The start of the season hasn't been ideal for some teams, and the high preseason expectations have turned into doubt.
Kawhi Leonard scores 41, leads Clippers past Rockets, to consecutive wins for first time since October
INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Forget what Bill Parcells used to say, the LA Clippers are convinced they are better than their record says they are.
Tuesday night, for the second game in a row, they looked like it. Having Kawhi Leonard back healthy helps.
KAWHI DOMINATED FOR THE CLIPPERS TONIGHT!
— NBA on NBC and Peacock (@NBAonNBC) December 24, 2025
41 PTS (most since Dec, 2023)
8 REB
5 AST
16-23 FG pic.twitter.com/nxOgZztD5s
"Just buying into it, what we're trying to do…" Clippers coach Tyronn Lue said when asked what was different in those wins. "Kawhi getting into a healthy state, James (Harden) being healthy... Just stay in the course. We hit a rough patch, and it's been a rough season, with all the injuries, the ups and downs, losing close games. But just stay the course. And so I give our guys credit."
Behind 41 from Leonard and 29 from Harden, the Clippers pulled away for a comfortable win over the Rockets, 128-108. This was the first time the Clippers have won back-to-back games since their second and third games of the season, back in October.
That comes at the expense of a Rockets team that is scuffling, having lost five of their last seven games, with the 27th-ranked defense in the NBA over that stretch. The Rockets struggled from 3-point range in this game (9-of-30), but what was more concerning was that they just kept making the kind of sloppy mistakes one expects from a young team — the kind of mistakes the Rockets thought they had outgrown.
The Rockets need to find themselves in the next 48 hours, before a big Christmas Day game across town against the Lakers.
While the Rockets struggled on defense, the Clippers' defense looked as good as it has all season.
"Outside that first quarter, I thought defensively, we really locked in…" Lue said. "I thought we took care of the basketball, and we did a good job of moving the basketball, making quick decisions."
"Probably the biggest things that we've done is the consistency in our communication — and obviously just the want, the need to play hard," said John Collins, who shot 3-of-3 on his way to 13 points. "I feel like we're all at that feeling we have our backs against the wall, and we just want to continue to improve and obviously change the course of the season."
The start of this game was a fun trip down memory lane, showing the old guys still have it. Kevin Durant scored 17 points on 7-of-10 shooting, while Leonard scored 18 on 8-of-12 shooting. In what had been a back-and-forth game, the Clippers led 63-58 at the half thanks to better shooting from 3-point range (45.5% to 31.3%) and more bench scoring behind Nicolas Batum (six points) and Kobe Sanders (seven).
The Clippers took charge of the game in the third quarter with a 13-2 run in the third to take a 92-75 lead, doing it with their best stretch of defense this season. Los Angeles won the third quarter by a dozen and led by 16 entering the fourth. In the final frame, the Rockets had no answers.
The Rockets have a lot of questions to answer before a big showcase game on Christmas.
"I feel like we just weren't locked in defensively today, I mean me," Amen Thompson said. "I feel like I could have been a lot better. Um, just set down my matchup."
Durant led Houston with 22 points, while Alperen Sengun and Amen Thompson both added 19 points.
The LA Clippers feel like they may be finally finding a few answers. Tyronn Lue challenged his team a couple of days ago to go 35-20 the rest of the way, which would get them to .500 by the end of the season. It's a goal they looked like they could reach on Tuesday night, if they can just stay healthy.
"If we get out of this situation we're in, it's gonna take all of us, and so it starts with (Leonard and Harden). They're our best players," Lue said. "And they responded the last couple of games. We got to continue to keep building days, like I said, just keep stacking days and getting better and better."
Villanova turns back Seton Hall 64-56 in Wildcats’ Big East Conference opener
Austin Reaves' return can't save Lakers from dismal defensive effort in loss to Suns
Austin Reaves returned from a left calf strain that sidelined him for three games, but the Lakers’ second-leading scorer did nothing to fix the team’s most glaring weakness.
The Lakers' defense collapsed in a 132-108 loss to the Suns on Tuesday at Mortgage Matchup Center, giving up a season-high field goal percentage (59%), tying their mark for most points allowed this season. Led by a combined 17-for-29 shooting from star guard Devin Booker (21 points) and Dillon Brooks (25 points), the Suns easily eclipsed the 56.5% they shot against the Lakers on Dec. 1.
The Lakers (19-9) lost consecutive games for the first time and limped into a marquee Christmas Day matchup against the Houston Rockets with a multitude of injuries.
Playing without Luka Doncic, who is day to day with a left leg contusion he sustained Saturday against the Clippers, LeBron James led the Lakers with 23 points on seven-for-14 shooting. Deandre Ayton had a 12-point, 10-rebound double-double while Reaves came off the bench for the first time in two seasons and scored 17 points with two assists and three turnovers.
Coach JJ Redick said Reaves was not on an official minutes restriction after his weeklong absence, but that the team would monitor his workload “in real time.”
Calf injuries, even the most minor, have been major concerns for the NBA since three stars suffered Achilles tendon tears during last season's playoffs. Reaves, who carried the team during the early part of a season that has featured injury absences from James and Doncic, led the team in minutes per game. His 775 minutes entering Tuesday were second-most on the team behind Rui Hachimura. The Japanese forward missed his second consecutive game with right groin soreness.
When asked whether Reaves needed a physical reset after carrying such a large load, Redick admitted a break may have been necessary.
Reaves looked out of sorts when he entered with 5:23 remaining in the first quarter. He fumbled the handoff on his first touch coming off a screen. When he tried to thread bounce passes through tiny windows, the ball was kicked away or deflected. He got attacked on defense and gave up consecutive driving layups to Suns guard Jamaree Bouyea.
Bouyea had 14 points off the bench, including a layup over Marcus Smart, who failed to draw a charge call, in the third quarter. While Smart laid in the key appealing to officials, Bouyea didn’t hesitate to leap over the Lakers' guard and score. The Lakers fell behind by as many as 29 in the third quarter, and Redick quietly waved the white flag with 5:22 remaining in the third when he put reserve forward Maxi Kleber and rookie Adou Thiero onto the floor.
The Phoenix crowd started to file out in bunches with seven minutes remaining when the lead reached 30.
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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
Cooper Flagg makes another statement dropping 33 in win over Jokic, Nuggets
Cooper Flagg is feeling the Christmas spirit — and that could be trouble for the Warriors on Thursday.
It was trouble for the Nuggets on Tuesday. On a night Nikola Jokic had 29 points and 14 assists, and Jamal Murray showed why he should be a first-time All-Star scoring 31 and also dishing out 14 assists, Flagg was the best player on the court.
Flagg finished with 33 points, nine rebounds and nine assists and hit a career-best four three-pointers leading the Mavericks to a 131-130 win over the Nuggets.
WHAT A NIGHT FOR COOPER FLAGG!
— NBA on NBC and Peacock (@NBAonNBC) December 24, 2025
33 PTS
9 REB
9 AST
10/15 FG pic.twitter.com/2hDwtb2Pxg
Was Flagg just feeling the Christmas spirit?
"Nah, I mean, Christmas time. There's magic in the air," Flagg said on NBC after the game. "It's the holidays. I'm just glad to come out here and have a good performance."
Hear from Cooper Flagg after his INCREDIBLE performance vs the Nuggets. pic.twitter.com/bN0TpWhtcw
— NBA on NBC and Peacock (@NBAonNBC) December 24, 2025
He will get a taste of true Christmas spirit when he and the Mavericks head to the Bay Area to take on Stephen Curry and the Golden State Warriors on Christmas Day.
The one scary part of the night came when Denver forward Cameron Johnson left the game with 9:18 in the fourth quarter after landing awkwardly going for a rebound — he fell straight to the ground, grabbing his knee. He limped off the court under his own power, straight to the locker room, with what the team later called a knee sprain. Considering how it looked when it happened, let's hope future tests show it is just a sprain. Denver is already down two starters — Aaron Gordon and Christian Braun — due to injury.
While Flagg was hot all game, it wasn't just him early on. Dallas raced out to a 20-6 lead because they were getting to the rim at will — 11 of their first 15 shot attempts were in the restricted area, and they made eight of them.
Dallas maintained that double-digit lead through the first half thanks to Flagg, who scored 22 points on 9-of-10 shooting before the half.
Cooper Flagg hit his first 7 shots of the game!
— NBA on NBC and Peacock (@NBAonNBC) December 24, 2025
Peacock pic.twitter.com/txW6UURV9A
Denver did what it does to everyone, though, walking Dallas down with a 47-point third quarter where it shot 9-of-11 from 3. The comeback was fueled by lock Jokic and Murray. It was a tie game entering the fourth.
Dallas, however, stepped up in the fourth behind 10 points in the quarter from Anthony Davis, who finished with 31points and nine boards.
Denver had a chance to win it at the buzzer, when the Mavericks' defense swarmed Murray and then Jokic in the final seconds. Jokic made a beautiful pass to a wide-open Peyton Watson in the corner, but his game-winning attempt rimmed out.
That left Flagg and the Mavericks celebrating at center court.
Knicks fall 115-104 to Timberwolves despite 40 points from Karl-Anthony Towns
The Knicks got 40 points from Karl-Anthony Towns, but playing without two starters, New York fell 115-104 at the Minnesota Timberwolves on Tuesday night.
With Jalen Brunson and OG Anunoby getting the night off amid the Knicks’ tight run of fixtures after their NBA Cup run, Tyler Kolek and Mitchell Robinson were bumped into the starting lineup. That put New York (20-9) in a tough spot against Minnesota (20-10, winners of five of six).
Towns looked to carry the load on offense, scoring 14 first-quarter points on 5-for-9 shooting. That was quite the turnaround for KAT after scoring just two points on 1-for-5 shooting over 29 minutes in Sunday’s win. Kolek looked to force the issue and contributed six points (3-for-7 from the floor), including some tough lay-ups to go along with two rebounds, two assists, and two steals in the opening quarter.
For Minnesota, Anthony Edwards tallied a quick 13 points and Donte DiVincenzo dished out four assists for a 31-28 Minnesota lead.
At the start of the second quarter, the Knicks' five of Kolek, Robinson, Josh Hart, Mohamed Diawara, and Kevin McCullar Jr. got blitzed for a 10-2 run. Minnesota’s run hit 17-2 for a 16-point lead before Towns put in back-to-back buckets and two at the line to give him 20 in the game. That started a 16-5 run, capped by a Jordan Clarkson three (the first points from the bench), forced a timeout with the deficit at five and 3:25 left in the second. New York cut it to one on a second Clarkson three, before the hosts took a 58-52 lead into the break.
The big issue at the interveal: outside of Towns, the Knicks were shooting 12-for-35 (34.3 percent) from the floor.
The third quarter started poorly: Two Wolves threes sandwiching offensive fouls by Robinson and Towns (his fourth foul, fifth turnover), and the deficit was back to 12. But after missing their first four shots, the Knicks used a 10-2 spurt, including five from Kolek, to force a Minnesota timeout. A further 7-1 spurt gave the Knicks a lead midway into the quarter at 69-67.
But as Mike Brown turned more to the bench, Edwards led the Wolves on a 9-0 run, giving him 32 in the game, to push it back to a seven-point Wolves lead. The Wolves’ star had 16 in the quarter on 7-for-10 shooting while his teammates went 2-for-12 in the quarter for an 85-79 advantage.
Julius Randle, held to eight points through three quarters, took over in the fourth with eight-straight Wolves points to force a timeout as their lead hit 97-85 with 6:51 to play. Randle kept it going, scoring the next seven for Minnesota before an Edwards dunk made it a 16-point lead with under five to play. The Knicks again had one more counterpunch as KAT and Hart combined for a 10-3 move to make it a nine-point game with 3:10 to play. But that was New York’s last gasp.
The Knicks were sunk in part by 19 turnovers, leading to 22 Timberwolves points and shooting 41-for-99 from the floor (41.4 percent). They did out-rebound their hosts, 55-42.
Here are the takeaways...
- KAT, soon after he sparked the Knicks’ big second-quarter surge, picked up his second offensive foul of the quarter (third foul overall) and was forced to the bench with 2:58 to play in the half. Sittig with 24 points (9-for-13 shooting), four rebounds, four turnovers, and was a plus-5 in 15 minutes. But after the hot start, Towns connected on just three of his next nine from the floor and picked up his fifth foul with five left in the game before he scored a quick five to give him 40 on the night.
Towns would foul out in the final minute. He finished with 40 points (14-for-24, 3-for-6 from deep, 9-for-11 from the line) with 12 rebounds (four offensive), one assist, one steal, five turnovers and was a plus-7 in 35 minutes.
- Kolek looked to do more on offense, but other than a few good drives, struggled from the floor in the opening half: 3-for-10 from the floor (0-for-3 from deep) for six points. He did have four rebounds and three assists, but was a minus-12 in his first 12 minutes. After going 3-for-7 from the floor in the third, he put in a quick five points on two possessions when he checked in midway through the fourth.
He finished with 20 points (9-for-22 shooting, 2-for-6 from three) with 11 rebounds, eight assists, three steals, and two turnovers, but was a minus-7 in 31 minutes. For Kolek, those are career highs in points (just his second game in double figures, with both coming in the last three games), rebounds, and minutes.
- Bridges grabbed the Knicks’ first opening field goals, and without Brunson, was going to have to pick up some slack on offense while taking on the challenge of guarding Edwards. But Bridges, who made 3 of 6 in the first quarter for six points, attempted just two field goals in the second to give him nine points in the first half.
After a 2-for-5 third quarter, Bridges didn’t find the touch in the fourth, finishing with 15 points on 7-for-16 shooting (1-for-6 from three) with three rebounds and was a plus-3 in 38 minutes.
- Hart continued to pop up in the right spots, hauling down seven rebounds, dishing out six assists, and grabbing two steals with five points in 22 first-half minutes. Late in the third, he tangled with Rudy Gobert on the defensive glass, but it was the Knicks man who was assessed a foul that was reviewed and upgraded to a flagrant foul as Hart, who was seated, was judged to have attempted to trip the Wolves’ 7-footer. He finished with 12 points (5-for-14 shooting) with 15 rebounds, eight assists, two steals, six turnovers, and was a minus-5 in 42 minutes.
- Robinson, who grabbed an offensive rebound on the first miss of the game. The Knicks tried to get the big man on a few lobs in the first quarter, but couldn’t find the connection. He struggled to assert himself and was being dragged to the perimeter on defense. Robinson was a team-worst minus-13 in 15 first-half minutes with just two points and two rebounds.
It wasn’t his night as he finished with two points (1-for-4) with seven rebounds (six offensive), two blocks, and a team-worst minus-15 in 26 minutes.
- Off the bench, Clarkson, Diawara, and Ariel Hukporti all saw time in the first. McCullar and Pacôme Dadiet got action in the second, but other than a pair of threes from Clarkson (2-for-6 from the floor), the bench wasn’t offering much as the other four were scoreless with Diawara missing his lone attempt and Dadiet missing twice from deep.
The McCullar cameo (minus-11 in just four minutes) was especially rough, as was Diawara’s time (minus-12 in seven minutes) in the first half.
Clarkson accounted for 10 of the Knicks’ 15 bench points on 3-for-11 shooting, and he was a minus-9 in 30 minutes.
- GuerschonYabusele was unavailable for the night due to illness.
- DiVincenzo finished with 11 points and eight assists in 32 minutes. Gobert added 11 points and 16 rebounds (six offensive) to go with three blocks, two steals, and two assists in 38 minutes.
Game MVP: Anthony Edwards and Julius Randle
The Wolves guard finished with 38 points on 15-for-27 shooting (4-for-10 from three) with four steals, two assists, one rebound, one block, just one turnover in 37 minutes. While Edwards owned the first three quarters, Randle pipped in here because of his 17-point fourth quarter, as he finished with 25 points (10-for-20 shooting) with six rebounds and three assists in 33 minutes.
What's next
The Knicks return to Madison Square Garden to play the early game (12 p.m. tip) on Christmas Day against the Cleveland Cavaliers.
Michael Porter Jr. scores 28 points to lift Nets to 114-106 win over 76ers
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Michael Porter Jr. scored 28 points, Egor Demin added 20 and the Brooklyn Nets beat the Philadelphia 76ers 114-106 on Tuesday night
Porter went 5 of 12 from the 3-point arc and Demin hit a couple of late 3s after the 76ers cut a 19-point lead to nine in the fourth quarter. Brooklyn shot 17 of 46 from 3-point distance to win for the third time in four games. Nic Claxton added 16 points and 10 rebounds.
Philadelphia’s Joel Embiid scored 27 points despite going out briefly early in the third quarter after banging his right knee. Paul George added 19 points, but 76ers leading scorer Tyrese Maxey was held to 13 points on 3-of-14 shooting. Andrew Drummond finished with 12 points and 13 rebounds.
Porter scored 24 points in the Nets’ 96-81 win over Toronto on Sunday and eclipsed that in the first half against Philadelphia.
Porter had 25 points and hit 5 of 8 from 3-point range, helping the Nets build a 63-57 halftime lead.
Embiid did most of his work inside the arc, hitting 7 of 10 shots to score 19 points by halftime. Maxey, coming off a 38-point game against Dallas, had five first-half points on 1-of-7 shooting.
Embiid went to the locker room clutching his right knee after colliding with Brooklyn’s Terance Mann in the opening minute of the third quarter. Embiid returned to the bench and re-entered the game a few minutes later.
Brooklyn gradually stretched the lead even after Embiid returned, up 89-77 after three quarters. Philadelphia used a 10-0 run to pull within 99-90 midway through the fourth quarter, but got no closer after Demin hit a pair of 3s.
Up next
Nets: At Minnesota Timberwolves on Saturday.
76ers: At Chicago Bulls on Friday in opener of a five-game trip.
Kings' Doug Christie states ‘you never know' as Malik Monk trade rumors swirl
Kings' Doug Christie states ‘you never know' as Malik Monk trade rumors swirl originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
SACRAMENTO – Despite rumors swirling that the Kings are open to trading Malik Monk, coach Doug Christie said Tuesday that he expects the veteran guard to still be wearing a Sacramento jersey at the end of the 2025-26 NBA season.
“Until otherwise, I expect him to be here for his contract,” Christie said shortly after the Kings’ 136-127 loss to the Detroit Pistons at Golden 1 Center. “He’s signed to be a Sacramento King. He’s going to be a Sacramento King. If something else happens … that goes when trades and all that stuff come into play.”
Since joining the Kings as a free agent before the 2022-23 season, Monk’s popularity has soared in the state capital to the point where he is now one of the most beloved players on Sacramento’s roster.
That was on full display Tuesday when Monk strolled to the scorer’s table to check in for the first time.
In unison the Golden 1 Center crowd roared in appreciation at a level surpassed only when Monk canned a 3-pointer early in his first rotation.
He finished with nine points in just under 14 minutes, shooting 3 of 8 with a pair of 3-pointers to go with two of steals.
A nice night, for sure, but not enough to erase the looming cloud of a potential trade that lingered overhead at G1C. NBA insider Chris Haynes reported early Tuesday morning that the Kings have made Monk available to teams ahead of the Feb. 5 trade deadline.
When asked about the rumors, Christie deflected.
“That’s a [general manager Scott Perry] question,” Christie said. “I don’t have any anything there, but I love Malik. Always have. What we’re trying to do here is bigger than any one player, two players, anything. We’re trying to set something that is sustainable. We just changed things up in this particular moment.”
Monk was not available for comment. He changed quickly after the game and was long gone by the time media was allowed into the Sacramento locker room.
When Christie talked to reporters, he insisted things between himself and Monk are OK.
“Nothing personal, nothing like that.,” Christie said. “I’ve told him that I love him to death. But we are trying to shake things up, and we’re going to figure out how to find a way to be, first of all, competing at a really high level and playing to our standard, a particular standard.”
A former Sixth Man of the Year runner-up who re-upped with the Kings last summer when he inked a four-year, $78 million contract, Monk was projected to be a big part of Sacramento’s once-promising future.
A lot of that promise has changed over the last two seasons. Mike Brown was fired as head coach after helping the Kings end the longest playoff drought in NBA history. Popular point guard De’Aaron Fox was traded to the San Antonio Spurs last season.
It appears that Monk might be the next one out the door.
“You never know,” Christie said. “When I was here in this jersey, I didn’t expect to get traded. It did happen.”
That was in 2005 when the Kings sent Christie to the Orlando Magic for Cuttino Mobley and Michael Bradley. If Monk is traded, the price of acquiring him could and should be a lot more.
What we learned as DeMar DeRozan's 37 points can't push Kings past Pistons
What we learned as DeMar DeRozan's 37 points can't push Kings past Pistons originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
SACRAMENTO – Two days ago, the Kings had Golden 1 Center rocking with a thrilling overtime win.
Two days before Christmas, the venue was the same — but the noise was mostly muted and the outcome was basically a lump of coal.
Not only did the Kings get smacked around handily by the Detroit Pistons 136-127 on Tuesday, they also saw another front-line player go down when Keegan Murray left the game in the second half after injuring his calf.
Murmurs also swirled throughout the night about Malik Monk being available in trade talks, a cloud that will most definitely linger overhead until a deal is done or the deadline passes Feb. 5.
Where the Kings are at that point likely will determine what, if any, other moves the franchise makes.
The way Sacramento looked against Detroit, no one’s job should be safe. That includes coach Doug Christie, whose style hasn’t produced any lasting or impactful moments.
DeMar DeRozan had 37 points and eight assists for the good guys. Russell Westbrook added 27 points and six rebounds while Precious Achiuwa had 15 points and 11 boards.
The Kings fell to 7-23 on the 2025-26 NBA season. They have lost six of seven, 10 of 14 and 17 of 21.
The Pistons took control early, dropping 37 points in the first quarter to take a double-digit lead. DeRozan scored 23 points in the first half but it wasn’t enough to overcome Detroit, which led 75-58 at the break,
Sacramento got within 15 early in the third quarter then pulled within 129-120 with 3:10 remaining in the fourth following DeRozan’s three-point play, but couldn’t muster another comeback.
Here are the takeaways from Tuesday:
Monk On The Move?
The loudest cheers from the Golden 1 Center crowd happened midway through the second quarter when Monk walked to the scorer’s table to check in.
The ninth-year veteran made his first bucket less than two minutes into his first stint then drained a 3-pointer after that as chanting monks played over the loudspeakers. That had been a tradition at G1C but was noticeably absent in the previous few games.
Monk, who had nine points in 14 minutes, has been a fan favorite in Sacramento ever since his arrival during the 2022-23 season, but there might have been more meaning to the ovations this time.
Minutes before tip-off a report from NBA Insider Chris Haynes surfaced that Monk has been made available for trade by the Kings, which if true certainly is no surprise.
Drowning From Deep
For a team that has mixed success shooting from deep over the season, the Kings seemed fascinated with trying to make things happen behind the arc against the Pistons.
That, like a lot of everything Sacramento tried, didn’t work out so well.
The Kings, who shot 29 percent (24-for-82) on threes in their previous three games, sputtered with their 3-point shooting for much of the night. They missed nine of their first 10 tries behind the arc and 13 of their first 18.
The struggles from deep took away what actually had been a decent shooting night for the Kings. They shot 31 of 59 on two-pointers.
Achiuwa was one of the few Sacramento players to have any sort of like shooting deep, connecting on 3 of 4 attempted threes.
No D At G1C
The Kings had a fairly decent night offensively, but this game turned on Sacramento’s inability to make consistent stops on the other end.
Time and time again the Pistons drove to the rack with very little resistance all game and nearly doubled the Kings’ scoring in the paint.
With Domantas Sabonis and Andrew Eubanks both injured, the bulk of the Kings’ interior defense was absent. Rookie Maxime Raynaud, who has been playing very well as of late, had eight points.
The defensive breakdowns weren’t limited to the big men. Pistons guard Cade Cunningham made seven of his first 10 shots and put up 16 points in the first half, many of them uncontested. He finished with 23 points on 8-of-15 shooting.
Obsevations after Maxey-McCain backcourt struggles in Sixers' loss to Nets
Obsevations after Maxey-McCain backcourt struggles in Sixers' loss to Nets originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia
Tyrese Maxey struggled all night long and the Sixers fell to a 114-106 defeat to the Nets on Tuesday at Xfinity Mobile Arena.
Maxey had 13 points on 3-for-14 shooting, three rebounds, four steals, two assists and four turnovers as the Sixers dropped to 16-12 on the season. Brooklyn improved to 9-19.
Joel Embiid posted 27 points, six rebounds and four assists. Paul George recorded 19 points, four rebounds and four steals.
Michael Porter Jr. led the Nets with 28 points.
The Sixers had three players sidelined by an illness in VJ Edgecombe, Quentin Grimes and Dominick Barlow. The team canceled its morning shootaround as a result.
Kelly Oubre Jr. (left knee LCL sprain) and Trendon Watford (left adductor strain) remained out.
The Sixers will begin a five-game road trip Friday night in Chicago against the Bulls. Here are observations on their loss to the Nets:
Embiid good to go after injury scare
Embiid suited up for his first game since the Sixers’ loss last Sunday to the Hawks. He’d missed the past two games with a “right knee injury management” designation in addition to an illness.
Jared McCain started for the first time in his second season. Maxey, George and Jabari Walker rounded out the Sixers’ first five.
Embiid had a smooth start offensively. He knocked down contested jumpers, sought out contact and seemed to believe he could score against whatever Brooklyn threw his way.
The seven-time All-Star also looked to be fine on the conditioning front. Embiid played until the 2:45 mark of the first quarter and posted 10 points on 4-for-5 shooting and three rebounds in the period.
Embiid had an injury scare just 25 seconds into the third quarter when Terance Mann bumped him as he jogged into the paint.
He grabbed his knee in apparent pain and eventually pointed toward the bench to request a sub. Andre Drummond entered and Embiid walked gingerly to the locker room.
About five minutes later, Embiid returned to the Sixers’ sideline. He checked back in with 6:49 left in the third quarter.
Nothing falling for Maxey
The Sixers took an 8-1 lead on a McCain fast-break layup, but the Nets responded with a run almost entirely about Porter’s shotmaking. His third three-pointer in quick succession gave Brooklyn a 12-10 edge.
On the other end, the Sixers’ outside shooters struggled. George and Walker air balled first-quarter three-point tries. The Sixers wound up shooting 40.7 percent from the floor and 25.9 percent beyond the arc.
Maxey went scoreless in the first quarter and missed his first six field goals. He was frustrated at times by Mann’s tight, physical defense and couldn’t hit the few open shots he managed to find.
Maxey was obviously not thrilled about the officiating. Both he and Sixers head coach Nick Nurse appeared to have heated words with crew chief Courtney Kirkland during a stoppage near the end of the second quarter.
The shorthanded Sixers’ guard rotation included little-used veterans Eric Gordon and Kyle Lowry. After Maxey was whistled for his second foul with 2:11 to go in the first quarter, Lowry checked in for the first home action of his 20th NBA season. Gordon (12 points on 4-for-8 shooting) made the Sixers’ first two long-distance jumpers.
The vet-heavy Sixers played zone defense early in the second quarter against the youthful Nets and didn’t fare badly. However, Brooklyn hit the Sixers with another run in the second and Porter kept causing serious problems.
Porter began 7 for 9 from the floor and piled up 25 points in the first half. The Nets held a six-point edge at intermission.
Last-gasp surge not enough
Maxey continued to come up empty.
He missed an open three early in the third quarter to fall to 1 for 10 from the field. Maxey then committed his fourth foul on a Egor Demin four-point play and the Nets’ advantage reached double digits. The Sixers had too many of those sort of sloppy mistakes on both sides of the ball.
Drummond (12 points, 13 rebounds) made three tip-ins early in the second half and stayed on the court once Embiid returned. Walker’s foul trouble presumably played a role in Nurse turning to a double-big frontcourt. Adem Bona shared the floor with Embiid, too.
The Sixers’ deficit swelled as high as 19 points. McCain shared Maxey’s offensive woes. He dipped to 1 for 9 from the floor early in the fourth quarter with a pair of missed lefty layup attempts. The starting backcourt of Maxey and McCain finished a ghastly 6 for 25, including several makes in quasi-garbage time. It’s very challenging to beat any team with that kind of backcourt shooting.
All of a sudden, the Sixers summoned a burst of late-game energy.
Maxey swiped a steal and coasted in for a layup. Bona slammed in an alley-oop assisted by Embiid. Two Embiid free throws cut the Sixers’ deficit to 99-90.
The Sixers couldn’t create any serious drama in the final minutes. They committed a slew of fouls, Maxey air balled a three and Brooklyn sealed the deal on a bad Sixers loss.
Nick Young shares why latest Draymond-Kerr clash feels ‘different' than others
Nick Young shares why latest Draymond-Kerr clash feels ‘different' than others originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
Former NBA guard Nick Young only spent one season playing for the Warriors, but that 2017-18 campaign was long enough for him to witness a Draymond Green-Steve Kerr tussle or two.
Speaking on Gilbert Arenas’ “The Arena” podcast, Young lent his insight into Green and Kerr’s relationship, and why their clash Monday night isn’t the same as past quarrels.
“[Green and Kerr] always fight,” Young said. “They got into a big fight in [Oklahoma City] where we had to pull Draymond back, pull Steve Kerr back. But this time it’s different because they’re not the same championship team.”
On an otherwise feel-good night for the Warriors—they trounced the Orlando Magic to climb back to the .500 mark at 15-15—Green and Kerr became embroiled in a heated discussion during a timeout, prompting Green to leave the floor completely and take refuge in the Golden State locker room.
“Tempers spilled over,” Green said in his postgame press conference. “And I thought it was best that get out of there. I didn’t think it was a situation where it was going to get better. So, it was best to remove myself.”
Kerr essentially echoed Green’s telling of events in his own postgame presser.
“We got into it, obviously,” Kerr said. “And I took the timeout because I thought we lost our focus there a little bit. And we had it out a little bit. And he made his decision to go back to the locker room to cool off.”
A day later, Young expressed uncertainty over whether this current version of the Warriors is built to withstand a squabble between its head coach and most volatile player.
“Everything going on with Steve Kerr, [his situation with Jonathan] Kuminga…it’s a lot over there,” Young said. “I just don’t know where they’re at this year. They feel like they just need to blow everything up at this point. This ain’t the first [instance] of them fighting. OKC was probably the worst thing I’ve ever seen between a player [and] coach. They both [were] holding each other back and cussing…it was a lot. It was a lot.”
Despite the dramatics on Monday, Golden State pulled away in the second half for a 23-point win over Orlando, a positive sign that Kerr can still focus his squad even with distractions lingering on his own bench.
Trey Jemison III a prime example of Knicks player development program
Late last Thursday, Jalen Brunson added another clutch shot to his resume.
Brunson hit a step-back 27-footer over Andrew Nembhard to give the short-handed Knicks a win at Indiana.
Highlights of the shot quickly ricocheted all over social media. It elicited a rare ‘double Bang’ from Mike Breen. Another game-winning shot from the 2025 Clutch Player of the Year.
“Our MVP – the league’s MVP – Jalen Brunson,” Mike Brownsaid after the game.
Later in his press conference, Brown referenced another award. The coach named Trey Jemison III as his Defensive Player of the Game.
Jemison III had five rebounds, a block, five points and played strong team defense in a key second-half stretch against Indy.
“Trey’s physicality and communication in the second half was off the charts,” Brown said.
What you saw that night from Jemison III is the same intensity and effort he plays with in practices and workouts.
“He brings energy (to every practice), makes you compete in practice,” is how one Knick staffer described Jemison.
Jemison has split time this season between the Knicks and their G League club, the Westchester Knicks. He’s one of several young players immersed in New York’s player development program.
All of the hours spent working with Knicks coaches have sharpened Jemison’s game (more on that below). But the foundation for his Jemison’s game – and the rest of his life – is his faith.
Jemison hosts regular Bible study sessions on his Instagram page.
He’s deeply spiritual and conducts study sessions to help his audience "understand the word of God."
“A lot of times, people read the Bible, and it's like all these old words and they're like, ‘I'm not reading that.’ So I try to make it simple so people can stay (engaged),” Jemison says.
He started doing study sessions on Instagram two years ago. At the time, Jemison says he had roughly 7,000 followers. Today, he has 70,000.
“When you go to God about something and you put him first, like, it's crazy the things you can really do,” Jemison says.
From time to time, Jemison will hear from audience members impacted by his words.
“It’s just priceless,” he says. “It's not an NBA game, not a dollar amount you can give (to match the value of) hearing somebody, say, ‘Hey you helped me get through a situation.’ That's just, yeah, that's a blessing for me.”
Jemison is one of the young Knicks heavily involved in the franchise’s player development program. New York has put resources into its program – hiring former St. Joseph’s coach Billy Lange to oversee things.
Jemison says Lange and the whole player development group have helped him.
Case in point: before the season, players had to make 10 free throws before they could leave the gym. Jemison was having a tough time until members of the coaching staff delivered a message:
“You can make these free throws. You're a good shooter.”
Jemison said the coach’s confidence helped him right away. From there, the Knicks worked a bit on Jemison’s form and his timing. After some fine-tuning, Jemison stopped getting stuck in the gym.
“Their belief in me, and they're breaking down small small details... has switched it up completely,” Jemison says of his free throws.
The former UAB star is grateful to be in New York, working with Lange and coaches like Mark Bryant and Carson Shanks and playing for Brown. Jemison and his agent, Derrick Powell of Dedicated Performance Sports, decided that the Knicks were a great option in part because of Brown.
The Knick head coach likes what he’s seen from the 26-year-old.
“He’s a physical presence. He’s a guy who communicates extremely well for a young guy,” Brown said earlier this season. “Guys like playing with him because they know he’s going to set screens and get them open. And he’s got good feet and a good motor.”
Jemison met with Lange and some Knicks coaches earlier this year to go through a development plan tailored for him. The plan remains in place when Jemison is with the big club or the G League team.
“They have a growth path for me,” Jemison says. “They don’t just ignore you because you’re on a two-way (contract). They want me to get better and grow my game so when my name is called, I can help the Knicks be the best team they can possibly be.”
Jemison has worked with Shanks, Bryant and the group on passing this season. The coaches have Jemison III make live reads at a fast pace.
“Now in games, it’s super slow for me. I see the cut before it happens,” Jemison says. “Now I understand, if I gotta screen this man, make this next pass, I know where to put it before he even cuts.”
That skill was on display in Indiana when Jemison made a well-timed pass to Brunson in the first half.
With the Knicks’ plans to rest rotation players at times over the course of the season, Jemison should have more opportunities to show what he’s learned under Lange and his group.
“My game is growing,” he says. “From my position coaches, to all my G League coaches, they are buying in and helping me set a higher standard for myself and it’s been great…. I love coming to work every day.”
Wizards' Cam Whitmore out indefinitely with deep vein thrombosis in right shoulder
Getting traded from a deep Houston roster to Washington last summer was an opportunity for Cam Whitmore to have the space to grow and develop. That opportunity has come to an end after 21 games.
Whitmore will be out indefinitely due to deep vein thrombosis in his right shoulder, the team announced.
G/F Cam Whitmore has been diagnosed with upper-extremity deep vein thrombosis. Whitmore was evaluated after missing the previous two games with right shoulder soreness.
— Wizards PR (@WizPRStats) December 23, 2025
Whitmore is expected to be sidelined indefinitely. His progress and recovery will be monitored, and his status…
After missing a couple of games with a sore shoulder, the team's doctors took a closer look, ran tests, and found a blood clot that led to the diagnosis. While there is no timeline for his return, Victor Wembanyama missed the second half of last season with the same issue, and Whitmore could be out until next season.
Whitmore was averaging 9.2 points a game shooting 45.6% from the floor in nearly 17 minutes a night for the Wizards. While whispers of questionable practice habits have followed him, Whitmore had been working more closely lately with Wizards coach Brian Keefe on a development plan and finding a role in Washington, reports ESPN’s Shams Charania. While Whitmore's athleticism and potential are without question, he is seen as a guy with tunnel vision who prioritizes his own scoring and is not a great passer. That has to change for him to find a consistent role in today's NBA.
Whitmore is making $3.5 million this season in the third year of his rookie contract. He is under contract for $5.5 million next season and is extension eligible next summer.
NBA Trade Rumors 2025-26: Lakers seek defense, Bucks eyeing adding Zach LaVine
With front office personnel leaving Orlando and the G League Showcase, trade talk is now in full swing around the league. Let's break down some of the latest talk around the league.
Bucks looking at adding Zach LaVine
While most fans (and plenty of content producers) are heading to trade machines looking for ways to get Giannis Antetokounmpo out of Milwaukee, the Bucks are in "desperate pursuit" of ways to bring in talent, re-energize the 11-18 team, and make Antetokounmpo happy (or, at least, less unhappy).
Enter Zach LaVine, reports NBA insider Chris Haynes, who reported this:
"The Milwaukee Bucks are in desperate pursuit, looking out on the trade market to see if they can bring in a difference-maker type of player. Sources have relayed they are canvassing the market, and one of the guys I identified is Zach LaVine of the Sacramento Kings."
While LaVine is available, there have been no serious talks between the sides, Hayes reports. It would be a difficult trade to construct because LaVine makes $47.5 million this season, it would likely require Kyle Kuzma, Bobby Portis and more heading out of Milwaukee (and maybe a third team involved).
Whether or not this specific deal comes together, it shows the Milwaukee front office's mindset: they are not trading Antetokounmpo unless he demands it and forces them to, and instead they want to be buyers at the deadline.
Lakers eying defensive wings Jones, Ellis
"Being able to contain the basketball is probably the most difficult thing for our team right now," Lakers coach J.J. Redick said of his team's point of attack defense after the Spurs eliminated the Lakers from the NBA Cup, a game in which San Antonio's young guards blew by their defenders, touched the paint, and either made a shot or sprayed it out for an open 3-pointer.
It's why the Lakers are looking hard at defensive wings, specifically good 3&D wings, Dan Woike of The Athletic reports. The challenge is that there aren't many of those players, and all 29 other teams are interested in them as well.
The Pelicans' Herb Jones is at the top of the list, but all reports out of New Orleans are that the asking price for him (or Trey Murphy III) is exceedingly high (the Pelicans don't really want to trade either). As Woike put it, the Pelicans "have signaled to interested teams that they're not entertaining Herbert Jones trades — at least not at any cost the Lakers can meet."
Sacramento's Keon Ellis also is available, a disruptive perimeter defender but a limited ball handler and not strong enough to switch onto larger forwards defensively. While Ellis is drawing more interest from other teams than the Kings' big three stars, he is a divisive figure among scouts, and it might be telling that both of the Kings' last two coaches — Mike Brown and Doug Christie — have limited his minutes.
Other defensive wings might be available — Derrick Jones Jr. (Clippers), Terrance Mann (Nets), Andrew Wiggins (Heat) — but the Lakers can trade one first-round pick, one second and find a matching salary (likely starting with Gabe Vincent), and the question becomes, will that be enough?
Nets make Michael Porter Jr. available
Brooklyn was expected to be active at the trade deadline, in part because they have more cap space than any other team and are likely a third team in to help facilitate any big trades.
However, they are looking to make one on their own and are testing the market for Michael Porter Jr., reports Jake Fischer at The Stein Line. It's not just Porter, the Nets are "willing to listen to pitches on the bulk of their veteran players," which would include Cam Thomas, Nic Claxton, Terance Mann, and more.
Porter Jr. is averaging 25.6 points and 7.4 rebounds per game, shooting 40% from 3-point range — he can help the offenses of a lot of teams. Porter Jr. is making $38.3 million this season and is guaranteed $40.8 million next season in the final year of his contract.
Consider Porter Jr. the name to watch for teams looking to make a big splash at the deadline and improve their playoff chances.
Warriors eying Gafford, Claxton
While the Warriors are reportedly patiently eyeing the Giannis Antetokounmpo situation (although constructing a trade that works with the Bucks is nearly impossible at the deadline), what they really want is a rim-protecting big man, reports NBA insider Chris Haynes on Amazon's NBA on Prime coverage.
Specifically, the Warriors are eying three players: Daniel Gafford (Mavericks), Nic Claxton (Nets), and Robert Williams (Trail Blazers).
"You look at the Warriors — rebounding and block shots, they're in the bottom half of the league," Haynes said on the broadcast. "And points in the paint, they are dead last. So they are looking for an athletic center…
"Those are three names who are on the Golden State Warriors' list of targets, to try to bring in a rim-running, block-shot defender. I was told they are really serious and they are trying to do everything they can to try to get the team back to being of the caliber of a championship-contending type."
Guerschon Yabusele
The Knicks signed Greece's Guerschon Yabusele last summer, with the big man coming off a solid season for the 76ers. That hasn't worked out as planned, so the Knicks are now open to trading him, reports James Edwards III at The Athletic.
Yabusele has not found a comfort zone with the Knicks this season, averaging 3 points a game on 39.4% shooting (30.6% from beyond the arc). That is not attracting many suitors, as Edwards notes.
Multiple league executives believe the Knicks would have to attach something to Yabusele in order to have a chance to move him before the deadline. Other than what New York does or doesn't do with Yabusele, the franchise has long put out feelers about adding another ballhandler and/or frontcourt player, per league sources.
Just something to watch as we approach the deadline.
Coby White
Among the names most mentioned as trade talk ramps up is Chicago point guard Coby White.
There are a number of teams looking for point guard help who are not interested in the big-name/big-expense players (Ja Morant, LaMelo Ball), and White might be the best of the next tier of players. White has been good for the Bulls this season, averaging 21.2 points and 5.2 assists a game, but he is shooting 29.8% from 3-point range (he's a career 36.7% from deep) and he is a minus defender. Still, he is in demand.
In his substack, Marc Stein reported that this "doesn't mean they'll actually move him before the Feb. 5 trade deadline, but the Bulls have left the impression with rival teams inquiring about White that they are more open to trading White than they've ever been."
Just something to watch going forward.
Malik Monk
Monk has not been a key part of Doug Christie's rotation in Sacramento of late, but some teams believe a change of scenery would do him good and he could work as a sixth man.
The Kings have made Monk available, reports Chris Haynes.
Sources: Sacramento Kings guard Malik Monk, one of the most dynamic Sixth Men in the league, has been made available in advance of Feb. 5 trade deadline. pic.twitter.com/O8MblILHq6
— Chris Haynes (@ChrisBHaynes) December 23, 2025
The Kings have made pretty much everyone except Keegan Murray available by trade, they are one of the big sellers at the deadline, but how much interest there is in Monk, an injured Domantas Sabonis and others remains to be seen (Keon Ellis is the one name drawing a lot of interest).
Steve Kerr, Draymond Green have (another) argument, Green heads to locker room, does not play again
Instead of talking about how, on some nights — when everything clicks, like it did Monday against the Magic — the Warriors look like a team that can be a threat in the West, we are talking about this:
Steve Kerr and Draymond Green got into a heated argument on the bench early in the third quarter Monday night, with Green leaving and going straight to the locker room. Although he returned to the bench, he never got back into the game.
Everything started at the 8:47 mark of the third quarter when Green turned the ball over, which led Golden State's Quinten Post to commit a take foul. The Magic capitalized, with Desmond Bane knocking down the free throw and then Anthony Black hitting a turnaround jumper for a three-point possession. A frustrated Kerr called a timeout.
"We got into it, obviously," Kerr said after the game, via Monte Poole of NBC Sports Bay Area. "And I took the timeout because I thought we lost our focus there a little bit. And we had it out a little bit. And he made his decision to go back to the locker room to cool off."
Kerr said everything else was private and he would not give more details. It was much the same playbook from Green and Stephen Curry postgame.
"Tempers spilled over," Green said. "And I thought it was best that I get out of there. I didn't think it was a situation where it was going to get better. So, it was best to remove myself."
Why did Green think this latest in a long line of arguments with his coach would blow over? Because every other one has.
"We've been at this now for a long time," Green said. "So, sometimes when you're with people for a long time, there's a level of comfort, and s--t happens. We move forward."
Maybe it blows over, but it's worth noting that the Warriors outscored the Magic 54-26 after Green left the game. That comes on the heels of a game in Phoenix where Golden State flipped a 10-point deficit into a lead without Green on the court, and the Warriors went on to get the win.
The argument overshadowed one of those nights when the Warriors don't look like the 15-15 team they are, but show signs of being a threat in the West. Stephen Curry scored 26, Jimmy Butler 21, and the Warriors picked up a win over a quality Magic team.