JJ Redick says Deandre Ayton is day-to-day with knee injury

WASHINGTON, DC - JANUARY 30: Deandre Ayton #5 of the Los Angeles Lakers celebrates after a play against the Washington Wizards during the second half at Capital One Arena on January 30, 2026 in Washington, DC. 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 Scott Taetsch/Getty Images) | Getty Images

To the surprise of no one, the latest Laker injury update involves a day-to-day designation.

On Saturday, Deandre Ayton was a very late scratch for the Lakers with a knee injury. Jaxson Hayes and Maxi Kleber stepped up in his place, helping the team to a victory over the Warriors.

After the game, head coach JJ Redick was asked about Ayton and his injury and you’ll never believe what the team considers him.

“He went out for his shooting stretch and just didn’t feel completely comfortable with it,” Redick said. “I don’t think there’s any reason to believe it’s anything but day-to-day.”

How helpful it is to know he’s just day-to-day, just like Luka Dončić is day-to-day with his hamstring injury. I mean, when you really think about it, aren’t we all just day-to-day?

Kleber’s play over the last two games has made the absences of Hayes against the Sixers and Ayton against the Warriors less of a concern. In fact, in both games, Kleber was the best center for the Lakers.

However, is it really that sustainable for Kleber to keep playing like this? I’d go as far as to say that it’s day-to-day whether he can keep being this impactful.

Adding to that is the fact the next two games are coming against perhaps the two best teams in the league in the Spurs and the Thunder and the team really needs to be back to full strength. Even if Ayton is in a bit of a slump of late, the best version of the Lakers includes him playing at a high level and if the Lakers are going to win either of these next two games, they need to play a high level.

Hopefully that day-to-day designation results in him playing on Monday.

You can follow Jacob on Twitter at @JacobRude or on Bluesky at @jacobrude.bsky.social.

Recap: Wizards lose to Heat, 132-101

WASHINGTON, DC -  FEBRUARY 8: Kasparas Jakucionis #25 of the Miami Heat plays defense during the game against the Washington Wizards on February 8, 2026 at Capital One Arena in Washington, DC. 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 2026 NBAE (Photo by Kenny Giarla/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Washington Wizards lost to the Miami Heat on Sunday, 132-101 at home. The loss has the Wizards falling to 14-38 for the season while the Heat improved to 28-26.

This game started with the Wizards racing to a lead that was large as 9 points in the first quarter. But the Heat were able to go on a run of their own and finished with a 37-33 lead on Washington. From there it was all Heat all the time.

The Heat made 21-of-47 three pointers today with Kasparas Jakucionis scoring a co-team high 22 points and making 6-of-6 threes while Bam Adebayo also scored 22 points. Miami also out-rebounded Washington 60-42.

For Washington, Tristan Vukcevic led with 14 points. Alex Sarr had a double double with 12 points, 12 rebounds and 5 assists.

The Wizards’ next game is on Wednesday when they are on the road to face the Cleveland Cavaliers. Tip off is at 7 p.m. ET. See you then and enjoy the Super Bowl tonight.

What we learned from the Spurs’ blowout win over the Mavericks

SAN ANTONIO, TX -FEBRUARY 7: Stephon Castle #5 of the San Antonio Spurs drives for two against the Dallas Mavericks in the second half at Frost Bank Center on February 7, 2026 in San Antonio, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Ronald Cortes/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Anyone who has watched the NBA for a few years knows not to overreact to career nights. It’s immensely fun to watch someone perform at or near the peak of their abilities, but it often doesn’t mean much. Those outlier games are often a combination of opportunity, circumstances, and a little luck.

Recently, the Jazz’s backup point guard, Isaiah Collier, dropped 22 dimes on the Pacers. Only John Stockton has had more in a game for the franchise. Does that mean Collier is as good as Stockton? Obviously not. He just got to play all 48 minutes for a shorthanded team, and it’s unlikely he will ever log 20 helpers again in his career, while Stockton has several such performances despite playing in a slow-paced era. It’s still impressive. It was fun. It shows that Collier can be a prolific playmaker given the opportunity. But extrapolating that night and projecting stardom for him would be as silly as believing Julian Champagnie’s 11 three-pointers in a game means he’s the second coming of Reggie Miller. Cautious optimism after career nights is warranted, but sometimes Corey Brewer will drop 51 before returning to his normal career path.

The point here is that Stephon Castle’s 40-12-12 historic triple-double doesn’t need to be assigned special meaning. It can just be enjoyed for what it was: an electrifying performance from one of the league’s best young players. For fringe guys or role players, career nights can be used as a reminder that they can produce more in better circumstances. They can even, often retroactively, serve as signs that there was more to their game than originally thought. Sandro Mamukelashvili’s explosion against the Knicks late last season might have shown that he was ready to make the leap as a shooter we’ve seen from him in Toronto. But Castle doesn’t need to prove anything. He showed star potential as a rookie and has produced like one as a sophomore. If he had finished with, say, a 25-7-8 stat line, the Spurs and their fans should have been just as excited about his future.

With the Castles of the NBA world, it’s the little things, the boring stuff that arguably matters more. The basketball nerds among us will remember the windmill dunk, but also how the Mavericks tried putting their center on him to start the game and then played off of him, daring him to shoot, and how he made them pay by both making threes and, more encouragingly, making quick decisions like stepping into a mid-range jumper or trying a pitch pass and then screen for one of his teammates. The highlights will show him skying for a monster putback dunk, but not necessarily the consistent defensive effort and intensity he displayed all game, a trait that could make him one of the premier two-way forces in the league.

Castle did Castle things against the Mavericks, the kind of spectacular, winning plays he’s made routinely this season. He just did more of it, and in a way that made a random February game one of the most fun Spurs viewing experiences of the last few years. It’s incredibly entertaining to witness amazing performances as they happen and completely fine to feel giddy about them as we rewatch the highlights the next day. But fortunately, Stephon Castle has done enough already that he doesn’t need the help of any arbitrary statistical performance to give anyone a reason to be optimistic or show he could be a legitimate star, likely sooner rather than later.

Takeaways

  • Carter Bryant could have been the main character of this one had Castle not made history. The rookie shot with confidence, skyed for rebounds, and emphatically swatted shots, continuing to show that the game is slowing down for him. His length and athleticism have always been impressive, but he looks more and more like he belongs on the floor. Those minutes Mitch Johnson force-fed him while he was looking lost seem to be paying off, so credit where credit is due.
  • Now that Johnson and Bryant have received their praise, let’s get to the important stuff: Bald Watch. De’Aaron Fox said three weeks ago that if Bryant missed three more dunks the rest of the season, he’d have to shave his head. I don’t think he had missed any since then, until last night. At the end of the third quarter, Wemby threw him a lob, and he couldn’t finish it. Only two more to go, Carter! And you better hope your teammates are not counting any that might happen in the Dunk Contest.
  • The Spurs are not as committed to attacking without using screens as last year’s Grizzlies and this year’s Heat, but they often go entire possessions with isolations or drives and kicks that often turn into other drives and kicks. When it doesn’t work, it looks like everyone is playing hero ball. When it does, as it did with the Mavericks, it makes them incredibly hard to defend, especially when the guards can consistently touch the paint.
  • After the last game against the Mavericks, Marilyn Dubinski pointed out how the Spurs seem to let games become a lot closer than they need to, saying “Don’t get me wrong: I love a team that knows how to tighten the strings and put things together on both ends when the game is on the line, which will be very important in the playoffs, but I would also happily accept a blowout win here or there, just for my own sanity.” A lot of fans can agree with that sentiment and will be happy with Saturday’s performance. San Antonio led by as much as 28, and there was no poor stretch that let the Mavericks get back into it in the second half. More of this, please.

Roberson's 22 points, 16 rebounds highlight No. 17 Duke women's near 60-point rout of SMU

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) — Freshman center Arianna Roberson had career highs of 22 points and 16 rebounds off the bench, Toby Fournier added 26 points and No. 17 Duke routed SMU 95-36 on Sunday for the Blue Devils' 15th straight win.

Duke's 13th straight ACC victory extends the Blue Devils' best conference start under head coach Kara Lawson. The 15 consecutive wins are also the most under Lawson, who is in her fifth full season leading the Blue Devils (18-6, 13-0).

Delaney Thomas had 16 points and 10 rebounds, and Ashlon Jackson was Duke's third player with a double-double in the game, scoring 11 points to go with 10 assists.

Fournier and Jackson scored eight points each and the Blue Devils raced out to a 24-6 lead at the end of the first quarter. They led 5-2 before going on a 19-3 run.

Roberson and Fournier scored eight points each in the second quarter and the Blue Devils continued to dominate, ending the half with a 46-16 lead. The Blue Devils shot 56% in the first half, compared to 22% for SMU.

Roberson scored 10 more in the third quarter and Duke's lead reached 50 points when Riley Nelson drained a 3-pointer with six seconds left.

Delaney Thomas scored seven points in a nine-point run that gave Duke a 95-35 lead near the one-minute mark. Grace Hall made a free throw for SMU to set the final margin. She led SMU (8-16, 1-11) with nine points.

For the game, Duke shot 52% and SMU hit only 23%.

Up next

SMU: at No. 25 North Carolina on Thursday.

Duke: North Carolina visits on Sunday in the second of three straight home games for the Blue Devils.

___

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David "Diggy" Coit scores 20 of his 28 after halftime, Maryland beats Minnesota 67-62

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — David “Diggy” Coit scored 20 of his 28 in the final 13-plus minutes, including the game's final seven points, to help Maryland beat Minnesota 67-62 on Sunday.

Coit made 9 of 13 from the field, 4 of 7 from 3-point range, and hit 7 of 7 from the free-throw line. The 5-foot-11 senior outscored the Golden Gophers 13-9 after Langston Reynolds made back-to-back layups to give them a 53-47 lead with 9:43 left in the game.

Cade Tyson hit two free throws to give Minnesota a two-point lead with 53 seconds left, but Coit answered 27 seconds later with a 3-pointer and then made four free throws in the final 11 seconds to cap the scoring.

Andre Mills scored 12 points for Maryland (9-14, 2-10 Big Ten) and Darius Adams 11. Solomon Washington had 10 rebounds, nine points and three steals.

Isaac Asuma hit a career-high six 3-pointers and finished with 18 points for the Golden Gophers. Tyson scored 12 points and Reynolds added 11. Minnesota (11-13, 4-9), which beat No. 10 Michigan State 76-73 on Wednesday to snap a seven-game skid, has lost eight of nine.

Asuma made 4 of 5 from 3-point range and scored 12 first-half points to help the Golden Gophers take a one-point lead into the break. Bobby Durkin hit a 3-pointer that gave them a seven-point lead — tied for the biggest lead to that point by either team — with 1:34 left in the first half but Coit answered with a 3 and then converted a three-point play that trimmed Maryland's deficit to 33-32.

Up next

Maryland: Hosts Iowa on Wednesday.

Minnesota: Plays next Saturday at Washington.

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Lakers reportedly plan to expand, remodel front office this offseason based on Dodgers model

When Mark Walters and his group purchased the Los Angeles Dodgers, he was patient. He didn't just jump in and start pushing for trades or making any changes on the baseball operations side. He watched and learned. After about a year and a half, he fired general manager Ned Colletti and replaced him with Andrew Friedman, then started spending money to build out Los Angeles' baseball side. The Dodgers didn't just build a three-time champion by splashing money around on free agents (although they certainly do that), the Dodgers are smart and strategic about who they bring in, and at the same time have built one of the best farm systems in the MLB. The Dodgers aren't just back-to-back champions, they are one of the smartest organizations in professional sports.

Walters purchased the Lakers from the Buss family last year and plans to follow the same blueprint, reports Dan Woike at The Athletic. That could start this summer with a host of changes.

The summer presents an opportunity, armed with significant cap flexibility, to start building the necessary components of a modern front office and reap early benefits. League sources say that includes significant hires to a wide range of front-office positions this summer, with the Lakers expected to model their front office after the World Series-winning Los Angeles Dodgers.

"It's going to be scary," one rival executive said when asked about the potential of the built-out front office the Lakers are expected to assemble.

This isn't about chasing stars, as has been the Lakers' history — the CBA and the nature of the sport make building an NBA team very different from building an MLB team. This is about building an improved infrastructure.

Los Angeles has one of the smaller, leaner basketball operations staffs in the NBA and has for years. Expect Walter to spend to bring in much more scouting, more analytics people, not to mention sports science staff and more. The Lakers were a relative mom-and-pop shop under the Buss family, which has its strengths but plenty of weaknesses. Expect the Lakers to have one of the most robust front offices in the league within a couple of years.

One of the big questions around the league: Will Rob Pelinka keep his GM job through all this?

Pelinka has won a title and had some real success as the Lakers GM — finding Austin Reaves, for example — but his three biggest successes fell in his lap: LeBron James chose to come to the Lakers, Anthony Davis forced his way to Los Angeles out of New Orleans, and the Luka Doncic trade was a gift from Nico Harrison and Dallas. The roster built around Luka Doncic this year is not well-suited to match up with his skill set, although his options were limited last offseason.

It's unclear whether Pelinka will remain at the top of the Lakers' basketball decision-making tree, whether he will be let go, or whether someone else will simply be brought in and put ahead of him in the pecking order.

As for the short term, yes, the Lakers will get in the Giannis Antetokounmpo sweepstakes if he is back on the market as expected, Woike notes. By the draft, Los Angeles can offer three first-round picks (including drafting and then trading a player this year), plus use an Austin Reaves sign-and-trade to get closer on salaries and get the Bucks a young player they can use as part of the core going forward. That said, Antetokounmpo to the Lakers only happens if he puts his thumb on the scale (telling teams he would only re-sign there in 2027 when he can be a free agent).

That said, one of the key points of this report is that Antetokounmpo and star chasing will not be the Lakers' only plan, they will have cap space and optionality to go a lot of different directions to build a team around Luka Doncic.

The biggest questions are who will be making those choices in a year and beyond.

Rob Pelinka says the Lakers aggressively told teams no to trades at deadline

SACRAMENTO, CA - DECEMBER 19: General Manager and VP of Basketball Operations Rob Pelinka of the Los Angeles Lakers looks on prior to the game against the Sacramento Kings on December 19, 2024 at Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, California. 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 Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2024 NBAE (Photo by Rocky Widner/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Merriam-Webster defines aggressive as “marked by driving forceful energy or initiative.” Lakers President of Basketball Operations Rob Pelinka defines it a bit differently.

The Lakers made just one small move at the trade deadline by bringing in Luka Kennard. With the focus on the offseason and maximizing cap space, the Lakers balked at the idea of adding players who would eat into it.

For most, that would not be described as an aggressive approach to the deadline. Pelinka, however, is not most, to say the least. And he delivered one of the most peak-Pelinka quotes he’s ever had when discussing the deadline prior to Saturday’s game against the Warriors.

This one goes up there with finding manna with Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and wearing a ridiculous leather jacket to Luka Dončić’s introductory press conference as an all-time moment for Pelinka. “Aggressive in saying no” is just a hilarious spin on doing hardly anything at the deadline.

As Pelinka confirmed, there were talks with other teams, so it’s not like the Lakers’ front office was kicking their feet as the deadline approached. And there were reports that the Lakers were, in fact, shopping Dalton Knecht.

While it might frustrate win-now Lakers fans that they didn’t make a huge splash immediately, Pelinka might’ve done the smarter thing and waited until better options are available.

However, there has to be a way to explain that where I’m not rolling my eyes. That being said, this was also the most on-brand way he could have described the situation as well.

Never change, Rob.

You can follow Edwin on Twitter at @ECreates88 or on Bluesky at @ecreates88.bsky.social.

Baba Miller has 17 points, 10 rebounds and 5 assists to help Cincinnati beat UCF 92-72

CINCINNATI (AP) — Baba Miller had 17 points, 10 rebounds and five assists, Jizzle James scored 11 of his 15 points in the second half, and Cincinnati beat UCF 92-72 on Sunday.

Moustapha Thiam also scored 15 points for Cincinnati (12-12, 4-7 Big 12), Jalen Celestine added 14 and Day Day Thomas 11.

The Bearcats, who went into the game shooting 41.7% from the field (worst in the Big 12 and No. 327 nationally) this season, shot a season-high 59% (33 of 56) and scored at least 90 points for just the third time this season.

Chris Johnson had 16 points and six assists and Jordan Burks also scored 16 for UCF (17-6, 6-5). Jamichael Stillwell finished with 14 points and nine rebounds, and Riley Kugel added 10 points.

The Knights made just 1 of 11 from the field to close the first half and went scoreless for the final three-plus minutes. Cincinnati scored 14 of the final 16 points, capped when Celestine made back-to-back 3-pointers that made it 40-28 at halftime.

The Bearcats opened the second half with a 9-0 run to take their biggest lead at 49-28 with 18:13 left.

Devan Cambridge and Johnson each hit from behind the arc in 20-6 run that culminated when George Beale Jr. made 3s 27 seconds apart to trim UCF's deficit to 62-56 with 9:33 left. Thiam answered with a jumper, James hit a 3 and made two free throws, and Thiam threw down a dunk that pushed the lead to 15 less than two minutes later.

Up next

UCF: Hosts West Virginia on Saturday.

Cincinnati: Plays Wednesday at Kansas State.

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2026 NBA All-Star 3-point Contest: Devin Booker, Kon Knueppel, Damian Lillard headline participants

For the first time this season, we are going to see Damian Lillard in a Portland Trail Blazers uniform and on an NBA court.

Lillard, who has not played a minute this season while recovering from a torn 45.1%) with Achilles, pushed to return and try to win his third NBA All-Star Saturday Night 3-point Contest in four years. He had won in 2023 and 2024 but lost last year to the Heat's Tyler Herro.

This year's competitors in the 3-point Contest are:
· Devin Booker, Phoenix Suns
· Kon Knueppel, Charlotte Hornets
· Damian Lillard, Portland Trail Blazers
· Tyrese Maxey, Philadelphia 76ers
· Donovan Mitchell, Cleveland Cavaliers
· Jamal Murray, Denver Nuggets
· Bobby Portis Jr., Milwaukee Bucks
· Norman Powell, Miami Heat

Of the participants, Portis is shooting the highest percentage this season (45.1%) with Murray (43.2%) and Knueppel next in line (42.8%). Lillard is a career 43.9% shooter from beyond the arc.

Knueppel can become the first rookie to win the event. He is one of four first-time participants, along with Maxey, Murray and Portis.

The format of the 3-point Contest remains unchanged. It is a two-round event where players attempt to knock down as many shots and score as many points as possible from five different 3-point locations (all within 70 seconds). The top three scorers from the first round advance to the championship round, where the highest score wins.

Fans will not have to wait long to see Lillard. In a change of pace this year, All-Star Saturday night will lead off with the 3-Point Contest, followed by the Shooting Stars and then the Dunk Contest.

Everything also starts earlier than traditionally — 5 p.m. ET — and coverage of All-Star Saturday night on NBC and Peacock will flow directly into coverage of the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics.

How to watch NBA on NBC and Peacock:

Every moment of All-Star Weekend — the Rising Stars challenge on Friday. (Feb. 13), All-Star Saturday Night with the 3-Point Contest and Dunk Contest (Feb. 14), as well as the All-Star Game on Sunday, Feb. 15 — will be broadcast on NBC and Peacock.

The 75th NBA All-Star Game will take place on Sunday, Feb. 15, at 5 p.m. Eastern, a time earlier than in previous years, leading into more coverage of the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics.

Peacock NBA Monday will stream up to three Monday night games each week throughout the regular season. Coast 2 Coast Tuesday presents doubleheaders on Tuesday nights throughout the regular season on NBC and Peacock. On most Tuesdays, an 8 p.m. ET game will be on NBC stations in the Eastern and Central time zones, and an 8 p.m. PT game on NBC stations in the Pacific and often Mountain time zones.

Check local listings each week. Both games will stream live nationwide on Peacock. NBC Sports will launch Sunday Night Basketball across NBC and Peacock on Feb. 1, 2026. For a full schedule of the NBA on NBC and Peacock, click here.

How to sign up for Peacock:

Sign up here to watch all of our LIVE sports, sports shows, documentaries, classic matches, and more. You'll also get tons of hit movies and TV shows, Originals, news, 24/7 channels, and current NBC & Bravo hits — Peacock is here for whatever you're in the mood for.

Brooks scores 21, Harris 19 and No. 25 North Carolina women rout Wake Forest for 7th straight win

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) — Nyla Brooks scored 21 points, Nyla Harris added 19 and No. 25 North Carolina rolled past Wake Forest 84-56 on Sunday.

North Carolina (20-5, 9-3 ACC) has won seven straight and reached 20 wins for the 34th time in program history.

Wake Forest led 9-6 through the first five minutes before North Carolina hit four 3-pointers — two each from Brooks and Lanie Grant — in a 16-0 run. The Tar Heels led 22-11 heading to the second quarter. Two more 3s from Brooks helped push the lead to 14 points before the Tar Heels settled for a 39-29 advantage at halftime.

Harris scored 11 points in the third quarter and the Tar Heels extended their lead to 65-42 entering the fourth. Carolina's lead first reached 30 points at 78-48 on a short jumper by Blanca Thomas with about 3 1/2 minutes to go.

Milan Brown scored 13 points for Wake Forest (13-12, 3-10).

Indya Nivar had nine points, eight rebounds and seven assists for North Carolina. Brooks buried five of the Tar Heels' 11 3-pointers.

Up next

North Carolina: SMU visits on Thursday.

Wake Forest: at Louisville on Thursday.

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Devin Booker will particpate in the Three Point Contest

CHICAGO, IL - FEBRUARY 15: Devin Booker #1 of the Phoenix Suns shoots three point basket during the 2020 NBA All-Star - MTN DEW 3-Point Contest on February 15, 2020 at the United Center in Chicago, Illinois. 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 2020 NBAE (Photo by Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The NBA All-Star Game is creeping closer, less than two weeks out now, and as the league starts pointing its compass toward Los Angeles, the side attractions are coming into focus. Skills. Dunks. Threes. And yes, the Phoenix Suns will have a seat at the table. Devin Booker is officially in the three-point contest.

This will be Book’s fourth time stepping into that pressure cooker. He did it as a rookie in 2016. He won the whole thing in 2018. He participated in 2020 as well.

Now here we are, round four, arriving during what is, by the numbers, the roughest three-point shooting season of his career. Booker is sitting at 30.7% from deep, knocking down 1.7 threes on 5.5 attempts per night. Not exactly vintage, not exactly automatic, but that is part of the intrigue.

The field is loaded. Kon Knueppel from Charlotte. Tyrese Maxey. Donovan Mitchell. Jamal Murray. Bobby Portis Jr. Norman Powell. Damian Lillard, who is still in this thing despite not having played since returning to Portland after the Achilles injury last season. Booker and Lillard are the only two in the group who have won this event before.

And honestly, this is still the best show All-Star Weekend has left. The dunk contest lost its soul somewhere along the way, back when it became a showcase for guys most fans met five minutes earlier. The three-point contest still brings stars. Real ones. Names you know.

Booker stepping into that rack again feels right. Percentages be damned, it’ll be nice seeing him out there representing the Phoenix Suns.

The Utah Jazz just pulled off a tanking masterclass

It was a sight to behold.

Jaren Jackson Jr. in a beautiful purple jersey with”Utah” written out diagonally over a gradient mountain on his chest with a baby blue trim on the edges.

Quadruple J — Jazz Jaren Jackson Jr. — had finally arrived.

For days, fans across the NBA anxiously awaited to see how the Jazz’s big man lineup of Lauri Markkanen at the three, Jackson at the four and Jusuf Nurkic (next year this spot will be filled by Walker Kessler) would play together. Regardless of if you think it would work or not, if you like basketball you were at least curious to see how this lineup meshed.

And boy, did it mesh.

At one point late in the third quarter on Saturday, the Jazz led the Orlando Magic by 17 points. Jackson and Markkanen were incredibly efficient, scoring 49 points on 55.3% field goal shooting. There was even an awesome dribble-handoff action from Jackson that set up perfectly for a Markkanen 3-pointer. Just off of the starting lineup’s size alone, the on and off-ball screens set up so many great looks for Utah. More so than usual.

Utah also dominated the team rebounding battle, in large part to Nurkic’s 14 boards, which calmed any anxieties about Jackson’s rebounding abilities — or lack thereof.

The trade was a success! This team is good!

A little too good.

In the fourth quarter, “Tank Note” took over. Head coach Will Hardy — and likely Danny Ainge and Ryan Smith — had seen enough of this new look team. Hardy yanked Jackson, Markkanen and Nurkic in the fourth quarter. With Keyonte George going out earlier in the game with an ankle injury, the Jazz managed to only play one starter in the fourth quarter, rookie Ace Bailey.

The Jazz lost the game 120-117. Just how they drew it up.

Is it ethical? Maybe not. Is it necessary? Absolutely.

In 2021 and 2022, the Jazz learned a hard lesson: you have to have a top-five player to win an NBA Championship.

Take a look at the NBA champions since 2015. The list of best players goes as follows: Steph Curry, LeBron James, Curry/Durant, Curry/Durant, Kawhi Leonard, James, Giannis Antetokounmpo, Curry, Nikola Jokic, Jayson Tatum, SGA.

The only player on that list that is not definitive top-five is Tatum, and when healthy, he is no lower than seven in my mind. He also had an elite cast surrounding him, more so than Jokic’s in the year prior.

You can point to the 2024-25 Pacers as a team that doesn’t fit this mold, but by all means, they are an outlier. I’d rather have Jokic than try to find the perfect blend of 11 players, like the Pacers impressively did last season.

The entire point of the rebuild is to find that guy. A guy who can play on the same court as SGA or Luka Doncic or Victor Wembnyama, and have just as much claim to the NBA throne as they do. The easiest way to do that is to draft inside the top-five. You can’t do that if you give up your top-eight protected pick to the reigning champions.

Yes, this Jazz team is exciting. I get chills just thinking about the 2026-27 season. But imagine this team with Darryn Peterson or AJ Dybantsa. Doesn’t that excitement go up a level?

The Jazz are getting a lot of hate right now for their decision to not play their best players in the fourth quarter against Orlando, but a lot of that is coming from teams that are doing the same thing as Utah.

Washington traded for Trae Young and Anthony Davis midseason, and the two will likely not suit up in red white and blue any time soon. The Mavericks deliberately tanked after the whole Luke trade debacle just so they could get into the lottery last season, and somehow the Basketball Gods rewarded them with Cooper Flagg.

The Quad-J — I’m really hoping there’s something there with that nickname — era has gotten off to a fun start already, but there is still more to accomplish. More pieces to add.

The end of the tank is near, but make no mistake, it is still very much alive. It has to be.

Big 12 fines Oklahoma State for anti-Mormon chants against BYU

The Big 12 Conference announced it was fining Oklahoma State $50,000 for inappropriate chants from fans during a men's basketball game on Wednesday, Feb. 4.

The conference announced the fine against the Cowboys on Sunday, Feb. 8, citing its “Principles and Standards of Sportsmanship."

"In accordance with the Big 12 Conference Principles and Standards of Sportsmanship, the conference issued Oklahoma State University a $50,000 fine following its investigation into inappropriate chants that occurred during Wednesday's men's basketball game," the statement read. "The Big 12 will not tolerate any behavior that targets or demeans others."

OSU said in a statement that said the school “respects the Big 12’s decision and will not appeal the fine.”

“The university conducted an immediate investigation into the allegation that a group of students used an inappropriate chant during last Wednesday’s men’s basketball game between OSU and BYU,” the statement said. “It was determined that a derogatory chant followed a disputed call and referenced the Mormon faith in relation to game officials. The reference to religion did not meet our standards and expectations. Oklahoma State respects the Big 12’s decision and will not appeal the fine.

“The Cowboy Code calls us to treat others with respect and dignity. Oklahoma State University values the relationship we have with BYU and deeply respects its community and faith. We will continue to work to ensure that the atmosphere at our events reflects the values of the Cowboy family.”

Following the 99-92 win for Oklahoma State over No. 14 BYU, Cougars coach Kevin Young shared his disappointment about anti-Mormon chants coming from the student section.

"There were some 'F The Mormons' chants tonight by the student section that I heard," Young said in his postgame news conference on Wednesday. "It was a great win for Oklahoma State University. I think their fans should be proud, but it would be great if some class was warranted.

"I got four small kids at home, I'm a Mormon, and when I go home, they're going to ask me about it, the same way they asked me about it last year at Arizona."

This is at least the fourth incident in the past year with derogatory chants aimed at Mormons during BYU football or basketball games. Last season, Arizona apologized for the chant that happened during a BYU loss in Tucson.

Similar chants were also heard during BYU football games against Colorado and Cincinnati. The Buffaloes were fined by the Big 12 for $50,000 and issued a public reprimand.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Oklahoma State fined $50,000 by Big 12 for anti-Mormon chants vs BYU

The Pindown: Kevin Huerter & a New York-Sized Beatdown

What a week.

The Pistons traded Jaden Ivey to the Chicago Bulls in exchange for Kevin Huerter, Dario Saric, and a 2026 first round pick swap. They were blown out in embarrassing fashion by the short-handed Wizards. Then they turned around and took the Knicks behind the woodshed on the second night of a back-to-back! Wes and Blake break it all down, diving into the main takeaways from that trade deadline and the game against New York. They discuss if we are all looking at the deadline backwards, every other Eastern Conference team needs to catch Detroit, not the other way around, after all. They react to Kevin Huerter’s addition and early performances, and they take a look at Ausar Thompson’s Defensive Player of the Years odds as well.

We’ve got you covered for all this and more in this week’s episode!

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