Russian strikes on Odesa kill 2 ahead of Orthodox Easter ceasefire

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Russian drone strikes killed at least two people in the Ukrainian city of Odesa overnight into Saturday, local authorities reported, ahead of aproposed ceasefirefor Orthodox Easter.

Associated Press A rescue worker walks in front of residential building which was heavily damaged after a Russian strike in Odesa, Ukraine, Monday, April 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Michael Shtekel) El presidente ruso Vladímir Putin escucha al viceprimer ministro y jefe del Gabinete del Gobierno, Dmitry Grigorenko, durante su reunión en el Kremlin, en Moscú, el jueves 9 de abril de 2026. (Alexander Kazakov/Sputnik, foto del Kremlin vía AP)

Russia Ukraine War

A further two people were wounded in the attack on the Black Sea port city, when drones hit a residential area, damaging apartment buildings, houses and a kindergarten.

According to the Ukrainian Air Force, Russia targeted Ukraine with 160 drones overnight, of which 133 were shot down or intercepted, hours before a proposed Easter ceasefire was due to come into force.

Russia’s Defense Ministry said 99 Ukrainian drones were shot down overnight across Russia and occupied Crimea.

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday declared a 32-hour ceasefire over the Orthodox Easter weekend, ordering Russian forces to halt hostilities from 4 p.m. Saturday until the end of Sunday.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Friday Ukraine is ready to mirror any ceasefire steps, having earlier proposed to Russia apause in attackson each other’senergy infrastructureover the Orthodox Easter holiday.

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Previous ceasefire attempts have had little impact, with both sides accusing each other of violations.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov on Friday described Putin’s move as a “humanitarian” gesture, but said Moscow remains focused on a comprehensive settlement based on its longstanding demands — a key sticking point that has prevented the two sides from reaching an agreement.

A possible prisoner exchange over the Easter holiday has also been discussed.

Russia’s human rights ombudswoman Tatyana Moskalkova said last week that both sides were working on exchanges of prisoners.

Periodic prisoner exchanges have been one of the few positive outcomes of otherwise fruitless monthslongU.S.-brokered negotiationsbetween Moscow and Kyiv. The talks have delivered no progress on key issues preventing an end toRussia’s invasionof its neighbor, now in its fifth year.

Follow AP’s coverage of the war in Ukraine athttps://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

Russian strikes on Odesa kill 2 ahead of Orthodox Easter ceasefire

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Russian drone strikes killed at least two people in the Ukrainian city of Odesa overnight into Saturday, local aut...
2026 NFL mock draft with trades: Jets get more picks, Chargers fill need

It’s mock draft season as the 2026 NFL draft is fast approaching.

USA TODAY Sports

Pittsburgh is the host city of the 91stedition of the NFL draft. It’s the first time the Steel City’s hosted the draft since 1948.

Indiana product and Heisman Trophy recipient, Fernando Mendoza, is the surefire No. 1 pick after a national championship winning season. But this year’s draft is a mystery after the Las Vegas Raiders presumably get their quarterback with the top overall selection.

A total of 257 players will be selected throughout the three-day event. USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon makes some draft predictions in his 2026 first round mock draft:

1. Las Vegas Raiders - QB Fernando Mendoza, Indiana

Mendoza is one of the biggest locks at No. 1 in recent memory. The only question is how many games Mendoza will start as a rookie now that the Raiderssigned a bridge QB and mentor Kirk Cousins. Mendoza is a polished quarterback, accurate passer and a good processor.

2. New York Jets – Edge Arvell Reese, Ohio State

Reese has the versality to play on the line of scrimmage or off the ball. At 6-foot-4, he has the length, athleticism and quickness to be a standout edge rusher. Reese would be an ideal fit in New York’s 3-4 defense.

3. Arizona Cardinals – Edge David Bailey, Texas Tech

The Cardinals have a plethora of holes – as do most teams at the top of the draft. Arizona could target an offensive tackle with an offensive-minded first-year head coach in Mike LaFleur. But Bailey is too intriguing of a prospect to pass up. Bailey is explosive at the line of scrimmage with multiple go-to moves.

4. Tennessee Titans – RB Jeremiyah Love, Notre Dame

The Titans have to supply second-year QB Cam Ward with more weapons. Who better than the best running back in this year’s draft? Many scouts believe Love is the top offensive player in this year’s class. The Titans had the 30thranked run offense in the NFL in 2025.

5. New York Giants – LB Sonny Styles, Ohio State

The Giants already have a stout front seven. Plugging in Styles at linebacker alongside Tremaine Edmunds would only bolster the unit. New York could also pivot and target an offensive player, but Styles is an elite tackler and boasts the athleticism that will immediately translate to the NFL.

6. Cleveland Browns – WR Carnell Tate, Ohio State

Tate possesses good agility and body control, which helps him run the route tree. Jerry Jeudy was Cleveland’s only wide receiver with over 25 receptions last season. Tate would be a nice complement to Jeudy – and aidwhoever starts at QB.

7. Washington Commanders - S Caleb Downs, Ohio State

The run of Ohio State players continues as Downs is the fourth Buckeye selected in the first seven picks. Downs is a playmaker in the defensive backfield. He possesses good ball skills. He can play in the box and line up at nickel corner. Plus, he has the IQ to be an anchor in Washington’s secondary.

8. New Orleans Saints – WR Jordyn Tyson, Arizona State

New Orleans ranked in the bottom half of the NFL in total offense last season. Chris Olave, who is routinely on the trading block, is entering the final year of his contract. Tyson will give the Saints necessary insurance if Olave leaves or would create a solid one-two punch on the outside for promising young QB Tyler Shough.

9. Kansas City Chiefs – Edge Rueben Bain Jr., Miami

The Chiefs need a disruptive playmaker other than Chris Jones on their defensive line. Plenty has been made ofBain’s arm length, but he’s the most polished edge rusher in this year’s class. He has explosive hands plus an assortment of moves to shed blocks.

10. Cincinnati Bengals – CB Mansoor Delane, LSU

The Bengals had the worst total defense in the AFC last season. Cincinnati needs to upgrade multiple spots on defense. Delane is a physical corner who plays well in press coverage. He was consistent in coverage throughout his college career.

11. Miami Dolphins – WR Makai Lemon, USC

Someone has to catch passes in Miami after the rebuilding DolphinsreleasedTyreek Hill andtradedJaylen Waddle. Lemon has sure hands and produces. The 5-foot-11 WR is best suited in the slot in the NFL.

12. Dallas Cowboys – CB Jermod McCoy, Tennessee

Dallas finished 2025 with the NFL’s worst pass defense. The Cowboys’ inability to get after the QB and shortcomings at cornerback both played a role in the team’s poor pass defense. Many believe McCoy would’ve been the best corner in this year’s draft before a torn ACL cost him the entire 2025 season.

13. Los Angeles Rams – OT Francis Mauigoa, Miami

There’s certainly a possibility Mauigoa gets drafted within the top 10. But if he’s available at No. 13, it’s hard to believe the Rams pass on him. Mauigoa can start right away at right tackle. He’s the top tackle in this year’s draft.

14. Baltimore Ravens – OG Olaivavega Ioane, Penn State

The Ravens must beef up their interior, especially after losing center Tyler Linderbaum. Ioane is the top-rated guard in this year’s draft. He’s a tough mauler of a guard who can help pave the way for more rushing lanes for Derrick Henry.

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15. Tampa Bay Buccaneers – Edge Akheem Mesidor, Miami

Tampa Bay has needed more pass rush juice for a while. Mesidor is a physical edge rusher who plays with a high motor. The Bucs saw what Mesidor can do as an edge rusher right down the road in the Sunshine State.

16. Trade: New York Jets trade pick to Carolina Panthers – TE Kenyon Sadiq, Oregon

With Sadiq slipping a little bit, the Panthers trade up to select the top tight end in the draft. The Panthers need more firepower on offense – Carolina didn’t have a tight end produce more than 30 catches in 2025 – and Sadiq can line up all over the field. He’s athletic and can keep the chains moving. The rebuilding Jets get additional draft capital in exchange to add to their nine total draft picks.

17. Detroit Lions – OL Spencer Fano, Utah

Fano seems like a quintessential Lions pick. The Utah product is the top offensive linemen available and has position flexibility. He can play guard or tackle. Detroit’s O-line ranked 31stin pass block win rate last year, perESPN.

18. Minnesota Vikings – S Dillon Thieneman, Oregon

Replacing long-time veteran Harrison Smith with Thieneman would be a seamless transition. Thieneman is a center fielder at safety with good speed and size.

19. Trade: Carolina Panthers trade pick to New York Jets – CB Avieon Terrell, Clemson

With multiple needs on both sides of the football, it makes sense for the Jets to trade down in an attempt to gain more assets. The Jets don’t have an adequate replacement afterthey shippedCB Sauce Gardner to Indy. Terrell is a smart instinctive cornerback with good football bloodlines. His brother, A.J., is the Falcons’ top cornerback. Opposing QBs had a league best 110.9 passer rating versus the Jets defense.

20. Dallas Cowboys – S Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, Toledo

McNeil-Warren can line up close to the line of scrimmage or play center fielder in Dallas’ defensive backfield. The Cowboys have an opportunity to help their poorest secondary in a big way in the first round.

21. Pittsburgh Steelers – OT Monroe Freeling, Georgia

Freeling has good length and athletic ability at tackle. OT Broderick Jones suffered a season-ending neck injury last season and hasn’t proved to be the long-term solution at the position.

22. Trade: Los Angeles Chargers trade pick to Cleveland Browns – OT Caleb Lomu, Utah

The Browns move up as the top tackles continue to come off the board. The Browns have revamped their offensive line this offseason, and the Lomu addition continues those efforts. The Chargers are prime candidates to trade down because they own just five total picks in this year's draft. The Chargers could fill a need at edge or guard later in the first or second round.

23. Philadelphia Eagles – OT Blake Miller, Clemson

Standout right tackle Lane Johnson isn’t getting any younger. Miller is a potential replacement. He’s a natural right tackle with impressive fundamentals at the position.

24. Trade: Cleveland Browns trade pick to Los Angeles Chargers – Edge T.J. Parker, Clemson

Clemson players go back-to-back. The Chargerslost Odafe Oweh, who thrived as their third edge rusher, in free agency. Los Angeles needs to find a long-term replacement for Khalil Mack. The Chargers traded a couple picks down and got a player who fills an area of need. Parker is a powerful edge rusher and stout run defender with impressive size.

25. Chicago Bears – Edge Keldric Faulk, Auburn

The Bears have a glaring hole at edge rusher. Chicago ranked 31stin pass rush win rate, perESPN. Faulk is a little raw as a pass rusher, but he has good traits and moves well.

26. Buffalo Bills – WR KC Concepcion, Texas A&M

After acquiring DJ Moorevia trade, the Bills add more firepower to their wide receiver room. Concepcion showed good separation skills in college. He’s at his best in short and intermediate routes.

27. San Francisco 49ers – CB Brandon Cisse, South Carolina

The 49ers could draft an edge rusher here to pair with Nick Bosa, but a cornerback room with Deommodore Lenoir and Cisse is intriguing. The 6-foot corner has the length and athleticism to play outside corner.

28. Houston Texans – OG Chase Bisontis, Texas A&M

Fixing theoffensive line is top priority for the Texansthis offseason. Houston ranked had one of the worst offensive lines in the NFL last year. Bisontis can start at guard as a rookie.

29. Kansas City Chiefs – CB Colton Hood, Tennessee

Cornerback is a glaring need for the Chiefs. It’s going to be tough to replace cornerbacks Trent McDuffie and Jaylen Watson, but Hood is a good start. Hood is a polished corner who plays with a physical style.

30. Miami Dolphins – OL Kadyn Proctor, Alabama

Proctor was one of the best tackles in college football last season. The behemoth offensive lineman is a bulldozer. There’s also talk that he could slide inside and play guard.

31. New England Patriots – WR Omar Cooper Jr., Indiana

The Patriots would love to see a player like Cooper fall to them. Cooper was Fernando Mendoza’s top target at Indiana last season. Cooper can play outside or inside. His ability to make catches in traffic is impressive.

32. Seattle Seahawks – RB Jadarian Price, Notre Dame

Price is a smooth runner with good instincts and vision. He made a name for himself in his own right playing with Notre Dame teammate Jeremiyah Love. The Seahawks lostSuper Bowl 60 MVPKenneth Walker III in free agency and Zach Charbonnet is recovering from a knee injury.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:NFL Draft 2026: First round mock includes two trade predictions

2026 NFL mock draft with trades: Jets get more picks, Chargers fill need

It’s mock draft season as the 2026 NFL draft is fast approaching. Pittsburgh is the host city of the 91stedition of the NFL draft...
Can the Suns' 'Big 3' round into shape for the postseason?

PHOENIX — On the morning of the much-needed Suns-Rockets reunion in the desert, the scene at Verizon 5G Performance Center largely mirrored the current state of affairs. Jalen Green was stationed at the far east corner of the gym, working on live reads with the help of a teammate and assistant. Superstar guard Devin Booker could be seen at the opposite end of the floor, operating out of the mid-post with another assistant. Dillon Brooks, who recently returned from a broken left hand, had already left for the day.

Yahoo Sports

It was a brief but adequate depiction of the Suns’ stop-start season, an injury-riddled campaign that has limited Phoenix’s three best players to just 102 minutes together heading into Tuesday night. With just three games remaining in the regular season, the lack of continuity hasn’t exactly been a deterrent — Suns head coach Jordan Ott has done a quality job making lemonade out of an assortment of lemons — but there are still wrinkles to iron out ahead of the postseason.

“Game reps are obviously the most important piece to it all,” Ott said following Phoenix’s 119-105 loss to Houston on Tuesday night. “Thankfully Dillon and Jalen have played together, and at times, two of the three have played together. I think that’s the unique challenge, all three of them out there at the same time. But we’ve talked about it, we’ve practiced as much as we can practice. We always try to keep those guys [together] just to get the extra reps together. Continue to look at it and we gotta speed it up.”

(Tuesday night was basketball’s version of Inglourious Basterds, equal parts aggression and comedy. It’s clear that there’s no love lost between the two franchises, but between Green’s and Amen Thompson’s brotherly tension, Brooks’ and Kevin Durant’s enjoyable back-and-forth, and the sheer physicality from both sides, it was a necessary game. The Rockets needed a reminder of the brand of ball they used to brandish, and the Suns needed a wake-up call as to what’s in store. Houston had 24 offensive rebounds for goodness sake, scoring 37 points off said second-chance opportunities and eliminating a 21-point first-half deficit in the process.)

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - APRIL 07: Devin Booker #1 of the Phoenix Suns handles the ball against Aaron Holiday #0 of the Houston Rockets during the second half of the NBA game at Mortgage Matchup Center on April 07, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona.  NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement.  (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

Understanding the Suns’ “struggles” (perhaps too harsh a word) incorporating their three-headed monster requires the context of both what has presented itself and also how well other lineups have played. Phoenix, up until this point, has essentially played teams to anet neutralwhen Green, Brooks and Booker share the floor, being outscored by one point in 219 possessions together, according to PBP Stats. They aren’t dominating opponents in the way that might have been hoped or expected at the outset, but not overwhelmingly losing those minutes, either. (It’s a testament to Ott, as previously mentioned, that Phoenix is actually outpacing teams bynearly six points per 100 possessionswhen all three are off the floor.)

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Following the game, Ott maintained the stance that his team, while knowingly ineffective on the defensive glass, tends to find other ways to win the possession battle. There were a plethora of warning signs going up against a large, physical Rockets team while committing to deploying smaller, quicker lineups — with Brooks or Royce O’Neale at the four — but the playoffs are a much more complex process than an early April game. The Suns remain one of the league’s most prominent offensive rebounding units since the All-Star break, grabbing the third-most boards in the NBAand continuing to excel in their transition defense. They understand their length limits threats as they send multiple bodies back, allowing just 1.09 points per chance, which ranks fifth in the league. More players sprinting back also means more opportunities to set up defensively and force turnovers — which makes sense given that the Suns are fifth in opponent transition turnover rate.

Still, having Brooks, Booker and Green requires a certain order of operation, maintaining a healthy shot and usage circulation while embracing the learning chemistry curve. Ott’s lineup against Houston — with Mark Williams and Jordan Goodwin as additives — has played at a breakneck 114.98 pace over 17 minutes this season. It’s an extremely small sample size, but an important one. The Suns coughed up the ball a whopping 19 times Tuesday, a good chunk of them live-ball turnovers. Playing at extremely high speeds — the Miami Heat, for context, lead the NBA in pace at nearly 10 possessions fewer — tends to lead to mistakes. When those three have been on the floor,nearly half of their turnovers are of the live-ball family.

Phoenix needs more possessions like these over the next three games, simple sets that afford all three being involved. The play below incorporates Green’s initiation, Booker’s gravity and Brooks’ improved shot-making, ultimately maximizing the Suns’ spacing to generate a high-quality look.

But all roads, even in losses, lead back to Booker. The star guard led all players in scoring with 31 points on 7-for-16 shooting, including an efficient 15-of-16 from the charity stripe. Booker is the straw that stirs Ott’s drink, a blend of high-usage, high-efficiency centripetal force that consistently puts pressure on opposing defenses. Booker is among the top 25 in bothpoints and assists per game, has further leaned into his driving ability andgravity—sixthin frequency since the break — and is still a top-40-ish player bymost advanced metric models. Surrounding Booker with shooters and mobile bigs has worked thus far; Phoenix is top five in 3-point rate and makes, and top 10 in conversion rate — and it’s no surprise the Suns aresix points better per 100 possessionswhen Booker’s on the floor.

In the playoffs, however, teams will certainly load up on Booker and force the Suns to take advantage of 4-on-3 possessions. This is a strong, confident Phoenix group backed by a top 10-defense, an abundance of pace and space, elite shooting, skilled bigs and an architect in Ott that is just now getting his best tools together. Their dreams of escaping the play-In have been vanquished, but getting their Big 3 on the same page — and quickly — is the next most important item on the agenda. Sometimes the simplest answer is the most obvious.

“We are trying to get better and be perfect for 48 minutes, so that has been our focus for the last few weeks,” Grayson Allen said. “Not looking ahead but thinking ahead and thinking ahead on what we are prepared for and that is the postseason. It will be the same thing these last few games, try and put perfect stretches together.”

Can the Suns' 'Big 3' round into shape for the postseason?

PHOENIX — On the morning of the much-needed Suns-Rockets reunion in the desert, the scene at Verizon 5G Performance Center largely mirr...
High school principal shot in leg after confronting man with a gun, Oklahoma sheriff says

PAULS VALLEY, Okla. (AP) — A high school principal in Oklahoma was shot in the leg Tuesday after confronting a man who entered the school with a gun, authorities said.

Associated Press In this image taken from video provided by Oklahoma television station KFOR, authorities block off an area following a shooting inside a high school, Tuesday, April 7, 2026, in Pauls Valley, Okla. (KFOR via AP) In this image taken from video provided by Oklahoma television station KFOR, authorities block off an area following a shooting inside a high school, Tuesday, April 7, 2026, in Pauls Valley, Okla. (KFOR via AP)

US School Shooting Oklahoma

Pauls Valley High School Principal Kirk Moore is in stable condition, and no students were injured in the shooting, according to authorities. The suspect, a 20-year-old former student, was taken into custody, Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation spokesman Hunter McKee told reporters outside the school.

Moore and other staff members quickly confronted the former student after they noticed he entered the school with a gun, McKee said.

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“The subject was able to fire multiple rounds, where the principal was hurt, but no one else was,” McKee said. “The actions of the staff and the principal stepping in as soon as they saw a subject with a firearm saved lives today.”

Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt said Moore “acted bravely to protect students’ lives" and that he and his wife were praying for his quick recovery.

“I’m thankful for the swift response from law enforcement and school staff, and I’m grateful no students were harmed,” he said in a post on the social platform X.

Pauls Valley is a community of about 6,000 people 60 miles (96 kilometers) south of Oklahoma City.

High school principal shot in leg after confronting man with a gun, Oklahoma sheriff says

PAULS VALLEY, Okla. (AP) — A high school principal in Oklahoma was shot in the leg Tuesday after confronting a man who entered the scho...
Possible human remains found by Easter egg hunters in Long Beach

Authorities in California are investigating after police said someone discovered potential human remains during an Easter egg hunt on Sunday, April 5.

USA TODAY

Long Beach Police Department Public Information Officer Andrea Moran said officers responded at 5 p.m. local time to the 5900 block of De Forest Avenue regarding the discovery of possible human remains.

The area, which runs along the Los Angeles River, is inDeForest Park and Wetlands, about7 miles northof downtown Long Beach.

"It was found during an Easter Egg hunt," Moran told USA TODAY on Monday, April 6.

The Los Angeles County medical examiner’s office was called to respond to the scene, Moran said.

As of early Monday, police remained on scene awaiting the arrival of members of the forensic anthropologist team from that office, Moran said.

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Toddler injured:Child reportedly stuck hand into wolf habitat at ZooAmerica

'Small skull' found by someone searching for Easter eggs

According to local news stationKTLA 5, someone found a "a small skull" during the Easter egg hunt.

It was not immediately known how long the remains had been in the vicinity.

The case remained under investigation on Monday, according to police.

This is a developing story.

Natalie Neysa Alund is a senior reporter for USA TODAY. Reach her at nalund@usatoday.com and follow her on X @nataliealund.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Human remains found during California Easter egg hunt

Possible human remains found by Easter egg hunters in Long Beach

Authorities in California are investigating after police said someone discovered potential human remains during an Easter egg hunt on S...
After missing more than 2 months with right knee injury, Stephen Curry returns for Warriors

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Stephen Curry swished a 3-pointer on his second shot from deep and raised his arms in delight when the ball went through.

Associated Press Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry celebrates after making a 3-point basket during the first half of an NBA basketball game against the Houston Rockets, Sunday, April 5, 2026, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. Vásquez) Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry looks toward the Houston Rockets bench during the second half of an NBA basketball game, Sunday, April 5, 2026, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. Vásquez) Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) reacts after making a 3-point basket during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Houston Rockets, Sunday, April 5, 2026, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. Vásquez) Houston Rockets center Alperen Sengun (28) is hugged by Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) after an NBA basketball game, Sunday, April 5, 2026, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. Vásquez) Houston Rockets guard Reed Sheppard, left, kicks a pass by Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry, center, during the first half of an NBA basketball game, Sunday, April 5, 2026, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. Vásquez)

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He was looking to do the same on the last possession with Golden State down a point, but missed a long, straightaway 3-pointer.

No matter the result, Curry is back and healthy at long last for the Warriors after a right knee injury, and everyone at Chase Center celebrated right along with him inGolden State’s 117-116 lossto the Houston Rockets on Sunday night.

With Curry back, the Warriors hope to make it out of the play-in tournament.

"There were a lot of nerves all day, my family supporting me at home when I was a nervous wreck trying to pass the hours before I got to the arena but once you get back into your routine I've been doing it so long muscle memory takes over and the adrenalin takes over," Curry said. "I appreciate the fans and the reception and just the buzz that was in the arena because you know at a certain point you won't be able to tap into that. So very grateful, it was a beautiful day and now I can kind of settle in to how we're going to finish the year.”

Coming off the bench in the regular season for the first time in 14 years, Curry was greeted by a warm standing ovation and greetings on the big screen — he also expressed his gratitude on video — when he entered with 4:54 left in the opening quarter.

He immediately passed off for an assist on a dunk by Charles Bassey, who just signed with Golden State earlier in the day. Curry made a 3-pointer with 34 seconds remaining in the period.

“You can just feel it, we're back in the mix, we're back in the fight with Steph,” coach Steve Kerr said.

Curry finished with 29 points on 11-for-21 shooting and became the 26th player in NBA history with 9,000 field goals. He was 5 of 10 on 3s, playing 26 minutes.

Fans chanted “We want Steph! We want Steph!” during the fourth quarter, seemingly unaware of his minutes restriction.

This marked the first time he has come off the bench in a regular-season game since March 7, 2012, against Memphis. He last was a reserve in Game 4 of the first round of the 2022 playoffs during the Warriors’ last championship run.

Curry's pregame warmup is always a must-see show long before the main event, and the cheers were extra loud for his latest session now that he's finally back on the floor.

He was cheered before tipoff, too, and was supposed to play 24 minutes following a two-plus-month absence and 27 straight games sidelined because of a right knee injury.

He signed a few autographs after his shooting routine then missed his full-court heave before disappearing into the tunnel.

“He's one of the most beloved players in league history, Bay Area history in any sport and I think a long absence like this reminds everybody how lucky we are to see him, to watch him, to coach him, to play with him,” Kerr said. “So tonight's a special night because we're reminded of how lucky we've been and how lucky we still are.”

Kerr said before the game that it's still unclear how many of the remaining games Curry will play given Golden State has five contests in eight days with a back-to-back the rest of the way — and the expectation is he wouldn't play on consecutive nights.

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The schedule will be determined by how Curry feels and input from Vice President of Player Health and Performance Rick Celebrini.

Soon, Curry will be starting again.

Rockets coach Ime Udoka knew Houston would have its hands full with No. 30 back.

“One of the best movers in the game,” Udoka said. "... Obviously, we’ve seen him enough and know some things that have hurt us in the past.”

Curry scrimmaged several times this past week to test his injured right knee, and he said Saturday it was never a consideration to shut it down for the rest of the season. Kerr hoped to have Curry and younger brother Seth finally play together.

At the 6:19 mark of the second quarter, they did — the first time brothers played together in Warriors franchise history, according to Elias.Seth Curryalso has been injured much of the season.

Seth Curry did appear in six preseason games for Golden State in 2013 then played for the team’s G League Santa Cruz Warriors that year — with the brothers playing all of 100 seconds together during the fourth quarter of two games during that ’13 preseason.

“That was special,” Curry said. “We both had very difficult years, honestly him more than me with injuries. I was joking calling us the rehab brothers. It's been like that all year but to have that moment coming out of a timeout, talking about our matchups, I was having flashbacks to Charlotte Christian in high school my senior year, his sophomore year was the last time in an actual game. ... That was a dream come true to be honest, it hasn't really sunk in yet.”

Their mother, Sonya, was in the stands for the moment.

Curry warmed up in Kevin Durant's “Scoring Title” Nike KD 4s with former teammate Durant playing for the Rockets.

After Saturday's practice, Curry said dealing with the pain is part of his “new normal” and the offseason will require a significant reset.

The 38-year-oldCurry initially expected to be playingright after the All-Star break, but the recovery was prolonged by some difficult moments when he would feel good, push hard then pay for it the following day.

The Warriors (36-42) lost their fourth straight game. They were 13-25 this season without Curry — including 9-18 during the recent stretch with him sidelined by patellofemoral pain syndrome.

Curry was thrilled to battle Durant again — knowing these moments won't last forever. The feeling was mutual.

“Amazing,” Durant said about Curry’s comeback night.

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

After missing more than 2 months with right knee injury, Stephen Curry returns for Warriors

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Stephen Curry swished a 3-pointer on his second shot from deep and raised his arms in delight when the ball went t...
Iran war's shock waves threaten England's farms 6,000 miles away

GREAT HORKESLEY, England — Few places feel farther from theIran warthan the potato fields of eastern England, where pastoral landscapes and ancient forests have inspired romantic painters and poets for centuries.

NBC Universal Rix Farm in Great Horkesley, England, on Thursday. (Andrew Testa for NBC News)

But this bucolic scene is not immune from the shock waves triggered by the American-Israeli assault — and it’sa story being repeated across farms all over the world.

Though much attention has been devoted to the oil shock brought on by the conflict, there is another, perhaps equally alarming crisis emerging for the global population: a looming shortage of fertilizer, which couldtrigger widespread food shortages.

Jumping down from his bright-green, 400-horsepower tractor, Stuart Josselyn wastes no time giving his view on geopolitics while standing on the plowed earth.

“Trumpy,” he said, using a nickname for the American president delivered with the elongated vowels of an East Anglian accent, “he is causing real problems for real people throughout the whole world.”

Stuart Josselyn, a machine operator at Rix Farms. (Andrew Testa for NBC News)

At 51, Josselyn is one of the farm’s top machine operators — whom his boss calls “fighter pilots” — but his chuckling manner and hoodie-sweatpants combo belie a serious message for the American president: “This is going to affect us for a long time, even if the war stops right now.”

A chorus of expert voices warned this could happen: Iran retaliating by blockading the Strait of Hormuz. This vital but narrow waterway shepherds through a fifth of the world’s crude oil and a third of its granular urea, a type of nitrogen fertilizer. Oil prices of more than $100 a barrel have been headline news for weeks. Less noticed is that future deliveries of Middle Eastern granular urea have spiraled from $484 per ton on Feb. 27 to $750 per ton as of Friday.

Already,global food commodity prices have climbed to their highest levels since December, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization said Friday. And if the conflict stretches beyond 40 days, then “farmers will have to choose” — plant less or switch to less fertilizer-intensive crops, the organization’s chief economist, Máximo Torero,said in a video Q&A. “Those choices will hit future yields and shape our food supply” this year and next, he said.

After Brexit, the coronavirus pandemic, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the relentless impact of the climate crisis, this is just the latest turbulence to batter the machinery of global trade. It is how one blockaded 20-mile stretch of water can create a cascade of consequences touching not just fuel and food, but medicine, electronics and the panoply of consumer goods.

For the United States and Europe, this threatens expensive groceries. For some parts of Africa, South America and Asia, it could mean acute shortages if the war lasts months rather than weeks.

Clockwise from top left: John Rix; machinery on Rix Farms; onion packaging at Stourgarden. (Andrew Testa for NBC News)

The chaos is already creeping into the balance sheet of large businesses like P.G. Rix Farms, which employs around 40 people some 90 minutes’ drive east of London.

It grows mainly onions and potatoes, supplying industry giants such as McDonald’s and Tesco, Britain’s largest supermarket chain. It also plants sugar beets, cereals and willow trees, whose fibrous wood is used to make cricket bats.

NBC News visited the farm on an overcast morning this Thursday. It sits just outside Colchester, which claims to be the country’s oldest town and was the Romans’ first capital in Britain.

Today, the farm’s maze of tracks, rolling fields and water meadows are near a government-protected “Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.” It is the kind of scene that stirs something deep in a certain English imagination: a landscape out of John Constable, the 19th-century Romantic painter whose work came to embody the nation’s ideal vision of itself.

This is no mom-and-pop operation, rather an empire of alliums and tubers. Rix Farms made 1.2 million pounds ($1.6 million) after taxes last year, filings show, and is among the country’s largest 10% of farms.

The war has prompted an uncomfortable realization for its chairman, John Rix, an affable farmer and businessman in fleece and a checked shirt.

“You think, hang on a minute, this isn’t going to add up,” he said while giving an impromptu tour of his 6,500 acres in a muddy 4x4.

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Rix Farms chairman John Rix. (Andrew Testa for NBC News)

“There does come a point where you have to go back to your customers and say, ‘Look —” he said. He trails off but the implication is clear: Prices will have to rise.

That means people doing their weekly grocery shopping will end up footing part of the bill, as they did afterRussia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022. (U.K. food inflation topped out at 19.1% in March 2023, but is currently back down at 3.3%.)

“Suddenly you’ve got this horrible inflation figure,” he said, playing out the consequences of this upheaval. “The economic cost across the globe is already fantastic, absolutely fantastic.”

Rix has seen a 44% price increase for diesel fuel, which powers the machines that sow and harvest 44 fields of potatoes and around 60 fields of onions. Together with natural gas, used to dry millions of onions each week, that will add 649,000 pounds to the farm’s costs this year, he said. Rix believes they are covered for this year’s fertilizer, but if the conflict and blockade drags on much longer, this will become another pain point when they buy next year’s supply in October.

“I wake up each morning thinking, ‘It’s got to be over,’” said Rix, who at 68 says he is all but retired, his son Sam, 35, now managing director. “But so far it hasn’t been.”

That morning, he rose to find that President Donald Trump claimed overnight he was going to bomb Iran “back to the Stone Age.”

“It’s not very statesmanlike is it?” said Rix with a sigh.

Asked for comment on the farmers' criticisms, White House Deputy Press Secretary Anna Kelly said that the “administration's detailed planning process” meant it was “was prepared" for any action taken by Iran.

Trump knew “Iran would try to stop the freedom of navigation” and “he has taken action to destroy over 40 minelaying vessels,” Kelly said. “The President is confident that the Strait will be opened very soon, and he has been clear about the consequences if it is not.”

He and his workers talk about how unnerving it feels to have their livelihoods subject to the whims of a man 3,700 miles away in the White House.

“I do think about it all the time,” said Michael Bloomfield, 37, another “fighter pilot” tractor driver.

Michael Bloomfield, a 37-year-old tractor driver for Rix Farms. (Andrew Testa for NBC News)

“If the field needs a second pass, I’m thinking, ‘Well that’s going to cost X amount more to go over again,’” he said, wearing a high-visibility tunic and black baseball cap.

One silver lining he and other staffers foresee is that the public might become more aware about what it actually takes to put food on their plates.

Ultimately, all crops need nitrogen to grow. They get this either from the soil or, as with modern farming, through added fertilizer. One of the easiest ways of producing nitrogen fertilizers such as urea is by using natural gas, which the Persian Gulf has in abundance.

Unlike oil, fertilizer is not generally backed by large strategic public stockpiles that can be rapidly released in a crisis. It’s only needed for a few specific months of the year, so it’s usually sold and shipped quickly as needed. It is also not easy to store, and some of it can explode — like the ammonia nitrate blast that rocked Beirut in August 2020.

Crops are sprayed at Rix Farms in Great Horkesley, England, on Thursday. (Andrew Testa for NBC News)

Another perverse kind of benefit that today’s farmers believe they have is becoming accustomed to a world shaped by regular upheavals, such as GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic, which they believe are behind declining sales of their spuds.

“Trump adds an element of uncertainty,” said George Rix, 38, John Rix’s nephew and the managing director of the farm’s sister company Stourgarden, which packs the produce after it has been harvested. “All we can try to do is build a model that’s resilient against those changes.”

He had to shout above a warehouse full of packing machines and — installed just 18 months ago — three large robotic arms lifting heavy boxes. One line was clear above the din: “We live in an uncertain world.”

Rix Farms chairman John Rix. (Andrew Testa for NBC)

Iran war's shock waves threaten England's farms 6,000 miles away

GREAT HORKESLEY, England — Few places feel farther from theIran warthan the potato fields of eastern England, where pastoral landscapes...

 

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