logo
Former Laker Vlade Divac has emergency surgery after breaking hip in motorcycle accident

Former Laker Vlade Divac has emergency surgery after breaking hip in motorcycle accident

Basketball Hall of Famer and former Lakers fan favorite Vlade Divac broke his hip Thursday when he fell from his motorcycle while riding near the Adriatic Sea coast in Montenegro.
On Friday, a spokesperson for a hospital in Risan said the 57-year-old Serbian basketball legend now has an artificial hip after emergency surgery.
'During the day, a surgical procedure was performed,' hospital spokesperson Ljubica Mitrovic said of Divac. 'He is in a stable general and physical condition and is under a careful supervision of the medical staff.'
Divac, a 7-1 center, was drafted by the Lakers in 1989 after leading the Yugoslavia men's basketball team to an Olympic silver medal the previous year. He became a full-time starter during his second season as a Laker and soon emerged as a fan favorite, with frequent appearances in commercials, sitcoms and late-night talk shows.
After seven seasons with the Lakers, Divac was traded to the Charlotte Hornets for the recently drafted Kobe Bryant on July 1, 1996. (The Lakers would sign another 7-1 center, Shaquille O'Neal, as a free agent later that month.)
Divac played two seasons with the Hornets and signed with the Sacramento Kings as a free agent in 1999. He spent six years there — a stint that included his only All-Star season, in 2000-01 — before returning to the Lakers for the last of his 16 NBA seasons in 2004-05.
After finishing his career with 13,398 points, 9,326 rebounds, 3,541 assists and 1,631 blocked shots, the Kings retired his No. 21 jerseyin 2009. He was inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 2019.
Divac was the Kings' general manager from 2015-2020.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Yankees activate Luke Weaver after the right-hander missed 2 weeks with a hamstring injury
Yankees activate Luke Weaver after the right-hander missed 2 weeks with a hamstring injury

Fox Sports

time40 minutes ago

  • Fox Sports

Yankees activate Luke Weaver after the right-hander missed 2 weeks with a hamstring injury

Associated Press NEW YORK (AP) — The New York Yankees activated right-handed reliever Luke Weaver from the injured list Friday after he missed two weeks with a strained left hamstring. Weaver was injured warming up before a June 1 game against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium. After being placed on the injured list, the Yankees thought Weaver might be out until early July or through the All-Star break. Instead, Weaver began feeling better quickly and said the pain disappeared shortly after the injury. He took his final steps in his rehab by throwing a simulated game on Tuesday after throwing three side sessions. 'The process of being outside of the field of play has been really strong,' Weaver said before the Yankees opened a three-game series against the Orioles. "The body has reacted every single day. We pushed it to the limits and smartly and it's reacted well and as good as I could have hoped for. So, throwing hasn't been delayed in any way and I feel ready to go tonight.' Weaver has a 1.05 ERA with eight saves in nine opportunities in 24 appearances. He ascended into the closer's role by converting six saves in seven chances after Devin Williams posted an 11.25 ERA in his first 10 appearances and was removed from that spot on April 27. 'I kind of look at (it) with him and Devin like we got two elite guys back there, obviously with how well Devin's been throwing the ball the last month," manager Aaron Boone said. A 31-year-old right-hander who can become a free agent this autumn, Weaver supplanted Clay Holmes as closer last September. From May 20-22, Weaver became the first Yankees pitcher to appear on three consecutive regular-season days since Aroldis Chapman in September 2021, though Weaver's first outing in that stretch lasted just two pitches, and the three totaled 18. Williams converted all four save chances while Weaver was injured and has a 1.76 ERA in his last 16 appearances since May 5. 'He's doing exactly what I knew he was going to do and obviously there's some adjustment periods but at the end of the day you got to go out and get your repetition just like hitters need to get their at-bats,' Weaver said. 'He's doing a fine job and we're very happy with what he's doing and he's at his elite self.' The Yankees cleared room for Weaver by optioning Jayvien Sandridge to Triple-A Scranton Wilkes/Barre. Sandridge was called up Thursday when Yerry De los Santos went on the injured list with right elbow discomfort. ___ AP MLB: recommended

Yankees reporter shuts down Paul Goldschmidt second base move
Yankees reporter shuts down Paul Goldschmidt second base move

Yahoo

time44 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Yankees reporter shuts down Paul Goldschmidt second base move

May 25, 2025; Denver, Colorado, USA; New York Yankees first baseman Paul Goldschmidt (48) fields a throw at first for the final out against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images The post Yankees reporter shuts down Paul Goldschmidt second base move appeared first on ClutchPoints. Paul Goldschmidt has played in almost 2,000 games across his 15 years in Major League Baseball. All of them were spent either at first base or as the designated hitter. The newest first baseman on the New York Yankees roster turned heads on Wednesday when a video surfaced of him taking ground balls at second base before New York's game on Wednesday. Yankees fans began talking about the potential position change and how it would impact Jazz Chisholm Jr., DJ LeMahieu, and the rest of Aaron Boone's roster. Advertisement However, MLB Network reporter Bryan Hoch cleared the air about the video he posted on his X account earlier this week. According to him, his original post was a joke and was serious. 'I'm told this got aggregated by a lot of places, including a few that should know better,' Hoch said. 'He's just having fun with a workout. Marcus Stroman also takes grounders at shortstop on occasion. Doesn't mean you'll see him play there.' The reason why the original story got so much attention is because of the roster issues Boone will face when Giancarlo Stanton makes his 2025 season debut. When his team is fully healthy, he will have three players to fit in at first base and DH. Advertisement Goldschmidt has been one of the best hitters in the American League this season. However, Ben Rice is just as good at the plate, and Stanton's power demands a starting spot as well. Someone will have to shift into a bench role if none are willing to change positions. Goldschmidt learning how to play second base could have opened up some doors for Boone to explore. He would ideally replace LeMahieu at second and the veteran could back up him and Chisholm Jr. as needed. With Anthony Volpe out of the Yankees' lineup for Saturday's game against the Boston Red Sox, fans have begun thinking about who could replace him if he misses a longer stretch of games. One thing is for sure; Goldschmidt is not playing anywhere other than first base in the field. Related: Yankees urged to move on from 2-time All-Star reliever Related: Yankees' Aaron Boone provides encouraging Giancarlo Stanton injury update

Mariners' Cal Raleigh hits 29th homer before All-Star break, most by a catcher in MLB history
Mariners' Cal Raleigh hits 29th homer before All-Star break, most by a catcher in MLB history

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Mariners' Cal Raleigh hits 29th homer before All-Star break, most by a catcher in MLB history

Mariners' Cal Raleigh hits 29th homer before All-Star break, most by a catcher in MLB history With his 29th home run on Friday, Seattle Mariners slugger Cal Raleigh has hit the most homers by a catcher before the All-Star break in MLB history. The milestone home run came off Chicago Cubs pitcher Caleb Thielbar in the seventh inning of Friday's matchup at Wrigley Field. Raleigh, 28, surpassed Cincinnati Reds Hall of Famer Johnny Bench, who hit 28 home runs before MLB's midseason break during the 1970 season. Fellow Hall of Famer Ivan Rodriguez had 26 home runs prior to the All-Star break in 2000. Advertisement Setting Raleigh's achievement further apart from those catching greats is how quickly he reached that home run mark. Raleigh hit his 29th homer in the 73rd game of the season. Bench hit his 28 in 87 games, while Rodriguez got to 26 in 80 games. Raleigh's 29 home runs currently lead MLB, three more than New York Yankees star Aaron Judge and four ahead of the Los Angeles Dodgers' Shohei Ohtani. He's batting .266/.373/.622 with 14 doubles and 62 RBI to go with his home run total. The Mariners catcher tied Bench with his 28th homer in the first inning off Cubs starter Matthew Boyd. Nicknamed "The Big Dumper" by former teammate Jarred Kelenic for his large backside and penchant for clutch home runs, Raleigh is well on his way to surpassing the career-best 34 home runs he hit last season. A third-round pick in 2018 out of Florida State, he's reached 30 or more homers for the past two years.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store