If Boynton can keep Michigan’s roster together, the Wolverines possess enough talent after signing an elite recruiting class to pursue another deep NCAA Tournament run. Achieve that, and Boynton can shed the interim label.
But, this job is too good for Michigan to commit to Boynton being anything more than a one-year experiment.
Never mind Michigan isn’t a blue blood, it boasts top-tier resources, and money matters more than ever in the buy-a-player landscape. If Boynton wobbles as interim, Michigan should open the job next spring to a full search that ought to attract top candidates.
Keep Saint Louis coach Josh Schertz on speed dial. Schertz would have been a natural heir to May if the job had opened two months ago.
The good news for Michigan? Schertz isn’t going anywhere between now and March. Schertz passed on Syracuse and NC State to stay at SLU — perhaps, because he figured something better would open if he showed patience.
Well, Michigan would fit the bill as something better.
Schertz and May are good pals, too. Before SLU faced May’s Wolverines in the second round of the NCAA Tournament, Schertz spoke of his yearslong friendship with May, calling him “an incredible resource.”
“We’re always picking each other’s brain,” Schertz said then.
Josh Schertz would fit Michigan's past playbook of hiring Dusty May
May climbed the ladder from video coordinator to becoming best coach in college basketball. Schertz also knows how to grind. He spent more than a decade coaching in Division II before Indiana State smartly hired him.
Schertz would’ve been an appropriate and qualified successor to his friend. He’s more accomplished than Boynton, who proved a valuable assistant to May, but who made just one NCAA Tournament appearance in seven seasons coaching Oklahoma State, a tenure that quickly got sideways as the FBI investigated assistant coach Lamont Evans for taking bribes.
Schertz’s resume, by comparison, includes multiple D-II Final Fours, an NIT runner-up finish at Indiana State after the NCAA selection committee snubbed the Sycamores, and winning an NCAA Tournament game in his second season at SLU, while setting a school record for wins.
If Schertz outperforms Boynton this season, make the switch.
No need for Michigan to reinvent the hiring wheel. Hiring Schertz next spring would amount to dusting off the “Hire Dusty” playbook by targeting a coach who's proven himself in the NCAA Tournament, but who hasn't peaked yet. May took Florida Atlantic to the NCAA Tournament in consecutive seasons and reached a Final Four before Michigan plundered him. He needed just two seasons to take Michigan to the pinnacle.
Don't get distracted by Billy Donovan
Let Kentucky pine over Billy Donovan. Donovan’s past performance at Florida indicates potential for a high ceiling, but he last coached in college more than a decade ago. His inexperience within the landscape of NIL and transfer free agency would make him a riskier hire than you’d expect for someone with his resume.
Instead of Donovan, Michigan could target a savvy coach on the rise who’s won big without Michigan’s resources — someone like Schertz.
Schertz's brand of up-tempo, unselfish offense that tilts toward the 3-pointer suits the modern game.
“When you look at a lot of our metrics and analytics, we mirror each other (in style),” May said last season, while comparing his Wolverines to Schertz’s Billikens.
Put Michigan’s checkbook in Schertz’s hand, and see if he could replicate his friend’s success.
Making Boynton the interim for this season amounts to a low-risk option. If he crushes it, keep him. If not, you’ve burned just one season, and Michigan would be positioned to pursue top candidates at a better stage in the calendar.
While I’d put Schertz near the top of the watch list, the list also should include names like Mark Byington (Vanderbilt), Ben McCollum (Iowa), T.J. Otzelberger (Iowa State) and Grant McCasland (Texas Tech). Like Schertz, they're in-their-prime coaches in their mid to late 40s or early 50s.
If this job had opened in April, I’d have hired any of those guys ahead of Boynton, but the job opened in late June.
That’s a recipe for an in-house interim coach — with a head coach watch list stashed away in Michigan’s top drawer.
Boynton joined May's staff in 2024 after serving seven years as Oklahoma State's head coach. Boynton was on Brad Underwood's staff for a year at OSU before Underwood left for Illinois. Boynton was elevated to head coach and posted a 119-109 (.522) record, which included two NIT quarterfinals appearances and a trip to the 2021 NCAA Tournament.
Prior to his time in Stillwater, Boynton worked for Underwood for three seasons at Stephen F. Austin. Boynton then followed Underwood to Oklahoma State for one season, before Underwood left for Illinois and Boynton was promoted to head coach.
Boynton has had assistant coaching stints at Furman, Coastal Carolina, Wofford, South Carolina, Stephen F. Austin and Oklahoma State, before being promoted to head coach at OSU after Brad Underwood took the Illinois job in 2017. In seven seasons at Stillwater, Boynton posted a 119-109 (.522) record, which included two NIT quarterfinals appearances and a trip to the 2021 NCAA Tournament.
What was Mike Boynton's role at Michigan?
Boynton was hired as an assistant coach on May's inaugural staff at Michigan in 2024, and also served as the program's defensive coordinator.
Mike Boynton NCAA Tournament record
Boynton has a 1-1 record at the NCAA Tournament as a head coach, with his lone win coming against No. 13 seed Liberty 69-60 in the first round in 2021. Oklahoma State subsequently fell to No. 12 seed Oregon State in the second round, sending the Cowboys packing.
It was a disappointing finish for the Cowboys, especially as they were led by future No. 1 overall pick and first-team All-NBA guard Cade Cunningham, now of the Detroit Pistons. It was the only season of his seven as a head coach that his team reached March Madness.
Mike Boynton coaching career timeline
Here's a look at Boynton's full coaching history, including each stop of his career:
2004-05: Furman (graduate assistant)
2005-07: Coastal Carolina (assistant)
2007-08: Wofford (associate head coach)
2008-13: South Carolina (assistant)
2013-16: Stephen F. Austin (assistant)
2016-17: Oklahoma State (assistant)
2017-2024: Oklahoma State (head coach)
2024-2026: Michigan (assistant)
2026-present: Michigan (interim head coach)
Where did Mike Boynton go to college?
Mike Boynton played four seasons at South Carolina, where he later served as an assistant coach from 2008-13.
He started 47 career games for the Gamecocks, averaging 4.3 points with 2.0 assists per game from 2000-04.
Two months after claiming the second national championship in program history, Michigan has found itself in the market for a new men’s basketball coach.
The last coach to leave right after winning the tournament was former Kansas coach Larry Brown, who made a habit of leaping from one spot to the next in his well-traveled career.
Dusty May was not supposed to follow that same path. After a steady building process resulted in one of the best teams in recent NCAA history, the belief coming out of this year’s Final Four in Indianapolis said that May was poised to become one of the faces of college basketball.
Boynton will have this coming season to convince Michigan to give him the full-time job. Looking toward next winter, here’s USA TODAY Sports’ glance at where Michigan could eventually go to permanently fill May’s shoes:
Boynton ran the defense under May — his work helped the Wolverines outscore opponents by nearly 20 points per game — and was the head coach at Oklahoma State from 2017-24. The results were very mixed: OSU won 20 games three times and reached the second round of the tournament in 2021 but went just 119-109 overall and 51-75 in Big 12 play. Still, Boynton has the qualifications and experience to step into the job at a late date and potentially keep the roster intact, or at least strong enough to stay a factor in the Big Ten and Final Four hunt.
Josh Schertz, Saint Louis
The list of outside candidates begins with Schertz, a close friend of May’s and a coach with a similarly prolific up-tempo offensive scheme. His system could be installed fairly seamlessly and mesh well with the Wolverines’ current roster. Schertz has also proven himself by winning 32 games at Indiana State in 2024 and then leading Saint Louis to 29 wins and the second round of this year’s tournament, where the Billikens were bulldozed by Michigan. Schertz could come eventually with May’s recommendation, which might carry weight in the school’s search.
Nate Oats, Alabama
Oats signed a massive extension that links him to Alabama through 2032 and has experienced his share of controversy, most recently this past season with Charles Bediako’s eligibility debate and guard Aden Holloway’s suspension in the wake of felony drug charges. But he’s also won 70% of his games, reached the Final Four, made two Elite Eight trips and advanced out of the tournament’s opening weekend in each of the past four years. He also spent a decade coaching high school basketball in Michigan before being hired as an assistant at Buffalo in 2013. Oats is in a good spot with the Crimson Tide but could be enticed by the opportunity to coach a program with more support and resources.
Billy Donovan
Donovan is currently out of coaching after stepping down from his spot with the Chicago Bulls after the end of the regular season. While he had his share of NBA success, Donovan is best known for the powerhouse he built Florida, where he claimed back-to-back national championships. Despite his time away from the college game, Donovan has essentially been linked to every major NCAA job opening since he left the Gators over a decade ago. Is Michigan the position that would bring him back? May showed how quickly the right coach can make things happen in Ann Arbor. But it’s unknown whether Donovan is interested in navigating the current landscape of college sports.
T.J. Otzelberger, Iowa State
Otzelberger seems very content in Ames, having already declined overtures from more historically relevant programs since kickstarting the Cyclones’ current run in 2022. Since taking over five seasons ago, he’s led Iowa State to three Sweet 16 berths, four 20-win seasons and at least 25 wins in each of the past three years. While Otzelberger’s teams have been more recognized for defensive intensity, he’s proven himself to be malleable enough as a coach to potentially blend in his style with the tempo that defined May’s tenure.
Brian Dutcher, San Diego State
Formerly a longtime Michigan assistant who was on the staff for the 1989 national champions and then spent another 18 years under former Michigan coach Steve Fisher with the Aztecs, Dutcher has won at least 21 games in every season since replacing Fisher in 2017 and led SDSU to the national title game in 2023. A few factors not in Dutcher’s favor are his age — he’ll turn 67 in October — and that SDSU has taken a bit of a recent dip, dropping out in the First Four of the 2025 tournament and missing this year’s bracket altogether.
The Ducks' 2025-26 season has been over for just over a month and with the 2026 NHL Entry Draft just around the corner, it feels like a good time to start recapping this past season for each player in the organization.
Today's edition of 'By the Numbers' will feature players who wore Nos. 51-60 this season.
If you missed the previous edition of 'By the Numbers', you can click here to read it.
Olen Zellweger
Zellweger was a mainstay on the Ducks' blue line up until the tail-end of the regular season, when a couple of defensive shortcomings seemingly put him in head coach Joel Quenneville's doghouse. There was an emphasis on defensive habits, with Zellweger deployed on the penalty kill throughout the season as opposed to the power play, where his skills may have been better utilized.
Tyson Hinds' call-up and subsequent strong play left Zellweger a spectator at the end of the regular season and into the playoffs. He went an entire month without playing in a game before he re-entered the lineup out of necessity for Game 4 of their playoff series against the Vegas Golden Knights. Paired with Ian Moore, he picked up a secondary assist on Moore's game-winning goal while playing mostly sheltered minutes on the bottom pair.
May 14, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Anaheim Ducks defenseman Olen Zellweger (51) controls the puck past Vegas Golden Knights center Brett Howden (21) during the third period in game six of the second round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Honda Center. Mandatory Credit: Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images
In Game 5, his play earned him more ice time and a promotion to the second defensive pair alongside John Carlson. He then tied the game late in the third period, though the Ducks fell in overtime. He was scoreless in Game 6 but had almost 14 minutes of ice time.
A pending RFA this summer, the Ducks appear to be at a crossroads with both Zellweger and Pavel Mintyukov, who is also an RFA. The two lefties have taken turns showing flashes of what they can become if given the proper ice time and runway. However, neither has been able to do this on a consistent basis just yet. With Jackson LaCombe entrenched as the Ducks' No. 1 on the left-hand side, it's a battle of who will be the No. 2 behind him.
Lucas Pettersson
After splitting time between the HockeyAllsvenskan and the SHL in 2024-25, Pettersson spent most of the past season with Brynäs in the SHL before finishing out the year in the AHL with the San Diego Gulls. He had 20 points in 40 games, primarily playing on the wing. Pettersson was also part of Sweden's gold medal-winning squad at World Juniors, collecting six points in six games.
Drafted as a center in the second round of the 2024 draft, Pettersson may project better as a winger due to his size (5-foot-11) and speed. He is dependable in both zones and has shown that he can contribute offensively off the rush and on the man advantage. He would be a candidate for the penalty kill as well.
As of now, it's unclear whether Pettersson will play for the Gulls in 2025-26 or return to Sweden for another season with Brynäs. The Gulls' forward depth is in flux, with Jan Myšák departed to HV71 in the SHL, Justin Bailey needing a new contract and Nikita Nesterenko and Sam Colangelo expected to be up with the Ducks full-time. If Pettersson does return to Brynäs, it would give him the chance to play either down the middle or on the wing again.
Tarin Smith
Smith was named captain of the Everett Silvertips prior to the start of the 2025-26 WHL season, his fourth full season with the club. He appeared in 60+ games for the third consecutive season, setting a new career high in assists (55) and points (71) as one half of the Silvertips' top defensive pairing.
Unfortunately, his final WHL postseason was cut short due to a dislocated shoulder that he suffered during the Silvertips' first playoff series. He will be out of the sling at the end of June and be able to resume skating in August. November is the targeted date for his full return to the ice, and he'll be doing it in the NCAA after committing to the University of Minnesota this past May.
An offensively-gifted defenseman, Smith was a finalist for the WHL Defenseman of the Year. Continued focus in the defensive zone will be a priority for him as he transitions to the collegiate game and goes up against older and stronger players.
Coulson Pitre
After spending the entire 2024-25 season with the Gulls, Pitre split the 2025-26 season between the AHL and ECHL. He was nearly a point per game player in the ECHL with the Tulsa Oilers (21 in 26 games), but failed to replicate that kind of production with the Gulls, putting up just five points in 25 games.
An upper-body injury that occurred prior to training camp kept Pitre out until almost November. After returning, he was then assigned to Tulsa, where he remained until January, when he was recalled to the Gulls. Pitre spent most of his time with the Gulls in a bottom-6 role, rotating between center and wing. His development has been hampered by injuries and he hasn't been able to carve out a consistent role with the Gulls through two full seasons.
May 14, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Anaheim Ducks defenseman Olen Zellweger (51) controls the puck past Vegas Golden Knights center Brett Howden (21) during the third period in game six of the second round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Honda Center. Mandatory Credit: Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images
Like 2023 second round pick Nico Myatovic, Pitre thrives in a complementary role, forechecking hard, retrieving/recovering pucks and setting up his higher-level teammates. However, it's been difficult for Pitre to find the same level of success at the AHL level that Myatovic has recently started to find.
Health will be paramount for Pitre as he enters the final year of his ELC. He could be in line for a bigger role with the Gulls this upcoming season depending on what moves are made during the summer.
Maxim Massé
Massé had his best season to date in 2025-26, setting career highs across the board. He eclipsed 100 points for the first time in his juniors career and helped lead the Chicoutimi Saguenéens to a QMJHL championship.
After four full seasons in the QMJHL, Massé will be heading to the NCAA to play for UMass. He follows in the footsteps of fellow Ducks prospects Roger McQueen, Alex Blais, Saguenéens teammate Emile Guité and the aforementioned Smith in transitioning from the CHL to the NCAA.
"It's good for the development," Massé said in an interview with THN Anaheim this past February. "We're only playing 30-40 games a season. Gaining some strength in my lower body and upper body, too, and just getting better with my skating. (The Ducks) were supporting me 100% in that."
Improving his skating, in addition to continuing to add strength, has been a focus for Massé since he was drafted by the Ducks in 2024. Playing collegiate hockey will allow him to ply his trade against older and stronger players and provide a bigger challenge than the CHL.
Yegor Sidorov
After a strong rookie season in the AHL in 2024-25 with 34 points in 59 games, Sidorov took a slight step back offensively in 2025-26. He had 29 points in 68 games while finding himself moving up and down the lineup throughout the season.
Scoring goals has never been an issue for Sidorov, who had a prolific juniors career in the WHL with the Saskatoon Blades. The big question was whether he could impact the game in other ways outside of scoring. It appears that he is still trying to find his 'B-game' after a promising start to his pro career. Sidorov was also a healthy scratch for both of the Gulls' Calder Cup Playoffs games against the Colorado Eagles, with players like scrappy forward Cal Burke getting the nod over him.
May 14, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Anaheim Ducks defenseman Olen Zellweger (51) controls the puck past Vegas Golden Knights center Brett Howden (21) during the third period in game six of the second round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Honda Center. Mandatory Credit: Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images
With a new coaching staff entering the picture, Sidorov could find himself in a more consistent next season. He too is in the final year of his ELC and will likely be part of the group competing for a spot on the NHL roster during training camp, with Troy Terry expected to be out until December after recently undergoing hip impingement surgery.
Sidorov was one of the final training camp cuts last season and if he once again doesn't make the cut, he could at least still be in line for a bigger role with the Gulls. Finding ways to impact the game outside of the scoresheet could help him get that.
Ethan Procyszyn
Procyszyn was a 30-goal scorer for the second consecutive season, also his second season as captain of the North Bay Battalion in the OHL. His points total dipped slightly from his career-high 64 in 2024-25, but he continued to be a driving force for the Battalion in 2025-26.
A gritty, hard-nosed forward, Procyszyn grabs points any way he can and is the true definition of a grinder. His playstyle suits the NHL game quite well, as teams are always looking for players who are willing to go the dirty areas of the ice.
Procyszyn signed his ELC in April following the conclusion of the Battalion's playoff run, though he didn't appear in any games for the Gulls. He'll be able to get his feet wet in the AHL next season as one of the Gulls' depth centers behind captain Ryan Carpenter.
Sasha Pastujov
After a surprise demotion to the ECHL to start the 2024-25 season, Pastujov returned to the AHL with a chip on his shoulder, putting up 45 points in 43 games. He built off of his strong season by leading the Gulls in points (57) in 2025-26 and also finished second on the team in goals (21).
Pastujov is a cerebral player who shows good vision and has a strong shot in his arsenal. Skating has always been the knock on him, an area that he has previously acknowledged needs work. He just completed his third full season as a professional and is a pending RFA. It's likely that he'll be tendered a qualifying offer and should be given a chance to compete for a spot on the NHL roster.
If he isn't able to crack the NHL roster, he'll slot into the Gulls' top-6 and be relied upon as one of their top playmakers.
Tyson Hinds
Another player who went through the rigors of the AHL for a few seasons before finally getting the call to the NHL, Hinds spent most of the 2025-26 season with the Gulls before being called up to the Ducks in April. He appeared in the last six games of the regular season and the first nine games of the Ducks' first playoff run since 2018 before being a healthy scratch for the final three games of the Golden Knights series. This came after logging heavy minutes as part of the Gulls' top defensive pair alongside Tristan Luneau.
May 8, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Anaheim Ducks defenseman Tyson Hinds (60) plays for the puck against Vegas Golden Knights right wing Pavel Dorofeyev (16) during the first period in game three of the second round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Honda Center. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images
Hinds fits the mold of the modern-day stay-at-home defenseman, a mobile defender who uses his length and skating to take away lanes and knock the puck away. He fared well (for the most part) alongside whoever his defensive partner was and wasn't afraid to activate offensively when the opportunity called for it.
He is a pending RFA and will likely be tendered a qualifying offer. The left side of the Ducks' defense is a bit crowded at the moment, so it's difficult to envision there being a regular spot for Hinds. But he showed that he is ready to be an everyday NHLer and could find a role as the seventh defenseman.
EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) — The Edmonton Oilers re-signed defenseman Connor Murphy to a five-year contract worth $20.5 million on Monday.
The team announced the deal roughly 24 hours after extending center Jason Dickinson for the next five seasons at $20 million. Murphy and Dickinson joined Edmonton in separate deals from Chicago as pending unrestricted free agents ahead of the trade deadline in early March.
Murphy, like Dickinson, improved the Oilers’ ability to keep the puck out of their own net. Their goals-against average was 3.34 in the 62 games before acquiring them and dropped to 2.90 in the final 20 games of the regular season with them.
That number shot up to 4.33 in a first-round loss to Anaheim, though that also included goaltenders Tristan Jarry and Connor Ingram combining for a playoff-worst .866 save percentage.
General manager Stan Bowman could address the goaltending situation via trade or free agency, and he and the front office need to hire a coach after firing Kris Knoblauch, who led consecutive trips to the Stanley Cup in 2024 and '25.
Re-signing Murphy, 33, is part of the organization's commitment to being better defensively in an effort to finally get Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl their first championship after more than a decade in the NHL together. Murphy has skated in 840 games in the league with the Coyotes, Blackhawks and Oilers.
Just one sleep remains before the first round of the 2026 NBA Draft in Brooklyn. The 2026 class is been considered one of the deepest and most talented in recent memory, headlined by a quartet of generational one-and-dones as well as explosive guards, and elite veteran forwards. With the draft almost here, here are John Fanta's picks for all 30 first-round selections.
A blockbuster like the Brady Tkachuk deal doesn’t just change rosters—it changes what the rest of the league thinks is possible.
For the Colorado Avalanche, the ripple effects of Tkachuk’s move to the Florida Panthers on Sunday are impossible to ignore. Ottawa landed a haul headlined by the No. 9 and No. 25 picks in the 2026 NHL Draft, along with a conditional first-round selection in 2029 and a second-round pick in 2027. The No. 25 pick, notably, was flipped earlier in the day by Florida in a separate move involving Seattle and forward Mackie Samoskevich.
And when a package like that moves for a player of Tkachuk’s caliber, it naturally resets the conversation around what elite, high-impact forwards are worth across the league.
For the Avalanche, that inevitably circles back to Valeri Nichushkin.
Avalanche star Valeri Nichushkin could very well be traded this offseason. Credit: Ron Chenoy - Imagn Images
In recent days, The Hockey News has explored the idea of whether Colorado should even consider moving him—ultimately leaning toward the idea that the organization would be better served evaluating him for at least another half-season before making any long-term decision. But trades like this reopen the door to more aggressive thinking.
What would it look like if Colorado explored a package built around Nichushkin—and potentially cash considerations—for the No. 9 overall pick? Even if that’s ambitious, a pivot toward something closer to No. 25 might be more realistic depending on how the market evolves. Either way, the Avalanche are in a position where adding draft capital has value after years of dealing picks away in win-now moves.
Ottawa’s return underscores that point: the No. 9 pick, the No. 25 pick, a conditional first-round selection in the 2029 NHL Draft, and a second-round pick in 2027.
And that’s before factoring in how quickly a market like this can get crowded. There are 30 other front offices looking at the same framework, and inevitably, someone will try to replicate it with their own roster calculus.
From Colorado’s perspective, the upside isn’t just the pick—it’s flexibility. Moving Nichushkin would also mean shedding his contract structure, which is notably front-loaded. While his $6.125 million cap hit remains the same, the Avalanche would be responsible for just under $5 million in actual salary this season. That kind of financial space can be just as valuable as the draft assets themselves if it opens the door to another impact player.
And that’s where another name enters the conversation.
Per NHL insider David Pagnotta, Mason Marchment is expected to test the free agent market. That alone is going to draw mixed reactions from Avalanche fans—some will see the fit immediately, others probably won’t be thrilled with the idea given how he’s played against Colorado in the past.
But stylistically, he’s exactly the type of player this roster has lacked at times: big, physical, heavy on the puck, and capable of scoring goals while changing the tone of a playoff series. The Avalanche found out first-hand against Vegas what happens when a series turns into a war of attrition rather than skill. Marchment fits firmly on the “make it miserable to play against” spectrum, and those are the kinds of players contenders tend to circle back to.
Marchment’s last contract was a four-year, $18 million deal ($4.5 million AAV). If the Avalanche move Nichushkin or find another way to offload salary, they would be positioned to comfortably afford him. And with the salary cap continuing to rise, Marchment’s next deal would likely come in higher than his previous contract, reflecting both market growth and his role as a physical, middle-six impact forward.
This is where another layer of context matters. Marchment’s name already carries a reputation in Colorado circles for being a thorn in their side, and he’s the kind of player teams don’t forget easily once the stakes rise.
Edmonton fans won't forgive Mason Marchment any time soon. Credit: Perry Nelson - Imagn Images
Marchment arguably changed the tone of the 2024 postseason when a heavy hit on Edmonton Oilers winger Zach Hyman knocked him out of the playoffs, before Edmonton eventually fell to the Panthers in the Stanley Cup Final.
This is where the broader roster idea starts to take shape. If Colorado does move Nichushkin, even partially to recoup draft capital, it opens a dual path: replenishing the prospect pool while also giving the front office flexibility to chase a different type of impact forward in free agency or trade.
Instead of your highest pick coming in the third round, maybe there’s a chance to step into the first two rounds again—targeting players like Alberts Šmits, the No. 2-ranked international skater by NHL Central Scouting, or potentially, if Colorado lands a pick in the mid-first range, someone like Ilya Morozov.
It becomes a balance of present and future. Not one or the other.
Yes, completely aware that Mason Marchment has been an absolute pain in Colorado’s side in past matchups, and Josh Manson has had his grievances with him over the years. The first day of practice might feel a bit like a therapy session with Draymond Green in the room, but the underlying question is whether Colorado is ready to keep getting outmuscled by teams built for playoff trench warfare.
The Avalanche have tried to win with skill and structure. The question now is whether the next step requires a little more edge.
And whether that edge comes through a trade, free agency, or both, it’s exactly the type of decision Joe Sakic and the front office are going to have to weigh this offseason.
Caluori, Fisilau, Janse van Rensburg, Sela, Kloska selected
Fin Smith says he had to ‘fake’ confidence after Lions tour
At some stage there will be better times ahead for English rugby. They have an encouraging amount of young talent, a decent age profile and another 15 months to develop prior to the 2027 Rugby World Cup. Get it right – and they have a more than promising draw – and the sunlit uplands could yet be glimpsed in Australia next year.
That, at least, is the cosy scenario. First, though, there is the equivalent of a precarious-looking rope bridge to be crossed by those named in Steve Borthwick’s squad for this summer’s inaugural leg of the new Nations Championship. Three Tests in three different continents in successive weeks with a squad lacking its regular captain and on a four-match losing streak is not the idyllic travel brochure it might have been.
St. Louis native Brady Tkachuk was dealt to the Florida Panthers in a blockbuster deal on Sunday, joining his brother Matthew on the 2024 and 2025 Stanley Cup champions.
The trade came as a shock, as most rumors surrounding the former Ottawa Senators captain had gone quiet.
What might come as an even bigger shock to St. Louis Blues fans is that Tkachuk was unwilling to be traded to St. Louis.
According to a post by The Athletic’s Jim Rutherford, GM Doug Armstrong said the Blues inquired about Tkachuk’s availability, but were told that they were not one of the teams the 26-year-old was willing to be traded to.
That’s a punch in the gut for the Blues, as Keith Tkachuk, the father of Brady, played nine seasons with the Blues, scoring 208 goals and 427 points in 543 games. The Tkachuk brothers have spoken highly about their time growing up in St. Louis, but clearly not enough to play for the franchise.
While it must hurt for Blues fans to hear this, it’s not hard to understand why. Tkachuk is looking to play meaningful hockey and play in the post-season. While nothing is guaranteed, the Panthers are far closer to being a playoff team next year than the Blues are.
Their roster is built to win Stanley Cups, while the Blues are in the middle ground, not knowing whether to rebuild or go all in.
Tkachuk was in a situation with Ottawa where they were stagnant, unable to get over the hump. They made the playoffs just twice in his eight-year NHL career and were unable to go beyond the first round. They were swept in the 2025-26 playoffs, and although they won two games in the 2024-25 playoffs, they found themselves down 3-0 in the series.
Coming to St. Louis would have been a linear move, or even possibly a backwards move for Tkachuk. Going to Florida opens a Stanley Cup window for the Olympic gold medalist.
The Blues have once again struck out when chasing a big-name trade option, which only adds to the fuel of uncertainty about which direction this team is heading.
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After Dusty May's stunning exit from the Michigan men's basketball program, the Wolverines will be looking within for the immediate replacement.
Michigan is expected to promote assistant coach Mike Boynton Jr. as the interim head coach, according to multiple reports. The decision comes less than a few hours after May's departure to take the job with the NBA's Dallas Mavericks on Monday, June 22.
Boynton joined May's staff when he arrived in Ann Arbor in 2024, after spending seven seasons in charge of Oklahoma State. His time with the Cowboys was up-and-down, with one NCAA Tournament appearance in 2021 with a team that featured eventually NBA draft No. 1 overall pick Cade Cunningham. In addition to the one March Madness trip, Oklahoma State had two NIT bids under Boynton.
At Michigan, Boynton has been in charge of the team's defense, which was among the best in the country in the past season, giving up just 69.5 points per game with a nation's best 38.2% defensive field goal percentage.
It's a move that makes sense given Boynton was the only staff member with head coaching experience. The Wolverines previously had an assistant in Justin Joyner, who left to take the Oregon State job.
May's departure this late in the summer also makes it rough for Michigan to find a permanent replacement option when nearly all coaching positions are filled. Boynton will likely be in charge of Michigan for the entirety of the 2026-27 season as the Wolverines searched for a permanent replacement, which Boynton could end up filling.
Can Michigan basketball players transfer with Dusty May leaving?
Yes, NCAA rules allow for the creation of a special transfer portal window following a head coaching change. At that time, players can enter the portal and potentially sign with another team.
When can Michigan players enter the portal?
According to the NCAA on Jan. 14, 2026, the Division I Cabinet enacted immediate rules changes for the transfer portal, including those for a team going through a coaching change.
Per the NCAA:
When a head coaching change occurs, a 15-day period will open five days after the new head coach is hired or publicly announced. If a new head coach is not announced within 30 days of the previous head coach's departure — and the 31st day after the head coach's departure is after the championship game — a 15-day window will open. The additional head coach departure window is available only after the basketball transfer window opens through Jan. 2.
Five days after Michigan hires or publicly announces its hire, the 15-day transfer portal will open, allowing players to enter and potentially sign with a team. The 15-day window will open if the Wolverines are unable to make a hire within 30 days of May's departure for the NBA.
That is separate from a 15-day transfer window that opens the day following the championship game, which in 2026 was on April 4.
Mike Boynton coaching record
Boynton joined May's staff in 2024 after serving seven years as Oklahoma State's head coach. Boynton was on Brad Underwood's staff for a year at OSU before Underwood left for Illinois. Boynton was elevated to head coach and posted a 119-109 (.522) record, which included two NIT quarterfinals appearances and a trip to the 2021 NCAA Tournament.
TUSCALOOSA, ALABAMA - JANUARY 3: Jayden Quaintance #21 of the Kentucky Wildcats comes away with a loose ball during the second half at Coleman Coliseum on January 3, 2026 in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. (Photo by Brandon Sumrall/Getty Images) | Getty Images
It’s the desire of every NBA team to find athleticism on the wings and at the center position. The surest way teams can find that, then, is in the NBA Draft.
With just over a day left before the first round of the 2026 NBA Draft, the projected Lakers’ picks are mostly either lob threats or wings with athleticism, which shouldn’t be a surprise. There is also one name that is coming up with increasing regularity as well.
On paper, Evans looks like he fits the mold of an athletic wing at 6’5” with a wingspan of nearly 6’9”. However, he instead fits the mold of a sharpshooter, which certainly could fill a need as well.
Here’s Jeremy Woo’s breakdown on the pick:
Evans’ long-range shotmaking has kept first-round interest high, and he appears likely to come off the board in the 20s. He has nice size for a wing shooter, measuring 6-5½ barefoot at the combine, and has a pathway to becoming a valuable role player if he can continue to flesh out his game, particularly on defense. Though he is more of a play finisher and spacer than a creator, his ability to hit shots off movement is rare and perpetually coveted by NBA teams.
This should be a best-available pick for the Lakers, who should be focused on the bigger picture of building around Luka Doncic but are also dealing with new contracts for LeBron James and Austin Reaves. Evans’ shooting could be a useful addition and a strong fit for him playing off L.A.’s stars.
Over the last week, Quaintance has been linked more and more to the Lakers. There’s certainly logic to it. He’s a great defender who can rebound at a high level, two things the Lakers could use.
Here’s what The Ringer had to say about him and his fit in LA:
Life with Luka Doncic can be tricky for guys who have grand aspirations or ideas about who they are as players. But for some, life gets simpler in a glorious way around Doncic, and Quaintance fits that bill to a T. If you’re focusing on Quaintance’s choppy and ridiculously brief tenure at Kentucky due to his injury recovery, you’re not going to come away with a clear picture of who this guy could become. Watching his tape from Arizona State a season prior is the way to go. I think he’s an All-Defense-level prospect on one end and the type of powerhouse who can punctuate Luka pick-and-rolls 10 to 15 times a game on the other. It comes down to health for Quaintance, but at pick no. 25, he is more than worth the risk.
Drafting Quaintance would certainly be a bet on both his medicals being clear and that the Lakers could develop him into a more refined player. If both of those things check out, then the team could pull off a steal by taking a player with injury concerns with the focus on the long term.
Here’s Cameron Salerno’s thoughts on the Lakers taking him:
The Lakers biggest need heading into the offseason should be finding a center. If Quaintance is still on the board, that should be the pick. He is one of the most unique prospects in this class. After playing in just four games at Kentucky last season, his stock has taken a hit. Still, when healthy, he is one of the best defenders in the class.
Lastly, there’s someone who fits the more traditional role of athletic wing in Swain. He has an ability to get to the rim and finish and has a jumper that needs work, which sounds a lot like the last player drafted by the Lakers.
Here’s what Kevin O’Connor said about the selection:
What type of support does Luka Dončić need by his side? Versatile wing defenders who can serve as connectors on offense. Swain is relentless getting to the rim, creative as a finisher, and active enough defensively to project as a switchable wing. But the reason he lives at the rim is because his jump shot is genuinely terrible. He has stiff mechanics, bad percentages, and a reluctance to even attempt it that goes all the way back to high school. He made improvements at Texas, though, so there’s hope his soft touch at the line and from the paint will eventually translate.
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - MARCH 23: Aaron Wiggins #21 of the Oklahoma City Thunder dribbles during the first half against the Philadelphia 76ers at Xfinity Mobile Arena on March 23, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Emilee Chinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images
At this year’s trade deadline, the Sixers made a trade with the Oklahoma City Thunder that we don’t need to rehash for the sake of everyone’s mental health.
Their reported trade target from that deal is now on the move.
In mid-May, Adam Aaronson of PhillyVoice reported that Thunder guard Aaron Wiggins was the “primary target” for the Sixers. He added “there was hope” that The Trade That Shall Not Be Named “could lead to a deal also involving Wiggins,” but that didn’t materialize at the time.
Four months later, Wiggins is heading to Atlanta for two distant second-round picks, according to ESPN’s Shams Charania. From OKC’s standpoint, it was a purely financially motivated move.
The Sixers have changed front offices since the trade deadline, so perhaps new team president Mike Gansey and vice president of basketball operations Jameer Nelson didn’t value Wiggins the same way that former president Daryl Morey and general manager Elton Brand did. But even if they did, money was the big obstacle in their way, which made Atlanta a far more logical trade partner for OKC.
Why the Sixers couldn’t get Wiggins
The Hawks had an $11 million trade exception after sending Luke Kennard to the Los Angeles Lakers for Gabe Vincent and a 2032 second-round pick at the trade deadline. They wound up sending the better of their own second-rounder and the Lakers’ second-rounder in 2032 along with their own in 2030 to acquire Wiggins.
More importantly, they were able to absorb Wiggins into that trade exception without sending salary back to OKC.
The Thunder appear to be in full payroll-trimming mode before having to decide whether to exercise their team options on Isaiah Hartenstein ($28.5 million), Lu Dort ($17.7 million) and Kenrich Williams ($7.2 million). It wouldn’t be a surprise if former Sixer Isaiah Joe and his $11.3 million salary is the next one out the door.
The Sixers have two small trade exceptions, but neither Wiggins ($9.0 million) nor Joe could fit into either of them. They could technically take either one into the $15.0 million non-taxpayer mid-level exception since it can now be used as a trade exception, but doing so would hard-cap them at the first apron. That should be a non-starter at this stage of the offseason.
The first apron is projected to land around $209 million. The Sixers already have more than $172.7 million on their books for next season, and that’s for only seven players. If they used $9 million of their non-taxpayer MLE to absorb Wiggins, they’d be up to $181.7 million in salary with seven open roster spots. That would leave them less than $27.5 million below their first-apron hard cap.
If the Sixers filled five of their remaining spots with players on minimum contracts, that would add $12.25 million to their books. That’d leave them about $15 million to spend on either Oubre or Grimes, or they could bring back one for around $10 million and spend the remainder of their non-taxpayer MLE on another free agent.
Either way, they presumably wouldn’t want to head into free agency hard-capped at the first apron, particularly not for a player like Wiggins. He’d be a solid addition off the bench, but he’d have minimal chance of cracking the Sixers’ starting lineup thanks to Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe.
If the Sixers are going to hard-cap themselves at the first apron before the new league year even begins, it needs to be a home run move. Otherwise, they have incentive to see how the Oubre and/or Grimes situations play out in free agency before imposing those kinds of handcuffs on themselves.
The Wiggins deal isn’t likely to be the only trade that goes down this week. Giannis Antetokounmpo is the headliner, while Ja Morant could follow in short succession. Unless the Sixers are trading one of Maxey, Joel Embiid or Paul George, they don’t have the salary-matching contracts to get involved for either one.
In fact, they don’t have the contracts to get involved for hardly anyone on the trade market.
The Sixers’ top-heavy salary structure
Embiid ($58.0 million), George ($54.1 million) and Maxey ($40.7 million) are the only Sixers players who are currently set to earn more than $12 million next year. Edgecombe is next at $11.7 million. Whomever they select with the No. 22 overall pick will temporarily be their fifth-highest-paid player at a whopping $3.6 million.
Despite having so few players under contract, the Sixers are already projected to be over the 2026-27 salary cap. They can’t swing a trade that’s unbalanced salary-wise unless they’re willing to hard-cap themselves at the first apron. (Which, again, should be a non-starter this early in the offseason.)
That top-heavy salary structure is going to limit the Sixers’ options on the trade market this offseason. Salary dumps of productive players should only become more common as teams look to trim their payroll, but the Sixers likely won’t be able to capitalize this offseason.
That shouldn’t be held against Gansey and Co. They’re just playing the hand they were dealt.
They didn’t choose to not outbid Atlanta for Wiggins. They didn’t have a choice in the matter since they couldn’t absorb Wiggins’ contract without sending salary back.
That would have defeated the purpose for OKC, and the same will go for any other team looking to cut costs.
According to multiple reports, May wasn't the only prominent college basketball coach to have interest in the Mavericks' job, which comes with coaching 2025-26 NBA Rookie of the Year Cooper Flagg. Per the Field of 68's Jeff Goodman, Flagg's college coach, Jon Scheyer, had "major interest" in the position but elected to stay with the Blue Devils.
Shortly after news broke May was leaving the Wolverines after two seasons, Duke’s social media team posted a photo of a young Scheyer in a Duke T‑Shirt — perhaps a Bat‑signal–style nod meant to signal his commitment to his alma mater.
Scheyer and Flagg were awfully successful in their lone season together in Durham, which included a 35-4 overall record and the program's first Final Four appearance in the post-Mike Krzyzewski era.
Named the Naismith and Associated Press Player of the Year, Flagg averaged 19.2 points, 7.5 rebounds and 4.2 assists per game in the 2024-25 season under Scheyer. In the Blue Devils' Final Four loss to Houston, Flagg scored 27 points to go along with seven rebounds, four assists, three blocks and two steals, making him the first player since defensive stats became official in 1986 to lead a team in all five categories in a Final Four game.
He was selected with the No. 1 overall pick in the 2025 NBA Draft by the Mavericks.
Duke is expected to be one of the top teams in the country once again under Scheyer this season. The Blue Devils return guard Caleb Foster and center Patrick Ngongba II, while they added Wisconsin guard John Blackwell and Belmont forward Drew Scharnowski to the roster through the transfer portal.
BROOKLYN, NY - JUNE 26: The Milwaukee Bucks round 1 pick 23 during the 2024 NBA Draft - Round One on June 26, 2024 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2024 NBAE (Photo by Kostas Lymperopoulos/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
In last week’s Reacts survey, we asked you one more—final?—time about the ongoing Giannis trade saga, which may or may not be headed for a resolution by tomorrow evening’s NBA Draft. Pretty simple questions here, but we wanted to see how opinions have or have not changed since the season ended. First off: do you want to trade Giannis or not?
In our final Tuesday Tracker of the season, a similar 53% of fans polled wanted the trade to happen regardless of what Giannis wants. But if you go back to our Tuesday Tracker before the trade deadline, 57% didn’t want the Bucks to trade him. That was before his knee injury, and Milwaukee’s late-season slide took them out of the play-in picture completely, of course.
Next up, if a trade does indeed occur, will fans feel betrayed by the Bucks, especially given all that’s happened over the last year?
Taken together, these two results paint a picture of an increasingly over-it fanbase. The publicly self-imposed deadline of tomorrow’s draft for an answer on Giannis’ future, one way or another, might elicit something by tomorrow. Or it might not. Either way, people are tired of the media cycle and wish either party—the Bucks or Giannis—would do something about it.
Check out FanDuel, the official sportsbook of SB Nation.
As recently as last week, league sources talking to NBC Sports were playing down the idea of Boston as a serious suitor for Giannis Antetokounmpo, saying they weren't really all-in on their pursuit.
"One league source, after this story was published, told The Stein Line that the Celtics managed to emerge from the weekend 'with a real shot' to win this race with a Jaylen Brown-centric offer, adding that Milwaukee has considered going ahead with a Boston swap even without a third-team facilitator."
Monday morning, ESPN’s Brian Windhorst said on Get Up, "I was really skeptical that the Boston Celtics were going to go all-in on this, but from what I understand, they have."
The expectation remains that this trade will be completed before Tuesday night's NBA Draft. Miami is still near the front of the line and may yet win this sweepstakes with an offer reportedly involving Tyler Herro, Kel'el Ware, Jamie Jaquez Jr. and draft picks. However, it's clear Milwaukee doesn't love that offer, or this trade would already be done.
ESPN's Shams Charania added this on the network’s Get Up show: "It's going to consist of Milwaukee and likely one of these two teams. There's no third team, fourth team in any construct right now."
Boston's offer would be based around All-NBA wing Jaylen Brown, coming off the best season of his career, averaging 28.7 points, 6.9 rebounds and 5.1 assists, leading the Celtics to 56 wins and the No. 2 seed in the East despite Jayson Tatum being out for most of the season. The talk in league circles had been that Boston didn't firmly put Brown in an offer, that Milwaukee had been using the situation more as leverage to get more out of Miami, but that appears not to have changed.
What other players (if any) and draft compensation would be in a Boston trade are the real questions. There have been rumors about Payton Pritchard being in the offer, but he would be a player the Celtics would want to keep because of how well he would fit playing off Antetokounmpo. Stein suggests it would be a young player, such as Hugo Gonzalez, plus draft picks. Boston has the No. 27 pick in Tuesday's NBA Draft, which likely would be part of the package.
Would Milwaukee keep Brown and try to build around him, or flip him to another team in a second trade? The argument for a second trade is that the Bucks are rebuilding and a 27-year-old player in his prime does not fit that timeline. Does Milwaukee believe that what it could get in return from Boston, plus a second Brown trade, outweighs what Miami has on the table?
Or, does the new lottery system, which punishes the teams with the three worst records in the league, change the calculus for Milwaukee, which now does not want to go into rebuild mode? Windhorst reported Brown is open to the idea of having "his own team," suggesting he is open to the idea.
Is it worth it for Boston?
Trading for Antetokounmpo would be a huge gamble for the Celtics.
We know that Brown and Tatum work together — they have won a title as a lead duo. If Boston spends this offseason filling out the roster around them — specifically upgrading along the front line — it enters next season as one of the true contenders to come out of the East, along with New York, Detroit and a healthy Indiana.
Antetokounmpo, at his best, is a two-time MVP and a better player than Brown, giving the team an elite dowhill attacker. Celtics president Brad Stevens talked in his postseason press conference about the need for the team to put more pressure on the rim, and nobody does that better than Antetokounmpo. He also is a two-way force. The risks are that he is also older (31) and has a growing injury history that has sidelined him or slowed him in each of the last three playoffs. On top of that, he will demand a new max contract after the trade, and it's likely that as he ages, that will be an anchor in the last season or two.
That risk is countered by the vision of just how good Boston could be with Antetokounmpo and Tatum. (Plus, Antetokounmpo becomes valuable looking ahead to a potential matchup with Victor Wembanyama and the Spurs, not many people have the size, strength and athleticism to bother Wemby.)
If this trade falls apart and Antetokounmpo heads to South Beach, it leads to another issue: Has Boston crossed the Rubicon with Brown and now has to trade him? Has it gone so far down that road that the relationship has soured and the two sides need to part ways? There will be a lot of speculation about that, but it's a question only Brown and Stevens can really answer, and both are intelligent men who can at least talk it out. If they choose to.