Kyshawn George is having a breakout season by embracing his role as a positionless creator

The Washington Wizards may not command your attention when you scan the NBA standings and find them sitting at 1-7 on the season, but it takes only a few minutes of watching them on the court to see the abundance of promise on this roster. Through the first eight games, none of those promising young players has demanded our attention quite like Kyshawn George.

The 21-year-old former 24th overall pick in the 2024 NBA Draft has emerged as an early candidate for Most Improved Player. After averaging 8.7 points, 4.2 rebounds, 2.5 assists, and 1.0 steals per game on 37.2% from the field in 26.5 minutes per game as a rookie, few people expected George to come into the 2025-26 season and lead the Wizards' offense in the way that he has.

Through eight games, George is averaging 16.8 points, 6.8 rebounds, 4.1 assists, 1.4 steals, and 1.7 blocks per game while shooting 53.2% from the field and playing 31.1 minutes per game. His 21.3% usage rate is the third-highest among Washington's starters and puts him right on the same level as players like Amen Thompson, Ryan Rollins, and Aaron Gordon, which speaks to George's prominent role within the offense. A role that, this season, has also placed George as the hub of offense on the perimeter way more than he was last season.

Kyshawn George came into Wednesday night’s game against Boston fifth in the NBA in his frequency as a pick-and-roll ballhandler, being used in that role 41% of the time. Last season, he was asked to do that under 17% of the time.

"Growing up, I've always been a point guard," said the 6'8" George. "It's only been the last couple of years that I kind of transitioned to being able to play the wing. I always kept the point guard skills. I've always been able to read the game really well and just make the right decision from there. So they've given me the opportunity to run the pick and roll more, and I'm just taking advantage of it."

With George running the pick-and-roll, the Wizards average 1.06 points per possession, which is 22nd among all pick and roll ballhandlers in the NBA, just below Dyson Daniels and ahead of players like Julius Randle and Paolo Banchero. The Wizards score on 48% of the possessions where George is used as a pick-and-roll ballhander, and he ranks in the 80th percentile in the NBA for his effectiveness in that role.

Part of his success in the pick-and-roll game is due to his work in the offseason.

"He's getting in the paint more to put pressure on the rim," said Wizards head coach Brian Keefe. "Just the work that he's put in during the offseason on his game, but also his body, so he's been able to absorb contact and been able to attack more. It's been great."

George has good lateral quickness, but he's larger than most point guards, so he doesn't have the lightning-quick first step or shiftiness that smaller players might have. Being able to figure out the right angles to attack the basket at and also improve his ability to finish through contact has been instrumental for him.

"I definitely worked on [finishing through contact] this summer," admitted George. "I mean, I was working the whole summer, basically, and there are definitely strides I took in the weight room with just lifting weights in general, and getting stronger and using my body to the best of my ability."

With that stronger body and summer of work behind him, George has focused on being "super aggressive in general" this season. Through his first eight games, he is averaging almost 10 drives per game this season, after averaging just over four last year. He's also shooting 59.3% on those drives this year, with nearly 64% of his points overall coming when he drives to the basketball.

"It's definitely a confidence thing," explained George. "The coaches emphasized that I was showing flashes of it last year, but I think it's just taking a step in how aggressive I could be. I think there's even a bigger step to be taken, but just, you know, causing havoc offensively, being able to get into the paint, make the defense collapse, and then make the right read from there."

Making the right read was something that George feels he struggled with last year. Despite seeing himself as a "positionless" player in a league that is largely positionless, George went into the off-season determined to improve in his ability as a facilitator. Last year, in pick and roll situaitons specifically, George had a nearly 20% turnover rate. This season, he has cut that down to 16%. On drives in general, George has a 5.3% turnover rate this season, down from 7% last year. Overall, his assist rate this season is 20.4%, which is a sizable jump up from his 13.3% mark last year.

"We noticed last year I was getting into the paint, and I was kind of indecisive when I got in there," explained George before Wednesday's game. "I just worked on my decision-making once I got into the paint...I see myself as a creator, either for myself or the team, and just being able to get us a good shot every possession."

Sometimes, the good shot that the Wizards can get comes with George launching from beyond the arc. Last year, that was not such a beneficial strategy. George took 5.2 three-pointers per game last year but converted at just a 32.2% clip. It was yet another aspect of his game that George focused on during the off-season, and he has been shooting the lights out early on, knocking down an absurd 53.8% of his shots from deep while still taking 5.6 three-pointers per game.

George attributes that growth to "reps over the off-season, and also discipline. I'm kind of a feel shooter, and I'm just adding the discipline part to it. Being able to hold my follow-through to try to keep it as consistent as possible. Just digging into the details of shooting and being able to be super consistent with that."

The detail-oriented approach to his game has become a central focus for George. He uses the word "intentionality" often when he speaks and makes sure he has a clear purpose behind every action that he performs, even in a practice setting.

"It's just a lot of adjustments," he explained about his growth as a shooter, "and making sure I'm not taking any shot for granted. I'm making sure that I'm really sticking and putting in meaningful reps every time I shoot. Not necessarily staying five hours in the gym and shooting a gazillion shots. Being able to get maybe a smaller amount, but game reps with really high intentionality."

That detail-oriented mindset has carried over on the defensive side of the ball. After posting a 115.5 defensive rating last year, he has registered a 117.7 mark this year, which is 38th in all of basketball among starters. "He's really an all-around player," said Coach Keefe." You know, over a block a game, over a steal game. He just continues to make these incremental gains."

For George, the biggest factor in his defensive improvements this season has been from getting more reps. The more experience he has on the court, the more time he has to pay attention to the details of what his opponents are doing and use that to improve his own game.

"I have more experience," he said plainly when asked about his defensive growth. "I just know what kind of actions are going on. I know what players like to do...Just playing against them, you see more reps and experience. Then, watching the games or watching individual players, you learn a lot from what they want to do, and you could also add that to your personal game...Just that overall experience. And then, it's just trying to win the matchup every time on the floor, not letting anybody score easily. Just playing basketball at the end of the day."

Pride in aggressive defense is one of the hallmarks of this young Wizards team. Players like Alex Sarr, Bub Carrington, Khris Middleton, and Bilal Coulibaly all rank ahead of George in defensive rating so far this season. As the second-youngest team in the NBA, with an average age of 23.8 years old, the Wizards want to hound you on the perimeter, speed you up, and then take the ball and sprint down the court in the other direction. Heading into Wednesday's game, they are 3rd in the NBA in pace and have no intention of slowing down.

"We’re going to play with that pace because we think that’s going to lead to us being a successful team," said Coach Keefe. "We’re a pretty deep team. That’s hard to handle when we’re really moving the ball like that. You can see that, at times. It’s got to get more consistent. That’s what we’re trying to work on every day to grow for our team.”

That path for growth, both for George and the Wizards, is easy to see. With George, Coulibaly, former 2nd overall pick Alex Sarr, former 14th overall pick Bub Carrington, and this year's 6th overall pick Tre Johnson, the Wizards have an athletic and promising core of players who are all under 21 years old. With Sarr also having a breakout season, Coulibaly recently returning from injury, andTre Johnson in the top 10 among rookies in points, rebounds, and steals per game, this Wizards team has all the makings of a group that could start the season feisty but unsuccessful and then work their way into being a team nobody wants to play in the second half of the year.

Still, even with a potentially bright future on the horizon, both personally and for his team, George is trying to keep a more immediate mindset.

"You just stay focused on the day-to-day," he said when asked about his thoughts on the outlook for his young team. "Just being intentional with everything you do. You trust that, with the work you're putting in, the intentionality you have every day, the results are gonna come. Yeah, it's tough sometimes, but you got to make sure that your focus is on the right thing, and that you just keep stacking days."

So how does George feel about the days he has stacked so far this season? "I think I'm going in the right direction, but there's way more to be done." It's a sentiment that his head coach shares: "There is no ceiling for a player like [George]."

Now that he has our attention, it's time to see just how high Kyshawn George and these young Wizards can go.

NBA Highest-Paid Players 2025-26: Curry, Durant Join $1 Billion Club

LeBron James, Stephen Curry and Kevin Durant have posted first-ballot Hall of Fame resumes on the court with a combined 10 NBA titles, seven MVPs and 43 All-NBA team selections. The numbers off the court are even more stunning.

The trio’s estimated career earnings from salaries and endorsements will hit $3.7 billion by season’s end, with Curry and Durant joining their longtime rival in an exclusive club: the only NBA players to earn $1 billion in salary and endorsements while still active (Michael Jordan hit $1 billion after his retirement). It’s a threshold that only six non-NBA players hit during their careers: Tiger Woods, Cristiano Ronaldo, Lionel Messi, Roger Federer, Phil Mickelson and Floyd Mayweather.

For the 2025-26 season, James reclaimed his crown as the NBA’s highest-paid player at $132.6 million, including an estimated $80 million off the court. James was the NBA’s top earner for 11 straight seasons before Curry finished on top last year at $156 million. The Golden State Warriors point guard’s endorsement earnings got a one-time boost from his Under Armour contract extension. Kobe Bryant in 2012-13 was the last player to finish ahead of LeBron before Curry last season.

While James will make more than any other basketball player this season, his $52.6 million Lakers salary once again trails many of his fellow All-Stars. It ranks No. 12 overall for the 2025-26 season. James has had the top salary only once (2016-17) during his 23-year career. At $59.6 million, Curry has the top playing salary for the ninth straight year.

James’ off-court earnings have exceeded his team salary since he was drafted first overall in 2003 and joined the Cleveland Cavaliers armed with a $90 million Nike deal, plus sponsor deals with Coca-Cola and Upper Deck. Nike remains his biggest backer, with his current “lifetime” deal signed in 2015 worth more than $1 billion, according to his longtime business manager, Maverick Carter.

James’ new brand partners this year include Richard Mille and Barbie-maker Mattel; in April, he became the first pro athlete to have a Ken doll. In March, Amazon signed a multiyear deal for James’ digital series, Mind the Game, which will be distributed across several Amazon properties.

The 20 highest-paid NBA players will earn a combined $1.4 billion, up 2% versus last year. The off-court earnings represent 29% of the total, and James is the only one to make more from his brand partners than his NBA team.

NBA salaries have skyrocketed as revenues rose, and players are entitled to 51% of the pie. Sixty NBA players are set to earn at least $30 million this year in salary, versus 35 in the NFL and 13 in MLB.

Methodology

Sportico estimated off-court earnings for the 2025-26 season through conversations with those familiar with NBA endorsement deals. Also included are royalties from sneaker deals, as well as earnings from memorabilia, appearances, media and businesses tied to their celebrity. We exclude investment income unless it is connected to an endorsement agreement. The figures are all before taxes and any agent fees.

The salaries are base salaries for the season and do not include any playoff bonuses or incentives—most of these players are on max-level contracts, which don’t include incentives. We also did not deduct the 10% escrow payments withheld from contracts, which ensures the proper revenue split as outlined in the collective bargaining agreement. The league retained 9.1% of the $5.3 billion in player contracts from the 2024-25 season, but players are likely to keep most, if not all, of their 2025-26 salaries with the league’s new 11-year, $76 billion TV contracts kicking in.

The 20 Highest-Paid NBA Players

1. LeBron James (Los Angeles Lakers): $132.6 million

Salary: $52.6 million | Endorsements: $80 million | Age: 40

This season marks James’ 23rd NBA campaign, and he has been selected for 21 All-NBA teams, six more than any other player in the history of the game. The longevity and dominance will push his career earnings to $1.7 billion by season’s end, on par with Messi for fourth all-time, behind Jordan, Woods and Ronaldo.

2. Stephen Curry (Golden State Warriors): $109.6 million

Salary: $59.6 million | Endorsements: $50 million | Age: 37

Curry’s business interests. which are housed under Thirty Ink, include Unanimous Media, Gentleman’s Cut Bourbon and Underrated Golf and Basketball. His other brand partners are Under Armour, Google, Chase, Rakuten and Fanatics. Curry remains a lethal shooter with the highest free throw percentage in the history of the NBA, and his 4,093 career 3-pointers made are more than 800 ahead of second-ranked James Harden.

3. Kevin Durant (Houston Rockets): $103.3 million

Salary: $53.3 million | Endorsements: $50 million | Age: 37

KD signed a two-year contract worth $90 million with the Rockets after he was traded this summer from the Phoenix Suns. The deal was a $30 million discount on the max contract Durant was eligible for, and it gives Houston room to bolster its roster and avoid the NBA’s second apron. It pushed his career playing salary, including money owed, to nearly $600 million, the highest in NBA history.

4. Giannis Antetokounmpo (Milwaukee Bucks): $99.1 million

Salary: $54.1 million | Endorsements: $45 million | Age: 30

Antetokounmpo is under contract with the Bucks through the 2026-27 season with a player option for the following year, but his potential departure from Milwaukee is always an NBA storyline. The Bucks are doing everything they can to satisfy the two-time MVP, including nabbing Myles Turner from the Pacers via a four-year, $109 million deal and signing two of Giannis’ brothers, Thanasis and Alex, just ahead of the season start.

5. Jayson Tatum (Boston Celtics): $72.1 million

Salary: $54.1 million | Endorsements: $18 million | Age: 27

Tatum will likely miss the entire 2025-26 season as he recovers from a torn Achilles tendon suffered during the 2025 NBA playoffs. He’ll still collect his full salary, which is the first year of a five-year, $313 million contract that is the biggest in the history of the NBA. The Jordan Brand ambassador added Vertex Pharmaceuticals to his endorsement roster this year.

6. Anthony Edwards (Minnesota Timberwolves): $65.6 million

Salary: $45.6 million | Endorsements: $20 million | Age: 24

Edwards is the youngest member of the NBA’s top-10 earners by more than two years, and one of the leaders to assume the face of the NBA moniker as the older guard nears retirement. Edwards led the Timberwolves to back-to-back Western Conference finals, and Adidas has pushed him hard in its marketing. Sprite, Fanatics, Chipotle, Bose, Hisense, Call of Duty and Panini are his other partners.

7. Joel Embiid (Philadelphia 76ers): $65.2 million

Salary: $55.2 million | Endorsements: $10 million | Age: 31

Injuries have limited Embiid to 58 total games during the past two seasons after he won the league’s MVP award during the 2022-23 season. He has a three-year, $188 million contract extension that kicks in next season. Last year, Skechers added Embiid as an endorser in its goal to establish a basketball brand.

8. Jimmy Butler (Golden State Warriors): $65.1 million

Salary: $54.1 million | Endorsements: $11 million | Age: 36

In February, Butler signed a two-year, $111 million contract extension with the Warriors after he forced a trade from the Miami Heat. Alo launched its first shoe collaboration with Butler last month. The “recovery” shoe retails for $275.

9. Nikola Jokic (Denver Nuggets): $64.2 million

Salary: $55.2 million | Endorsements: $9 million | Age: 30

Jokic’s salary is tied with Embiid for the second-highest this season after Curry. He is eligible to sign a four-year extension next summer for $293 million. During the past five seasons, the Joker has won three NBA MVP awards and finished second the other two years.

10. Devin Booker (Phoenix Suns): $63.1 million

Salary: $53.1 million | Endorsements: $10 million | Age: 29

Booker, along with Durant and Bradley Beal, contributed to Suns owner Mat Ishbia paying $220 million in luxury tax penalties the past two seasons for the club’s high payrolls. But of that trio, Booker is the only one left in Phoenix. In July, Booker agreed to a two-year, $145 million contract extension with the franchise through the 2029-30 season at the highest annual salary in NBA history.

11. Luka Dončić (Los Angeles Lakers): $61 million

Salary: $46 million | Endorsements: $15 million | Age: 26

The Mavericks’ trade of the Serbian star to the Lakers rocked the sports world in February. In July, he agreed to a three-year, $165 million maximum contract extension through the 2027-28 season, eschewing a chance to test free agency next summer. Dončić was first team All-NBA five straight seasons before injuries curtailed his 2024-25 campaign.

12. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (Oklahoma City Thunder): $58.3 million

Salary: $38.3 million | Endorsements: $20 million | Age: 27

SGA’s dream season included a league-high 32.7 points per game, NBA MVP award and NBA Finals MVP nod while leading the Thunder to their first title since moving to Oklahoma City. He signed a four-year contract extension that tips off with the 2027-28 season worth an estimated $273 million. On top of that, he signed an extension with Converse last year that made him the brand’s creative director of basketball.

13. Karl-Anthony Towns (New York Knicks): $58.1 million

Salary: $53.1 million | Endorsements: $5 million | Age: 29

The Knicks acquired Towns from the Timberwolves just ahead of the 2024-25 season start, and he helped lead them to their first Eastern Conference final since 2000. He’s in the second season of a four-year, $220 million contract he originally signed with Minnesota.

14. Anthony Davis (Dallas Mavericks): $57.6 million

Salary: $54.1 million | Endorsements: $3.5 million | Age: 32

Davis was on the other end of the Dončić trade that ended his five-plus season run in Los Angeles. In 2023, the Lakers signed Davis to a three-year deal that was the richest NBA deal by average annual value at the time, with the $175 million pact kicking off this season. He ranks second in career blocks among active players, behind Brook Lopez.

15. Donovan Mitchell (Cleveland Cavaliers): $56.9 million

Salary: $46.4 million | Endorsements: $10.5 million | Age: 29

Mitchell finished fifth in last season’s MVP voting, as the Cavs won 64 regular-season games, their second-highest win total in franchise history. Mitchell has become an endorsement star with more than 10 partners, including Adidas, American Express, Bodyarmor and Skims.

16. Paul George (Philadelphia 76ers): $56.7 million

Salary: $51.7 million | Endorsements: $5 million | Age: 35

George missed 41 games during the 2024-25 season after joining the 76ers under a four-year, $211.6 million free agent contract. He no longer has a signature shoe with Nike but still works with the brand, in addition to Kinder, GALA Sports, Panini, SCUF and American Express.

17. Tyrese Haliburton (Indiana Pacers): $56.6 million

Salary: $45.6 million | Endorsements: $11 million | Age: 25

The All-Star point guard will sit out the 2025-26 season recovering from a torn Achilles tendon suffered during Game 7 of the NBA Finals against the Thunder. Haliburton had been a Nike guy since he was drafted in 2020, but Puma signed him to a huge deal last year to be the face of the brand.

18. Kawhi Leonard (Los Angeles Clippers): $56.5 million

Salary: $50 million | Endorsements: $6.5 million | Age: 34

Leonard’s endorsement deal with bankrupt environmentally focused financial services firm Aspiration has triggered an NBA investigation over potential salary cap violations by the Clippers, whose owner Steve Ballmer invested in the company. At $7 million per year, Leonard’s Aspiration sponsorship was worth more than his New Balance sneaker deal and almost every other player endorsement, outside of shoe deals.

19. Cade Cunningham (Detroit Pistons): $56.4 million

Salary: $46.4 million | Endorsements: $10 million | Age: 24

The Pistons finished above .500 last year for only the second time since the 2007-08 season. Cunningham was the main driver of the sharp turnaround with his 26 points per game and seventh-place finish in MVP voting. He’s built a deep roster of sponsors, led by Nike, that also includes Meta, 2K, Coinbase, Funko, The Sam Bernstein Law Firm, Daiya Foods and Impossible Foods.

20. James Harden (Los Angeles Clippers): $55.2 million

Salary: $39.2 million | Endorsements: $16 million | Age: 36

Harden made an All-NBA team last year for the first time since the 2019-20 season. The Clippers rewarded the 36-year-old point guard with a two-year, $81 million contract extension.

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Watch Russell Westbrook drop triple-double on Warriors, lead Kings to home win

Russell Westbrook can still dial up some vintage nights.

Golden State found that out Wednesday, when Westbrook had a 23-point, 16-rebound, 10-assist triple-double to spark a 121-116 Sacramento win at home.

Those 16 rebounds moved Westbrook in front of Jason Kidd for most rebounds by a guard in NBA history (8,734). That was Westbrook's 204th career triple-double.

This game was seriously lacking in star power due to injuries. The Warriors were without Stephen Curry, Jimmy Butler and Draymond Green, while the Kings did not have Domantas Sabonis or Zach LaVine.

Dennis Schroder finished with 18 points, seven rebounds and seven assists, plus knocked down three 3-pointers during an 11-0 fourth quarter run where Sacramento pulled away. DeMar DeRozan led the Kings with 25, while Malik Monk had 23 off the bench.

Rookie Will Richard led the Warriors with 30 points, while Moses Moody scored 28.

NBA's last unbeaten record goes as Thunder lose

Duop Reath and Jerami Grant smiling after the Portland Trail Blazers beat the Oklahoma City Thunder
Jerami Grant (right) scored 20 points off the bench for Portland, with only Deni Avdija (26) and Jrue Holiday (22) scoring more [Getty Images]

The Portland Trail Blazers fought back to beat the Oklahoma City Thunder and halt the NBA's last remaining unbeaten record.

The defending champions won their opening eight games of the new NBA season but their streak ended as Portland came back from 22 points down to win 121-119.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored a game-high 35 points for Oklahoma City and last season's Most Valuable Player has now scored 20 or more in 81 consecutive games, extending the third-longest streak in NBA history.

Luka Doncic got the better of Victor Wembanyama as the Los Angeles Lakers claimed a 118-116 win over the San Antonio Spurs.

Elsewhere, the Brooklyn Nets became the last team to claim their first win of the season, beating the injury-hit Indiana Pacers 112-103.

Nikola Jokic registered a triple-double to lead the Denver Nuggets to a 122-112 win over the Miami Heat, while the New York Knicks scored 83 points in the second half to claim a 137-114 victory over the Minnesota Timberwolves.

Mitchell Robinson shows importance to Knicks with game-wrecking performance vs. Timberwolves

Mike Brown was shocked when he looked at the final box score on Wednesday night

He looked at the blocks category and thought someone must have made a mistake. 

“I was shocked (Mitchell Robinson) only had three,” Brown said with a laugh. “Mitch was all over the place, guarding everybody, blocking shots, contesting shots.”

There aren’t many players in the world who can do what Robinson did on Wednesday. He had nine offensive rebounds and three blocks in just 16 minutes. The Knicks in the second half outscored Minnesota by 17 in Robinson’s nine minutes. 

He wrecked the game for Minnesota. And the box score doesn’t entirely encapsulate it. The Knicks had 21 offensive rebounds as a team. Many of those were thanks to the attention the Timberwolves had to pay to Robinson. 

“Whenever he’s out there doing that, it makes us really comfortable shooting shots because we might get a second chance,” Jalen Brunson said. 

The issue, of course, is how often Robinson is "out there" for New York. 

He has been hidden for most of this early season. He’s missed three preseason games and three regular season games as part of the Knicks’ workload management plan. 

His appearances have been sporadic. But nights like Wednesday remind you why the Knicks have held on to Robinson for so long. 

Nights like Wednesday remind you why VP of Sports Medicine Casey Smith and his group are managing Robinson’s workload. 

Given his significant injury history, the Knicks are willing to sit Robinson during the regular season with the bigger picture in mind. 
Because if the Knicks have a healthy Robinson in the postseason, they are a different team. It’s probably easy to forget how good Robinson can be because he’s been out of the lineup so often. But nights like Wednesday serve as a reminder: Robinson can dominate a game when healthy. 

Knicks pour in 83 second-half points to beat Timberwolves 137-114

The Knicks used an 83-point second half and a constricting defense to snuff out the Minnesota Timberwolves for a 135-114 win on Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden.

After an even first half, Jalen Brunson took over in the third, with 12 points, five rebounds and four assists, and OG Anunoby owned the start of the fourth quarter with eight fast points as the Knicks turned a two-point halftime deficit into a 15-point lead with seven minutes to play in the contest and put the game on ice from there.

Anunoby led the Knicks with 25 points on 10-for-17 shooting (3-for-5 from deep) with eight rebounds and a plus-14 in 32 minutes. Brunson finished with 23 points on 9-for-20 shooting, 10 assists, seven rebounds, and was a plus-16 in 33 minutes.

Julius Randle, in his second game back at MSG after the trade, led the Timberwolves with 32 points on 12-for-21 shooting with five rebounds, four assists, but was a minus-16 in 38 minutes.

New York improved to 5-0 at home to start the season, winning a third straight after three straight losses on the road. 

Here are the takeaways...

- On the night, New York was just faster to the basketball for all but the first few minutes of the game: out-rebounding the visitors 56-38, with a 31-14 edge in second-chance points, and a 62-40 edge in points in the paint. The Knicks had four starters in double figures and got 53 points from the bench, led by Josh Hart, pouring in 18 on 7-for-12 shooting (4-for-5 from three) with five rebounds, four assists for a plus-12 in 27 minutes. 

Karl-Anthony Towns scored 15 points with 10 rebounds, four assists, and two blocks in 31 minutes and was a plus-15. Mikal Brides had 13 points on 5-for-12 shooting with five assists and was a plus-13 in 33 minutes. In just 16 minutes, Mitchell Robinson had eight points (4-for-5 shooting) with 10 rebounds (nine offensive) with three blocks, and was a plus-7.

Anthony Edwards, back in the lineup after missing four games due to a hamstring injury, started slow with just five points (2-for-5) in the first half. He was blocked twice in the opening moments of the third as he didn’t look himself. He finished with 15 points on 5-for-13 shooting (3-for-7 from deep) and was a minus-25 in 29 minutes. Donte DiVincenzo, in his first game back since the trade, had spurts of good play and scored 21 points on 7-for-15 shooting (5-for-11 from deep) but was a minus-14 in 36 minutes.

- The Knicks' offense did not start smoothly, with four turnovers and 0-for-5 from the floor in the first four minutes. Mike Brown had seen enough, calling for time with his side down 13-4. Bridges finally got the Knicks’ first field goal with a three, which started a 10-2 run, including two run-outs, as the home side finally turned defense into offense. 

After an 0-for-6 start, the Knicks finished the quarter converting on 10 of 15, capped by Robinson scooping his fifth rebound (fourth offensive) and laying it in before the buzzer for a 28-26 lead.

Brunson made just 2 of 6 to start with four points and two turnovers, but added four assists and two rebounds. Hart knocked down his first two threes of the game and added a good assist to Guerschon Yabusele for a corner three. Anunoby added four first-quarter points on three attempts, but put on a defensive clinic with effort across the board.

Randle had his typical good first quarter, scoring 11 points on 4-for-7 shooting. And he added seven more in the second, to go along with three assists, two rebounds, and a block, and was plus-10 in 20 first-half minutes.

- A pair of emphatic Towns dunks – first over Rudy Gobert and then over Edwards – helped New York build an eight-point edge early in the second, but Minnesota's ball movement continued to be good and got them a pair of back-to-back open threes. But a 7-0 Knicks spurt built the lead up to nine, with Miles McBride scoring five of his first-half seven and Jordan Clarkson grabbing a dunk off a nice backdoor cut from a Towns feed. McBride finished with 14 points (6-for-10 shooting) with four assists and three boards and was a game-high plus-26 in 21 minutes. Clarkson finished with seven off the bench in 16 minutes.

But that lead was quickly erased by 14 unanswered points from Minnesota, with DiVincenzo connecting twice from three and Randle walking into an easy one as Towns left him wide open, forcing another Brown timeout. Brunson put a stop to it as the Knicks ran a good play for him to get a three, as they got back into things to level the score, but Randle scored four in the final half-minute to give Minnesota a 58-54 lead at the break.

New York was outrebounding the visitors 21-17 at the half, but Minnesota was 20-for-38 from the floor (52.6 percent) and 12-for-23 from deep (52.2 percent) compared to 21-for-46 (45.7 percent) and 8-for-18 (44.4 percent) for the home side.

- New York’s offense didn’t start clicking immediately after the break, but the defense began to tighten the screws, highlighted by a 13-2 run powered by a Towns block, Anunoby steal, Hart charge with Anunoby and Brunson each scoring five to match their largest lead of nine.

The Knicks finished the third with 40 points on 17-for-28 shooting (60.7 percent) as the Wolves went just 9-for-24 from the floor, building an eight-point lead. The hottest hand belonged to Brunson, who turned it on in the third, scoring 12 points on 5-for-8 shooting. Not to be overlooked, Robinson added three dunks, three rebounds, three blocks, and a steal in the third.

In the second half, the Knicks shot 60.7 percent (34-for-56) and held the visitors to 44.4 percent (20-for-45). As a unit, New York was 55-for-102 (53.9 percent) from the floor and 19-for-42 from three (45.2 percent).

Highlights

What's next

The Knicks have a few days off before they host the Nets on Sunday, with the tip set for 6 p.m.

Nets defeat Pacers, 112-103, to pick up first win of season

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Michael Porter Jr. had 32 points and 11 rebounds, and the Brooklyn Nets overcame the loss of leading scorer Cam Thomas to claim their first victory of the season in a 112-103 road win over the Indiana Pacers on Wednesday night.

Porter made 10 of 20 shots, including four three-pointers, as the Nets pulled away in the fourth quarter in a game of spurts that featured 12 lead changes and 10 ties. His final three-point play pushed the Nets ahead 110-103 with 22.1 seconds remaining.

Porter’s extra scoring was needed after Thomas, who entered with a 24.4-point scoring average, exited midway through the first quarter with hamstring tightness. It’s the same hamstring that limited him to 25 games last season.

The Nets, who had lost the first seven games this season, got four other double-digit efforts as Nic Claxton scored 18, Noah Clowney had 17, Tyrese Martin 16 and Terance Mann 15.

The Pacers, who are also now 1-7, were led by Pascal Siakam’s 23 points and nine assists. Ben Sheppard scored 18. Backup center Jay Huff added 16 with four three-pointers.

Up next

The Nets host the Detroit Pistons on Friday.

The Pacers visit the Denver Nuggets on Saturday.

Approaching 37th birthday, Russell Westbrook displays ‘beautiful' game for Kings

Approaching 37th birthday, Russell Westbrook displays ‘beautiful' game for Kings originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SACRAMENTO – Just a few weeks ago, Russell Westbrook was jobless following the completion of his 17th NBA season.

On Wednesday night, just days before his 37th birthday, he recorded his 204th career triple-double with 23 points, 16 rebounds and 10 assists in 35 minutes to help lead the Kings to a thrilling 121-116 win over the Golden State Warriors.

“Honestly, it’s just a blessing,” Westbrook said postgame. “I don’t take this game [or] opportunity to be able to go out and compete for granted. So I’m just super grateful and thankful to be able to go out and still compete.”

Approaching age 37. In season 18. Through 1,244 career games.

How?

Kings guard Malik Monk, 27, wanted to know the same thing.

“I asked him [Westbrook] what he do,” Monk said Wednesday night. “I need his off-the-court [routine]. What are you doing in the summer? I need everything. How you eat. It’s crazy. 

“How you that old and still doing this and dominating the game at a high level?”

Preparation is the key for Westbrook, as well as taking good care of his body, he said.

The nine-time NBA All-Star added that he takes the game “very seriously” as he continues to make the most of his opportunity with Sacramento.

To Kings coach Doug Christie, it’s less about the physical and more about Westbrook’s mental approach to the game that allows him to still play at such a high level.

“First, he’s a Hall of Fame, incredible talent,” Christie said. “But the passion and desire that he plays with is crazy. That’s really what the game is about. It’s about a kids’ game that you still play with that type of effort, energy and enthusiasm. 

“It’s beautiful to watch.”

A “Vintage Russ” performance in the year 2025 had fans wondering, “How was this guy unsigned one month ago?”

Even after his recent “they didn’t want me back” comments referring to the Denver Nuggets, the team he was a part of last season, Westbrook maintains his motives in Year 18 aren’t to prove anything to another team or person, but rather to himself.

“To be honest, I don’t live up to anybody else’s expectations that they put on me,” Westbrook said. “I have my own personal goals and aspirations, things I want to do. So to be honest, I have nothing [to prove]. 

“I know what I’m capable of doing when given the opportunity, and now my job is to go out there and do it.”

Part of that job, and one of the reasons the Kings signed Westbrook, is due to his 1-of-1 rebounding ability as a point guard.

He had 16 boards on Wednesday. No other player on either team finished with double-digit rebounds. The next players closest were Warriors forward Jonathan Kuminga and Brandin Podziemski, another guard, who had nine apiece.

 “I mean, humbly speaking, I’m the best rebounding guard ever,” Westbrook said. “So when the ball comes across the rim, I’m going to get it.”

Westbrook’s 16 rebounds on Wednesday gave him a career total of 8,734 and helped him surpass Jason Kidd for the guard with the most career rebounds in NBA history. Kidd finished his career with 8,725.

That postgame exchange, from the playful banter to the meme-worthy moments, is the type of presence the Kings have needed. Westbrook’s confidence off the floor translates on the court and even rubs off on his teammates.

While Westbrook is happy to have found a home in Sacramento, he knows the Kings can also benefit from the mental edge he brings night in and night out.

“It’s needed. Every night, teams are getting better. Teams are loading up. Every night is a dogfight. Our schedule is pretty rough right now, but I do think if we knuckle up, compete at a high level, and that’s something that I want to bring as a part of my leadership and making sure that us as Kings, we come out and compete at the highest level, and we can live with the result at the end of the game.”

Before signing Westbrook, the Kings added veteran guard Dennis Schroder to the mix this offseason.

Christie has made it clear that Schroder is the starting point guard and the team’s floor general. But Schroder hasn’t quite found his rhythm with the starting unit thus far, granted it’s constantly changed due to injuries and absences, which likely has played a factor.

With Keegan Murray out as he rehabs from UCL surgery, Westbrook has started alongside Schroder. But could Westbrook’s performance on Wednesday keep him in the starting lineup even when other players return? His energy is something Monk believes the team needs in the starting unit, given the way they’ve started games in the past. Christie shared his thoughts.

“Once players come back, I think, you know, we brought Russ in to be the backup point guard, but he has so many gifts,” Christie said. “He played the four, so he’s going to play all over the floor because of his physicality, his downhill nature. He rebounds the basketball at a high level. But I think when we’re fully healthy, he even makes us better, because Russell Westbrook playing against second unit players is like, it’s a cheat code.

“But I mean, he’s going to find his way into closing games, to every aspect of what it is for us to be a winning basketball team, because he’s a winning basketball player.”

Not a yes. But also not a no …

If patience runs out for the Kings with Schroder as the lead man, they could turn to the Triple-Double King.

Why Not?

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Will Richard's 30-point game serves as silver lining in Warriors' loss to Kings

Will Richard's 30-point game serves as silver lining in Warriors' loss to Kings originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SACRAMENTO – Steve Kerr tried to find a pregame silver lining to Wednesday’s game at Golden 1 Center, noting that the Warriors missing their three best players offered a chance for the coach to get an extended look at different combinations and some of Golden State’s younger players.

Will Richard was exactly what Kerr was hoping to see.

Making his first NBA start, the Warriors rookie put on the type of show that should have fans licking their lips in anticipation of what the future potentially holds for the 22-year-old from Georgia.

There was plenty to like, too.

Richard dropped a season-high 30 points on the Sacramento Kings in the Warriors’ 121-116 loss on Thursday at Golden 1 Center with five 3-pointers to move into rarefied air.

He became the first Warriors player drafted in the second round or later to score 20 or more points in his first career start since Eric Paschall in 2019. He also matched the second-most points scored by a Warriors player in his first career start with the Warriors. John Lucas also had 30, while Anthony Morrow has the record with 37 points.

All of those stats are pleasing to the eye, but it was the way Richard played that was most pleasant to watch. He played steady, albeit unspectacular, defense and had one steal – something he has done in each of his first six NBA games.

Richard shot 10 of 15 (5 of 8 on 3-pointers), snatched seven rebounds and had three assists.

This all came after being a healthy scratch due to coach’s decision in each of Golden State’s previous two games.

“Will was amazing,” Kerr said. “This guy, from the beginning of camp, has shown he’s an NBA player. The experience, the poise, he doesn’t turn it over, he makes the right play. He can handle the ball under pressure, he makes the right pass.

“This guy’s a hell of a player.”

That clearly was evident against the Kings.

After Sacramento pulled within 72-71 midway through the third quarter, Richard made a clutch 3-pointer but missed a shot at the four-point play when he shanked the free throw.

Richard made a pair of deep threes in the fourth quarter, but by then, the Kings had grabbed momentum and the Warriors spent the rest of the evening trying to catch up.

“Just trying to keep it simple but make an impact on the game,” Richard said. “I’m a big believer in controlling what you can control. Whatever role I’m in, I want to do whatever it takes to help the team win. Whether playing or not playing, I just want to see us win.”

While the Warriors failed to get the win, they head back home to the Bay with a much better vision of who Richard can be.

“Will is a great player,” Jonathan Kuminga said. “I’m always trying to talk to Will, especially as a rookie. There’s a lot of expectations, there’s a lot of eyes on you.”

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Even in loss, Jonathan Kuminga shows he can carry load with Warriors' stars out

Even in loss, Jonathan Kuminga shows he can carry load with Warriors' stars out originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SACRAMENTO – For one night at least, Jonathan Kuminga had the type of game that Warriors fans have been expecting ever since he entered the NBA as the No. 7 overall pick in the 2021 NBA Draft.

Kuminga put together a very respectable stat line in the Warriors’ 121-116 loss to the Kings at Golden 1 Center – 24 points and game-high-tying nine rebounds in 25 minutes – but it was the way the night went down that stood out most.

The Warriors were without their three best players and needed someone, anyone, to step up and take over.

Kuminga pretty much did just that for most of the evening. Like his Golden State teammates, though, everything went haywire in the fourth quarter.

Until then, however, Kuminga was all that and a bowl of grits.

“Jonathan attacked, he was aggressive,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. “We got him the ball quite a bit. He helped us get off to a great start. Really gave a fantastic effort.”

The best part was that there was no indication beforehand that Kuminga would have this type of night.

It came 24 hours after a dreadful showing in a win over the Phoenix Suns when Kuminga had nine points in just over 24 minutes. Three nights before that, Kuminga had 17 points and five rebounds but was minus-20 in a road loss to the Indiana Pacers.

Additionally, the Warriors played without Stephen Curry, Draymond Green and Jimmy Butler, who are all nursing injuries or sickness.

That put more pressure on the Warriors’ other players to pick up the slack, though Kuminga claimed nothing changed in his mind.

“My mindset is always the same no matter (with or without) Steph, Jimmy and Draymond,” Kuminga said. “Every time I play with them they want me to be aggressive. My mindset is always the same. Just come in, find a way to win.”

Kuminga did all of that except for getting the W, something Kerr said was part of a team-wide issue.

“The lesson for him and for our team is just how important every possession is,” said Kerr, whose squad committed 19 turnovers leading to 30 points for the Kings.

For Kuminga, however, the game was another important step forward in his NBA evolution.

“I think we came out with great energy,” said Kuminga after notching his third 20-point game of the season. “In the third quarter, we just started turning the ball over. That took the energy out of all of us. We just gotta find a way to execute certain plays.”

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Banged-up Pacers granted hardship exception by league, use it to sign Cody Martin

Just seven games into the season, injuries have ravaged the Pacers: Tyrese Haliburton (out for season, torn Achilles), Bennedict Mathurin (foot), Andrew Nembhard (shoulder), T.J.McConnell (hamstring), Obi Toppin (foot), Johnny Furphy (ankle), and Kam Jones (back).

With all those players out, the league has granted Indiana a hardship exception, and the team has used it to sign Cody Martin to a 10-day contract, the Pacers announced on Wednesday.

Martin, a 6'5 "wing, has spent six seasons in the NBA, most of them with Charlotte, but he was traded to Phoenix last season and has been a free agent all summer. He's a solid defender at multiple positions, and for his career he averaged 6.2 points a game, but injuries have limited him in recent seasons. He played in 53 games last season, but only 35 total in the two seasons preceding that.

The Pacers have already signed Jeremiah Robinson-Earl on a 10-day contract under one hardship exception, this would be a second one. Which speaks to just how hard the injury bug has hit Indiana.

The 1-6 Pacers host the winless Nets on Wednesday, then head out on a four-game road trip through the West that starts in Denver this weekend.

What we learned as Russell Westbrook's triple-double fuels Kings' thrilling win

What we learned as Russell Westbrook's triple-double fuels Kings' thrilling win originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SACRAMENTO – The Kings kicked off their five-game homestand on the right foot, as a late rally allowed them to defeat the Golden State Warriors by a final score of 121-116 on Wednesday night at Golden 1 Center.

A vintage Russell Westbrook masterclass helped the short-handed Kings stay alive against their NorCal neighbors, as the new Kings point guard finished with a 23-16-10 triple-double.

Malik Monk’s return was a welcome sight after missing the last two games. He added 21 points in 25 minutes off the bench. Rookie Nique Clifford had a career-high 12 points.

Without Steph Curry, Draymond Green and Jimmy Butler, Golden State’s role players stepped up behind a demanding performance from rookie guard Will Richard, who finished with a team-high 30 points, six rebounds and three assists in 34 minutes.

Jonathan Kuminga, who was tied to trade rumors with the Kings this offseason, somehow proved his value to both Sacramento and Golden State in the same game. The high-flying wing contributed 24 points.

Even without some of the game’s biggest and most entertaining stars, both teams still put on a thrilling show in front of a crowd divided by fans of both teams inside Sacramento’s home arena.

The Warriors regained the lead midway through the fourth after a 12-2 run, but only for a few seconds before the Kings responded with their own run to close out the game and ultimately pull out the victory.

Here are the takeaways from the Kings’ win.

The Triple-Double King

The Kings signed Westbrook for his energy, rebounding ability and veteran leadership.

All things that were on full display for Sacramento on Wednesday night.

Westbrook, like most Kings, got off to a slow start but quickly found his rhythm. And that’s all it takes for the future Hall of Famer.

The 18-year pro had just five points in the first quarter, then was on triple-double watch by the third. He finished with his first triple-double as a King, with 23 points, 16 rebounds and 10 assists in 35 minutes. His last triple-double was recorded on March 18, 2025, when he was with the Denver Nuggets, against the Golden State Warriors.

Sacramento doesn’t need Westbrook, who turns 37 next week, to drop 20-plus every night. But when short-handed like the Kings were Thursday, missing three of their typical starters, Westbrook rose to the occasion and vintage Russ took over.

Through seven games (three starts) with the Kings thus far, Westbrook is averaging 13.9 points, 5.9 rebounds and 5.0 assists.

Shining without the stars

Fans who purchased tickets to this game months ago might have been upset when they realized several stars on both sides were ruled out.

But they got their money’s worth during the thrilling NorCal showdown.

Golden State was without its triple-threat trio of Curry (illness), Butler (back) and Green (rib). Meanwhile, Zach LaVine (back) and Domantas Sabonis (ribs) were ruled out for Sacramento, and Keegan Murray (thumb) still is rehabbing from his UCL surgery.

But with absences come opportunities for others, and some take advantage of it more than others. Richard, the rookie who’s played just six NBA games, did exactly that for the Warriors. The second-round draft pick finished with a team-high 28 points, six rebounds and three assists in 34 minutes.

For the Kings, the vets acted like vets as DeRozan, Westbrook and Schroder, who share a combined 45 years of NBA experience, stepped up for Sacramento.

The show went on Wednesday night, and it didn’t disappoint.

A needed boost 

Monk has been Sacramento’s Energizer Bunny for the past four seasons.

When he’s on the floor, you feel his presence. The fans embrace it. The team thrives off it.

And when he’s not, you feel that, too.

Monk missed the last two games for Sacramento due to personal reasons. In those respective contests, which the Kings split 1-1, Sacramento often lacked the energy that Monk provides.

The 27-year-old returned to the court on Wednesday and didn’t miss a beat with what he does best. In an arena taken over by Warriors fans who didn’t have to travel far to watch their favorite team, Monk gave Kings fans a reason to outshout them throughout the course of the NorCal showdown. 

15.6 points on 54.7 percent shooting from the field and 52 percent from 3-point range, with 1.2 rebounds and 2.4 assists in 25.2 minutes through five games this season.

Monk led all bench players on Wednesday, finishing with 21 points on 6-of-12 shooting, with four rebounds and two assists in 25 minutes.

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What we learned as short-handed Warriors squad stumbles in second half vs. Kings

What we learned as short-handed Warriors squad stumbles in second half vs. Kings originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The number of players missing the first matchup of the 2025-26 NBA season between the Warriors and Sacramento Kings made the vibe feel closer to a Santa Cruz vs. Stockton G League game than two Northern California rivals battling each other Wednesday night at Golden 1 Center. 

As the game progressed, though, so did the intensity. And inexperience eventually caught up to the Warriors in a 121-116 loss playing a Kings team that still featured two future Hall of Famers in their starting five. 

The Kings were in the bonus with nearly nine minutes left in the third quarter, and went 14 of 18 from the free-throw line for the quarter after taking nine free throws in the first half. The Warriors in the third quarter were outscored 35-23, due in large part to having eight turnovers and being whistled for 11 fouls. While they scratched and clawed their way back in the fourth quarter, it was too little and too late for the undermanned Warriors.

Rookie Will Richard scored a game-high 30 points for a new career high that fell just four points of his previous career total of 34 points. Moses Moody, one night after scoring a season-high 24 points, scored a new season-high 28 points with six 3-pointers. Jonathan Kuminga fell one rebound shy of a double-double with 24 points and nine rebounds.

An ugly number of 19 Warriors turnovers became 30 points for the Kings. 

Steph Curry (illness), Jimmy Butler (lower back) and Draymond Green (ribs) all were out for the Warriors. The Kings were down Domantas Sabonis (ribs), Zach LaVine (back) and Keegan Murray (left thumb surgery).

Here are three takeaways from the Warriors’ loss to the Kings.

Second Timeline Starting Lineup

Without their top three players, the Warriors’ starters featured a rookie, a second-year player, a third-year player and two 23-year-olds. Hello there, second timeline. The future, for at least one night, is now.

You’d have to go all the way back to the finale of the 2011-12 regular season to find the last time all five starters had four or fewer years of service time.

The starting lineup hadn’t played a single second together this season as a five-man unit, yet they looked completely comfortable to begin the game. The Warriors led 16-11 through the first five minutes of the game before Al Horford replaced Quinten Post ahead of Will Richard’s second free throw. The ball was moving, and the youth was bringing the kind of spark coach Steve Kerr was searching for to survive and advance a shorthanded second night of a back-to-back.

In the first half, the young starting five scored 48 of the Warriors’ 62 points. The only starter held scoreless was Post, who took only one shot in eight minutes.

Post continued to struggle in the second half, too. The stretch-5 missed all five of his shot attempts and was scoreless in 15 minutes. The starting five played 10 and a half minutes together as a unit and was a plus-5, outscoring the Kings 30-25.

The Rook Shines

Here’s how Richard’s last three days have gone: Sent to Santa Cruz for his first G League practice Monday, recalled Tuesday but was a DNP-CD (Did Not Play, Coach’s Decision) and then received his first start in the NBA on Wednesday. He was a DNP-CD on Sunday against the Indiana Pacers, too. No rust or nerves were seen from the Warriors rookie

Richard in the first quarter alone scored 12 points, five more than his previous career high for a game. The former Florida Gator knocked down two threes from the left corner, made all four of his free throws and threw down a fastbreak dunk. He scored another four points in the second quarter, giving him 16 at the half.

The impressiveness of Richard’s performance popped in every which way. Richard scored another 14 points in the second half, and the Warriors wouldn’t even have had a chance if it weren’t for his two-way impact.

When the Warriors are at full strength, especially after De’Anthony Melton’s return, Richard might not have a spot in the rotation. However, he always makes it hard for Kerr not to play him.

Kuminga’s Showcase Game 

Schedule makers haven’t been kind to the Warriors through the first two weeks of the season. They also brought some unintentional drama to their third back-to-back. 

The Phoenix Suns and Sacramento Kings were the two teams that pursued Kuminga the hardest during his restricted free agency over the summer. Though he eventually signed a two-year, $48.5 million contract with a team option on the second year to remain with the Warriors, the Suns offered Kuminga a four-year deal around $90 million and the Kings put a three-year deal on the table worth $63 million with the chance for it to be slightly more. 

Both contracts had Kuminga’s preferred player option on the back end. 

Kuminga on Tuesday night against the Suns scored nine points on a season-low seven shot attempts. But a much bigger opportunity was presented to him in Sacramento. With eight minutes remaining in the third quarter, Kuminga already had his third 20-point game of the season. His 24 points were a mixed bag of good and bad.

After a strong start, Kuminga went 2 of 10 in the second half and clanked an open chance from 10 feet away to tie the game with 24 seconds left. Kuminga was called for four fouls in the second half and he again racked up far too many turnovers, finishing with five for a combined nine in the Warriors’ back-to-back.

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Observations after Sixers start very slowly, fall to Cavs to finish back-to-back

Observations after Sixers start very slowly, fall to Cavs to finish back-to-back  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Sixers couldn’t overcome a very slow start and concluded a winless back-to-back Wednesday night in Cleveland.

They fell to a 132-121 loss to the Cavs. Both the Sixers and Cleveland now sit at 5-3 on the season.

Tyrese Maxey had 27 points, nine assists and seven rebounds.

Quentin Grimes scored 27 points. Andre Drummond posted a 13-point, 13-rebound double-double. Trendon Watford put up 16 points and six assists off the bench.

Donovan Mitchell starred for the Cavs with an incredible 46 points on 15-for-21 shooting and eight assists. Jarrett Allen had 24 points and Evan Mobley added 23.

Four Sixers were out on the second night of their back-to-back:

  • Joel Embiid (left knee injury recovery)
  • Paul George (left knee surgery recovery)
  • Dominick Barlow (right elbow laceration)
  • Jared McCain (left knee injury recovery) 

The Sixers have another back-to-back coming up this weekend. They’ll host the Raptors on Saturday and the Pistons on Sunday. 

Here are observations on their loss to the Cavs:

Nothing resembling an immediate bounce-back 

Cleveland scored the night’s first 13 points off turnovers. The Sixers were disjointed across the board and generally at around the same level as they’d been in the late stages of Tuesday night’s collapse against the Bulls.

Maxey had three early giveaways. The Sixers also missed a few open jumpers short, which of course is not a rare sight in the second game of a back-to-back. 

After Adem Bona picked up a loose ball, he had his outlet pass intercepted by Allen. Mitchell then sunk a three-pointer that gave the Cavs a quick 17-4 lead.

Sixers head coach Nick Nurse was clearly not thrilled with what he saw and called timeout. He brought in Grimes and Drummond to replace starters Jabari Walker and Bona. 

Watford thrives at point guard 

The Cavs led by as many as 17 points in the first quarter. In contrast to the Sixers, the Cavs ran clean offense and didn’t seem bothered by much.

Watford served as the Sixers’ lead ball handler to open the second quarter. He got an extended stretch there as Maxey rested.

The 6-foot-8 Watford did a strong job in that role, which is certainly in his comfort zone. Watford’s capable of regularly driving into the paint thanks to his size, physicality and feel for the game. He has good passing instincts once he draws help defense, too. 

The 24-year-old was also efficient as a scorer in Cleveland, shooting 5 for 9 from the floor and 4 for 4 at the foul line. Watford knocked down a wing three to bring the Sixers to within single digits. A Drummond put-back layup cut their deficit to 51-45. Drummond went 6 for 7 from the field and made his second three-pointer of the season. 

Even when Maxey checked back in, Watford started plenty of possessions with the ball in his hands. He had sharp two-man actions with Maxey, including a Maxey triple off of a dribble handoff. The Sixers trailed by just three points at halftime and Maxey had 18. 

Tough back-to-back for Edgecombe

Though a Kelly Oubre Jr. corner three knotted the game at 72-all early in the third quarter, the Cavs responded with a 13-0 run spearheaded by Mitchell and Mobley. 

Oubre found his shot in the second half and wound up with 19 points on 7-for-16 shooting. Edgecombe was off all game and ended the evening 3 for 14 from the field. He totaled 19 points on 7-for-26 shooting in the back-to-back.

The rookie has acknowledged that he’s figuring out exactly how to take care of his body and best approach back-to-backs in the NBA. While he had a fantastic first few games as a professional, he’ll inevitably need to learn through some trial and error.

One positive note on Edgecombe: The offensive rebounding ability he showed at Baylor has carried over to the NBA. With effort, athleticism and a nose for the ball, the 20-year-old guard has recorded at least one offensive board in every game so far and averaged 2.1 per contest.

The Sixers’ defense was not close to stingy enough in the second half. The Cavs’ lead swelled to 20 points with a Mitchell scoring spree late in the third quarter and the Sixers appeared to be running on fumes early in the fourth. They somewhat hung around, trimming Cleveland’s advantage to 128-119 on a Grimes dunk with 1:21 left, but the outcome was never in true doubt.

The Sixers will head home, rest up and aim for a better back-to-back performance this weekend.

Lakers guard Austin Reaves to miss game tonight vs. Spurs

Los Angeles, CA - November 02: Los Angeles Lakers guard Austin Reaves (15) dribbles against Miami Heat guard Davion Mitchell (45) during the first half of an NBA basketball game at Crypto.com Arena on Sunday, Nov. 2, 2025 in Los Angeles, CA. (Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Times)
Lakers guard Austin Reaves, bringing the ball upcourt against Heat guard Davion Mitchell on Sunday, will miss a second consecutive game Wednesday night. (Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Times)

Guard Austin Reaves will miss a second consecutive game because of right groin soreness, the Lakers announced Wednesday, since he will be sidelined for the game against the San Antonio Spurs.

Reaves started to feel discomfort in the first quarter of the team’s win over Miami on Sunday, coach JJ Redick said Monday, and sat out of the second game of back-to-back nights in Portland. He was a full participant in the team’s shootaround Wednesday morning, even joining star guard Luka Doncic, forward Maxi Kleber and staff members in a half-court shooting competition.

Reaves is averaging 31.1 points per game with a team-leading 9.3 assists. Doncic, who missed the Portland game while managing a left leg contusion, will be available Wednesday as the team hosts the Spurs and star center Victor Wembanyama.

The French superstar is averaging 26.7 points, 13.7 rebounds and 4.7 blocks per game in his third year in the NBA. The still-growing 7-foot-4, 21-year-old has turned heads with his unique combination of perimeter skill, shooting and defense that Lakers center Deandre Ayton compared to the Space Jam villians “The Monstars” on Wednesday morning.

“He’s unbelievable,” Ayton said. “He’s truly a once in a generational player. And he can do everything. A dude his size so nimble and so fast and quick with or without the ball. It takes a whole team to guard him.”

The Lakers will have center Jaxson Hayes to help. Hayes was listed as probable on the initial injury report with a right ankle sprain, but was upgraded to available after the shootaround.

LeBron James (right sciatica), Adou Thiero (left knee surgery recovery), Gabe Vincent (left ankle sprain) and Kleber (abdominal muscle strain) remain out.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.