2027 NBA Mock Draft has prospects take lead as No. 1 pick contenders

Now that the 2026 NBA Draft is behind us, scouts and executives fully shift their evaluation focus to the 2027 NBA Draft and a new crop of players.

12 months away from when these prospects will actually hear their names called, it is nearly impossible to predict which players will emerge at the top of the next class. Experts feel the upcoming class is not nearly as loaded at the top as 2026 was with AJ Dybantsa, Darryn Peterson and Cameron Boozer.

However, there are still plenty of talented prospects who will soon make a name for themselves at the next level in college basketball and overseas.

2027 NBA mock draft

While the lottery process will look very different next season, here is a quick look at the top players to know heading into the upcoming season:

  1. Sacramento Kings: Jordan Smith Jr. (Arkansas, Guard)
  2. Chicago Bulls: Bruce Branch III (BYU, Wing)
  3. Memphis Grizzlies: Caleb Holt (Arizona, Guard)
  4. New Orleans Pelicans (from MIL): Tyran Stokes (Kansas, Wing)
  5. Houston Rockets (from BKN): Braylon Mullins (UConn, Guard)
  6. Atlanta Hawks (from NOP): Cameron Williams (Duke, Big)
  7. Memphis Grizzlies (from UTA): Amari Allen (Alabama, Wing)
  8. Charlotte Hornets: Anthony Thompson (Ohio State, Forward)
  9. Washington Wizards: Alijah Arenas (USC, Guard)
  10. Houston Rockets (from PHX): Dylan Mingo (Baylor, Guard)
  11. Charlotte Hornets (from DAL): Motiejus Krivas (Arizona, Big)
  12. Toronto Raptors: Stefan Joksimovic (Baskonia, Guard)
  13. San Antonio Spurs (from ATL): Hugo Yimga-Moukouri (Nanterre, Forward)
  14. Portland Trail Blazers: Thomas Haugh (Florida, Forward)
  15. Orlando Magic: Abdou Toure (Arkansas, Wing)
  16. Oklahoma City Thunder (from LAC): Miikka Muurinen (Arkansas, Forward)
  17. Golden State Warriors: Patrick Ngongba II (Duke, Big)
  18. Philadelphia 76ers: Jason Crowe (Missouri, Guard)
  19. Brooklyn Nets (from HOU): Brandon McCoy (Michigan, Guard)
  20. Utah Jazz (from CLE): Caleb Gaskins (Miami, Forward)
  21. Indiana Pacers: Matt Able (North Carolina, Guard)
  22. Memphis Grizzlies (from LAL): Tyler Tanner (Vanderbilt, Guard)
  23. Detroit Pistons: Billy Richmond (Arkansas, Wing)
  24. Oklahoma City Thunder (from DEN): David Mirkovic (Illinois, Forward)
  25. Phoenix Suns (from MIN): Ivan Kharchenkov (Arizona, Wing)
  26. Charlotte Hornets (from MIA): Matas Vokietaitis (Texas, Big)
  27. Brooklyn Nets (from NYK): Luigi Suigo (Villanova, Big)
  28. Boston Celtics: Christian Collins (USC, Forward)
  29. Oklahoma City Thunder (from SAS): Cameron Houindo (Cedevita, Big)
  30. Los Angeles Clippers (from OKC): Tounde Yessoufou (St. John’s, Wing)

This draft order was based on projected championship odds via DraftKings and account for trades and swaps via RealGM.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: 2027 NBA Mock Draft: Caleb Holt and Bruce Brunch take an early lead

How big was Sean Marks’ decision to bet the ranch on Mikel Brown Jr?

BROOKLYN, NY - JUNE 23: Mikel Brown Jr. poses for a photo during the 2026 NBA Draft - Round One on June 23, 2026 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Laura June Kirsch/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

It’s basically pretty simple. All the rebuilding, all the losses, all the trades, all the disappointments over the past two years came down to the moment that Adam Silver stepped to the stage Tuesday night and intoned those words, “with the sixth pick of the 2026 NBA Draft, the Brooklyn Nets select… MIKEL BROWNJR!”

Sure, the selection of Egor Demin at No. 8 a year ago and his (mostly) positive season matter, but the sixth pick in what could be a generational Draft was also the franchise’s highest pick since 2010 when they took Derrick Favors with construction barely underway at Barclays Center and HSS Training Center just an idea. More than that, the 2010 Draft was mediocre at best.

Indeed, the pick that became a thin 20-year-old lead guard from Orlando was arguably the franchise’s biggest decision since John Calipari muffed 1996 Draft and wimped out by deciding against taking Kobe Bryant. No, no, we’re not saying Brown is the next Kobe, nor are we dissing the pick of Brook Lopez at No. 10 in 2008. We’re just measuring the call’s potential impact.

Brian Lewis on Friday put Sean Marks decision this way:

The Nets have had a busy month of decisions, from the Julius Randle trade to Michael Porter Jr. extension to how to use the rest of their cap room. But down the road, whether Marks is still Brooklyn’s GM or not, his legacy may well be remembered by the call he made Tuesday night.

Might well be choosing Mikel Brown Jr. over Darius Acuff Jr., just as The Post projected he would.

That’s probably reductive. Technically, Marks picked Brown over not just Acuff but a litany of prospects — including Kingston Flemings and Brayden Burries, Nate Ament and Aday Mara. But realistically? Brown and Acuff are going to be linked because Marks drafted the Louisville freshman sixth overall, and Acuff came off the board one spot later to Sacramento.

Frankly, a big win on Brown would also help fans forget what happened with the Clean Sweep. Without saying so, Marks gets that. In his post-Draft presser, he noted:

“We’ve all talked about, and the media talked about, how good this draft was and how deep this draft is. You never quite know until four or five years down the road,” he told reporters.

“I’ve said the things that stood out about Mikel, the high character, the competitive fire that he has, the physical skills he has, the ability to shoot from deep, the range that he has, play with his teammates, make quick decisions, his athletic ability. A lot of those things will definitely translate to our league. Those are definitely things that stood out, being able to play on and off the ball and his versatility.”

Those or five years will also likely be filled with comparisons to the other lead guards who were available at the time No. 6 spot, particularly Acuff. So be it. Marks gets that, adding “Look, I don’t know that I need to get into who we didn’t draft and so forth.”

Others surely will, as Lewis writes.

Right now we’re just in the prologue. But by then, the Big 3 era will be a decade in the rearview, a distant memory. Porter and Randle — both of whom can be free agents next summer — may each be gone. Meanwhile, these rookies will be entering their prime. And Marks’ call will be either vindicated or vilified.

Graves and Bradley touchdown in Toronto: Here’s what they have to say

Jun 23, 2026; New York, NY, USA; NBA commissioner Adam Silver greets the nineteenth pick in the 2026 NBA draft, Santa Clara forward Allen Graves after he was selected by the Toronto Raptors at Barclays Center. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images | Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Allen Graves and Jaden Bradley have been wrapped up in the whirlwind of the draft, seeing the two players make their way north to Canada to speak to media ahead of the Summer League’s beginning.

Graves entered flanked by family, his brother a prominent presence on the sidelines as the rookie took a seat at the OVO Athletic Centre. The former Louisiana Mr. Basketball was collected and relaxed as he spoke about the outpouring of support from his Ponchatoula community – 8000 strong – where “literally the whole town” was picking up the phone to wish him well.

He called Toronto “amazing,” and spoke positively about the city’s greenery as similar to that of his native US south. The connection to home is strong, noting that his father worked four jobs – as a bus driver, in a mechanic shop, and as a minister – and brings that ethos of working hard to his play on the court. “I got to take my job as serious as he does,” said the forward. And indeed, Graves seems to have a good understanding of his place on the team, and in the league.

He said that his year one focus would be on defence, “being able to switch, being able to guard,” with that side of the ball being how he would “keep getting contracts.” Graves was confident about his abilities, saying that the latter half of the season, especially his matchup with Gonzaga, marked when the NBA dream felt real. “I feel ready, I wouldn’t have took it if I didn’t think that I was ready, and I was able to play at this level.”


Bradley, drafted just last night, was a bit more subdued after flying in to Toronto from North Carolina. Bradley was born in Rochester, New York, and lived in Charlotte for much of his life. Similarly to Graves, he spoke about his defensive responsibilities as paramount to his play. “I knew I had to hang my hat on the defensive end,” he said. “My freshman year at Alabama, I had some great, great players and I knew I had to… kind of earn minutes.”

That unselfish perspective from the former Big 12 Player of the Year suggests he’ll fit in well on a Raptors squad alongside the roster of other points guards. Having faced off against Jamal Shead in college, Bradley called it “a crazy game,” and complimented Shead, calling him “a great player defensively,” and that “offensively, he had it going as well.” Having the two hard-nosed guards on the same team now could be a dangerous weapon in the hands of this Raptors organization.

There were moments of levity from Bradley as well. When asked about strange questions that he was asked by teams during the draft, he was asked “what is it like growing up with a fed in the house?” This, in reference to his father’s work in the federal government, which he joked was a matter of his father “know[ing] every movement”.

Bradley was the only second round draft pick not traded last night, and spoke about what that meant to him.

“It means the world to me,” he said. “I’m going to show them that it’s gonna, it’s gonna work out.”

The NBA Summer League will begin on July 9th, 2026, running until the 19th. Keep an eye out for the rookies to show off their stuff soon!

Rangers vs Blue Jays Prediction, Odds & Home Run Pick for Today's MLB Game

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Toronto Blue Jays slugger Kazuma Okamoto draws a favorable matchup against Texas Rangers left-hander MacKenzie Gore, and his power profile makes his total base prop my favorite play for today’s matchup.

Read on for my Blue Jays vs. Rangers predictions and MLB picks for tonight's matchup.

Rangers vs Blue Jays predictions

Rangers vs Blue Jays best bet: Kazuma Okamoto Over 1.5 total bases (+115)

Kazuma Okamoto profiles well against lefty MacKenzie Gore, who gets barreled up hard and often, allowing a 9.6% solid-contact rating, far above the 5.1% league average. 

The Toronto Blue Jays third baseman leads the team with a 12% barrel-rate against Gore’s pitch mix, which has led him to a .298 batting average and a .577 slug-rate this season against the four-seamer and curveball. 

That average clubs to .360 and a .640 slug-rate when facing a left-handed pitcher, which strengthens my conviction in this matchup against Gore.

Additionally, Okamoto has eclipsed his 1.5 base total in 12 of his 19 outings this month. This consistency gives me confidence to play this market down to +105.

Covers COVERS INTEL: Kazuma Okamoto has a 1.000 OPS, averaging 2.2 bases per game in 19 appearances since June 1.

Rangers vs Blue Jays same-game parlay (SGP)

Okamoto has a hit in five of his last six games and profiles well against Gore’s pitch mix, owning a .360 average against them since June 1. He also had a .421 average with RISP over that stretch, with a team-high 16 RBI in that stretch. 

I’ll also add Guerrero Jr. Over 0.5 hits. He’s eclipsed this mark in 11 of 13 outings, and owns a .363 average and a .491 slug-rate against Gore’s primary pitch mix.

Astros vs Blue Jays SGP

  • Kazuma Okamoto Over 1.5 total bases
  • Kazuma Okamoto Over 0.5 RBI
  • Vladimir Guerrero Jr. Over 0.5 hits
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Rangers vs Blue Jays home run pick: Kazuma Okamoto (+295)

We’ll continue to bet on Okamoto tonight in a great matchup against Gore. Okamoto’s combination of barreling the baseball with power against Gore’s inability to miss bats and 45% hard-hit rate makes him a home run threat tonight.

However, Gore has only allowed two home runs over his last seven starts, so I’ll make this a half-unit play

2026 Transparency Record
  • Best bets: 36-40, +1.15 units
  • SGPs: 14-62, +0.15 units
  • HR picks: 13-63, +2.4 units

Rangers vs Blue Jays odds

  • Moneyline: Texas +125 | Toronto -150
  • Run line: Texas +1.5 (-170) | Toronto -1.5 (+145)
  • Over/Under: Over 8 | Under 8

Rangers vs Blue Jays trend

The Blue Jays have covered the first five innings run line in seven of their last 11 games for +2.55 units and a 20% ROI. Find more MLB betting trends for Rangers vs. Blue Jays.

How to watch Rangers vs Blue Jays and game info

LocationRogers Center, Toronto, ON
DateThursday, 6-25-2026
First pitch7:07 p.m. ET
TVSportsnet
Rangers starting pitcherMacKenzie Gore
(4-6, 4.07 ERA)
Blue Jays starting pitcherKevin Gausman
(4-5, 4.05 ERA)

Rangers vs Blue Jays latest injuries

Rangers vs Blue Jays weather

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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TJ Friedl’s time with the Cincinnati Reds is probably over

PITTSBURGH, PA - MAY 03: TJ Friedl #29 of the Cincinnati Reds looks on prior to the game between the Cincinnati Reds and the Pittsburgh Pirates at PNC Park on Sunday, May 3, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Christopher Denver/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

If you posted a .364 OBP during the 2025 Major League Baseball season, you were in pretty elite company. Among the 108 MLB players who logged at least 550 PA last season, that number would’ve sandwiched you right between perennial All Star Jose Ramirez (.360) and slugger Kyle Schwarber (.365). The small number of names ahead of that mark is the who’s who of the sport – Ohtani, Tatis, Freeman, Soto, Judge, etc.

That was just last season! The Cincinnati Reds aren’t even 80 games into this season! It’s all such a recent memory, isn’t it?

The baseball world evolves incredibly fast, however. That .364 OBP from 2025? That’s precisely the mark posted by TJ Friedl in his most recent full season, and last year he served as a perfectly good on-base machine and run scorer atop the lineup for a club that actually participated in postseason baseball.

You’d think a guy like that would have some value, especially since he’s just making $3.8 million this season and comes with two additional years of team control through the arbitration process. If the Reds had tried trading him over the winter with that kind of profile – he even got down-ballot MVP votes in 2023, all as a player playing CF – you’d think there would’ve been a number of teams jumping at the opportunity.

When I posed the question earlier in the week whether you thought Friedl had played his last game in a Reds uniform, very little of all that seemed to matter anymore. An overwhelming 68% percent of respondents think Friedl’s time with the Reds at the big league level is effectively over, the litany of complicating administrative and roster issues hanging over his head right now too much for his recent poor play to overcome.

Poor play is putting it mildly. From the heights of his OBP prowess in 2025 he fell to just .179/.259/.256 (.515 OPS) in 178 PA to start 2026 before the Reds mercifully optioned him to AAA.

He’s almost 31 and his speed has evaporated. With little power to his game, speed – and the good defense that supported – were two key aspects of his game that don’t seem to be there any longer. If that means he’s a LF now – which the Reds pretty much admitted in-game early this season – that’s an overall profile that doesn’t really work. Now, he’s been passed on the OF depth chart by the likes of JJ Bleday, Noelvi Marte, Blake Dunn, and Dane Myers, with Spencer Steer still very much an option in LF, and the idea of keeping that player around on an arbitration raise over the $3.8 million he’s making right now seems impossible on Cincinnati’s budget.

Barring serious injury elsewhere, he’s not getting called back up anytime soon, and we’re now just over 5 weeks from the MLB trade deadline on August 3rd. If the Reds aren’t going to keep him around and tender him a contract at season’s end, they might as well try to trade him to someone who’s willing to take a flyer on him, and that means there’s precious few games in which Friedl would actually have a chance to make a return to Cincinnati.

Maybe that’s not how it plays out. Maybe they sell other pieces at the deadline (seeing as they’re once again in last place), and that opens a path back for him to finish the season at the big league level if he turns it around down in Louisville. Then, the Reds could shop him for something this winter. At this rate, though, that sure seems unplausible.

MLB Reacts are brought to you by FanDuel Sportsbook.

A look at the Mets’ rotation without David Peterson

May 20, 2026; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; New York Mets starting pitcher Zach Thornton (49) pitches in his major league debut against the Washington Nationals during the first inning at Nationals Park. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-Imagn Images | Geoff Burke-Imagn Images

In trading David Peterson, the Mets have dealt from a position of weakness, as their starting rotation was already more or less in shambles. With yesterday’s poor performances from Nolan McLean and Sean Manaea, plus the demotion of Kodai Senga to the bullpen and Peterson’s departure, the Mets have to rebuild their starting staff mid-season, and there aren’t too many options.

What is known is that, at least for now, McLean, Manaea, and Freddy Peralta are going to hold down the top three slots of the Mets’ rotation. Peralta is coming off one of his worst starts as a Met, and McLean was left in too long against the Cubs yesterday, but both are as close to a ‘sure thing’ as the Mets have right now, even if that pains me to say it. Manaea has improved his velocity since rejoining the rotation, but he’s still a shakier third starter than the Mets would like.

Now here comes the tricky part. Reports are that the Mets are calling Zach Thornton to start on Friday in Peterson’s stead, but whether this is a spot start of an invitation to prove himself in the rotation remains to be seen. In 12 appearances (11 starts) across both Double and Triple-A, Thornton has a 4.25 ERA. In his one big league appearance, he went four and a third innings, giving up three earned runs and striking out three.

Replacing Senga in the rotation will be the returning Christian Scott, after serving time on the IL with a hip issue. Scott has been a rare bright spot on this club, putting up a 3.10 ERA across nine starts. His first start of the year was an abject disaster (5 earned runs in one and a third innings pitched), but since then, he’s settled in nicely.

With Clay Holmes likely not back until August (and being one of the best trade chips the Mets have, broken fibula or not), the Mets are going to need to make this group, or this group plus or minus Jonah Tong and/or Jack Wenninger, work for them. It looks like the Mets are likely out of the playoff race, and so players like the aforementioned Holmes and Peralta might be on the block. If that’s the case, the Mets’ rotation will get very young, but the results may even look, somehow, worse than they do right now.

Lakers fans entering offseason with limited confidence in front office

El Segundo, CA - September 25: Los Angeles Lakers General Manager Rob Pelinka during a preseason press conference at the UCLA Health Training Center in El Segundo on Wednesday, September 25, 2024. (Photo by Keith Birmingham/MediaNews Group/Pasadena Star-News via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NBA. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Lakers fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

The NBA offseason is in full swing, and we’ve already seen teams like the Miami Heat and the Minnesota Timberwolves making moves to get better. The Lakers have also made some additions, but not as splashy as trading for Giannis or LaMelo Ball.

Instead, the Lakers have re-signed Austin Reaves to a max deal and drafted Cameron Carr with the No. 24 pick. There’s still plenty of time left to get things done, but this summer has big expectations for the Lakers’ front office, considering the amount of cap space and roster spots they have available.

For our SB Nation Reacts survey this week, we asked fans how much confidence they have in the Lakers’ front office, and the results weren’t glowing.

Most fans selecting “a little” feels fair, but it’s not exactly a huge vote of confidence. It signals that even with money to spend and roster spots potentially open, fans don’t know whether Lakers President of Basketball Operations Rob Pelinka can make the right moves to turn the team into true title contenders.

That’s also reflected in second place being the no-confidence option, and last place getting 13% of the vote being the a lot of confidence pick.

At this point, after many years in the position, Pelinka is in the show me stage with fans. They want to see the front office build out a championship roster around Luka Dončić, who is an MVP-caliber player. And this is the summer to do it.

Lakers fans love Cameron Carr

On the plus side, the Lakers moving up to select Carr in the draft has been a popular choice. Draft experts gave the selection rave reviews, and fans agree that it was a good pick.

Carr is exactly the kind of young athletic player the Lakers have been lacking. Obviously, it’s way too early to know how good he will be, but his selection points towards the Lakers working to address their lack of athleticism.

Hopefully, Carr and Adou Thiero can both have positive seasons and suddenly, the Lakers will have some second-unit guys who can really push the tempo and be an injection of energy for the team.

And if Pelinka does his job, there will be other great options on the bench and in the starting unit, making the Lakers a fun team that will win a ton in the West, both in the regular season and during the playoffs.

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



Hornets reportedly set to re-sign Coby White to three year, $74 million contract

The second that it was clear LaMelo Ball was being traded, this was always going to be the next domino to fall.

White agreed to a deal to return to Charlotte on a three-year, $74 million deal, something first reported by Shams Charania of ESPN. This is a fully guaranteed deal with no player or team options.

This is a good deal for both sides. White essentially doubles his salary and moves into starter range money. At the same time, the Hornets get their new point guard — a dynamic shot creator in his own right — at a lower price than Ball, giving them flexibility to add to the roster.

White will be the starting point guard with Kon Knueppel next to him in the backcourt, with Brandon Miller at the three, the just-acquired Nas Reid at the four, and either Moussa Diabate or Ryan Kalkbrenner at the five — that is a good, more rounded lineup than the Hornets had last season, when they won 44 games and made the postseason.

Last season, after being traded at the deadline to Charlotte, White averaged 15.6 points a game off the bench, shooting 39.1% from 3-point range, and dishing out 3 assists a game. His most memorable moment was hitting the 3-pointer in the play-in game against Miami that forced overtime.

White had other potential suitors, including Detroit and maybe Brooklyn (although the Nets get thrown around by agents all the time as a threat because they have cap space, whether they seriously wanted White is another question).

Red Sox welcome Yankess to Fenway Park as team falls into abyss

(080211, Boston, MA) fans take cover under anything handy, like pizza boxes and trash bags as the Red Sox take on the Guardians at Fenway Park. Tuesday, August 02, 2011. (Staff photo by Stuart Cahill) (Photo by Stuart Cahill/MediaNews Group/Boston Herald via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images

Sunday July 9th, 2006 was last day before the All-Star Break. The Red Sox were 53-32 entering that game. First place in the AL East. They won the first two games against the Chicago White Sox 7-2 and 9-6. Up 3-2 in the 9th, closer Jonathan Papelbon came in for the save. He blew it, allowing Chicago to tie the game. The Sox then scored 2 in the 11th inning. Mike Timlin came in and blew the save, allowing 2 runs to tie the game. In the bottom of the 19th, Rudy Seánez, in his third inning of work, allowed a walkoff run. Boston was still in first place but the season had, more or less, ended. The Red Sox would go 33-43 over the remainder of the season and suffer injuries to Trot Nixon, Jason Varitek, Jon Lester, and Jonathan Papelbon. They would finish in third place. 2007 would, of course, still be exciting.

Similarly crushing losses in Colorado are the departing memories as the Sox fly back to Boston to face the first place Yankees. At home. Where they have struggled mightily.

Cam Schlittler once again takes on the Red Sox. In April, Schlittler went 8 innings and allowed 2 runs (1 earned). In June the Sox got him out of the game in 5.2 innings but he still only allowed 1 earned run. Last time out he struck out 13. Vaunted “draft guy” Chaim Bloom selected Caleb Bolden with the pick right before the Yankees in the seventh round of the 2022 draft. Bolden currently has s 4.50 ERA for the Portland SeaDogs. He is not in their top 60 prospects according to SoxProspects. He wasn’t that great in college so that’s more on Bloom than on the pitching development program. Connelly Early bounced back from his worst start of the season to hold the Mariners to 1 run in 6.0 innings. In April he allowed 3 runs in 5.1 to the Yankees.

Will Warren hasn’t been bad but hasn’t been great either. This is probably the Sox best chance to prevent a four-game sweep if we want to consider that possibility. He has six starts of fewer than 5.0 innings on the season including two of the last three. He hasn’t faced the Red Sox this season but last year allowed 15 runs in 14.1 innings against Boston. Payton Tolle had a low-strikeout (2) 6.0 inning start where he allowed 3 runs to the Mariners but the Sox only scored one time. He faced NY in his first start of the season when he struck out 11 over 6.0 innings only to have Danny Columbe and Greg Weissert lose the game.

Gerritt Cole is back after missing a season. Will Garrett Crochet return to face him someday? Who can say. Sadly, Cole looks healthy and possibly good. Though the Tigers hit him for 5 runs in 4.1 last time out. He returned in May in two 6.0 inning shutouts. Jake Bennett was the hard luck loser (he didn’t get an L but was denied a W) in the Aroldis Chapman Collapse game. Six shutout innings and 9Ks while not issuing a single walk? More of that, please. A steal by Craig Breslow here.

Not to be confused with Rodan, a foe of Godzilla, Rodón has recovered from his 6 ERA introduction to the Yankees. He missed the start of the season and hasn’t faced the Red Sox thus year. He hasn’t gone more than 6.0 innings and has allowed 3 runs exactly in five of his eight starts. Sonny Gray is coming off a dominant start against the Colorado Rockies going 7.0 innings, allowing 1 run, and striking out 11. Boston won his game in Yankee Stadium on June 5th where he allowd 3 runs in 6.1 innings. The Sox won 7-1 but are missing Ryan Weathers this time around.

Aaron Judge is still out but it hasn’t slowed them down, sadly.

Spencer Jones has come up and hit .220/.324/.356 with 2 home runs and 29 strikeouts in 23 games. Totally irrelevant but Nick Sogard and Spencer Jones are each worth 0.2 bWAR this year and Sogard needed only 12 games.

Cody Bellinger is the most valuable bat by WAR for New York at 3.8. He’s slashing .271/.370/.464 with 11 homers and 10 steals.

In the last 14 days Ben Rice is at just .220/.304/.460 for a .764 OPS. Maybe they catch him in a slump and the lineup becomes a bit less scary. The Red Sox took pitcher Chris Troye (7.20 ERA in Portland this season) in the same round that the Yankees took Rice. Prospects are random. Tanking won’t improve the team any time soon. Better luck will.

Probable Pitching Matchups

Thursday, June 25: Cam Schlittler (1.71 ERA / 2.13 FIP) vs. Connelly Early (3.64 ERA / 4.87 FIP

Friday, June 26: Will Warren (3.45 ERA / 3.36 FIP) vs. Payton Tolle (3.08 ERA / 3.32 FIP)

Saturday, June 27: Garritt Cole (3.62 ERA / 4.25 FIP) vs. Jake Bennett (3.71 ERA / 2.62 FIP)

Sunday, June 28: Carlos Rodón(3.70 ERA / 3.49 FIP) vs. Sonny Gray (2.95 ERA / 3.81 FIP)

When/Where to Watch

Thursday, June 25: 7:10 PM ET on NESN

Friday, June 26: 7:10 PM ET on NESN

Saturday, June 27: 1:10 PM ET on ABC/ESPN

Sunday, June 28: 7:20 PM ET on NBC/Peacock

Mets place Marcus Semien on IL, recall Daniel Duarte and Ronny Mauricio

May 10, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; New York Mets infielder Marcus Semien against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

In what seems almost comically timed after an all-time terrible performance on his souvenir jersey night, Marcus Semien hit the Injured List with a left hip flexor strain. In his place, the Mets are calling up Ronny Mauricio, who was just activated yesterday after a stint on the IL with a thumb injury.

To replace the now traded David Peterson on the active roster, Daniel Duarte is joining the club. And in one final move (for now), Jonathan Pintaro was returned to Syracuse after acting as the 27th man during yesterday’s painful doubleheader.

Duarte has thrown five scoreless innings so far for the Mets this year, striking out three and allowing one hit and one walk.

Semien had a truly terrible night in the field in Game 2 of the doubleheader, misplaying a number of balls beyond just the two errors he was charged with; for a player known for his defense, this was an especially embarrassing performance.

Mauricio will likely get many of the second base reps until Semien’s return, while the also newly reinstated Francisco Lindor holds down shortstop, allowing Bo Bichette to play third base. Brett Baty will likely play some second base in Semien’s stead as well.

Warriors sign intriguing Gonzaga prospect to Exhibit 10 contract

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - DECEMBER 13: Graham Ike #15 of the Gonzaga Bulldogs reacts during the first half against the UCLA Bruins at Climate Pledge Arena on December 13, 2025 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Golden State Warriors have signed Gonzaga undrafted free agent forward Graham Ike to an Exhibit 10 contract, per the Gonzaga’s men’s basketball team. Ike was actually ranked higher in Sam Vecenie’s draft rankings for The Athletic than Warriors second-round pick Lajae Jones (70 vs. 99). Exhibit 10 deals are non-guaranteed but include small bonuses (less than $100,000) designed to incentive players to join a team’s G-League affiliate when they likely do not make the team. Exhibit 10 contracts primarily function to help NBA teams fill out their rosters, which expand to 21 in the offseason for summer league and the preseason. Each team is allowed up to six Exhibit 10 contracts. They may be converted to a two-way deal prior to the start of the regular season as well.

Ike was one of the most productive players in college basketball last season, averaging 19.9 points (leading the West Coast Conference), 8.0 rebounds, and 2.4 assists per game on 56.3%/33.8%/79.7% shooting in 31.2 minutes per game (31 games). Ike was the best player on a Gonzaga team that finished the season ranked 18th in the country with a 31-4 record and a West Coast Conference championship. Ike was named an AP and NABC third-team All-American.

Ike began his collegiate career back in the 2020-21 season at Wyoming. A knee injury had hampered his recruitment and kept him sidelined early in the year, but he was immediately a quality rotation player across 11 games once he was able to play. As a sophomore, he led Wyoming in scoring (19.5 points per game) and rebounding (9.6 rebounds per game).

A leg injury led Ike to take an injury redshirt for the entire 2022-23 season and enter the transfer portal, were he landed at Gonzaga. He immediately slotted into the Bulldogs starting lineup, where he remained for the next three seasons. Over his college career, Ike averaged 17.6 points and 7.8 rebounds in 26.8 minutes per game on 56.8%/34.8%/76.5% shooting.

The biggest question facing Ike is how his game will translate to the NBA, where scouts worry he may be a tweener wing/big caught in no man’s land (think Eric Paschall), lacking the creation ability to score against stronger & more athletic NBA defenders without the refined post game to handle responsibilities as a five. As Vecenie wrote in his draft guide about Ike, “Massive, long post player who needs to change play style for NBA.”

With that said, there’s a lot to like about Ike’s potential fit with the Warriors, who currently have an open two-way spot next to Malevy Leons and LJ Cryer. Ike will be 24 in August and has an impressive frame. At the combine he measured 6’9.75” barefoot with a wingspan north of 7’5” at around 250 lbs. In fact, his combine measurements closest comp, according to DraftExpress is Steven Adams.

Ike’s path to an NBA career will be much easier if he is a viable three-point shooter at the next level. His free-throw efficiency (79.6% on 451 attempts at Gonzaga) demonstrates he has some touch on his shot, but he never attempted a three per game before this past season (when he shot 33.8% on 71 attempts).

With the Warriors re-signing Al Horford, likely re-signing Kristaps Porzingis, they will need young depth at center next season. With a guard and wing already filling two-way contracts, Ike could be the early favorite to take the third and final spot if second-round pick Lajae Jones is going to be an immediate member of the Warriors roster.

Who’s Hot, Who’s Cold: Blue Jays Batters

Jun 19, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Toronto Blue Jays third baseman Kazuma Okamoto (7) throws to first base to attempt to force out Chicago Cubs infielder Dansby Swanson (not pictured) during the fifth inning at Wrigley Field. Mandatory Credit: Patrick Gorski-Imagn Images | Patrick Gorski-Imagn Images

Over the past two weeks the Jays are 6-5. The offense has scored 4.3 runs per game, a little better than the 4.1 they’ve averaged this year.

Hot

Andrés Giménez: Started 10 of 11. Hit .313/.343/.500 with 1 home runs, 3 doubles, with 3 RBI, 0 walk and 7 strikeouts.

His RISP numbers are continuing to drop .667 OPS now on the season, four weeks ago it was .973 and we were told how great he was with RISP. Now he’s hitting about the same with RISP or not. Still excellent defense. FanGraphs has him +8 outs above average, which is 8th in the MLB. Now if he could hit like he has the last two weeks and play that defense, we’d really have something.

Kazuma Okamoto: Started 11 of the 11 games. Hit .289/.400/.684 with 3 double, 4 home runs, 11 RBI, 6 walks, and 12 strikeouts.

He’s been amazing. And his defense looks fine. Fangraphs has him at a -1 outs above average. I think it will come up some. The play last night was terrible. Apparently he expect the throw to come from the catchers, not from the pitcher. I don’t know if it was a language thing or just a misunderstanding. I hate pickoff plays at second or third. I don’t understand the point. Pickoffs at first have enough errors to make any value you get out of it a wash, but I’m sure that at second and third, it is a negative value to the defense.

Davis Schneider: Played in 9 games, starting 7. Hit .250/.280/.583 with 2 home runs, 2 doubles, 3 RBI, 1 walk and 5 strikeouts.

Maybe the time in Buffalo did do him well. Not many walked in the last two weeks but 4 extra base hits. And the team likes his defense in the outfield more than Sanchez’s. I’m not sure, FanGraphs has him at a -2 outs above average in the outfield (limited inning), Sanchez at a -6, in three times the innings. I guess they have a point, but it is close. Neither will be getting a Gold Glove anytime soon. But I wouldn’t be against giving Davis more playing time against RHP.

Daulton Varsho: Started 4 games. Hit .389/.421/.833, with 2 doubles, 2 home runs, 5 RBI, 1 walks, 5 strikeouts and 2 steals.

Just four games, but they have been four very good games.

George Springer: Started all 11 games,. Hit .302/.404/.535 with 1 double, 3 home runs, 7 RBI, 7 walks and 9 strikeouts, with 3 steals and 0 caught.

Nice to see him hitting. The problem, when you have started the season poorly, no one notices when you start hitting. They talk about having him play outfield, but I don’t really think that’s a great idea. Of course, we have several guys who should DH.

Nathan Lukes: He’s played in all 12 games, starting 10. Hit .270/.289/.486 with 2 doubles, 2 homers, 3 RBI, 3 walk and 8 strikeouts.

Not very hot, but hitting well. Good bat, good defense, not all that much to complain about. He isn’t hitting lefties at all, but that’s very limited at bats.

Yohendrick Pinango: Played in 6 games, starting 4. Hit .143/.294/.286 with 2 double, 0 RBI, 3 walks and 4 strikeouts.

And now he’s in Buffalo. He’ll be back.

Cold

Ernie Clement: Played in 9 games, starting 7. Hit .188/.212/.219 with 1 double, 1 RBI, 1 walks and 4 strikeouts. And a caught stealing.

Started 6 games at second, 1 at short and played short in a couple of other games. He’s been dealing with a hip injury of some sort, which would make it tough to hit. Hopefully it will improve soon.

Brandon Valenzuela: Started 4 games. Hit .250/.333/.313 with 1 double, 1 RBI, 2 walks, and 7 strikeouts.

He threw out 1 of 2 base stealers. Cold is a little unfair, but his .646 OPS isn’t great, in very few at bats.

Vladimir Guerrero: Started 9 of 11. Hit .243/.256/.351 with 1 double, 1 home run, 6 RBI, 1 walk, and 4 strikeouts. And 1 steal.

He’s looked worse in the last couple of weeks, not even talking walks, which he’s always been able to do. He had one hard hit ball, yesterday 100.3 mph line out the opposite way that Baseball Savant had as a .700 expected BA, but that was his only hard hit ball on the day. And nothing hit hard the day before either.

Jesús Sánchez: Started 7 games. Hit .130/.259/.174 with 1 doubles, 0 RBI, 3 walks and 9 strikeouts.

He’s had a bad couple of weeks in all ways. Seems to have lost his starting job in the outfield, because his fielding is so bad. He should DH. The two weeks before these two, he hit great. I wonder if the defensive issues are following him to the plate. He hasn’t always been this bad defensively. We were told that they are working with him.

Myles Straw: Played in 10 games, 5 starts. Hit .158/.227/.211 with 1 double, 1 RBI, 2 walks and 3 strikeouts..

One of a number of guys not hitting well.

Alejandro Kirk: Played in 8 games, starting 7. Hit .222/.267/.259 with 1 double, 4 RBI, 2 walks and 6 strikeouts.

14 steals against, no caught steal. He hasn’t been great since coming back.

Yohendrick Pinango: Played in 6 games, starting 4. Hit .143/.294/.286 with 2 double, 0 RBI, 3 walks and 4 strikeouts.

And now he’s in Buffalo. He’ll be back.

IL

Anthony Santander: Might get into a game before the end of the season. Who knows..

Addison Barger: He is to meet with ‘Blue Jays staff’ because ‘some soreness has crept in. Hopefully it is nothing. If they decide he’s ok, he’ll start a rehab assignment.

How LaMelo Ball trade reshapes Timberwolves roster for Anthony Edwards

The Minnesota Timberwolves have been bold NBA contenders since drafting Anthony Edwards.

They stunned the league four years ago by trading a 2022 first-round pick (Walker Kessler) and four future first-round draft picks to acquire center Rudy Gobert. They shocked even their own locker room two years later by trading Karl-Anthony Towns to the New York Knicks in a three-team deal that brought back Julius Randle and Donte DiVincenzo. They were at it again in the days surrounding the 2026 NBA Draft, jettisoning Randle and their 2026 first-round pick in a move that helped open the door for the biggest splash of all.

The Timberwolves have acquired LaMelo Ball in a trade with the Charlotte Hornets, creating a backcourt tandem with Anthony Edwards that will combine Minnesota's pre-existing MVP candidate with a freewheeling, but undeniably talented point guard capable of highlight-reel plays at any moment.

The move resets the Timberwolves' supporting cast around Edwards after the team fell short of the Western Conference finals for the first time in three years this past season. But it's also perhaps the biggest risk yet for this Minnesota front office considering the franchise is in the midst of its best run of seasons ever.

Here's a closer look at what the Timberwolves roster will look like after the LaMelo Ball trade and the 2026 NBA Draft, as well as how Ball fits with Edwards and the players still on Minnesota's roster:

LaMelo Ball trade details: What Timberwolves, Hornets got

Minnesota Timberwolves receive:

  • LaMelo Ball
  • Josh Green

Charlotte Hornets receive:

  • Naz Reid
  • Unprotected 2033 first-round pick
  • First-round pick swaps in 2028, 2029 and 2030
  • Second-round picks in 2029, 2032 and 2033

How LaMelo Ball fits with Anthony Edwards, Timberwolves

The Timberwolves have been in search of an upgrade at point guard and a better sidekick for Edwards since he elevated into one of the NBA's best players. Ball, in theory, could fill those gaps and work interchangeably with Edwards.

Ball can be the playmaker Edwards hasn't had to relieve defensive pressure in high-leverage halfcourt situations. Edwards' strengths as a passer and on-ball defender (and the presence of Gobert) will, in turn, give Ball more open 3-point shots and allow Minnesota to hide Ball on defense.

There are, of course, injury and maturity concerns involving Ball. He played in more than 70 games for the first time since 2021-22 season last year with the Hornets. Perhaps not coincidentally, 2021-22 and 2025-26 are the only seasons in which Charlotte finished with an above .500 record with Ball.

He's also been fined multiple times by the NBA for his conduct, most recently for tripping Bam Adebayo in Charlotte's play-in tournament elimination game against the Miami Heat. There's a reason the Hornets are moving on around other players. Ball's talent is undeniable, but so are his bad habits and mental lapses.

But Ball also had 30 points and 10 assists in Charlotte's 127-126 play-in victory, including the game-winning layup in overtime. If Minnesota can rein in Ball's shot selection and decision-making, he and Edwards are capable of becoming the best backcourt in the league. Maybe Ball is inclined to be more disciplined more often on an established contender.

This could also completely backfire, though, for a couple reasons. For one, the Timberwolves are sacrificing some depth to make these offseason moves work under the NBA salary cap. There's also the pressure and ego that must be sorted through when two young players who've likely never shared the same backcourt with someone this good before come together for the first time.

What the Timberwolves roster looks like now

The trade to acquire Ball, in addition to the trade that sent Julius Randle from Minnesota to the Brooklyn Nets that preceded this move, has restructured the pecking order of the Timberwolves' roster below Edwards.

Jaden McDaniels and Ayo Dosunmu will join Edwards, Ball and Gobert as the featured players on the team. The Timberwolves agreed to a five-year, $112-million contract with Dosunmu following the Randle trade. The team acquired Dosunmu from the Chicago Bulls at last February's trade deadline.

Here's a breakdown of the Timberwolves roster after the LaMelo Ball trade

  • G LaMelo Ball
  • G Anthony Edwards
  • G Donte DiVincenzo
  • G Isaiah Evans**
  • G Bones Hyland*
  • G Mike Conley*
  • G Jaylen Clark*
  • G/F Ayo Dosunmu
  • G/F Terrance Shannon Jr.
  • F Jaden McDaniels
  • F Trey Kaufman-Renn**
  • F Joe Ingles*
  • F Kyle Anderson*
  • F Julian Phillips^
  • F/C Joan Beringer
  • C Rudy Gobert
  • G Zyon Pullin*^
  • F Enrique Freeman*^
  • C Rocco Zikarsky*^

*pending free agent; ^team option for 2026-27 season; *^two-way contract; **2026 NBA Draft pick

LaMelo Ball contract details

Ball has three years and more than $130 million remaining on the five-year, $203.9 max rookie extension he signed with the Hornets in 2023. He is also eligible to sign a two-year extension with the Timberwolves worth an additional $119 million beginning next month.

LaMelo Ball stats

Ball averaged 20.1 points, 7.1 assists and 4.8 rebounds per game, while shooting 36.8% from 3-point range and 40.7% from the floor during the 2025-26 season.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Timberwolves roster after trade for LaMelo Ball and Josh Green

Jets Risk Losing Former First Round Pick As Finnish Defenseman Qualifies As Group-6 UFA

The Winnipeg Jets may be about to lose one of their own without receiving anything in return with Ville Heinola, the Finnish defenseman selected by Winnipeg in the first round of the 2019 NHL Draft, is entering the offseason as a Group-6 unrestricted free agent. 

This means he is free to sign with any team in the league when the market opens next Wednesday. For an organization that has watched Heinola develop patiently over seven professional seasons, the prospect of losing him without compensation is a situation the front office will be eager to avoid.

Group-6 free agency is among the lesser known classifications in the NHL's collective bargaining agreement, but Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman broke down all six groups on his 32 podcast this week for those unfamiliar with how Heinola arrived at this crossroads. 

The six groups cover players finishing entry-level contracts, traditional restricted free agents like Jason Robertson and Connor Bedard, the widely understood unrestricted free agents, players who have competed overseas and were never drafted or signed in North America like Ottawa Senators defenseman Artem Zub, a fifth category involving players with ten or more professional seasons or those meeting a specific salary threshold, which Sportsnet's Kyle Bukauskas noted is quite rare, and finally the sixth group, which is where Heinola lands.

 A Group-6 unrestricted free agent is defined as a player who is 25 years of age or older as of June 30th of the expiring contract year, has played fewer than 80 career NHL games, and has completed three or more professional seasons.

The 25-year-old appeared in just five games with the Jets this past season, recording no points at the NHL level, while spending the bulk of his year with the Manitoba Moose in the AHL, where he posted three goals and 18 assists for 21 points in 44 games. Those numbers add to an already impressive AHL resume. 

Over seven seasons with the Moose, Heinola has accumulated 124 points in 198 games, establishing himself as one of the more productive defensemen in franchise history at that level. At the NHL level, the production has been harder to come by with 12 points in 58 career games across six seasons, largely due to limited opportunity rather than a lack of ability.

That lack of opportunity may ultimately be what drives Heinola out of Winnipeg. As a Group-6 unrestricted free agent, he holds all the leverage and will have no shortage of suitors among teams willing to give him the consistent top-league deployment that has eluded him in Manitoba. For a player of his caliber and age, the desire to find a situation where he can finally stick in an NHL lineup full time is entirely understandable.

The Jets did bring Heinola up towards the end of this past season, a move that could be read as a final audition or a genuine attempt to reintegrate him into the big league club ahead of a potential re-signing. Whether that late-season callup translates into a new deal remains to be seen, but Winnipeg will need to move quickly. The clock runs out on Wednesday, and if the Jets cannot offer Heinola what he is looking for in terms of both contract and opportunity, another organization almost certainly will.

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Thursday Posted & Toasted Notes: LaMelo goes West, Obama and Leon speak, draft bonanza

Sam, an American bald eagle from the Cincinnati Zoo, takes flight before the first inning during a baseball game between the New York Yankees and the Cincinnati Reds, Friday, May 19, 2023, at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati.

I wasn’t planning on starting the column discussing a Minnesota Timberwolves trade, let alone one involving LaMelo Ball, but here we are. YIK broke the news (at least to me) in the comments section, so kudos to him for staying on top of it. Better salute one of us than Shams, you know what I’m saying? Spoiler: the Wolves package is ludicrous.

Anyway, Kento Kato covered the news while I was working on this, and he has a delicious summary of the trade impact in the NBA as well as the Knicks going forward. If you ask me, I’m cool with removing a threat from the East (the Hornets were looking good at the start of last season and LaMelo was a big part of that) and sending him to the West so it’s now a four-team war for the rights to Western Conference finals, not to mention the actual Finals.

  • This just in: ESPN’s Brian Windhorst says it’s 51/49 for Mitchell Robinson to return to New York. We have you covered. Check out the latest here.
  • Now starting for good, with the man who helped build the title Knicks, Brock Aller… welcome to another Knicks draft! Four trades, a bunch of second-round picks, extra cap flexibility, cash, and somehow the rights to Melvin Ajinca again. The man treats draft night like it’s 2KGM with God Mode turned on.
  • Before we move forward, keep Melvin Ajinca’s name in mind. You’ll need it for an extraordinary feature I have dropping later today.
  • International Knicks superstar Jack Kayil doesn’t sound interested in becoming another overseas stash. Quotables in the Bulletin.

“My plan is to stay here and get into the organization and keep growing with them.”

  • Freshest Knicks superstar Tyler Nickel, meanwhile, claimed to be “delusional” last January. And I love it.
  • If you somehow haven’t listened to Leon Rose’s appearance on the Roommates Show yet, make some time for it today. This felt like Christmas in June, and Rose touched a whole lot of topics from Jalen and Mikal trades, the firing of Thibs and why he chose Brown, how the Knicks FO operates, and plenty of other saucy stuff. Check it out asap.
  • Newsday’s Steve Popper wrote an interesting piece on the Knicks’ second-apron situation, and one question is at the front of Popper’s mind: Why did James Dolan publicly reveal the team’s financial intentions before free agency even began? Here’s a bit of what he wrote, but check out the full post.

“The first question is why would (Dolan) go public about this when the Knicks have masked their intentions so well for years? If the Knicks intend to stick to this plan then it basically sets the price for the Knicks free agents, meaning if a team intends on making an offer for Robinson, they would know just how far the Knicks could go to remain under the second apron. But the deeper question is why are the Knicks so determined to remain under the second apron?

  • Stefan Bondy wrote a similar column for the NY Post and echoed the same thoughts Popper floated after speaking with league sources. According to Bondy, plenty of people around the NBA believe ownership will ultimately be convinced to spend because the championship window is simply too valuable to just break the core over a few million dollars. We all agree, don’t we?
  • The Lakers and the Kings keep being mentioned as the main suitors for Mitchell Robinson if he hits free agency, and the Knicks indeed refuse to get into the second apron. Current Kings and former Knicks GM Scott Perry might have something to do with Sacto’s links. We have plenty of great thoughts and discussions going on in the comments section here. Go chime in!
  • I am no capologist, so I won’t be judging Spike Lee’s Joint idea to bring back all three of Mitch, Shamet, and Jose. Thoughts?

“I think there is one way to re-sign all three of Robinson, Shamet and Jose with some but not a lot of discount. Jose opts in at $4.5 million. He will then be extended at a reasonable price. Shamet re-signs starting at just under $6 million. This is probably around his market value, maybe a small discount.

“Here’s the doozey: Mitch re-signs to a five-year, $50 million deal. With 8% raises, this allows you start his contract at $8.5 million. If you assume his market is somewhere around two years, $30 million, then it essentially matches that and then gives 3 years and $20 million starting in his age 30/31 season. I’m not sure it’s a wise decision—he’d be getting paid $11.5 million in year 5 as a 32/33 year old Mitch… but it might be the best combination of staying under the apron and keeping this team together.

This scenario, plus trading Pacome and signing the second-round picks (Nickel and Kayil) to two-year rookie minimum deals would get you in a hair under the second apron with 14 players. Plus, the Pacome TPE would mean you would be able to trade for a Vet minimum at the deadline

  • New York Magazine dropped an outstanding Jalen Brunson feature on Wednesday. It’s packed with little stories about JB and a bunch of fresh post-championship quotes, which honestly makes it all a thousand times better. Funny nugget: Brunson talks about sleeping through Lionel Messi’s World Cup hat trick and being mad about it. Check it out to know all about that and a whole lot more.
  • Speaking of Rick Brunson, the old man keeps messing around with his son. Across multiple interviews this week, RB again said that 1) Patrick Ewing remains the greatest Knick ever, 2) Jalen still has years to go before entering that conversation, and 3) Prime Derrick Rose would vaporize his own son in a one-on-one game. If you’re too young to know, please don’t skip D-Rose’s MVP mixtape.
  • Barack Obama appeared on All The Smoke (how far we’ve gone folks…) and spent plenty of time praising the champs, from OG to Brunson.

“I’m trying to think of a better series from somebody who’s never been an All-Star, and it’s hard to think of one, right? Through the whole playoffs, he was just a rock.”

  • Windhorst nearly lost it discussing a hypothetical scenario about a Lakers-Cavaliers trade that would flip LeBron James for Jarrett Allen in a sign-and-trade. The Lakers would “kill” for Allen and that deal, he believes. I do, too.
  • Boston continues having an incredibly normal week. Jaylen Brown called ESPN “unethical,” singled out Stephen A. Smith by name, and defended his previous comments about last season.
  • Sports Illustrated’s Chris Mannix, meanwhile, doubled down on his information regarding Brown’s future in Boston, which isn’t nearly as settled as Brad Stevens publicly suggested after the Giannis trade left the C’s and Brown in the cold. Sister site CelticsBlog is already publishing mock trades. Here’s one of them:

A potential pick: Boston gets Kawhi Leonard and the Pacers 2029 first round pick, unprotected. Los Angeles gets Jaylen Brown.”

  • Jeremy Schneider of NJ.com was joined by Jerry Carino to discuss KAT’s path from middle school to hosting the Larry O’Brien trophy, his evolution as a player, his most personal side, and what makes him an all-time all-New Jersey basketball hooper.

That’s probably enough internet for one day. The draft is in the rearview mirror, and free agency is almost here, with the first item on the to-do list being Jose Alvarado’s player-option decision.

Never a dull offseason around these parts, whether we’re champs or chumps.