Doncic energizes LeBron as NBA homestretch begins

Luka Doncic and LeBron James of the Los Angeles Lakers during the second quarter of a game against the Utah Jazz at Crypto.com Arena on Feb. 10, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Getty Images via AFP)
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Updated 19 February 2025
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Doncic energizes LeBron as NBA homestretch begins

  • James missed the NBA All-Star Game while resting a foot and ankle injury ahead of facing Charlotte on Wednesday and visiting Portland on Thursday
  • Oklahoma City Thunder lead the West and share the NBA’s best record with the Cleveland Cavaliers at 44-10

WASHINGTON: LeBron James is energized to play alongside new Lakers teammate Luka Doncic while in Oklahoma City, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander hopes a National Basketball Association title will secure his place among league legends as the regular-season homestretch begins.

The NBA returns from the All-Star break on Wednesday when the Los Angeles Lakers, led by James and Doncic, entertain Charlotte in a game postponed from January by wildfires.

The Lakers, fifth in the Western Conference at 32-20, made a deal with Dallas on Feb. 2, trading away forward Anthony Davis and others to obtain Slovenian guard Doncic, uniting the playmaker with 40-year-old legend James in hopes of making the Lakers a title contender.

“Just the excitement of being able to add a caliber player like that, a generational talent like that to our franchise, it’s something that has given me energy,” James said.

“I’m looking forward to seeing what we can do. We only had two games so far and I believe he has been on a minutes restriction since he came back from the calf (injury).

“As he continues to get in form, I think we could be really good going down the stretch. But we’ll see what happens.”

James missed the NBA All-Star Game while resting a foot and ankle injury ahead of facing Charlotte on Wednesday and visiting Portland on Thursday.

“With 30 games left and us trying to make a playoff push in the wild, wild west, I feel like it’s important for me to take care of myself and understand what’s coming on,” James said. “I have to look out for myself when it comes to this injury that I’ve been dealing with for years.

“Hopefully I can play against Charlotte on Wednesday and Portland on Thursday. It’s a big stretch for us.”

Oklahoma City Thunder lead the West and share the NBA’s best record with the Cleveland Cavaliers at 44-10.

In the East, the Cavs are 5.5 games ahead of reigning champion Boston while the Thunder lead Memphis by eight in the West.

Gilgeous-Alexander leads the NBA with 32.5 points a game.

The 26-year-old Canadian guard also averages 6.1 assists, 5.1 rebounds, 1.9 steals and 1.0 blocked shots a game for a team trying to defend its regular-season conference crown.

“We have an opportunity to, for sure, win an NBA championship,” he said. “Now we’re going to have to earn it.

“You go in the playoffs and you need to be the best team for a couple months and you’re not that unless you earn it throughout the season and playoffs.

“We’re more than halfway through the season, but it’s a long road and we’ve just got to keep getting better through the road and hopefully where we want to be at the end of it.”

Gilgeous-Alexander has accepted the growing attention brought by his exceptional play.

“I try to make sure I don’t let it affect the person I am, the player I am and the teammate I am,” he said.

“Doing so has helped me succeed on the court and us succeed as a team, as well. Yeah, I definitely notice it, embrace it, and try to make sure it doesn’t get in the way of things.”

Gilgeous-Alexander says he knows he will not be mentioned alongside such contemporary greats as James, Kevin Durant and Stephen Curry unless he leads an NBA championship team.

“You play the game to win and that’s, at the end of the day, all that really matters,” he said. “If I don’t succeed in that in my career, I will have never have accomplished what I wanted to.”

He accepts he might have a chance to become the face as the NBA like James and Michael Jordan.

“That’s literally for the world to decide and whoever the world gravitates to is going to become it naturally,” he said. “It’s not really like a title, it’s more of an opinion, but it is something that is for sure surreal.

“If you’re in that conversation... you will probably go down in history, and to be in that conversation is a blessing.”


Alfie Davis faces ultimate test against Usman Nurmagomedov in Dubai

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Alfie Davis faces ultimate test against Usman Nurmagomedov in Dubai

  • The two fighters will headline PFL’s first event of 2026 as they battle for the Lightweight World Championship at PFL Road to Dubai

DUBAI: On Feb. 7 in Dubai, England’s Alfie “The Axe Man” Davis will be challenging reigning champion Usman Nurmagomedov for the PFL Lightweight World Championship in the main event of PFL: Road to Dubai at the Coca-Cola Arena. 

A standout in Bellator and the PFL last season, Davies earned his spot opposite Nurmagomedov by becoming the 2025 PFL World Tournament’s lightweight champion.

As he looks to add “world champion” to his list of accomplishments, he will also have the distinction of being the last PFL Lightweight Tournament Champion, at least for now, as the league is looking to usher in a new era, which includes moving away from the tournament format that they have become known for since their inception in 2017. 

For years, the tournament format was the PFL’s selling point, as it helped them stand out from the UFC and helped them to become more relatable to traditional sports fans. 

And while it has brought them success over the past few years, the league’s new powers-that-be decided that it was time for a change. 

Davis, who tore through the tournament last year with wins over big names such as Clay Collard, Brent Primus and Gadzhi Rabadanov, shared his sentiments on the league moving away from the tournament format.

“I’m mixed on my views, to be honest with you, because I competed in the tournament, and I really enjoyed the tournament structure from an athlete perspective, in terms of you get to fight in quick succession,” Davis explained. “Obviously, you get the paycheck for each fight, and there’s a large surprise money. Also, I feel like there is a good story behind it in terms of you know exactly who you’re fighting next after, beating the next person, I think just that that structure of a tournament is quite exciting to follow.”

As Davis also said, there were some cons to the tournament format. 

“In saying that, it’s very hard on the athlete to do back-to-back fights so quickly. And also, I think from a business perspective, it’s quite hard to market the fights like that, in terms of, like, the marketing, sort of, budget and stuff.” 

Now that he is challenging for a world championship, Davis is getting the main event treatment, and is seeing how the traditional format of promoting fights works better towards building up lesser-known fighters. 

“I think a more traditional approach allows you to, like, really build big fights,” Davis said. “So, like, I think PFL are doing really well in how they’re marketing this fight, because we’re getting a lot of exposure.

“And I think that we can really start telling a lot more stories, because I think, ultimately, I think that’s what is gonna get the PFL brand better is starting to tell the story of the fighters, because I think we’ve had the talent for a while.  

“I mean, for athlete for athlete, I think we can compete with the very best. I think we’ve got guys that are better than some of the UFC guys, we’ve got some of the guys that are the best in the world. I think what the PFL has maybe lacked before is telling the story of these fighters. I think that’s the way that all sports ... people are invested ... not just in the sport.”

As for his fight against Nurmagomedov, Davis believes that, even without the title on the line, this is the biggest fight of his career, but he did have a bit more to say about his opponent. 

“I would say yes. The only kick I will have is that, when I fought Gadzhi Rabadanov, a lot of people were ranking him higher than Usman at the time, because he was on such a tear and beating some great guys,” Davis said. “And also, Gadzhi, in my opinion, was a bit scarier than Usman, because Gadzhi was on a firefight knockout streak. He was knocking out people left, right and center, beating some very good names, knocking them out. So he was a very scary fighter to fight.”

To be fair, Rabadanov was a former tournament champion in his own right, and was on an 11-fight winning streak before running into Davis. 

“Usman is very skilled and talented, and has got the Nurmagomedov name, but I would actually say that Gadzhi, for me, was almost equal, if not somewhat ... he was definitely scarier than Usman,” Davis said. 

“But Usman’s definitely got the name, he’s got the followers, he’s got an unbeaten record, which people like, so he is, arguably, yeah, the biggest fight in my career.”