“It’s a complicated matter. [Each company] has to look at harms versus benefits and exit responsibly,” she said.
Minnesota’s victory was crucial because no team has ever recovered from a 3-0 deficit to win an NBA playoff series.“We just didn’t bring it from an energy and focus standpoint,” said Gilgeous-Alexander. “We just didn’t have it. They had the sense of urgency, knowing if they go down 3-0, it’s going to be pretty tough.
“They blitzed us pretty early, and we were never able to get back. We’ve got to start coming out with a sense of urgency.”The Timberwolves set a club record for points in a playoff game and led by as much as 129-84 late in the fourth quarter.“We do have to look at it and address the things that went awry for us,” said Timberwolves coach Mark Daigneault. “They really took it to us.
“They were just much more physical, much sharper, executed better, more forceful on offence. For the score to be what it was, they needed to outplay us in a lot of areas, and that’s what they did.”Randle was benched late in game two and unhappy about it, but responded by taking out his frustrations on the Timberwolves.
“He knows not to take nothing too personal,” Edwards said of Randle. “I could see it in his eyes. He wanted his respect back, and he got it.”
Wolves dominate earlyIsraeli ministers and settler politicians are using rhetoric about protecting Jewish Biblical heritage to disguise their long-held desire to annex Sebastia, Azim said.
Eliyahu was joined in Sebastia by Minister of Environmental Protection Idit Silman and Yossi Dagan, chairman of the Shomron Regional Council, which controls 35 illegal West Bank settlements.Silman has hailed the scheme and told Israeli media, “historical justice is being done”, accusing Palestinians of attempting to “erase” Jewish heritage.
The Israeli government has long been clear that Sebastia, which most historians agree was the capital of the Kingdom of Israel for less than 200 years, will be taken over and transformed into the centrepiece of Israeli tourism in the West Bank.In May 2023, the Israeli government approved a 30 million shekel (more than $8m) scheme to restore the park and establish a tourism centre, new access roads, and an expanded military presence. The four million shekel ($1.2m) regeneration of a disused Hijaz railway station about two miles from Sebastia, last operational in the final years of the Ottoman Empire, has also been announced.