Cardinals quarterback Jacoby Brissett wants a new contract and has skipped the team's voluntary offseason work, but he plans to show this week for mandatory minicamp.
Brissett will be in attendance, but it's unclear how much on-field work he will do, according to ESPN. If he were to skip mandatory minicamp, the Cardinals could fine Brissett $107,911.
Last offseason, Brissett signed a two-year, $12.5 million contract with the Cardinals. Heading into the second year of the deal, Brissett is due a salary of $4.9 million, of which $1.5 million is guaranteed.
This year, quarterback Gardner Minshew signed a one-year, $5.8 million contract with the Cardinals, and almost all of that is guaranteed. The Cardinals reportedly view Brissett as the starter and Minshew as the backup, at least until rookie third-round draft pick Carson Beck is ready to start, and Brissett may be questioning why his backup has a bigger guarantee.
Whether the Cardinals are willing to give Brissett the contract he wants remains to be seen, but now that the work is mandatory, Brissett is ready to get to work.
Perhaps the best way to humanize the world's biggest celebrities is to get them talking about sitting courtside at Madison Square Garden for a New York Knicks game.
Rapper Fat Joe always says a prayer once he's in his seat, grateful he no longer has to watch from the top of the "World's Most Famous Arena." Actress Anne Hathaway says Knicks' games give her "a fairytale feeling," with flashbacks to her childhood spent dreaming of being where she watches the games from now.
The stars will be out in full force when the Knicks host their first NBA Finals game since 1999 at the Garden on Monday, June 8, with President Donald Trump among those expected to be in the building for Game 3 against the San Antonio Spurs.
Celebrity row is a tradition at Knicks games. There are mainstays who span generations of Knicks teams, such as Spike Lee and Ben Stiller, still in the crowd. But many of the names and Knicks regulars have changed after so many years between Finals appearances.
Tony Bennett sang the national anthem before the Knicks played Game 3 against the Spurs 27 years ago. John F. Kennedy Jr., Tiger Woods, Adam Sandler, Billy Crystal, Woody Allen, James Caan and Evander Holyfield showed up to Game 4 at Madison Square Garden that year. Actors Timothy Hutton, Matt Dillon, Rick Moranis and Matthew Modine were shown by NBC during Game 5.
What celebrities will be there in 2026? The possibilities are part of the fun in having the NBA Finals in New York again. But there are a group of diehard Knicks fans who also happen to be extremely famous.
Here's a fun breakdown of Knicks celebrity row, featuring fan origin stories and anecdotes for Chalamet, Tracy Morgan, Stiller and more of the most well-known New York Knicks basketball fans:
How much have things changed since 1999? Here's what celebrity row looked like for Game 4 of the Finals - the last year the Knicks made it that far until 2026 pic.twitter.com/6cf6mrxDCy
Chalamet has become one of the most recognizable Knicks fans in recent years, with his courtside appearances alongside girlfriend Kylie Jenner going viral during the past two postseasons. He previously called last year's postseason run "the most fun period of my life."
But the movie star, who grew up in Manhattan, didn't just join the bandwagon when the Knicks got good again with their current nucleus. There are photos of Chalamet, then 14 years old, winning a social media contest hosted by former Knicks players Landry Fields and Andy Rautins.
"He's the real deal," Stiller told "The Howard Stern Show" in December 2025. "…I've sat with him, I don't know him that well, but this year we sat at a bunch of games. He reminds me of my level of just, he lives it, he feels it. He really is experiencing it inside … but there are others who don't."
Chalamet, 30, told the "7PM in Brooklyn" podcast in December 2025 he used the money he received from a Disney commercial when he was 12 or 13 years old to buy "the cheapest season tickets I could find thinking LeBron was coming to the Knicks." He would go to as many games as he could walking from where he lived at 43rd Street and 9th Avenue, or sell the tickets he couldn't use to scalpers outside Madison Square Garden.
Chalamet revealed to Anthony that he was at the 2006 game when Anthony, then with the Denver Nuggets, was involved in a brawl with the Knicks.
"It's very pixelated on the footage, but you can see a little kid going nuts on the players," Chalamet said. "That was me."
"My whole life, my grandma was a huge Knicks fan, so that's what turned me on to them," Chalamet explained. "If you live in New York, you are a Knicks fan. My grandma had a New York Giants teddy bear and a New York Jets teddy bear, but she only had a New York Knicks teddy bear. … That's what made me a fan and I went to as many games when I could afford a ticket growing up."
Ben Stiller
Stiller has become one of the more engaged celebrities among Knicks faithful in recent years, with his social media commentary during games and throughout the season serving as a connection point for the team's diehard fans.
Stiller began following the Knicks in the early 1970s and witnessed their championship runs in 1970 and 1973, attending games with his late father, Jerry Stiller, according to a 2024 ESPN story. Stiller's wall included a poster of Knicks star Willis Reed.
"The 10-year-old in me is like this is the coolest thing ever," Stiller told Stern last October.
Tracy Morgan
"There's only one problem with being a Knicks fan," Morgan said during an NBA on NBC voiceover earlier this season. "I was 4 years old the last time we won a championship. A baby."
Morgan told MSG Network in 2018 he's been "watching Knick games my whole life" and he's been a passionate supporter for decades at home and away games ever since he broke through as a cast member on "Saturday Night Live."
Tina Fey, Morgan's co-star on "30 Rock," said in an interview on "The Today Show" last week that Morgan is the source of her courtside seat at Knicks games. She was optimistic about being a guest of his again at the NBA Finals when they return to New York.
"Sitting next to Tracy Morgan at a Knicks game is an experience," Stiller said to Howard Stern. "My son's 20 now, but sitting next to Tracy Morgan when he was 10, Tracy Morgan's pointing out all the Knick dancers and telling him what he wants to do."
"Don't spill beer on the parquet and don't get Reggie Miller mad," Morgan told MSG Network about the unofficial rules of sitting courtside. "That's basketball. That was me in the projects, T-shirt backwards, tag hanging out, sneakers untied, snapping on everybody on the court, criticizing everybody's game."
Spike Lee
Lee became famous as a Knicks superfan for his trash-talking courtside exchanges with Michael Jordan and Reggie Miller in the 1990s, but he's been going to games at Madison Square Garden for 60 years. He initially bought season tickets ahead of Patrick Ewing's rookie season in 1985.
"My father started taking me 8, 9 years old, and my father is a great, great musician … his lawyer had season tickets to the yellow seats," Lee during an NPR interview recently. "May 8th, 1970, Game 7, he said, 'You go to the game.' I was at the Willis Reed/Walt Frazier game, where the Knicks won their first NBA championship. So I said, 'Lord, if I ever make any money, I just want to get season tickets.'"
Anne Hathaway
After Knicks forward OG Anunoby nearly ran over Hathaway while seated courtside at Madison Square Garden last season – she called it a "bucket-list moment" on Instagram – Hathaway explained her fandom on "The Jimmy Fallon Show."
"I'm very chill. I'm very loving and calm. But I'm also the type of fan that I considered wearing an OG (Anunoby) jersey out here today," Hathaway told Fallon on April 29. "… When I'm at the game, I want them to know that I know who they are and that they're going to win. … I want them to know you can do no wrong. I'm trying to be a gentle, loving motherly fan."
But Hathaway, a Brooklyn native, also has a deeper connection to the team related to her childhood.
"The Knicks, to me, that's where I have a fairytale feeling whenever I go to The Garden and I see them," Hathaway told ESPN's Sportish, "because when I was growing up, going to a game was such a huge deal and the closest we ever got was nosebleed, and I remember looking down and seeing the people who sat close up and some people got to sit courtside."
"And so when I get to go to The Garden now and I get to sit in those beautiful seats," she continued, "I'm like, 'Oh my God, 8-year-old me is up there looking down and I'm one of those people now.' It's so special and I love the team. I'm such a huge fan of Jalen Brunson. I think he's such a brilliant player and such a phenomenal leader."
Fat Joe
Rapper Fat Joe has been a fixture at Knicks games over the years and made some headlines earlier this postseason when he revealed the Cleveland Cavaliers took away his courtside tickets to Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals.
The Bronx-born entertainer told Eli Manning in 2023 he "was just born into the Knicks" and would sit in the highest parts of Madison Square Garden growing up as a fan.
"I used to see Michael Jordan this little, the last (row)," Fat Joe said on "The Eli Manning Show," while squeezing his fingers together. "… Something I do courtside at the Knicks game, I always give a prayer appreciative of being here and not being all the way at the top."
Michael J. Fox
The "Back to the Future" star and longtime Parkinson's Disease advocate has been a regular at Madison Square Garden for decades along with his wife, Tracy Pollan. He's been pictured seated with Stiller and Chalamet courtside this season.
The origins of Fox's Knicks fandom are unknown, but the Canadian-born actor was watching games long before this current run.
Mariska Hargitay
Hargitay's relationship with Knicks star Jalen Brunson has been a constant the past couple years, with the two often hugging after wins at Madison Square Garden. Stiller has said Hargitay is "the envy of every other Knicks fan, Knicks celebrity fan" because of her bond with Brunson.
"How it started is they let me know Jalen is a big fan, and I was so flattered and thrilled because I was such a huge fan," the "Law and Order: SVU" star said on NBC's Late Night with Seth Meyers. "I think Jalen sort of grew up on 'SVU' … He felt, as many people do, that intimacy and safety that one does growing up on 'SVU.'"
Brunson said he would often watch "Law and Order" with his father, former NBA player and current Knicks assistant coach Rick Brunson. Jalen Brunson told Hargitay he plans to attend her new Broadway show, "Every Little Thing" after the Knicks' NBA Finals run is over, according to NBC. He previously attended the premiere of her recent HBO documentary.
"I’ve never been like super, super starstruck. I saw her and I was like, 'Oh, (wow),'" Brunson said during a May 2025 episode of his "The Roommates Show" podcast, which he hosts alongside teammate Josh Hart. "Then, the first time we met, it was awesome, we talked and everything."
It's unclear how long Fallon has been a Knicks fan, but several current players have been on "The Tonight Show" in recent years and his presence at playoff games this spring produced a noteworthy gag initiated by Knicks forward Josh Hart.
Cameras originally caught Hart untying Fallon's shoe as Hart was leaving the Madison Square Garden court during a 137-98 blowout win over the Philadelphia 76ers in the Eastern Conference semifinals. Fallon then attended Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals with his daughter, when the Knicks erased a 22-point deficit in the fourth quarter to beat the Cavaliers.
Fallon recounted on the May 20 edition of "The Tonight Show" that when the Knicks were losing, he had his daughter untie his shoe to help encourage a potential comeback. Afterwards, as everybody inside Madison Square Garden celebrated the win, "Josh Hart runs by me and he unties my other shoe," Fallon revealed.
NEW YORK, NY - JUNE 02: Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees stands for God Bless America during the game against the Cleveland Guardians at Yankee Stadium on June 2, 2026 in New York, New York. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images
New York Post | Joel Sherman: Speaking of the Yankees playing without Judge, even despite his absence and the Yankees being a bit subpar of late, they still moved into a tie back atop the AL East with the Rays. The reason that they were able to do that and why they might be able to withstand Judge’s injury to some degree is this: the American League as a whole is not particularly strong.
MLB.com | Bryan Hoch: Aaron Judge may be out for the next little while, but he was still present in the game on Sunday…in a way. Jazz Chisholm Jr. borrowed one of Judge’s bats and used it to hit a three-run home run that turned a close game into a comfortable win over the Red Sox. It wasn’t just for fun either, as Chisholm said that he believed using one of Judge’s heavier bats would help him in that particular spot.
MLB.com | Aiden Stepansky: Last year’s Yankee third-round draft pick Kaeden Kent has a degree of notoriety for more than just being good enough to be a high draft pick: he is the son of Hall of Famer Jeff Kent. However, if he keeps up what he’s done so far in June, he’ll make a name of his own. Kent has been hot of late while playing for High-A Hudson Valley.
Reuters: Having struggled mightily this season, Yankees’ catcher Austin Wells was placed on the IL as he deals with “cervical headaches.” Wells talked with the media on Sunday explaining that these headaches have been building up for a while, and the IL stint was need to let his brain “catch up.”
SAN ANTONIO, TX - JUNE 2: Mikal Bridges #25 of the New York Knicks talks to the media during 2026 NBA Finals Practice and Media Availability on June 2, 2026 at Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas. 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 Michael Gonzales/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
The New York Knicks were never going to win the trade. Not in November. Not in December. Not in January. Not in April or May. Simply put, Mikal Bridges would forever need to carry the weight of landing in Manhattan by way of five draft picks sent across the bridge to Brooklyn.
The Knicks’ package was loaded with first-round picks, and every single missed corner three or defensive whiff was obviously going to lead directly to questioning New York’s asset management. Mikal must have felt like dying by a thousand cuts.
That was always the problem with judging Bridges fairly and early. The trade was not made for a random Tuesday night in Charlotte, nor for a three-game stretch in January, nor for whatever helped push the “ain’t worth five first-round picks” agenda a step further.
“Just fight, man,” an emotional Bridges said after the Game 2 win over the San Antonio Spurs in the NBA Finals. “A lot of integrity, a lot of poise. Just staying together. We’re going to fight to the end. They made a run—they’re a really good team—but we’re going to fight to the end.
“This is great, man, it’s great. I wish we had a better fourth quarter, but they’re a really good team. They pushed it, but we gotta be better.
“My teammates, man, my teammates and coaches gave me confidence… Bad, bad fourth. I gotta be better. I gotta play hard all throughout the fourth quarter, even when I’m tired—I gotta keep going. I can’t have a fourth quarter like that.”
Asked about his and the collective Knicks’ mindset after going up 2-0, Bridges left no doubt about it.
“Zero-zero,” Bridges answered. “Stay desperate at all times.”
On the black side, De’Aaron Fox has come downhill, Stephon Castle has tried to turn the corner, Dylan Harper and Harrison Barnes and Devin Vassell and Julian Champagnie have also taken turns at it. On the blue side, Jalen Brunson has surprisingly needed somebody else to hold the offense together while he’s still in search of his jumper. And truth be told, Karl-Anthony Towns has been the undeniably best Knickerbocker out there.
Outside of the 1A-1B punch of KAT and JB, which FanDuel projects to snatch the NBA Finals MVP award with +115 and +165 odds, respectively, someone is emerging. Captain obvious writing here, as you guessed it right: that’s your man Mikal.
Game 2 was the clearest proof yet that Bridges is, against all odds, inching very veryveryclose to making the Nets regret sending him to New York, no matter what they extracted from the Knickerbocker coffers.
Bridges finished G2 with 20 points, six rebounds, six assists, and shot 8-for-13 from the field while going 4-for-6 from three in New York’s 105-104 win in San Antonio, helping the Knicks take a nearly-insurmountable 2-0 series lead in the freaking NBA Finals.
Mikal did it on a night when Brunson went 7-for-25, when Josh Hart scored zero points, and when the Knicks barely escaped both a team and an officiating crew working together to try and put a stop to what is now a 13-game winning streak.
Bridges kept the Knicks afloat before Brunson put the Spurs to the sword. He hit eight straight shots across the second and third quarters, gave Mike Brown real offense when things got dicey, and still had enough left on D to give Fox, Castle, and whoever hunted him fits.
Per the New York Daily News’ Kristian Winfield, Bridges has held Fox to 0-for-4 and Castle to 1-for-7 when serving as their primary defender through the first two games of the series. That might or might not sound like much, but when you realize the Spurs are basically a one-man army with a few minions around him, once you cut those two from the body, the thing becomes an entirely different and not-so-offensive animal.
“[Bridges] was huge for us on both ends of the floor,” Brown said. “You’re not stopping a guy like De’Aaron Fox. You’ve just got to try to make him work. We put Mikal on Fox in the second half a little bit and made him work. But what he did for us offensively when we were struggling and then when we took Jalen out was huge. He made big play after big play after big play.”
And outside of his production—Bridges’ averaging a strong 14-3-3-1 line in the playoffs, shooting 58.5% from the floor and 38% from three—the thing the Knicks might benefit the most from having him is his experience and veteranship. You might have forgotten, but Mikal was part of the latest, biggest face-painting in NBA history.
Up 2-0 with the Suns in the 2021 NBA Finals, Bridges and the band went on to drop four straight games to the Bucks, losing 4-2 and losing an once-in-a-lifetime shot at Larry. Good for Mikal, he found a way to navigate his way to New York and earned a second chance.
“0-0 man, f**k. Keep playing—sorry, excuse my language—desperate. That’s it, man,” Bridges told Shaq after Game 2 on ESPN’s Inside the NBA. “Desperate, that’s the only thing that we’re worried about. Take this rest—we got two days, take a break, do whatever you gotta do to get ready for this next game, but keep going out there and don’t stop. We got nothing but the offseason, man. Keep pushing. Leave everything on that court.”
Shaq "2 games to go…what are you thinking right now?
Mikal "0-0 man. Fking keep playing–sorry
Shaq "Go ahead you can curse
Mikal "Desperate. Thats it man…Got 2 days, take a break…but dont stop. Got nothing but the offseason man. Keep pushing. Leave everything on that court" pic.twitter.com/xaF0MLqice
“I just remember losing four straight. That’s what I remember out of that,” Bridges said on the eve of Game 3. “They all understand as well, knowing the series is far from over. We’ve got to keep playing desperate and be the more desperate team.”
The Knicks are two wins from their first championship since 1973, and Bridges surely is not the main reason they are here. Brunson is still New York’s honcho and captain. Towns has done so much during the past couple of months—and week—to flip the narrative of his career that we’re starting to open discussions about his number potentially hanging on the MSG rafters. OG Anunoby is a ruthless, calming presence by nature. Nobody is getting Josh Hart to stop running and biting. The bench mob has been the next thing to great.
But Bridges is slowly, quietly, shadowy, but surely becoming the final piece to make the machine click out on the court and inside the locker room. The Knicks paid a monster price, yes, but I bet they’d hand out twice that package if that’s what brings New York to the promised land on Wednesday or at any point in the next week-and-change.
Two down, two to go, and the show is coming to the Garden. Can’t ask for more.
Carolina Hurricanes (53-22-7, in the Metropolitan Division) vs. Vegas Golden Knights (39-26-17, in the Pacific Division)
Paradise, Nevada; Tuesday, 8 p.m. EDT
LINE: Hurricanes -115, Golden Knights -105; over/under is 6
STANLEY CUP FINAL: Golden Knights lead series 2-1
BOTTOM LINE: The Vegas Golden Knights host the Carolina Hurricanes in the Stanley Cup Final with a 2-1 lead in the series. The teams meet Saturday for the sixth time this season. The Golden Knights won the last matchup 5-4 in overtime. Mitchell Marner scored three goals in the victory.
Vegas has a 39-26-17 record overall and a 27-14-9 record on its home ice. The Golden Knights have gone 50-7-12 when scoring three or more goals.
Carolina is 53-22-7 overall and 30-12-6 on the road. The Hurricanes are 28-9-3 in games they score at least one power-play goal.
TOP PERFORMERS: Pavel Dorofeyev has 37 goals and 27 assists for the Golden Knights. Brett Howden has seven goals and two assists over the last 10 games.
Nikolaj Ehlers has 26 goals and 45 assists for the Hurricanes. Shayne Gostisbehere has three goals and six assists over the last 10 games.
LAST 10 GAMES: Golden Knights: 8-1-1, averaging 3.8 goals, 6.6 assists, 3.2 penalties and 7.5 penalty minutes while giving up 2.6 goals per game.
Hurricanes: 7-2-1, averaging 3.7 goals, 6.4 assists, four penalties and 9.6 penalty minutes while giving up 2.6 goals per game.
INJURIES: Golden Knights: None listed.
Hurricanes: William Carrier: day to day (upper body).
___
The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.
SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS - JUNE 05: Dylan Harper #2 of the San Antonio Spurs dunks the ball against the New York Knicks during the first quarter in Game Two of the 2026 NBA Finals at Frost Bank Center on June 05, 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 the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Down two games to zero, the San Antonio Spurs are playing not only against the New York Knicks, but against history. Only five teams in NBA history have come back from a 0-2 defecit in the NBA Finals: the 1969 Boston Celtics, the 1977 Portland Trail Blazers, the 2006 Miami Heat, the 2016 Cleveland Cavaliers, and the 2021 Milwaukee Bucks. None of those teams did it after losing the first two home games.
It may seem like there is no hope, but the Spurs don’t feel that way.
“The key is acceptance… taking a step back and realizing the journey that is behind us and ahead of us,” Victor Wembanyama told the press before Game Three. “At the end of the day, this is everything that I wished for, so there is no reason to overthink it. This is what I am built for.”
It was a mature answer for a team that has, for the first time in the postseason, looked immature. Errors on both ends have built this hole for the Spurs. Both games seemed like ones that San Antonio could have won if they cut down on the types of mistakes that most young teams are prone to making. Now, they’ll have to play with their backs against the wall in historic Madison Square Garden, and a rabid fan base that is eagerly awaiting it’s first championship since 1973. It won’t be easy, but Wembanyama seems to think this group is built for it.
The Spurs will once again look for answers to New York’s stars. Both Karl-Anthony Towns and Jalen Brunson have been tough to stop. Towns and the Knicks have created big problems while the Spurs are on offense. Wembanyama, De’Aaron Fox and Dylan Harper seemed to find their footing a bit in Game Two, and will hope to carry that momentum into MSG.
San Antonio has been in tough spots before. This is by far the toughest. A win in enemy territory would be the exact type of response this team needs to turn things around. Game Three could turn out to be a pivotal moment in the series if the Spurs can eliminate their mistakes and get a win on the road.
San Antonio switched up their strategy guarding Brunson a bit in Game Two, and for the most part it worked. The Spurs stopped throwing quick doubles at Brunson, and instead guarded him mainly one-on-one with Stephon Castle, and switching pick-and-rolls so Wembanyama matched up on Brunson in space. If a bad switch came, the Spurs would sometimes send another defender at Brunson to get the ball out of his hands. The result was some poor decision making from Brunson, who shot 7-25 from the field and had 4 turnovers. Yes, he hit a clutch shot down the stretch, but the defensive approach worked for the most part. If the same defensive strategy is working in Game Three, the Spurs could have a slight edge in guard play.
Playing fast
It’s a worn out saying at this point, but the Spurs play their best when they play with pace. San Antonio mounted it’s big fourth-quarter comeback in Game Two when it started to push the ball in transition to catch the Knicks in disadvantageous cross matches. In front of a raucous New York crowd, the Spurs should be looking to land haymakers by playing fast in transition whenever they have the chance. That may mean playing the “four-guard” lineup that includes Fox, Harper, Castle, Wembanyama and Devin Vassell. This group can hold their own on the perimeter and push quickly with a surplus of ball-handlers to beat the Knicks in transition.
Defensive rotations
San Antonio’s help defense and overall attention to detail on the defensive end has been lacking in The Finals. It’s been where they’ve looked the most inexperienced. Too many times a Knicks player is overplayed for a blow by or left alone for an open shot as the Spurs scramble to help on drives to the paint. New York is going to shoot the ball incredibly well at home. San Antonio has to tighten it’s defensive rotations to get good contests on shooters, or else the Knicks’ lead will balloon quickly.
A bizarre sequence had the Orioles fuming during their 6-4 loss to the Blue Jays on Sunday after what looked like an inning-ending double play turned into a catalyst for a Toronto rally.
The Orioles had a 4-1 lead in the sixth inning at Rogers Centre when Ernie Clement reached base on a fielding error by Gunnar Henderson that placed runners on the corners with one out.
That’s when Brandon Valenzuela came up to the plate and hit a ball up the middle to Henderson, who looked as though he reached out to tag the baserunner and then made the throw to first.
Ernie Clement runs toward second base during the Blue Jays’ June 7 game. Screengrab via X/@jomboymedia
Baltimore thought that Clement had run out of the basepath and would be called out for doing so, but instead, second-base ump Nic Lentz called Clement safe, believing that the runner had altered his path in order to allow Henderson to make the play.
The Orioles were livid with the call and more so when it allowed Kazuma Okamoto, Andrés Giménez and Nathan Lukes to drive in runs.
Righty Shane Baz came out of the game after Okamoto and Giménez got hits, and as he did, the pitcher shouted toward the umpire, “You f–ked up,” according to Jomboy Media.
“The only reason I’m not going to talk about that play is because I will get fined,” Baz told reporters following the game, according to the Associated Press. “That’s the only reason.”
Orioles pitcher Shane Baz stared down umpires after they didn't rule Blue Jays' Ernie Clement was out of the baseline
The double play would've ended the inning and instead allowed the Blue Jays to keep scoring pic.twitter.com/oZpM71a5Nk
Henderson told reporters that he “felt like, not a great call.”
Speaking with a pool reporter after the game, the umpires expanded on the rationale for the call.
“The runner has the right to establish his basepath, and so Clement had established his basepath to avoid the fielder from potential interference,” Lentz said, according to the Baltimore Banner. “Even though Henderson reached out for a tag, Clement’s basepath was already established out there, going to the second base, so therefore it was not out of the baseline.”
The Blue Jays’ Ernie Clement appears to run well out of the baseline against the Orioles. @jomboymedia/X
Crew chief Hunter Wendelstedt went as far as to describe the decision to alter the basepath a “very gentlemanly thing to do.”
“He was getting out of the way to allow the fielder to make the play toward first base,” he continued. “It just so happened that, you know, then they tried to spin it to get two, but his [Clement’s] basepath was already established, and it was not trying to get out of that.”
Craig Albernaz #55 of the Baltimore Orioles speaks with umpire Hunter Wendelstedt #21 during the eighth inning at Rogers Centre. Getty Images
Orioles manager Craig Albernaz said the umpires had told him it was because there wasn’t enough of a tag attempt by Henderson.
“I think when you stick your glove out to tag somebody, that’s an attempted tag,” Albernaz said following the game. “There’s no rule about how far you have to extend your arm to tag somebody.”
CHICAGO (AP) — Matt Chapman singled to drive in automatic runner Jonah Cox in the 10th inning, lifting the San Francisco Giants over the Chicago Cubs 2-1 on Sunday night for their fourth win in their last five games.
Chapman lined the second pitch from Trent Thornton (2-2) to center and Cox, pinch running for Bryce Eldridge, scored from second base as the Giants took two of three at Wrigley Field and dealt the Cubs their 20th loss in 27 games.
Keaton Winn (2-1) pitched a scoreless ninth for the win, working around a single and a walk. Dylan Smith tossed a perfect 10th for his first major league save, getting Alex Bregman to pop out and stranding Pete Crow-Armstrong at third.
Javier Assad threw 6 1/3 shutout innings and allowed only Chapman’s infield single — along with a walk and a hit batter — after coming in for Cubs starter Jameson Taillon, who exited with a strained left hamstring with no outs in the second. Taillon said after the game he thinks he’s headed to the injured list.
Assad struck out five following his recall from Triple-A on Saturday for a second stint with the Cubs this season. The right-hander retired the last 12 Giants he faced before Jacob Webb took over in the eighth.
Jung Hoo Lee had an RBI single in the first to stretch his hitting streak to 15 games
Crow-Armstrong extended his career-high hitting streak to 12 games with a single. Moisés Ballesteros singled in a run in the third.
Giants starter Trevor McDonald allowed one run on four hits in five innings.
Taillon exited after walking Chapman to lead off the second. The right-hander allowed one run and two hits, and walked two.
Two-time Gold Glove shortstop Dansby Swanson was held out of the Cubs’ starting lineup for a second straight game. He entered batting .180.
Up next
Giants: RHP Logan Webb (3-4, 4.25 ERA) starts Monday in San Francisco against Washington RHP Miles Mikolas (1-5, 6.39)
Cubs: RHP Colin Rea (5-3, 4.45) faces Rockies RHP Tomoyuki Sugano (5-4, 3.98) on Tuesday in Colorado.
CHICAGO (AP) — Cubs starter Jameson Taillon thinks he’ll end up on the injured list after he left Chicago’s 2-1, 10-inning loss to the San Francisco Giants on Sunday night with a strained left hamstring.
Taillon walked Matt Chapman to lead off the second with Chicago trailing 1-0. Then, the Cubs training staff and manager Craig Counsell came to the mound to talk to the right-hander. After a brief discussion, Taillon walked to the dugout and was replaced by righty Javier Assad, who was recalled from Triple-A Iowa on Saturday.
“I don’t think it’s crazy,” said Taillon, who’ll have an MRI on Monday. “Like, I’m walking around and moving around. Obviously, it will be an IL stint, but hopefully we can keep the arm conditioned and moving around. I don’t think it’s surgical or anything like that.”
Taillon said he first felt discomfort in the hamstring after throwing an inside changeup to Chapman that made the count 2-2 in the at-bat.
“And then kind of in-between pitches, I was kind of trying to weigh whether I should throw another pitch or not, then threw the 3-2 pitch and kind of felt it a little more,” Taillon said. “Nothing I’ve ever felt. Unfortunately, just kind of one pitch did it.”
Taillon allowed a run in the first inning Sunday on a walk followed by two singles, pushing his ERA to 5.19. He entered the game 2-5 and had lost four straight decisions over his previous five starts.
Assad followed with 6 1/3 scoreless innings, allowing only one hit, along with a walk and a hit batter. He retired the final 12 Giants hitters he faced.
San Francisco won it in the 10th when Chapman singled in automatic runner Jonah Cox. The Giants won for the fourth time in their last five games and handed Chicago its 20th loss in 27.
Before Liberty star Breanna Stewart sat down for her obligatory media availability after Wednesday’s win against the Toronto Tempo, she checked the score of Game 1 of the NBA Finals between the Knicks and Spurs.
Two nights later, Stewart was watching Game 2.
But since the Liberty were hosting the Indiana Fever on Saturday, she had to turn off the TV early to sleep and missed the thrilling end, which put the Knicks up 2-0 with the best-of-seven series resuming Monday at Madison Square Garden.
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The WNBA season is in full swing, but the Liberty are keeping a close eye on the Knicks, as is the vast majority of people in the city.
How could they not be?
The buzz across the five boroughs has been palpable.
You can’t turn a city corner or step into a subway car without seeing someone sporting donning orange-and-blue gear.
Even visitors are taking notice.
Fever star Caitlin Clark said she was tempted to join the mass celebration outside Madison Square Garden on Friday night.
“I always want to see those people that … they’re jumping around on each other and climbing light poles,” Clark said. “I feel like that would be an experience. I don’t know if my security guy would let me do that, but I want to experience that because those Knicks fans are so passionate and crazy. I admire it. It’s pretty awesome.”
The Knicks fever spread around Brooklyn and infiltrated the Barclays Center, too.
Sure, the Liberty are far more connected with the Brooklyn Nets because of their joint ownership by Joe and Clara Wu Tsai.
But members of the Liberty feel a sense of connection to the Knicks run to their first Finals since 1999.
They’ve relished the communal excitement, too.
Liberty guard Sabrina Ionescu (not in uniform) celebrates with center Jonquel Jones (35) in the fourth quarter against the Indiana Fever at Barclays Center. Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images
“It’s been amazing,” Sabrina Ionescu said. “You’re able to understand when you’re driving on the street or walking on the street, like, everyone’s in Knicks gear, everyone’s dialed into the game, the streets are packed. Everyone’s cheering, watching the game, and I think it’s a testament to the basketball culture here in New York City, but also how you know everyone’s a fan and so if you’re not, you kind of become one because of the feeling and the buzz in the city, so I’m really excited, the series is going to be really good.”
The Knicks are vying for their first championship since 1973.
The Liberty broke the city’s professional basketball title drought when they won it all in 2024.
So no one understands the pressure and feelings the Knicks are going through better than the Liberty.
Knicks Fans fill the summer stage in Central Park for Game 2 of the NBA Finals. Lone Pine Press for NY Post
“We’ve been able to bring a championship to a city that loves the game of basketball,” Jonquel Jones said. “And obviously, now, seeing the Knicks do it, and see the way that everybody’s supporting them is a great thing and I just want the city to continue to be successful because it’s a special type of energy when New York basketball teams are winning, and New York teams are winning and you can’t really explain it, you just have to experience it.”
Jalen Brunson is pictured at Frost Bank Center for Game 1 of the 2026 NBA Finals. Jason Szenes for The New York Post
The Liberty have a lot of connections to this Finals series.
Ionescu and Jalen Brunson — the faces of New York basketball — are close friends.
Liberty coach Chris DeMarco worked with current Knicks coach Mike Brown on Steve Kerr’s staff with the Golden State Warriors.
Marine Fauthoux played with Victor Wembanyama’s older sister, Ève, and knows his family well.
She said she also has a friend on the Spurs coaching staff.
New York Liberty forward Breanna Stewart (30) drives past Indiana Fever forward Monique Billings (25). Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images
Marine Johannès shares an agent with Wembanyama and crossed paths with him when the two represented France at the 2024 Paris Games.
The bummer is that the Liberty wrapped up their seven-game homestand Saturday.
They’re heading out for a two-game road trip, starting Monday in Connecticut, meaning they’ll be gone for Games 3 and 4 this week.
“Knicks in four!” Stewart said. “It’s crazy because we go on the road now … We don’t get to go to any games.”
Clark said she’s indifferent about who wins, but selfishly, she hopes the series goes to seven games.
“It’s been a great series — even the Spurs beating the Thunder, I think that was incredible, too,” she said. “So I’m a fan of basketballI think even watching, you can learn so much. So I try to absorb as much as I can.”
Then he used it again this spring and said he “almost ripped my oblique” again because he swung it as hard as he does with his own lighter bat.
So after striking out in each of his first three at-bats Sunday, Chisholm found the injured Judge’s bat bag, picked one out and brought it to the plate with him in the eighth inning.
Red Sox lefty reliever Joe La Sorsa threw him a first-pitch sinker on the inside edge and Chisholm, not wanting to hurt himself, got off an in-control swing that resulted in a three-run home run that put the Yankees’ 6-1 win on ice.
“I feel like when I pick up his bat, I know I can’t swing as hard as I can, or else I’ll tear an oblique like last year,” Chisholm said. “But I feel like it just helps me to go out there and control the barrel and just try to touch the ball instead of trying to hit it so hard.
Jazz Chisholm Jr. hits a home run during the Yankees’ June 7 win. Robert Sabo for the NY Post
“I was swinging and missing when I thought I was hitting the ball [earlier in the game], so I was just seeing if the bat would change [things]. Sometimes you need a little bit more weight and a little bit less on your swing.”
For those keeping score at home, Chisholm was wearing Giancarlo Stanton’s pants (a slump-busting trick that worked earlier in the season and has stuck) and swinging Judge’s bat — at a time when the Yankees are missing both sluggers to the injured list — to cap the five-run rally in the eighth.
At this rate, Chisholm’s teammates might start offering him any of their belongings if it is going to lead to this.
Aaron Judge watches from the dugout during the Yankees’ June 7 win. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST
“I like when he does that,” manager Aaron Boone said with a grin.
Chisholm said he had used Judge’s bat one other time, in his second game as a Yankee, and hit a home run.
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Judge’s bat is 35 inches and about 33 ¹/₂ ounces, according to Chisholm, whose own bat is 34 inches and 31 ounces.
The second baseman has also used José Caballero’s bat for some key hits this season, and said he has probably used just about every teammate’s bat at least once, except for Paul Goldschmidt and Stanton, as the veterans have bigger bats that were grandfathered in to the current regulations.
“With Cabby’s bat, I think I can still try to muscle up a little bit and be super strong through the zone like I was in the first three at-bats today,” Chisholm said. “But after that, picking up Cap’s bat, I can’t do it. I really just can’t.”
WASHINGTON, DC - MARCH 29: A general view of the Brooklyn Nets uniform logo worn during the second half of the game against the Washington Wizards at Capital One Arena on March 29, 2025 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
The Draft is two weeks and two days away. Free agency is three weeks away. And all we have is speculation – a lot of it – which is exactly how Sean Marks & co. want it. The number and range of possibilities is near infinite, at least by NBA standards: Stay at Nos. 6, 33 and 43, move up, move down, add a pick. When you have as many draft assets as the Nets do — the most picks (32), most first round picks (13), most tradeable first round picks (nine), most first round swaps (two) and most second round picks (19) plus $34 million in cap space, there’s plenty of ways to move. You’ve heard it all before but it remains true.
One bet we’d make, based purely on history, is that it is highly unlikely that the Nets will come away from the draft with picks taken at Nos. 6, 13 and 43. We at NetsDaily learned that lesson back in 2019 when the Nets had two first rounders at Nos. 17 and 27 plus a pick at the top of the second in No. 31. We wrote endlessly about the top prospects at those first round slots, only to see Marks trade both picks to add the cap space needed to sign Kevin Durant, Kyrie Irving and DeAndre Jordan. Then, they took Nic Claxton at No. 31. One surprise after another.
Here’s another bet: Whoever they take in the Draft will not be close to a finished product, even in the most basic sense. Nate Ament told Marc J. Spears in May that he’s been told he could grow another two inches from his current 6’9.5” in socks. He also has “projectable frame,” meaning he can fill out, tweeted Jonathan Givony. They’ll all likely be 19 or 20 years old and be in need of a lot of work in the weight room, on the practice court, etc. No team in the Nets situation drafts for the next season.
Moreover, the roster will change …. a lot. We can only speculate on who they plan to target and how. Will Marks try to lure a veteran like Austin Reaves? C.J. McCullum? Donatas Sabonis? Or maybe toss an offer sheet at Peyton Watson and see how much the Nuggets are willing to spend to keep him? Or how about Tari Eason of the Rockets? He’s also restricted. Ayo Dosunmu of the Timberwolves? He’s unrestricted. Will he put together a big trade offer? We have no idea … none … really. (A side note: is it possible the wheels are already in motion on such moves? Sure. The Nets shocking blockbuster trade for Joe Johnson in 2012 was a done deal well before the NBA Draft. It was just announced afterwards.)
Also, not all the young players the Nets suited up at the end of last season will return. Already, we know that E.J. Liddell won’t. He signed this weekend with Aris Basketball in Thessaloniki in the Greek League…
🔥✍🏼Aris have secured the signing of E.J. Liddell for the next two seasons.
— hoopsforthought.gr (@hoopsfthoughtgr) June 6, 2026
Liddell, 25, played 26 games for Brooklyn last season, averaging 5.7 points and 2.7 rebounds. He also played 22 games for Long Island before his contract was converted from a two-way to a standing deal, putting up 18.0 points and 8.4 rebounds. Tyson Etienne’s future seems uncertain. Chaney Johnson will get another chance.
Three players have team options that come up in the days after the Draft: Day’Ron Sharpe and Zaire Williams at $6.3 million each and Josh Minott at $2.6 million.
The bottom line that often seems lost on Nets fans is that last season’s team was built to lose and little can be drawn from that experience when looking forward. A big part of the rationale in taking a record five first rounders, playing eight rookies — the Flatbush 5 plus Chaney Johnson, Grant Nelson, Malachi Smith — a record 6,400 minutes and building the youngest NBA roster in 20 years was to pre-tank the season. The goal was to get top three odds in the Lottery so they had a 51% chance at a top four pick. They did but they lost in the Lottery. Unfortunate.
Still in the Salary Dump game?
We all know, because dozens of fans and pundits remind us daily, that the Nets have no incentive to tank next season since they may have to swap first rounders with the Houston Rockets. (We say “may” rather than “will” because you new never know about the NBA, but yeah it’s likely.)
So no need to tank again, but what about salary dumps which were also part of the Nets strategy last year? At the end of 2024-25, the Nets had $60 million in salary cap space — easily the most in the NBA — and used virtually all of it between April and February. They didn’t even get to the salary cap floor until the trade deadline. This year, they have around $34 million per Bobby Marks which is likely to be third in the NBA. As noted above, they could use it in a lot of ways to help with free agency, the Draft, etc. … and salary dumps, that is, taking on bad salaries (or salaries seen as bad by other teams) in return for future assets whether picks or young players. There are still a number of teams that will need to shed salary to avoid luxury tax payments or the limitations posed by being over aprons 1 and 2. So there may very well be opportunities.
So we looked at last season’s dumps to help us figure out what and how they might move now. There were eight in all and they were varied. We graded each one.
—June 24: Sent $1.1 million in cash considerations to Celtics to facilitate a three-team deal involving Brooklyn, Boston and Atlanta, receiving Terance Mann ($47 million over 3 years) and draft rights to the Hawks #22 pick in 2025 Draft which became Drake Powell. Took on roughly $19 million in space, the combined salaries of Mann and Powell, their biggest dump overall. (B+. The only reason it isn’t an A is that Powell needs time to develop.)
—June 25: Nets traded #36 pick from the 2024 Mikal Bridges trade in what became a seven-team deal. Nets got future second pick in 2026 (least favorable of Clippers or most favorable of the Celtics, Pacers and Heat) which became the No. 43 pick in this year’s draft plus Celtics pick in 2030. No increase in cap space in this one, just assets. (B. Not needing a second when you have five firsts, they moved one pick forward and got another.)
—June 28: – Traded Cam Johnson to Nuggets for Michael Porter Jr. and Denver’s unprotected first rounder in 2032. Took on #17 million in space. (A+. CBS Sports rated this deal the fourth best move of the 2025 off-season.)
—August 15: Traded a Nets’ heavily protected second rounder in 2026 to Heat for Haywood Highsmith and Miami’s second round pick in 2032. Took on $5.6 million in space. Highsmith didn’t play a minute for Brooklyn due to injury and was later waived to open roster spot. (D. They still got a pick.)
—September 15: Sent $110,000 in cash considerations to Hawks for Kobe Bufkin. Took on $1.6 million in space. Later waived. (D. They took a chance and it didn’t work. It’s a luxury you have.)
—February 5: Sent $110,000 in cash considerations to Celtics for Josh Minott. Took on $2.5 million in space (B+. He’s looked good and is only 23.)
—February 5: Traded the less favorable of 2026 Clippers and Hawks second-round pick to Denver in return for Hunter Tyson and a Nuggets second in 2032. Tyson waived immediately. Took at $2 million in space. (C. They simplified their draft picks. No big whoop.)
—February 5: Traded draft rights to Serbian PG Vanja Marinkovic to Raptors in three-team deal that also included the Clippers, receiving Ochai Agbaji, Toronto’s second rounder in 2032 and $3.5 million in cash considerations. Took on roughly $3 million in space. (B. If he makes the team, the grade may go higher.)
Bottom line: The Nets used the dumps as much to take on risks as much as to secure picks. The CamJ-for-MPJ deal was both and overall the best. They wound up taking on five other players — Mann. Highsmith, Bufkin, Minott and Agbaji (as well as Tyson who they immediately dumped) while picking two unprotected firsts — the Hawks 2025 first rounder and the Nuggets 2032 first rounder; and a net of three seconds, coming away with the Heat’s in 2032, the Clippers in 2026, the Celtics in 2030 and the Nuggets in 2032. (They gave up one to get two in the trade of the second from the Bridges trade.)
So, since they seem to have more picks than they would need, don’t be surprised if they take another risk or two on young players.
Joe Tsai, Hall of Famer
Pro Lacrosse Hall of Famer, that is.
Three days ago, the Professional Lacrosse Hall of Fame announced its 2026 class and Joe Tsai, who is basically the godfather of professional lacrosse in the U.S., was among those honored as the hall’s first “contributor.” Said the hall in a release:
Joe Tsai loves this game the way the rest of us do, and he’s used everything he has to push it forward,” said Paul Rabil, co-founder and President of the PLL and member of the Professional Lacrosse Hall of Fame. “He’s grown lacrosse at every level, from the grassroots to the Olympics, and he’s done it because he believes in what this sport can be. There’s no one more deserving. We’re proud to welcome Joe into the Professional Lacrosse Hall of Fame.”
The 2026 Hall of Fame class reflects the full range of what it takes to build a sport – elite players who set records that may never be broken, and a contributor whose investment made professional lacrosse’s growth possible at scale,” said Mike Rabil, Co-Founder and CEO of the Premier Lacrosse League. “Brodie, Greg, and Drew each defined their positions for a generation. Joe Tsai’s commitment to this game has shaped the PLL and the sport in ways fans and players will continue to benefit from for decades. We’re honored to welcome all four into the Professional Lacrosse Hall of Fame.
Tsai began his lacrosse career at New Jersey’s Lawrenceville School as a 13-year, continuing his love of the game at Yale where he played four years and recently financed a $40 million training center for the school’s team. He currently is the principal owner of two teams in San Diego and Las Vegas (it’s permitted) in the indoor league, the National Lacrosse League, and is a principal financier of the outdoor league, the Premier Lacrosse League.
He will be inducted along with players and coaches during the PLL’s Hall of Fame weekend in Hempstead, Long Island, June 19-20. He’ll no doubt be on hand since the NBA Draft is three days later in Brooklyn.
Congratulations.
Draft Sleeper of the Week
We try to keep track of who’s been in to HSS Training Center for workouts. It’s one of the Nets “state secrets.” There was a time under Rod Thorn and Billy King that not only would the team disclose who had worked out at the Meadowlands then HSS. They would have the chief scout provide reporters with player assessments!
Here’s our best guess at who’s been in.
Keba Keita, the 6’9” BYU center who played with both Dybantsa and Egor Demin;
Cruz Davis, Hofstra’s high scoring 6’3” lead guard. Could he fit with nearly Long Island Nets;
Malik Dia, a 6’9” 3-and-D type who played at Vanderbilt, Belmont, then his final two years at Ole Miss;
Grant Newell, another 6’9” forward who played at California, North Texas and most recently Western Kentucky;
Jevon Porter, a 6’11’ center for Missouri who at 22, is MPJ’s younger brother.
Xaivian Lee, a 6’4” lead guard who finished his career at Florida after three solid years at Princeton. A Korean-Canadian.
Brenen Lorient, a 6’9” wing who shot 38.9% from deep for his career at West Virginia and before that at Florida Atlantic and North Texas.
Fletcher Loyer, 6’5” 3-point specialist for Purdue who is the brother of Nets head video coordinator Foster Loyer and son of New Jersey Nets assistant John Loyer.
Tramon Mark, a 6’6” shooting guard who led the Texas Longhorns in scoring.
Collin Parker, Austin Peay’s 40.4% 3-point wing who at 6’8” is one of several tall sharpshooters who’ve been in.
Nick Pringle, a 6’10” bruiser who played with Darius Acuff at Houston.
Jaden Henley, Grand Canyon’s 6’7” wing, a 3-point specialist.
Isaac McKeenly, Mikel Brown’s 6’4” backcourt running mate at Louisville and another 3-point specialist;
Kobe Knox, a 6’5” wing at South Carolina named for Kobe Bryant;
Corey Stephenson a 6’6” shooting guard who played last season FIU after two years at UCSB;.
Dain Dainja, a 6’9” forward who averaged 14 points and six rebounds for the Heat’s G League affiliate, the Sioux Falls Skyforce last season.
And, oh yeah, Darius Acuff, the 6’2” — in socks — lead guard from Arkansas who was in Wednesday, according to Jonathan Wasserman of Bleacher Report. Acuff is the first of the leading candidates for the sixth pick who we know has worked out. It’s fair to say he and Mikel Brown Jr. are the fan favorites at this point. (We could have profiled Nate Ament, but Lucas Kaplan has covered that waterfront quite extensively.)
Acuff is the most offensively gifted of the four lead guards draftniks have linked to the Nets. Take a look at his highlights from the NCAA tournament where he cemented his reputation as a top prospects at the 1 or 2:
As Wilko Martinez-Cachero of Floors and Ceilings wrote, he can do it all …. on offense:
Darius Acuff Jr. has a high offensive floor with the ultimate potential to serve as his team’s primary offensive engine. That’s why he is around the top 15-20 range of my board, with the chance to climb into the back end of the lottery depending on how draft declarations shape up.
Acuff can score at all three levels to an extent, handle a heavy playmaking load without turning the ball over much, and he has proven that he can play both on- and off-ball this year.
The Arkansas freshman thrives on getting downhill and is always putting pressure on defenses. He’s comfortable getting to his spots in the midrange and getting to his pull-up on balance. Plus, Acuff’s three-pointer – especially his catch-and-shoot – has been a pleasant surprise, which makes me think he can be more of a combo guard and less of a ball-dominant guard in the NBA.
In 36 games, he averaged 23.5 points and 6.4 assists while shooting 48/44/81. He also showed that quick decision-making the Nets love and has the confidence teams love in a lead guard. Asked by Brian Lewis at the NBA Combine how he saw his future, Acuff put humility to the side: “Definitely a superstar point guard for sure.” Some have even compared him to Allen Iverson!
However… and it’s a big however … he has not shown much inclination to play defense, like any defense, leading to some ugly assessments…
No amount of offense can make up for this complete lack of effort on defense by Darius Acuff Jr imo. https://t.co/3A62DGQA4b
There has been some revisionist history of late about how the Razorbacks didn’t need him to play defense, that John Calipari wanted to make sure he was on the court as much as possible, not sitting in foul trouble. He did play 35.1 minutes a game for Coach Cal while racking up those gaudy numbers. Still, until proven otherwise, it has to be an issue … and the Nets recent draft history suggests they’re not enamored of small guards. The only guard or for that matter only player 6’3” or under who they’ve taken in the Marks era, in either round, was Cam Thomas. Gulp.
Then again, if you look across the river, there’s this lead guard with almost the same measurements as Acuff who has led his team to a 2-0 advantage in the NBA Finals. Indeed, Acuff told Draymond Green a couple of days ago that he’s been studying Jalen Brunson…
Darius Acuff Jr. reveals he’s been studying Jalen Brunson this NBA Finals:
“I’ve been focusing on both teams, of course, but I’ve really been seeing how Jalen Brunson is navigating through the defense and stuff like that. Obviously as a PG myself I’ve been paying attention to…
Word is that the Clippers who pick at No. 5 like Keaton Wagler and the Kings who pick at No. 7 covet Acuff.
A bit of Nets history to help you through Monday
The Knicks and Spurs will face off at Madison Square Garden Monday in what is almost certainly the most important game at the Garden in 53 years, since the Knickerbockers last won an NBA title. On hand will be the Mayor, Zohran Mamdani, who says he will be sitting with some friends (not courtside) and the President of the United States, Donald J. Trump, who will likely be sitting with James Dolan … attended by security personnel that will be numbered in the dozens if not hundreds, everyone from MSG security to the NYPD to the Secret Service.
The occasion has reignited interest in New York’s last men’s professional basketball team that won a championship. We mean the New York Nets who took the ABA title back in 1976 three years after the Knicks. (The last professional basketball team in New York to win a title, male or female, was your New York Liberty who won the WNBA championship at Barclays Center two years ago.)
Mike Vaccaro, the New York Post columnist, was at Nassau Coliseum as an 8-year-old that night when the Nets beat the Nuggets, 112-106, giving them the title in six games. He wrote Saturday about his youthful disappointment that the Nets wouldn’t play that year’s NBA champs, the Boston Celtics, in a tournament of champions. The Nets had publicly offered to play the Celts with all profits going to the U.S. Olympic Team but the NBA and Celtics declined, as another Post writer, Paul Forrester wrote earlier in the week.
Vaccaro spoke to a number of people familiar with the NBA and ABA at the time, including Bill Melchionni, the Nets point guard about who would have won the series that never happened. But beyond the opinions, Vaccaro engaged Jerry Milano and John Garcia of Strat-O-Matic, who he called “the market leader in sports simulation” to create mythical matchups between the NBA and ABA championships in both 1974 and 1976. The Celtics were the NBA champs in 1974 as well.
“In the ’73-’74 matchup, The Nets won Game 6 in Nassau Coliseum then went up to the Boston Garden and edged the Celtics, 111-110, in a decisive seventh game,” the results showed. “Julius Erving led all scorers with 37.3 points per game, including 38 and 14 rebounds in Game 7.”
John Havlicek tried to close the Nets out in Game 6 with 47 points and 11 assists but couldn’t quite get it done.
“The simulation from two years later had New York winning again, this time in six games,” the simulation showed. “Erving again paced scoring with 34.7 ppg.”
In Game 6, played at the Coliseum in what would’ve been the last gasp of the ABA — and we assume since it was a Nets home game they would’ve used the red, white and blue rock — the Nets won 123-115. Dr. J had 35 and 10 to lead the Nets and Super John Williamson had 14 and 6; Jo Jo White led Boston with 34 and nine assists while Cowens had 10 points and 15 rebounds.
Can they hang a make-believe banner at Barclays Center for that?
Probably not.
And what about the Nets and Knicks back then? Who would have won in those head-to-heads? Vaccaro didn’t requests simulations there. Both New York clubs were riding high back then. In 1974 through 1976, the Nets were the ABA’s best while the Knicks who had won in 1970 and 1973 but were beginning a slow slide. This was, of course, before the NBA-ABA merger in 1977 when the Nets needed to pay the Knicks an “entry fee” that forced owner Roy Boe to choose between his two teams, the Islanders and Nets. He chose the Isles and sold Julius Erving to the 76ers, paid the Knicks off and joined the NBA.
As we wrote back in 2012, when the Nets were nearing their move back to New York, the NBA and ABA did hold a series of preseason exhibition games starting in October 1972, prior to the Knicks last championship season of 1972-73 but before Dr. J’s arrival at Nassau Coliseum. In year one, the city guys beat the suburbanites twice, the first time in a blowout.
Then, things changed with Erving in red, white and blue. In pre-season exhibitions in 1973 and 1975, prior to the Nets last two ABA championship seasons, the Nets beat the Knicks all three times the two teams played. Was that the reason that the Knicks demanded a $4.8 million “entry fee” from the Nets on top of the $3.2 million the league required? Did they know the fee would strangle the Nets, require them to undertake a massive cost-cutting, which ultimately included the sale of Dr. J. to the 76ers? Ya think?
Here, thanks to Remember the ABA, are thumbnail descriptions of what went down in each of the five games:
October 5, 1972 Knicks 117 – Nets 88 at New Haven, CT Leaders: John Roche 26 points; Jerry Lucas 25 points; DeBusschere 15 points October 6, 1972 Knicks 100 – Nets 91 at Uniondale, NY Leaders: DeBusschere 19 points; Frazier 19 points; Johnny. Baum 19 points; Billy Melchionni 18 points
October 2, 1973 Nets 97 – Knicks 87 at New York, NY (Madison Square Garden) Attendance at MSG 17,226; Leaders: Julius Erving 27 points (12 in 3rd quarter); Frazier 25 points October 8, 1975 Nets 110 – Knicks 104 at Uniondale, NY October 18, 1975 Nets 103 – Knicks 101 at New York, NY (Madison Square Garden) Leaders: Erving 33 pts & jump shot at buzzer to win game; Frazier 22 points.
The Nets did get some revenge on the Knicks in 1996, as we also reported in 2012. Taking advantage of the Dolans need to get the Nets vote on a change of ownership, the New Jersey Nets traded their vote in the board of governors for the right to move anywhere in New York. No questions asked. Michael Rowe was president of the team back then and in 2012, he explained to us just how he outmaneuvered Dolan … and paved the way for the eventual move to Brooklyn.
In 1996, the New Jersey Nets had just turned down an offer to sell the team to the late John Mc Mullen, owner of the NJ Devils, and instead the Nets were turning their interests towards maximizing their opportunities for a possible sale/relocation.
At the same time, the lease to play in the Meadowlands was re-negotiated to give the team flexibility to move and concurrently, the arrangement with Sportschannel, [a Dolan-owned entity] who had local broadcast rights for New Jersey Nets games at the time, was re-negotiated to allow the Nets to end the agreement without the broadcaster having a right to ‘match’… something that would prove invaluable if/when the Nets sought other broadcast opportunities.
While all this was going on, an [NBA] ownership vote affecting the Knicks required that the Knicks receive the Nets’ approval and, keeping in line with our Ownership’s strategic plans, we sought to have the territorial restrictions that the Knicks had over the Nets totally eliminated. We were receiving strong interest from the NY Islanders ownership about relocating to Nassau [County on Long Island], but such a move would have surely been blocked by the Knicks under the old provisions.
I met with [MSG CEO] Dave Checketts at the Garden. We hashed through the issue and the League approved the revision. David Stern was very supportive of the change.
In essence, the clause was designed to aid a sale, or move to Nassau Coliseum, not Manhattan or Brooklyn ( although we did have some brief discussions with Garden about moving into their building…ala Staples Center teams –Clippers, Lakers and Kings). So, the NY/NY Rivalry almost happened back in that 1996 timeframe (actually, a few years later, we had a serious offer from Islanders to sell the team and move it to Nassau in 1998).
But the real ‘gem’ of the above accomplishments was that when our new ownership group [Raymond Chambers, Lewis Katz et al] purchased the Team in 1998 there was NO restrictions on where to move, NO restrictions on our cable rights and NO mandate for the Nets to remain in the Meadowlands. These conditions created a perfect storm to form the Yankee Nets Organization and the YES Network.
Yeah, it’s a lot of history, but it should be comforting in these difficult times.
Final Note
Apologies for the length — it’s our longest Off-Season Report ever, but there’s a lot of stuff going on!
Apr 6, 2026; Indianapolis, IN, USA; Michigan Wolverines forward Morez Johnson Jr. (21) and guard Nimari Burnett (4) celebrate after their win against the UConn Huskies in the national championship of the Final Four of the men's 2026 NCAA Tournament between the and the Michigan Wolverines at Lucas Oil Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Bob Donnan-Imagn Images | Bob Donnan-Imagn Images
With the NBA Finals underway, it’s time for all but two franchises to begin looking ahead to the draft and free agency. This year’s selection is critical for the Detroit Pistons, as they look to capitalize on moving up seven spots as part of a deadline deal that brought in Kevin Huerter. Coming off a 60-win season, it’s feasible for the franchise to see itself drafting in the late twenties each summer for the foreseeable future. Getting value this year is paramount.
Of course, this pick could very well end up being made by another team, with the potential for it to be used in a trade to help bolster Cade Cunningham’s supporting cast. Should they keep the pick, Detroit has been linked to a few prospects already, most of whom are guard/wings.
Iowa’s Bennett Stirz, Duke’s Isaiah Evans, or Baylor’s Cameron Carr have shown up in a lot of mocks selected by the Pistons since the combine. All of these players are intriguing prospects, but history suggests that it is unlikely that any of these players will come close to matching their college production in a Pistons uniform. Much of the discourse on Pistons Twitter or in the local media has seemed to frame someone like Stirz as a genuine solution for a second banana to Cunningham. The reality is that caliber of player is rarely found at this point in the draft. Finding a star is difficult in the lottery, and next to impossible outside of it. Rather than try to swing for the fences and find the next Tyrese Maxey, the Pistons would be wise to embrace a more prudent approach and target a player that they believe will have a long pro career. That could mean drafting someone projected as a rotation player or even a specialist.
Frankly, coming away with a solid contributor is the equivalent of striking gold outside of the lottery. The hit rate on players drafted outside of the lottery is abysmal. If the Pistons ascend the way the fanbase hopes, they will be picking in the mid to late 20s as long as Cunningham and the young core continue to progress. At that position, finding even a quality rotation player is a crapshoot at best. In taking advantage of the move up this summer, getting on base and adding a contributor for cheap is far more prudent than swinging for (and potentially whiffing) on a prospect with star potential.
Though he has been rising in mock drafts in recent weeks, Morez Johnson is a prospect I identified early who brings multiple tangible NBA skills, and could be available outside of the lottery. The Michigan product has a high floor and multiple traits that translate to winning basketball. Furthermore, he has a fairly high ceiling that could allow him to outperform his draft spot. If Detroit could get him at 21, it would be a job well done by Trajan Langdon and the front office. Let me explain why.
A Closer Look: Morez Johnson
There is much to like about Johnson for Detroit, or any team for that matter. He comes in as one of the most versatile defensive prospects in this draft class. Throw on tape from just about any Michigan game this season, and you will see a 6-foot-9, 250-pound Johnson picking up the team’s opposing point guard full court. No, that was not a typo.
He frequently was at the top of the team’s full-court press, and it was not uncommon to see him poking the ball away from opposing guards in space. You can’t find centers capable of moving like that, especially with a bigger frame like Johnson. Having a big that can move their feet in space the way that he can is especially valuable as it allows you to switch one through five and have more options and versatility in the team’s defensive scheme.
Additionally, Johnson is a flat-out machine on the glass. In limited minutes as a freshman at Illinois, Johnson’s offensive rebounding rate ranked fourth in the nation. At Michigan, his rebounding rate dipped a bit, but it can reasonably be attributed to the team he was on, starting 3 players who were 6-foot-9 or above. Johnson possesses plus strength for his age, good hands, and a 39-inch vertical to go along with a high motor. Those traits project the Illinois native as an instant impact player on the boards.
Offensively, the sophomore showed flashes of a greater role than he consistently played in college. Johnson is already an elite play finisher, and graded out statistically as one of the better roll men in the country in the pick and roll. Johnson is nimble for his size, and was able to maneuver through an often crowded paint while staying under control. He showed good hands and the ability to catch the ball in traffic and bring the ball down without losing it. He even began to show more flashes as a passer out of the short roll as the season went on, which may benefit further from NBA spacing. What is most intriguing, however, is Johnson’s potential as a shooter. He already has great form, and shoots nearly eighty percent from the free throw line. As the season went on Michigan gave him more leeway to shoot jump shots, and shot a solid thirty four percent from downtown. With proper development, it is not inconceivable to envision Johnson becoming a stretch four or five down the road.
Why This Makes Sense For Detroit
While the Pistons already have a glut of centers on the roster, this could give the team roster flexibility both now and down the road. The team could play Johnson some at the 4 now if he continues to expand his range from three-point land. Due to his defensive versatility, he could likely play alongside Isaiah Stewart or even Jalen Duren in certain lineups. Side note, just imagine Johnson, Ausar Thompson, and Stewart on the floor together defensively.
He could also provide insurance for Beef Stew. While Stewart has arguably been the best non-Wemby paint defender in the league the past couple of seasons, he has not exactly been a model of durability early in his career, and has faced multiple suspensions. In his six-year career, Stewart has played more than sixty-five games only three times. While he has been vital to the team’s culture and defensive identity, there could be a case to be made to sell high on the injury and suspension-prone big man while he is young and still on a team-friendly extension.
Johnson’s presence could make him more expendable, as their skillsets mirror each other in many ways. This could allow Detroit to use Stewart as a sweetener in any trades it might make this summer or next season. Almost all mock trades to this point have had the Pistons sending out either Stewart or Ron Holland as part of a potential return. Wing production is so hard to find, and it is still unclear what Holland’s ceiling will be. If Langdon and company wanted to give the young wing another year to develop and grow on a rookie deal, they could potentially get away with keeping him on the roster while making a splash trade with Stewart as a primary piece of the package. Lastly, if the team decided it did not want to pay Jalen Duren and wanted to use him in a sign and trade, Johnson could help maintain the team’s center depth in the short term.
Johnson likely won’t make many All-Star teams in his career, and may not be the flashiest pick. But he projects as a winning contributor who could help give the Pistons optionality with their roster that they don’t have today.
What do you think of Morez Johnson’s fit in Detroit, and who else would you like to see the team target at twenty one?
The Mets have played at the Giants, Dodgers, Angels, Rockies, Diamondbacks, Mariners and Padres.
All told, it’s been 22 of 65 games in the Pacific and Mountain time zones.
In contrast, the Mets have played only seven road games in the Eastern time zone.
They have played six others in the Central.
Carlos Mendoza is pictured during the Mets’ June 3 game against the Mariners. Getty Images
“It’s brutal,” David Peterson said of the schedule. “I think they need to take a look at how they are doing the schedules and fix it. We’re in June and we haven’t seen Atlanta or Philly yet and usually we would have seen them by now.”
That will begin changing when the Braves arrive at Citi Field for a three-game series starting Friday.
On their ensuing road trip, the Mets will face the Phillies for the first time.
Among Peterson’s issues with the West Coast travel was the absence of an off-day when heading east to west.
Three times the Mets went from playing during the day in Queens to a game the following night on the West Coast.
Teams are required to receive an off-day when they travel from the West Coast to the East Coast.
“There is one way of looking at it, where we’ve got all our West Coast swings out of the way,” Peterson said. “But I also think the schedule over the last couple of years has lost some of the balance that it’s had previously.”
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Do the condensed mileage and time-zone hopping take a physical toll?
“It could be a challenge, but I feel like our guys do a good job of communicating with our training staff, making sure they recover their sleep, the nutrition, all that,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “You go to places like Colorado [with the altitude], and that is where you feel it the most, but … the guys do a really good job of doing what they need to do to stay in good shape.”
And Mendoza isn’t about to concede the Mets have played their last game out West this season.
“We’re done for the regular season,” he said. “I am trying to be optimistic here.”
Mikal Bridges has been in this exact same position before — five years ago.
His Suns thought they were on their way to a championship, leading the Bucks 2-0 in the NBA Finals.
Then, everything went wrong. They didn’t win again.
“It’s always going to stick with you,” the two-way wing recalled Sunday, on the eve of the first Finals games at the Garden in 27 years.
The only difference is that the Knicks are up 2-0 going home, one of three road teams to ever take the first two games of the Finals, along with the 1993 Bulls and 1995 Rockets. But Bridges knows this series isn’t over. He’s seen how quickly things can change.
In 2023, he joined current (and former) teammates Jalen Brunson and Josh Hart on their podcast, “The Roommates Show,” and shared his memories.
“We over here like, man, it’s light. It’s the East. … They ran up four straight, I just couldn’t believe it,” Bridges said.
Mikal Bridges (25) drives to the basket during the game against Julian Champagnie (30) during Game 2 of the 2026 NBA Finals on June 5, 2026. NBAE via Getty Images
Bridges is having a terrific postseason, averaging 14.6 points, 2.8 assists, 1.2 steals and an even 38 percent shooting from 3-point range.
In Game 2, he came up big, finishing with 20 points, six assists and six rebounds.
Mikal Bridges defends Khris Middleton of the Milwaukee Bucks during Game 5 of the 2021 NBA Finals on July 17 at Footprint Center in Phoenix, Arizona. NBAE via Getty Images
He has spoken to his teammates about his own Finals experience, about not letting their foot off the gas.
“Same situation, up 2-0, and I’ve got to be able to talk to these guys and just keep [them] levelheaded and just keep playing desperate,” he said after Friday night’s win over the Spurs.
On Sunday, he added: “[My teammates] all know, too, and they all understand as well, knowing the series is far from over. Got to keep playing desperate and be the more desperate team.”
Perhaps the most impressive aspect of this run is that the Knicks have not gotten overconfident.
They have set a franchise record with 13 consecutive playoff wins, playing desperately despite being ahead.
A common refrain after these victories are different Knicks saying they have to treat the next game like the series just started, whether it is Game 1 of a series or they’re up 3-0. That mindset has taken them pretty far.
“Personally, I think we really don’t care too much about the winning streak or anything like that because all that’s in the past,” Bridges said. “I think we do a great job as a team of always knowing that it’s 0-0 after every win, staying locked in on the next game.”