Edwards, Timberwolves overcome Warriors in Game 3 to take 2-1 series lead

Anthony Edwards poured in a game-high 36 points, Julius Randle had 24 as part of a triple-double, and the Minnesota Timberwolves wrested back home-court advantage in their second-round playoff series against the Golden State Warriors with a 102-97 triumph in San Francisco, California.

Game 4 in the Western Conference best-of-seven series is scheduled for Monday night in San Francisco, with the sixth-seeded Timberwolves leading 2-1.

Jimmy Butler III had a team-high 33 points on Saturday for seventh-seeded Golden State, which played without star guard Stephen Curry, out with a strained left hamstring.

The tightly contested game saw the Warriors clinging within 84-82 before two game-disqualifying fouls on defensive ace Draymond Green within 18 seconds inside the final five minutes.

The Timberwolves took control from there, getting a triple from Jaden McDaniels and a three-point play from Rudy Gobert, the latter creating a six-point cushion for the visitors with 2:05 to play.

“We’re making some shots, for sure,” Timberwolves coach Chris Finch said. “We’re getting stops. We were getting stops throughout the regular season. We’re just winning the possession battle in clutch time now. We’re just not — we’re not giving the ball back on cheap turnovers. We’re not giving up as many or any second-chance opportunities.”

A 3-pointer by Edwards, his fifth of the game, all but clinched Minnesota’s second consecutive win with 1:19 to go.

Edwards’s 36 points were his second-most this postseason, topped only by a 43-point explosion in Game 4 against the Los Angeles Lakers in the first round. He hit 13 of his 28 shots on Saturday.

“The team defence was really good,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. “Held them to 102. That’s a pretty good number. But Randle and Edwards really both got going in the second half, and that was the key. We couldn’t quite contain them, especially in the fourth, and that was the difference.”

Randle complemented his 24 points with 10 rebounds, a game-high 12 assists and three steals for the Timberwolves, who outshot the hosts 43.9 percent to 43.2 percent in a defensive struggle.

“He’s playing with so much force and determination,” Finch said of Randle. “He’s going out there early and aggressive, and he’s exerting a tonne of energy on the defensive end with his body and his rebounding. He’s playing a complete game for us, no doubt.”

McDaniels added 15 points and Gobert had a game-high 13 rebounds for Minnesota, which went 2-1 on the road in its 4-1 first-round series win against the Lakers.

Golden State Warriors forward Jimmy Butler III (#10) led Golden State with 33 points in a losing effort in Game 3 [Godofredo A Vasquez/AP Photo]

Butler’s 33 points on 12-for-26 shooting were his most since he had 35 for the Miami Heat in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals at Boston in 2023. He also found time for seven rebounds and a team-high seven assists.

“Man, Jimmy was incredible,” Kerr said. “He really controlled the game for us and put us in a position to win, and we just couldn’t close it out. But he was brilliant all night.”

Jonathan Kuminga, pressed into increased playing time as the Warriors looked to fill the void of Curry’s regular scoring, backed Butler with a postseason career-high 30 points. He had totalled just 43 in Golden State’s first nine playoff games.

“JK [Jonathan Kuminga] played one of the best games of his life,” Kerr said. “It was fantastic to see. You can see how necessary he is in this matchup, especially without Steph [Curry].”

Buddy Hield shot 4-for-8 on 3-pointers to account for a majority of his 14 points for the Warriors, while Brandin Podziemski collected a team-high eight rebounds on a night when he shot 1-for-10.

Celtics bury Knicks in Game 3

In an earlier playoff game on Saturday, Jayson Tatum finished with 22 points, nine rebounds and seven assists, and the Boston Celtics pulled away for a 115-93 win over the host New York Knicks in Game 3 of their second-round Eastern Conference series.

Payton Pritchard scored a team-high 23 points off the bench for Boston, which cut the Knicks’ lead to 2-1 in the best-of-seven series. Jaylen Brown added 19 points, and Derrick White had 17.

Jalen Brunson scored 27 points on 9-for-21 shooting to lead the Knicks. Karl-Anthony Towns finished with 21 points and 15 rebounds.

After struggling to score in the first two games of the series, the Celtics found their rhythm on offence. Boston shot 48.2 percent (40 of 83) overall and 50 percent (20 of 40) from 3-point range, and New York shot 40 percent (32 of 80) from the field and 20 percent (5 of 25) from beyond the arc.

“They got some clean looks early, and they see it go in; that gives them confidence. Then it’s hard to shut them off,” said Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau. “We have to have greater awareness. We can’t allow missed shots to take away from [our] defensive tenacity. We’ve got to bounce back.”

Tatum made a basket to put Boston on top 112-89 with 2:40 remaining. He assisted on a 3-pointer by Al Horford on the next possession, and Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla rested his starters for the remainder of the game with the score out of reach.

“This is the fun part. You don’t get into the journey for it to be easy,” said Mazzulla. “It’s been dark, but in a good way. You’ve just got to tap into your darkness, and that’s it.”

Game 4 in the best-of-seven series will be played in New York on Monday.

Jayson Tatum in action.
Boston Celtics’ Jayson Tatum, right, shoots over New York Knicks’ Mikal Bridges, left, during Game 3 of their second-round NBA playoff series on May 10, 2025, in New York, US [Pamela Smith/AP Photo]

Danny Dyer ‘off his nut’ while filming EastEnders – leading bosses to take drastic steps

Danny Dyer has confessed to downing booze and taking prescription pills before filming scenes on EastEnders during his nine-year run as Mick Carter on the hit soap

Danny Dyer made a candid confession about his time on EastEnders(Image: Brett Cove/Shutterstock)

Danny Dyer has confessed that he was “off his nut” while filming for EastEnders, forcing show bosses to take drastic action. The actor made bombshell claims about his time on the BBC soap as he slammed it for being “s*** now.”

Talking at a charity event on Friday Danny – who has suffered from drink and drug abuse in the past – opened up about how he struggled after joining the soap and found himself drunk on set and taking prescription pills. Danny starred on EastEnders for nine years from 2013 – 2022 and during that time went to rehab in 2017 to address his addiction problems.

He described how the production team took action when he was drunk on set to stop him from downing beers while he worked. He said: “When I first arrived the pints were reaI. I was slipping and sliding around having a few lagers and they found out, so they started to put TCP in the f***ing beer!”

Danny then admitted that he was also taking pills but still managed to act his scenes as loveable landlord of The Queen Vic, Mick Carter. He said: “I was off my nut for a lot of that job, I’ve got to say. I was on a lot of valium and diazepam, that is why. Still got that f***ing job done somehow.”

Danny Dyer
Ricky Norwood and Danny seen at an Evening With Danny Dyer for the Paul Stank Charitable Trust(Image: Brett Cove/Shutterstock)

Danny didn’t hold back as he was asked what he thought of the show since he left in traumatic scenes that saw Mick lost at sea saving the lives of ex Linda Carter and evil new wife Janine Butcher at Christmas in 2022. He said: “S*** now though, ain’t it,” adding, “Serves them right.”

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Talking at the Paul Strank Charitable Trust event in Wimbledon, south London – where he donated thousands of pounds of his own money – Danny opened up about the emotional rollercoaster and how he struggled with the lack of downtime from draining scenes, saying there wasn’t enough “duty of care”.

“In a film you properly cry and go to a dark place,” he said. “You have time to recover. But on soap, you ain’t. On a soap, it f**** a lot of people’s heads up. I tell you most people in soaps are off their nut. You meet them on the street and they’re f***ing lunatics, I’m telling you.

“If someone dies in your family, they won’t even let you go to a f***ing funeral because it is such a machine there wasn’t much duty of care there.”

A spokesperson for the show has rebuked Danny’s claims. In statement, they said: “We would never discuss an individual’s private matters however, we do not recognise these claims. EastEnders has extremely robust and well established procedures in place to safeguard the welfare of everyone who works on the show.”

Danny Dyer and Kellie Bright
Danny with co-star Kellie Bright as Mick and Linda Carter(Image: BBC/Jack Barnes/Kieron McCarron)

He took the part of Mick Carter at a low point in his career after his Human Traffic and The Football Factory success had waned and with bailiffs at his door, having previously sworn he would never star in the soap.

Danny, 47, claims he didn’t get a warm welcome on Albert Square. “I will be honest, it is a very clicky place to work,” he said. “We took the pub over from Jessie Wallace and Shane Ritchie. Kat and Alfie had an 11 year run and then they want to get rid of them.

“So they brought us in and they had the hump. That was getting tricky. I was like ‘What’s the matter with these people, I’ve not made this call’. So there was a lot of people blanking us when we turned up.”

Whilst he looks back fondly on the first three years of working on the show, he said it went downhill from there. “I really cherish those first three years,” he recalled, “Then a new producer came in and sacked every f***er. It is a very ruthless job. I learned a lot. Nine years was enough for me.”

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Emily In Paris’ Lily Collins surprises castmates as she brings baby to set four months after birth

Emily In Paris star Lily Collins brought her cast mates and crew to a standstill after she brought her four month old daughter to the set of the popular Netflix drama

Lily Collins brings four month old daughter to set(Image: Getty Images for BFI)

After months away from filming Emily In Paris, Lily Collins’ return to set was always going to be a welcoming affair. But Netflix star brought the entire set to a standstill as she returned to work with her four month old daughter in tow.

Cradling her in her arms, the 36 year old actress looked the picture of happiness as she was surrounded by her cast mates and crew as they cooed over her baby girl, named Tove. And it looked as though the four month old was also in her element as she playfully smiled and sat comfortable in the arms of various pals of the actress.

In one picture, one member of the crew appeared so enamoured by Lily’s daughter, she could barely contain her excitement as she looked on as Lily cradled her baby girl.

The star is back filming the latest series of Emily In Paris
The star is back filming the latest series of Emily In Paris(Image: CAROLE BETHUEL/NETFLIX)

The actress was seen dressed in a blue and white floral trouser suit for her role as Emily Cooper for the new series of the show, in photos shared by the Daily Mail.

Waiting in the wings to step in for parent duties in case Lily was to be whisked off to shoot a scene, was her husband and father to her daughter, Charlie McDowell.

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Standing aside, Charlie placed a muslin cloth over his shoulder in case he needed to take over and comfort his daughter.

The new series of the show is being filmed in Rome instead of Paris as Lily’s character is now creating a new life for herself in the historical city with her on-screen boyfriend Marcello, played by Eugenio Franceschini.

(Image: Getty Images for Netflix)

Back in January, Lily and Charlie welcomed their daughter via surrogate.

Sharing her happy news with her 29 million followers, Lily posted: “Welcome to the center [sic] of our world Tove Jane McDowell. Words will never express our endless gratitude for our incredible surrogate and everyone who helped us along the way. We love you to the moon and back again…”

Unfortunately, both Lily and Charlie were criticised by a few people on social media for using the aid of a surrogate to fulfil their dreams of becoming parents, as they claimed they had bought the privilege.

Lily and Charlie became parents in January
Lily and Charlie became parents in January(Image: Getty Images)

While others likened surrogacy to “human trafficking.” This forced Charlie to publicly address the comments and labelled the comments as “unkind.”

He wrote: “It’s OK to not know why someone might need a surrogate to have a child. It’s OK to not know the motivations of a surrogate regardless of what you assume.”

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A month after the birth, Lily took to Instagram once again to share with fans how Valentines Day took on a new meaning for her now that she was a mother.

On February 14, she wrote: “I truly can’t imagine feeling more love. Valentine’s Day (and every day) just got a whole lot sweeter.”

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‘Difficult ceasefire’: Guns silent, but will the India-Pakistan truce hold?

New Delhi, India – Mukeet Shah had not slept for days, doomscrolling on his mobile phone as he remained hooked to news updates on the spiralling India-Pakistan conflict.

A phone call from his mother, Tanveera Bano, on Saturday made it worse. “Please, come back [home]. Why be apart when we can at least die together?” she urged her younger son, who studies at a university in New Delhi, the national capital.

Shah, 23, said her appeal shattered him. An hour or so later, another news flash popped up on his phone: “US President Donald Trump says India and Pakistan have agreed to a ‘full and immediate’ ceasefire.” Moments later, the South Asian rivals confirmed the ceasefire, mediated by dozens of countries besides the United States.

“It was such a relief,” Shah recalled. Happily, he called home. “Both countries have agreed to peace. We will spend more time soon, don’t be afraid, mother,” he told 48-year-old Bano, who asked him to focus on his studies and return home only after his annual exams.

However, barely three hours after that phone call, the sense of relief was blown away. A barrage of drones had hit Srinagar, the main city in Indian-administered Kashmir, forcing another electricity blackout. Similar reports of firings and drone sightings came from other cities in the region, including Jammu, Anantnag, as well as the border districts of Rajasthan and Gujarat states.

On the Pakistan side as well, several villages along the Line of Control (LoC) – the de facto border that divides Kashmir – reported alleged ceasefire violations by the Indian forces. As Pakistan and India denied each other’s allegations and reaffirmed their commitment to the ceasefire, questions were raised on whether the fragile agreement between the nuclear-powered neighbours would hold.

Bano called her son again, crying.

“In her intermittent pauses, I could hear sounds of blasts behind her as she broke down. The jets were loud as well,” Shah told Al Jazeera on Saturday night, sitting in a huddle with his Kashmiri friends in a New Delhi neighbourhood, 800km (about 500 miles) away from home.

Eighteen days after gunmen killed 26 civilians in Indian-administered Kashmir’s resort town of Pahalgam, nearly 1.6 billion people on either side of the border reeled under the fears of another India-Pakistan war over Kashmir, a Muslim-majority Himalayan region claimed in full by both the nations that rule over parts of it.

An armed rebellion against New Delhi’s rule erupted on the Indian side in 1989. Since then, tens of thousands of people, most of them civilians, have been killed in the conflict. New Delhi accuses Islamabad of backing the rebellion, but Pakistan denies the allegation and claims to provide only diplomatic support to the Kashmiris’ struggle for an independent state or a likely merger with Pakistan.

‘Kashmiris stuck in the middle’

Abbas, a Srinagar resident who requested to be identified by his last name only, told Al Jazeera the loud explosions his family heard on Saturday night were terrifying.

“Each blast came out of nowhere and left us scared and confused. As a Kashmiri, I have lived through tough times before, but this [current conflict] feels different,” he said.

A family looks towards the sky as projectiles fly over Indian-administered Kashmir [Rafiq Maqbool/AP Photo]

Abbas said he had been waking up to toddlers crying amid explosions at night.

“It feels like a psychological war has been waged on us. The fear isn’t just from the blasts; it is from the uncertainty and a lack of transparency,” he said. “Kashmiris are once again stuck in the middle, with no refuge, no escape.”

Yet, the ceasefire announcement on Saturday evening was met with jubilation in several frontier districts on the Indian side, especially among thousands of displaced residents since the cross-border tensions mounted earlier this month.

Deepak Singh, a 40-year-old resident of Poonch, one of the most affected border districts in Indian-administered Kashmir, said in a brief phone interview that his family of four looked forward to leaving their shelter and being home.

“We have known a life that gets disturbed by the border clashes, but I am hopeful to return to my home soon,” Singh told Al Jazeera.

But that was before the explosions were reported from Srinagar. As both sides accused each other of breaching the truce, Singh said he felt devastated.

“Not again,” he later said. “Till how long are we supposed to sleep in this shelter? Will this ceasefire hold at all?”

More than 1,000km (620 miles) away, Pradyot Verma was having similar feelings.

A resident of Jodhpur, a border town in India’s western state of Rajasthan, Verma said their joy and relief were short-lived as they witnessed another round of blackouts and siren alerts on Saturday night, keeping the residents in an anxious loop.

“The ceasefire announcement was met with cheers here,” said the 26-year-old law student as he sat in darkness in his rented room. “Indian defence system keeps on intercepting [Pakistan-origin missiles] and we are hoping that they keep doing it.”

‘Back from the brink of war’

After four days of military escalation, during which Indian and Pakistani forces attacked each other’s military installations, they agreed on a ceasefire, which Trump said was reached after “a long night of talks” mediated by the US and other countries. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the two nations have also agreed to “start talks on a broad set of issues at a neutral site”.

However, geopolitical and military experts argue the ceasefire is fragile and does not promise much.

“The Indian government has already signalled rebutting Rubio’s assertion that India and Pakistan have agreed to start talks on a broad set of issues at a neutral site,” Sumantra Bose, a political scientist, told Al Jazeera. “It is something [Prime Minister Narendra] Modi’s government just can’t do, given its commitment to unilateralism on Kashmir and rejection of diplomatic engagement with Pakistan.”

Bose said the ceasefire was merely a “band-aid slapped on a profusely bleeding wound that was threatening to turn gangrenous if not fatal”.

While the escalation might have stopped due to intervention by foreign governments, “the problem is all the other parameters and vectors of the India-Pakistan relationship and the Kashmir conflict remain as before”, Bose said, adding, “in an even more bitter and toxic form than was the case earlier”.

However, Michael Kugelman, an expert on South Asia politics, stressed that the subcontinent was “back from the brink of war”.

“This ceasefire, so long as it holds, even with some violations, does bring an end to what had been the biggest regional security threat by far in decades,” he told Al Jazeera.

“This is going to be a very difficult ceasefire to uphold. It was very quickly put together at a moment when India-Pakistan tensions were soaring [and] this is also a ceasefire that appears to have been interpreted differently by India,” added Kugelman, referring to India’s historic position on Kashmir, which has been a consistent rejection of any attempt by Pakistan at internationalising the issue.

But for the people living along the tense borders between the South Asian rivals, a cautious optimism is their only recourse.

“We are holding this ceasefire very dear to us,” said a Kashmiri political analyst, who requested anonymity, fearing reprisal from the Indian authorities.

“Be it anyone’s war, India or Pakistan, people on the border, Kashmiris and Punjabis, have been losing their lives for generations. I hope this madness stops here.”

Amanda Holden ‘humiliated but won’t lose sleep’ after critics blast Netflix show

A source says that Amanda Holden will brush herself off and move on after TV critic blasts her new Cheat: Unfinished Business series as ‘worst show ever created’

Amanda’s new Netflix series has received very mix reactions(Image: Tom Dymond/Netflix)

Amanda Holden’s new reality show has been panned by the critics, but a source claims that the veteran presenter is refusing to “focus on the negatives”. The nine-part Cheat: Unfinished Business series, which landed on Netflix on 30 April, sees the 54-year-old Britain’s Got Talent judge join forces with relationship guru Paul C Brunson to reunite eight former couples who split up due to infidelity – or alleged infidelity, as reports OK!.

It is Heart radio host Amanda’s first major project for the streaming service, joining the likes of celebrity presenters Holly Willoughby, who hosted Celebrity Bear Hunt , and Matt and Emma Willis, who fronted Love Is Blind . Despite the show sitting at number six on the Netflix UK Top 10 at the time of going to press, the critics’ reviews tell a different story. One national newspaper described it as “basically The Jeremy Kyle Show on coke”, and another branded it “the single worst thing that has ever been created in the history of humankind”.

READ MORE: Amanda Holden speaks out on wild Les Dennis split rumour as she sets record straight

Amanda Holden, Paul Carrick Brunson and couples in the Reckoning Room
Amanda and Paul reunite eight couples to discuss their cheating and breakups(Image: Netflix)

But according to our source, Amanda, whose 1995 marriage to comedian Les Dennis ended very publicly when she had an affair with actor Neil Morrissey, has been in showbiz long enough not to let the critics’ words ruin her moment. “Amanda has had a good 20 years at the top and she’s a professional, she’s not naïve,” they said. “She knows that in this industry you’ll have highs and lows, and you can’t sit at home crying and losing sleep about it.

“She’s fully aware of how negative some of the reviews are, and of course it’s a bit humiliating to read them, but as far as she’s concerned, she had fun making the series, she earned her money, some people liked it, some didn’t, and now it’s on to the next thing.

“She’s very robust, she’s already been through a lot worse than this, with all the stories about the end of her marriage to Les back in the day, for example. She’s a tough cookie. She’ll never take the criticism personally or let the online haters win. She’s very robust, she’ll always defend herself.”

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BGT judges
Amanda has been a judge on Britain’s Got Talent since 2007(Image: Tom Dymond/REX/Shutterstock)

Amanda isn’t known for staying silent when she feels professional criticism isn’t justified. In December last year, she came out fighting after some viewers tweeted about her Royal Variety Performance with Alan Carr, throwing around words like “awkward” and “painful”.

Following the criticism, Amanda hit back on her socials, saying that despite the temptation to “ignore” the comments she wanted to speak up. “All the big shows get battered… Merry Christmas you lovely lot. Our ratings were brilliant so that’s what counts xx,” she told fans.

Amanda, who is now married to producer Chris Hughes and has two daughters, has also been at the centre of a number of fiery debates about some of her daring outfits on Britain’s Got Talent – one of which attracted more than 630 complaints to the TV regulator Ofcom.

In 2017, her plunging black Julien Macdonald frock – worth an eye-watering £11,000 – was described by some viewers as “unsuitable” for a family show. In response, Amanda made it clear she wasn’t going to change her fashion style for anyone, saying, “It’s all quite laughable. It’s been called another national crisis – but, oh no, I will not be covered up.”

Amanda Holden
The BGT judge refused to cover up after her Julien Macdonald dress was criticised

Despite the official reviews of Cheat: Unfinished Business , the show has received a lot of love from Amanda’s many followers on her social media. Fans have said, “This was so good, binge-watched it all,” and “Absolute dream pairing this is,” in reference to Amanda and Paul, who is also currently filming Celebs Go Dating.

Discussing the format on The One Show before the series dropped, Amanda emphasised that it was ultimately about helping people, not just eyeballing people’s heartache. “The end result is that you have 16 people leave there that are so different to how they went in,” she said. “That’s what I find so heartwarming and brilliant about it. Yes, you are watching it to get the gossip and the salaciousness and the juicy factor. But every single person who went in has learnt something.”

While Amanda might have had good intentions, they appear to have been lost on many of the country’s TV critics. The Telegraph ’s arts and entertainment editor delivered a two-star review, writing, “Drama-wise, it is the TV equivalent of sitting on a bus and overhearing a stranger moaning on the phone about their ex. Then going on seven other bus journeys and having to listen to the same sort of thing.”

However, there have been rumours already of a second series being commissioned, but Amanda told her Heart Radio listeners last week she “didn’t know for sure”.

Amanda Holden and Alan Carr
Amanda and Alan’s renovation series has been recommissioned by the BBC(Image: BBC/Voltage TV)
Amanda Holden and Alan Carr
Viewers loved their chemistry and banter on the first few series(Image: CREDIT LINE:BBC/Voltage TV)

It is far from professional doom and gloom for the TV personality though. Earlier this month, Amanda and comedian Alan Carr announced that the BBC had recommissioned a fourth series of their popular Amanda And Alan renovation show.

Revealing the news on her socials, Amanda said, “We couldn’t be happier to be spending another summer together bashing down walls in one of our favourite places ever! MILLIONS of you tuned in – thank you SO MUCH for all the love and support.”

Our source goes on to claim that Amanda is more than capable of handling the ups and downs that go with working in the fickle showbiz industry so, while her pride might be temporarily hurt, she’ll “dust herself off and move on”.

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They added, “She knows there’s a few lows in the highs, but she had fun doing it and she doesn’t regret it. She also doesn’t have time to focus on the negatives. She’s got a lot going on with BGT and more shows with Alan. She knows that in this industry, you win some, you lose some – and Amanda’s still hot property in TV land.”

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