Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame Class of 2026 inductees list stars Parker, Stoudemire and more

The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame has officially announced its Class of 2026 inductees, representing some of the most impactful individuals who have played a part in the growth and advancement of basketball.

The Basketball Hall of Fame class of 2026 is headlined by Joey Crawford, Mark Few, Doc Rivers, Amar'e Stoudemire, the 1996 U.S. Women's national team, Elena Delle Donne, Chamique Holdsclaw, Candace Parker and Mike D'Antoni.

“The Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame is proud to welcome the Class of 2026, a group that reflects the very best this sport has to offer,” President and CEO of the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame John Doleva said in a news release. "From a referee who set the standard over four decades, to coaches who built dynasties at every level, to players who redefined their positions, to a visionary who changed how the game is played — and a women’s class headlined by a national team that helped launch an entire league, alongside three of the most accomplished players the women’s game has ever seen — we are honored to welcome them to Springfield."

These individuals were recognized for their contributions to the game of basketball, whether they revolutionized the sport, pushed it forward, or have been an adversary to the betterment of the overall product of the game.

Here are the list of the newly inducted Class of 2026 Basketball Hall of Fame members, their accolades and how they've impacted the game.

North American committee hall of fame selections

These individuals were selected by the North American committee to the 2026 Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.

Joey Crawford

Joey Crawford was an NBA referee for 39 seasons spanning from 1977 to 2016. He is one of the NBA's longest-tenured and most accomplished officials in league history. Crawford has officiated 2,561 regular-season games in his career, which is second most to fellow Hall of Fame NBA referee Dick Bavetta. Crawford has also officiated an NBA record 374 playoff games and 50 NBA Finals games. He's worked every Finals series from 1986 to 2015.

His refereeing career first began with high school basketball in 1970. Crawford earned professional experience in the Eastern Basketball Association. He made his NBA debut as a 26-year-old.

Mark Few

Mark Few is one of the most successful coaches in college basketball history. He got his collegiate head coaching start at Gonzaga in 1999 and hasn't looked back. Few has led the Bulldogs to long-term national prominence with 773 coaching wins, 26 consecutive NCAA Tournament berths and two NCAA championship game appearances in 2017 and 2021. Few was named Naismith Coach of the Year in the seasons where he coached his team to a NCAA title game.

Few is the winningest active coach, by winning percentage. He has recorded at least 20 wins in every season as Gonzaga’s head coach. He's won numerous West Coast Conference titles and was an assistant coach for the 2024 U.S. Olympic Men’s Basketball Team that took home the gold medal against France.

Doc Rivers

Doc Rivers, who is currently head coach of the Milwaukee Bucks, was named to basketball's highest honors for his contribution to the league for 27 seasons. Rivers collected more 1,180 wins in his career that spans nearly three-decades.

Rivers has coached the Orlando Magic (1999-2003), Boston Celtics (2004-13), Los Angeles Clippers (2013-20), Philadelphia 76ers (2020-23), and Bucks (2023-present). Rivers was named NBA Coach of the Year with Orlando. He is revered for coaching the Celtics to their 2008 championship, at the time was the first for the franchise since 1986. He also coached them to a finals appearance in 2010.

Rivers moved into sixth place on the NBA’s all-time coaching wins list, passing George Karl, in a 123-113 victory over the Charlotte Hornets on December 29, 2025. He is the winningest active coach and has 114 playoff victories, which ranks fourth all-time.

Although he is being inducted as a coach, Rivers was a former All-Star point guard who played 13 NBA seasons.

Amar'e Stoudemire

Stoudemire was the ninth overall pick in the 2002 NBA Draft directly out of high school. He played 14 seasons in NBA and was a six-time NBA All-Star and 2003 NBA Rookie of the Year. In his career, Stoudemire averaged 18.9 points and 7.8 rebounds.

His best years came with the Phoenix Suns where he tallied 21.4 points and 8.3 rebounds on a nightly basis during his first eight seasons from 2002 to 2010. He earned five All-NBA selections and was a key figure in Phoenix’s “Seven Seconds or Less” era coached by Mike D'Antoni, who was also inducted to the Basketball Hall of Fame class of 2026.

Women's committee Hall of Fame selections

These individuals were selected by the women's committee to the 2026 Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.

The 1996 United States women's national team

Similar to how the 1992 U.S. men's national team changed international competition and expanded the NBA's popularity, the 1996 United States women's national team probably single-handedly showcased the women's talent and sparked conversations of a professional women's league, which became the WNBA later that year.

The U.S. women's team captured the gold medal at the 1996 Olympics Games in Atlanta, finishing with an undefeated 8-0 record and an average margin of victory of more than 30 points.

The roster included future Hall of Famers Lisa Leslie, Sheryl Swoopes, Dawn Staley, Teresa Edwards, Rebecca Lobo, and Katrina McClain. Other members were Jennifer Azzi, Ruthie Bolton-Holifield, Venus Lacy, Nikki McCray, Carla McGhee and Katy Steding. The team was coached by future hall of fame coach Tara VanDerveer.

Elena Delle Donne

Elena Delle Donne played 11 seasons in the WNBA and became a two-time WNBA Most Valuable Player in 2015 and 2019. She was drafted second overall in the 2013 WNBA Draft, selected by the Chicago Sky. Delle Donne was named WNBA Rookie of the Year in 2013. She was traded to the Washington Mystics in 2017. Delle Donne led Washington to its first WNBA championship in 2019. She was named to the WNBA’s 25th Anniversary Team in 2021. Delle Donne was a seven-time All-Star and four-time All-WNBA First Team selection. She helped win an Olympic gold medal with the U.S. team at the 2016 Games in Rio de Janeiro.

Chamique Holdsclaw

Chamique Holdsclaw played 11 seasons in the WNBA suiting for the Washington Mystics (1999-2004), Los Angeles Sparks (2005-2007), Atlanta Dream (2009), and San Antonio Silver Stars (2010).

She was a six-time WNBA All-Star from 1999 to 2003 and in 2005. She was the first overall pick in the 1999 WNBA Draft after she led Tennessee to three consecutive NCAA national championships (1996-98), twice won Naismith College Player of the Year (1998, ‘99) and finished as the SEC’s all-time leading scorer.

Holdsclaw became the 1999 Rookie of the Year. She led the WNBA in scoring in 2002. She averaged 16.9 points and 7.6 rebounds across her career. She won an Olympic gold medal in 2000. She was inducted to the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame in 2018.

Candace Parker

Candace Parker is arguably one of the most accomplished players in women’s basketball history. Parker is a two-time league MVP (2008, 2013), three-time WNBA champion (2016, 2021, 2023) and 2016 Finals MVP.

Parker was drafted with the first pick in the 2008 WNBA Draft to the Los Angeles Sparks. At the time she became the second player ever to dunk in a game, second to Lisa Leslie, her former Sparks teammate. Parker became the only player in WNBA history to be named Rookie of the Year and MVP in the same season. She earned a league Defensive Player of the Year in 2020. Parker is a seven-time WNBA All-Star and All-WNBA First Team selection.

She made her name at the college level, starring at Tennessee, where Parker helped to lead the program to two NCAA national championships in 2007 and 2008. Parker is a two-time Olympic gold medalist winning in 2008 and 2012.

Contributor's committee hall of fame selection

The following individual was selected by the contributor's committee to the 2026 Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.

Mike D'Antoni

Mike D'Antoni has his prints all over the modern game of basketball. In the 2000s, 'experts' thought he was insane for idolizing offense, and less defense. D’Antoni influenced the game through his up-tempo, 'space-and-pace' philosophy that helped redefine offensive strategy, emphasizing ball movement, shooting and efficiency, and shaping the analytics-driven era of the sport. His Suns' offense was deemed 'seven seconds or less' meaning that players had the green light to shoot good, high volume shots within seven seconds of a 24-second shot clock.

His impact spans continents, having coached professionally in Italy for eight seasons before bringing his ideas to the NBA. Through his 16 NBA seasons, D'Antoni has racked nearly 1,200 career wins. He was named NBA Coach of the Year twice in 2005 and 2017, he served as an assistant coach for the gold medal-winning 2012 U.S. Olympic Team and was recognized as one of the 50 Greatest Contributors in EuroLeague history in 2008.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame includes long list of legends

Final Four official manning UConn-Illinois game was present for three of Huskies' losses this year

Dan Hurley is a man of superstition.

The Connecticut men's basketball coach is also often animated on the sidelines, whether it is his displeasure with something from his team or displeasure with a call from a referee (or referees) on the officiating crew.

Speaking of officials, the Huskies will see three officials in their Final Four game on Saturday vs. No. 3 Illinois who have worked previously worked their games earlier this season, including one who was on the whistle for three of their five losses.

As noted by CT Insider's David Borges, UConn is 1-3 on the season with official Ron Groover this season. The three losses came against Arizona on Nov. 19, at St. John's at Madison Square Garden on Feb. 6 and then Feb. 18 vs. Creighton. The lone win came in a home game against Marquette on Jan. 4.

Hurley has spoken at length about his intensity on the sidelines with officials this week in Indianapolis after he appeared to have butted heads with referee Roger Ayers in the final seconds of UConn's Elite Eight win vs. Duke last Sunday in Washington, D.C. after Braylon Mullins knocked down the game-winning 3-pointer.

"I get much more of a bad reaction from people, I think, on social media than when I meet regular people," Hurley said Friday, April 3 at the Final Four. "Because anytime I meet regular people, they look at me and they start laughing or they start smiling. Or (say), 'You're the guy from the video. You look a little crazy, but I think you're a good egg.'"

It's worth noting that in eight overall trips to the NCAA Tournament across his coaching career, Hurley has not received a technical foul or an ejection — like he did in the final game of the regular season vs. Marquette after making contact with an official — from a game in the tournament. He was mindful of this in a media availability on Thursday, and based on his speculation history, he's likely thinking of it still.

"I think I'm an intense coach. It's not easy to work my games. But I've always gotten zero technical fouls in my NCAA Tournament coaching career. I just jinxed myself. Oh, my God, now I'm going to get bounced out of this thing. Oh, my God," Hurley said on Thursday, April 2.

Saturday's Final Four will be the third national semifinal that Hurley has led the Huskies to in the last four years, the first team in over a decade to do such a thing in the NCAA Tournament in a four-year span. UConn is 17-3 in six NCAA Tournament appearances under Hurley.

Official crew for UConn-Illinois Final Four semifinal

The NCAA announced on Saturday that the official crew for UConn-Illinois in the Final Four will comprise Ron Groover, Paul Szelc and Marques Pettigrew. The alternate referee is Greg Nixon.

UConn has won both games that Szelc and Pettigrew worked earlier this season: Szelc for the win over Illinois at Te Garden in November, and then Pettigrew for the win over Florida in the Jimmy V Classic at The Garden in December.

UConn-Illinois Final Four time today

  • Date: Saturday, April 4
  • Time: 6:09 p.m. ET
  • Location: Lucas Oil Stadium (Indianapolis)

The Huskies and the Illini will tip off at 6:09 p.m. ET on Saturday, April 4 inside Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis.

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Final Four official for UConn-Illinois connected to Huskies' three losses

College Basketball Crown payout format, winner's share: How much do teams make in CBC?

One team will head home with a national championship trophy when Michigan, Arizona, UConn and Illinois face off in the Final Four and national championship game this weekend.

Another team across the country won't be winning a national title, but will be going home with $300,000 in name, image and likeness cash.

The second annual College Basketball Crown, which Nebraska won during its inaugural tournament in 2025, is a five-day tournament in Las Vegas, where eight teams that didn't make the Men's NCAA Tournament compete for cash prizes.

Oklahoma, Baylor, Creighton and West Virginia already earned at least $50,000 each for reaching the semifinals of the tournament, which are being played Saturday, April 4. The championship game will be held Sunday, April 5.

The CBC is a similar postseason tournament to the National Invitational Tournament (NIT), which usually features the top non-NCAA Tournament teams in a given season. NIL, though, is shaking up which consolation tournament teams choose to be a part of, especially with the CBC featuring all power conference teams.

Here's a look at the payout structure for the CBC in 2026, which features $500,000 in prize money:

CBC winner's share: How much does champion make in prize money?

  • CBC champions: $300,000

The champion of the College Basketball Crown earns $300,000 in NIL money.

College Basketball Crown payout structure 2026

Teams competing in the CBC are guaranteed to earn NIL cash prizes as long as they won their first-round game in 2026. Here's how the CBC payout structure works:

  • CBC champions: $300,000
  • CBC runners-up: $100,000
  • Semifinalists: $50,000 each

College Basketball Crown bracket, scores

Here's a look at the full College Basketball Crown bracket so far, with scores for each game:

Wednesday, April 1

  • Oklahoma 90, Colorado 86
  • Baylor 67, Minnesota 48

Thursday, April 2

  • West Virginia 82, Stanford 77
  • Creighton 82, Rutgers 69

Saturday, April 4

  • Oklahoma 82, Baylor 69
  • Creighton vs. West Virginia | 4 p.m. ET

Sunday, April 5:

  • Oklahoma vs. Creighton/West Virginia | 5:30 p.m. ET

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: College Basketball Crown payout, winner's share: How much do teams make in CBC?

Why does Arizona say 'Bear Down'? Meaning of slogan with Wildcats in Final Four

INDIANAPOLIS — Arizona is out to Bear Down at the 2026 Final Four.

The Wildcats are back on the biggest stage in college basketball, breaking a 25-year drought to reach the national semifinals. It's been a remarkable ride, winning the Big 12 regular season and tournament titles to earn a No. 1 seed in March Madness. Arizona hasn't slowed down since then, winning every game by double-digits to make it to Lucas Oil Stadium.

With Arizona having one of its most successful seasons in decades and two wins from its first national title since 1997, fans will sure be rallying around its most famous chant: Bear Down.

People may be hearing it for the first time and may be confused about why the Wildcats are chanting about bears, but it holds a special meaning for Arizona, with a story that is 100 years old.

Why does Arizona say ‘Bear Down’?

Bear Down came from a tragedy.

In 1926, John Byrd “Button” Salmon was a star on campus as the student body president, member of several honor societies, football quarterback and baseball catcher, according to Arizona.

That October after the varsity team beat the freshman squad, Salmon returning from a trip to Phoenix with friends when he was in  their car crashed and rolled over, leaving him "critically injured." He was paralyzed below his second rib and his spine was shattered. He had regained some motor function in his arms, but doctors determined that any additional surgeries wouldn’t be effective.

Coach J.F. "Pop" McKale visited him in the hospital regularly, but Salmon died the morning of Oct. 18 at the age of 22. Before he died, his last words with McKale were a message to his teammates, "Tell them... tell the team to 'bear down.'”

Later that season, McKale gathered his team and relayed the message to the players.

Word spread of Salmon's final message and the university student body grew attached to it, painting the slogan on the roof of the gym and it inspired Jack K. Lee to write the song “Bear Down, Arizona” in 1952 for his application to become the university’s band director. He earned it and the song became the fight song, which is played at sporting events and the campus bell tower daily.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Why does Arizona say 'Bear Down'? Meaning with Wildcats in Final Four

Is Bill Murray a UConn or Illinois fan? Comedian answers question ahead of Final Four

Bill Murray is going to be present for the Final Four in the 2026 Men's NCAA Tournament on Saturday, April 4.

College basketball fans won't be too shocked by this development, as the actor and comedian has long attended Connecticut men's basketball games. That's because he's the father of Luke Murray, an assistant coach for UConn and future head coach of Boston College.

However, Bill Murray also grew up a fan of Illinois men's basketball — the team UConn happens to play in the Final Four for a chance to compete in the March Madness national championship game.

So, who is the "Saturday Night Live," "Caddyshack," and "Groundhog Day" actor rooting for between UConn and Illinois?

Here's what Bill Murray said ahead of the Final Four meeting between Huskies and Fighting Illini:

Is Bill Murray a UConn or Illinois basketball fan?

Bill Murray grew up in Evanston, Illinois, and is a known longtime Chicago Cubs fan. And, despite attending Regis University in Denver, a private Jesuit school, he still grew up a fan of the Fighting Illini.

He has also been seen supporting Illinois basketball in the past, as evidenced by a 2005 photo of when Illinois last played in the Final Four:

That said, Bill Murray will be rooting for the Huskies for at least one more game.

“Go Huskies!” Murray wrote in a text message to a Chicago Tribune reporter earlier this week.

His son, Luke Murray, 41, is in his fifth season as an assistant coach to Dan Hurley. He has won two national championships in the role. However, last month, he was hired as the new head coach for Boston College.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Is Bill Murray a UConn or Illinois fan? What to know ahead of Final Four

Best NBA Player Props Today for April 4: Daniss Jenkins Stays Hot Against Philly

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There are just three games in the Association today (apparently, some other basketball games are getting all the attention today), but I've still found some value in the NBA player props market.

My NBA picks for Saturday, April 4 cover all three of today's matchups — see why I'm targeting rebounds in what should be an absolute slopfest, Wemby to focus more on defense than offense, and Daniss Jenkins continuing to cash the Over on his threes.

Best NBA player props today

PlayerPickbet365
HeatJaime Jaquez Jr.o5.5 rebounds +110
SpursVictor Wembanyamau28.5 points -112
PistonsDaniss Jenkinso1.5 threes -120

Prop #1: Jaime Jaquez Jr. Over 5.5 rebounds (+110)

+110 at bet365

What can we expect with mediocre (or outright) bad teams playing? That's right: Bad offense! The Miami Heat sit 20th in the league in field goal percentage, with Washington 23rd, with plenty of missed shots up for grabs on both sides.

The big difference here is that the Wiz are also dead last in rebounding percentage, meaning we should look to Miami to clean the glass — and Jaime Jaquez Jr. has been doing just that, topping this number in three straight games.

His numbers took a dip during a four-game stretch a few weeks ago (where his minutes were limited due to a hip ailment), but looking at when he's had regular run (27+ minutes), he's cashed this prop in five of his last seven games — and our NBA player prop projections put him right at six boards today.

  • Time: 3:00 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: MNMT, FDSN SU

Prop #2: Victor Wembanyama Under 28.5 points (-112)

-112 at bet365

Victor Wembanyama is coming off back-to-back 41-point outings, but those were against the depleted Warriors and hapless Bulls.

Neither team has a truly threatening interior presence, and today he's squaring off with three-time MVP Nikola Jokic. Wemby will have to spend more time and effort defending (and dealing with the physicality of the much thicker Jokic), and I'm anticipating it will come at the expense of his scoring production.

The Spurs star went Under this number in six of his previous seven games before his 40+ outbursts, and our NBA player prop projections have Wemby pegged for just 24.4 points today.

A number of other books have moved to 27.5 already (or have higher juice on u28.5), giving us a little bit of value on the number as well.

  • Time: 3:00 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: Prime Video

Prop #3: Daniss Jenkins Over 1.5 threes (-120)

-120 at bet365

Daniss Jenkins has stepped up in a big way for the Pistons since Cade Cunningham has been sidelined with a collapsed lung, getting moved into the starting lineup and seeing his usage expand from around 20 per game to 36 minutes per night.

His scoring has also skyrocketed, averaging more than 19 points per game in that span, while hitting just over two threes per game (on almost five attempted) and cashing this prop in six of 10 games since becoming the starting PG.

Jenkins and Detroit will face Philadelphia tonight, which is giving up the most 3-point attempts since March 1 — and could have some tired legs on defense after grinding through a tough matchup with Minnesota last night.

  • Time: 7:00 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: FDSN DT, NBCSP

These props are available now at bet365, one of our best betting sites.

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Cavaliers Reacts Survey: Hopes are still high for the playoffs

SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH - MARCH 30: Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers in action during a game against the Utah Jazz at Delta Center on March 30, 2026 in Salt Lake City, Utah. 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 Alex Goodlett/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NBA. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Cavaliers fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

If you’ve scrolled Twitter lately, you might think the Cleveland Cavaliers are stuck in a doom spiral. Fans are upset about some of their recent performances. I share some of that sentiment. But the truth is, Cleveland has won eight of their last 11 games and continues to be one of the Eastern Conference’s strongest contenders.

Even the fans agree with that, despite some grumbles.

More than a third of fans said they believe the Cavs will make it to the Eastern Conference Finals this May. Another 26% predict the Cavs will make it to the NBA Finals, win or lose.

FanDuel tends to agree. The Boston Celtics are the only Eastern team with higher odds to win the title. Overall, Cleveland has the fifth-highest odds behind the Oklahoma City Thunder, San Antonio Spurs, Celtics, and Denver Nuggets.

On the flip side, fewer than 10% of the fan base is worried about a first round loss. It seems no one is overly concerned about the Atlanta Hawks.

Hope is a good thing. It’s the reason why we root for these teams in the first place. The Cavs have done enough this season, largely behind a seismic change for James Harden, to make you feel like they have a fighting chance at doing something special. All that’s left now is to finish the regular season and get healthy.

Rivers inducted to Hall of Fame, Johnson misses out again

MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - MARCH 31: Head coach Doc Rivers of the Milwaukee Bucks reacts during the first quarter against the Dallas Mavericks at Fiserv Forum on March 31, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. 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 Patrick McDermott/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Bucks head coach Doc Rivers has been voted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame’s Class of 2026. Rivers, who boasts one NBA championship and 1,162 wins (sixth-most all-time), will join legendary figures like Mark Few, Amar’e Stoudamire, and Candace Parker. The enshrinement ceremony will occur from August 14–15 in Springfield, MA.

Although Rivers can boast a successful career as an All-Star point guard, he earned his induction for his achievements as a coach. Named as one of the 15 greatest coaches in NBA history in 2021, Rivers is the winningest active NBA coach and sixth-winningest all-time. He’s best known for his nine-season stint with Boston, where he won the 2008 NBA championship, and his leadership of the Lob City Clippers with Chris Paul and Blake Griffin. He’s adapted to the increasingly fluid NBA landscape by managing superstar egos and acting as a “player’s coach,” while developing young prospects into All-NBA guards through his offensive sets.

“It would mean the world to me,” Rivers told the media on Tuesday. “I’ve done a lot, the numbers are the numbers. But it’s not, I swear, it’s not why I got into this. It’s the relationships, it’s the people. From the day that I was nominated, the calls, I can’t tell you. It’s in the hundreds, the player calls. And some of the calls have been amazing because I thought they didn’t like me anymore… It’s been amazing that they have reached out, and it’s made me feel really good about just doing what I do. It’s been great.”

It remains to be seen if Rivers will accept the award in August as the Bucks’ head coach. Reports from ClutchPoints insider Brett Siegel suggest he could be let go after the season ends, regardless of any offseason drama between Giannis and the Bucks front office. 

Once again, Bucks legend Marques Johnson was snubbed as a Hall of Famer. Johnson was the only nominee to be chosen as a finalist by the Hall of Fame’s Veterans Committee, but failed to make the nine-member class. The Veterans Committee recognizes candidates who have retired from basketball for at least 35 years. Johnson beat out former stars like World B. Free and Paul Silas to reach the final stage.

Johnson, a five-time All-Star, averaged 20.1 points and seven rebounds across 691 NBA games, 524 of which were with Milwaukee. He led the Bruins to an NCAA title in 1975 under the legendary John Wooden, while collecting several All-American and Player of the Year Awards in Los Angeles. The Bucks legend saw his no. 8 jersey retired in 2019 by Milwaukee and pioneered the point forward role under coach Don Nelson. 

With the committee’s failure to induct Johnson for another year, he remains one of two eligible players who have scored at least 13,000 points, 4,500 rebounds, and 2,500 assists in the first eleven years in the NBA, along with Griffin. His contributions to basketball are certainly Hall-of-Fame-level, and it remains to be seen whether the Veterans Committee inducts Johnson again in 2027.

Wizards at Heat discussion

MIAMI, FLORIDA - MARCH 10: Bam Adebayo #13 of the Miami Heat drives against Tristan Vukcevic #00 of the Washington Wizards during the third quarter of the game at Kaseya Center on March 10, 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 Megan Briggs/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Washington Wizards play the Miami Heat at 3 p.m. today. Watch the game on Monumental Sports Network.

Amar’e Stoudemire and his coach Mike D'Antoni, plus Candace Parker headline 2026 Hall of Fame class

It's perfectly fitting that Amar'e Stoudemire and Mike D'Antoni will enter the Hall of Fame together.

Two members of the "seven seconds or less" Suns, who revolutionized the NBA, headline the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame class of 2026, which was announced Saturday in Indianapolis at the Final Four. That class also includes an impressive lineup of WNBA and Olympic legends: Candace Parker, Elena Delle Donne, Chamique Holdsclaw and the 1996 U.S. Olympic women's basketball team.

Here is the full class:

Amar'e Stoudemire is a six-time All-Star who averaged 21.4 points and 8.3 rebounds during his first eight seasons with the Phoenix Suns, then went on to star with the New York Knicks.

Mike D'Antoni is a two-time NBA Coach of the Year who revolutionized the NBA game with his pace and space concepts.

Doc Rivers is the sixth-winningest coach in NBA history and has won a ring coaching the 2008 Boston Celtics to the title. While he is a favorite punching bag of fans on social media (three blown 3-1 series leads in the playoffs will do that), he is a very deserving Hall of Fame choice. He has 114 playoff victories, fourth most all-time.

Candace Parker is one of the greatest players in WNBA history, the only player to win MVP and Rookie Of the Year in the same season, she was a three-time WNBA champion and two-time league MVP.

Elena Delle Donne is a two-time WNBA Most Valuable Player and six-time All-Star who led Washington to its first WNBA championship in 2019.

Chamique Holdsclaw won three NCAA championships at Tennessee, was the No. 1 pick in the draft and went on to be Rookie of the Year, a six-time WNBA All-Star and the 2002 scoring champion who averaged 16.9 points and 7.6 rebounds across her 11-year WNBA career

Joey Crawford, a referee for 39 NBA seasons who holds the record for officiating 374 playoff games and 50 NBA Finals games, working every Finals series from 1986- 2015.

Mark Few, the Gonzaga coach who has led the team to 26 consecutive NCAA Tournament berths and recorded at least 20 wins in every season as Gonzaga's head coach.

The most obvious snub is Blake Griffin, who should get in the Hall in the coming years.

Enshrinement for the Class of 2026 is set for August at the Hall of Fame in Springfield, Massachusetts.

Mike D’Antoni is heading to the Hall of Fame

PHOENIX - OCTOBER 13: Head coach Mike D'Antoni of the Phoenix Suns cracks a smile during the game against the New Orleans Hornets at U.S. Airways Center on October 13, 2007 in Phoenix, Arizona. The Hornets won 111-106. 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 2007 NBAE (Photo by Barry Gossage/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Phoenix Suns will have even more representation in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, as head coach Mike D’Antoni has officially been selected for enshrinement. It’s a fitting honor for a coach who helped redefine how the game is played, especially during his time in Phoenix. Pace, space, and offensive freedom became more than philosophy during his time in Phoenix from 2004 to 2008, it became identity.

In a statement from the organization:

PHOENIX – The Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame announced today that former Phoenix Suns head coach Mike D’Antoni is among the Class of 2026 to be enshrined this August.

“Mike’s forward thinking forever changed the game of basketball while leading some of the greatest teams in Suns history,” said Mat Ishbia, Phoenix Suns and Phoenix Mercury owner. “This honor reflects the lasting mark he has made on the sport.”

D’Antoni compiled a 253-136 (.650) record across five seasons as head coach of the Suns from 2003-08, the second-best winning percentage in franchise history. He won the NBA Coach of the Year award in 2004-05 after going 62-20, tying what was then the franchise best record in a season and the third-largest single-season turnaround in league history. D’Antoni created the ‘7 Seconds or Less’ offense during his time with the Suns, an innovative approach that revolutionized the game with its pace, spacing and three-point volume. The Suns won three Pacific Division titles and made two trips to the Conference Finals in four playoff appearances during D’Antoni’s tenure as the team’s head coach.

Across 16 total seasons as an NBA head coach with the Denver Nuggets, Suns, New York Knicks, Los Angeles Lakers and Houston Rockets, D’Antoni amassed a record of 672-527 (.560) with 10 playoff berths. He won a second NBA Coach of the Year award with Houston in 2016-17 and totaled 10 Conference Coach of the Month honors throughout his career. D’Antoni, who is of Italian descent and played for the Italian national team, began his coaching career in the Lega Basket Serie A, Italy’s top-tier league. He also served as an assistant coach with USA Basketball at the Olympic Games in 2008 and 2012, helping the U.S. to two gold medals.

The Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame will host Enshrinement Weekend for its Class of 2026 from August 14-15 in Springfield, Mass.

He now joins a group of Suns legends already in the Hall, including Cotton Fitzsimmons, Paul Westphal, and Jerry Colangelo, further cementing the franchise’s imprint on the history of the game.

Candace Parker, Amar’e Stoudemire, Doc Rivers headline 2026 Hall of Fame class

Candace Parker, Amar’e Stoudemire, Doc Rivers headline 2026 Hall of Fame classCandace Parker, Amar’e Stoudemire and Doc Rivers headline a nine-member class that has been selected for induction into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame next August.

The threesome will be joined by Elena Delle Donne, Mark Few, Joey Crawford, Chamique Holdsclaw, Mike D’Antoni and the 1996 United States Women’s National Team in the Class of 2026, the Hall of Fame announced Saturday. Some were dominant forces on the court and pioneers of their sport, while the coaches maintained remarkable levels of success for over two decades each.

Read more about the full class of inductees below:

Candace Parker (player)

WNBA player (2008-2023), three-time WNBA champion, seven-time WNBA All-Star, two-time WNBA MVP, two-time NCAA champion

The list of accolades only begins to scratch the surface of Parker’s basketball resume. She was the best player at every level at which she competed.

She was the top high school player in the country in Illinois, twice winning USA Today High School Player of the Year (2003 and 2004). Her high school years were also when she first drew acclaim for her athleticism. She is believed to be the first woman in Illinois to dunk in a basketball game, doing so at just 15 years old.

It was an omen of just how head and shoulders above the competition she would be for the rest of her career.

Parkler’s dominance continued in her three seasons under Hall of Fame coach Pat Summitt at Tennessee (2005-08), where the 6-foot-4 forward averaged 19.4 points and 8.8 rebounds per game. She won two national championships with the Vols (2007 and 2008) and was an All-American all three years in college. In both national title runs, Parker was named the Most Outstanding Player of the NCAA Tournament.

“Candace Parker is the best player in the women’s game,” Summitt said in 2008. “There has been a lot of questions or suggestions about who is the best player. My comment on that is, the big question should be, who is the best player in the world? Is it Candace Parker or is it Lauren Jackson?”

At the time, Jackson was a WNBA center who had already won two of her three MVP awards.

Parker’s brilliance continued in the WNBA. Drafted by the Los Angeles Sparks in 2008, Parker became the first WNBA player to win Rookie of the Year and MVP in the same season. In 2016, she won the first of her three championships. She was still averaging close to a double-double (14.7 points and 9.7 rebounds) in her 12th WNBA season in 2020 for the Sparks. She won Defensive Player of the Year that season before leaving the team to join her hometown Chicago Sky in 2021, where she helped the franchise win titles in 2021 and 2023.

In 2016, when Parker was 30, the WNBA named her to its list of 20 greatest players. She remained on the list when it expanded to 25 players in 2021. Her jersey has been retired by Tennessee, the Sparks and the Sky.

“Candace Parker has left an indelible mark on the Los Angeles Sparks,” Magic Johnson wrote on Twitter after Parker’s jersey retirement. “Not only as one of the greatest players to ever grace the court, but as a true ambassador of our franchise and women’s basketball as a whole.” — Devon Henderson, staff writer

Mark Few (coach)

Gonzaga head coach (1999-present), 773 wins, 2017 AP Coach of the Year, two Final Fours, two championship game appearances

In his 27 seasons and counting at Gonzaga, Few has transformed the Bulldogs from an obscure mid-major men’s basketball program into a national power. His impact was immediate, leading the Bulldogs to the Sweet Sixteen in each of his first two seasons (2000 and 2001) as one of two head coaches to accomplish that feat since the NCAA Tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985.

Since then, Few’s Gonzaga teams have won the WCC Tournament championship 21 times and have made the NCAA Tournament in all 27 seasons, clinching an automatic bid in 2020 before the tournament was canceled due to COVID-19. The Bulldogs made the NCAA title game in 2017 and 2021, but lost both times.

His winning percentage (.832) is the highest in NCAA history for coaches with more than 600 games, and he currently ranks 19th in career wins. Few will be the fifth active Division I coach to be inducted into the Hall of Fame. — Henderson

Amar’e Stoudemire (player)

NBA (2002-2016), six-time NBA All-Star, five-time All-NBA Selection, 2002-03 NBA Rookie of the Year

One of the game’s highest flyers will soon land in the Hall. It didn’t always appear that destiny was assured for the power forward. Stoudemire didn’t start playing organized basketball until he was 14, and through various moves and eligibility complications, he only ended up playing two seasons in high school. His senior year was enough, however, to be drafted directly into the NBA after he averaged 29.1 points, 15 rebounds, 6.1 blocked shots and 2.1 steals per game for Cypress Creek High School in Orlando, Fla.

The Phoenix Suns drafted Stoudemire with the No. 9 pick in the 2002 draft, and he spent the first eight years of his career with the franchise. The 6-foot-10 forward made an immediate impact, averaging 13.5 points and 8.8 rebounds en route to becoming the first prep-to-pro player to win Rookie of the Year in 2003. He later became one half of a superstar duo with two-time MVP point guard and 2018 Hall of Fame inductee Steve Nash on the famed “Seven Seconds or Less” Suns. Two of Stoudemire’s three seasons averaging more than 25 points per game came in Phoenix. In the Suns’ 2005 run to the Western Conference Finals, he averaged just under 30 points and 11 rebounds through 15 playoff games.

Stoudemire became known as one of the hardest dunkers in the game, but was also a skilled midrange shooter with deft footwork.

“This guy made my life so fun,” Nash told PHNX Sports in 2024. “Every night, getting the chance to find him on the break, find him on the pick-and-roll, play in the half-court with him, just an incredible, incredible player. I think we’ve all seen him dunk on people, and we’ve all seen him tear the rim off, but I think what people don’t always understand is the dynamism of an athlete at 6-foot-10 that he possesses. Out of this world.”

In 2010, Stoudemire signed with the New York Knicks in free agency and was later joined by Carmelo Anthony in a midseason trade. In 2010-11, he poured in 25.3 points per game for New York. Stoudemire’s NBA career — he also played a few seasons overseas — ended in 2016 after 14 seasons. He finished with career averages of 18.9 points and 7.8 rebounds. — Henderson

Doc Rivers (coach)

NBA coach (1999-present), 2008 NBA champion, 2000 NBA Coach of the Year, sixth in career wins by an NBA coach

In Rivers’ 13-season playing career with the Atlanta Hawks, Los Angeles Clippers, New York Knicks and San Antonio Spurs from 1983-96, he was a one-time NBA All-Star in 1988 with Atlanta.

It was as a head coach that he built his legacy. He has won 1,192 games and counting in 27 seasons as an NBA head coach with the Orlando Magic (1999-2003), Boston Celtics (2004-13), Los Angeles Clippers (2013-20), Philadelphia 76ers (2020-23) and Milwaukee Bucks (2023-present). He is currently sixth on the career wins list for NBA head coaches. He was the only coach in the top 10 not yet in the Hall of Fame.

Rivers won Coach of the Year in his first season with Orlando, and led the Magic to the playoffs in three of his four years with the team. By 2004, Rivers had made his way to Boston. In the 2007-08 season, he led the Celtics to a 36-win turnaround, tied for the largest ever season-to-season turnaround in NBA history, and led the Celtics to a title, winning the finals in six games over the Los Angeles Lakers.

Rivers had a star-studded roster on the 2008 champion Celtics, including future Hall of Famers Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen.

“Doc is probably one of the more intelligent people I’ve ever met,” Garnett said on the Bucks’ YouTube channel in 2025. “Always coming up with quotes, always having things in the chamber that he hits you with. One of the — if not the best — inspirational coaches I’ve ever been around. He is a special type of coach.”

Rivers brought the Celtics back to the finals in 2010, again against the Lakers, but this time fell in seven games.

In 2013, he became the coach of the LA Clippers and helped turn the long-struggling franchise into a Western Conference power with stars Chris Paul and Blake Griffin. The Clippers averaged 54 wins from 2013 to 2017 after recording just one 50-win season in the previous 43 years of the franchise’s existence, dating back to its days as the Buffalo Braves.

All told, Rivers has made the playoffs in 21 of his 27 seasons.

“It would mean the world to me,” Rivers told reporters Tuesday in Milwaukee when asked about potentially joining the Hall of Fame. “I’ve done a lot, the numbers are the numbers. But it’s not, I swear, it’s not why I got into this. It’s the relationships. It’s the people. From the day that I was nominated, the calls, I can’t tell you. It’s in the hundreds, the player calls. And some of the calls have been amazing because I thought they didn’t like me anymore. You have falling outs with players, and you don’t ever worry about it; it’s just part of it as a coach. It’s been amazing that they have reached out, and it’s made me feel really good about just doing what I do. It’s been great.” — Henderson

Elena Delle Donne (player)

NCAA leading scorer (2012), WNBA Rookie of the Year (2013), WNBA MVP (2015, 2019), WNBA champion (2019)

Before becoming a prominent WNBA fixture, Delle Donne walked on to the volleyball team at the University of Delaware and led the team to the conference title before joining the basketball team, where she led the nation in scoring as a junior and took her team to the Sweet 16 as a senior. The Chicago Sky selected Delle Donne with the second pick in the 2013 WNBA Draft, and in 2014 she led the team to its first finals appearance. Her 2013 draft class, including Brittney Griner and Skylar Diggins along with Delle Donne, is regarded as one of the most influential in league history.

After being traded to the Washington Mystics in 2017, the 6-5 forward won a WNBA championship and her second league MVP in 2019, making her the first player to earn the honor with two different franchises. An elite shooter, Delle Donne has the league’s all-time leading free-throw percentage (93.7) and was the first WNBA player to achieve the 50-40-90 mark (50 percent from the field, 40 percent for 3, 90 percent from the free-throw line) over the course of a season. Her versatility attracted attention from opponents, as Delle Donne’s nimble ballhandling, paired with her height and lethal shooting, made her a threat in every aspect of the game. In addition to her 2016 Rio Olympic gold, she also won gold medals at the 2018 FIBA World Cup and 2011 World University Games.

Off the court, Delle Donne has been an outspoken advocate for those with Lyme disease and has talked openly about her struggles with the illness. She is also a champion of disability awareness, inspired by her older sister Lizzie. — Emily Ohman, staff writer

Joey Crawford (referee)

NBA referee (1977–2016), 2,561 regular-season games, 374 playoff games, 50 NBA Finals games

By the end of the 2014-15 season, Crawford had refereed more playoff and NBA Finals games than any active referee. He is among the two longest-tenured NBA referees in history, having been active for 39 seasons. In November 2005, he became the sixth referee to officiate 2,000 games and was a staple officiating the game’s biggest moments for decades.

Crawford is the 19th referee to be inducted into the Hall and the ninth NBA referee.

Crawford became infamous for his quick technical fouls, most notably in a tiff with Tim Duncan in 2007 when Crawford ejected the San Antonio Spurs star for laughing while on the bench. Crawford said Duncan had been laughing at him and used an expletive, while Duncan later said that Crawford had asked him if he wanted to fight. Crawford was later suspended by the league and said the incident changed his life and the way he approached the job.

He retired in 2016 due to nagging knee injuries, leaving behind a legacy as one of the most experienced referees in NBA history who called a record number of playoff games. — Henderson

1996 United States Women’s National Team (team)

1996 Olympic gold medal, 10 future Hall of Fame members

The WNBA owes a debt of gratitude to this group.

The team, coached by legendary Stanford coach Tara VanDerveer and headlined by stars such as Lisa Leslie, Sheryl Swoopes, Rebecca Lobo and Dawn Staley, ran roughshod over its competition in Atlanta. They went 8-0 with an average margin of victory of more than 30 points.

Their dominant performance raised the global profile of the women’s game and contributed to the launch of the WNBA in late 1996. The Olympic team went on a months-long global tour in preparation for the 1996 Games, showcasing the interest in women’s basketball while playing against college and professional teams from all over the world.

The players on the team went on to become some of the earliest superstars of the WNBA, which held its inaugural season in 1997. “Now, when I look in hindsight,” Lobo told ESPN in 2022, “… holy cow, what the Olympic team did, the launch of the WNBA that’s here 26 years later, would there even be a WNBA without that team? Certainly not in that immediate time frame.”

The Americans averaged 102 points per game at the Atlanta Games. Leslie and Katrina McClain led the team in scoring, averaging 19.5 and 14.1 points, respectively. Leslie also added 7.3 rebounds per game and took home tournament MVP.

She later became a three-time WNBA MVP and two-time champion. All told, 10 players on the 1996 Olympic team have been inducted into the Hall of Fame, including Staley in 2013.

“We didn’t really have those profound conversations,” Staley told ESPN. “It was OK then to not feel the weight of the world on your shoulders. We were task-oriented.

“But when you grow and remove yourself from that time, you do have those conversations now. It is cool to have been part of the evolution of a sport, to have seen it, felt it, lived it, and take the time to really, really try to appreciate it and think how to keep it going.” — Henderson

Chamique Holdsclaw (player)

WNBA player (1999-2013), six-time WNBA All-Star, three-time NCAA champion

The star of powerhouse Tennessee teams in the mid-1990s, Holdsclaw led the Volunteers to three straight national championships and won back-to-back NCAA Tournament Most Outstanding Player awards before being drafted with the No. 1 pick in the 1999 WNBA draft by the Washington Mystics. She left college as the SEC’s all-time leading scorer, totaling 3,025 points.

She was named WNBA Rookie of the Year in 1999 after averaging 16.9 points and 7.9 rebounds per game that season, in which she also started in the inaugural WNBA All-Star Game. Despite struggling with injuries in subsequent years with the Mystics, she averaged a double-double in back-to-back seasons in 2002 and 2003, leading the WNBA in rebounds per game each year.

She finished her WNBA career after stints with the Los Angeles Sparks, Atlanta Dream and San Antonio Silver Stars. Holdsclaw was inducted into the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame in 2018. — Mark Puleo, senior editor

Mike D’Antoni (coach)

NBA coach (1998-2020), two-time NBA Coach of the Year

Considered one of the most innovative offensive minds in NBA history, D’Antoni jumped into the NBA coaching ranks after spending seven years coaching in Italy, where he previously played with Olimpia Milano from 1977 to 1990, retiring as the franchise’s all-time leading scorer.

In the NBA, D’Antoni revolutionized the pace of offensive play as head coach of the Phoenix Suns from 2003 to 2008. He led the Suns to 50-plus wins in four consecutive seasons. After coaching stints with the New York Knicks and Los Angeles Lakers, D’Antoni again took the league by storm in the late 2010s with the Houston Rockets, leading the franchise to three straight seasons with more than 50 wins. He famously coached Steve Nash and James Harden to MVP campaigns, and he was instrumental in the career of fellow 2026 Naismith inductee Stoudemire. — Puleo

This article originally appeared in The Athletic.

NBA, Men's College Basketball, WNBA, Women's College Basketball

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Giannis Antetokounmpo says he is healthy enough to play, rips Bucks as league starts investigation

Tensions between the Milwaukee Bucks and their star, Giannis Antetokounmpo, blew up in public on Friday, with the Greek Freak calling out the Bucks for not letting him play despite his saying he is healthy enough to. Now the NBA is stepping in with an investigation, something confirmed by NBC Sports.

Antetokounmpo pulled no punches speaking to reporters Friday before the Bucks lost to the Celtics, via Eric Nehm of The Athletic.

"I've never seen a case of a player saying, my caliber of player, that's like — I'm saying it publicly — I want to f****** play. You know what I'm saying? I don't think I've seen this. So, if there needs to be an investigation, great. There should be. I don't know. There should be. Until we figure something out."

Antetokounmpo has been out since March 17, following a left knee hyperextension that led to a bone bruise. From the start, Antetokounmpo has said he wanted to return to play this season, even though the Bucks have already been eliminated from the postseason. The Bucks have wanted — and, according to Antetokounmpo, essentially forced him — to shut it down for the season, focusing on a draft pick to help them rebuild around their star (either by using or trading the pick).

The NBA is investigating because Antetokounmpo qualifies under the league's player participation policy (PPP), designed to keep star players on the court. If Antetokounmpo is healthy, he has to play. The NBA players' union had previously released a statement backing Antetokounmpo, saying if he is healthy and wants to play, he should be on the court. The Bucks could face significant fines for sitting the two-time MVP if he can play.

It all fuels the idea that Antetokounmpo and the Bucks will part ways this summer.

"You know who you are dealing with. So for somebody to come and tell me to not play or not to compete, it's like a slap in my face. So, I don't know where the relationship goes from there."

In the NBA, star players have the leverage — it's a simple matter of supply and demand — and if they push for something, they usually get what they want. Players also can be terrible judges of when they should return from injury. For their entire lives they have pushed through pain and obstacles, so they believe they can do it despite an injury— which is why team medical staffs sometimes have to step in and pump the brakes.

Nobody knows his body like Antetokounmpo. However, he has played in just 36 games this season due to an assortment of injuries, and the Bucks are likely pointing to the bigger picture of his health. If an NBA doctor agrees with Antetokounmpo that he can play — and to hear the player tell it, he is ready — then the Bucks are both violating league rules and further damaging an already increasingly fragile relationship with their star. That doesn't seem wise.

If it didn't already feel that way after the Bucks gauged the trade market for Antetokounmpo at the February deadline, it now feels like this situation is hurtling toward an offseason divorce.

Nets sign Malachi Smith to two-year deal

BROOKLYN, NY - APRIL 3: Malachi Smith #18 of the Brooklyn Nets shoots a free throw during the game against the Atlanta Hawks on April 3, 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 Mike Lawrence/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

In a bit of a surprise, the Brooklyn Nets on Saturday announced that they had signed 10-day player Malachi Smith to a two year standard deal. Shams Charania of ESPN was first with the news; the Nets later confirmed…

Smith’s signing gives the Nets the league maxium of 15 standard deals and three two-ways with five games left in the 2025-26 season.

Neither Shams nor the Nets provided details on the contract, but in the past, Brooklyn has signed a number of players to multi-year, non-guaranteed deals late in the season, among them Kessler Edwards, David Duke Jr. and current Net Jalen Wilson. In those cases, the players contracts only became guaranteed for the second year if they made the final roster the following October.

On Friday night, Smith had expressed his gratitude for his opportunity with Brooklyn.

“It’s been like a blessing, for sure,” Smith said after Friday night’s loss to the Hawks. “But I think it’s just a testament to my work and my journey. If anyone knows my journey, it’s anything but easy.

“And, for me, I’m just trying to stay present and just be the same player; but just be grateful and just do what got me here. So, obviously there’s a transition: physically, athletically, thinking the game a lot faster. But at the end of the day, it’s still basketball. So just having that same mentality, just going out there having fun and controlling the things I could control.”

Smith, 26, becomes the eighth rookie on the Nets roster this season. In addition to the Flatbush Five and Smith, two other first year players with no NBA experience have donned the black-and-white: Grant Nelson who played four games on a 10-day in February and March before being sidelined with patellar tendinitis, and current two-way Chaney Johnson who’s played 14 games with Brooklyn, averaging 7.8 points per game. Both are 23.

Smith played 39 total games in Long Island this season before being called up on March 13. Undrafted out of Gonzaga in 2023, he previously played for the G League affiliates of the Trailblazers, Bucks and Grizzlies who traded him to Long Island last September.

His numbers jumped January 6 when Long Island coach Mfon Udofia inserted him at point guard after Nolan Traore was called up to Brooklyn. In 24 games after that, Smith averaged 17.7 points, 7.3 assists, 5.5 rebounds and 1.5 steals while shooting 51.9% overall and 42.9% from deep. He’s upped his game again over the last 10 games, averaging 18.5 points, 5.9 rebounds, and 7.8 assists while shooting 57.9% from the field and converting 50% of his opportunities from beyond the arc.

Zach Lowe even took note of the heater Smith has been on…

Smith joined high school teammate, Nets two-way E.J. Liddell, on the Brooklyn roster. The pair played for Belleville West High School in Belleville, Illinois, and won a state championship in 2018. Liddell is a year younger.

Smith is the fourth call-up for Long Island, which finished its season two nights ago with a loss in the opening round of the G League playoffs. In addition to Smith, Nelson and Trevon Scott, who just signed to a 10-day with Brooklyn, Nate Williams was signed to a two-way by the Golden State Warriors.

Long Island now ranks fourth in the number of G League affiliate call-ups this season, tied with Oklahoma City and the Clippers, trailing only San Antonio and Cleveland with five and Washington with six.

The NBA’s Tankathon 2026 hits an embarrassing new low

Apr 3, 2026; Dallas, Texas, USA; Dallas Mavericks forward Cooper Flagg (32) is helped up by his teammates during the second half against the Orlando Magic at the American Airlines Center. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images | Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

April 3, 2026 isn’t likely to be a date well-remembered in NBA history, but it did produce an extraordinary (if unfortunate) statistic: In the 7,891 days in which regular season NBA games have been played since the 1976-1977 season began (i.e., since the NBA-ABA merger), yesterday is the only day in which five games were won by 32+ points. Unsurprisingly, all five games pitted playoff-bound teams who are fighting for seeding against lottery-bound teams who are desperate to lose. Here are a handful of other details:

  • The total margin of victory recorded across all games was +220. This is the 13th highest daily total recorded since the NBA-ABA merger, but the highest for a day in which no more than nine games were played (all days ranked 1st through 12th included at least 11 games played).
  • The average margin of victory across the nine games played was 24.4 points, the highest ever for a day in which at least nine games were played.
  • Of the four other games played, three were double-digit victories. The only truly close contest was the King’s 117-113 victory over New Orleans. Since the NBA-ABA merger, this is just the 18th regular season day in which 9+ games were played with no more than one single-digit margin of victory. However, there have actually been four days in the same period where 9+ games were played with NO single-digit point differentials. Those days are February 3, 1995, November 7, 2025, March 8, 2026, and March 29, 2026. That’s right, three of these four cases happened this season.

In any case, to commemorate this event I’ve provided the graded box scores for all five blowouts. If nothing else, examining these tables provides some illuminating insights into the myriad ways in which a 30-plus point blowout can occur. Hope you enjoy.

What are Team Graded Box Scores?

Very briefly, these box scores grade winner-loser differentials for basic box score statistics, with the grade being based on the winning team’s differential relative to other NBA winners during a defined reference period. Think of it like a report card for understanding how a given winner performed relative to other winners. The reference period used runs from the start of the 2012-2013 season to the latest date of play, including only games in the same season category (i.e., regular season and playoff games are not compared to each other).

Data Source: The underlying data used to create these box scores was collected from Basketball Reference. In all cases, the data are collected the morning after the game is played. Although rare, postgame statistical revisions after data collection do occur and may affect the results after the fact.