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Deadspin | Shopify Rebellion moves atop LSC Spring standings after Week 1  A backlit keyboard is part of the gear online video game streamer Jordan Woodruff uses in his Gilbert home.

Jordan Woodruff   Shopify Rebellion pulled off a sweep to move atop of the standings at the end of the first week of the regular season of the LCS Spring event on Sunday.  Shopify beat Dignitas 2-0, and Team Liquid beat FlyQuest 2-1 in the other match of the day.  Eight teams will compete in best-of-three matches in the round-robin regular season before advancing to the playoffs of the League of Legends event, which will be contested in best-of-five matches in a double-elimination format. The top two teams will qualify for the Mid-Season Invitational.  Shopify wrapped up the only 2-0 win of Week 1 with 34- and 24-minute victories on red. South Koreans Baek-jin “Zinie” Yoo and Yeong-hoon “Bvoy” Ju each earned an MVP honor in the win.  Team Liquid opened with a 32-minute win on blue before FlyQuest forced the decisive third game with a 29-minute triumph on red. Liquid, though, finished off the win with a 27-minute victory on blue. Brandon “Josedeodo” Villegas of Argentina was the MVP for each of Liquid’s wins, while Canadian/Iraqi competitor Fahad “Massu” Abdulmalek was the MVP for FlyQuest’s sole win.  Regular season standings (Win-loss total, map differential)  1. Shopify Rebellion, 1-0, 2-0  T2 Cloud9, 1-0, 2-1   T2. Disguised, 1-0, 2-1  T2. Team Liquid, 1-0, 2-1  T5. FlyQuest, 0-1, 1-2  T5. LYON, 0-1, 1-2  T5. Sentinels, 0-1, 1-2  8. Dignitas, 0-1, 0-2  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Shopify #Rebellion #moves #atop #LSC #Spring #standings #Week

Deadspin | Shopify Rebellion moves atop LSC Spring standings after Week 1
Deadspin | Shopify Rebellion moves atop LSC Spring standings after Week 1  A backlit keyboard is part of the gear online video game streamer Jordan Woodruff uses in his Gilbert home.

Jordan Woodruff   Shopify Rebellion pulled off a sweep to move atop of the standings at the end of the first week of the regular season of the LCS Spring event on Sunday.  Shopify beat Dignitas 2-0, and Team Liquid beat FlyQuest 2-1 in the other match of the day.  Eight teams will compete in best-of-three matches in the round-robin regular season before advancing to the playoffs of the League of Legends event, which will be contested in best-of-five matches in a double-elimination format. The top two teams will qualify for the Mid-Season Invitational.  Shopify wrapped up the only 2-0 win of Week 1 with 34- and 24-minute victories on red. South Koreans Baek-jin “Zinie” Yoo and Yeong-hoon “Bvoy” Ju each earned an MVP honor in the win.  Team Liquid opened with a 32-minute win on blue before FlyQuest forced the decisive third game with a 29-minute triumph on red. Liquid, though, finished off the win with a 27-minute victory on blue. Brandon “Josedeodo” Villegas of Argentina was the MVP for each of Liquid’s wins, while Canadian/Iraqi competitor Fahad “Massu” Abdulmalek was the MVP for FlyQuest’s sole win.  Regular season standings (Win-loss total, map differential)  1. Shopify Rebellion, 1-0, 2-0  T2 Cloud9, 1-0, 2-1   T2. Disguised, 1-0, 2-1  T2. Team Liquid, 1-0, 2-1  T5. FlyQuest, 0-1, 1-2  T5. LYON, 0-1, 1-2  T5. Sentinels, 0-1, 1-2  8. Dignitas, 0-1, 0-2  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Shopify #Rebellion #moves #atop #LSC #Spring #standings #WeekA backlit keyboard is part of the gear online video game streamer Jordan Woodruff uses in his Gilbert home. Jordan Woodruff

Shopify Rebellion pulled off a sweep to move atop of the standings at the end of the first week of the regular season of the LCS Spring event on Sunday.

Shopify beat Dignitas 2-0, and Team Liquid beat FlyQuest 2-1 in the other match of the day.

Eight teams will compete in best-of-three matches in the round-robin regular season before advancing to the playoffs of the League of Legends event, which will be contested in best-of-five matches in a double-elimination format. The top two teams will qualify for the Mid-Season Invitational.

Shopify wrapped up the only 2-0 win of Week 1 with 34- and 24-minute victories on red. South Koreans Baek-jin “Zinie” Yoo and Yeong-hoon “Bvoy” Ju each earned an MVP honor in the win.

Team Liquid opened with a 32-minute win on blue before FlyQuest forced the decisive third game with a 29-minute triumph on red. Liquid, though, finished off the win with a 27-minute victory on blue. Brandon “Josedeodo” Villegas of Argentina was the MVP for each of Liquid’s wins, while Canadian/Iraqi competitor Fahad “Massu” Abdulmalek was the MVP for FlyQuest’s sole win.

Regular season standings (Win-loss total, map differential)

1. Shopify Rebellion, 1-0, 2-0


T2 Cloud9, 1-0, 2-1

T2. Disguised, 1-0, 2-1

T2. Team Liquid, 1-0, 2-1

T5. FlyQuest, 0-1, 1-2

T5. LYON, 0-1, 1-2

T5. Sentinels, 0-1, 1-2

8. Dignitas, 0-1, 0-2

–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Shopify #Rebellion #moves #atop #LSC #Spring #standings #Week

A backlit keyboard is part of the gear online video game streamer Jordan Woodruff uses in his Gilbert home.

Jordan Woodruff

Shopify Rebellion pulled off a sweep to move atop of the standings at the end of the first week of the regular season of the LCS Spring event on Sunday.

Shopify beat Dignitas 2-0, and Team Liquid beat FlyQuest 2-1 in the other match of the day.

Eight teams will compete in best-of-three matches in the round-robin regular season before advancing to the playoffs of the League of Legends event, which will be contested in best-of-five matches in a double-elimination format. The top two teams will qualify for the Mid-Season Invitational.

Shopify wrapped up the only 2-0 win of Week 1 with 34- and 24-minute victories on red. South Koreans Baek-jin “Zinie” Yoo and Yeong-hoon “Bvoy” Ju each earned an MVP honor in the win.

Team Liquid opened with a 32-minute win on blue before FlyQuest forced the decisive third game with a 29-minute triumph on red. Liquid, though, finished off the win with a 27-minute victory on blue. Brandon “Josedeodo” Villegas of Argentina was the MVP for each of Liquid’s wins, while Canadian/Iraqi competitor Fahad “Massu” Abdulmalek was the MVP for FlyQuest’s sole win.

Regular season standings (Win-loss total, map differential)

1. Shopify Rebellion, 1-0, 2-0

T2 Cloud9, 1-0, 2-1

T2. Disguised, 1-0, 2-1

T2. Team Liquid, 1-0, 2-1

T5. FlyQuest, 0-1, 1-2

T5. LYON, 0-1, 1-2

T5. Sentinels, 0-1, 1-2

8. Dignitas, 0-1, 0-2

–Field Level Media

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#Deadspin #Shopify #Rebellion #moves #atop #LSC #Spring #standings #Week

A side already backed into a corner by injury and form was pinned to the wall a bit more by a man with a point to prove. 

Age had bent Mohammed Shami’s back, not his spirit. He arrived at the Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium on Sunday with the jersey changed, but the fire burning just as bright. And he struck, not with the fury of youth, but the precision of a legend to set up an eventual five-wicket win for the Lucknow Super Giants. 

Sunrisers Hyderabad had engraved its orange-hued initials into the PowerPlay with outlandish scoring patterns, but Shami decided to bring the ‘Travishek’ party to a screeching halt. The veteran cleverly mixed his variations to dismiss Abhishek Sharma and Travis Head, both undone by the lack of pace. 

If Rishabh Pant’s call to bowl first drew roaring approval from the partisan home crowd, even as pundits were sceptical, it took twenty minutes for that decision to look inspired as that early excitement gave way to stunned silence around the stadium.

Ishan Kishan had barely found his footing when Prince Yadav shattered his off stump, sending the home side’s top three back to the pavilion for their lowest combined total in IPL history. The collapse deepened just beyond the PowerPlay as Liam Livingstone fell, with Pant’s exquisite anticipation cutting short the Englishman’s bid to rebuild the innings.

ALSO READ:KKR vs PBKS, IPL 2026: Kolkata Knight Riders hopes to get its act together against Punjab Kings

At 35 for four, its lowest score at the halfway mark, SRH looked completely adrift, with the Orange Army desperate for a moment of relief. Even a ball trickling past the 30-yard circle was enough to spark applause.

That relief finally arrived in emphatic fashion. Nitish Kumar Reddy and Heinrich Klaasen stitched together a breathtaking counterattack, producing SRH’s best partnership for the fifth wicket or lower.

The duo added 79 runs in just 30 balls, as they both raced to half centuries. For the first time in the game, the Super Giants appeared rattled. Shami watched from the dugout. 

While the host ambitiously targeted a score in the 180s to give itself a chance in this contest, Manimaran Siddharth put the brakes on the 116-run stand when Nitish’s swing failed to clear Prince at deep extra cover. Klaasen followed three balls later, his attempted scoop ending in a diving Pant’s gloves. With their departures, the momentum drained away, and LSG quickly regained control to restrict SRH to 156.

The Super Giants turned to the tried-and-tested pair of Aiden Markram and Mitchell Marsh to marshal the chase, and Markram quickly provided evidence of his reputation at the top of the order, plundering 17 runs off Nitish’s opening over with crisp, authoritative strokeplay.

Eshan Malinga’s dismissal of Marsh was the lone bright spot for Sunrisers during the PowerPlay, which ended with Markram emphatically sending a short ball over fine leg. By the time he was undone by Shivang’s wrong’un in the tenth over, LSG was halfway to victory.

A struggling SRH bowling lineup persevered, triggering a brief wobble as it claimed Ayush Badoni and Nicholas Pooran’s wickets in quick succession. But Pant remained unfazed, as the game dragged right down to the wire. His measured, unbeaten half-century braved all the late twists, taking LSG home with a boundary aimed at his dugout with just a ball to spare. 

Published on Apr 05, 2026

#SRH #LSG #IPL #Shamis #economical #spell #Pant #helps #Lucknow #Super #Giants #pip #Sunrisers #Hyderabad">SRH vs LSG IPL 2026: Shami’s economical spell, Pant 50 helps Lucknow Super Giants pip Sunrisers Hyderabad  A side already backed into a corner by injury and form was pinned to the wall a bit more by a man with a point to prove. Age had bent Mohammed Shami’s back, not his spirit. He arrived at the Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium on Sunday with the jersey changed, but the fire burning just as bright. And he struck, not with the fury of youth, but the precision of a legend to set up an eventual five-wicket win for the Lucknow Super Giants. Sunrisers Hyderabad had engraved its orange-hued initials into the PowerPlay with outlandish scoring patterns, but Shami decided to bring the ‘Travishek’ party to a screeching halt. The veteran cleverly mixed his variations to dismiss Abhishek Sharma and Travis Head, both undone by the lack of pace. If Rishabh Pant’s call to bowl first drew roaring approval from the partisan home crowd, even as pundits were sceptical, it took twenty minutes for that decision to look inspired as that early excitement gave way to stunned silence around the stadium.Ishan Kishan had barely found his footing when Prince Yadav shattered his off stump, sending the home side’s top three back to the pavilion for their lowest combined total in IPL history. The collapse deepened just beyond the PowerPlay as Liam Livingstone fell, with Pant’s exquisite anticipation cutting short the Englishman’s bid to rebuild the innings.ALSO READ:KKR vs PBKS, IPL 2026: Kolkata Knight Riders hopes to get its act together against Punjab KingsAt 35 for four, its lowest score at the halfway mark, SRH looked completely adrift, with the Orange Army desperate for a moment of relief. Even a ball trickling past the 30-yard circle was enough to spark applause.That relief finally arrived in emphatic fashion. Nitish Kumar Reddy and Heinrich Klaasen stitched together a breathtaking counterattack, producing SRH’s best partnership for the fifth wicket or lower.The duo added 79 runs in just 30 balls, as they both raced to half centuries. For the first time in the game, the Super Giants appeared rattled. Shami watched from the dugout. While the host ambitiously targeted a score in the 180s to give itself a chance in this contest, Manimaran Siddharth put the brakes on the 116-run stand when Nitish’s swing failed to clear Prince at deep extra cover. Klaasen followed three balls later, his attempted scoop ending in a diving Pant’s gloves. With their departures, the momentum drained away, and LSG quickly regained control to restrict SRH to 156.The Super Giants turned to the tried-and-tested pair of Aiden Markram and Mitchell Marsh to marshal the chase, and Markram quickly provided evidence of his reputation at the top of the order, plundering 17 runs off Nitish’s opening over with crisp, authoritative strokeplay.Eshan Malinga’s dismissal of Marsh was the lone bright spot for Sunrisers during the PowerPlay, which ended with Markram emphatically sending a short ball over fine leg. By the time he was undone by Shivang’s wrong’un in the tenth over, LSG was halfway to victory.A struggling SRH bowling lineup persevered, triggering a brief wobble as it claimed Ayush Badoni and Nicholas Pooran’s wickets in quick succession. But Pant remained unfazed, as the game dragged right down to the wire. His measured, unbeaten half-century braved all the late twists, taking LSG home with a boundary aimed at his dugout with just a ball to spare. Published on Apr 05, 2026  #SRH #LSG #IPL #Shamis #economical #spell #Pant #helps #Lucknow #Super #Giants #pip #Sunrisers #Hyderabad

KKR vs PBKS, IPL 2026: Kolkata Knight Riders hopes to get its act together against Punjab Kings

At 35 for four, its lowest score at the halfway mark, SRH looked completely adrift, with the Orange Army desperate for a moment of relief. Even a ball trickling past the 30-yard circle was enough to spark applause.

That relief finally arrived in emphatic fashion. Nitish Kumar Reddy and Heinrich Klaasen stitched together a breathtaking counterattack, producing SRH’s best partnership for the fifth wicket or lower.

The duo added 79 runs in just 30 balls, as they both raced to half centuries. For the first time in the game, the Super Giants appeared rattled. Shami watched from the dugout. 

While the host ambitiously targeted a score in the 180s to give itself a chance in this contest, Manimaran Siddharth put the brakes on the 116-run stand when Nitish’s swing failed to clear Prince at deep extra cover. Klaasen followed three balls later, his attempted scoop ending in a diving Pant’s gloves. With their departures, the momentum drained away, and LSG quickly regained control to restrict SRH to 156.

The Super Giants turned to the tried-and-tested pair of Aiden Markram and Mitchell Marsh to marshal the chase, and Markram quickly provided evidence of his reputation at the top of the order, plundering 17 runs off Nitish’s opening over with crisp, authoritative strokeplay.

Eshan Malinga’s dismissal of Marsh was the lone bright spot for Sunrisers during the PowerPlay, which ended with Markram emphatically sending a short ball over fine leg. By the time he was undone by Shivang’s wrong’un in the tenth over, LSG was halfway to victory.

A struggling SRH bowling lineup persevered, triggering a brief wobble as it claimed Ayush Badoni and Nicholas Pooran’s wickets in quick succession. But Pant remained unfazed, as the game dragged right down to the wire. His measured, unbeaten half-century braved all the late twists, taking LSG home with a boundary aimed at his dugout with just a ball to spare. 

Published on Apr 05, 2026

#SRH #LSG #IPL #Shamis #economical #spell #Pant #helps #Lucknow #Super #Giants #pip #Sunrisers #Hyderabad">SRH vs LSG IPL 2026: Shami’s economical spell, Pant 50 helps Lucknow Super Giants pip Sunrisers Hyderabad

A side already backed into a corner by injury and form was pinned to the wall a bit more by a man with a point to prove. 

Age had bent Mohammed Shami’s back, not his spirit. He arrived at the Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium on Sunday with the jersey changed, but the fire burning just as bright. And he struck, not with the fury of youth, but the precision of a legend to set up an eventual five-wicket win for the Lucknow Super Giants. 

Sunrisers Hyderabad had engraved its orange-hued initials into the PowerPlay with outlandish scoring patterns, but Shami decided to bring the ‘Travishek’ party to a screeching halt. The veteran cleverly mixed his variations to dismiss Abhishek Sharma and Travis Head, both undone by the lack of pace. 

If Rishabh Pant’s call to bowl first drew roaring approval from the partisan home crowd, even as pundits were sceptical, it took twenty minutes for that decision to look inspired as that early excitement gave way to stunned silence around the stadium.

Ishan Kishan had barely found his footing when Prince Yadav shattered his off stump, sending the home side’s top three back to the pavilion for their lowest combined total in IPL history. The collapse deepened just beyond the PowerPlay as Liam Livingstone fell, with Pant’s exquisite anticipation cutting short the Englishman’s bid to rebuild the innings.

ALSO READ:KKR vs PBKS, IPL 2026: Kolkata Knight Riders hopes to get its act together against Punjab Kings

At 35 for four, its lowest score at the halfway mark, SRH looked completely adrift, with the Orange Army desperate for a moment of relief. Even a ball trickling past the 30-yard circle was enough to spark applause.

That relief finally arrived in emphatic fashion. Nitish Kumar Reddy and Heinrich Klaasen stitched together a breathtaking counterattack, producing SRH’s best partnership for the fifth wicket or lower.

The duo added 79 runs in just 30 balls, as they both raced to half centuries. For the first time in the game, the Super Giants appeared rattled. Shami watched from the dugout. 

While the host ambitiously targeted a score in the 180s to give itself a chance in this contest, Manimaran Siddharth put the brakes on the 116-run stand when Nitish’s swing failed to clear Prince at deep extra cover. Klaasen followed three balls later, his attempted scoop ending in a diving Pant’s gloves. With their departures, the momentum drained away, and LSG quickly regained control to restrict SRH to 156.

The Super Giants turned to the tried-and-tested pair of Aiden Markram and Mitchell Marsh to marshal the chase, and Markram quickly provided evidence of his reputation at the top of the order, plundering 17 runs off Nitish’s opening over with crisp, authoritative strokeplay.

Eshan Malinga’s dismissal of Marsh was the lone bright spot for Sunrisers during the PowerPlay, which ended with Markram emphatically sending a short ball over fine leg. By the time he was undone by Shivang’s wrong’un in the tenth over, LSG was halfway to victory.

A struggling SRH bowling lineup persevered, triggering a brief wobble as it claimed Ayush Badoni and Nicholas Pooran’s wickets in quick succession. But Pant remained unfazed, as the game dragged right down to the wire. His measured, unbeaten half-century braved all the late twists, taking LSG home with a boundary aimed at his dugout with just a ball to spare. 

Published on Apr 05, 2026

#SRH #LSG #IPL #Shamis #economical #spell #Pant #helps #Lucknow #Super #Giants #pip #Sunrisers #Hyderabad
Deadspin | Contending Magic rally from 15-point deficit, upend Pelicans  Apr 05, 2026; New Orleans, LA, USA; New Orleans Pelicans guard/forward Saddiq Bey (41) handles the ball against Orlando Magic forward Jett Howard (23) in the first half at Smoothie King Center. Mandatory Credit: Stephen Lew-Imagn Images   Desmond Bane scored 27 points as the Orlando Magic overturned a 15-point third-quarter deficit to defeat the host New Orleans Pelicans 112-108 on Sunday.  Paolo Banchero paired 23 points with 16 rebounds for the Magic (42-36), who seized control after edging in front midway through the fourth quarter.   Orlando has won three of its last four and sits ninth in the Eastern Conference, a half-game behind the Charlotte Hornets and one game ahead of the Miami Heat, with four games remaining.  Saddiq Bey had 32 for the Pelicans (25-54), who succumbed to their eighth straight defeat, losing their way offensively down the stretch through turnovers and lack of ball movement, after they had spent much of the night in a strong position.  Jeremiah Fears added 19 points, Yves Missi posted 18 and Zion Williamson contributed 17 for New Orleans.  Orlando jumped ahead 13-6, fell behind 27-19 on a Missi-inspired 21-6 Pelicans surge, then went back ahead 29-28 after finishing the opening period with a 9-1 rush.  The Magic moved ahead 45-39 midway through the second frame before going cold on offense, New Orleans taking control with a 13-1 response.   The Pelicans continued to control the quarter and led 60-52 at halftime.  Orlando shot just 7 of 25 from the floor for the period and 2 of 20 from 3-point range at the half.  New Orleans stormed out of the blocks after the long break, streaking ahead 72-57, before the Magic rallied.  Banchero’s layup with 5.1 seconds left in the third slashed the deficit to 86-81, before a pair of Williamson free throws with 0.6 ticks on the clock made it 88-81 with one quarter to play.  After Missi’s dunk had the Pelicans out 96-88, Orlando called a timeout and scored the next 10 points to clinch the lead on a Jalen Suggs trey for the first time since the second frame.  Jamal Cain missed a dunk attempt then, Bey buried a three to put New Orleans back in front, before Bane responded with a 3-pointer to give the Magic the lead back.  –Field Level Media    #Deadspin #Contending #Magic #rally #15point #deficit #upend #PelicansApr 05, 2026; New Orleans, LA, USA; New Orleans Pelicans guard/forward Saddiq Bey (41) handles the ball against Orlando Magic forward Jett Howard (23) in the first half at Smoothie King Center. Mandatory Credit: Stephen Lew-Imagn Images

Desmond Bane scored 27 points as the Orlando Magic overturned a 15-point third-quarter deficit to defeat the host New Orleans Pelicans 112-108 on Sunday.

Paolo Banchero paired 23 points with 16 rebounds for the Magic (42-36), who seized control after edging in front midway through the fourth quarter.

Orlando has won three of its last four and sits ninth in the Eastern Conference, a half-game behind the Charlotte Hornets and one game ahead of the Miami Heat, with four games remaining.

Saddiq Bey had 32 for the Pelicans (25-54), who succumbed to their eighth straight defeat, losing their way offensively down the stretch through turnovers and lack of ball movement, after they had spent much of the night in a strong position.

Jeremiah Fears added 19 points, Yves Missi posted 18 and Zion Williamson contributed 17 for New Orleans.

Orlando jumped ahead 13-6, fell behind 27-19 on a Missi-inspired 21-6 Pelicans surge, then went back ahead 29-28 after finishing the opening period with a 9-1 rush.


The Magic moved ahead 45-39 midway through the second frame before going cold on offense, New Orleans taking control with a 13-1 response.

The Pelicans continued to control the quarter and led 60-52 at halftime.

Orlando shot just 7 of 25 from the floor for the period and 2 of 20 from 3-point range at the half.

New Orleans stormed out of the blocks after the long break, streaking ahead 72-57, before the Magic rallied.

Banchero’s layup with 5.1 seconds left in the third slashed the deficit to 86-81, before a pair of Williamson free throws with 0.6 ticks on the clock made it 88-81 with one quarter to play.

After Missi’s dunk had the Pelicans out 96-88, Orlando called a timeout and scored the next 10 points to clinch the lead on a Jalen Suggs trey for the first time since the second frame.

Jamal Cain missed a dunk attempt then, Bey buried a three to put New Orleans back in front, before Bane responded with a 3-pointer to give the Magic the lead back.


–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Contending #Magic #rally #15point #deficit #upend #Pelicans">Deadspin | Contending Magic rally from 15-point deficit, upend Pelicans  Apr 05, 2026; New Orleans, LA, USA; New Orleans Pelicans guard/forward Saddiq Bey (41) handles the ball against Orlando Magic forward Jett Howard (23) in the first half at Smoothie King Center. Mandatory Credit: Stephen Lew-Imagn Images   Desmond Bane scored 27 points as the Orlando Magic overturned a 15-point third-quarter deficit to defeat the host New Orleans Pelicans 112-108 on Sunday.  Paolo Banchero paired 23 points with 16 rebounds for the Magic (42-36), who seized control after edging in front midway through the fourth quarter.   Orlando has won three of its last four and sits ninth in the Eastern Conference, a half-game behind the Charlotte Hornets and one game ahead of the Miami Heat, with four games remaining.  Saddiq Bey had 32 for the Pelicans (25-54), who succumbed to their eighth straight defeat, losing their way offensively down the stretch through turnovers and lack of ball movement, after they had spent much of the night in a strong position.  Jeremiah Fears added 19 points, Yves Missi posted 18 and Zion Williamson contributed 17 for New Orleans.  Orlando jumped ahead 13-6, fell behind 27-19 on a Missi-inspired 21-6 Pelicans surge, then went back ahead 29-28 after finishing the opening period with a 9-1 rush.  The Magic moved ahead 45-39 midway through the second frame before going cold on offense, New Orleans taking control with a 13-1 response.   The Pelicans continued to control the quarter and led 60-52 at halftime.  Orlando shot just 7 of 25 from the floor for the period and 2 of 20 from 3-point range at the half.  New Orleans stormed out of the blocks after the long break, streaking ahead 72-57, before the Magic rallied.  Banchero’s layup with 5.1 seconds left in the third slashed the deficit to 86-81, before a pair of Williamson free throws with 0.6 ticks on the clock made it 88-81 with one quarter to play.  After Missi’s dunk had the Pelicans out 96-88, Orlando called a timeout and scored the next 10 points to clinch the lead on a Jalen Suggs trey for the first time since the second frame.  Jamal Cain missed a dunk attempt then, Bey buried a three to put New Orleans back in front, before Bane responded with a 3-pointer to give the Magic the lead back.  –Field Level Media    #Deadspin #Contending #Magic #rally #15point #deficit #upend #Pelicans

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