All eyes on Wemby for Game 5 of Spurs-Timberwolves series, after his elbow merited Game 4 ejection

SAN ANTONIO (AP) — San Antonio'sVictor Wembanyama is playingin Game 5 of the Spurs' Western Conference semifinal series against the Minnesota Timberwolves, after getting ejected early in Game 4 for throwing an elbow.

Associated Press San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama (1), right, scores against Minnesota Timberwolves center Rudy Gobert (27) during the first half of Game 4 of an NBA basketball second-round playoffs series, Sunday, May 10, 2026, in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr) Minnesota Timberwolves guard Ayo Dosunmu, left, and San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama reach for a rebound during the first half of Game 4 of an NBA basketball second-round playoffs series, Sunday, May 10, 2026, in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr) Minnesota Timberwolves forward Julius Randle (30) shoots over San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama, second from right, during the first half of Game 4 of an NBA basketball second-round playoffs series in Minneapolis, Sunday, May 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr) San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama (1) reacts after he was ejected for a flagrant foul during the first half of Game 4 of an NBA basketball second-round playoffs series against the Minnesota Timberwolves in Minneapolis, Sunday, May 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr)

Spurs Timberwolves Basketball

The Spurs are obviously relieved about that. And if Wembanyama is angry about missing most of Game 4, then even better, Spurs guard Devin Vassell said Tuesday at shootaround.

“I know he was upset not being able to play that game," Vassell said at a shootaround attended by Spurs President Gregg Popovich, Spurs legend Manu Ginobili and former Spurs assistant Brett Brown, among others. "So, I know that he’s going to be ready to go. That’s what we need. We need that upset Vic who’s ready to attack the game for sure.”

It could be easily argued that Tuesday's game — Game 5, playoff series, tied 2-2, with the winner moving one win from a trip to the Western Conference finals — is the biggest of Wembanyama's NBA career.

Vassell wants to see a fiery Wembanyama — within reason, of course.

“We’ve seen it before. We’ve seen when Vic gets upset," Vassell said. "I mean, we just need him to calm his emotions, make sure that he doesn’t let his emotions take over because at the end of the day like I said, he can’t get any flagrants, he can’t get anything like that. So, Vic knows what he's got to do and he’ll be ready.”

Advertisement

Wembanyama was ejected from theSpurs-Timberwolves game on Sunday nightbecause of the elbow, which he threw early in the second quarter after getting tangled with Minnesota's Naz Reid and Jaden McDaniels while grabbing a rebound. Wembanyama swung his arms and his elbow struck Reid in the face.

Officials looked at the play and upgraded the foul to a Flagrant 2, which comes with an automatic ejection. The NBA, as it always does in those situations, further reviewed the play after the game and decided Monday that the ejection was sufficient. It could have fined or even suspended Wembanyama for Game 5 and beyond if it felt that was warranted.

“I don’t think we even thought about it much at all," Timberwolves guard Mike Conley Jr. told reporters at Minnesota's shootaround session Tuesday. "I think once the ruling came down, it was just like, we expected that and just moved forward. It's one of those things. We don’t want guys to miss games. We want to play against the best. We don't want to have guys missing games like that."

Wembanyama's elbow isn't the Spurs' biggest issue right now. The ankles and knees of two of his teammates are potentially problematic, however.

The Spurs added Dylan Harper to their injury list a few hours before Game 5 on Thursday with left knee soreness. He's listed as questionable, as is point guard De'Aaron Fox — who is dealing with what the Spurs described as right ankle soreness.

AP NBA:https://apnews.com/hub/NBA

All eyes on Wemby for Game 5 of Spurs-Timberwolves series, after his elbow merited Game 4 ejection

SAN ANTONIO (AP) — San Antonio'sVictor Wembanyama is playingin Game 5 of the Spurs' Western Conference semifinal series against...
The Only TV Show Siskel & Ebert Ever Reviewed Is a 2-Part Hidden Gem Worth Revisiting

Roger EbertandGene Siskelare often considered to be among the top tier of film critics, particularly their TV seriesAt The Movies(originally known asSiskel & Ebert & the Movies). The duo was known for theirscathing sense of humorwhen it came to their reviews, along with their famous "Thumbs Up/Thumbs Down" system (long before Rotten Tomatoes was a thing). In all that time, Ebert and Siskel never reviewed a television series — except for one major occasion. That review was for the short-lived animated seriesThe Critic,which was ironically about a movie critic's life.

Collider Siskel and Ebert in a TV screen with newspapers

Created byAl JeanandMike Reiss,The Criticfollows New York movie critic Jay Sherman (Jon Lovitz). Much like Siskel and Ebert, Sherman hosted his own television series where he delivered takedowns of movies — most of them parodies of popular or classic films. He even had his own catchphrase: "It stinks!" Butwhat did Siskel and Ebert think of the show?The answer's a bit complicated.

It Took Siskel and Ebert Time To Warm Up to 'The Critic'

Siskel and Ebertwould review the first three episodesofThe Critic,and their initial reactions were mixed. Siskel felt thatThe Critichad far fewer memorable characters thanThe Simpsons, which Jean and Reiss previously worked on. Ebert, on the other hand, felt that the show should focus on Jay's job rather than his personal life. But the mix of Jay's personal and professional life is what makesThe Criticsuch a great watch. His interactions with his friends led Jean and Reiss to provide commentary on Hollywood, and he was a single father — a rarity in a sitcom, let alone an animated one.

Once Season 1 ofThe Criticfound its groove, Ebert would eventuallywrite a glowing reviewon his website.He thoroughly enjoyed it, saying that it was "impossible" not to like Jay, while praising executive producerJames L. Brooks' work in balancing the show's humor with character development. Ebert even delivered one of his signature witty observations regarding the pilot, which opens with a beautiful actress turning on Jay after he negatively reviews one of her movies: "In real life (in my experience of it, anyway), critics are never offered bribes for good reviews, and never wind up in bed with movie stars."

Advertisement

‘The Critic’ Eventually Had an Episode Guest Starring Siskel and Ebert

Film critic Siskel and Ebert meet up with Jay in 'The Critic.'

It might have taken Siskel and Ebert a while to warm up toThe Critic,but no one could have predicted thatthe duo would actually guest star on the series. In the Season 2 episode "Siskel & Ebert & Jay & Alice," Jay gets invited to the Academy Awards alongside a select group of critics that includes Siskel and Ebert. But Siskel and Ebert get into a fight on the trip back, and eventually split up; Jay tries to partner with both of them before seeing how much they miss each other, and decides to repair their friendship.

Siskel and Ebert fully lean into the humor ofThe Critic, riffing on the fact that Jay ripped off the climax ofSleepless in Seattleto bring them together. It's no wonder Jean and Reiss consider this to beone of their favorite episodesofThe Critic.

30 Years Later, ‘The Critic’ Has Become a Classic

The-Critic-siskel-ebert

The Criticweathered some rough storms during its brief run; it moved from ABC to Fox, and a crossover withThe Simpsonsled to series creatorMatt Groeningdenouncing said episode. It was cancelled after two seasonsbut earned a reappraisal years later. Even the cast loved it!Maurice LaMarche, who provided a multitude of voices forThe Critic, says that it andPinky and the Brainweretwo of his favorite projects. Lovitz had a similar reactionwhen conducting an interviewcelebratingThe Critic's 30th anniversary:

It’s very flattering, but at the same time, it's frustrating, because I wish the show would have kept going. It was a hit show, and they just canceled it. So it's one of those regrets, like: What would five years’ worth of shows that should have been, instead of just 23 [episodes], look like? I've been trying to do it again ever since, and they tell me it's complicated.

The Critic, along with Siskel and Ebert's work, helped shed light on how film criticism really worked. It's rather fitting that it was the only TV show they ever reviewed and guest-starred in.

The Criticis available to stream on Tubi in the U.S.

The Only TV Show Siskel & Ebert Ever Reviewed Is a 2-Part Hidden Gem Worth Revisiting

Roger EbertandGene Siskelare often considered to be among the top tier of film critics, particularly their TV seriesAt The Movies(origi...
The ‘naughty’ TV gardener designing a Chelsea showstopper for the King and David Beckham

“There is a kind of expectation when you work as a gardener that we’re nice people,” says Frances Tophill, one of the most famous – and famouslynice– gardeners on our television screens. For the past 10 years she has shared airtime withMonty Don, another famous, nice gardener. “When you work onGardeners’ World, everything islovely. Everything’snice. You have that slight pressure – or an assumption – thatyou’relovely,” she says, laughing. “And that’s sometimes a lot, because I can be not-lovely, you know?”

The Telegraph Frances Tophill

For the avoidance of doubt, Tophill is completely lovely when we meet. But the niceness ofGardeners’ Worldcan be an oppressive mantle to someone who took it on at the age of 26. The show, which has been running on the BBC for more than 58 years, isASMRfor the middle-aged and beyond; it’s so relaxing that its mere theme tune can induce a sense of calm bordering on the opioid. It has birds tweeting, plants (mostly) growing how they should, and gardening without the personalkneeache. It is, as Tophill says,sonice.

She describes the version of herself that we see on television as something like her phone voice: a mask to hide her “secret self”. Outside what the cameras capture, Tophill is more subversive. “I like to be a bit naughty, but in a very quiet, passive sort of way,” she says. To her, there is more to gardening than people – or even plants – being nice.

Frances Tophill

Take her show garden, four years ago, at Gardeners’ World Live at the NEC in Birmingham. It was like a dystopian movie set: rusted water butts, thick chains directing the flow of scarce rain, old sinks used as planters, and a teetering corrugated iron shed up a steep steel staircase. It was like something out ofMad Max.As Tophill showed us around the garden on TV, spreading the message of sustainability and of gardening in an increasingly challenging climate, while bees buzzed over the drought-tolerant plants, she never called it what it actually was, nor what she had designed it to be: post-apocalyptic.

“[It was the garden of] someone who’s living post-nuclear fallout, and trying to grow in this post-industrial, post-human landscape,” she says. Tophill had built a monument of death and doom in the middle of the flower show, as a warning, and then stood among it, being lovely. She won best in show.

Expectations of overnight fame

We are chatting on a sofa in the vacant bridal suite of Ripple Court Estate, an 18th-century house turned wedding venue in Kent. Her sister, who started there part-time as a gardener, collects twigs for the dead hedging in the next show garden Tophill is designing: the RHS andThe King’s FoundationCurious Garden – her first at Chelsea.

Outside, the blinding April sun beats down on the white van Tophill drove here. Fitted with insulation and a bed, it takes her around the country on long road trips with her lurcher, Rua. She sleeps there during filming breaks, and it is currently strung with swatches of fabric bunting she has dyed herself using plant pigments for her Chelsea display.

Tophill is “excited, slightly nervous” about making a garden with the King andSir David Beckham, The King’s Foundation ambassador, but she seems more nervous about what’s happening today – her first magazine photoshoot, the kind where there is a moodboard. “Usually I’m just like –” she mimes cartoonishly leaning on a shovel in the dirt, giving a thumbs-up.

Tophill first appeared on our television screens in 2011 after successfully auditioning to co-host ITV’sLove Your GardenwithAlan Titchmarsh. Then aged 23, she thought it would make her famous overnight. She was studying horticulture in Edinburgh at the time and threw a viewing party for her friends when the first episode aired. “I went for breakfast with my friend Tim the next morning and I remember us both being like, ‘Oh my God, this is going to be so intense,’” she says, rolling her eyes and hiding behind her hand, play-acting as a harassed celebrity. “We were in a greasy spoon café expecting to be asked for an autograph. Nothing happened,” she cackles.

The Love Your Garden team, from left: Katie Rushworth, Alan Titchmarsh, Frances Tophill and David Domoney

She discovered that she felt relieved; fame was not what she wanted after all. “I went for years and years without anyone ever recognising me.” And then, in 2023, she covered for Don, hostingGardeners’ Worldfor the first time while he was away, filming in her own tiny garden in Devon.

The week after her episode was broadcast, she went to help a friend sell plants at an annual flower stall, as she had done every year. However, this time things were different. She was mobbed. “That’s when I got a glimpse of what being Monty must be like,” she says, wide-eyed. To her, it revealed a life without freedom. “I don’t want that.”

Tophill found gardening – like a lot of people do – by accident. She grew up in a family she describes as “eccentric”: her mother, who had trained in art, would take the three sisters out on sunny days to sunbathe and sketch trees in the fields of Kent, and her father still plays the piano accordion in pubs, although Tophill is now too busy to roll his cigarettes while he’s performing. She thoughta job in the artsmight be where she was headed so took a BTEC in jewellery design, where she playfully made Boudica-like armour out of thebronze-cast nipples of her friendsand family, despite having no interest in jewellery. At 19, she woke up one morning and noticed rain on the window. “I wanted to go for a walk in the rain, and thought: maybe I could be a gardener? Surely that must be the worst part of being a gardener – getting rained on.”

She applied for a £2-an-hour apprenticeship at the Salutation, the garden of a Grade I listed manor near her house, but kept her Saturday job in the hosiery department atM&Sto make up for the low pay. She soon found that the physical exhaustion of a proper apprenticeship – cleaning drains, digging holes – was more satisfying than anything she had done before. Suddenly, she could lift the unliftable boxes in the stockroom at M&S. “I was like ‘Oh my God, I’ve got muscles! I’ve never had muscles,’” she says. “It was hard work for a 19-year-old waif who had never done any labour in her life. But that was it: that was the moment I learnt about plants.”

While she had discovered plants, the general ethos of the garden she was working in was at odds with what she liked about them. It was open to the public, with a kitchen garden no one could eat from because it was for display. “I think I saw plants from my apprenticeship as accessories to make the world look nice,” she says. She felt as if something was missing. It was only later, while completing her degree at theRoyal Botanic Gardenin Edinburgh, when everything clicked.

Frances Tophill

With increasing speed and enthusiasm, Tophill explains: “I started learning about conservation, and ecology, and the relationships of insects and plants, and people and plants, and the history of plants and trade, and the physiology of plants and how their cells work, how photosynthesis works, how mycorrhizal fungal bacterial interactions within soil can affect the growth of a plant – and all of that just blew my mind.”

It’s this part – the mind-blowing, heart-swelling curiosity – that made her the perfect fit to design theCurious Garden at Chelsea, which aims to encourage people to consider a career in horticulture by making that enthusiasm contagious. At the centre will be a building called the Museum of Curiosities, showcasing everything plants can do – from making fabric and medicine to even hats – with a microscope revealing the cells that build them.

Advertisement

“Basically, it’s showing that plants aren’t just pretty, they are part of human history, economic history, and cultural history,” Tophill says. “That’s where my fascination with it is.” When she speaks about her own garden in Devon – where she grows only things with a purpose, even if she never quite finds the time to make the oil infusions, the beer or the smudge sticks from a kind of sage that grows only in California – she sounds quietly witchy. But all of this is about the relationship between humans and the plants we grow.

‘New gardeners want to do everything’

Her involvement in the Chelsea garden began last August. She was driving to France for a camping trip when she got a call from the RHS pitching her the plan. She was to be the practical linchpin that held it all together in a cohesive way, fusing all that was important to both the King and Beckham. Tophill travelled toHighgrove in Gloucestershireto meet the King’s gardening team (she briefly entertained the idea of a show garden filled with “crazy, looming”, Tim Burtonesque topiary to hark back to the kind in the King’s own garden, but she has abandoned this idea for now) and heard the word “harmony” repeatedly.

As the King is also adedicated watercolour painter, Tophill wanted to bring an artist’s sensibility to the design, too. “He’s got loads of acers, so I’m thinking about the colours and the placements and the views,” she says. “Everyone keeps saying that he’s so detail-focused that he’ll notice all the tiny things.” This is also why she’s scouring the internet for the perfect gnome, in homage to the one in the King’s whimsical Highgrove garden. “He hides it in the stumpery for the gardeners to find,” she laughs. The RHS is lifting its gnome ban for only the second time in history, partly to celebrate the King’s tradition, while also auctioning off gnomes decorated by celebrities to raise money for the RHS Campaign for School Gardening.

As well as this, Tophill wants to harnessBeckham’s enthusiasm for gardening, including a nod to his love of beekeeping with a woven willow beehive. He gave Tophill a list of his favourite plants to include – things such as the catnip Nepeta ‘Six Hills Giant’ – but the list was so comprehensive it also featured things like hyacinths and snowdrops, which are out of season in May. Mostly, though, the list was full of vegetables. “He wasreallykeen on garlic, so I was likeOK…” Tophill looks unsure but resolute: “I started growing garlic on my allotment, and I said to him: ‘I really hope you don’t get your hopes up for this garlic. I’m doing my best with it, but my allotment is quite shady.’ He replied: ‘I don’t care! Sounds great. It will be nice to see your garlic!’”

Frances Tophill with Alan Titchmarsh (left), Sir David Beckham (centre) and the King, April 2026

Beckham is still relatively new to gardening, and retains the new gardener’s refusal to be told something won’t work – and this has become key to the design of the garden. “A new gardener doesn’t have to be a bad gardener. New gardeners aren’t basic – they want to doeverything.So that’s what fed into this: trying everything. It’s not going to be a designery-looking garden; it’s going to be a real person’s garden. It’s a little section of this, and a little section of that. It’s how I feel new gardeners garden, and how real gardeners garden,” she says. “I still garden that way.”

Part of the joy of an episode ofGardeners’ Worldhosted by Tophill is its relatability. She doesn’t have much space. She doesn’t have much sun, or she has too much. And sometimes things just don’t work. She laughs as she recalls a short segment she filmed years ago, when she proudly held up a small cabbage she had grown on her own desolate, windblown allotment. To her, this was an impossible achievement. The edit then cut straight to Don harvesting a colossal “two-arm job” cabbage at Longmeadow.

“I realised that my thing is always a little bit basic,” she says. “But I kind of like holding the flag for that.” And this is where Tophill wants to remain – in the attainable part of the garden. What she keeps coming back to is the idea of what’s real, and where she can make a difference. She doesn’t want to be mobbed for selfies, mostly because it stops her being able to help in any practical way – even if it’s just pricing up plants at a flower stall.

She says that starting out onLove Your Garden– a surprise transformation show – is probably why she’s so keen to keep her feet on the ground now. “We were going into people’s houses, often at their lowest points,” she says. “I remember one particularly brutal one – I still cry, I hope I don’t cry now. He was this lovely kid called Harry. He was 15, and he had terminal cancer. Single parent family, only child – this mum in Hull was facing her son’s death.” Harry kept lizards, he grew plants for his terrariums, he had ducks, and he was dying of an aggressive bone cancer. “He had this bucket list of 30 things he wanted to do before he died and one of them was stand under a waterfall. Another one was ‘my duck to lay an egg’. He was just this nature-loving guy and we made this garden for him.”

In early 2020, a month after the episode was filmed, Harry died. “Meeting a person like that, it’s like –” Tophill is blinking at the ceiling, trying to stop tears. “Sorry, I can’t think about that guy without crying.” She pauses. “That’s what makes the world, you know? It’s not me swanning around theChelsea Flower Show, or anyone else. It’s these real people who are going through real things.”

Tophill sees an interest in nature and gardens as a way to help combat not only the climate crisis, but also an urgent social crisis. “We’re all angry because we feel there’s nothing we can do about the way things go,” she says. “People don’t think they will be listened to.” She knows that weaving wicker baskets, orgrowing flowers, can seem futile – irrelevant even – given everything happening in the world. But she is adamant there is more to it: she has seen first-hand, while filmingGardeners’ Worldin Bradford, how participating in community gardens can give a sense of cohesion to an otherwise segregated society.

“It’s not the only solution, but I feel really passionately that gardening can be a solution to help escape whatever difficult circumstance you might be in,” she says. “A lot of talk is about finances – and yes, people are struggling – but actually, it’s more existential than that: it’s about community. It’s about working together. It’s about feeling like there’s a place in the world for you.”

Frances Tophill shot for Telegraph Mag

As she passes the 10-year mark onGardeners’ World,Tophill is starting to take stock of what a TV career has added to, and taken away from, her life. Now 36, she says working alongside newer presenters onGardeners’ Worldwho are around her age makes her feel old, simply because she’s been there so long.

“I do wonder if it would have been helpful to have had that extra 10 years to form who I am before rolling with this weird shift in my life trajectory,” she says. “Like, I haven’t had kids – I wonder, would I have had kids? It’s fine,” she says, waving it away, reluctant to push her personal life into the spotlight . “But it makes you realise – I was really young at the time.” She’s not looking for a career change, but she believes she’s on the brink of a new adventure. “I feel like when you get to this age, you’re more empowered to just be OK with who you are. And I’m not a person who ever wants to be famous.”

While we’ve been talking, her estate agent has been calling. Tophill is trying to sell the old stone house she bought in Devon – the one from which she hosted episodes ofGardeners’ World– because she is so rarely there. She lives alone and feels that a house like that needs to be lived in and warmed with fire – otherwise it becomes too dark and cold to come home to. She’s downsizing to somewhere more modern, but is adamant she won’t be hosting any episodes ofGardeners’ Worldat her new place – she doesn’t like being told what she can and can’t do with her own garden, or which way she should lay her path for a better picture, and she’s uncomfortable with TV crews disturbing her neighbours.

If she is sure of anything, she knows she never wants to be the newMonty Don. “I’ve kind of done it. I’m not hungry for it. I’ve seen where it goes.” Mostly, she just wants to be the real Frances. “As I get older, I feel like that subversiveness might come out a little more vocally. Possibly not in this project,” she laughs, pulling it back to her Chelsea garden. “Might be the wrong crowd…”

RHS Chelsea Flower Show runs from May 19 to 23

The ‘naughty’ TV gardener designing a Chelsea showstopper for the King and David Beckham

“There is a kind of expectation when you work as a gardener that we’re nice people,” says Frances Tophill, one of the most famous – and...

 

ONEEL JRNL © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com