Winners, Losers from NBA Draft Lottery: Shameless tanking for the win. And Toni Kukoc.

It feels ironic that the Washington Wizards became the first team with the worst record to get the No. 1 pick since the NBA switched to these new lottery odds — just in time for the league to change everything next year to "fix" tanking. Again.

The way the ping-pong balls bounced this year left some big winners and some painful losers. Let's break down who won and who lost in the 2026 NBA Draft Lottery.

Winner: Shameless tanking

The Washington Wizards traded for Trae Young and Anthony Davis and barely played them to maintain their lottery odds (to be fair, AD was injured). The Utah Jazz were the face of tanking in the league, got a massive fine, traded for Jaren Jackson Jr. and mostly sat him to keep their draft position. The Memphis Grizzlies were just a couple of games out of the play-in when they traded Jackson to the Jazz and started tanking in earnest, going 5-28 the rest of the way.

All three of those teams were rewarded and have the top three picks in this draft. If you wonder why the league thinks it needs a new lottery system to fix tanking, this is the prime example.

Winner: Toni Kukoc, Chicago Bulls

Chicago jumped up to the top four because Toni Kukoc brought the swagger.

Six years ago, when Arturas Karnisovas took over as the lead executive in Chicago, the Bulls jumped up from seventh in the lottery odds to get the No. 4 pick, which they used to select Patrick Williams. That pick (and subsequent contract) was an anchor on Karnisovas' entire tenure.

This year, Bryson Graham has taken over as the lead executive in Chicago, and the Bulls jumped from ninth in the lottery odds to get the No. 4 pick. Most likely, they will use that on North Carolina's Caleb Willson, unless Memphis falls in love with him, in which case Cameron Boozer of Duke likely falls to the Bulls. Either way, Graham needs this pick to work out.

Winner: Washington Wizards

Washington was active in "pre-agency" at the trade deadline last February, getting good deals on two former All-Stars other teams were looking to dump move on from: Trae Young and Anthony Davis. This is a team that already had some promising young players like big man Alex Sarr and last year's first-round pick Tre Johnson. This was a team that was already going to be better and in the postseason mix in the East.

Now they likely add AJ Dybantsa, the 6'9" ultra-talented, ultra-athletic wing out of BYU, who seems like a perfect fit. Suddenly, the Wizards look interesting next season.

There is a report that Washington might be open to trading down, via Jake Fischer of The Stein Line. Sure, if someone comes in with a Godfather offer they can't refuse, but that's unlikely at best. The Wizards are not giving up their first No. 1 pick since selecting John Wall in 2010, a pick that has the fan base excited, without some overwhelming talent returning.

Loser: Brooklyn Nets

The most talent-starved team in the league was let down by the basketball gods. While they will still get a quality player at No. 6 — likely a star guard like Darius Acuff Jr. or Keaton Wagler — but it's not the guy or the lottery luck they were hoping for.

Brooklyn is on track to struggle again next year, and with the coming new “3-2-1" lottery system, their chances of adding that elite talent just got longer.

Winner: Utah Jazz

The lottery gods finally smiled on the Jazz. Which is ironic because they became the face of tanking this season when the league fined them $500,000 for playing their stars 20 minutes a game, then benching them in the stretch and losing. It turns out that what the league wanted was just for the Jazz to make up an injury and bench them all game, so they did. The Jazz got all the bad press, and the basketball gods rewarded them.

This is another team already building something with guard Keyonte George and big man Walker Kessler, plus last year's No. 1 pick Ace Bailey. They already had Lauri Markkanen and then added Jaren Jackson Jr. at the deadline. Now put Kansas guard Darryn Peterson in the mix and they look like a potential playoff team starting next season.

Loser: Indiana Pacers

You know it's not good when just after the lottery the GM steps up and takes the blame.

As part of the trade to bring in Ivica Zubac in February, the Pacers traded their pick this year to the Clippers, but it was top-four protected. While the Pacers finished with the league's second-worst record, that made it basically a coin toss (52% to 48%) whether they would lose their pick. They did lose it, which essentially means they traded the No. 5 pick for Zubac. Make no mistake, Zubac with a healthy Tyrese Halliburton is a good pairing — and the Pacers will be back contending for the East crown next season with him — but that is a steep price.

Winner: LA Clippers

If the Pacers are losers, then the Clippers must be winners. They get to add another high-level player to a roster that is getting retooled in the next couple of years.

They are going to be an interesting team on draft night. At No. 5, that's where a run of strong point guards starts, except the Clippers traded for Darius Garland during the season (for James Harden). LA needs to find a guard or wing who can play off ball, not just on, which might be Keaton Wagler.

Loser: Sacramento Kings

Call it an ethical tank if you want, the Kings were just bad this season. At No. 7, they are still going to get a quality player, but maybe not the star they were hoping for to anchor their rebuild. Also, like Brooklyn, the Kings may be bad again next year but with flatter lottery odds (almost certainly a part of whatever system the owners approve) it will be even harder for Sacramento to get that elite talent.

Loser: New Orleans Pelicans

We knew this would be the case when it happened last June. That's when the Pelicans traded the rights to their pick this year to jump up 10 spots and select Derik Queen. Now we know that it is the No. 8 pick. Queen showed promise this season, but that looked like a bad trade at the time and it may be worse now.

Surging Knicks will enter Eastern Conference Finals as prohibitive favorite after second-round sweep

PHILADELPHIA - A few notes from Game 4 of the Knicks’ sweep of the Sixers

AWAKENED IN ATLANTA

The seeds for the Knicks’ demolition in Philadelphia were planted about three weeks ago. 

The Knicks, in Miles McBride’s words, got "punched in the mouth" by the Hawks in Game 3 of their first-round series. 

Instead of wilting, New York considered it a wake-up call. 

Yes, the Knicks changed their offense after that loss on April 23 -- that’s been well-documented

But the offense isn’t the only thing that changed. 

“I feel like our mindset shifted,” McBride told SNY. “We know we’re the better team (but) we can’t just come out there and expect to win, because they’re talented too. So I feel like our mindset just shifted totally to ‘take the game’ instead of (waiting for) them to give us the game.”

McBride certainly had a "take the game" approach on Sunday. 

He made four three-pointers in an 81-second span to give the Knicks an early 14-point lead.

New York never looked back, building a 24-point lead at halftime and going up by as many as 44 in the second half. 

They beat Philadelphia by 30 to extend their playoff win streak to seven games, winning each of those by an average of 26.4 points. 

Given the circumstances, has any Knick team in the last 50 years played a better seven-game stretch?

Don’t think so. 

Now New York will enter the Eastern Conference Finals as the prohibitive favorite. 

“I think the more we’ve played together as a team, the more we’ve grown. And we’ve continued to get better,” Jalen Brunson said. “It’s a chemistry thing. It’s a feel thing. It’s how things get better. Things get better over time.”

Things are getting better at the right time for Brunson and the Knicks.

A SLOW BUILD

The Knicks underwhelmed for long stretches of the regular season. Fans and media questioned their legitimacy again and again. But that sentiment never effected the team, Brunson says. 

“It was a rollercoaster for sure,” he said. “I think outside the Knicks organization, things looked worse than what they were. From the outside looking in. But inside the building, we were working every single day to be the best team we can be. That’s all we were focusing on. 

“There were times when there were positives and negatives, ups and downs. But that’s what our goals were. And that’s still our goal. Be the best we can be. Continue to learn. Continue to get better. The journey shows you who you are.”

So far, the journey has shown that the Knicks are a resilient, talented team. 

Now, they can take a short rest and get ready for the next round of the playoffs. 

The conference final will start on either Sunday or Monday. Game 4 of Cavs-Pistons is Monday night.

Canadiens beat Sabres to take a 2-1 lead in the second-round Eastern Conference series

MONTREAL (AP) — Cole Caufield scored his second goal of the playoffs and added an assist as the Montreal Canadiens beat the Buffalo Sabres 6-2 in a dominant Game 3 on Sunday night to take a 2-1 lead in their second-round playoff series.

Alex Newhook had two goals, including an empty-netter, and Zachary Bolduc, Juraj Slafkovsky and Kirby Dach also scored for Montreal.

Lane Hutson and Jake Evans each had two assists, and Jakub Dobes made 26 saves as the Canadiens won consecutive games for the first time in this season’s playoffs.

Tage Thompson and Rasmus Dahlin each had a goal and an assist for Buffalo, which dropped its first road game of the postseason. Alex Lyon stopped 31 shots in his second straight loss.

The teams split the first two games in Buffalo. The Sabres handed the Canadiens a 4-2 loss in Game 1 before Montreal responded with a 5-1 victory in Game 2.

Game 4 is Tuesday night in Montreal.

DUCKS 4, GOLDEN KNIGHTS 3

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — Alex Killorn and rookie Beckett Sennecke had a goal and an assist apiece, and Anaheim beat Vegas in Game 4 to even their second-round series at two games apiece.

Ian Moore got his first career playoff goal, Cutter Gauthier contributed three assists and Mikael Granlund also scored for the upstart Ducks, who responded to their 6-2 blowout loss in Game 3 with a mature two-way performance in their first playoff run since 2018.

Lukas Dostal made 18 saves in a strong bounce-back effort after getting pulled from Game 3 for allowing three goals in his latest shaky first period, and his teammates provided more than enough offense to even the series.

Game 5 is Tuesday night in Las Vegas, with Game 6 back in Anaheim on Thursday night.

Pavel Dorofeyev and Brett Howden scored for the Golden Knights, whose three-game road winning streak ended.

Killorn, Sennecke get big goals in Ducks’ series-evening, 4-3 win over Golden Knights in Game 4

NHL: Stanley Cup Playoffs-Vegas Golden Knights at Anaheim Ducks

May 10, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Anaheim Ducks left wing Cutter Gauthier (61) skates with the puck against Vegas Golden Knights center Colton Sissons (10) during the second period in game four of the second round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Honda Center. Mandatory Credit: Corinne Votaw-Imagn Images

Corinne Votaw-Imagn Images

ANAHEIM, Calif. — Alex Killorn and rookie Beckett Sennecke had a goal and an assist apiece, and the Anaheim Ducks beat the Vegas Golden Knights 4-3 in Game 4 on Sunday night to even their second-round series at two games apiece.

Ian Moore got his first career playoff goal, Cutter Gauthier contributed three assists and Mikael Granlund also scored for the upstart Ducks, who responded to their 6-2 blowout loss in Game 3 with a mature two-way performance in their first playoff run since 2018.

Lukas Dostal made 18 saves in a strong bounce-back effort after getting pulled from Game 3 for allowing three goals in his latest shaky first period, and his teammates provided more than enough offense to even the series.

Game 5 is Tuesday night in Las Vegas, with Game 6 back in Anaheim on Thursday night.

Pavel Dorofeyev and Brett Howden scored for the Golden Knights, whose three-game road winning streak ended.

Carter Hart stopped 19 shots despite some shaky moments, while Mitch Marner had three assists in Game 4 following his hat trick in Game 3, giving him an NHL-leading and career-best 16 points in the postseason.

Anaheim scored two power-play goals in Game 4, ending the unit’s 0-for-11 skid and finally denting a Vegas penalty kill that allowed just one power-play goal in its first nine postseason games.

After Killorn scored a tiebreaking power-play goal late in the second period, Moore added one early in the third with his first playoff point.

Tomas Hertl scored for Vegas with 1:04 left while Hart was pulled for an extra attacker, but Anaheim held on.

Sennecke, the Ducks’ 20-year-old Calder Trophy finalist, opened the scoring with just the second power-play goal allowed by the Golden Knights in the entire postseason, ending a streak of 21 straight kills and the Ducks’ 0-for-11 start to the series on the power play.

Sennecke scored a goal in his third consecutive game, joining Sidney Crosby (2007) as the only players under 21 with a three-game postseason goal streak in the 21st century.

Howden scored his seventh goal of the postseason early in the second period off a slick setup from former Ducks draft pick William Karlsson.

But Killorn put the Ducks back ahead when his shot trickled through Hart late in the second period for his fourth goal of the postseason.

Vegas played without captain Mark Stone, who incurred an undisclosed injury in Game 3.

Anaheim shook up its lineup, inserting puck-moving defenseman Olen Zellweger for his playoff debut and his first game action since April 7. Moore and forward Mason McTavish also returned after healthy scratches.

Ducks find their power-play scoring touch and defeat Vegas to even playoff series

Anaheim, CA - May 10: Vegas Golden Knights defenseman Rasmus Andersson, #4, center, and goalie Carter Hart, #79, watch as Anaheim Ducks left wing Alex Killorn, #17, right, scores a goal in the second period during their 4-3 win in Game 4 of their Stanley Cup Western Conference semifinal playoff series at the Honda Center in Anaheim Sunday, May 10, 2026. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
Ducks forward Alex Killorn, right, scores past Vegas goalie Carter Hart during the second period of the Ducks' 4-3 win in Game 4 of the Western Conference semifinals Sunday night at Honda Center. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

The Ducks’ second-round playoff showdown with the Vegas Golden Knights has become a best-of-three series.

With a 4-3 victory Sunday before a raucous sold-out crowd at the Honda Center, the Ducks evened the series 2-2 as it heads back to Las Vegas for Game 5 on Tuesday. But it wasn’t easy, with the Golden Knights twice rallying from one-goal deficits, only to see the Ducks answer each time.

And the Ducks’ power play, so lethal in the team’s first-round win over Edmonton and so ineffective in the first three games of this series, finally found a spark, scoring goals in each of the first two periods.

The Ducks' goals came from Beckett Sennecke, Mikael Granlund, Alex Killorn and Ian Moore. Pavel Dorofeyev, Brett Howden and Tomas Hertl scored for Vegas.

Read more:'That's in the garbage can.' Ducks can't stop Mitch Marner, Golden Knights in Game 3 loss

The Ducks were fast and physical in the early going, playing with an urgency they lacked in their Game 3 loss. They also did a better job protecting the puck and that paid off with the team’s first power-play goal of the series 8:43 into the first period.

Vegas had killed 11 penalties against the Ducks and 21 in a row dating back to Game 3 in their first-round series against Utah. But after Dylan Coghlan went off for interference, Sennecke teed up a slap shot from the top of the right circle for his fourth goal of the playoffs, putting the Ducks up 1-0.

The lead didn’t last long, however, with Dorofeyev evening things with a power-play goal of his own about a minute and half later. The goal, on a tip-in, was Dorofeyev’s fifth of the postseason.

Ducks defenseman Ian Moore celebrates with teammates after scoring in the third period.
Ducks defenseman Ian Moore celebrates with teammates after scoring in the third period of a 4-3 win over the Golden Knights in Game 4 on Sunday at Honda Center. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

Granlund put the Ducks back on top less than five minutes before the first intermission, taking a pass from Jeffrey Viel along the left-side boards and getting off a shot as he battled Vegas forward Cole Smith. The puck appeared to strike the blade of Smith’s stick as Viel let it go and that proved fortunate for the Ducks since the deflection fooled defenseman Noah Hanifin and goalie Carter Hart, who both let the bouncing puck tumble through them and into the goal.

That lead didn’t last long, either, with Howden tying things again for Vegas 4:04 into the second period. The goal, on the Golden Knights’ ninth shot, was Howden’s seventh of the playoffs, giving him a share of the NHL lead. Mitch Marner assisted on the first two Vegas goals, giving him a league-best 15 points in 10 postseason games.

However, Killorn scored the Ducks’ second power-play less than two minutes before the second intermission, putting the Ducks in front to stay. Moore doubled the lead 3:43 into the third, lining in a slap shot from well above the right circle.

The two-goal lead matched the largest of the series for the Ducks. Hertl cut that in half with 64 seconds to play after Vegas pulled their goalie for an extra attacker. But the Golden Knights got no closer.

Read more:'We kept the momentum.' Beckett Sennecke, Leo Carlsson power Ducks to Game 2 win over Vegas

Both teams have split their two games at home. The Golden Knights will have the home-ice advantage — if there is one — over the last three games since two are scheduled in Las Vegas.

Sunday’s win marked the sixth consecutive time the Ducks evened a playoff series it trailed 2-1 after three games.

Vegas played without winger Mark Stone, whose 28 goals were second-most on the team during the regular season. Stone, who had a goal and an assist in the first three games against the Ducks, is the team’s all-time playoff scoring leader with 79 points (39 goals, 40 assists) in 94 games. He sustained an undisclosed injury in the first period of Game 3 and his status for the rest of the series is unclear.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Lakers vs. Thunder Game 4 Preview: Is this it for L.A.?

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - MAY 09: LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers reacts against the Oklahoma City Thunder during the fourth quarter in Game Three of the Second Round of the NBA Western Conference Playoffs at Crypto.com Arena on May 09, 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 Harry How/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Now on the brink of elimination, the Los Angeles Lakers look to avoid being swept in Game 4 against the Oklahoma City Thunder on Monday.

Start time and TV schedule

Who: Los Angeles Lakers vs. Oklahoma City Thunder

When: 7:30 p.m. PT, May 7

Where: Crypto.com Arena

Watch: Prime Video


Unless the Lakers have a miracle in them to come back from a 3-0 series deficit, this series feels pretty much over. No matter what adjustment the Lakers come up with, what’s been established is that they’re simply not better than the Thunder.

And that’s why Los Angeles is on the verge of being swept — unless they have something to say about it.

In order to keep their season alive on Monday, the Lakers have to do something they haven’t done in this series: outplay the Thunder. This means LeBron James and Austin Reaves have to give more than what they already have in the last three games and hope most of their supporting cast play extraordinarily well.

This is what James and Reaves pretty much implied after Game 3. But the question is, will they follow through?

Over the years in the playoffs, there have been times when the Lakers let go of the rope — remember the Nuggets series in 2023 — simply because they couldn’t compete anymore. They can do that on Monday, too, but it’ll be up to them.

This season has obviously not been perfect for the Lakers, but if there are two things they have consistently done, it’s compete to the best of their abilities and rise to the occasion. That’s why it’ll honestly be a surprise if this team doesn’t go down swinging. They owe it to themselves at least to keep fighting until the final buzzer.

Whether fighting means controlling the paint, stepping up their defense, especially against the Thunder’s role players — looking at Ajay Mitchell — or simply coming out stronger in the third quarter, this is the game where the Lakers throw everything they have at OKC and let desperation take over.

Let’s see if that works for the purple and gold and if they can live to fight another day on Monday.

Notes and Updates

  • For the Lakers’ injury report, only Luka Dončić (left hamstring strain) is out.
  • As for the Thunder, Jalen Williams (left hamstring strain) and Thomas Sorber (ACL surgery recovery) will not suit up.

You can follow Nicole on Twitter at @nicoleganglani.

Spurs coach Mitch Johnson sounds off on Wolves' physicality with Wemby

San Antonio Spurs head coach Mitch Johnson had to field questions about his superstar center after his first career ejection in Game 4 against the Minnesota Timberwolves on May 10.

Victor Wembanyama was ejected in the second quarter after pulling in a rebound and delivering an intentional elbow to the throat of Naz Reid after being swarmed by him and Jaden McDaniels.

Johnson, after the game didn't condone the act, but was in defense of the Spurs' MVP candidate and 2026 Defensive Player of the Year.

“In general, I do think it’s getting to a point that the people that are in charge of controlling the game and protecting the physicality of the game don’t do that, then at some point he’s going to have to protect himself,” Johnson told reporters after the game. “We’ve been asking him to do that for a while. Naz Reid was okay and that call was warranted, but in terms of the game plan of every single team we face since that young man has been in the league and the physicality that people try to impose on him and the lack of protection is really disappointing."

Minnesota and San Antonio had been a physical series leading up to the Wemby's bow. On the particular play, as Wembanyama came down with the rebound, he was smacked in the head by McDaniels, who then held Wembanyama's arm afterward.

As he swung away from McDaniels, his elbow made contact with Reid, catching him in the throat.

The game's officials reviewed it and determined that the contact was an unnecessary, non-basketball play with wind up, contact and follow through, resulting in the Spurs center's first-career ejection – regular season or postseason.

“At some level, it’s starting to get actually disgusting, just in terms of when he tries to fight through things and be professional and mature and deal with some of that stuff," Johnson said. "I’m glad he took matters into his own hands — not at all in terms of hitting Naz Reid, I want to be very clear about that, I’m glad Naz Reid was okay. I didn’t want him to elbow him. But he’s going to have to protect himself if they’re not. And I think it’s disgusting.”

The Spurs went on to lose the game without Wemby, 114-109.

Social media reactions to Spurs-Wolves physicality

Social media also has noticed the physicality with Wembanyama in the Wolves-Spurs series so far. Here's how X users, some clearly Spurs fans, have reacted to how the series has been played. It's social media, please be advised of explicit language.

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Spurs head coach Mitch Johnson responds to Victor Wembanyama ejection

It’s unfair, but Victor Wembanyama has to be bigger person

This would’ve been a very different game had Victor Wembanyama been on the floor for most of it.

The San Antonio Spurs wasted a chance to take a commanding 3-1 series lead on Sunday, May 10 over the Minnesota Timberwolves in the Western Conference semifinals when Wembanyama’s second quarter ejection sabotaged their efforts.

Wembanyama, 22, is a bright, young player, one who has been transparent about his relative inexperience in playoff basketball. Treat this as another lesson, rather unfairly, that he’ll have to learn.

Because not only did Wembanyama miss two and a half quarters of an eventual five-point loss, he might face further discipline from the NBA league office, including a possible suspension.

With Game 5 set for Tuesday, May 12, the NBA is expected to review the incident and make any determination on discipline by Monday evening. And if Wembanyama does indeed face a suspension in Game 5, the series might very well slip away from the Spurs.

No team is better than the Timberwolves at annoying opposing players, getting under their skin to force them to respond in ways that are uncharacteristic. Jaden McDaniels, an all-world defender and sometimes-troll, is the perfect example.

McDaniels, one series after he called out the entire Denver Nuggets by name for being “all bad defenders,” joined teammate Naz Reid in the second quarter on Sunday night, pestering Wembanyama to the point of frustration that prompted the Spurs phenom to throw a reckless elbow at Reid’s throat.

It was a dangerous play, and Reid and Wembanyama are both fortunate that the elbow appeared to catch Reid’s collarbone before striking his throat.

And, to be completely fair to Wembanyama, McDaniels and Reid were aggressively harassing Wembanyama, and he should have the right to protect himself. This, unfortunately for Wembanyama, is nothing new.

“At some level, it’s starting to get actually disgusting, just in terms of when he tries to fight through things and be professional and mature and deal with some of that stuff,” Spurs coach Mitch Johnson told reporters after the game. “I’m glad he took matters into his own hands — not at all in terms of hitting Naz Reid, I want to be very clear about that. I’m glad Naz Reid was okay, I didn’t want him to elbow him. But he’s going to have to protect himself if (the officials) are not.”

Victor Wembanyama commits a Flagrant 2 foul on Naz Reid during Game 4 at Target Center.

Johnson is absolutely justified, but Wembanyama will nonetheless have to learn that he and the Spurs stand to lose more in cases like these. He’s one of the top three best players in the world, and teams are going to hunt and target him — whether that’s in an attempt to put him in foul trouble, or, like Sunday night, to get in his head. This is only magnified in the playoffs, when a suspension can swing an entire series.

Wembanyama is too good. No player impacts the game on both ends the way he does. His defensive presence alters the way opposing teams attack San Antonio, and his shooting range and offensive portfolio are singular for someone with his frame.

After playing just 12:29 on Sunday night, Wembanyama left with 4 points on 2-of-5 shooting, adding 4 rebounds and 1 assist. And the Timberwolves, both in the minutes following the ejection and in the fourth quarter, spammed attacks in the paint, knowing Wembanyama would not be there to protect the rim. Simply put: Wembanyama’s ejection made the prospect of a Spurs victory far more challenging.

“Everybody know the rim’s going to be a lot more open when he’s not on the floor,” Timberwolves guard Anthony Edwards told reporters after the game. “Yeah, he’s 8 feet tall, so he’s gonna cover up the rim anytime he on the floor.”

When reviewing possible suspensions, the league looks at several factors, including a player’s history. Since this was Wembanyama’s first Flagrant 2 and first ejection, the NBA might opt to let the time missed in Game 4 stand. The league can also fine Wembanyama.

Johnson, who obviously has an agenda to push in this case, said it “would be ridiculous” if Wembanyama was suspended.

Either way, the Spurs should prepare for the possibility. And beyond that, they should continue to expect teams to provoke Wembanyama like this, simply because San Antonio is easier to beat when he’s not on the floor.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Victor Wembanyama can expect further provocation in NBA playoffs

2026 NBA mock draft roundup: Lakers searching for a center

TAMPA, FLORIDA - MARCH 20: Rueben Chinyelu #9 of the Florida Gators reacts to winning the first round of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournamentagainst the Prairie View A&M Panthers held at Benchmark International Arena on March 20, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Tyler Schank/NCAA Photos via Getty Images) | NCAA Photos via Getty Images

Sunday’s NBA draft lottery provided a bit of a surprise and some unfortunate good luck for the Clippers, who saw the Thunder not jump into the top four while also having the Pacers slip, resulting in the other LA team picking fifth.

The Wizards secured the top pick, a familiar place for an Anthony Davis team to be, while the Jazz, Grizzlies and Bulls round out the top of the draft.

The Lakers knew their spot in the draft some time ago following a coin flip with the Knicks that saw them land at the 25th pick. With the season on the brink of ending and the draft now approaching, let’s take a look at some of the prospects fans can start searching for on YouTube.


SB Nation — Joshua Jefferson, forward, Iowa State

In a bit of a spoiler for the rest of these picks, this is the only non-center mocked to the Lakers. However, wings are always a valuable commodity and the Lakers certainly could use more of them.

Here’s what Ricky O’Donnell had to say about this pick:

Jefferson is a big, strong forward who brings two-way ability and rare passing vision for someone his size. He made a nice leap as a shooter this year to get up to 34.5 percent from three (a career-best), but he’ll need to continue to grow in that area. He will add some toughness and rebounding to any frontcourt, and his ball handling and playmaking would let JJ Redick’s coaching staff get creative with his usage.

Friend of Silver Screen & Roll and draft expert Mike Garcia also shared some insights on Jefferson in his recent Substack post.

Simply put, he has an NBA body and reads the floor. He has a sense of confidence with the basketball and just plays poised all the time. It helps he knows exactly where to be and what to anticipate on both ends of the floor. This kind of reading ability, a lot of NBA players don’t reach.

What makes him appealing? He’s just mobile enough to be switchable, but reads the game so well, he’ll likely be neutral defensively as a big wing and possible back up 5 as a rookie, which is an absolutely big deal.


ESPN — Henri Veesaar, center, North Carolina

The general consensus is that the Lakers need an athletic, lob-catching center. However, there also might not be that type of player available. Instead, there’s a different option in Henri Veesaar from North Carolina.

Here’s Jeremy Woo’s insight:

Veesaar comes off a productive season at North Carolina and will offer sheer size and viable shooting (42.6% from 3) in a draft that has become light on true centers. He has above-average athleticism and offensive skill for his size, plus he should also be able to hold up defensively in drop coverage. The functionality he offers on offense and defense should allow him to plug into a rotation next season.


The Athletic — Henri Veesaar, center, North Carolina

Woo wasn’t alone in projecting Veesaar to LA as Sam Vecenie of The Athletic followed suit as well.

Veesaar is projecting like he prefers to stay in the 2026 draft, and he’d be a pretty excellent fit as a floor-spacing complement for the Lakers with all of their perimeter talent. Yes, Luka Dončić tends to like more of a rim-running big than a floor-spacer, but the Lakers simply need talent at the center position. At 7-foot, Veesaar moves very well for his size and also has a high-end skill set that involves both passing (as he averaged 2.1 assists per game) and shooting from distance, as he hit 42.6 percent of his three 3-point attempts per game.


CBS Sports — Rueben Chinyelu, center, Florida

Veesaar isn’t the only center expected to be available in the range of the Lakers’ pick. Reuben Chinyelu isn’t quite a lob-catching big, but he’s still a center that could prove valuable to the purple and gold.

Here’s Adam Finkelstein’s thoughts on the potential selection:

Chinyelu is another one who may very well be headed back to Florida next year, but is ready to impact an NBA game defensively right now. At 6-foot-10 with a nearly 7-foot-8 wingspan, he’s freakishly long, powerful, and yet totally switchable with great recoverability. The offense has improved, but is still limited. The Gators are waiting, but it’s not hard to see how Chinyelu could be exactly what the Lakers need.

Our good friend Mike Garcia also wrote about Chinyelu in his Substack post:

Steven Adams’s strength is otherworldly, but if there was a more mortal version of that kind of archetype, it’s Rueben Chinyelu. Rueben isn’t that kind of giant, but he has one advantage defensively that Steven Adams doesn’t have; the ability to mirror smaller point guards defensively along the perimeter, while still being a dominant rebounder. This also makes him great at hedging or trapping in screen situations and recovering to the roll man.

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

Sergei Murashov Continues To Step Up In Big Games

It's no secret that there were some Pittsburgh Penguins fans who wanted goaltender Sergei Murashov to come up from Wilkes-Barre/Scranton for the Stanley Cup Playoffs. 

He got a taste of the NHL during a two-week stretch in November and also played in one game in December before he was sent back to WBS. During that time, he recorded his first win (a shutout over Nashville in Sweden), but also endured some growing pains.

Fast forward to the end of the regular season, and the Penguins' goaltending was inconsistent, leading some fans to think that Murashov was the best option heading into the playoffs.

The Penguins didn't feel that way, opting to keep him in the American Hockey League for the rest of the regular season and into the Calder Cup Playoffs. He finished the regular season with a 24-9-4 record, a 2.20 goals-against average and a .919 save percentage. 

Murashov was the 1A goaltender with Joel Blomqvist serving as the 1B behind him. WBS head coach Kirk MacDonald rewarded Murashov for his excellent regular season with the starting job in the Atlantic Division Semifinals against the Hershey Bears and he didn't disappoint. 

Murashov won three of the four games in the series, compiling a 1.99 goals-against average and a .937 save percentage. He also stepped up in a big way in Game 4, finishing with 37 saves on 38 shots. 

As the series went on, Murashov got better. One save that really stood out was in Game 2 when WBS was down 2-1 in the third period. WBS gave up a 3-on-1 rush, but it didn't matter for Murashov as he stayed with the play and was able to make a sprawling save after it looked like he had lost the net.

WBS may have lost that game, but he gave them a chance throughout the third period with big, timely saves like that one. 

Pittsburgh Penguins goaltender Sergei Murashov (1) warms up before playing against the Nashville Predators in a Global Series ice hockey game at Avicii Arena. Mandatory Credit: Per Haljestam-Imagn Images
Pittsburgh Penguins goaltender Sergei Murashov (1) warms up before playing against the Nashville Predators in a Global Series ice hockey game at Avicii Arena. Mandatory Credit: Per Haljestam-Imagn Images

Fast forward to Game 4 (his 37-save performance), he was stepping up when he was needed, especially when Hershey was firing everything at him in the third period. He was cool, calm, and collected in the crease and didn't seem phased by the moment. His rebound control was also very good, and he continued to look more confident. 

He'll have to bring all of those traits into the Atlantic Division Final series against Springfield, which is set to start in WBS on Tuesday. It's WBS's first trip to the Atlantic Division Final since 2016. A series win against Springfield would send WBS to the Eastern Conference Final, where it would await the winner of the Cleveland-Toronto series, which is the North Division Final. 

5 Penguins' Prospects Most Likely To Make NHL Roster Out Of Training Camp5 Penguins' Prospects Most Likely To Make NHL Roster Out Of Training CampThe Pittsburgh Penguins should have some interesting decisions to make in terms of their NHL roster next season - and their top prospects will be a big part of that.

If Murashov keeps this up, Penguins general manager/president Kyle Dubas would likely have no choice but to put him on the NHL roster for the start of the 2026-27 season. He's already in a good spot since it's unlikely that Stuart Skinner returns as one of the goaltenders, but this would be the icing on the cake, unless he somehow has a poor training camp or preseason. 

Game 1 between WBS and Springfield is set for Tuesday at 7 p.m. ET. Game 2 will be on Thursday at the same time before the series shifts to Springfield for Games 3 and 4 on May. 19 and May. 21. The start time for those latter two games will also be at 7 p.m. ET.

A potential Game 5 would be back in WBS on May. 23 at 6 p.m. ET. 


Bookmark THN - Pittsburgh Penguins on your Google News tab to follow the latest Penguins news, roster moves, player features, and more!    

Spurs keep Game 4 vs. Timberwolves close despite Wembanyama’s ejection, fall late

SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS - MAY 06: Anthony Edwards #5 of the Minnesota Timberwolves dribbles against Stephon Castle #5 of the San Antonio Spurs during the second quarter in Game Two of the Second Round of the NBA Western Conference Playoffs at Frost Bank Center on May 06, 2026 in San Antonio, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Ronald Cortes/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Western Conference Semifinals between the Spurs and the Timberwolves keeps providing memorable matchups. On Sunday, Victor Wembanyama’s first-half ejection threatened to create a throwaway game, but the Silver and Black responded without their best player and battled to the very end before losing a heartbreaker, 114-109. The series will move back to San Antonio for Game 5 tied 2-2.

Surprisingly, considering the event that will be most remembered from this game, the Spurs seemed like the calmer and more disciplined team early on. They played with pace while still involving Victor Wembanyama both on and off the ball, with the pick and roll between the big man and Stephon Castle proving to be effective. On the defensive end San Antonio was not sending as much help as they did in past games but were getting some stops. The main thing keeping the Timberwolves in it in the opening few minutes were second-chance points. Alas, as it has happened often in the postseason, once the second unit checked in, the execution suffered and Minnesota upped the pressure to create turnovers. The momentum was swinging the home team’s way before Dylan Harper, who had a slow, erratic start, showed off his tremendous offensive talent to provide a boost. After one, the Wolves led by four on a surprisingly high-scoring affair.

Both teams quickly started to settle for too many jumpers to kick off the second quarter, but the Spurs were getting the better of their opponent until the incident that changed the game. Victor Wembanyama got an offensive rebound, was fouled, didn’t hear a whistle, and threw an elbow at Naz Reid that rightfully got him ejected. The rest of the half prectably consisted of the Wolves trying to get to the rim as much as possible, with Anthony Edwards attempting to take over. But the Silver and Black responded. Luke Kornet provided some good minutes, and the frenetic pace of the game when they went small favored them. There were some stretches when it seemed like Minnesota would pull away, but San Antonio’s guards always scored a timely bucket to keep up with their opponent, as Chris Finch’s guys fell for the trap of playing rushed. At the half, the Spur still trailed by four.

The circumstances were so favorable for them with Wembanyama out that it wasn’t shocking to see the Timberwolves come out of the locker room feeling a little complacent. The energetic Spurs made them pay for it by causing turnovers, and never looked scared as they hunted matchups and attacked their defenders one-on-one. The isolation-heavy style does not characterize San Antonio, but it worked well and led to Minnesota’s players trying to do the same, with many looking to be the hero of the night, to bad results. When Kornet had to rest, the team suffered from a lack of height, but tried to make up for it with timely traps for Anthony Edwards on defense and pace and aggression on the other end. Improbably, San Antonio won the third quarter and went into the final frame up four.

The chaotic nature of the game didn’t stop until the final buzzer. Edwards went off for 16 fourth-quarter points, and both Naz Reid and Rudy Gobert had good moments on offense, which normally would have meant that the Timberwolves were fully in control. It wasn’t the case. They took the lead with a shade under five minutes to go, but the Spurs’ guards responded a few times to take it back. Even after the home team managed to extend its buffer to seven heading into the final minute, San Antonio continued to fight and got it to three with 21 seconds to go. The deciding factor on what was often a sloppy but always hard-fought matchup was a catch from Ayo Dosunmu on a long inbound pass, as the ball bounced off his leg, allowing him to control it. In the end, despite the Silver and Black’s fantastic effort without their superstar, Minnesota won Game 4 to tie the series.

Game notes

  • The Wembanyama ejection is hard to talk about because he absolutely deserved it, but his frustration leading up to it is also easy to understand. Wembanyama takes a beating every game. Opposing teams have stated that it’s their goal to be as physical with him as the officials allow. He had gotten hit with an elbow in a previous play and was clearly fouled on the rebound that led to him throwing the elbow. He could have seriously hurt Reid, so he got the punishment he deserved, but, as Mitch Johnson said after the game, “at some stage, he should be protected. And if not, he’s going to have to protect himself, and, unfortunately, stuff like that happens.”
  • The guard trio was terrific on Sunday, stepping up to provide scoring. Fox, Castle, and Harper combined for 68 points. They all had their struggles at times, with Fox’s inability to hit shots in the clutch being the most notable, but they all not only scored but also defended and played with the pace the team needed to have a shot.
  • The forwards, on the other hand, struggled. Julian Champagnie missed all of his five threes. Keldon Johnson had three turnovers. So did Carter Bryant, who did not get a favorable whistle at all, as the officials seemed intent on reminding him that he’s a rookie. Harrison Barnes didn’t make much of an impact in his 10 minutes. They all played extremely hard, like everyone else on the team, but didn’t make plays.
  • Devin Vassell had a great Devin Vassell game. Even with the three guards dominating the ball, he still managed to log 14 points and three assists while hitting big shots and making some plays on defense. Vassell has settled into a small role in which he has to pick his spots on offense and do a little bit of everything else, and he delivered in the loss.
  • Luke Kornet turns into a different player when Wembanyama is not available. He wasn’t having a good postseason in a very limited role, but he gave San Antonio a strong 27 minutes in this one. There were some mistakes, but overall, a terrific “next man up” night for Kornet.
  • Anthony Edwards played 40 minutes and had 36 points in 22 shots. That’s a fantastic performance in ideal circumstances, but considering he’s playing through two knee injuries and is dealing with conditioning issues, it’s just insane.

Play of the game

Dylan Harper is going to be a superstar.

Game 5: at San Antonio on Tuesday

The Spurs will look to get a match point at home. Hopefully, Victor Wembanyama will be available and not suspended.

Utah Jazz jump to #2 in the lottery, plus full results

CHICAGO, IL - MAY 12: Utah Jazz win the 5th overall pick during the 2025 Draft Lottery on May 12, 2025 at McCormick Place in Chicago, Illinois. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE(Photo by Melissa Tamez/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

In what has a chance to be one of the most important nights in Jazz history, the Utah Jazz jumped in the NBA Lottery to the #2 spot for the upcoming NBA draft.

Here are the final results, which show all the movement.

PostitionTeamLottery Movement
1Washington WizardsStayed
2Utah JazzUp 2
3Memphis GrizzliesUp 3
4Chicago BullsUp 5
5Los Angeles Clippers (From Indiana)Indiana dropped 3 giving pick to Clippers
6Brooklyn NetsDown 3
7Sacramento KingsDown 2
8Atlanta Hawks (From New Orleans Pelicans)Down 1
9Dallas MavericksDown 1
10Milwaukee BucksStayed
11Golden State WarriorsStayed
12Oklahoma City Thunder (From LA Clippers)]Stayed
13Miami HeatStayed
14Charlotte HornetsStayed

Aside from it being a massive night for the Wizards, Jazz, Grizzlies, and Bulls, it was a devastating night for a few teams, but no one more than the Indiana Pacers. The Pacers, in their trade for Ivica Zubac, had a stipulation on their pick that if the pick was top-4 they kept it. But if it fell below 4, they would give it to the Clippers which is exactly what happened. Now, the Clippers, who are without Zubac, find themselves with a #5 pick to build around.

For the Jazz this is a culmination of four years of rebuilding that ends with an extremely satisfying end. Utah will now have one of the tier-1 players from this draft: AJ Dybantsa or Darryn Peterson. The player Utah drafts will be one of their cornerstone pieces and will have the chance to not only play, but be a part of a team that will be competing for the playoffs this season.

The Utah Jazz now have a Sinister Six core: Darryn Peterson (If AJ Dybantsa goes #1), Keyonte George, Ace Bailey, Lauri Markkanen, Jaren Jackson Jr., and Walker Kessler (if he signs). It’s quite the core with a mix of youth and veterans in their prime. With this group, the Jazz will have a chance to be one of the top teams in the Western Conference. Yes, the Thunder and Spurs are going to be difficult to beat, but Utah has the mix of talent, coaching, and depth that could absolutely do the trick.

Now the Utah Jazz look forward to the NBA Draft that be on June 23rd. Let the posturing begin!!

Despite the way things ended, Joel Embiid is optimistic about his health moving forward

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - MAY 08: Joel Embiid #21 of the Philadelphia 76ers in action during Game Three of the Second Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs against the New York Knicks at Xfinity Mobile Arena on May 08, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Emilee Chinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Context matters when breaking down sports.

“A banged-up Joel Embiid lost in the second round of the NBA Playoffs,” sounds like a familiar story, but that’s only if you ignore everything that’s happened over the last two-plus years.

Sure, there was plenty of disappointment after the Sixers were crushed in Game 4 Sunday by the New York Knicks to complete a sweep, but there was also plenty of optimism. They made the second round of the playoffs after a 24-win season. They came back from a 3-1 deficit to defeat the Boston Celtics in the postseason for the first time since 1982. Tyrese Maxey took another leap and VJ Edgecombe had one hell of a rookie season.

And Joel Embiid played basketball. At times, he even played it at an extremely high level. If you weren’t sure that could happen this season, you weren’t alone.

“I thought I was done. That’s the best way to put it,” Embiid said. “I came into this year not knowing where I was going to be, how long I was going to play, if I was even going to play, based on how the knee was the last few years.”

The former MVP played in 38 games this season and eight more in the playoffs. After a rough start, his numbers from his last 29 regular-season games were, well, Joel Embiid-esque. He averaged 29.6, 8.4 rebounds, 4.2 assists and 1.2 blocks in 33.5 minutes a game. He shot 50.9% from the field and 37.6% from three during that span.

Of course, the appendectomy came at the worst possible time, with Embiid trending in a positive direction health-wise and the team beginning to coalesce. When all seemed lost against the Celtics in the first round, Embiid played his guts out in Games 5, 6 and 7 to complete a historic comeback from a 3-1 deficit.

After that, there simply wasn’t much left in the tank. Embiid was dealing with a right hip issue, which he seemed to indicate was a complication from his recent surgery. Remember, he returned just 17 days post-op and it’s a procedure that cuts through muscle. It was pretty remarkable he returned at all, let alone carried his team to a Game 7 victory in TD Garden.

The most positive news from Embiid as his 2025-26 season ends: his knees feel good.

Embiid is optimistic his most recent procedure and work with Dr. Jonathan Glashow will allow him to be more available, something he admits led to a lot of the team’s inconsistencies this past season.

“That’s where I put it on me,” he said, “where I felt like I wasn’t around for much of the season, for a lot of things, and moving forward, understanding what it takes when it comes to my body, and what we have to do as a group to make sure that I get to play every game. I feel like we found that solution, so it’ll be better next year.”

So, this will be an offseason where Embiid gets to work on his game and not worry about rehabbing yet another knee surgery. It’ll take some time to recover from his most recent ailments, but there’s nothing to suggest those will be long-term hurdles.

Aside from his body, Embiid does seem to be in a great place mentally. He sat postgame with his son, Arthur, who looked ready for bed. He was asked a question about his legacy, but it wasn’t something he wasn’t interested in discussing — at least as far as on the basketball court.

“I don’t know. I don’t care,” he said. “I got this beautiful young man. You guys might’ve taken away my chance to put my daughter to sleep. My wife is going to be extremely mad at me.”

Again, there was disappointment, but no anger or finger-pointing or doomerism.

But there was trolling, of course.

“Maybe I got to go to church more so I don’t have those type of things right before the playoffs,” Embiid said. “I don’t know. Maybe I’m cursed. I don’t know. Maybe Philadelphia is cursed. …

“That’s a joke, but, yeah, just got to keep doing the right things over and over and hope that at some point it changes.”

Timberwolves 114, Spurs 109: They Never Make it Easy, Do They?

MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - MAY 10: Anthony Edwards #5 and Rudy Gobert #27 of the Minnesota Timberwolves embrace after the 114-109 victory against the San Antonio Spurs in Game Four of the Second Round of the NBA Western Conference Playoffs at Target Center on May 10, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. 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 David Berding/Getty Images) | Getty Images

What did Sunday night’s Game 5 win take for the Minnesota Timberwolves?

“Some heart,” Rudy Gobert said to the Target Center crowd after the madness had ended.

Where do we even start?

Perhaps the part where this should have been less close than it ended up as with a sharp elbow to the face?

With 8:39 left in the second quarter, Victor Wembanyama teed off on Naz Reid out of frustration. A 36-34 game favoring the Wolves at that point in time seemed to open up the clouds.

“KICK HIM OUT” chants rained down at Target Center as Wemby initially didn’t know what getting flagrant foul 2 meant. With his trek back to the locker room, Luke Kornet was needing to play heavy minutes out of necessity – a big man the Wolves have had a lot of success against, especially wiht Rudy Gobert on the floor.

Compound one of the best defender ever being out of the rest of the game, a great start out of the gate had any reasonable person thinking that the Wolves were going to sleep walk to a 2-2 series tie.

As with many of the situations throughout the season, the Wolves unfortunately thought they were going to as well.

Cue the regular season music!

At the end of the third quarter, the Wemby-less Spurs were 62% on their twos, while the Wolves were 44% on theirs.

Leading by eight in the second half at their peak, the Spurs and DeAaron Fox killed the Wolves drop coverage. Fox got to whatever he wanted in the mid range, and missed rotations made the undisciplined Gobert-led defense show its warts.

But similar to the situations that would shake out over the 82-game schedule, a certain number 5 would go on to throw the cape on.

Regaining the lead with four minutes left, Anthony Edwards went 6-8 and notched 16 points in the fourth quarter.

In a game where Julius Randle struggled with six turnovers, Jaden McDaniels was 6-15 from the field, and Ayo Dosunmu was 3-12, Anthony Edwards on .75 knees cam through.

Game 5 in San Antonio begins knotted up 2-2.


Up Next

A game at a reasonable time!

With the New York Knicks sweep of the Philadelphia 76ers, tipoff for Game 5 in San Antonio on Tuesday will be at 7:00 PM CST. It’s extremely doubtful Wembanyama will be suspended, but you never really do say never. The league will certainly review it, but what follows will likely be a fine at worst.

San Antonio vs. Minnesota, Final Score: Spurs almost overcome Wembanyama ejection, but Timberwolves survive 114-109

MINNEAPOLIS, MN - MAY 10: Dylan Harper #2 of the San Antonio Spurs dribbles the ball during the game against the Minnesota Timberwolves during Round Two Game Four of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on May 10, 2026 at Target Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota. 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 Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Early in the second quarter tonight, Victor Wembanyama, who was being manhandled by multiple players every time he entered the game, tried to spin his way out of a double bear hug from a couple of Wolves, and caught Naz Reid hard on the neck with an elbow. The referees called this a flagrant foul two, which resulted in an immediate ejection for the Spurs best player and emotional leader. It was a move that didn’t look intentional at all to me, but that was not the judgment of the officials, who had an interesting evening calling the game.

[As much as it pains me to write this, it does seem like the elbow might have been intentional, because a close analysis of the video shows that Wemby had eyes on Reid before the elbow lands. So, correct call but also the officials need to address how much other players are able to scratch and grab on Wembanyama without being called for a foul. This goes beyond normal physical defense into a long form mugging attack, and it’s not basketball.]

The Spurs almost overcame Wemby’s absence with some solid performances with their trio of elite guards, as Dylan Harper had a solid night on both ends of the court, Steph Castle had another great night, and De’Aaron Fox stepped up late in the game with timely scoring. Luke Kornet had a good outing as the sole big, protecting the rim while he was in. The Spurs had to go small for long stretches of the game and that’s when Minnesota took advantage of the Spurs lack of rim protection. Carter Bryant couldn’t get going tonight, and he committed a few bad fouls, which limited his minutes. The Spurs tried to control Anthony Edwards by double teaming him every time he touched the ball, but he’s just too good to completely stop, as he took over the game in the fourth quarter with 14 points and brought them back from an 8 point deficit to take the the lead with 3 minutes left. Rudy Gobert made some key plays in the comeback as he took advantage of the Spurs lack of size to grab timely rebounds and put them through the iron circle thing bolted to the backboard, a thing that he’s mostly unfamiliar with.

The Spurs almost pulled off an improbable rally in the last 30 seconds, but Minnesota was able to avoid a turnover as Ayo Dosunmu somehow bounced the ball off his trailing leg and kept it in bounds to keep the Spurs from having a shot to tie it up with 10 seconds left. Despite their valiant effort, the Spurs couldn’t quite eke out a win tonight, and this series is going to at least six games. It resumes on Tuesday at 7:00 PM in San Antonio, which is now a must-win game for the Silver and Black squad.

Observations

  • Because this game was broadcast over the air, I watched it on my antenna-connected TV, and also on my streaming network provider on my computer. The stream was consistently about 15 seconds behind the antenna feed, which got really distracting. I get it that for technical reasons that the streaming content is behind the antenna feed, but modern TV broadcasts are already in a digital format. Fifteen seconds seems excessive.
  • Oh no, Reggie Miller. Having him announcing a game makes it a lot less fun to watch.
  • The Spurs leave Gobert open on the perimeter for a reason.
  • The Timberwolves started the game with a lot of energy and physicality, tying it up at 10 in the first 4 minutes. The offensive rebounding of the Wolves is a problem for the Spurs. The possession isn’t over until the defense gets a rebound.
  • Terence Shannon is a master of theatrical defense because he relies a lot on flopping to sell charge calls. It’s too bad, because he is actually a good defender, but almost every time he draws a charge, he’s still moving into the path of the driving player.
  • When Wemby went to the bench, the Wolves went on a 14-3 run and briefly took a 5 point lead with two minutes left in the first.
  • Dylan Harper went on a heater in the last couple of minutes of the first, while the Timberwolves exploited the Spurs zone and uncharacteristically hit three-point shots. The Wolves led 34-30 at the end of the first quarter.
  • Early in the second quarter, Wembanyama was called for an insane flagrant penalty two after being manhandled for about 5 seconds by McDaniels and Naz Reid, and tried to spin out of the hold and caught Reid with an elbow. It didn’t look intentional at all, but it looked bad, and I could see a flagrant one, just based on how bad it looked. But a flagrant two and ejection was just insane and unjustified.
  • Is kneeing the shooter in the shoulder a foul? Apparently it is, but you need to call for a review for the refs to call it, and even then it wasn’t a shooting foul. When does the gather begin? Nobody knows. Thanks to Julian Champagnie’s two charity shots, the Wolves led 60-56 at the half.
  • The Spurs survived Wemby’s absence for most of the second quarter, they trailed by two when he was ejected, and the deficit only grew by two by halftime. One troubling indicator was the five missed free throws by the Silver and Black, if they had made those, they could be ahead at the half even with all of the tough things that happened and odd officiating of the first half.
  • I really like Carter Bryant, but he sure gets called for a lot of fouls.
  • The Spurs started the third quarter with increased intensity, taking the lead back from the grasping and leaping Wolves. Fox got mauled when Dosunmu dived at his knees to contest a rebound, but somehow that was just a common foul. He had to sit about five minutes, but looked fine after he returned to the game, using the stepback and speed to get a couple of quick baskets for San Antonio.
  • Edwards was held under control for most of the third quarter, while the Wolves’ offensive production came from unexpected sources, as two consecutive corner triples from Shannon cut the Spurs lead to a pair of buckets. The Spurs survived a late surge from Minnesota and led 84-80 with a quarter to play.
  • Naz Reid went down with an ankle injury early in the fourth, and the Spurs increased their lead to 8 with a Fox triple. You can never feel comfortable against a team that has Anthony Edwards, who can go crazy with scoring at any time, and on cue, a five point barrage from the Ant Man cut the lead to just three points, leading to a quick Mitch Johnson timeout.
  • The Wolves retook the lead with Anthony Edwards doing everything, and Rudy Gobert taking advantage of the double team to roam at the hoop and get easy offensive rebounds and a couple of timely putbacks.
  • The Spurs were down by 7 with 30 seconds left and cut the deficit to one score with 20 seconds left. The Spurs were close to getting the ball back with 13 seconds, but a lucky bounce of Ayo Dosunmo’s leg allowed the Timberwolves to maintain possession and hold of for a 114-109 win.

Up next

The Spurs will play Minnesota in the Frost Bank Center on Tuesday night, at 7:00 PM because it’s the only game of the night after the Knicks swept the Sixers.