Cincinnati hires Utah State's Jerrod Calhoun as men's basketball coach

Cincinnati has hired Utah State’s Jerrod Calhoun as its next men’s basketball head coach, multiple sources confirmed to USA TODAY Sports on Monday, March 23.

The move comes one day after Calhoun’s Aggies team lost to No. 1 seed Arizona 78-66 in the second round of the 2026 NCAA Tournament. Utah State finished the season 29-7, winning the Mountain West regular-season and tournament titles.

Over his two seasons with the Aggies, Calhoun’s teams went 55-15 and made the NCAA tournament twice.

Calhoun is an Ohio native who graduated from Cincinnati in 2004. He served as a student assistant under Bob Huggins from 2003-04 and later coached under Huggins as an assistant at West Virginia from 2007-12.

The 44-year-old Calhoun was previously the head coach at Youngstown State, where he went 118-106 from 2017-24, and Fairmont State, a Division II school in West Virginia where he went 124-38 from 2012-17, which included a national runner-up finish in 2017. One of Calhoun’s assistants for three seasons at Fairmont State was current Boston Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla.

With Calhoun’s departure, Utah State continues its recent standing as a way station for top mid-major coaches in the sport. Calhoun is the fourth coach in the past six years who has left the Aggies for another job, three of which were in power conferences, joining Craig Smith (Utah), Ryan Odom (VCU) and Danny Sprinkle (Washington). Despite that turnover, Utah State has made the NCAA tournament in six of the past seven years in which it was held. During that stretch, it went 201-71 and won at least 25 games six times.

The Aggies will be heading to the reformed Pac-12 after this season. Given the recent track record of their coaches, they’ll instantly become one of the more attractive job openings in the sport.

At Cincinnati, Calhoun will inherit a program that has two national championships to its name and that was a national powerhouse under Huggins during the 1990s and 2000s, but has gone seven years without an NCAA tournament appearance, the program’s longest such drought in more than 30 years.

He’ll replace Wes Miller, who was fired earlier this month after going 100-74 in five seasons. Since joining the Big 12 ahead of the 2024-25 season, the Bearcats are 37-31 overall and 16-22 in conference play.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Jerrod Calhoun leaving Utah State to be Cincinnati men's basketball coach

Michael Jordan is no longer one of NBA's all-time top 5 scorers, but his NASCAR team is surging

Michael Jordan slaps hands with Tyler Reddick amid a celebration after a NASCAR race
Michael Jordan, NBA Hall of Famer and co-owner of 23XI Racing, congratulates Tyler Reddick, center, after a NASCAR Cup Series on Sunday at Darlington Raceway. (Jonathan Bachman / Getty Images)

Michael Jordan didn't seem too upset.

Hours after Kevin Durant knocked him out of the top five on the NBA's all-time scoring list , Jordan was all smiles as he walked to Victory Lane to greet Tyler Reddick after the driver's win Sunday at Darlington Raceway.

Reddick — who drives for 23XI Racing, which is co-owned by Jordan and veteran driver Denny Hamlin — joined NASCAR Hall of Famers Dale Earnhardt and Bill Elliott as the only Cup Series drivers to win four of the first six races in a season.

Read more:'3 Peat Baby': NASCAR's Tyler Reddick celebrates historic start to season with team co-owner Michael Jordan

To do so, Reddick had to overcome a malfunctioning battery and a large deficit in the final 50 laps. Afterward, Jordan jumped the track's safety barrier to greet Reddick and his team with some hard high fives and enthusiastic cheers.

“I think the key to him winning was just keeping his head,” Jordan said after the race. “We just had to get the car right, and I think he did an unbelievable job. I just wanted everything to be good, because once he gets back out there, then I feel like his competitive juices are going to carry him all the way to the end. He earned it all week, and I’m real proud of the team.”

Earlier this year, Reddick became the first NASCAR driver to start the season with three consecutive wins. He stands atop Cup Series standings, leading second-place Ryan Blaney of Team Penske by 95 points. Reddick's 23XI teammate Bubba Wallace is currently in third place.

Read more:NASCAR settles antitrust lawsuit involving Michael Jordan, agrees to permanent charters for all teams

One night earlier, Durant scored 27 points in the Houston Rockets' 123-122 victory over the Miami Heat to overtake Jordan for fifth place on the NBA's all-time leading scorer list. In his 18th season, Durant has 32,294 points — two more than Jordan, who played 13 seasons for the Chicago Bulls and two for the Washington Wizards. Durant and the Rockets play the Bulls in Chicago on Monday.

Jordan has yet to comment publicly on the matter, but Durant had plenty of praise for the man considered by many to be basketball's GOAT on Saturday during his postgame news conference.

"It’s kind of crazy passing him up because he’s meant so much to the game," said Durant, who passed Wilt Chamberlain and Dirk Nowitzki on the scoring list earlier this season and now trails only Kobe Bryant, Karl Malone, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and all-time leader LeBron James.

Read more:Full coverage: LeBron James breaks Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's all-time scoring record

“I’ve been inspired by all of these players that I’m either coming close to or passing up, and MJ is in a world of his own," Durant added. "He’s in a galaxy of his own as somebody that I look up to, respect and who basically shaped the game for me.”

Durant also pointed out that Jordan would have scored many more points had he not taken multiple seasons off during the span of his playing career.

"He left a few, I want to say, thousand or so points on the table, too, with the amount of games he missed," Durant said. "... He scored points quickly, man. So he set the bar high, and it’s pretty cool to reach that bar."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

How to watch Warriors vs. Mavericks

SAN FRANCISCO, CA - DECEMBER 25: Cooper Flagg #32 of the Dallas Mavericks drives to the basket during the game against the Golden State Warriors on December 25, 2025 at Chase Center in San Francisco, 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 Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Jed Jacobsohn/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Golden State Warriors finish off their six-game road-trip with one final stop in the state of Texas as they take on the Dallas Mavericks. Tip-off is set for 6:30 PM PT in Dallas and can be watched on Peacock and NBC Sports Bay Area.

Previously with the Warriors:

The Warriors fell to five games under .500 following Saturday night’s 126–110 loss to the Atlanta Hawks. It was a familiar script for Golden State throughout this road trip — a strong start followed by a sharp drop-off as the game progressed.

The offense held up early, with the Warriors trailing by just two points at halftime. But things unraveled coming out of the break, as Atlanta broke the game open with a dominant 39–20 third quarter.

Of course, much of the attention heading into the game centered on the matchup against former Warrior Jonathan Kuminga. However, Golden State kept him largely in check. Kuminga remained scoreless for most of the night, scoring his only basket on a layup midway through the fourth quarter with the game already out of reach. He finished with just two points on 1-of-9 shooting, along with four rebounds, two assists, one steal, and two turnovers.

While the reunion didn’t quite live up to the hype, it was a sign that both sides have begun to move forward with no more lingering bad blood between them.

What to watch for tonight:

The Warriors will look to end the road trip on a positive note against a Mavericks team that has been trending in a similar direction. Just like Golden State, Dallas has lost three straight games including eight of its last 10.

The difference, however, lies in the standings, where the Mavericks sit well behind the Warriors and have little incentive to push for wins — especially with this upcoming draft marking the final year they fully control their first-round pick until 2030.

There is some good news for Golden State. Kristaps Porzingis is listed as probable and appears on track to play after missing Saturday’s game with a back injury. He’s made a noticeable impact on both ends whenever he plays but his availability has been the main concern during his Warriors’ tenure thus far.

Enjoy the game Dub Nation. GO WARRIORS!!! 

Projected Starters

Warriors: Brandin Podziemski, De’Anthony Melton, Gui Santos, Draymond Green, Kristaps Porzingis

Mavericks: Cooper Flagg, Max Christie, Naji Marshall, P.J. Washington, Daniel Gafford

How to watch Regular Season Game 72

Who: Golden State Warriors (33 – 38) vs. Dallas Mavericks (23 – 48)

When: Monday, March 23rd, at 6:30 p.m. PT

Where: American Airlines Center — Dallas, Texas

TV and Streaming: Peacock and NBC Sports Bay Area (available on fuboTV)

Raptors sign 2017 No. 1 overall draft pick Markelle Fultz to a 10-day contract

TORONTO (AP) — The Toronto Raptors signed guard Markelle Fultz to a 10-day contract, the team announced Monday.

Fultz, the No. 1 pick in the 2017 draft, last played in the NBA in 2024-25 for the Sacramento Kings.

The 27-year-old Fultz averaged 2.7 points, 1.0 rebounds, and 1.3 assists in 8.8 minutes per game in 21 appearances for the Kings.

Fultz is averaging 9.8 points, 5.3 assists, 2.5 rebounds and 22.2 minutes in six games, all starts, with Toronto’s G League affiliate, Raptors 905, this season.

The 6-foot-4 209-pound guard has career averages of 10.4 points, 4.4 assists, 3.2 rebounds, 1.1 steals and 24.0 minutes in 255 NBA games, including 164 starts, with Philadelphia (2017-19), Orlando (2019-24) and Sacramento (2024-25).

___

AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba

ESPN: Nets trade for Michael Porter Jr. ranked 4th best move of season

BROOKLYN, NY - MARCH 20: Michael Porter Jr. #17 of the Brooklyn Nets arrives to the arena before the game against the New York Knicks on March 20, 2026 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by David L. Nemec/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

When the Nets traded Cam J0hnson for Michael Porter Jr. and the Denver Nuggets unprotected first rounder in 2032, there was much weeping and gnashing of teeth. Renting of garments. The whole biblical megilla. No excess verbiage was squandered. It was b-a-d, double-bad, bad.

Who can forget Bill Simmons? He seemed actually angered by the move.

“Did they have to even put Cam Johnson in the trade?” the Ringer founder said on his podcast. “I just think that trade, the more I thought about it over the last five days, is one of the worst trades of the decade. You have to attach a pick to get rid of Porter, and I also didn’t get anything for Cam Johnson? Nothing?”

Simmons also called the Nets situation among the league’s “bleakest.”

That latter conviction is still up for debate and on Monday, ESPN’s Zach Kram laddressed the former and included it on his list of “the 10 best and 10 worst moves” of the season, stretching back to the 2025 Draft. And there at No. 4 on the “best” side not the “worst” was the MPJ trade!

Why it’s on the list: Brooklyn traded Cameron Johnson to Denver for Porter and a 2032 first-round pick, and Porter has significantly outplayed Johnson this season. So Brooklyn got the best player in the trade and a future unprotected pick to add to its vast war chest.

Despite a massive increase in usage rate — Porter ranks 12th among qualified players this season with 30.4% usage, while his previous career high was 22.7% — on a worse team, Porter’s efficiency hasn’t dropped much. All those extra opportunities have boosted his scoring to a career-high 24.2 PPG, 5.2 points above his previous best.

What’s the potential playoff impact? None, with the Nets’ sights squarely on the lottery. But Brooklyn seeks to contend in 2026-27, with no control over its own draft pick next year, so Porter could be much more relevant then.

The only moves about the late June trade: Atlanta Hawks add Nickeil Alexander-Walker via sign-and-trade; Oklahoma City Thunder extend Ajay Mitchell and trade for Jared McCain; and at the top of the list: the Charlotte Hornets selection of Kon Knueppel at No. 4 in the NBA draft.

It is of course a justification for Sean Marks (not that this sort of stuff means much to him.) The pick is valuable because by the time it comes around, Nikola Jokic is likely to be admiring his statue outside Ball Arena while a group of young’uns rebuild the fanchise inside. Johnson, moreover, is having the opposite of Porter’s season. This will be the fourth straight Johnson won’t break 60 games played and is averaging a little less than half MPJ’s production at 11.9 ppg, his lowest since his second year in the league. He also 29 two years older. (Of course, if Denver winds up with the O’Brien trophy, there’ll have to be a recalculation.)

It’s the second time in about two weeks that a nationally recognized outlet has changed its mind on the deal. On the Third Apron podcast co-hosted by Yossi Gozlan of capsheets.com and Sam Quinn of CBS Sports, Quinn credited Sean Marks for his patience in making deals, waiting for a better deal, citing the MPJ deal as an example.

“They waited on Cam Johnson too. It might have cost them draft position in 2025. I think Egor Demin looks good. I’d be very excited to have him. Maybe they could have gotten higher up in that lottery, who’s to say. BUT they get an unprotected pick for Cam Johnson plus Michael Porter Jr. who’s better than Cam Johnson. That’s a killer trade,” said Quinn.

Beyond Simmons, other pundits around the league criticized the deal with one decision-maker telling ND that the Nets had chosen to go in a different direction than expected. “Where’s the seven firsts,” he said derisively at the time. He called the trade the worst of the summer.

Despite some loathsome language on various podcasts, including some earlier the month, the Nets brass seem generally pleased with Porter Jr. with more than one pundit suggesting that the Nets plan on keeping Porter Jr. as they transition from rebuild to a build this summer. There has also been media speculation that Porter could help in the wooing of the Nuggets’ 23-year-old rising star Peyton Watson who will be a restricted free agent this summer. The two were close in Denver.

The Nets did not place in the 10 worst trades (always a danger,) but the Milwaukee Bucks decision waive and stretch Damian Lillard to sign Myles Turner got top billing.

Has LeBron James played his way back into the Lakers’ future plans?

ORLANDO, FLORIDA - MARCH 21: LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers warms up prior to a game against the Orlando Magic at Kia Center on March 21, 2026 in Orlando, Florida. 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 Julio Aguilar/Getty Images) | Getty Images

If you’re wondering, “Didn’t we just have a conversation about LeBron’s future last week?” then the answer is yes.

But this ongoing discussion isn’t going away anytime soon. This won’t be the last time we wonder what the future holds for LeBron and the reasons the conversation is worth having again is that the dynamics are rapidly changing with the Lakers.

Not even a month ago, the narrative around the Lakers was that they were better without LeBron, both in the present and future. On Monday, Sam Amick of The Athletic wrote about how, as recently as six weeks ago, the assumption around the league was LeBron was playing his final games in Los Angeles.

As recently as late January, not long after an ESPN report detailed so much of the dysfunction in James’ relationship with the Lakers organization, the widely-held consensus around the league was that there’s no way he’d be back in a Lakers jersey. The Cleveland Cavaliers and Golden State Warriors were, and are, often mentioned by league executives as his most likely destinations.

Upon his return, he’s adopted a much different role that has allowed both Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves to be on the ball more while still allowing him to contribute in meaningful ways.

It’s not a coincidence that the Lakers have stopped losing during that stretch either. LeBron is most certainly not the main reason for that as Luka playing some of the best basketball of his life has been the driving force. But LeBron has one of the most consistent pieces of their current win streak.

Now, the conversation feels a bit different about LeBron and the Lakers moving forward. Granted, the necessary caveat to mention is that the Lakers can’t overreact to a couple of weeks of good play. Is this sustainable for LeBron and the Lakers alike? Is he even open to this role long-term, serving as the third fiddle behind the team’s star backcourt?

If he’s willing to take a backseat role on the court, is it easier to see him getting his swan song in purple and gold?


The reality is that no situation makes clear sense for LeBron next season. While the Warriors and Cavs are mentioned, both have equal or greater reasons as to why it may not work out.

Golden State’s main selling point is a chance to team with an aging Steph Curry — and Warriors team in general — for one last ride. But does LeBron want to end his career on a team that was his main rival for years in a city he has no connection to?

He definitely has connections to the Cavs and Cleveland, but there are plenty of hurdles there, too. Cleveland would need to still do a fair amount of cap gymnastics just to open up room to offer him a contract. They’re also a team with title aspirations. Do they want to have LeBron’s retirement tour running in parallel with that? To say nothing of the team needing to adapt to him and vice versa on his send off?

That former point stands for the Lakers, too. With Luka firmly in his prime, they, too, will have title aspirations. But they don’t have to integrate LeBron into a system. They know how to play around and with him already. And they’re doing it at a high level right now.

It’s not the Lakers’ problem that LeBron doesn’t have a clear landing spot for next season and it’s not their responsibility to offer one. But President of Basketball Operations Rob Pelinka said the team wanted LeBron to retire as a Laker. And the team is playing well right now because of him. This wouldn’t some charity offering.

Actions speak louder than words. Pelinka said the thing that cooled temperatures most in that moment earlier this year. Do the Lakers really feel that way? Can they really move into the Luka era with LeBron on the team?

At one point this season, very recently, it felt like a foregone conclusion that LeBron was leaving. But as they barrel toward the postseason playing their best basketball of the season, have they found a solution for the present and the future?

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

Arizona State basketball hires Randy Bennett, longtime Saint Mary's coach

A significant college basketball coaching shift is happening on the West Coast.

Randy Bennett will be the new Arizona State coach, leaving Saint Mary's after spending 25 seasons turning the Gaels into a respectable mid-major program. His final game was a 63-50 loss to No. 10 seed Texas A&M in the first round of the 2026 Men's NCAA Tournament.

The Saint Mary's job was Bennett's first head coaching role when he took it in 2001, taking over a program that had had little success. After just three NCAA Tournaments prior to his arrival, Bennett took the Gaels to the Big Dance 12 times during his tenure, including each of the past five seasons with at least 26 wins in each campaign during the run. The most successful run of Bennett's tenure was the trip to the Sweet 16 in 2010 as a 10th seed.

During his time, Saint Mary's elevated itself as one of the most successful mid-majors, competing with fellow West Coast Conference member Gonzaga and often taking down the powerful Bulldogs. By putting out quality teams for most of his tenure, the conference was able to send two teams to March Madness consistently, a rarity for mid-majors.

Saint Mary's head coach Randy Bennett walks in front of the bench in the first half during a first round men's basketball game of the NCAA Tournament between St. Mary's and Texas A&M, at Paycom in Oklahoma City on Thursday, March 19, 2026.

Bennett's overall record is 589-228 and he won more than 75% of his conference games. The Gaels won seven West Coast Conference regular season titles and four tournament titles. He also developed future NBA championship players in Patty Mills and Matthew Dellavedova.

While it is a shock to see Bennett leave a role where he spent a quarter of a century, the 63-year-old coach is from Mesa, Arizona, just east of the Arizona State campus in the Phoenix metro area.

“It was going to take a special situation for us to leave Saint Mary’s, and I am energized, driven, and focused on taking over Sun Devil Basketball, a program I am very familiar with and grew up watching," Bennett said in a statement.

He will be tasked with trying to revive the Sun Devils, who were unable to sustain success in the 11 seasons under Bobby Hurley. During Hurley's time, Arizona State made the NCAA Tournament just three times — all as a No. 11 seed — and won two First Four games, with the program's last major achievement being a Sweet 16 run in 1995.

The task will only be more challenging with Arizona State in a crowded and loaded Big 12, with a losing conference record in its two seasons in the league.

"We are in the best basketball conference in the nation and I look forward to the opportunity and am excited to meet everyone who wants to help this program reach our goals in the new landscape. My staff and I will be ready for the challenge," Bennett said.

Bennett's departure also comes as Saint Mary's enters a new era of the West Coast Conference, which will be greatly affected by Gonzaga leaving for the Pac-12 next season.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Randy Bennett hired as Arizona State basketball coach, leaves Saint Mary's

Boston Celtics Daily Links 3/23/26

MEMPHIS, TN - MARCH 20: The sneakers worn by Jayson Tatum #0 of the Boston Celtics during the game against the Memphis Grizzlies on March 20, 2026 at FedExForum in Memphis, Tennessee. 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 Grant Burke/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

HeraldJayson Tatum fighting through ‘frustrating’ shooting slump: ‘It’s been a long time’

Celtics crater late in home loss to shorthanded Timberwolves

Celtics notebook: Big man’s breakout ‘awesome’ to former head coach

GlobeBracket Championship: What is the best soundbite in Boston sports history?

Tracy McGrady questions whether Celtics are ‘still on same the page’ following Jayson Tatum’s return

Jaylen Brown sheds light on 1-on-1 meeting with Jayson Tatum ahead of playoffs

Bones Hyland, short-handed Timberwolves beat ice-cold Celtics: 6 takeaways

Jayson Tatum, frustrated by shooting slump, is showing both rust and flashes

The Celtics need to dig deeper to beat elite teams, and the No. 2 seed in the playoffs hangs in the balance

Jayson Tatum frustrated with his progress after Celtics go cold in loss to Timberwolves

Celtics GreenComments from the Other Side – Timberwolves 3/22/26

CelticsBlog10 takeaways from a lackadaisical Celtics loss

Jayson Tatum deserves all the grace as he returns from the worst injury in basketball

Jaylen Brown admits Celtics didn’t ‘meet the challenge’ in loss to Timberwolves

Timberwolves’ hot fourth quarter sinks Celtics, 102-92

CLNS MediaJayson Tatum Deserves Grace | You Got Boston w/ Noa Dalzell 

Will Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum Finish Their Careers in Boston | Bob Ryan & Jeff Goodman Podcast

Celtics Fall to Undermanned Timberwolves after Poor Fourth Quarter | Garden Report Postgame Show on CLNS

Celtics .comKeys to the Game: Timberwolves 102, Celtics 92

NBC Sports BostonNBA playoff picture: Celtics, Knicks in a tight race for No. 2 seed

Celtics-Wolves recap: Rough fourth quarter dooms C’s in loss

NESNNBA Legend Urges Celtics’ Jayson Tatum to Change Offensive Approach

Celtics Have Golden Opportunity To Change Frustrating Narrative This Week

Are Celtics Suddenly In Jeopardy Of Losing Key Spot In Standings?

NBA Writer Specifies New Goal For Celtics Heading Into Stretch Run

Bleacher Report Identifies ‘Dream Target’ For Celtics In Free Agency

Timberwolves’ Bones Hyland Reveals Mindset Behind 23-Point Outburst Vs. Celtics

NBA Hall Of Famer Drops Truth Bomb On Celtics In Wake Of Jayson Tatum’s Return

Jaylen Brown Praises Communication With Fellow Celtics Superstar

Celtics Legend Explains Surprising Lack Of Communication With Jayson Tatum

Celtics Go Cold From Three, Fall To Anthony Edwards-Less Timberwolves At Home

Mass Live Celtics rookie makes franchise history after scoring 1st NBA points

Hall of Fame guard makes eye-opening claim about Celtics after Wolves loss

Celtics star makes candid admission on return after Wolves loss

Celtics playoff picture: Where Boston stands with 3 weeks left in season

Jaylen Brown talks important Jayson Tatum meeting ahead of playoffs

Jaylen Brown is the Celtics ‘Name to Know’ Player of the Game in Sunday’s loss to Timberwolves

4 takeaways as Celtics lose to Wolves to end improbable streak

Celtics WireFor Robert Parish, defense is the through line from his Celtics to today

Naz Reid has high praise for former Timberwolves teammate Luka Garza

Should we be worried about Jayson Tatum being in a shooting slump with Boston Celtics?

Jaylen Brown on what went wrong for Boston Celtics vs. Timberwolves in 2nd, 4th quarters

Celtics history: Cowens drafted; Hollins signed; Hayward, Forte, Judkins born

Jaylen Brown admits Timberwolves outworked Celtics down the stretch

Celtics fall apart in fourth quarter of 102-92 loss to Timberwolves

Former Celtic Evan Turner knows the game of basketball missed Jayson Tatum

The Athletic NBA Power Rankings: Lakers, Cavs, Nuggets inch closer to contenders tier

As playoff races heat up, we’re still thinking about that 65-game rule

Tables turned on Celtics in costly home loss to the Timberwolves

Boston Sports JournalSimone’s Six: Defensive chess, offensive checkers, and a Jayson Tatum update in Celtics-Wolves

Hardwood Houdini Tracy McGrady’s divisive Jayson Tatum take is only half right

Celtics’ rookie’s improbable achievement nearly went unnoticed in rough loss

Jayson Tatum opens up about giving himself grace as he pushes for pre-injury form

Timberwolves showed how teams are going to attack the Celtics come playoff time

Problem that may be unfixable undoing was on display for Celtics in rough loss

Celtics got a taste of their own medicine in awful loss vs. Timberwolves

Jaylen Brown keeps it real about Jayson Tatum and championship blueprint

Celtics fail to capitalize on advantageous situation in disappointing loss

CLNS Media/YouTube Robert Parish Tells Bill Walton ‘86 Celtics Practice Story

Luka Garza Had MIXED FEELINGS After Nikola Vucevic Trade | Exclusive Interview

Jayson Tatum CANDID Interview About his Struggles | Celtics vs Timberwolves Postgame

Jaylen Brown: We Will LEARN From Timberwolves Loss | Celtics vs Timberwolves Postgame

Joe Mazzulla EXPLAINS What Went Wrong Against Timberwolves | Celtics vs Timberwolves Postgame Show

Chris Finch: Jayson Tatum is Still DOING HIS THING | Celtics vs Wolves Pregame

Joe Mazzulla on Tatum’s UNDERRATED Screening Ability | Celtics vs Timberwolves Pregame

SI .com Deep Dive Into Jayson Tatum’s Stats Shows a Quirk and How Far He Still Has to Go

3 Eye-Popping Numbers From the Timberwolves’ Win Over the Celtics

Timberwolves Have a Lot of Love for Former Teammate Thriving with Boston Celtics

Newsweek Celtics Legend Endorses Jaylen Brown For NBA MVP Award

Bleacher ReportPaul Pierce Praises Jaylen Brown, Says It’s ‘Unfortunate’ Celtics Star Isn’t in NBA MVP Conversation

‘I’m Not Superman,’ Jayson Tatum Reflects on Celtics Return from Achilles Injury in Trending Video

Pistons RoundtableDetroit Pistons Vs. The East: Which Teams Pose The Greatest Threat?

Maine Celtics Celtics bounce back in Long Island 114-104

HeavyCeltics’ Jaylen Brown Drops Blunt Take After Timberwolves Loss

Boston Celtics Make Roster Moves After Timberwolves Game

Celtics’ Jaylen Brown Breaks Silence on Jayson Tatum Ahead of Playoffs

BasketNews Jaylen Brown explains what went wrong in Celtics loss to Timberwolves

The Sports Hub Celtics win streak snapped in home loss to Timberwolves

Max Shulga makes history for Celtics

NBA .com Power Rankings, Week 23: Pistons, Knicks and Celtics jostle in Top 5

Larry Brown SportsJayson Tatum makes honest admission about his return to action

For the WinJayson Tatum was so candid about his struggles during Achilles comeback

Our Sports CentralMax Shulga Had Himself a Day!

TalkBasket Joe Mazzulla explains Celtics’ offensive struggles after Timberwolves snap 18-game drought in Boston

Athlon Sports Jayson Tatum Had Words on His Shooting Slump Since Making Celtics Return After 298-Day Absence

Hoops Rumors Jayson Tatum Admits Frustrations Since Return From Achilles Injury

Fadeaway WorldTimberwolves Grind Out Physical Win Over Celtics Behind Bench And Defense: 5 Key Takeaways

Jaylen Brown Explains What Went Wrong For Celtics In First Loss To Wolves At Home Since 2005

NBA/YouTube TIMBERWOLVES at CELTICS | FULL GAME HIGHLIGHTS | March 22, 2026

Total Pro SportsJoe Mazzulla Highlights Hidden Impact of Jayson Tatum That Doesn’t Show Up in the Box Score

Fansided 5 NBA Draft sleepers the Celtics should be watching closely in March Madness

Barstool SportsIf The Celtics Keep F***ing Around And Dropping Winnable Games, They Won’t Like What They Find Out

WEEI/YouTubeJayson Tatum admits to struggling as ramp-up continues. Should fans be concerned? | Afternoons

Audacy ‘He always had game:’ How daily workouts in Minnesota set the stage for Luka Garza’s success

NBA power rankings 2025-26: Thunder, Spurs, Pistons make up the top three

Only one of the top eight teams in NBC's NBA Power Rankings from last week lost a game: Boston on Sunday to Minnesota. With that, not much movement at the top.

1. Oklahoma City Thunder

(56-15, last week No. 1)
Only two franchises in NBA history — at the peak of their powers — have won 65 games in consecutive seasons. The Jordan-era Bulls did it between 1995-97 (winning the championship both years), and the peak Curry-era Warriors did it three consecutive years (two with Kevin Durant) between 2014-17, winning two rings (hat tip to the Slam & Jam podcast for the stat). The Thunder are on pace to be the third. They won 68 games last season and have 56 wins this season, on pace for 65 exactly — and they are about to get their second-best player back. Jalen Williams is set to return from his second hamstring injury on Monday against Philadelphia, plus Lu Dort is cleared to play in that game as well. It would be the first game this season when the OKC core would all be healthy… except that Ajay Mitchell is suspended for that game after escalating a fight against the Wizards.

2. San Antonio Spurs

(53-18, last week No. 2)
San Antonio has reached 50 wins for the first time since the 2016-17 season (the Kawhi Leonard, LaMarcus Aldridge, Pau Gasol era). "That's real," coach Mitch Johnson said of hitting the mark. "It's one of those things we've done this year where we're not going to avoid that or try to act like that (is nothing) — 50 wins this league is tough." It has happened because Victor Wembanyama made a larger leap than anyone but himself expected: In March, he averaged 26.6 points, 10.8 rebounds and 3.6 blocks per game while shooting 38.1% from 3-point range. Starting Monday in Miami, San Antonio has six of seven on the road.

3. Detroit Pistons

(51-19, last week No. 4)
Cade Cunningham is out with a collapsed lung, possibly for the remainder of the regular season. That sucks for him because he was on the way to being top-5 in MVP voting and first-team All-NBA, and now he's unlikely to reach the 65-game threshold (he's at 60 qualified games). Note: This is example 1,437 why the 65-game rule sucks. His exit also had people questioning if the Pistons could hold on to the No. 1 seed in the East, but this team has a 7-2 record in games Cunningham has missed this season — including 2-0 in this stretch — with a +3.9 net rating when he is off the floor. It's going to be tough for the Celtics to make up that ground.

4. Boston Celtics

(47-24, last week No. 3)
Boston is 6-2 in the games Tatum has played since his return. He's not consistent yet (6-of-16 Sunday in a loss to Minnesota), but he is finding a groove, having scored 20+ points in five games played and has a couple of double-doubles. He talked about the frustrating process of finding his way back and having off days after Sunday's loss: "It's tough in the moment, right? You try not to think about it. You just want to be Jason Tatum and feel like yourself again. I'm not Superman, so, obviously, it's going to take some time. I think the next day I can give myself a little more grace over certain things, but in the moment, I mean, it's frustrating."

5. Los Angeles Lakers

(46-25, last week No. 5)
The Lakers are the hottest team in the NBA — and they kept that streak alive this week with a couple of dramatic clutch wins. The Lakers are not just a league-best 22-6 in clutch games (within five points in the final five minutes), their +27.8 net rating in those minutes is top-10 all-time in the clutch. At the heart of that success is the Lakers have three players who can thrive in isolation — Luka Doncic, Austin Reaves, LeBron James — and the Lakers average 1.03 points per isolation possession, second best in the league (behind OKC, with SGA). The Lakers are 4-0 on their road trip, which continues with stops in Detroit and Indiana.

6. New York Knicks

(47-25, last week No. 6)
The best teams don't let the easy wins slip away and beat the soft teams on their schedule — and that has been the Knicks the past couple of weeks. New York has won six in a row, but the best team they faced in that stretch was the Curry-less Warriors. That winning streak has New York just half a game back of Boston for the No. 2 seed in the East, and the Knicks have an easier schedule the rest of the way. This hot streak also moved the Knicks into the top five in the league in offensive and defensive rating — a sign of a true contender. That soft schedule is about to change with the Pelicans, Hornets and Thunder on the schedule this week.

7. Cleveland Cavaliers

(44-27, last week No. 7)
The glass-half-full spin: Cleveland has won three in a row. The glass-half-empty spin: That came against two tanking teams and the Pelicans, and none of those wins was by more than seven points. James Harden has helped spark those wins, and since coming over to the Cavaliers, he's averaging 20.9 points per game while shooting 45% from 3-point range, plus dishing out 7.8 assists per game. Better tests for just how good Cleveland is this week with Orlando and two against Miami.

8. Denver Nuggets

(44-28, last week No. 8)
Since returning from his 16-game absence due to a knee hyperextension, Nikola Jokic has been very good, but not quite at the same MVP-level he was before. He's averaging 3.4 fewer points and one fewer assist per game, is shooting 52.5% from the floor (down from 60.5% before the injury) and 31.7% from 3-point range (down from 43.5% before, all stats from before Sunday's game). Jokic is still on pace to become only the second player in NBA history to average a triple-double for multiple seasons (Russell Westbrook is the other), but he might slide below Victor Wembanyama in the MVP race as the Spurs thrive. Good news in Denver is that Peyton Watson is back, and the team is mostly healthy. Key game for Denver this week on Tuesday against the Suns (the No. 7 seed) — a game you can watch on Coast 2 Coast Tuesday on NBC and Peacock.

9. Minnesota Timberwolves

(44-28, last week No. 11)
Anthony Edwards is out with right knee inflammation, but the Timberwolves have gone a respectable 3-1 in his absence so far, including a critical win over the Phoenix Suns (a team chasing them for the No. 6 seed in the West and avoiding the play-in) plus beating the Celtics in Boston on Basketball Night in America Sunday. Edwards has to play in at least eight more games this season to get to 65 and qualify for postseason awards — if he does, he is a lock for his third All-NBA nod (and has a case for First Team). Ayo Dosunmu – acquired from the Bulls at the trade deadline – has started in Edwards' place and, over his first three games, averaged 19.7 points per game.

10. Houston Rockets

(43-27, last week No. 12)
The two losses to the Lakers last week (both at home) summed up why many around the league do not see the Rockets as a contender: In the clutch, in games where it becomes about half-court offense, the Rockets struggled to generate enough to win. Everything unfairly falls on Kevin Durant, and in those losses to the Lakers, in the clutch he scored a combined 5 points on 2-of-5 shooting, with 3 turnovers to 1 assist, and he was -10. That's not all about Durant (who passed Michael Jordan this week for fifth on the all-time scoring list), it's about defenses loading up on him because the Rockets don't have other options that scare other teams. Would that be different if Fred VanVleet and Steven Adams had remained healthy? That's two key starters out, guys who brought very specific, needed skill sets. Even without those guys, the Rockets are in the thick of the 3-6 battle in the West, currently fourth in that group and with the easiest remaining schedule of any of those teams (according to the Elias Sports Bureau). Important game Wednesday in that group as Houston travels to Minnesota for a game.

11. Atlanta Hawks

(39-32, last week No. 13)
Atlanta has won 12-of-13 (the Rockets snapped the Hawks' 11-game win streak), and that run not-so-coincidentally started when CJ McCollum moved into the starting lineup in place of Zaccharie Risacher. Atlanta's starting lineup now — Dyson Daniels, Jalen Johnson, Onyeka Okongwu, Nickeil Alexander-Walker and McCollum — is tearing people up and why Atlanta is now sixth in the East (that and the tiebreaker over Philadelphia).

12. Charlotte Hornets

(37-34, last week No. 17)
Charlotte sits as the No. 10 seed but is still one of the hottest teams in the East, having won 5-of-6 — including victories over Miami and Orlando last week — and is 7-3 so far in March. Coby White, in 11 games with the Hornets since coming over from the Bulls at the trade deadline, is averaging 14.9 points and 3.8 assists per game, boosting the bench (along with a healthy Josh Green and Grant Williams). Good tests this week to see just how hot the Hornets are, facing the Knicks and Celtics.

13. Toronto Raptors

(39-31, last week No. 14)
Raptors fans, do you feel this team has lived up to expectations this season? If the season ended today, Toronto would be the No. 5 seed in the East — higher than I expected before the season — and it has done it despite a rash of injuries. On the other hand, this team is 9-11 against teams over .500, and the Raptors are 1-8 against the top three in the East (Pistons, Knicks, Celtics). This is a good team, but not a postseason threat, and the front office has work to do. Toronto is 1-2 on a five-game road trip that still includes Utah and the LA Clippers.

14. Orlando Magic

(38-32, last week No. 9)
Orlando has dropped four straight games, and the culprit is that their inconsistent offense has been on the downswing. That offense should look better when Franz Wagner and Anthony Black get healthy, but until then, inconsistency may be the buzzword. As it has seemed all season. The good news is that, among the teams in the tight 5-10 race in the East over the final three weeks of the season, the only team with an easier schedule in that group is Toronto.

15. Miami Heat

(38-33, last week No. 10)
Miami has dropped four in a row and it all starts with its defense, having given up 120+ in each of those games. The losing streak has dropped the Heat to ninth in the East — only 2.5 games separate fifth and 10th in the East, Miami needs wins and it can quickly move back up the standings. That might be tough to do this week, facing the Spurs, then two games on the road against the Cavaliers.

16. Los Angeles Clippers

(35-36, last week No. 16)
Kawhi Leonard returned from injury this week, and if he can get to 65 games played, he will make an All-NBA team this year (deservedly so) — Leonard has missed 16 games this season, he can only afford to miss one more to stay above the ridiculous NBA-set number. Before Darius Garland went off for 41 and got the Clippers and overtime win in Dallas, the team had dropped four straight and opened the door for Portland to get into the top eight (a much easier path through the play-in to the playoffs than being ninth). Fortunately for the Clippers, there are winnable games on the schedule this week, with the best team they will see being Toronto on Wednesday at the Intuit Dome.

17. Phoenix Suns

(40-32, last week No. 15)
Phoenix's push to make the top six and avoid the play-in likely ended with the team's five-game losing streak (which ended Sunday with a blowout win over Toronto). A few things have led to that streak. One is that this is not a good clutch team, it has a -9.6 net rating in games within five points in the final five minutes, which is 23rd in the league. Also, Jalen Green is still trying to find his way after returning to the team from injury on Feb. 7, and in his last 10 games he's averaging 21 points a game but on an inefficient 40.4% shooting (which is actually up from when he first returned). Devin Booker has been the bright spot, but it hasn't been enough. In his last 10 games, Booker is third in the NBA in scoring at 30.3 points per game, including a season-high 43 against the Pacers and 40 points in a loss to the Celtics. Critical game Tuesday against Denver, if the Suns are going to have any chance to get into the top six they need this one — game you can watch on Coast 2 Coast Tuesday on NBC and Peacock.

18. Philadelphia 76ers

(39-32, last week No. 18)
Jared McCain makes his return to Philadelphia Monday, as a member of the Oklahoma City Thunder, and this has revenge game written all over it. Even if McCain said Monday at shoot around he isn't really angry about being traded, "When (Philadelphia president of basketball operations Daryl Morey) first told me, I didn't even really understand what team he sent me to. I heard 'traded' and that was kind of it. But once I understood it was OKC, it was one of those moments where you're almost like, 'OOK they won a championship … why do you want me?'" McCain has looked like his best self in OKC, and with Ajay Mitchell out for Monday's game (suspension), McCain should get plenty of run to remind Philly fans what they are missing.

19. Portland Trail Blazers

(35-37, last week No. 19)
No coasting into the finish line in Portland — they are in a race with the Clippers for the No. 8 seed in the West (being top 8 means needing just one win in two games to make the playoffs, as opposed to being 9-10 and needing to win two games, one on the road). The Trail Blazers have won 4-of-6 and have a slightly easier schedule the rest of the way than the Clippers, thanks to having 7-of-10 at home.

20. New Orleans Pelicans

(25-47, last week No. 22)
Everyone's favorite spoiler took two games from the LA Clippers last week and almost did the same against Cleveland, but New Orleans blew a 15-point fourth-quarter lead and lost. Part of the reason for the Pelicans' improved play is that Dejonte Murray returned from a torn Achilles and is averaging 18.7 points and 6.2 assists per game, and the Pelicans are 5-5 in the games he has played.

21. Chicago Bulls

(28-42, last week No. 20)
Two players have 100 blocks and 100 3-pointers this season. One is obvious: Victor Wembanyama. The other is Matas Buzelis. The No. 11 pick in 2024 has taken a step forward this season, averaging 16.1 points and 5.6 rebounds a game, shooting 35.9% from beyond the arc. One other note, Josh Giddey has 19 triple-doubles as a member of the Bulls, but more than half of those (10) came after March 1 each season.

22. Golden State Warriors

(33-38, last week No. 21)
Stephen Curry could return to the court as early as Wednesday — and the Warriors need him. The Warriors are 6-15 in this stretch of games without him and have fallen to the No. 10 seed in the West. When he was healthy, Curry looked elite, averaging 27.2 points and 4.8 assists a game, shooting 39.1% from 3-point range. The Warriors are 1.5 games back of Portland for the No. 9 seed and two games back of the No. 8 Clippers — that's ground that can be made up in three weeks, but the Warriors need to start racking up wins. Fast. They have a chance to turn things around this week with three tanking teams on the schedule this week (plus the Nuggets).

23. Milwaukee Bucks

(29-41, last week No. 23)
We wrote about it in last week's Power Rankings before it became a very public thing: The question was never whether it was best for the Bucks to shut Giannis Antetokounmpo down for the season, the question was whether he would let them. This has become a thing. The reality is that it would be best for the Bucks' chances of retaining Antetokounmpo if he sat (they could marginally improve their NBA Draft Lottery odds, and that pick can be traded to get the kind of player Antetokounmpo wants next to him). Antetokounmpo will say that his competitive drive is not a switch that can just be flipped on and off, and he wants to play. Okay, but in this case, it feels a bit performative, given the Bucks are 7.5 games out of the play-in with 12 games left to play.

24. Dallas Mavericks

(23-48, last week No. 24)
If Cooper Flagg is going to win Rookie of the Year over former Duke teammate Kon Knueppel, he is going to have to put on a finishing kick — which he is trying to do. Missing eight games due to injury in February and March — while Knueppel was playing in meaningful games for Charlotte — put Flagg a step back in a very tight race. Flagg's recent strong outings against Cleveland (twice) and New Orleans, where he scored 21+ points with efficient shooting, are what he needs. The 6-15 shooting against Atlanta, followed by 6-of-16 against the Clippers, is not ideal.

25. Memphis Grizzlies

(24-46, last week No. 28)
Memphis ended its eight-game losing streak with a spoiler special, upsetting the Denver Nuggets. It was a needed bright spot. Even though it feels like we say every week that the Grizzlies have been riddled by injuries, it hits harder when you see the list of guys who are out: Ja Morant, Zach Edey, Scotty Pippen Jr., Santi Aldama, Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, Ty Jerome and Brandon Clarke. That's a lot, and why the Grizzlies have leaned into using a hardship exception to bring in players.

26. Utah Jazz

(21-50, last week No. 26)
Jazz fans may not want to win a lot of games the rest of the season, but it was hard not to be excited watching this team beat the shorthanded Bucks by 32 (Utah's largest win of the season). Especially with Ace Bailey going off for 33. It's going to be interesting in the next couple of years to see how he fits alongside Keyonte George and Lauri Markkanen.

27. Sacramento Kings

(19-53, last week No. 25)
When a team is tanking — and the Kings are tanking, even if they beat the Nets Sunday and have now gone 5-3 in their last eight (playing DeMar DeRozan far too many minutes in a couple of those wins) — the goal is to find a couple of guys who can be part of what is being built. Maxime Raynaud is one of those guys. The 7'1" center out of France was a second-round pick last June, but has steadily improved all season and has taken off of late, scoring 30 against Philadelphia, 32 against the Spurs, 23 in a win over the Clippers, and 22 and 10 in a win over Brooklyn on Sunday. Whatever is next in Sacramento, Raynaud should be part of it.

28. Brooklyn Nets

(17-54, last week No. 27)
Losers of seven straight games, and that includes blowing a late fourth-quarter lead against the Knicks. While Brooklyn is in the bottom five in the league in defense, the bigger concern long-term is the offense, which is dead last in the league. When you look at this roster and the teams around them in this ranking, is there a team more desperately in need of lottery luck than Brooklyn?

29. Washington Wizards

(16-55, last week No. 29)
Losers of 16 straight, and for all the optimism about next season (with Trae Young and Anthony Davis) this is hard to watch right now. If you're looking for the silver lining, rookie Will Riley has shown some promise and might become part of the rotation for whatever comes next in the nation's capital.

30. Indiana Pacers

(15-56, last week No. 30)
Interesting speculation out there that if the Pacers luck into the No. 1 pick, they would take Cameron Boozer because he fits their win-now needs along the front line. It's all just speculation at this point, and the Pacers would be very happy with Boozer at any spot in the top four, he would be plug-and-play next to Ivica Zubac starting next season. That said, you get the No. 1 pick, you take the best player regardless of position (don't repeat the "we don't need Michael Jordan, we have Clyde Drexler" mistake). Speaking of Zubac, he is out for the remainder of the season with a fractured rib. After being traded by the Clippers, Zubac averaged 11.6 points and 7.2 rebounds per game with the Pacers, but the team dropped all five of those games. Expect Jay Huff to get more run to end the season for the Pacers.

MMBets: the depleted Warriors meet the spiraling Mavericks

The Mavericks are home for a game against their 2022 Western Conference Finals opponents, the Golden State Warriors. Golden State has been ravaged by injuries this season and find themselves fighting for the eighth spot in the playoffs. Both teams own a three-game losing streak, but both have different incentives behind winning and losing. The Mavericks can only play spoiler from here until the final game, and tonight is a great spot to do just that.

Game intangibles

Dallas Mavericks (23-48) vs Golden State Warriors (33-38)

Tipoff: 8:40p CT at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, TX.

How to watch: The game will be televised nationally on Peacock.

Odds via the Fanduel Sportsbook as of 2:00PM CST

Spread: Dallas +2.5 (-114)

Over/Under: 231.5 (-110/-110)

Moneyline: Dallas +104

Player props

Cooper Flagg to score 25+ points (+176)

Daniel Gafford under 10.5 points (-130)

Flagg has a great matchup. The Warriors have little to no size or shot-blocking  and they do not have a perimeter defender who can guard him. Gafford has a poor matchup guarding Quentin Post, who likes to step out to the three-point line, and has been bullied by Draymond Green on offense in the past. 

Game sides

Mavericks to win (+104)

Mavericks to win the first quarter (+112)

I expect the Mavericks to get a “locker-room” win. They need one. There has been a lot of losing, and these guys are not used to it. They will come out of the gates hot and not look back after a heartbreaking loss on Saturday.

2026 NBA Draft Profile: Karim Lopez – One Of A Kind

According to Shams Charania, Karim Lopez has declared for the 2026 NBA Draft and is projected to become the first Mexico-born first-round pick in league history. ESPN currently has him ranked as the 11th best prospect on their Big Board, but as we approach the NBA Draft I wouldn’t be surprised if we see him improve his stock to the Top 8. He has some things that need to be worked on, but I believe the he has the makings of a really solid pro.

Tale of the Tape

Team: New Zealand Breakers (NBL)

Position: Forward

Height: 6’9”

Weight: 225 lbs

Counting Stats: 11.9 PPG, 4.3 RPG, 2 APG, 2.2 Stocks (steals + blocks) per game

Shooting Splits: 50.2 FG%, 32.6 3P%, 71.7 FT%

Hardware/Honors: NBL Ignite Cup Winner (NBL’s version of the NBA Cup)

Triumphs

The things that Karim does well, he does really well. He’s physical, he’s tough, he’s gritty, and his 7’1” wingspan allows him to have impressive defensive counting stats. He isn’t the fastest guy on the court; as a matter of fact Utah Jazz Legend “Slow Mo” Kyle Anderson probably comes to mind while watching him, but when he is asked to self-create it usually ends in a positive result as he uses that unorthodox timing and rhythm to get to his spots.

After he uses his physicality to get to the rim he also has a very soft touch. During his tenure in the NBL he’s been able to display a beautiful blend of power and finesse that you don’t usually see in a teenager. He was also asked to be a huge part of the team’s operations and finished the season in the top 5 of each counting stat (points, rebounds, assists, steals, and blocks per game).

Arguably my favorite part of his game is his relentless motor. You can see in his rebounding effort (and the aforementioned physicality to get to the rim) that he has a “never say die” attitude on the basketball court. His effort kind of reminds me of Boston Celtics Rookie Hugo Gonzalez, and I think you’d be hard pressed to find anyone who’s tapped into the league that would say that Hugo isn’t impactful. His counting stats might not scream “mega-star” but his contributions to winning for the Celtics franchise this year are undeniable.

Shortcomings

When I made the comparison to Kyle Anderson earlier, I meant it as both a term of endearment and a red (orange potentially?) flag. Lopez is slow; I feel pretty comfortable in saying that we’ll probably never see anyone touch Earth falling for one of his left-to-right crossovers. I’m not worried about his speed on the offensive end (I mean, look at Luka Doncic and Nikola Jokic for goodness sake), but I am quite concerned about his slowness on defense.

With all due respect to the National Basketball League, they do not have the same kind of speed and athleticism that the NBA has. There are times in the NBL where he is targeted on defense and opposing offenses are able to get the best of him. To say I’m scared to see what someone like De’Aaron Fox or even Rob Dillingham would do to him would be an understatement. I think he does have the physical tools to make up for some of his lack of speed, but at that point you are banking on his upside.

The other notable shortcoming he has is his shooting ability. I won’t say that his jump shot is textbook but I do think that it is foundationally solid enough to believe he could improve. Will he turn into Duncan Robinson in three years? I doubt it, but will he become someone that you can’t leave alone? I think so. Shooting 32% from deep on 3 attempts a game isn’t incredible but it seems like there are plenty of prospects in this draft that need to work on their outside scoring, so we can add Karim’s name to that list.

Is He Worth The Pick?

The answer to this question largely depends on where the Front Office’s head is at. As it stands right now we will have 10 players on the roster for next year (11 if we can/will resign Walker Kessler), so there are roster spots to fill. If we believe that we need a player with a lot of upside for the future then I think that drafting someone like Tennessee’s Nate Ament may be the better option. However, if you believe in what this team could be with a healthy Keyonte George, Lauri Markkanen, and Jaren Jackson Jr. (not to mention the strides we’ve seen over the past month from Cody Williams and Ace Bailey) and the Front Office thinks that we just need a reliable, ready to contribute player on a cheap deal then I think Lopez may be the guy.

It’s a gamble; I won’t pretend like it isn’t, but the one thing that I think the league will NEVER say no to is a skilled wing player. After seeing what Cody Williams has been over the past few weeks after a rough start to his career, I do tend to believe in this team’s player development system. If we were to draft him I think that he would spend some time in the G-League, but when he does get his number called I think that he’s displayed enough maturity in his game to be a valuable role player for us. Now I will say, as a personal note, that I would hope we give the “role player/glue guy” responsibility to someone who’s displayed that ability already for us this year (looking at you Elijah Harkless and Blake Hinson) but if the brass doesn’t believe in them as players I think that taking a chance on Lopez wouldn’t be the worst thing in the world.

I certainly would hope that our pick lands in the Top 4 where we have pretty good odds of landing a future superstar in the league, but if we get cursed by the Basketball Gods again we’ll probably have to start thinking about high end role players. I certainly don’t envy a Front Office’s responsibility because if I was the one calling the shots I would trade the non-Top 4 pick for more draft capital until I have a surefire thing; just another reason why I’m writing about draft prospects and not actually drafting them.


What do you think of Karim Lopez? Do you think his play in the NBL will translate to the NBA? Do you think that he’s ranked too high on ESPN’s Big Board? Sound off in the comments below!

Be kind. Tell someone you love them.

NBA Rumors: Is LeBron James better off in Cleveland or Los Angeles?

MIAMI, FLORIDA - MARCH 19: LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers reacts against the Miami Heat during the third quarter at Kaseya Center on March 19, 2026 in Miami, Florida. 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 Rich Storry/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Los Angeles Lakers are in the middle of a nine-game winning streak. LeBron James, during this stretch, is thriving as the second-fiddle for the first time in his life. Transitioning into a play-finishing wing next to another ball-dominant star might be the final evolution of LBJ’s career.

But would he be better suited to do this in LA, or back home with the Cleveland Cavaliers?

The answer to that question felt obvious less than two months ago.

Per Sam Amick of The Athletic, executives across the league were reaching a consensus on LeBron’s future as recently as late January.

“As recently as late January, not long after an ESPN report detailed so much of the dysfunction in James’ relationship with the Lakers organization, the widely-held consensus around the league was that there’s no way he’d be back in a Lakers jersey. The Cleveland Cavaliers and Golden State Warriors were, and are, often mentioned by league executives as his most likely destinations.”

Via The Athletic

A lot has changed since then. James has gone from the odd-man-out in LA to fitting in nicely with the rest of his team. He’s emerged from his cocoon as a new player, showcasing that he’s able to embrace a new style even in his 23rd NBA season.

James is averaging 19 points on 60% shooting during the Lakers’ streak. He’s found chemistry with Luka Doncic, who just scored 40 points per game across a four-game stretch. This synergy between James and Doncic could reshape his future.

“It was the lack of synergy and consistent success with James on the court, above all else, that drove the idea of an unavoidable exit,” said Amick.

The Lakers are rolling, and James is fitting in more than fitting out. That’s opened a new door for him to remain in LA, where he already has everything he needs to compete. Of course, he could potentially take on the same role in Cleveland, joining another contending roster and playing off the backcourt of James Harden and Donovan Mitchell.

The fit in Cleveland looks better on paper. James is insulated by better defenders and fills a much larger need for the Cavs than he does with the Lakers. Then, obviously, there’s the storybook ending of winning one final title with his hometown. That’s hard to deny.

A Brief Rant on Social Media

I don’t know what James will do this summer. No one does.

All I can say for certain is that rumors aren’t always what they seem.

If you’ve seen Amick’s story aggregated today on Twitter, you might have assumed James already packed his bags and was ready to leave Hollywood. That’s because a handful of accounts have taken this report out of context, posting that James is “reportedly NOT expected to return to the Lakers.”

That, of course, was not at all implied in Amick’s story. In fact, I’d argue his story does the opposite. James seems more likely to stay in LA now.

I don’t have to explain to anyone why an account would intentionally (or unintentionally) frame the report this way. We all understand the concept of clickbait at this point. And, in fairness, even our lovely Fear The Sword has to blur the lines at times to keep the blog running. But the truth still matters — and there’s a difference between an engaging headline and straight-up lying.

So, let that be a lesson in social media aggregation.

If you read a report that surprises you, take the extra minute to find the original source and read it for yourself. Then take it a step further and mute any accounts that frequently mislead you. That’s what I do, at least.

Seven Days of Sun, Week 22: The dogs days of March

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - MARCH 22: Devin Booker #1 and Jalen Green #4 of the Phoenix Suns react after a basket during the second half against the Toronto Raptors at Mortgage Matchup Center on March 22, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. 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 Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The 22nd week of the NBA season for the Phoenix Suns is finally over, and honestly, good riddance.

It was one of those strange weeks. Five games in seven nights, a heavy schedule that hit at the worst possible time. This team is already dealing with injuries across the roster, something that has defined the second half of the season, and then you layer that kind of workload on top of it. It is a tough formula.

They simply cannot get healthy. And when you are fighting for relevance in a packed Western Conference, that matters. Every game carries weight, every opportunity counts, and this was a week where Phoenix had a chance to make a move. The sixth seed was sitting there. That’s an important place in the standings. It keeps you out of the Play In, where one or two bad nights can undo an entire season. It matters because it gives you a cleaner path into the postseason. Avoiding that Play In game is everything when you have worked this hard to stay above water.

It also matters because of the matchup. If you land in that six spot, you are not staring at the top of the conference in round one. You are looking at the three seed, which right now is trending toward the Lakers. That is a different path, a different challenge, and one you would take every time over having to deal with the top tier right away.

Week 22 had that opportunity. And it slipped. So yeah, it was a long week, and I know people are probably tired of hearing me complain about the schedule. Especially when you look ahead to Week 23 and see a game on Tuesday, then nothing until Saturday. It makes you shake your head a little. But every team plays 82, and sometimes the calendar hits you at the wrong time. For the Suns, five games in one week came when they were already limping, and they quite literally staggered through it.

If you ask what we learned, it is hard to land on anything definitive. We learned the depth is real. Even with all the injuries, this team stayed competitive and gave itself a chance in nearly every game. We also saw how hard it is to close when you are missing that many key pieces. That is not a revelation as much as it is confirmation. We already knew it, we simply watched it play out over the course of a full week.

At least it ended on a high note. Snapping the five game losing streak matters, even if it does not change much in the standings. And that is where the focus begins to shift. With 10 games left, the Suns feel locked into the seventh seed. So this is no longer about climbing. It is about preparing. Get healthy. Get guys back into rhythm.

That is the real challenge. We watched how long it took Jalen Green to find his legs again, and there is a chance that same process is coming for others returning from injury. That is what these final games are for. Find some cohesion. Build some rhythm. Become as difficult as possible to deal with. Because if this team can get closer to whole, they might not be a favorite, but they can still be a problem.

Week 22 Record: 1-4

@ Boston Celtics, L, 120-112

  • Possession Differential: -1.1
  • Turnover Differential: -4
  • Offensive Rebounding Differential: +1

The Suns wandered into TD Garden and, for three quarters, it was pure cinema. Devin Booker went full scorched-earth, rattling off 23 straight points, keeping Phoenix breathing while Boston rained fire.

But then, the familiar late-game rigor mortis set in. The offense turned into a predictable slog, orbiting Booker until the Celtics’ defense simply swallowed him whole. A late Celtics’ run salted it away.

@ Minnesota Timberwolves, L, 116-104

  • Possession Differential: +3.4
  • Turnover Differential: -5
  • Offensive Rebounding Differential: +2

The Suns marched into Minnesota with a chance to shift the vibe, but instead, they got swallowed by a forest of Timberwolves’ limbs. Eleven blocks? That’s not basketball, that’s a SWAT team. Phoenix looked gassed, surrendering 16 fourth-quarter points in the paint as their defensive edge vanished like a mirage.

@ San Antonio Spurs, L, 101-100

  • Possession Differential: +1.4
  • Turnover Differential: -3
  • Offensive Rebounding Differential: +1

Losing a heartbreaker to the NBA’s silver-medal Spurs should make me want to throw my remote into the Gila River. Especially after blowing a ten-point lead and watching Rasheer Fleming’s missed free throws feed the ever-growing Wembanyama mythos. But honestly? I’m not even mad. Down five rotation players, the Suns played with actual, tangible grit.

vs. Milwaukee Bucks, L, 108-105

  • Possession Differential: +0.7
  • Turnover Differential: -5
  • Offensive Rebounding Differential: +4

The Suns’ five-game slide is officially a foul-smelling stew of CVS-receipt injury reports and late-game execution that resembles a dumpster fire in a hurricane. With Booker shooting a cold 4-of-17 and Jalen Green hoisting “heat check” bricks, this team is currently allergic to closing out winnable games.

vs. Toronto Raptors, W, 120-98

  • Possession Differential: -0.3
  • Turnover Differential: -3
  • Offensive Rebounding Differential: +7

The Suns finally traded their CVS-receipt injury reports for a shovel and buried that five-game skid by absolutely dismantling a fifth-seeded Raptors squad. Instead of the usual late-game “Booker-ball” cardiac arrest, Phoenix actually punched back and proved they aren’t just a collection of available bodies and good intentions.

Inside the Possession Game

  • Weekly Possession Differential: +4.1
  • Weekly Turnover Differential: -20
  • Offensive Rebounding Differential: +15
  • Year-to-Date Over/Under .500: +8

It is kind of wild when you look at the weekly possession battle graph, because on paper, the Suns had a good week. They won the possession differential, took care of the ball, and finished with 20 fewer turnovers than their opponents. They also grabbed 15 more offensive rebounds. Those are winning metrics. And yet, they went 1–4.

The culprit is clear. Late game execution in the fourth quarter.

In Week 22, the Suns struggled in that final frame. They averaged 22.2 points, which ranked 26th in the league for the week. They shot 28.9% from three, 20th, and 35.5% from the field, 29th. If not for a strong fourth against Toronto on Sunday, they would have finished dead last in plus/minus. Instead, they ended at -20.6, tied for 28th.

That tells the story. It reinforces what we have been seeing. This team needs to get healthy. And it also shines a light on Devin Booker’s fourth quarter performance this week. He averaged 4.8 points, shooting 30% from the field and 20% from deep, with a 1-to-1 assist-to-turnover ratio.

There is context there. Part of it comes from not having his usual group around him. Fewer outlets, fewer options, more pressure. At the same time, part of it falls on him. When the roster is depleted, that is when your best player has to elevate and find a way to close. Right now, that balance has not been there.


Week 23 Preview

After an arduous week that saw the Suns play five games in seven nights, things slow down a ton. Only two games on the schedule this week, both at home, which feels like a much-needed reset.

It starts Tuesday night against the Denver Nuggets. Denver is a team that has had Phoenix’s number this season, and they are right in the middle of a tight race with Houston and Minnesota, all sitting 12.5 games back of first. That means urgency. That means focus. And it means they are going to come in ready, especially against a team they have handled well.

Then comes Saturday. The Suns face the Utah Jazz, who sit at 21–50 and have leaned fully into the tank. It is the most favorable matchup remaining on Phoenix’s schedule. Outside of Utah, the other lighter opponents left are Dallas, Memphis, and Chicago, but none present the same level of opportunity as this one.

So it is a lighter week in terms of volume. Not in terms of importance.


Only 5% of the community expected the Suns to go 1-4 in Week 22. The majority thought 3-2 was their destiny. Fewer options to choose from this week. Where do they end up?

Rockets vs Bulls Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight’s NBA Game

Want to get more Covers content? Add us as a preferred source on your Google account here.

The Houston Rockets have struggled to put together a functional NBA offense lately, but that may not matter tonight against a Chicago Bulls team heading for the draft lottery.

While Houston is just 6-5 this month, Chicago has lost five of its last seven contests, and my Rockets vs. Bulls predictions expect the visitors to do enough defensively to land a big road win. 

Read on for my free NBA picks ahead of this March 23 matchup.

Rockets vs Bulls prediction

Rockets vs Bulls best bet: Rockets -8.5 (-110)

Despite some of the Houston Rockets' flailing crunch-time efforts this month, I’m not ready to write off Ime Udoka’s squad, especially when the Rockets are allowing just 109.9 PPG, the fourth-lowest mark in the league.

Defense is the visitors’ edge here, and Houston has won four straight meetings against the Chicago Bulls. This spread could be bigger when you look at Chicago’s recent blowout losses against the Raptors, Lakers, and somehow, Kings.

Though Josh Giddey is a threat, the Rockets have the perimeter hounds to limit his scoring, and they’re coming off encouraging victories over the Hawks and Heat.

Rockets vs Bulls same-game parlay

A Houston win tonight starts with Amen Thompson and Kevin Durant. Thompson has been a beast on the glass lately, with 11+ rebounds in four of his last five games, and KD’s latest masterpiece — 27 points against the Heat — took him past Michael Jordan in the all-time scoring chart.

Rockets vs Bulls SGP

  • Rockets moneyline
  • Amen Thompson Over 7.5 rebounds
  • Kevin Durant Over 25.5 points

Our "from downtown" SGP: Amen to that

This is the matchup within the matchup. Thompson is averaging a monster 21.3 PPG and 9.5 RPG in March, while Giddey has dished double-digit dimes in four of his last five outings, even with the Bulls’ faltering form.

Rockets vs Bulls SGP

  • Amen Thompson Over 19.5 points
  • Amen Thompson Over 7.5 rebounds
  • Josh Giddey Over 9.5 assists
  • Josh Giddey Over 7.5 rebounds

Rockets vs Bulls odds

  • Spread: Rockets -8.5 | Bulls +8.5
  • Moneyline: Rockets -370 | Bulls +290
  • Over/Under: Over 229.5 | Under 229.5

Rockets vs Bulls betting trend to know

The Over is 9-1 in the last 10 meetings between these teams. Find more NBA betting trends for Rockets vs. Bulls.

How to watch Rockets vs Bulls

LocationUnited Center, Chicago, IL
DateMonday, March 23, 2026
Tip-off8:00 p.m. ET
TVSCHN, CHSN

Rockets vs Bulls latest injuries

Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

How to watch Golden State Warriors vs Dallas Mavericks: Live stream info for tonight's game

Tonight's Peacock NBA Monday doubleheader begins at 7:00 PM when the San Antonio Spurs take on the Miami Heat at Kaseya Center. The action continues at 9:30 PM with a Golden State Warriors vs Dallas Mavericks matchup at American Airlines Center in Texas. Live coverage begins at 6:00 PM with NBA Showtime on NBC and Peacock. See below for additional information on how to watch each game.

Follow all of the NBA action on NBCSN and Peacock. Peacock will feature 100 regular-season games throughout the course of the 2025-2026 season.

Click here to sign up for Peacock!

Golden State Warriors vs Dallas Mavericks Game Preview:

The Warriors have lost seven of their last eight games, including the last three straight. The team is decimated with injuries: Jimmy Butler has been out for the season with a torn ACL since January 19. Stephen Curry hasn't played since January 30, missing the last 21 straight games with a right knee injury. Moses Moody has missed the last ten with a wrist sprain, and Al Horford has missed the last five with a left calf strain.

However, the Warriors, currently 10th in the Western Conference, are still in Play-In Tournament position.

That is not the case for the Mavericks have lost twelve of their last 14 games. Tonight they look to earn their first home win since January 22.

RELATED:Warriors at Mavericks Prediction - Odds, recent stats, trends, and best bets for March 23

How to watch Golden State Warriors vs Dallas Mavericks:

  • When: Monday, March 23
  • Where: American Airlines Center, Dallas, Texas
  • Time: 9:30 PM ET
  • Live Stream: NBCSN and Peacock

What other NBA games are on Peacock tonight?

How to watch the NBA on NBC and Peacock:

Peacock NBA Monday will stream up to three Monday night games each week throughout the regular season. Coast 2 Coast Tuesday presents doubleheaders on Tuesday nights throughout the regular season on NBC and Peacock. On most Tuesdays, an 8 p.m. ET game will be on NBC stations in the Eastern and Central time zones, and an 8 p.m. PT game on NBC stations in the Pacific and often Mountain time zones.

Check local listings each week. Both games will stream live nationwide on Peacock. Sunday Night Basketball coverage will also be available on NBC and Peacock. For a full schedule of the NBA on NBC and Peacock, click here.

How to sign up for Peacock:

Sign up here to watch all of our LIVE sports, sports shows, documentaries, classic matches, and more. You'll also get tons of hit movies and TV shows, Originals, news, 24/7 channels, and current NBC & Bravo hits—Peacock is here for whatever you’re in the mood for.

NBA on NBC 2025-26 Schedule:

Click here to see the full list of NBA games that will air on NBC and Peacock this season.

What devices does Peacock support?

You can enjoy Peacock on a variety of devices. View the full list of supported devices here.