there to leave, fearing that their presence might trigger Israeli attacks.

Legislator Taymour Joumblatt who is the leader of the Progressive Socialist Party, the largest Druze-led political group in the country, said that the biggest concern in the country now is "strife."

"The most important thing is to reduce sectarian pressures on the ground," Joumblatt said. "Our Shiites brothers are part of this country and our humanitarian duty is to help them."

Associated Press writer Isabel DeBre contributed to this report from Beirut.

Lebanon’s displaced Shiites face rising hostility as airstrikes fuel fear and evictions

BEIRUT (AP) — When the Israel-Hezbollahwar broke out in early March, Hussein Shuman fled the heavy bombardment of the sou...
Myanmar's parliament elects ruling general as president, keeping the army in charge

BANGKOK (AP) — Myanmar's parliament on Friday electedMin Aung Hlaing,a general who ousted Aung San Suu Kyi's civilian government in 2021 and kept an iron grip on power for the past five years, as the country's new president.

Associated Press FILE - Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, head of Myanmar's military council, inspects officers during a parade to commemorate Myanmar's 78th Armed Forces Day in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, March 27, 2023. (AP Photo/Aung Shine Oo, File) Myanmar's military representatives arrive for a session at Union parliament in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, Friday, April 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Aung Shine Oo) Myanmar's military representatives arrive for a session at Union parliament in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, Thursday, April 2, 2026. (AP Photo/Aung Shine Oo) Myanmar's military representatives and lawmakers arrive to attend a session at Union parliament in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, Friday, April 3, 2026.(AP Photo/Aung Shine Oo) Parliament chairman Aung Lin Dwe, center, arrives for a session of Union Parliament in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, Friday, April 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Aung Shine Oo)

Myanmar President

The move marks a nominal return to an elected government but is widely considered to be an effort to keep the army in power after anelection organized by the militarythat opponents and independent observers deemed neither free nor fair.

Min Aung Hlaing was one of three nominees for the president's post, but was virtually guaranteed the job as lawmakers from military-backed parties and appointed members from the army hold a commanding majority in parliament.

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Aung Lin Dwe, speaker of parliament's combined upper and lower house, announced that Min Aung Hlaing won 429 out of the 584 votes. The two runners-up became vice presidents.

Min Aung Hlaing, who holds the rank of senior general, had earlier relinquished his post of the commander-in-chief because the constitution prohibits the president from simultaneously holding the top military position. A close aide, Gen. Ye Win Oo, took over the powerful job.

The 69-year-old Min Aung Hlaing had been the military chief since 2011. Under a military-imposed constitution, he held major power even before overthrowing Suu Kyi's government.

Parliament members were elected in three phases in December and January. Major opposition parties, including Suu Kyi's former ruling National League for Democracy, were either blocked from running or refused to compete under conditions they deemed unfair. Suu Kyi has been held in prison.

Myanmar’s parliament elects ruling general as president, keeping the army in charge

BANGKOK (AP) — Myanmar's parliament on Friday electedMin Aung Hlaing,a general who ousted Aung San Suu Kyi's civi...

 

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