LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, Lindsey Vonn, Naomi Osaka among several sports stars to wish Chris Paul a fond farewell after his retirement

After 21 seasons and 12 All-Star selections,Chris Paul called it a career on Friday. It didn't take long for the well wishes to start flooding in.

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Between his tenures with seven different teams, his leadership role with the NBPA and his famous Banana Boat friendships, few players in the history of the NBA have been connected across the league like Paul. Here's a sample of the comments that came in onhis Instagram post making the announcement:

  • LeBron James: "HELLUVA CAREER CHAMP! CONGRATULATIONS 🙏🏾✊🏾"

  • Dwyane Wade: "An honor to compete against you my brother. A Legendary Career"

  • Klay Thompson: "Point god ! It was a pleasure being your teammate. Congrats on a legendary run my man !"

  • Tyrese Maxey: "LOVE OG!! Respect"

  • Trae Young: "Set the Blueprint 🫡 Legend !"

  • Bradley Beal: "Happy for you and the fam! Congrats on a great career bro! LEGEND"

  • Kyle Lowry: "Amazing career my brother!! Love brother!!"

  • Naomi Osaka: "❤️❤️❤️"

  • Donovan Mitchell: "Point God🤞🏾🫡"

  • Matt Barnes: "One of the Greatest PG's the games ever seen. Love you bro"

  • Chiney Ogwumike: "LEGEND! ✊🏿✨"

  • Al Horford: "Congrats CP!!!!! 👏👏👏👏👏"

  • Muggsy Bogues: "One hell of a ride young fella- You did it your way🎩👊🏾"

  • Trayce Jackson-Davis: "It was an honor cp! 🙏🏾"

  • Mike Conley: "👏🏾👏🏾 Congrats!!"

  • Richard Jefferson: "Point God🤞🏾The best is yet to come"

  • Nina Westbrook (wife of Russell Westbrook): "👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾 congratulations on an incredible career!"

Lindsey Vonn even got in there from her hospital bed, writing "❤️💪🏻 legend!!!" And, of course, State Farm chimed in with "From assists on the court to assists in life - you've always been a good neighbor. Respect the legacy, CP3 👏"

Stephen Curry, who has been both friend and foe for Paul in their careers, released a video message praising the future Hall of Famer:

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One interesting note is that of Paul's seven teams played for, six of them posted a farewell note on X soon after the announcement:the New Orleans Pelicans,Houston Rockets,Oklahoma City Thunder,Golden State WarriorsandSan Antonio Spurs.

FILE - Los Angeles Clippers guard Chris Paul drives to the basket during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Orlando Magic, Thursday, Nov. 20, 2025, in Orlando, Fla. (AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack, File)

The one holdout was the Los Angeles Clippers, where Paul arguably enjoyed the best years of his career. They ended up posting a tribute video at 9:43 p.m. PT.

It was unclear if the Clippers would even acknowledge the news during the day given how awkward the situation was. Paul reunited with the team for a farewell season only to be permanently sidelined in early December andeventually traded to the Toronto Raptors, who waived him Friday.

It was an ugly divorce,as there were reports of Paul clashing with team leadership.The Clippers announced they were sending him home in the dead of night, and that wound up being the finale of his career.

LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, Lindsey Vonn, Naomi Osaka among several sports stars to wish Chris Paul a fond farewell after his retirement

After 21 seasons and 12 All-Star selections,Chris Paul called it a career on Friday. It didn't take long for the wel...
Baylor's Tyce Armstrong becomes 2nd college baseball player with 3 grand slams in the same game

WACO, Texas (AP) — Tyce Armstronghit three grand slamsin his Baylor debut Friday night in the Bears' 15-2 season-opening victory over New Mexico State, just the second college baseball player to ever accomplish that feat.

Associated Press

"I'm speechless," Armstrong said. "It's the coolest thing I've ever been a part of."

He joins Louisville's Jim LaFountain as the only players with that distinction. LaFountain hit two of his three grand slams in the same inning on March 24, 1976, in the second game of a doubleheader against Western Kentucky. He also hit a two-run home run in the 26-4 victory that was called in the fifth inning.

No Major League Baseball player has ever hit three grand slams in one game. Thirteen players have had two in a game.

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Armstrong, a senior first baseman, transferred from Texas-Arlington, where he had 17 homers and 87 RBIs over three seasons.

Against New Mexico State, he went 3 or 4 with 12 RBIs.

Armstrong hit all three homers to left field — a 401-foot shot in the third inning, a 407-foot blast in the fourth and a 386-foot homer in the seventh.

AP college sports:https://apnews.com/hub/college-sports

Baylor's Tyce Armstrong becomes 2nd college baseball player with 3 grand slams in the same game

WACO, Texas (AP) — Tyce Armstronghit three grand slamsin his Baylor debut Friday night in the Bears' 15-2 season-ope...
Braves' Chris Sale has no intention of using ABS system: 'I'm not an umpire. That's their job.'

Chris Sale of theAtlanta Bravessaid he will do his job when it comes to being a starting pitcher and will allow umpires to do their jobs when it comes to calling balls and strikes with the theAutomated Ball Strike Challenge Systembeing instituted in MLB this season.

Every team will have two challenges to begin each game. Only batters, catchers and pitchers will be allowed to challenge ball or strike calls and they must signal their intent by tapping their heads immediately after the pitch to initiate the challenge.

The 36-year-old Sale has thrown over 30,000 pitches in his 15-year career with the Chicago White Sox, Boston Red Sox and Atlanta Braves. What he won't do for the remainder of his time on the mound is challenge any called ball he believes is a strike.

"I will never challenge a pitch. I will never do it. I won't do it,"Sale told reporters on Friday. "I'm not an umpire. That's their job. I'm a starting pitcher. I've never called balls and strikes in my life. Plus, I'm greedy, and I know that. I think they're all strikes."

Sale added that catchers, like teammates Sean Murphy and Drake Baldwin, are so good at framing pitches that a lot more pitches appear to be strikes than they used to, especially ones on the corner of the plate. The nine-time All-Star and 2024 pitching Triple Crown and Cy Young Award winner said he'll trust the umpire's call so as to not risk a challenge that could be used later in the game during an important at-bat.

"I've dealt with it before, across all games in my entire career there's been balls called strikes and strikes called balls and you just deal with it," Sale said.

If Murphy or Baldwin disagree, however, that's a different story.

"If my catcher has something to say about it, I'll leave that to him," Sale said. "I've dealt with both sides and I'm fine to keep dealing with it."

Braves' Chris Sale has no intention of using ABS system: 'I’m not an umpire. That’s their job.'

Chris Sale of theAtlanta Bravessaid he will do his job when it comes to being a starting pitcher and will allow umpires ...
Leslie Grossman and Sascha Penn Are Married! Inside Their Summer Elopement and Winter Wedding Party (Exclusive)

Parker Burr

People Leslie Grossman and Sascha Penn Parker Burr

NEED TO KNOW

  • Leslie Grossman and Sascha Penn privately eloped in July 2025

  • The couple later celebrated their marriage with an intimate New Year's Eve dinner, entirely planned by Ryan Murphy

  • "It was like the bow on the whole thing that we didn't know we needed that ended up being so important," Grossman tells PEOPLE

Leslie Grossmanand Sascha Penn have tied the knot!

The actress, 54, and the film producer, 55, privately exchanged vows in July 2025 when they eloped on Martha's Vineyard, the same Massachusetts island they gotengagedat in August 2024. A few months later on New Year's Eve, the couple celebrated their marriage with an intimate dinner at the Chateau Marmont in Los Angeles thanks toRyan Murphy, 60, who planned the entire party.

"It really was the ultimate wedding gift that we didn't know that we needed," Grossman tells PEOPLE.

Leslie Grossman and Sascha Penn Parker Burr

Parker Burr

Ahead of the celebration, the newlyweds opened up to Murphy about their "very special" elopement over dinner when the award-winning writer and producer suggested they have a party. Because the couple married later in life, they were focused on honoring the "miracle" of finding each other and hadn't considered having a traditional wedding.

"Ryan was like, 'Listen, your friends and your family want to celebrate you, and I'm giving you a party and that's that,' which was so sweet," Grossman remembers. "It was funny because my first instinct was, 'Oh, let's not make a big deal out of this,' and if you know Ryan Murphy, he's not someone that you say no to. And of course, because Ryan is always right, it ended up being truly one of the most special nights of our lives."

Murphy — who has been a "dear friend" of Grossman's for more than two decades and has worked with her on multiple projects, includingMonsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Storyand several seasons ofAmerican Horror Story— planned "the whole thing," leaving almost everything a surprise.

Ryan Murphy and Leslie Grossman Parker Burr

Parker Burr

"It was so beautiful and perfect and lovely," Grossman raves. "It was a really great way to welcome in the new year."

The celebration had "a winter wonderland vibe," and even though it rained, the unexpected weather made the gathering feel "even more dramatic and intimate."

Among the guests were actressesSarah Paulson, 51, and Holland Taylor, 83, who gave "the most lovely speech." Murphy's toast was "incredible" too, Grossman notes.

Ryan Murphy, Sarah Paulson, and Leslie Grossman Parker Burr

Parker Burr

Also at dinner were Penn's three adult children from a previous relationship, and Grossman's 19-year-old daughter Goldie, whom she shares with her ex-husband, Jon Bronson.

"My life is so much richer that I get to know these three people. They're the coolest people, and I'm so lucky that I get to know them," Grossman gushes. "And it's so great to see Goldie interact with Sascha because they have a really fun, lighthearted but meaningful connection. And it's just better than anything I could have imagined for myself."

Leslie Grossman and Sascha Penn with their children Parker Burr

Parker Burr

For the cocktail reception and dinner, Grossman selected a custom flocked dot tulle tea-length gown with Chantilly lace trim and a black velvet belt by Honor, jewelry by Forever Diamonds New York, and heels by Alena Ettea. To ring in the new year, she wore a black lace trim Zimmerman midi dress and Stuart Weitzman heels.

At midnight, everyone was dancing. In an "amazing, sweet moment of pure joy," Grossman and Goldie danced together toBeyoncé's "Love on Top."

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"Ryan was right, it's important to celebrate with the people who love you the most," Grossman says. "It was like the bow on the whole thing that we didn't know we needed that ended up being so important."

Afterward, Grossman and Penn headed back to their hotel room, where Penn, who is the creator and showrunner of the Starz crime drama seriesPower Book III: Raising Kanan, turned to his wife and said, "I think that was the best night of my life."

Holland Taylor and Leslie Grossman Parker Burr

Parker Burr

"It was so special because it wasn't about the party, it was about just the people there," Grossman says.

Grossman is enjoying every aspect of married life so far with Penn, whom she met on a dating app in early 2022, and is prioritizing spending more time together.

"I feel like we waited a long time to find each other and it's about maximizing the time that we have to be together," Grossman shares. "What I'm most looking forward to is honestly all of the mundane little things about sharing a life with someone. My hopes are not big sweeping things, it's about all of the small little things that make sharing a life with someone so special."

Leslie Grossman and Sascha Penn Parker Burr

Parker Burr

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Grossman hopes her marriage reminds other women her age that it's never too late to find love, even after divorce.

"You can meet someone when you both come into it with full lives and stories and a little emotional mileage, and it can still be as good as you thought it was going to be when you were a very young person. In fact, it's even better," thePopularalum says.

Leslie Grossman Parker Burr

Parker Burr

Grossman never expected to meet the love of her life at age 50.

"It sort of knocked my socks off," she shares, continuing, "[It] has added this whole huge new heart to my life that I didn't even know I needed or I wanted. And it's incredibly special when it's coming from this place of just addition. You're building on top of an already full life."

Leslie Grossman and Sascha Penn kissing Parker Burr

Parker Burr

Grossman emphasizes that marrying later in life is a completely different experience than tying the knot young because it's truly something a couple chooses out of love, not necessity.

"You're together because you want to be, because you're choosing it, not because you need it, you just want them in your life," she says. "It's just a reminder that it is never too late to start again and to begin again and to add a new chapter. It's never, ever, ever too late."

Read the original article onPeople

Leslie Grossman and Sascha Penn Are Married! Inside Their Summer Elopement and Winter Wedding Party (Exclusive)

Parker Burr NEED TO KNOW Leslie Grossman and Sascha Penn privately eloped in July 2025 The couple later cel...
2 Washington Post writers at the Olympics despite being laid off, say it was important to be there

CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy (AP) —Washington PostcolumnistBarry Svrlugawas reporting from his first Winter Olympics whenLindsey Vonnleft her hospital bed after a crash and returned to compete days later at the 2006 Turin Games.

Associated Press One Franklin Square, home of the Washington Post newspaper in downtown Washington, Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2026. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais) United States' Lindsey Vonn crashes during an alpine ski women's downhill race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin) United States' Mikaela Shiffrin at the finish area during an alpine ski, slalom portion of a women's team combined race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty) A sign for the Washington Post is seen at the company's offices, Monday, Jan. 26, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)

Washington Post

He is back in Italy two decades later at theMilan Cortina Gamesand was there again to write about it when Vonn ended up back in the hospital following another crash. Even thoughhe's losing his job.

The Post announced two days before the Olympics opened last week that it was eliminating its sports section whilelaying off a third of its staff.Svrluga said the newspaper originally planned to send 14 staff members to these Games.

With air tickets and accommodation already paid for, Svrluga is one of four of the paper's journalists who decided to still come: He is in Cortina, Rick Maese is in Bormio, andLes Carpenterand national staffer Robert Samuels are in Milan.

"They can take away our section," Svrluga said, "but in a way, they can't take away our spirit."

Of the four, Svrluga and Carpenter are being laid off. They came to their final assignment anyway.

"I wanted to be occupied," said Svrluga, who is at his 12th Games. "I love covering the Olympics. … I had Lindsey injured in Sestriere and then had her gold (Vancouver, 2010) and I've had every one of her Olympic races, whether they were successes or not. Same with (Mikaela) Shiffrin."

The first Olympics that Svrluga worked at was the 2004 Athens Summer Games and he was immediately struck by the way colleagues at the paper collaborated at such a big event.

"It felt like a team sport for us and that benefited the section and the paper," Svrluga said. "What we're trying to do here is remind people — readers and decision makers — that these are a lot of committed people who were doing things for the right reasons."

Carpenter, the Post's Olympics writer, is at his eighth Games. He's been covering figure skating, speedskating and hockey.

"The Post sports department always had such a great connection with its readers. I felt I had to stay to tell the story of this Olympics for them," Carpenter said. "It's what I'd want as a reader. If this is the end for Post sports, let's give our most loyal readers our best."

Shiffrin trusted Svrluga with some personal news

Svrluga gave his readers — and the wider skiing community — reason for pause even before he got to Cortina.

An extensive pre-Games interview with Shiffrin and her mother and coach, Eileen, turned into much more than an Olympic preview story when they revealed to Svrluga why Eileen was absent at the start of this World Cup season: She had been diagnosed with cancer and faced six weeks of treatments.

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"This was a very personal situation," Svrluga said. "I'm thankful for them that they trusted me with the information. It's their story to tell."

Staff reductions are 'tragic for readers'

Changes across the industry have resulted in fewer American reporters attending events like the Olympics.

"That's tragic for readers," Svrluga said, noting how the extra space in the reporters' interview areas at the finish lines are "great for logistics and sad for the business."

Some of the people who Svrluga has reported on at the Olympics have reached out to him after word spread about the cuts at the Post. It's happened back in Washington, too, he said.

"People who have won World Series, people who own teams. I've been there 22 years, so you build relationships over time, even with people you battle with a little bit or you write something they don't like. It's still a human element to it," Svrluga said. "So I've heard from more people than I can count."

But, Svrluga added, "You don't want to be the story. You want to cover the story."

The Post's executive editor, Matt Murray, called the layoffs painful but necessary.

"You could argue maybe we're in this position because we didn't adapt or see what is coming next," Svrluga said. "It's obvious people get their news in different ways now. I'm 'old school' in one regard. … I hope that the people who are in their 20s and early 30s, like when I first went to the Olympics, are figuring out whatever's next. I would love for it to include written storytelling, because that's what I like to do."

A final story and 'the red wine will flow'

Eliminating the Post sports section was a sharp blow since the department has hosted many well-known bylines through the years, including the likes of John Feinstein, Michael Wilbon, Shirley Povich, Sally Jenkins and Tony Kornheiser.

Svrluga's final column from these Games will mark his final story for the Post. In the meantime, he's going to try and enjoy the Olympics — and being in Italy — more than he usually does while on assignment.

"The red wine," he said, "will flow."

AP Olympics:https://apnews.com/hub/milan-cortina-2026-winter-olympics

2 Washington Post writers at the Olympics despite being laid off, say it was important to be there

CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy (AP) —Washington PostcolumnistBarry Svrlugawas reporting from his first Winter Olympics whe...

 

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