General News
Meropi Kyriacou Honored as TNH Educator of the Year
NEW YORK – Meropi Kyriacou, the new Principal of The Cathedral School in Manhattan, was honored as The National Herald’s Educator of the Year.
PHOENIX — At their best, the Phoenix Suns have three players who can take over a game.
There's Chris Paul and Devin Booker, breaking down defenses from the backcourt. Deandre Ayton has been a beast on the backboards and almost automatic as a shooter.
When all three are rolling the way they were in Game 1 of the NBA Finals, it's easy to see why this could finally be the Suns' championship chance.
"We have a real team," Paul said Wednesday, "like a team where you can't just key on one guy or two guys."
The Milwaukee Bucks are supposed to have the same formula.
Yet just when Giannis Antetokounmpo came back, Jrue Holiday's game went away. And if the Bucks are going to even the series Thursday night — and certainly if they have any hopes of winning it — they can't afford bad nights from those two or Khris Middleton.
"I think in that perfect, ideal world, all three guys are hitting and clicking and everything is perfect," Milwaukee coach Mike Budenholzer said. "But I'm guessing if you look at any team that has three great players or three really significant players, I bet a lot of nights it's two out of three that they're going and playing well."
Antetokounmpo had 20 points and 17 rebounds in his return to the lineup, and it might be hard for Milwaukee to ask for much more so soon after a left knee injury that looked like it could have knocked him out far longer.
But the Bucks certainly can expect better from Holiday, who missed 10 of his 14 shots and finished with just 10 points in the Suns' 118-105 victory. And though he's long been regarded as one of the NBA's top defensive guards, he wasn't able to limit either Paul or Booker — though in fairness, maybe nobody could have Tuesday.
Holiday said he knows what he needs to do offensively.
"Pick my spots to be aggressive, and I think sometimes it's gotten me in trouble," Holiday said. "I think I've got to be aggressive from the beginning of the game. Sometimes it gets just a bit difficult, or it's just a bit different, again, because we have another ball handler and somebody that's great in transition and makes plays for others."
Holiday averaged 26 points and 11 assists in the two victories that Antetokounmpo missed to end the Eastern Conference finals. He took at least 20 shots in both games, playing with an aggression without the two-time MVP that he hasn't always provided with him in the postseason.
Budenholzer said that's the challenge of getting three players going at once.
"So it's harder than people realize," he said.
It wasn't any problem for the Suns. Paul had 32 points and nine assists, Booker added 27 points and six assists, and Ayton finished with 22 points and 19 rebounds.
Paul in particular wore the Bucks out in the third quarter by exploiting their coverage of the pick-and-roll whenever it ended up with a big man such as Brook Lopez or Bobby Portis switching out to defend him. The crafty and creative All-Star guard could either blow by those players off the dribble, or step back away from them to launch deep jumpers.
Milwaukee has faced that problem before. The Bucks never got a handle on the Brooklyn Nets until first James Harden and then Kyrie Irving were injured, or Atlanta's Trae Young until he hurt his foot in the East finals.
The Bucks eventually got through those series and the Suns expect them to be better in Game 2 of this one.
"We talked about it this morning," Suns coach Monty Williams said. "We have already started to prepare ourselves for the best Milwaukee effort that we're going to see in the series. We're ready for that."
Antetokounmpo said he was having no problems with his hyperextended left knee. He wasn't at his best in Game 1 — and certainly was not as effective as Ayton, who hiked his field goal percentage in the postseason to an absurd 71.1% — but is looking forward to the challenge of Game 2 before the NBA Finals return to Milwaukee this weekend for the first time since 1974.
"Hopefully I can feel more comfortable, more confident to go downhill, to make more plays," Antetokounmpo said. "We'll see. We'll see. I don't know how tomorrow is going to be, but hopefully I can be in a position that I can make more plays."
NEW YORK – Meropi Kyriacou, the new Principal of The Cathedral School in Manhattan, was honored as The National Herald’s Educator of the Year.
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Hurricane Milton barreled into the Atlantic Ocean on Thursday after plowing across Florida as a Category 3 storm, pounding cities with ferocious winds and rain, whipping up a barrage of tornadoes and causing an unknown numbers of deaths.
BOSTON – On the morning of Thursday, October 10, Florida resembled a vast lake due to the terrible and fearsome passage of Hurricane Milton, which pounded the area for nine hours on Wednesday night, as described to Τhe National Herald by Father Stavros Akrotirianakis, presiding priest of St.
LONDON - Lee Carsley ran into the first problems of his tenure as England's interim coach after a bold team selection backfired in a 2-1 home loss to Greece in the Nations League on Thursday.
PITTSBURGH (AP) — Former President Barack Obama gave a blistering critique of his White House successor Donald Trump and urged Black men to show up for Kamala Harris as he campaigned in Pittsburgh on Thursday at the start of a swing-state tour for the Democratic ticket.
Panagiota Panousopoulos, affectionately known as Toula, was born in the village of Menidi on March 10, 1935 and grew up in Kalamata, Greece.