Miami Heat urges fans to demand gun reform from lawmakers as Marco Rubio calls out NBA over ties to China
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Spencer Dinwiddie es una de las piezas importantes en la rotación de Dallas Mavericks, el sorprendente finalista del Oeste que entrena Jason Kidd y dirige en pista Luka Doncic. El escolta, de 29 años, ejerce de tercer guard por detrás del esloveno y Jalen Brunson: minutos muy importantes desde el banquillo y en el quinteto en cuanto hay una baja por lesión. Su encaje, que muchos veían complicado, ha resultado óptimo por ahora desde que antes del cierre del mercado invernal, en febrero, llegó a Texas procedente de Washington Wizards. Viajó con el tirador Davis Bertans y una segunda ronda protegida a cambio de Kristaps Porzingis, en el que los Mavs habían dejado definitivamente de creer y por el que, se pensó, no había mejores ofertas que cuadraran con su salario que la combinación de los dos jugadores que llegaban desde la capital.
For several months, any discussion of the top prospects in the 2022 NBA draft has primarily focused on three names — Gonzaga's Chet Holmgren, Auburn's Jabari Smith and Duke's Paolo Banchero. The three one-and-done standouts have been the first three players on draft lists since the early stages of the 2021-22 college basketball season, and remain at the center of the conversation now that the complete 2022 draft order has been set.
Other nations have strong gun cultures, but only in America do so many die, a country where people can legally buy the same military-grade weapons that are currently used in battle in Ukraine. Does a nearly $20 billion industry matter more than the basic safety of school kids?
By Amy Woodyatt and Ben Morse, CNN
Grief has engulfed the Texas city of Uvalde as more details emerged about the school shooting that saw 21 people killed. Nineteen children aged between eight and 11 and two teachers were shot dead by a teenager who had bought two AR-15-style semi-automatic rifles just days before, after his 18th birthday.
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