2026 NBA Draft trade proposals: Will Clippers or Warriors trade down, can Thunder trade up?

The draft starts at No. 5.

That's maybe the most heard piece of analysis around the 2026 NBA Draft. The top four teams (Washington, Utah, Memphis, Chicago) are not trading down or out of those spots, and they are going to select the top four players (AJ Dybantsa, Darryn Peterson, Cam Boozer, Caleb Wilson) in whatever order.

From there, anything could happen — and that includes trades, too. There will be plenty on draft night. Let's break down some of the trade rumors already and ones we might see during the first round of the NBA Draft.

Will Clippers trade No. 5 pick?

While there was a lot of talk about this early, it likely isn't happening, according to the latest reports. The Clippers did explore the market for trading their pick, league sources told NBC Sports, and they should as a team at a crossroads — retool and continue to try to win now around Kawhi Leonard and Darius Garland, or start to rebuild to whatever is next. That uncertainty fueled speculation that Lawrence Frank and the front office might trade the No. 5 pick in favor of a win-now player.

Instead, the Clippers are now operating like a team that is going to keep the pick, reports Jake Fischer of The Stein Line. What would it take to get the Clippers to change their mind about that? Multiple first-round picks — especially in outlying years, picks the league can't take away in any punishment tied to the Aspiration scandal (we're all still waiting to see how that plays out) — and young players. Oklahoma City has the assets, but isn't likely to send them to Los Angeles.

The strongest buzz in league circles is that the Clippers will use that pick on Keaton Wagler out of Illinois, or maybe Mikel Brown Jr. out of Louisville. However, when the Clippers have made big moves in recent years — including trading away Ivica Zubac this season — they have come out of the blue. This is not a leaky organization, and with that anything could happen.

Oklahoma City wants to trade up

Just what the rest of the league wants to see, the Thunder with another elite young player.

That's likely going to happen one way or another. Oklahoma City controls the No. 12 (via the LA Clippers) and the No. 17 (via Philly) picks in this draft, and the Thunder are looking to package those picks, possibly with something else (a future pick or player on a minimum deal such as Thomas Sorber), to move up in this draft, according to multiple reports (most recently ESPN’s Marc Spears). Maybe to the Bucks' pick at No. 10, or even Atlanta at No. 8 can be in play — OKC has the depth of assets to make that happen if they want to.

The Thunder have been linked to three Michigan players: Morez Johnson Jr., Yaxel Lendeborg, and center Aday Mara. While at least one of them is very likely on the board at No. 12. However, if the Thunder have eyes on one of them in particular — specifically Johnson — they very likely will need to trade up to get him.
While there very much is a "don't help out the Thunder" sentiment around the league (Darryl Morey apparently didn't get the memo), teams have to do what is in their own best interest, and if the Thunder makes a good enough offer, they will be able to get their man. And get even deeper and better.

Also, league sources have told NBC Sports that if the Thunder keep the No. 12 pick and use it, look for them to trade out of the No. 17 pick.

Does Miami trade No. 13 pick for Giannis?

To say it's the worst-kept secret in the NBA suggests it's still a secret. It's not. Miami is trying to send the No. 13 pick to Milwaukee as part of a trade for Giannis Antetokounmpo (one that will include three or four teams if it all comes together).

Milwaukee has been acting for a month like a team that will have multiple lottery picks in this draft. (There was speculation they would try to package those picks to move up, but none of the top four teams are selling.) The only question now is if the trade happens. If it does, Milwaukee will pick tenth and thirteenth in the first round.

Warriors might trade down

While the Thunder are looking to trade up, the Warriors might be open to trading down out of the No. 11 pick, reports Brett Siegel at ClutchPoints. He also said the Warriors would love to add a second first-round pick later in the teens.

If the Warriors keep the No. 11 pick, they have been heavily linked to Arizona guard Brayden Burries, except there is little chance he is still on the board at that point. After that, they also like the Michigan trio of Lendeborg, Mara and Johnson.

If the Warriors use their pick, this remains a win-now team in the Stephen Curry era and they will want a player who can contribute now, not a project.

Chicago looking to trade up

It's not just the Thunder looking to move up; the Chicago Bulls — with the No. 15 pick plus two early second-rounders (36 and 38) — are looking to move up, specifically to get Michigan's Mara, reports Siegel of ClutchPoints.
There's logic to that. The Bulls traded Nikola Vucevic midseason to Boston and Zach Collins was on an expiring deal, the Bulls need their center of the future and Mara would be a great fit with Josh Giddey. The question becomes, do they have enough to offer a team like the Bucks or Warriors to move up in the draft? It's something to watch.

Boston, Denver, Minnesota want to trade up

Denver, Boston and Minnesota are set to pick at the end of the first round — picks No. 26, 27 and 28, respectively — as happens to good teams with good records.

However, all three are looking for ways to move up in the first round, reports Jake Fischer at The Stein Line. To do that would require attaching a player or a future draft pick of real value — teams are not eager to trade into the back end of the first round — but these picks could be part of a larger deal. Boston, for example, is listening to calls about Derrick White (even if it's unlikely they move him).

Denver is looking to add youth and athleticism to its young core (which is why they likely re-sign Peyton Watson), and moving up in the draft could help with that. Boston also is looking to add depth to a roster it expects will contend for the East crown and a title next season. A good draft pick helps both those teams, but can they afford to move up to make it happen?

Fischer adds if Minnesota keeps the pick (a swap with Detroit, which has Minnesota's No. 21 pick) general manager Tim Connelly may take Spanish guard Sergio de Larrea.

JJ Redick Has Done A Brilliant Job With L.A., But Things Could Get Rocky Soon

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - MAY 11: Head coach JJ Redick of the Los Angeles Lakers reacts against the Oklahoma City Thunder in Game Four of the Second Round of the NBA Western Conference Playoffs at Crypto.com Arena on May 11, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Luke Hales/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Remember when the Los Angeles Lakers hired former Duke star JJ Redick? There were a lot of people who predicted failure, that he had no experience, that they should have gone after a more established coach, say, Sam Cassell, or Kenny Atkinson, or UConn’s Dan Hurley, for whom they were ready to open the vault.

In the end, despite the controversy, they hired Redick, and he’s panned out pretty well.

In his first season, Redick won 50 games, and this past season, he won 53. In both seasons, the Lakers finished first in the Pacific Division.

His career record now stands at 164-103.

That’s all very impressive, but even more so when you consider that this team is in a long and slow transition. LeBron James is still an amazingly effective player at 41, and he works hard to maintain his presence, but he’s not the player he was a few years ago. He doesn’t work as hard on defense as he used to, and he’s not feared in the way he once was.

Ideally, this should be Luka Doncic’s team now, but Doncic has historically been poorly conditioned, and there are those who believe that, at 27, he may have already peaked.

When you get past those two, 29-year-old Austin Reaves is getting 34.5 minutes per game, then it’s Marcus Smart, who is 32, with 28.5 mpg. Rui Hachimura pulled 28.3, De’Andre Ayton is pulling 27.2, from former Demon Deacon Jake LaRavia handled 25.2 and former Blue Devil Luke Kennard, got 32.6 minutes.

Redick has done a tremendous job with a team handling what could be a difficult transition, and an uncertain future for both stars (James for age and Doncic, essentially for durability).

In one sense, the best thing for L.A. would be if James finished his career elsewhere. He’s making $52.6 million, while Doncic is getting $54.1. Additionally, Reaves will be a free agent, and while the Lakers would like to keep him, it will be difficult to keep three guys who all want big money. Who do you let go?

We’d argue for the guy who will be 42 next year. James has had a great career, but he’s going to be a free agent as well, and at this point in his career, the math is inexorable. They simply can’t pay him what they have. We could imagine him going to Dallas for a year to mentor Cooper Flagg, or perhaps the San Antonio Spurs for similar reasons, but to stay with L.A., he’d likely have to take a big pay cut.

The Lakers won’t pick in next week’s NBA Draft until the 25th pick, which could mean a shooter like Duke’s Isaiah Evans, or a risky pick like Jayden Quaintance or Koa Peat.

If James left, they would have a good bit of money to pursue free agents, like possibly Detroit’s Jalen Duren or former Blue Devil Gary Trent.

L.A. has always been a magnet for great players, and they could pull that off again via free agency. It’s just a question of the fit.

In other words, while Redick has done a tremendous job with the players he’s had, improvement for L.A. is going to be more on GM Rob Pelinka, who, to be kind, has a reputation for not being entirely straightforward.

It’s possible he could find some talent that slips through the draft, which could happen to former Blue Devil Maliq Brown, but L.A. has just one draft pick and not that many assets they could get a good return on. And given Pelinka’s reputation, that is even more complicated.

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NBA mock draft 2026: Big changes to lottery on the brink of first-round

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 22: Brayden Burries #5 of the Arizona Wildcats reacts against the Utah State Aggies during the second round of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament held at Viejas Arena at San Diego State University on March 22, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Jamie Schwaberow/NCAA Photos via Getty Images) | NCAA Photos via Getty Images

The 2026 NBA Draft will be immortalized for the four standout talents available at the top of the class. A.J. Dybantsa and Darryn Peterson are reportedly battling for the No. 1 overall pick until the very last second. For as good as those two players are, Cameron Boozer is the best player in the class in my view, and it isn’t really that close. Caleb Wilson’s statistical dominance and jaw-dropping athleticism turned this big three into a big four, and he appears to have the mentality required to reach his full potential.

The talent keeps coming after the first four picks, though there seems to be little consensus in the rest of the board. The draft really starts when the Los Angeles Clippers come on the clock with the No. 5 overall pick. The biggest points of curiosity will be in what order a loaded class of lead guards come off the board, and if Michigan can put three players in the lottery after winning the men’s college basketball national championship.

There are big changes from last week’s mock draft throughout the lottery with first-round just around the corner on Tuesday, June 23. Let’s dive into the movement from our previous projection after the table.

PickTeamPlayerPositionSchoolClass
1Washington WizardsAJ DybantsaWingBYUFreshman
2Utah JazzDarryn PetersonGuardKansasFreshman
3Memphis GrizzliesCameron BoozerForwardDukeFreshman
4Chicago BullsCaleb WilsonForwardNorth CarolinaFreshman
5Los Angeles ClippersKeaton WaglerGuardIllinoisFreshman
6Brooklyn NetsDarius Acuff GuardArkansasFreshman
7Sacramento KingsKingston FlemingsGuardHoustonFreshman
8Atlanta HawksMikel Brown Jr.GuardLouisvilleFreshman
9Dallas MavericksBrayden BurriesGuardArizonaFreshman
10Milwaukee BucksNate AmentForwardTennesseeFreshman
11Golden State WarriorsYaxel Lendeborg ForwardMichiganSenior
12Oklahoma City ThunderMorez JohnsonCenter/ForwardMichiganSophomore
13Miami HeatLabaron PhilonGuardAlabamaSophomore
14Charlotte HornetsHannes SteinbachCenter/ForwardWashingtonWashington
15Chicago BullsAday MaraCenterMichiganFreshman
16Memphis Grizzlies (via Magic)Bennett Stirtz GuardIowaSenior
17Oklahoma City Thunder (via 76ers)Karim LopezForwardNZ BreakersBorn 2007
18Charlotte Hornets (via Suns)Dailyn SwainWingTexasJunior
19Toronto RaptorsChristian AndersonTexas TechGuard Sophomore
20San Antonio SpursChris Cenac Jr.BigHoustonFreshman
21Detroit Pistons (via Wolves)Cameron CarrWingBaylorJunior
22Philadelphia 76ersJayden QuaintanceBigKentuckySophomore
23Atlanta Hawks (via Cavs)Ebuka OkorieGuardStanfordFreshman
24New York KnicksAllen GravesForwardSanta ClaraRS Freshman
25Los Angeles LakersJoshua Jefferson ForwardIowa StateSenior
26Denver NuggetsKoa PeatForwardArizonaFreshman
27Boston CelticsSergio De LarreaGuardValenciaBorn 2005
28Minnesota Timberwolves (via Pistons)Isaiah EvansGuardDukeSophomore
29Cleveland Cavaliers (via Spurs)Henri VeesaarBigNorth CarolinaJunior
30Dallas Mavericks (via Thunder)Meleek ThomasGuardArkansasFreshman

Here’s what’s changed since our last mock.

The Wizards go with A.J. Dybantsa over Darryn Peterson

It’s starting to feel like the public won’t know what the Washington Wizards are doing with the No. 1 overall pick until Adam Silver announces it. I had Darryn Peterson going first overall last week, but I’m flipping back to Dybantsa for a couple reasons. It feels like the Wizards would try to leverage Utah to trade up if they really wanted Peterson. There’s still time for that to happen, but there hasn’t been much smoke on a No. 1 for No. 2 trade the last few weeks. Dybantsa also feels like a cleaner fit in Washington’s projected lineup with Trae Young potentially signing a long-term deal this summer, plus last year’s No. 6 overall pick Tre Johnson already installed at the two. Dybantsa also has fewer questions about his mental makeup than Peterson does after a bizarre freshman season at Kansas.

I’d take Cam Boozer with the first pick, and I lean Peterson over Dybantsa on my personal board, but it still feels like A.J. is the slight front-runner to go No. 1.

The Clippers select Keaton Wagler over Mikel Brown Jr.

Brown’s got a little bit of LaMelo Ball in him, and while that’s a compliment coming from me, it also carries some serious risk. The Louisville guard battled a bad back throughout his freshman year at just 19 years old, and his shot selection might make a head coach’s skin crawl early in his career. Brown also just isn’t a very good fit next to Darius Garland, because that backcourt would be too small and too vulnerable defensively. Wagler has a little more height on him after measuring 1.5 inches taller at the combine, and he also feels far less ball dominant than Brown entering the league, two factors that make him a better fit with Garland.

I like Brown a lot as a prospect for his pull-up three-point shooting ability, passing creativity, and dynamism going to the basket. He still feels a little too risky to be a top-5 pick.

The Thunder change their mind on Michigan big men

The Thunder need to try to find a Victor Wembanyama stopper in this draft, but they can go about a few different ways. Last week, I had Michigan center Aday Mara in this spot as a 7’3 center with a 9’9 standing reach who could be one of the few humans alive able to match Wemby’s length. After watching the NBA Finals, though, I’m more convinced that the best type of matchup for the Spurs superstar is a stronger and more athletic big man who wrestle him away from his spots and keep pressure on him by rolling hard to the rim and hitting the glass. Johnson checks those boxes even if he lacks ideal height for the matchup at 6’9 barefoot. I might be wrong, but I have a gut feeling the Thunder are going to prefer Johnson to Mara if both are on the board at No. 12 overall.

In this projection, Mara falls out of the lottery and into the waiting arms of the Chicago Bulls at No. 15 overall. New head coach Tiago Splitter could really use a young big man to help mold, and Mara would be ideal with a special intersection of size, passing, and footwork as he starts his tenure in Chicago.

Labaron Philon and Hannes Steinbach sneak into the lottery

I had Steinbach going No. 17 to Charlotte and Philon going No. 19 to Toronto last week, but that just feels a little low for both players. Steinbach is a pretty clear lottery-level talent in my eyes: his offensive rebounding is the sharpest skill in the draft after Cam Boozer’s processing, and soft hands and coordination on the move are also rare traits for someone with his size. I don’t see Steinbach as a defensive anchor, but he should thrive in the two-big looks that are back to the norm around the league.

Philon goes No. 13 to Miami in this projection, but it’s possible that pick ends up belonging to Milwaukee. The Bucks had Philon in for a workout, and he’d give them an element of shot creation they need after reaching for Nate Ament at No. 10 overall. The Bama also just feels like a lottery talent, so it’s hard to see him falling all the way to Toronto.

Leave your NBA Draft comments and questions below

I’ll respond to any inquiries in the comments. This draft is going to be a blast.

A look at the contract situations of Villanova Wildcats in the NBA

NEW YORK, NY - DECEMBER 7: Mikal Bridges #25, Josh Hart #3, and Jalen Brunson #11 of the New York Knicks look on during the game against the Detroit Pistons on December 7, 2024 at Madison Square Garden in New York City, New York. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2024 NBAE (Photo by Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The news of Collin Gillespie signing a contract extension with the Phoenix Suns adds more to weeks of action in the NBA surrounding Villanova.

The New York Knicks are NBA champions with a trio of former Wildcats on the roster and now, Gillespie adds to the pot of money made from former Villanova greats.

The news broke on Saturday night of Gillespie’s new deal and it made one think, what are the contract situations of former Villanova players currently in the NBA?

Wildcats in the NBA

  • Jalen Brunson: 4 years, $156.5 million with New York Knicks
  • Mikal Bridges: 4 years, $150 million with New York Knicks
  • Josh Hart: 4 years, $81 million with New York Knicks
  • Collin Gillespie: 4 years, $48 million with Phoenix Suns
  • Donte DiVincenzo: 4 years, $46.8 million with Minnesota Timberwolves
  • Saddiq Bey: 3 years, $20 million with New Orleans Pelicans
  • Cam Whitmore: 4 years, $15.6 million rookie deal with Washington Wizards

NOT MENTIONED: Kyle Lowry spent the last two plus years with the Philadelphia 76ers. He was rostered this past season but, while not official, shared his plans to sign a one-day deal to retire as a member of the Toronto Raptors. Lowry spent 20 years in the NBA with the Memphis Grizzlies, Houston Rockets, Toronto Raptors, Miami Heat, and 76ers. According to Spotrac, Lowry earned $281.6 million during his career.

Jalen Brunson left $113 million on the table when he signed his extension in 2024. He wanted to give the Knicks flexiblity to keep the core together in hopes of winning championship. With that goal accomplished, Brunson is set up for a well-earned payday after the 2027-28 season. This extension could be upwards of $400 million over five years.

Brunson’s move allowed the Knicks to sign Mikal Bridges to a new four-year deal after he was acquired from the Brooklyn Nets. Donte DiVincenzo was another signing of the Knicks in free agency and made an impact for the team before being dealt to Minnesota in a deal that landed the Knicks Karl-Anthony Towns. He will enter the final year of his deal in 2026-27 and become a free agent at the end of the year.

Both Saddiq Bey and Cam Whitmore are also in the final years of their contracts. For Whitmore, it is the fourth year of his rookie deal. He was selected 20th overall in 2023. Bey is in the third year of his deal with the Pelicans.

Bey and Whitmore were part of the same trade that involved getting CJ McCollum out of New Orleans. In a three-team deal, Bey was sent to New Orleans from Washington while the Wizards brought in Whitmore.

New Zealand rout England by 253 runs: second men’s Test, day five – as it happened

Matt Henry ripped through England on the final morning to finish with career-best figures of 11 for 109

49th over: England 184-5 (Root 76, Cox 1) Henry sets the agenda with a perfect first delivery on off stump that is defended awkwardly by Root. After Root takes a single later in the over, Jordan Cox gets off the mark from his 15th delivery. Can’t imagine that has happened too often.

Ben Stokes and Gus Atkinson have been withdrawn from the remainder of Durham and Surrey’s ongoing County Championship matches at the request of the England and Wales Cricket Board [ECB].

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Lakers likely to select a big man or wing in first round of NBA draft

Kentucky center Jayden Quaintance, right, tries to secure a rebound against Alabama guard Latrell Wrightsell Jr.
Kentucky center Jayden Quaintance, trying to secure a rebound against Alabama guard Latrell Wrightsell Jr., is likely to be drafted late in the first round Tuesday, possibly by the Lakers, who have the 25th overall selection. (Vasha Hunt / Associated Press)

The Lakers will seek to use their 25th pick in Tuesday’s first round of the NBA draft on a player who fills a need on a roster that could have up to nine free agents this summer. Yet the Lakers also are aware that picking that late in the round could leave them selecting the best player available.

They probably will be in search of a center who can be a lob threat or an athletic wing who can play defense and knock down three-pointers, two positions the Lakers crave as they try to build a team around star Luka Doncic that fits best with his style of play.

Names that NBA executives and mock drafts attached to the Lakers are Kentucky center Jayden Quaintance, Texas forward Dailyn Swain and Duke wing Isaiah Evans.

The Lakers spent time in Spain looking at 20-year-old guard Sergio de Larrea, but many NBA scouts see him going later in the first round or even in the second. According to people not authorized to speak publicly, the Lakers were impressed by their workout with Purdue point guard Braden Smith. But he’s on the smaller side (6 feet) and played four years in college, leading scouts to believe his upside is not that high and that he’ll be drafted in the second round.

The Lakers don’t have a pick in Wednesday’s second round.

After the Lakers were swept by a deep and athletic Oklahoma City team in the second round of the playoffs, president of basketball operations Rob Pelinka outlined what it takes when trying to compete in the uber-tough Western Conference against the likes of the Thunder and the San Antonio Spurs, who became the second-youngest team to reach the NBA Finals.

Read more:Why this loaded NBA draft could hinge on what the Clippers do with the No. 5 pick

Pelinka looked at how Thunder guard Ajay Mitchell was drafted in the second round and how he flourished in just his second season, especially in the playoffs, in which he averaged 15.1 points and 4.3 assists in 11 games.

“Depth is really important, athleticism and youth. We have a lot of components of that on our roster, but we need to add to it,” Pelinka said last month during his exit interview with the media. “I think those are some of the key North Stars that we need to look at.

“One of the players that they had who played really well, Ajay Mitchell, they got in the second round. So there’s ways to add to your roster if you commit to doing the hard work and commit to the process of adding the right pieces. … We’ll be doing that through the draft and free agency and through trades. We’ve gotta find a way to have a roster that will compete with any team in the NBA. That’s what we do here.”

The Lakers do have three tradable first-round picks — 2026, 2031 and 2033 — but the latter two can’t be moved until after the draft.

Lakers star LeBron James is an unrestricted free agent and is looking for a deal from the Lakers, while Austin Reaves is expected to opt out of his $14.8-million deal so he can sign a contract with them for up to five years and about $241 million.

Still, the Lakers have to proceed with the draft to find a player.

Texas forward Dailyn Swain, left, vies for a loose ball against Purdue guard Braden Smith during an NCAA tournament game.
Texas forward Dailyn Swain, left, vies for a loose ball against Purdue guard Braden Smith during an NCAA tournament game in March. (Godofredo A. Vásquez / Associated Press)

Swain (6-7) and Evans (6-6) are the kind of athletic wings the Lakers could use, but both might be chosen before the Lakers make their pick.

The 6-9 Quaintance could slide to the Lakers because of health concerns. He played in only four games last season at Kentucky because the team was being cautious following knee surgery after he tore an anterior cruciate ligament when he played at Arizona State.

Scouts still view him as mobile, athletic and young enough — he turns 19 next month — to develop. But, Quaintance will need to rehab his knee and probably won’t be ready for the upcoming season. When healthy, scouts said, he can be the lob threat and defender that Doncic yearns to have.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Matt Henry ends England’s resistance as New Zealand complete second Test rout

New Zealand made very short work of claiming the five England wickets required to secure victory in the second Test on Sunday.

Matt Henry removed four England batters, including Joe Root for 77, in a ferocious 25-minute spell at the Oval. The hosts began the day on 182-5 but added just 10 runs for the first four wickets lost, slipping to 192-9 as the Black Caps showed no mercy.

Ali Martin’s day five report will follow

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Why this loaded NBA draft could hinge on what the Clippers do with the No. 5 pick

Darius Acuff Jr., left, of Arkansas and Keaton Wagler, right, are shown in side-by-side photos
Keaton Wagler of Illinois, left, and Darius Acuff Jr. of Arkansas are two potential draft prospects the Clippers might select in the first round Tuesday night. (Associated Press photos)

Even during an early start to their offseason, the Clippers got one major win in May.

The Clippers were the quiet winners of the NBA draft lottery, where, with coin-flip odds, they swiped the Indiana Pacers’ first-round pick in a loaded draft class. The No. 5 pick can add an immediate rotation player for the Clippers while also being a potential fulcrum for what experts consider one of the deepest draft classes ever.

The top four prospects are locked. The only question is in what order Brigham Young forward AJ Dybantsa, Kansas guard Darryn Peterson, Duke forward Cameron Boozer and North Carolina forward Caleb Wilson will hear their names called Tuesday night at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center. Washington, which picks first, Utah, Memphis and Chicago have the first shots at those potential franchise-defining players.

The first round then could turn with the Clippers’ pick.

“It puts the Clippers in an interesting spot at five,” ESPN draft analyst Jeremy Woo said on a conference call with reporters. “They’ve got options, including trades.”

After the top tier of primarily wing prospects, four guards are likely to go in the next wave of picks. Louisville’s Mikel Brown Jr. broke former No. 1 overall pick Cooper Flagg’s Atlantic Coast Conference freshman record with 45 points in a game, but did not play in the NCAA tournament because of a back injury after averaging 18.2 points and 4.7 assists for the Cardinals.

Read more:Lakers likely to select a big man or wing in first round of NBA draft

Kingston Flemings (16.1 points, 5.2 assists, 1.8 turnovers) became the first freshman at Houston to earn All-America honors, named a consensus second-teamer last year while leading the Cougars to the NCAA tournament’s Sweet 16. But Houston’s bid for consecutive Final Fours ended against Illinois and guard Keaton Wagler.

The 6-foot-6, 180-pound guard averaged 17.9 points, 5.1 rebounds, 4.2 assists and 1.8 turnovers as a freshman. Coming out of high school, Wagler was the lowest-ranked prospect out of the four guards jockeying for draft position between picks five and eight, but he could be the first of the group off the board.

“He has the size, and he has this brain where you see how quickly he’s improved,” Woo said. “And that, to me, is the biggest thing. But I just think people will continue to learn more about him. He’s not someone NBA teams knew about really coming into the year. … It just happened faster than we all expected.”

Arkansas’ Darius Acuff Jr. has the attention of scouts after averaging 23.5 points while shooting 44% from three-point range, but the 6-foot-3, 190-pound guard could create a defensively challenged pairing next to Clippers point guard Darius Garland.

Garland was acquired in a midseason move that signaled a significant pivot in the team’s plans. The Clippers sent 36-year-old James Harden, who was having his highest-scoring season in six years, to Cleveland in exchange for the 26-year-old Garland and a 2028 second-round selection.

Two days later, the Clippers got even younger by sending starting center Ivica Zubac and third-year guard Kobe Brown to Indiana for 23-year-old guard Bennedict Mathurin, backup center Isaiah Jackson, two first-round picks and one second-round pick. One of the first-round picks turned into this year’s selection after the Pacers, who finished with the second-worst record, slipped out of the top four in the draft lottery.

Zubac, 29, was the Clippers’ longest-tenured player and top rebounder. He and Harden were two of their top three scorers.

Houston guard Kingston Flemings, left, elevates for a layup past Illinois' Kylan Boswell, center, and Zvonimir Ivisic.
Houston guard Kingston Flemings goes for a layup during an NCAA tournament game in March. (Ashley Landis / Associated Press)

“When we traded James and when we traded Zu, those were incredibly hard and difficult situations,” Clippers president of basketball operations Lawrence Frank told reporters after the season.

“But it requires that you must be honest about yourself and honest about where you’re at as a team. Usually teams, when you study team building, if they’re in this contender status, they usually take this huge drop to rebuilding. We’re not going to do that.”

The Clippers have had 15 consecutive winning seasons, the longest active streak. But they have not won a playoff series since their Western Conference finals run in 2021. Last season ended with a play-in game collapse, the Clippers squandering a 13-point, fourth-quarter lead to the Golden State Warriors at home.

The midseason trades helped the Clippers start replenishing their draft capital after the blockbuster move that brought Paul George and Kawhi Leonard to L.A. in 2019 hamstrung their assets. Because of the Cavaliers trade, the Clippers also have the 52nd overall pick in Wednesday’s second round, along with the 36th pick. The moves also helped reset the roster from the oldest in league history to one with six rotation players who are an average of 25.7 years old.

Leonard, who turns 35 the week after the draft, is entering the final year of his contract. The superstar forward averaged a career-best 27.9 points while playing 65 games, just the second time with the Clippers that he appeared in 60 or more in a season.

But the franchise still is waiting for the results of a league investigation into alleged salary cap circumvention involving Leonard and former team sponsor Aspiration. The punishment levied could include multimillion-dollar fines, a loss of future draft picks or voiding Leonard’s contract with the team.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

How Brewers' Jake Bauers conquered his fears to find All-Star form

LAS VEGAS — The Milwaukee Brewers’ Jake Bauers would wake up in the middle of the night in a cold sweat, grab a baseball bat, walk over to the mirror and just start swinging.

Over and over again, hours at a time, until exhaustion set in.

He would wake up, pore over videotape of his swing, trying to detect any possible little thing that could end all of his struggles.

It was relentless, night after night, day after day, the anguish and anxiety slowly eroding his soul, wondering how long he could do this.

“It was a 24/7 thing," Bauers tells USA TODAY Sports. “I couldn’t turn it off. I was killing myself."

Here he was, 29 years old with a wife and two young children, playing in his seventh different organization, wondering if his career was over before it ever really started.

“It wasn't necessarily killing me like in life," Bauers said, “but it sucked as a baseball player. You call yourself a baseball player, you're getting paid to play baseball, and you don't feel like you're very good at it."

Jake Bauers is making a strong case for his first All-Star nod.

It was near the end of the season last year, the Brewers were in Pittsburgh for a three-game series the first weekend of September, and Bauers knew his career was on life support. He was hitting .188 with a .315 on-base percentage and .333 slugging percentage.

Bauers, in the starting lineup batting seventh as the Brewers’ DH on Sept. 5, popped up to the shortstop on a 78-mph curveball by Johan Oviedo in his first at-bat. Then, he struck out on an 86.3-mph slider his next.

That’s when he completely lost it.

“I remember going down in the tunnel by myself," Bauers says, “and screaming:

“What is this?’

“Are we going to keep doing this?

“Can I even play?

“Do I have what it takes?

“Is this it?

“I remember looking up at the scoreboard and it says .180," Bauer says. “Then, just saying, “[Expletive] it. I’m just going to go up there, not thing about anything, and just swing. Whatever happens, happens. I really don’t care anymore."

Bauers stepped to the plate in the sixth inning, and with two outs and runners on second and third, slapped a two-run single to right field off reliever Carmen Miodzinski’s 97.3-mph fastball for a 3-2 Brewers lead. He came up again in the eighth inning, and this time, smoked a single to center field with an exit velocity of 104.4 mph. He even stole second base.

Bauers’ confidence, which had completely vanished, came rushing back into his body.

The next day, he went 2-for-3 with two RBI, hitting his first homer in three months.

The next, 2-for-4 with a double and two more RBI.

Bauers stepped aside mentally, cleared his mind, and let his natural talents took over.

“That’s when I realized," Bauers says, “I just needed to get out of the way."

He hit .378 with a .472 on-base percentage, .600 slugging percentage and a 1.072 OPS the remainder of the regular season, and had a .973 OPS in six postseason games.

The Brewers, who had signed him to a minor-league contract the previous winter, this time signed him to a one-year, $2.7 million deal, making him a fixture in the everyday lineup, and a rejuvenated Bauers has run with the opportunity.

Bauers, playing first base and the outfield, has responded with the finest season of his career. It’s not even the halfway point of the season, and he already has hit the most homers (13) of his career, and is just two RBI (46s) shy of his career-high, leading the Brewers in both categories. He’s hitting .269 with a .373 on-base percentage and .502 slugging percentage, with his .875 OPS being 41% above the league average.

The Brewers are now campaigning for him to make the All-Star team.

“I don't know, man,’’ Bauers says, quietly, “I haven't really even thought about the All-Star Game. It wasn't really something that I ever pictured for myself.

“I mean, you have dreams like the All-Star Game when you come up, and you have things that you want to do in this game, but I've been beaten up in this game so hard that I think for a while, those kind of dreams kind of went out the window.

“It's just trying to survive and keep my head above water."

For a guy who has bounced around looking for a home his entire career, Bauers finally has found peace in Milwaukee. He has become the Brewers’ most consistent hitter, and a vital cog to their success, sitting back in first place in the NL Central.

“This guy has meant so much to us," Brewers manager Pat Murphy said. “He came to us last year as a minor-league free agent, we don’t give him a big-league job, and he earned it by working hard every day. It wasn't easy. He had days when I could tell he was down, a guy that was scuffling, a guy that was saying, “What am I doing?’

“Now, look at him. He’s having an All-Star season. Man, I’d love to see him make that All-Star team. What a great story it would for not only us, but for all of baseball."

Bauers, who grew up in Huntington Beach, California, was considered one of the nation’s top high-school prospects with a scholarship to Hawaii. The San Diego Padres, and Murphy as their Triple-A manager for the El Paso Chihuahuas, drafted him as a 17-year-old in the seventh round, believing he could be a star.

“He was a talked-about guy," Murphy said. “Everybody kept talking about how this kid can really hit. But then he was traded pretty quickly after that. And never stopped getting traded.’’

Bauers was traded one year after the draft to the Tampa Bay Rays in a three-team swap that involved future All-Stars Trea Turner and Will Myers.

The Rays traded him four years later in another three-way trade that included All-Stars Carlos Santana, Edwin Encarnacion and Yandy Diaz. In 11 years, he has gone from San Diego to Tampa Bay to Cleveland to Seattle to Cincinnati to New York to Milwaukee, with a couple of minor-league contracts and an out-right assignment mixed in, too.

“When he got to the big leagues, because of the type of swing he had, people wanted him to pull," Murphy said. “They wanted him to hit homers. He had some bouts of hitting homers, but he got away from what made him cook.

“I won’t say the organization, but he was with an organization that was saying, “We need you to do damage.’ I’m philosophically against telling a kid to do damage. You’ve got to be a pure hitter. So when he came to us, I said, 'Jake, I don't care if you're hitting homers. I want you to be the hitter you can be.'

“Jake has done that, and you look at him now, and he’s a guy people respect because of the journey he’s been on."

Bauers has become a role model for perseverance in this game.

“It’s one of those things like [quarterback] Sam Darnold of the Seahawks," said Arizona Diamondbacks closer Paul Sewald, Bauers’ former teammate in Seattle. “People’s progression happens at different moments. Jake was a big-time prospect. Started well, and then got lost in the shuffle, DFA’d here, traded there. Expectations get so high, but development is not this perfect linear. It’s different for everybody.

“It’s a lot to put on young guys who are just trying to figure out who they are in life, and you don’t know who you are as a player."

Jason Lane, the Brewers' offense and strategy coordinator, can certainly relate. He was an All-America pitcher and DH who led USC to the 1998 College World Series championship with the tournament’s most hits, batting .417 while also pitching. He was drafted in 1999 by the Houston Astros, and hit 26 homers to help lead the Astros to the 2005 World Series. He stayed for two more years and wound up playing for six different teams in three years.

The next thing he knew, Lane gave up hitting, became a pitcher again, and found himself back in the major leagues in 2014 with the Padres. He spent his last professional season playing in the minors for Murphy in El Paso before joining the Brewers coaching staff after the 2015 season.

When Bauers arrived in Milwaukee, Lane saw the talent, while also witnessing the constant mental torture, beating himself up so much he never gave himself a chance for success.

“When we got him, he was fighting his mechanics and was just sort of frustrated the whole year," Lane said. “The next year, we started talking to him about vision and intent. Forget the mechanics, have your intent able to attack the ball right away. If you attack it the right way, it takes care of the mechanics. He was just overthinking everything."

Says Bauers: “I was trying to be perfect. I mean, this game's hard enough if you're standing in the box trying to hit, and you're thinking about where your hands are, what your lower half is, and everything else. I was handcuffing myself."

These days, Bauers looks like a completely different hitter. His chase rate has diminished and ranks in the 98th percentile. His bat speed has accelerated, ranking in the 97th percentile. His hard-hit rate is the 97th percentile. His exit velocity is the 92nd percentile. He’s hitting everyone, batting .270 with an .863 OPS against right-handed starters, and is actually better against left-handed starters, .289 with a .999 OPS.

“He’s been playing the game with more peace and freedom,’" Lane said, “When you’re chasing results and mechanics, you get sleepless nights. You’re always like, 'What’s tomorrow going to be like?’

“It’s really hard at the big-league level to convince guys that you can have a good day at the plate without getting a hit because it’s a result-based business. They’re fighting for their lives a lot of times. So it’s really hard to get that confidence back. There are so many guys go to the plate defeated before the first pitch is even thrown."

These days, Bauers' self-doubt has evaporated, the confidence is back, and the game is joyous once again.

The last time he had the feeling believing he’d have a success each game instead of consumed with averting failure?

Bauers, without blinking, blurted: “high school."

"I’m grateful for the journey of the past," Bauers says. "I look back to my major-league debut eight years ago, and there was a 22-year-old kid who thought he was going to be a Hall of Fame. The pursuit of the result became a negative thing. I put so much pressure on myself to live up to that.

“I went through all of the hardships, but I’m grateful for all the struggles. I wouldn’t be the person that I am today without everything I've been through in my career."

Bauers has fallen back in love with the game, and the game is loving him right back.

“I have a completely different relationship with the game now than I did in the past,’’ Bauers quietly says. “I know that whatever happens today doesn't define who I am.’’

Bauers stopped, looked away, and then softly said: “It just took a long time to realize that."

Around the basepaths

– The Houston Astros have told teams that they are wasting their time asking about shortstop Jeremy Pena and first baseman Christian Walker.

They may be a sub-.500 team, but plan to be buyers at the deadline, not sellers, in a division in which only the Seattle Mariners are above .500. They are searching for bullpen help and a left-handed hitting outfielder.

– The Los Angeles Angels also plan to retain their key players at the deadline with owner Arte Moreno not wanting to unload starters Reid Detmers and Jose Soriano, or outfielder Jo Adell. Detmers and Soriano still are under team control through 2028, while Adell is eligible for free agency after the 2027 season.

If the Angels changed their mind and made Detmers available, they could demand a package greater than the one the Tigers will receive for two-time Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal. He not only has two more years of control than Skubal, but is earning just $2.7 million.

He also is one of the hottest pitchers in baseball.

  • Detmers' last six starts: 2-0, 1.36 ERA, 12 hits, 3 runs, 5 walks, 39 strikeouts, 33 innings.
  • Detmers' last three starts: 1-0, 0.45 ERA, 6 hits, 1 run, 2 walks, 18 strikeouts, 20 innings.

– GMs believe there will be fewer trades involving prospects at this year’s trade deadline because of the impending CBA in which MLB is pushing for a salary cap.

“If there’s a salary cap, the young players will be more valuable than ever before,’’ one GM said. “No one’s going to want to trade good young players making no money with a cap.

– MLB executives believe the minimum salary will rise from $780,000 to $1.25 million when the next CBA is finalized. The union proposed a $1.5 million minimum in 2027, $1.65 million in 2028, $1.825 million in 2029, $2 million in 2030 and $2.2 million in 2031.

– Mike Trout has never participated in the Home Run Derby, but with the All-Star Game being in Philadelphia, a 40-minute drive from his hometown of Millville, N.J., he said he’d consider it this year if All-Star officials invite him this year.

– The Boston Red Sox will be on everyone’s speed dial next month with starter Sonny Gray, closer Aroldis Chapman, outfielder Jarren Duran and possibly first baseman Willson Contreras thought to be available.

– Minnesota Twins center fielder Byron Buxton insists that teams are wasting their time making calls inquiring about his availability. He has a full no-trade clause and loves playing in Minnesota.

– The Yankees are making it no secret they want Minnesota Twins catcher Ryan Jeffers at the trade deadline.

– The San Francisco Giants are hopeful of moving third baseman Matt Chapman– who is owed $100 million over the next four years and has a full no-trade clause – along with starter Robbie Ray and second baseman Luis Arraez. They're pessimistic about the odds of trading Rafael Devers or Willy Adames with their bloated contracts.

– The sleeper in the Tigers Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal sweepstakes, several executives predict, will be Atlanta.

The cost could be two of their top-10 prospects, including one who’s in the top 100 overall.

– One father of an MLB player, after seeing MLB’s proposal banning high school graduates from being drafted until they’re 20 years old, is offering a counter-proposal.

MLB can still draft high-school players, pay 50% of a signing bonus to players in lieu of them receiving NIL money, and retain exclusive rights to the player for three years. The player can still attend college, giving MLB the right to monitor his development and negotiate a contract after each season.

After three years, the player can either sign with the team that drafted him or re-enters the drat if no agreement is reached.

OR: Players can have the option of attending college or junior college for one year, and then decide whether to enter the draft after the first year or wait until three years.

– Bryan Duffy, the grandson of Atlanta legendary executive Bill Bartholomay, has organized a GoFundMe me for Walter Banks, Atlanta’s beloved usher who began working in 1965 for the Atlanta Crackers, and has worked Altanta baseball, basketball and football games games as an usher since 1966, and inducted into Atlanta’s hospitality Hall of Fame in 2002.

He is now being transitioned into a full-time health facility, where baseball dignitaries like Ryan Klesko have made donations to help provide for his care and honor his legacy.

– While MLB informed three Giants relievers last week they could not write a Bible verse on their baseball cap, which they chose on Pride night, Dodgers reliever Blake Treinen said last year that MLB cracked down on him last year when he wrote Charlie Kirk’s name on his cap after his murderer last September, threatening a fine if he did it again.

– Driveline founder Kyle Boddy and the Boston Red Sox have parted ways, less than three years after chief baseball officer Craig Breslow hired him to be a special advisor. His previous stint with an MLB team lasted less than two years when he was the pitching coordinator with the Cincinnati Reds.

– Phillies first baseman Bryce Harper hasn’t played right field since April 2022 when he tore an elbow ligament but says he would be willing to move back to right field temporarily if it would help the Phillies acquire a right-handed bat.

The Phillies appreciate the gesture, but are passing, having no interest in moving Harper back to the outfield and risking injury.

They will continue to look for a right-handed hitting outfielder.

– The Angels may be struggling at the big-league level again, but are the only organization in which every farm team has a winning record.

– The Boston Red Sox, who had slashed their pro scouting department, have suddenly begun assigning scouts to MLB games recently.

– The more things change, the more they stay the same department:

The Red Sox scored three or fewer runs in 55.6% of the games, going 3-12 (.200 winning percentage) in those games, before manager Alex Cora was fired this season.

They have also scored three or fewer runs in 55.6 of the games under interim manager Chad Tracy, going 5-20 (.200 winning percentage).

– If Shohei Ohtani isn’t the starting pitcher at the All-Star Game, it may be difficult for him to enter the game in relief, the Dodgers say, while remaining as the starting DH.

The NL starting pitcher is expected to be Phillies lefty Cristopher Sanchez or the Brewers' Jacob Misiorowski.

– Padres closer Mason Miller still has not allowed an extra-base hit since Aug. 25, 2025, spanning 51.1 consecutive innings, the third-longest in MLB history.

Brewers sensation Jacob Misiorowski’s last nine starts:

87 strikeouts.

1 extra-base hit.

He’s the only pitcher since 1900 to accomplish the feat.

– Misiorowski was asked by USA TODAY what’s the fastest pitch he could ever throw.

“I think I can throw 105 mph," he said.

How about 106?

“I don’t think I could do that.’’

His fastest on record is 104.5 mph.

– The White Sox have been without their MVP, Munetaka Murakami since May 29, but remain in first place.

They have had 13 players make their major-league debut this season, tying the 1944 Cincinnati Reds for the most since the All-Star break.

‘‘I think you should stop thinking of this as a surprise,’’ White Sox shortstop Colson Montgomery told reporters, “because we’re consistently winning, we’re consistently in every game.’’

– Yankee starter Cam Schlittler’s 1.71 ERA through the first 16 starts this season is the lowest by a Yankee pitcher since Hall of Famer Whitey Ford in 1964, and second-lowest in 107 years.

– Philadelphia Phillies rookie Andrew Painter, who was optioned to Triple-A after being lit up once again, was 1-8 with a 7.06 ERA and was told that he must improve his fastball.  He was yielding a .404 batting average and .660 slugging percentage with the pitch.

– While the landscape is filled with pitchers and position players who have struggled since the WBC, Eduardo Rodriguez has absolutely excelled since pitching 4 ⅓ scoreless innings to help Venezuela beat Team USA in the WBC championship game.

He is yielding a 2.45 ERA in 15 starts, working at least six innings nine times, while yielding two or fewer runs in 11 games.

– Future Hall of Famer Justin Verlander, 43, was hoping to become the last player to win 300 games in his career.

Now, he’s hoping just to make another start in his career, as he was shut down again with a left hamstring strain just before he was scheduled to start Sunday in his first start since March 30.

"I've always said that I want to play until the wheels fall off," Verlander told reporters. “Maybe they are falling off.

“I hope not. ... If I can't be healthy, and I continue to prove that I can't be healthy, that's something that I have to really evaluate. …It's disappointing to say the least."

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Jakers Bauers an All-Star? Inside Brewers slugger's amazing turnaround

Today on Pinstripe Alley – 6/21/26

Jun 20, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees shortstop Anthony Volpe (11) collides with Cincinnati Reds second baseman Edwin Arroyo (2) after stealing second in the third inning at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images | Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

The Yankees have won a few blowouts this week, and quite a few this year, so perhaps they were due to be on the receiving end of a rout. A close game early morphed into a laugher yesterday, with some shaky defense leading to a crushing three-run homer off the bat of Spencer Steer. It’s not what you want to see, but thanks to a dominant win on Friday night, the Yankees are still in position to win another series today. We had a doozy of a matchup lined up, but the Yankees pushed back Gerrit Cole, meaning we’ll see Elmer Rodríguez against Reds ace Chase Burns. That one will go off at 1:35 p.m. EST.

On the site today, Maximo will look at the Yankees schedule, and highlight how a soft stretch on it has given the Yankees a good opportunity to whether their recent rash of injuries, while Andrew looks back on last night’s American League action, and Matt celebrates “Steady Eddie” Lopat for today’s Yankees Birthday post. And after the game, John provides a very hectic Yankees social media roundup.

Today’s Matchup

New York Yankees vs. Cincinnati Reds

Time: 1:35 p.m. EST

TV: YES Network, Reds.tv

Venue: Yankee Stadium, Bronx, NY

Questions/Prompts:

1. What do you expect from Elmer Rodríguez today?

2. Looking across town, do you think the Mets are fried after last night’s embarrassing loss to the Phillies? Or, much like 2024, do they have a run in them yet?

Know the draft prospect: Alex Karaban

INDIANAPOLIS, IN - APRIL 04: Alex Karaban #11 of the Connecticut Huskies dribbles the ball during the National Semifinal game of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament against the Illinois Fighting Illini at Lucas Oil Stadium on April 04, 2026 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Mitchell Layton/Getty Images) | Getty Images

As we inch closer and closer to the 2026 NBA Draft, we continue our series looking at potential draft prospects. In this edition, could the Knicks take a swing at another older, two-time national champion from the Big East with their second-round pick?

The Basics

  • School: UConn
  • Position: SF/PF
  • Height: 6’7”
  • Weight: 225 lbs
  • Age: 23 (Born November 11, 2002)
  • 2025-26 Stats: 13.2 PPG, 5.3 RPG, 2.4 APG, 0.8 BLK, 0.8 STL, 46.4% FG, 37.4% 3PT, 85.1% FT
  • Projected Draft Range: Early second round (30–40)

The Numbers

Karaban grew up in Massachusetts, but only spent his freshman year of high school at Algonquin Regional in Northborough before transferring to New Hampton School in New Hampshire, where he won New Hampshire Gatorade Player of the Year as a junior. With plenty of collegiate interest, he transferred again to IMG Academy in Florida for his senior year.

As a four-star recruit in the Class of 2022, he earned dozens of offers and made official visits to Northwestern, Penn State, and UConn. In the end, he chose Dan Hurley and the Huskies, who were playing just their second season back in the Big East after a forgettable seven years in the AAC. He was even able to graduate high school a semester early, enrolling for the Spring 2022 semester and redshirting.

Right out of the gate, Karaban was a starter for UConn, ultimately finishing with 150 career starts in 151 games played over four years. He would go on to be named to the Big East All-Freshman Team in 2022-23, be named to two All-Big East teams, win two national championships, and go out being named to the All-NCAA Tournament team in 2026.

Throughout his career, he was known as a great shooter, shooting 37.4% from three on over five attempts a game while being one of the best free-throw shooters in college basketball (84.4%). He was never overly impressive defensively, but averaged 1.5 blocks a game as a junior in 2024-25. He also routinely led the Huskies in minutes and even led the entire Big East in 2025-26.

Skills That Pay the Bills

  • Three-Point Shooting: Karaban has been an above-average shooter in three of his four collegiate seasons. The ability to knock down open jumpers will always be valuable
  • Team Defense: While he isn’t some one-on-one lockdown force, he consistently makes the right reads on the defensive end, knowing when to switch, making hard closeouts, and has enough size to hold his own down low. He’s not a 1-through-5 defender, but he’s comfortable 2 through 4.
  • Good Decision Maker: He’s never going to be someone to run an offense, but he makes good decisions with the ball in his hands. Playing a higher usage role at UConn than he will in the pros, he consistently had an assist-to-turnover ratio of over 2.0. He’s also got a nose for making plays off the ball.
  • Size and Length: He stands 6’7” without shoes, has a 6’11” wingspan, and has an 8’8” standing reach. That’ll play for a wing in the NBA.
  • Big-Game Experience: Karaban is a two-time national champion and has played in 20 NCAA Tournament games, including six Final Four games. He was the stable rock and locker room leader for arguably the best program in the country in his 4.5 years there. While the latter might not be necessary as a rookie coming into the NBA, he’s as battle-tested as any rookie in this draft.

Concerns

  • Limited Offensive Game: Karaban can knock down open shots and is a strong cutter and off-ball mover. Outside of that? He’s very limited. You rarely see him create his own shot, and he’s very dependent on others creating those looks for him.
  • Not Overly Athletic: Doesn’t have the foot speed to be a truly versatile defender. He’ll struggle in certain matchups against smaller guards. While he was a strong finisher at UConn, he wasn’t much of a dunker.
  • Defensive Limitations: He won’t be hunted out there, but he’ll be vulnerable if he’s switched onto dynamic offensive threats. You won’t see him guarding the Donovan Mitchell’s and Tyrese Haliburton’s of the world, either.
  • Age: Karaban will be 24 shortly after Opening Night of his rookie season. Many teams stay away from these types of players because of the relentless chase of youth and upside.

The Knicks Fit

If James Dolan’s word is to be believed, and the Knicks will not be going into the second apron, there will immediately be a big hole in the Knicks’ bench, as Landry Shamet will likely go elsewhere after getting a deserving raise on his last two minimum contracts. Shamet’s ability to defend multiple positions and knock down threes will need to be replaced.

Could Karaban fill that role better than, say, Mo Diawara or Pacǒme Dadiet in-house? Maybe. I’d certainly trust Karaban’s jumper to translate, and he’s a significantly more willing shooter than the team’s internal options, even if he’s not able to create his own shot. There might be a bit of redundancy considering the team already has a pure catch-and-shoot offensive weapon in Deuce McBride, but Karaban can be a solid 10-15-minute per game guy for the regular season if needed.

His big-game experience is a big plus for me. There are already four Big East alums on the roster, three of whom have won a combined five national championships. Three of them (all but Mikal Bridges) were underdrafted based on their college production. Karaban would fit in nicely with a group of guys who entered the league as older underdogs who came from flat-out winners.

NBA Comparison

  • Best-Case Comparison: Late career Peja Stojaković
  • Median Outcome: Sam Hauser
  • Low-End Outcome: Garrison Matthews

The Verdict

Do not consider at No. 24 or in any first-round trade back: The Knicks will have their fair share of options in the first round and should go for someone with better upside than Karaban with their first pick. Considering they might need to replace Mitchell Robinson, the earlier they draft a center, the better.

Consider at No. 31, make him a Knick in a trade back past No. 35: The right range for Karaban appears to be at the top of the second round. Depending on where the board is, he could be an option at No. 31, but we could also see Leon Rose utilize his famous trade back to get an additional pick. If the Knicks select in the 35-40 range, he’s a slam dunk.

Read all our draft profiles here.

Go Knicks!

Ben Stokes and Gus Atkinson withdrawn from county matches ‘at request of ECB’

  • England captain Stokes stood down from Durham game

  • Decision hints at third Test recall for both players

Ben Stokes and Gus Atkinson have been withdrawn from the remainder of Durham and Surrey’s ongoing County Championship matches at the request of the England and Wales Cricket Board [ECB].

“Ben Stokes has been withdrawn from the remainder of Durham’s County Championship match against Northamptonshire at the request of the ECB,” a club statement on X said. “Colin Ackermann will replace Stokes in the Durham 11.”

Continue reading...

Yankees news: Wells, Rodríguez return in roster shake-up

Jun 14, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; New York Yankees designated hitter Ben Rice (22) celebrates in the dugout after hitting a ninth inning home run against the Toronto Blue Jays at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: Gerry Angus-Imagn Images | Gerry Angus-Imagn Images

New York Post | Dan Martin: After missing the past couple of weeks with cervical headaches, Austin Wells is expected to be recalled for Sunday’s game. Manager Aaron Boone said he would “likely” be in the starting lineup his first game back. It’s been a lost season so far for the Yankees backstop, whose .533 OPS ranked fourth-worst among all regulars before he landed on the shelf.

In a corresponding move, the Yankees sent down J.C. Escarra, another catcher who’s struggled to get it going offensively, including while given an expanded role during Wells’ absence. That leaves the right-handed Ali Sánchez, a journeyman who has appeared in eight games since the left-handed Wells went down, to serve as his backup. Even with their catching corps at full health, the Yankees are expected to seek help at the position in advance of next month’s trade deadline.

The Athletic | Brendan Kuty: ($) After Saturday’s loss, the Yankees announced that Elmer Rodríguez would be called up to start Sunday’s series closer against Cincinnati. Gerrit Cole, who was slated to start that game, will be bumped back along with the rest of the regular rotation. The move was made to build in some extra rest during a stretch that will see the Yankees play 16 games in 16 days.

“It’s something we’ve been kicking around the last few days,” said Boone, who emphasized that the move was not due to any issue with the 35-year-old Cole. “(We) want to be pretty mindful of this as we go through the summer with a long stretch here.” Reliever Jake Bird was the odd man out, getting demoted to Triple-A to clear room on the active roster for Rodríguez.

MLB.com | Bryan Hoch: The Yankees took their largest loss of the year Saturday, a 10-2 drubbing at the hands of the Reds. Will Warren, who’s been as reliable as they come all year in the rotation, allowed six runs in 5.2 innings, though four were unearned. Those runs came courtesy of an error at first by Ben Rice, who failed to secure a low but catchable throw from Anthony Volpe to help kick off a big inning. A man who’s evolved from role player to veteran leader was circumspect in his analysis. “Let’s move on and be ready to go tomorrow,” said Paul Goldschmidt. “They played better than us. They beat us today. We’ll be ready to go tomorrow.”

MLB.com | Bryan Hoch: Cam Schlittler tossed six scoreless innings Friday while punching out a career-high 13, dropping his ERA to 1.71 while strengthening his case as a All-Star hopeful. “I think he should actually start the All-Star Game,” said his teammate, Jazz Chisholm Jr. While Chisholm is prone to bombast, he may be on the money here, with Boone agreeing that the phenom may be “the best pitcher in the American League right now.”

Schlittler got some love from one of the current kings of New York, a member of the champion Knicks squad. “Schlitty is the Cy Young winner hands down,” posted Josh Hart during Friday’s game. For his part, Schlittler is not putting the cart before the horse. “It’s early. I’ve got a lot to work on,” he said. “The most I can do is go out there, stay healthy and consistent, and try to win this team some games.”

From championship teammates to Finals rivals—The History in Green

BOSTON, MA - DECEMBER 13: Boston Celtics players Frank Ramsey, left, and Bill Sharman hold some of the Globe Santa gifts which funds contributed by Boston Globe readers will buy for children in need at Christmas on Dec. 13, 1957. (Photo by Paul J. Maguire/The Boston Globe via Getty Images) | Boston Globe via Getty Images

This week we’re going to take a break from the trade rumors and do something that’s our privilege as fans of the most successful franchise in NBA history.

We’re going to look back.

It’s May of 1971 and the ABA Finals are underway.

The league’s sprawling western division is represented by the Utah Stars, a team that finished second in the league with a 57-27 record. The best record in the league belonged to the Indiana Pacers, who finished 58-26.

The Eastern division was clearly the weaker of the two. The Virginia Squires took the top seed, 55-29, but second place belonged to the Kentucky Colonels who finished the season at 44-40.

The Colonels are on their third coach of the season.

The first 15 games were coached by Gene Rhodes, who led the team to a 10-5 record. This was not good enough for team owner John Y. Brown, who fired him, with Alex Groza coaching the team for the next two games (both wins), before being replaced by Celtic legend Frank Ramsey. Ramsey took the job on the condition that he be allowed to fly to games from his home in Madisonville, Kentucky, 150 miles away. Brown agreed to this and Ramsey took over the Colonels.

(Original Caption) Ballet at Boston Garden…Celtics' Frank Ramsey, left, fingertips ball in ballet movement as Philadelphia Warriors' York Larese, right, springs high in air during 3rd quarter action, Boston Garden (1/28). Celtics lost game, 133-129, their 4th straight loss.

His record as a regular season coach was nothing to write home about. The team went 32-35 with him on the bench. He was noted for being something of a micromanager, even insisting on taping players’ ankles himself.

However, the Colonels caught a bit of lightning in the playoffs. In the first round, they faced off against the Floridians. The Colonels won the series 4-2, in part due to their reliance on the three point shot. During the regular season, the Colonels were mid-pack when it came to three point attempts per game, with the league’s second best success rate from beyond the arc, while the Floridians avoided the shot like the plague. The Colonels’ use of the shot reflected Ramsey’s own preference for outside shooting during his playing career with the Celtics.

In the second round, the Colonels faced off against the top seeded Virginia Squires.

The Colonels rallied from a 2-1 deficit, winning three straight games to close out the Squires 4-2. Game 3 of this series was an offensive extravaganza, with the two teams combining for 287 points in a 150-137 Squires victory; that total score remained a playoff record for both leagues until a double-overtime contest in 1992 between Portland and Phoenix.

This set up a Finals matchup with the Utah Stars. The Stars were spending their first season in Utah, having relocated from Los Angeles over the summer.

Utah had made quick work of the Texas Chaparrals, a team that would go on to become the San Antonio Spurs, sweeping them in the first round after the Chapparals won a play-in tiebreaker against the Denver Nuggets. The Stars won their four games by an average of 15.75 points.

The Stars’ opponents in the Western Division Finals were the Indiana Pacers, who had won the ABA title the year before.

This series went the full seven games, with Utah closing out the series at the Indiana State Fair Coliseum 108-101.

The Stars were coached by Bill Sharman, another Celtic legend, and one who had already tasted success as a basketball coach. He guided the Cleveland Pipers to a championship in the short-lived ABL in 1962, and had coached the San Francisco Warriors to the Finals in 1967, the year the Sixers broke through the Celtics’ dynasty and got Wilt his first championship.

Thus the 1971 ABA championship marked the first—and so far only—occasion when a pair of ex-Celtics found themselves on opposing benches jockeying for a league championship.

As was fitting for an era dominated by big men, the Stars were led by veteran center Zelmo Beaty, who was on his way to the Hall of Fame. The Colonels, on the other hand, had stayed local in the draft, picking their starting center, Dan Issel from the University of Kentucky before the season started. Issel would be the ABA’s Rookie of the Year, and would also end up in the Basketball Hall of Fame.

SALT LAKE CITY – 1970: Zelmo Beaty #31 of the Utah Stars drives to the basket against the Kentucky Colonels during an ABA game circa 1970 in Salt Lake City, Utah. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges 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 1970 NBAE (Photo by NBA Photo Library/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Utah’s home court was the brand new Salt Palace, a drum-shaped venue which housed the Utah Jazz from 1979 to 1991. Although the arena could hold over 10,000 people, average attendance during the first Stars season was just 6,100. Despite filling barely half the seats in the arena, the Stars led the ABA in attendance that year. The arena, constructed as part of Utah’s bid to host the 1972 Winter Olympics, was demolished in 1994 to make room for an expanded convention center.

Kentucky played their home games at Freedom Hall, a cavernous arena on the Kentucky State Fairgrounds that was designed to house the Kentucky State Fair World’s Championship Horse Show, a confusingly named event that requires almost a hundred yards of clear floor space. Aside from seats located along the sides of the court, the arena was not well-suited to basketball, although it could host over 16,000 fans during the years the Colonels played there. The venue also hosted six NCAA Final Fours between 1958 and 1969. It’s still standing, and still hosting horse shows and basketball games.

The Finals went seven games, and featured, among other things, Frank Ramsey bringing a bottle of oxygen to Utah to help cope with the high elevation (Salt Lake City sits at 4225 feet above sea level, which is high enough to give you a nice bout of altitude sickness, as I can personally attest).

In the first game of the Finals, Utah stomped Kentucky, 136-117. The only highlight for Kentucky was a surprising 36-point performance by Darel Carrier, who made six of seven three-point attempts. Utah had six players score in double figures and three players with more than 20 points, including a pair of reserves.

The Stars had little difficulty winning Game 2, 138-125, and they looked to be well on their way to dominating the Colonels until the series went back to Kentucky. Here the Colonels won a pair of close contests to even the series.

The teams continued to swap home court victories over the next two games, with Kentucky squeaking out a three-point victory in a classic Game 6 that pushed the series to a deciding Game 7. Kentucky was clinging to a slim lead when Dan Issel was sent to the bench with five personal fouls in the third period. With him out, Cincy Powell stepped up and kept the Colonels in the game by scoring 20 of the team’s 31 points over a 21-minute span as Utah edged out to a slim lead.

Kentucky fought back late in the fourth and put the game away at the free throw line, nailing all four attempts over the final 33 seconds. A bid by Red Robbins to tie the game with seven seconds to go off a deliberately missed free throw and a three-point attempt went nowhere when Dick Nemelka’s shot bounced off the rim. The game also featured a small shower of beer cups and debris from the stands when the scorekeeper apparently failed to sound the buzzer at the end of the third period allowing a late Utah basket to count.

The series shifted back to Salt Lake where Utah won the deciding game by ten, despite 41 points from Dan Issel, playing his final game as a rookie.

The Finals MVP was Zelmo Beaty, who had been an NBA All-Star before jumping to the upstart ABA.

BOSTON, MA – APRIL 8: Boston Celtics players Bill Sharman, left, and Frank Ramsey read a copy of teammate Bob Cousy's book "Basketball is My Life" following a practice during the 1958 NBA World Championship Series in Boston on April 8, 1958. (Photo by Gil Friedberg/The Boston Globe via Getty Images) | Boston Globe via Getty Images

Frank Ramsey was fired by John Y. Brown at the conclusion of the series. Ramsey settled down to a quiet life in Madisonville, eventually becoming a bank president.

Bill Sharman parlayed his ABA championship into a head coaching gig with the Los Angeles Lakers. He hired ex-Celtic KC Jones away from Harvard University, and these Celtic-tinged Lakers went on to record a then NBA record 69-13 record which featured an astonishing 33-game winning streak. When the Lakers won the title that season, it made Sharman the only coach to win a title in three different professional basketball leagues.

Sharman was also one of two coaches to win a title in the NBA and the ABA. The other, Alex Hannum, had been Sharman’s college teammate with the USC Trojans.

When Sharman retired from coaching in 1976, he took the Lakers’ general manager slot, a post he held until 1982.

The Colonels’ owner, John Y. Brown, would win an ABA title in 1975 and then sell Dan Issel’s contract to the Baltimore Claws. After the following season he took a three million dollar buyout from the NBA to extinguish the Colonels franchise. He said that he had no interest in being in the basketball business at the time, and then went on to buy a controlling stake in the Buffalo Braves later that same year.

In 1978, Brown finagled a franchise swap with Irv Levin, who owned the Celtics. The idea was that Irv Levin wanted to move a team to his home state of California, and there was no way on earth that this team would be the Celtics. The Braves, however, were teetering on the brink of disaster and were easily packed up and moved to San Diego, where they became the Clippers.

Thus, John Y. Brown ended up owning the Celtics, and one of the first things that he did was trade three first round picks for Bob McAdoo. Now, McAdoo was a great player, but he was in no way worth three first rounders. Brown did this without bothering to consult with Red Auerbach—in fact this was the second trade Brown executed without talking to Red first. Red was so incensed by this that he seriously entertained thoughts of leaving the Celtics and joining the Knicks

Brown’s tenure as owner of the Celtics was short-lived. After the 1978-79 season, Red delivered an ultimatum to Brown, having an offer to run the Knicks in his back pocket: “Either you go or I do.”

Brown, who had not yet dealt with anyone that had Red’s record and personality—folded. He sold his stake in the Celtics to co-owner Harry Mangurian in 1979.

Ramsey and Sharman, of course, had played together with the Celtics in the late 1950s. Ramsey was Sharman’s backup and the NBA’s first real sixth man.

Sharman was part of the Celtics’ title winning teams in 1957, 1959, 1960 and 1961. Ramsey was also part of those teams, as well as the teams that won in 1962, 1963, and 1964. He was replaced as the team’s sixth man by John Havlicek.

Sharman’s number 21 and Ramsey’s 23 both hang in the rafters above the Celtics’ home court.

Mariners all wrong against another lefty, lose 5-1 to Sox

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - JUNE 20: Connor Joe #9 of the Seattle Mariners commits a fielding error during the fifth inning against the Boston Red Sox at T-Mobile Park on June 20, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Jack Compton/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Today’s loss to the Red Sox left much to be desired, but it started out promisingly enough. Emerson Hancock was clean the first time through the order, picking up four strikeouts, three of which came because a Red Sox hitter left the bat on his shoulder.

The rearranged left side of the infield even made a couple very nice plays. J.P. Crawford, who some had left for dead, gets today’s Sun Hat Award for shoveling the ball from his glove up to Colt Emerson on a 5-6-3 double play and later snatching a hot shot out of the air.

The Mariners even grabbed an early 1-0 lead thanks to a Crawford walk and line drives into left-center from Cal Raleigh and Josh Naylor.

But things quickly took a left turn. The Sox led off the fourth with their first hit when a ground ball split the left side. Despite Hancock striking out the next batter, he then left a cutter over the heart of the plate that Wilyer Abreu sent nearly to the batter’s eye to give Boston a 2-1 lead. The fifth inning saw another hit and an embarrassing error from tonight’s left fielder, Connor Joe, who got his glove to the ball pretty easily but then just refused to actually catch it.

By the sixth inning, Hancock was left holding the bag for an offense that couldn’t get anything going against Connelly Early. A single and a walk looked like it was setting off a retro Hancock spiral, of the type it seemed like he’d left in Arkansas. But another four-pitch walk loaded the bases, Dan came out, and Elvis left the building.

With leverage lefty Jose A. Ferrer and his 50% groundball rate coming out in relief, it seemed like the Mariners might get out of it. And indeed, Ferrer got not one, not two, but three easy groundballs, but for the second night in a row, the BABIP monster left a bad taste in my mouth. The score had bubbled up to 5-1 by the time the Mariners finally left the field.

It wouldn’t have mattered so much if the Mariners offense could hit a left-handed pitcher. And they had a bunch of chances against Early, who pitched the game with two left feet, hitting three batters and nearly a couple more. But the Mariners bats’ futility against south paws hardly comes out of left field at this point. They couldn’t get a single hit after the first inning, and left five runners on base.

Left to your imagination, this is a dominant roster, but they find themselves about halfway through the season back at .500 and leading the division only thanks to their rivals’ incompetence. It’ll probably be fine in the end, but if they don’t want to get left at the postseason altar, they’re going to have to get right.