CLEVELAND, OHIO - MAY 09: Jaylon Tyson #20 of the Cleveland Cavaliers runs down court during the third quarter in Game Three of the Second Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs against the Detroit Pistons at Rocket Arena on May 09, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. 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 Jason Miller/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 Cavs fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.
Summer should be a season of growth for the Cleveland Cavaliers. While all eyes are on competing for a title in the immediate future, the continued development of their youth is arguably just as important. There aren’t as many prospects on the roster as there were a few years ago — but there are still a few players worth talking about.
Jaylon Tyson, Tyrese Proctor, and whoever the Cavs potentially select 29th overall in this year’s NBA Draft are the main prospects we are focusing on.
In your opinion, whose development is the most important?
Tyson is probably the closest to making an impact. He had a breakout sophomore season as a multifaceted role player who knocked down over 40% of his three-point attempts. Tyson’s on-ball game is ripe with potential, and he has one of the highest motors on the team. A more refined defensive game could make him a highly valuable two-way threat.
Proctor, meanwhile, is still lurking in the shadows. Opportunities were limited during his rookie season. But Cleveland is counting on him to take a leap and be playable next year. He’s got all the tools to play next to James Harden and Donovan Mitchell as an efficient shooter who can defend the point of attack. The Cavs would love to have Proctor in their rotation.
Finally, the 29th pick in the draft is a mystery. We don’t know who they might pick or what position they would even play. If there’s a prospect that has piqued your interest, then maybe you’ll vote for them.
Either way, we want to hear from you in the comments. Do you believe Tyson, Proctor, or the 29th pick can develop into something special on this roster? Who has the highest ceiling? Let us know!
For the foreseeable future, the Knicks are New York's team. It's not surprising, then, that the Yankees want to get a piece of that action.
The ballclub announced Wednesday, June 17 that NBA Finals MVP Jalen Brunson and teammate Josh Hart will throw out the first pitches at that night's game against the Chicago White Sox at Yankee Stadium.
The ceremonial tosses will come a little more than 12 hours before the Knicks will be feted with a parade through Lower Manhattan's so-called "Canyon of Heroes," proceeding north on Broadway to City Hall.
Brunson averaged 32.8 points during the Finals as the Knicks won 15 of their last 16 playoff games, losing only Game 3 against San Antonio at Madison Square Garden. Brunson has pulled off first pitch duty in the Bronx as recently as 2024.
Brunson, Hart and Mikal Bridges, famously, were teammates at Villanova during the late 2010s.
CHICAGO, IL - MAY 12: Tarris Reed Jr. shoots the ball during the 2026 NBA Draft Combine on May 12, 2026 at Wintrust Arena in Chicago, Illinois. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Jeff Haynes/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
The Knicks enter the 2026 NBA Draft with picks No. 24, No. 31, and No. 55. Depending on how the board falls, Tarris Reed, Jr. could be available when New York is on the clock. Should the Knicks consider him?
The Basics
School: UConn
Position: Center
Height: 6’10” (Measured 6’9.75” barefoot at the 2026 Combine)
Projected Draft Range: Late first to early second round (Picks 24–40)
The Numbers
On the surface, Reed profiles as a traditional, retro low-post center. But deeper investigation of his senior season under Dan Hurley at UConn shows a highly modern interior engine. Reed posted an efficient 61% field goal percentage, largely because he understands his limits and dominates the restricted area.
The advanced metrics that stand out are his defensive and playmaking indicators. Reed grabbed nine boards per game with a strong defensive rebound percentage, but his defensive utility is what pops: he averaged two blocks per game, anchoring the paint using his massive 7’4.25” wingspan and a 9’2” standing reach.
Perhaps the most surprising evolution in Reed’s game is his passing. Jumping up to 2.3 dimes per game as a center isn’t an accident. He logged an impressive eight-assist game against Georgetown in the Big East tournament, showing he can act as a high-post hub or find cutters out of short-roll scenarios. The red flag remains at the charity stripe, where a 62% free-throw mark (and a total lack of three-point shots) confirms he is strictly an interior finisher.
What Does He Do Well?
Interior Physicality & Screen Setting: Reed is absolute bruising. At 263 pounds, he sets bone-crushing screens that create massive separation for ball-handlers. He creates extreme roll gravity because defenders must respect his strength as he barrels toward the rim.
Elite Rebounding Motor: He doesn’t rely solely on height; he understands boxing out and using his lower body to carve out space. He is relentless on the offensive glass, generating second-chance opportunities through pure effort and physical dominance.
Short-Roll Passing & Processing: Unlike many traditional college enforcers, Reed doesn’t suffer from tunnel vision. When teams blitzed UConn’s guards, Reed caught the ball at the free-throw line and quickly mapped the floor, hitting weakside shooters or dumping it off to baseline cutters.
On-Ball Interior Defense: While he won’t explode out of the gym with raw vertical leap, his 9’2″ standing reach makes him a wall at the rim. He handles post-up threats with ease, holding his ground without fouling, and rotates with exceptional timing.
Concerns?
Limited Vertical Explosiveness: Reed is a below-the-rim athlete in terms of explosiveness. His 29.5” standing vertical at the combine shows that he wins with positioning and length rather than jumping over people. This raises minor questions about how his finishing will translate against elite NBA shot-blockers.
Zero Floor-Spacing Capability: The shooting is entirely non-existent from the perimeter. He didn’t make a single three-pointer this past season, and his sub-optimal free throw shooting indicates that a reliable mid-range or pick-and-pop jumper could be years away.
Perimeter Switchability: While Reed has nimble feet for a guy his size, he will struggle if isolated on an island against the NBA’s quickest elite guards. He would flourish in a drop scheme, and matching up against modern, highly skilled stretch-bigs who pull him out to the arc will be a challenge.
Age: Turning 23 shortly after draft night means Reed is older than your typical prospect. Teams might view his ceiling as relatively capped compared to an 19-year-old developmental big. But how old was Tyler Kolek when Leon Rose drafted him? We’re obliged to mention it, but age probably won’t be a big deterrent.
The Knicks Fit
Reed is a physical, blue-collar enforcer who thrives on doing the dirty work that impacts winning. The Knicks have a need for dependable, low-mistake interior depth off the bench, and Reed fits like a glove. Unlike a raw developmental project who needs two years in Westchester, Reed spent two seasons under Dan Hurley playing a highly disciplined, demanding style of basketball. He understands defensive rotations, values every possession, and sets the exact type of physical screens that Jalen Brunson loves to exploit. He would be a safety net at the five spot, giving the Knicks a rugged interior presence who can be a physical rebounder and pass out of the short roll.
NBA Comparison
Best-Case Comparison: Isaiah Stewart / Day’Ron Sharpe
Median Outcome: Michael Cage with a passing gene
Low-End Outcome: Reggie Evans / Modern Enforcer off the bench
The Verdict
Pass at 24, Draft at 31.
If the Knicks keep both picks, taking Reed at No. 24 might feel like a slight reach given his lack of vertical explosiveness and spacing. However, if he is sitting there on the board at No. 31, run don’t walk Leon.
Mar 30, 2026; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Cleveland Cavaliers guard Sam Merrill (5) goes up for a shot against Utah Jazz guard Bez Mbeng (21) during the second half at Delta Center. Mandatory Credit: Rob Gray-Imagn Images | Rob Gray-Imagn Images
When the Cleveland Cavaliers signed Sam Merrill to a contract extension and let Ty Jerome walk, it raised a lot of eyebrows. It created unnecessary discourse around who they should have let walk in free agency when they could have retained both at the expense of going further over the second apron. Merrill’s 2025-26 season showed why the Cavaliers invested in one of the league’s purest three-point shooters.
All grades are based on our usual expectations for each player.
Regular Season Stats
12.8 points
2.6 rebounds
2.4 assists
46.1% FG
42.1% 3PT FG
85.5% FT
Merrill is arguably one of, if not the most straightforward, grades on this Cavaliers roster. The question boils down to “how well did Merrill shoot the ball in 2025—2026?” The answer to that question is very well.
It was not only that Merrill had his highest three-point percentage since his rookie season, but also that he accomplished this feat while shooting the highest number of attempts from the perimeter in his career.
If one word could describe Merrill’s past season, it is confidence. It takes a certain mindset to blindly fire from the perimeter as Merrill did. There is a sureness with his approach, combined with the ability makes him a one-man wrecking crew to opposing defenses. I’m not saying Merrill was the Cavaliers’ version of Steph Curry, however, the way that his presence can bend a defense is a difference maker alone.
Merrill is an active shooter; he does not sit idle in the corner and wait for the primary ball-handler to generate his looks for him. When Merrill is on the floor, he is arguably the most active player, constantly forcing opposing defenses to keep their eyes on him as much as any star the Cavs have in lineups with him.
What separated Merrill’s 2025-26 season from others is that it felt like the Cavs optimized Merrill as a player. They featured him in a way that previous versions of the team didn’t. This was best shown once the Cavaliers acquired James Harden at the trade deadline.
Harden passed the ball most to Merrill of anyone on the Cavs, averaging nearly 10 passes a game. James Harden and Merrill are an intriguing example of how Merrill’s game is far from just a floor spacer. Their partnership evolved into these convoluted pick-and-roll or pop actions where their basketball IQ would stand out almost instantly.
When players like Harden immediately take note of how dynamic a player Merrill can be, it validates the investment made into Merrill at the beginning of the season. The Cavaliers made the correct choice of extending Merrill and keeping his elite skills in house. As the Cavaliers look forward, it’s safe to say that Merrill will continue to play an integral part of the offense and motion of it.
New York, N.Y.: San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama reacts after hitting the floor hard against the New York Knicks during the fourth quarter of Game 3 of the NBA Finals on June 8, 2026 at Madison Square Garden in New York, New York. (Photo by J. Conrad Williams Jr./Newsday RM via Getty Images) | Newsday via Getty Images
To get a sense of how universally beloved Victor Wembanyama was before playing a single second of NBA basketball, look at the way the best players in the world described him ahead of his first professional minutes.
“I think he’s going to be one of the best to play this game,” added Giannis Antetokounmpo.
Wembanyama had a higher approval rating than pizza and puppies when the San Antonio Spurs selected him first overall in the 2023 NBA Draft out of Le Chesnay, France. The 7-foot-4 center with an 8-foot wingspan walked into the league looking like a wacky waving inflatable tube man and became the first unanimous Rookie of the Year since 2016, averaging 21.4 points and 10.6 rebounds. Despite being a 20-year-old rookie, he led the league in blocks with 3.6 per game, finishing second in Defensive Player of the Year voting behind fellow French big man Rudy Gobert. “Let [him] win it now,” Wembanyama said. “Because after that, it’s no longer his turn.”
Confident quips like that one — along with various philosophical ruminations — only worked to further endear Wembanyama to the basketball world and beyond. Legions of new fans from all over fell in love with his rare combination of brash competitiveness, raw vulnerability, confidence, calculation, and, of course, his one-of-a-kind style of play. One couldn’t help but stare in wonder at the way he dominated the game on the defensive end, where the biggest, fastest athletes in the world veered away from him at all costs.
Off the court, Wembanyama was unafraid to stand out in historically unmasculine ways. “Personally, I refuse to carry the burden of having to hide my emotion,” he said after crying on the court following a big Spurs win. In a league full of guarded superstars who would rather act tough than stand out, Wembanyama’s vulnerability was a breath of fresh air. “He has a spine, guts, and heart,” NBA journalist Michael Pina wrote. “To soberly possess such authenticity at that age, in front of the world, is special. It makes him such an easy player to bet on. He cares deeply.” The recognition only continued to build as Wembanyama won the 2026 Defensive Player of the Year award and finished third in MVP voting after leading the upstart Spurs to 62 wins and a spot in the NBA Finals this June.
However, over the past few weeks, people have started to turn on Wembanyama. Though it started with Oklahoma City Thunder and New York Knicks fans, it wasn’t just egg-gate — basketball fans everywhere are suddenly turning on the NBA’s golden child. “I cannot stand this guy,” basketball podcaster David Jacoby said on “The Zach Lowe Show.” “I hate his outfits. I hate his face. I hate his hair. I hate everything about him.”
The question is, why?
Is it because Wembanyama is a frontrunner — a rare exception in being considered the world’s best basketball player before winning a title? Is it because he’s a bully, throwing elbows and jabs at opposing players without facing repercussions from the NBA? Or because he’s too full of himself? Too corny? Too calculated? Or is it simply because he has the conviction to parade around with his dogs out in the Garden?
Wembanyama the frontrunner
On May 18, despite coming into Game 1 of the Western Conference finals as significant underdogs to the reigning NBA Champion Thunder, Wembanyama became just the fifth player in NBA history to drop 41-points and 24-rebounds in a playoff game. The Spurs won the double-overtime classic, 122-115, with Wembanyama looking like the best player on the floor over two-time NBA MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.
Typically, an athlete isn’t crowned as the best player alive until they win the big one, especially in basketball, where one player can affect the game in so many different ways. But Wembanyama is different. “The best player in the (expletive) world,” Spurs guard Stephon Castle announced for all the world to hear in a postgame interview on NBC. And it wasn’t just him: basketball analysts and former players were equally loud about Wembanyama now having the claim to basketball’s throne.
It was clear to anyone watching that he was on his way there. But now? At age 22? For some, he was being punctually recognized. For others, it was too much praise too fast, resulting in him becoming overrated. “Wemby ain’t the one, yo. Y’all crowning Wemby too fast,” radio host and culture critic Charlamagne tha God said on “Breakfast Club Power 105.1.” “I don’t see the dominance yet.”
Wembanyama the bully
Wembanyama’s frustration had been mounting throughout the postseason, where he was subjected to more contact than anyone since prime Shaquille O’Neal. And it boiled over during the opening minutes of Game 3 of the NBA Finals, when Wembanyama shoved Knicks star Jalen Brunson to the floor despite the ball not being anywhere in their vicinity.
“I hate him. He’s a bully,” Knicks fan and head of content at The Ringer, Sean Fennessey, said on the “Bill Simmons Podcast.” “He’s dirty, like it’s very obvious; you can watch clips from the game, he plays like a bully, and he’s not being officiated like a bully, and it’s annoying. So, it’s hard to watch the series.”
Knicks fans like Fennessey had a legitimate gripe: Wembanyama already accumulated two flagrant fouls earlier in the postseason, most notably for losing his temper and elbowing Minnesota Timberwolves forward Naz Reid in the head during their second-round series, which resulted in an ejection but not a suspension. A third flagrant would have put him one short of a one-game suspension in the NBA Finals — a death knell as far as the NBA’s surging ratings were concerned. And while the league had an opportunity to retroactively upgrade the clear violation to a flagrant foul, they chose not to. “It’s just better for the league if there’s six games or seven games instead of four games, and so it’s hard not to think that when you’re watching the game,” Fennessey added.
The tinfoil hats came out, and anyone rooting against the Spurs was quick to point out that the NBA was protecting their golden child, who brought so many new, global eyeballs to the game that he could do no wrong. The animosity only grew from there.
Wembanyama the tryhard
After missing a buzzer-beating jump shot that would have won Game 2 of the NBA Finals for the Spurs, Wembanyama needed to decompress. “The Playoffs, it’s like… a whirlwind. It’s hard to put your head out of the water,” he said. “I need some time off, let my brain cool down, recover. Recover as much for the body as for the mind.”
Last Sunday, in between Games 2 and 3, he went to Gramercy Park in lower Manhattan with his sister, Éve, to sketch. All of a sudden, his park rendezvous became the main storyline, with hilariously inaccurate hypotheses flying about regarding the calculated, pretentious superstar. “He’s corny as fuck,” one Knicks fan said to the Channel 5 YouTube channel. “And he’s just trying way too hard to make a storyline for himself.”
Finally, after the Knicks won Game 5 of the NBA Finals and put an end to their 53-year championship drought on Saturday, Wembanyama returned to the Spurs locker room without shaking hands with his opponents. It drew the ire of fans and players alike, with four-time NBA Champion Draymond Green saying, “Look your killer in the face. You got to look them in they face… and so to see them walk off the court, it was disheartening.”
But isn’t Wembanyama supposed to be different? Isn’t that what people liked about him in the first place?
Wembanyama the product of the internet age
It’s clear that people are turning on Wembanyama for the same reasons they originally fell in love with him, from his awe-inspiring feats of athleticism to his brash competitiveness to his quirky hobbies. These characteristics endeared him to people until they didn’t. It begs the question: Is it possible that Wembanyama changed during the postseason, behaving in a more distasteful way? Or is there something about the postseason spotlight that changed the way we think about him?
One could argue that he brought the villain narrative onto himself, going out of his way to provoke Knicks players and fans. There’s no doubt that Wembanyama enjoys being an agitator at the center of the basketball universe, growing increasingly disdainful of the media as the postseason went along before saying “see y’all… never” at his final press conference of the season. But it’s not so simple as to say Wembanyama chose villainy for himself.
Wembanyama isn’t the modern NBA’s first villain, and he won’t be the last. Just a few weeks ago, Gilgeous-Alexander had a similar fall from grace. After ethically working his way up the basketball ranks from an undersized underdog in Hamilton, Ontario to the best player on earth, he was framed as an unskilled flop-artist who was ruining basketball (and the future of the sport). What do Wembanyama and Gilgeous-Alexander have in common, other than the fact that they are both foreigners?
They are both products of the internet.
An unfortunate truth of the modern world is that people increasingly encounter reality through “algorithmic feeds built to warp reality, on platforms with every commercial incentive to keep users scrolling,” culture and technology writer Lane Brown writes in a Vulture story titled “The Feed is Fake.” Now that everything an athlete says or does can be recorded, cut up, aggregated, and misrepresented online through bad-faith actors who understand that extreme content gets rewarded, celebrity athletes like Gilgeous-Alexander and Wemby are subjected to the internet and its hot-take machinery finding something they don’t like about them and drumming it up until it becomes a story.
“On social media, popular opinion is being formed, measured, and manipulated all at once,” Brown continues. “And every signal the platforms produce — a trending song, a backlash, a talking point, the feeling that ‘everybody’ is suddenly talking about the same thing — can now be fabricated by unseen actors with hidden agendas.” As hateful content gets drummed up by the algorithm, trust in journalism declines and good reporting disappears behind paywalls, the average fan and media member are forced to look towards the comment sections for a sense of what’s being said. Talking heads pick up on that and bam! You got a snowball of negativity becoming too big to stop because on the internet, hate rises to the top.
It happened to Gilgeous-Alexander. And now it is happening to Wembanyama — and it will only get worse. Next season, the French Freak will be back in San Antonio with more tricks in his bag and more haters magnifying and criticizing his every move. Because in the modern NBA, the true sign of superstardom isn’t rings or MVP trophies: it’s hate and villainy. Get used to it.
GREENVILLE, SOUTH CAROLINA - MARCH 19: Henri Veesaar #13 of the North Carolina Tar Heels reacts in the second half against the VCU Rams during the first round of the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at Bon Secours Wellness Arena on March 19, 2026 in Greenville, South Carolina. (Photo by Jacob Kupferman/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Depending on how the board falls, North Carolina big man Henri Veesaar could be available when New York is on the clock on draft night next week. Should the Knicks consider him with their 24th or 31st selection?
Projected Draft Range: Late first to early second round
The Numbers
Veesaar turned himself into a legitimate NBA Draft prospect after transferring from Arizona to North Carolina. He started all 31 games for the Tar Heels, averaged 17 points and 8.7 rebounds, and earned second-team All-ACC honors.
The most interesting numbers in Veesaar’s sheet are linked to his shooting. Veesaar made 42.6% of his 94 three-point attempts, showing real catch-and-shoot touch for a 7-footer. He hit spot-up threes, trailer threes, and pick-and-pop looks, giving scouts the stuff of their dreams heading into the NBA in what looks like a smooth transition to the pro game.
Veesaar was also extremely efficient near the rim, converting more than 75% of his half-court attempts at the basket. He added 2.1 assists per game against 1.7 turnovers, showing enough passing feel to operate as more than a standstill stretch big.
That mix of shooting, touch, passing, and size explains why ESPN’s mock draft has Veesaar going to New York with the No. 24 overall pick as a late first-round selection.
What Does He Do Well?
Floor Spacing: Veesaar’s jumper is his cleanest NBA skill. He shot 42.6% from three at North Carolina and looked comfortable on catch-and-shoot attempts, especially above the break and in pick-and-pop situations. For a 7-footer, that kind of shooting would do wonders for spacing his team’s offense.
Pick-And-Roll Versatility: He can roll, pop, slip screens, and make quick reads after catching the ball. Veesaar already understands timing and angles, which helps him find soft spots in the defense instead of relying only on power.
Touch Around the Rim: Veesaar is not an explosive athlete, but he has soft hands and comes with reliable finishing. He can do it all in the paint from hooks, layups, floaters, and quick catches around the basket, but not so much flashy dunking.
Passing Feel: Veesaar showed strong high-low chemistry with phenom Caleb Wilson at UNC and made smart reads from the short roll, post, and perimeter. He is not a hub-style creator, but he can move the ball quickly and punish rotations.
Rebounding: At 227 pounds, he is not built like a traditional bruiser, but he averaged 8.7 rebounds and showed solid fundamentals on the defensive glass. He reads the ball well and uses his reach effectively.
What Are the Concerns?
Strength and Physicality: This is the biggest negative factor to considering using a pick, let alone if the Knicks move one of their selections, on Veesaar. He needs to add 15 to 20 pounds without losing mobility, which is never guaranteed to happen smoothly. Right now, stronger NBA centers could move him off spots, seal him deep, or knock him off balance on rolls and post touches.
Defensive Translation: Veesaar is not an elite rim protector. He blocked 1.2 shots per game, but his impact comes more from length and positioning than verticality in the paint. NBA teams may question whether he can anchor a defense.
Ball-Screen Defense: He struggled at times when switching onto guards and was not always active enough in drop coverage. He can play too upright, which creates problems against quicker ball-handlers.
Free Throw Shooting: His three-point shooting was excellent, but the 61.5% free-throw mark is a small concern. It does not erase the jumper, but it does make the shooting projection slightly less automatic. And it’s not that the Knicks haven’t already had their fair share of Mitch’s issues there…
The Knicks Fit
The Knicks enter the 2026 NBA Draft with picks No. 24, No. 31, and No. 55. Veesaar makes sense if New York wants a frontcourt piece who can give the second unit a different offensive look than the one built around Mitchell Robinson.
In fact, Veesaar is the total opposite to Mitch: not a vertical lob threat or solid defensive anchor. Veesaar is closer to the other side of the Robinson archetype: a skilled stretch big who can space the floor, pass from the middle, finish with touch, and keep offensive possessions moving.
That matters for a team built around Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns, however, as Veesaar could function as a backup center who keeps the floor open, gives guards room to attack, and allows the Knicks to run more five-out or pick-and-pop actions with the bench.
The concern is whether New York can live with the defensive questions. Would Mike Brown trust a young big who cannot hold up physically, communicate in coverage, or survive playoff matchups? Veesaar would need strength development and probably would not be a finished product as a rookie.
Still, if the Knicks believe their strength staff can add functional weight to his frame, the offensive upside is obvious. Skilled 7-footers who shoot, pass, and finish efficiently are not easy to find late in the first round.
NBA Comparison
Best-Case Comparison: Kelly Olynyk (Skilled stretch big who shoots, passes, plays from the elbows, and survives despite his subpar defense)
Median Outcome: Mike Musical (Foor-spacing backup big whose shooting and offensive feel keep him useful, but whose defense limits his role)
Low-End Outcome: Frank Kaminsky (A skilled college big whose shooting, touch, and passing flashes at times, but whose defense and strength cap his NBA career and end up cutting it short)
The Verdict
Think about it at 24. If a higher-upside wing or guard is still available, the Knicks may be better off prioritizing athleticism, defense, or shot creation. Veesaar’s defensive questions are real, and the Knicks should not ignore them if they want a plug-and-play prospect to bolster next year’s rotation.
Draft him at 31. Veesaar is worth serious consideration if he reaches the Knicks’ second selection, especially if New York wants a cost-controlled stretch big with real offensive skill. The value here is obvious, and the Knicks should pounce, as Veesaar is the next-bext 7-footer in the whole draft after lottery-bound Aday Mara. Veesaar has the size, shooting, passing and touch to appeal a pro franchise, and is coming off a productive high-major season. He may never become a defensive anchor, but he could develop into a useful rotation center who gives New York a different kind of frontcourt option.
NEW YORK, NEW YORK - FEBRUARY 07: Day'Ron Sharpe #20 of the Brooklyn Nets drives against Anthony Gill #16 of the Washington Wizards during the first half at Barclays Center on February 07, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Jordan Bank/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Timing is a big part of free agency. Teams that are trying to preserve cap space so they have maximum flexibility often make what may look at first like surprising and perhaps head-scratching moves, then when all the smoke clears things get rectified…
That is basically what Keith Smith wrote for Spotrac Tuesday He reported that the Nets are unlikely to exercise team options on four free agents. Smith predicted that Sean Marks & co. will decline team options on Day’Ron Sharpe, Ziaire Williams, Josh Minott, and Malachi Smith, saving the franchise a little more than $15 million in cap space … then likely re-sign them when the smoke clears.
Here’s what Smith reported this on Sharpe, Williams Minott and Smith.
Day’Ron Sharpe – $6.5 million team option: Just like a year ago, the Nets would like to keep Sharpe. However, in order to maximize cap space first, they’ll decline Sharpe’s option. But don’t rule out a plan to re-sign him after Brooklyn’s other offseason work is completed.
Ziaire Williams – $6.5 million team option: Everything we wrote about Day’Ron Sharpe applies to Williams as well.
Josh Minott – $2.6 million team option, contract then becomes non-guaranteed: Minott still has rotation potential. For the Nets, who are likely to have a lot of cap space, it doesn’t make sense to keep Minott on this deal. This option will be declined, but Brooklyn could re-sign Minott later.
Malachi Smith – $2.1 million team option, contract then becomes non-guaranteed: Smith showed some stuff after a late-season callup. But, once again, the Nets want to maximize their cap space. Smith will have his option declined, but he could be back on a new deal later in the summer.
How much cap space could Brooklyn have in making those moves? Last week, Yossi Gozlan reported the number could approach $50 million. He also suggested how the Nets could move once they finish dealing with whatever bigger free agency or trade opportunities come along.
[T]he Nets could get up to a maximum of $47.9 million in cap space by declining team options and waiving non-guaranteed players. That would include the $6.25 million team options for Day’Ron Sharpe and Ziaire Williams. They could decline both players and re-sign them to new deals. They could also decline both to maximize cap space, then re-sign one of them with the $9.4 million room mid-level exception afterward.
Gozlan also wrote about how the Nets could use the Room MLE, particularly on Sharpe.
Third Apron projects Sharpe’s true annual value to be at least double his current salary, but the Nets may still aim to minimize a potential early raise. As mentioned earlier, they could decline his team option and renounce his cap hold to maximize cap space. They could then bring him back with the $9.4 million room mid-level exception after exhausting cap space, re-signing him for up to three years and $29.5 million. That would still feel like a favorable deal for Brooklyn, so perhaps Sharpe would prefer another two-year deal for a quicker chance to earn more money.
As for his take on Minott and Smith, Gozlan wrote this:
The Nets could also decline the team options of Josh Minott and Malachi Smith if they need extra room. It would make sense to decline Smith since he would be restricted, and they could re-sign him to a new multi-year deal or bring him back on a two-way contract. Minott, on the other hand, would be unrestricted, but they should still be able to bring him back at a minimum salary if they’d like.
Beyond the team options, based on history, he said he doesn’t expect Brooklyn to extend Noah Clowney this off-season, preferring instead to have him enter next summer as a restricted free agent.
If there is an extension to be done, it would probably land slightly above the mid-level exception range, with a starting salary no larger than his $16.2 million restricted cap hold in 2027. That is so they could maximize their 2027 cap space in case they don’t add any significant long-term salaries this season.
History suggests there won’t be an extension between Clowney and the Nets. They haven’t signed a player to a rookie-scale extension since Taurean Prince in 2019.
No matter what, the 22-year-old Clowney will be paid $5.4 million this season, the last on his four-year rookie deal. Unless things change, he will be one of seven Nets players on rookie deals in 2026-27. Clowney, the Flatbush 5 and whoever they take at No. 6 will make a total of $35.1 million. That’s 21.3% of the $165.0 salary cap next season for basically half the 15-man roster, yet another indication of how much flexibility Brooklyn has going into free agency.
Welcome to our annual Lakers season in review series, where we’ll look back at each player on the team’s roster this season and evaluate if they should be part of the future of the franchise. Today, we wrap our series with a shift away from the players and towards the head coach, JJ Redick.
Maybe it’s a product of the internet-fueled brain rot that distorts the passage of time these days, but it feels like five years have passed since the debates about JJ Redick’s qualifications to be an NBA head coach, spurred on by his post-playing days podcast career and never having coached at any level beyond his grade-school-aged sons’ teams.
Or maybe it’s the fact that after two full NBA campaigns under his belt, Redick has so quickly and thoroughly dismissed those concerns as irrelevant, it seems like ancient history that ever mattered in the first place.
Either way, it’s no small feat that Redick has put all of that talk behind him to the point that it is hard to imagine him doing anything else besides coaching now. Consecutive 50-win seasons and playoff appearances with home court advantage in the first round do have a way of shifting the perception of a coach under the type of scrutiny Redick was just two years ago.
The degree to which this matters at this point may not be very much at all.
After all, I think JJ would be the first to tell you that, beyond even the wins and losses, he simply wants to be judged on whether he has maximized the group of players he coaches in a specific season. But the fact that we’ve gotten to that point with Redick at all this early into his career is worth mentioning as meaningful — and the fact that this seems to be the only standard he’s being held to at all now even more so.
Yes, there have been growing pains and things have been far from perfect, but I think it’s abundantly clear now that Redick is viewed only as a coach. And, after two seasons, it’s fairly clear he’s a pretty good one.
How did he coach?
Coming off a rookie season that saw his roster upended by a franchise-altering trade, Redick’s second year was also a challenging one due to injuries and player availability impacting a roster that, even with multiple holdovers, did introduce three new rotation players, including two starters.
Whether it was LeBron missing all of training camp and the team’s first 14 games with sciatica, Austin Reaves missing substantial time with two calf strains and an oblique injury, and Luka Dončić missing the team’s final five games and the entire playoffs with a hamstring strain, Redick had to navigate a season where his best three players rarely played together and, when they did, were adjusting to the ever-shifting roles borne from that lack of shared court time.
Redick, though, handled this deftly, creating an environment where roles were backed by communication, understanding, and belief in the players’ abilities to take on whatever was put in front of them. This was exemplified both by the team’s incredible month of March and then in the team’s playoff upset of the Rockets.
In the former, a string of good health was backed by a redefined pecking order that saw Redick cater to Dončić and Reaves as his primary ball handlers and shot creators while LeBron took on a more supportive role as an off-ball worker who focused on doing more with less. Credit the players — particularly LeBron — for being able to adapt on the fly, but Redick also deserves his flowers for formulating this sort of plan and for having the wherewithal to organize the team in a way that, in one stroke, optimized the group while also diminishing the role of a player whose reputation and cachet is as substantive as LeBron’s.
And then, in the latter playoff stretch, with both Dončić and Reaves injured, Redick not only turned back to LeBron as an on-ball creator and primary leader, but crafted offensive game plans that prominently featured Marcus Smart and Luke Kennard as primary scorers and ball-handlers and defensive schemes meant to play into Houston’s lack of experience and guard play by pressuring the ball and forcing turnovers.
In essence, Redick took two totally different groups with different strengths on both sides of the ball and created environments where both experienced great success. Because this is a player’s league and the Lakers were obviously led by historically great individual players, Redick really did not get the credit he deserved in real time. But hindsight really does reveal how much of a strong coaching job the dichotomy of these two stretches required.
Overall, then, it’s more than fair to say that Redick had an excellent year coaching.
He wasn’t perfect by any means and you could certainly nitpick some of the decisions he made over the course of the year, but there were very few, if any, times where I could honestly say I didn’t understand a choice he made, even if I disagreed with it. Which, honestly, is all you can ask for from a coach as an outsider. Can this be explained rationally? If the answer is yes, you don’t have to agree.
Further, I’d argue there was a general adaptability and willingness to change course when something wasn’t working, which really mattered towards the team’s success this year.
Whether it was the aforementioned reorienting of the team’s hierarchy around Luka and Austin or the ultimate shift he made to bring Rui off the bench in favor of Smart, Redick often got to where he needed to be with this roster rather than stubbornly sticking to ideas that would have been easier to stomach politically. And while it’s fair to wonder if he could have done some of these things sooner, I think it’s more important you get there eventually — because some coaches never do.
So, credit to Redick. He still has learning and refining to do, but the trajectory he’s on is positive and I believe in where this team can go with him as the head coach.
What is his contract situation moving forward?
By all accounts, Redick is under contract for several more seasons after receiving a contract extension following his first season that reportedly tacked on two more years to what was originally a four-year deal. That would leave Redick with four years still on this deal now, which positions him well to be the Lakers’ coach for the foreseeable future.
Even beyond that contractual security, though, it is also clear that Redick has a strong relationship not only with Dončić, but with LeBron and Austin. This sort of alignment with your team’s best players can often mean more than the number of years left on your deal or even the sort of support you might have from your general manager.
Should he be back?
Unequivocally, yes. While this is clearly Luka’s team from the player side of things, Redick feels nearly as indentured as the team’s head coach. And just as the team will clearly try to acquire the sorts of players who best complement Dončić and his skill set, I also believe the team will target players who fit into how Redick wants to play while possessing the character and skill set that Redick has established as pillars for the team.
BADALONA, SPAIN - JUNE 14: Sergio de Larrea of Valencia Basket warms up during the Spanish League, Liga ACB Endesa, basketball Semi Final Game 3 match played between Asisa Joventut and Valencia Basket at Olimpic Arena on June 14, 2026 in Badalona, Spain. (Photo By Javier Borrego/Europa Press via Getty Images) | Europa Press via Getty Images
Depending on how the board falls, Spanish guard Sergio de Larrea could be available when New York is on the clock on draft night next week. Should the Knicks consider him with their 24th or 31st selection?
The Basics
Team: Valencia Basket (Spain’s Liga ACB)
Position: Guard
Height: 6’6″
Weight: 204 lbs
Age: 20
2025-26 Stats: 8.9 PPG, 3.1 RPG, 3.4 APG, 40.9% FG, 36.7% 3PT, 81.3% FT (in ACB play)
Projected Draft Range: Late first to early second round (Picks 25–35)
The Numbers
De Larrea has built one of the cleaner international profiles heading into the 2026 NBA Draft. He played meaningful professional minutes for Valencia Basket in Spain’s ACB and a bit smaller role at the EuroLeague. In any case, he gave scouts more than a large sample against professional, older, stronger, and truly more experienced competition for the past few months.
His ACB production stands out because it came in a rotational role, with De Larrea averaging around 18 minutes per game while shooting 36.7% from three and 81.3% from the free-throw line. At the end of the day, however, this is a guard whose value is found in his passing and decision-making.
De Larrea averaged 3.6 assists per game in ACB action, showing good court vision and building him into one of the more intriguing bigger guards in the class, and the best guard outright coming from overseas. That said, De Larrea is not a high-volume scorer or explosive downhill athlete. But he has size, polish, shooting indicators, and something the Knicks might like in his professional experience, giving him a strong baseline.
Making things more intriguing is the fact that the Knicks have already been linked to him, as Jake Fischer reported New York’s interest in the Spanish guard, writing, “I’m told that the Knicks, like the Timberwolves, have interest in Spain’s Larrea.”
What Does He Do Well?
Advanced Playmaking: De Larrea’s biggest appeal is his feel. He sees passing windows early, plays with pace, and can operate in ball-screen actions without rushing. At nearly 6’7”, he can see over smaller guards and make live-dribble reads that many late-first prospects cannot consistently make yet.
Reliable Shooting: The shooting profile looks a bit of a work-in-progress, but his three-point shooting in ACB play, combined with his free-throw touch, gives him a strong foundation as an NBA spacer in time. He can punish defenders who go under screens, hit spot-up looks, and operate away from the ball.
Positional Size: De Larrea has legitimate guard size. He is big enough to play next to a smaller lead guard and skilled enough to handle secondary creation duties.
Professional Polish: He has already played in a structured European system against veteran competition, both at the domestic and continental levels. That does not guarantee immediate NBA success, as we very well know around these places, but it lowers the developmental risk compared to prospects who still need to learn some basics of the pro game.
What Are the Concerns?
Limited Burst: De Larrea is not an explosive athlete. He does not consistently win with a lightning first step, and NBA defenders may test whether he can create separation without a screen.
Physical Strength: He still needs to add a good deal of strength, which matters as a finisher, ball-handler under pressure, and defender against bigger NBA guards and wings.
Defensive Ceiling: His size will help on D, but he is not a high-level defensive disruptor for now. De Larrea projects as a smart positional defender more than someone who blows up actions with elite athleticism.
Scoring Creation: De Larrea is more of a connector than a takeover scorer. He can shoot, pass, and make smart reads, but he is unlikely to become an offensive engine.
The Knicks Fit
The Knicks enter the 2026 NBA Draft with picks No. 24, No. 31, and No. 55, and there has already been reporting that New York could look to move one of its first-rounders if only to save themselves some dough.
If the Knicks keep one of their late first-round picks, de Larrea fits the type of cost-controlled, high-IQ contributor who makes sense for a team smacked right in the middle of their contending window and coming off winning a championship. De Larrea would not need to dominate the ball at all, could play next to Brunson, splitting minutes with Deuce McBride and Tyler Kolek, and function with the second unit while honing his skillset in Tarrytown and watching from the pine most of the time.
The most obvious angle to consider regarding the little Spaniard has to do with the Knicks’ long-term roster building. If New York wants to maintain some flexibility while managing an expensive championship core, a late-first/early-second rookie who can provide guard depth on a controlled contract has real value.
NBA Comparison
Best-Case Comparison: International Malcolm Brogdon (Steady guard who wins with strength and decision-making but lacks burst)
Median Outcome: Tomas Satoransky (Tall European guard who can pass, organize, play on or off the ball, and survive as a rotation player without scoring that much)
Low-End Outcome: Frank Ntilikina (Welp)
The Verdict
Pass at 24. New York may have access to higher-upside prospects, especially if someone like Meleek Thomas, Isaiah Evans, Chris Cenac Jr., or Morez Johnson Jr. slips. But at No. 31, de Larrea’s combination of size, shooting, passing, and professional polish is hard to ignore.
Think twice at 31. If Sergio de Larrea is still on the board when the Knicks pick early in the second round, he makes some sense. The Spaniard may not have star upside nor a legit role during his first days in Manhattan, but that is not necessarily what the Knicks need right now. De Larrea profiles as a smart, skilled, low-maintenance guard who can help a good team stay organized, space the floor, and develop into a reliable rotation piece. We don’t know what will happen to Deuce McBride once his deal expires, and the only long-term option at the point is Tyler Kolek. Considering de Larrea will likely be gone at No. 55, the Knicks would need to make a tough decision here.
The New York Knicks made history last Saturday, capturing the franchise's first NBA championship in 53 years. This Thursday, June 18, New Yorkers will get to celebrate the milestone in the franchise's first ticker-tape parade.
“For more than 50 years, New Yorkers have waited for this moment. Through near misses, heartbreak and a hope that every year could be our year, this city never stopped believing in the Knicks. And this team fulfilled that hope with grit, resilience, and heart — just like the five boroughs itself,” said New York City Zohran Mayor Mamdani in a statement. “New Yorkers have cheered for our team from packed living rooms in the Bronx to watch parties in Brooklyn, from bars in Queens to Staten Island to Manhattan, and Madison Square Garden itself. Now it’s time for our city to celebrate together. Bing bong.”
See below for everything you need to know about the 2026 Knicks championship parade.
The New York Knicks rallied once again thanks to a 45-point performance from Jalen Brunson to beat the San Antonio Spurs 94-90 in Game 5, winning the team’s first title since 1973.
Jun 25, 2025; Brooklyn, NY, USA; NBA commissioner Adam Silver speaks during the 2025 NBA Draft at Barclays Center. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images | Brad Penner-Imagn Images
The Celtics may not be sitting still at No. 27.
According to NBA insider Jake Fischer, Boston is looking to trade up in the first round of next Tuesday’s NBA Draft. The Celtics currently hold the No. 27 pick and the No. 40 pick, but Fischer reported that they have been exploring a move higher on the board.
While Boston continues to loom as a potential Giannis Antetokounmpo landing spot, sources say the Celtics are looking to trade up in the first round of next Tuesday’s NBA Draft from their No. 27 pick.
The first is pretty straightforward: Brad Stevens and the Celtics may have found a player they like and do not believe he’ll be there at 27. That is the normal draft-week explanation.
The louder version is the one you’re probably already sick of hearing about. We’ll get to…him…later.
Maybe the Celtics are trying to jump a few spots for a frontcourt prospect they think fits the next version of the roster. Or perhaps they’re trying to improve their draft capital before the rest of the offseason starts moving. Maybe they are doing both, because Brad Stevens has never seemed like someone who enjoys having only one door available to him.
Either way, Boston exploring a move up feels like the first move in what figures to be a busy offseason.
Who could Boston be targeting?
Henri Veesaar feels like the cleanest name to watch.
ESPN’s latest mock draft has the North Carolina big going No. 24 to the Knicks, which puts him close enough to Boston’s range for a trade-up conversation to make some sense. At 7 feet, with shooting touch and pick-and-pop potential, Veesaar checks a lot of the obvious boxes for a Celtics team still trying to solve its frontcourt issues.
ESPN’s latest Mock Draft has the Lakers selecting Henri Veesaar with the 25th overall draft pick, a center out of North Carolina
He is the #3 ranked center on ESPN’s Top 100 Prospect List for the 2026 class and shot 42.6% from three last season 👀 pic.twitter.com/xyoNwaFpCx
A big who can keep the floor spaced, rebound enough and do more than simply occupy space would give Boston a better answer than hoping the current rotation solves itself.
Jayden Quaintance is another interesting name if the Celtics are comfortable with the medical risk tied to his knee. If Boston wants to jump higher, names like Chris Cenac Jr., Hannes Steinbach and Morez Johnson Jr. could come into play, but that would require a more aggressive move. Aday Mara is probably the dream version of the idea, though ESPN has him at No. 11, which feels like a different conversation entirely unless something much larger is about to happen.
If the Celtics stay put, Tarris Reed Jr. could still make sense as a more physical, ready-now big. But if Fischer’s report is tied to a specific frontcourt target, Veesaar is the easiest name to connect.
My big fat Greek trade rumors
You didn’t think we were getting through a Celtics offseason report without Giannis Antetokounmpo showing up, did you?
Fischer’s note also mentioned Boston as a team very much still looming in the Giannis conversation, which gives the trade-up report a second layer to consider. Moving up could be about drafting a player. It could also be about improving the quality of an asset before a larger deal takes place.
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN – APRIL 03: Jayson Tatum #0 of the Boston Celtics and Giannis Antetokounmpo #34 of the Milwaukee Bucks talk after a game at Fiserv Forum on April 03, 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
A better first-round pick is more attractive than No. 27 in almost any trade conversation with the Bucks. That does not magically make a Giannis deal realistic, simple or even likely. Nothing about acquiring a player of that caliber is ever straightforward. But if Boston is trying to keep every door open, turning No. 27 into something slightly more appealing would at least fit the larger logic of the offseason.
That is probably the cleanest way to look at this for now. The Celtics are trying to give themselves more options.
Maybe they want to move up for a big who can help answer the frontcourt question. Maybe they want a better asset before taking a bigger swing. Maybe nothing happens, because draft-week rumors have a long history of being just that: rumors.
Still, for a team with limited easy ways to improve, exploring a move up makes sense.
The Celtics can stay at No. 27 and hope the board cooperates. Or they can try to make sure it does.
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - MAY 08: Paul George #8 of the Philadelphia 76ers is introduced before the game against the New York Knicks in Game Three of the Second Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs at Xfinity Mobile Arena on May 08, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Emilee Chinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images
We saw quite the rise in impact from Paul George through 2025-26. The season started in typical Sixers fashion, with their star wing sidelined due to injury for the first 12 games. His play from mid November to the end of January was solid, yet he only averaged 16.0 points per game in this 27-game span. Even with the arrival of VJ Edgecombe to give the team’s offense a major uplift, that’s simply not the kind of production the Sixers expect or pay for from George.
Then came the startling, embarrassing moment: George being suspended 25 games for violating the terms of the NBA’s anti-drug policy. It left him just 10 games of availability at the end of the regular season to get back into form and ramp up for the playoffs.
Yet sure enough, he did. He used the time to get right physically and came back with a clear extra spring in his step. From his first game post suspension putting up 28 points on 11-of-22 shooting with six made threes (a scoring tally he’d reached just twice in the previous 27 games), George suddenly hit a higher level than probably anyone saw coming. And he maintained it, putting together the kind of play that showed why the Sixers wanted him — and wanted to pay him star money.
George got started with 10 games to close the regular season after his return. In this stretch, he averaged 21.0 points on 47.2 percent shooting (including 41.5 from three, with his 8.2 attempts being the more notable number), 5.7 rebounds, 3.2 assists and a highly disruptive 2.2 steals per game.
The epitome of George’s performance — and what makes him more important if he can replicate it enough moving forward — was his first-round series against the Celtics. He was phenomenal at both ends of the floor, showcasing his varied offensive skillset and stellar defense against a tough Celtics squad. Like the Sixers as a whole, the steam ran out in the second round against the eventual champion Knicks. But the Celtics series was a perfect example of what George is still capable of.
Through the first round, George averaged 17.4 points on 48.9/55.0/77.8 shooting splits, 4.0 rebounds, 3.0 assists and 1.4 steals per game.
The scoring output didn’t need to be huge with Tyrese Maxey going off and Joel Embiid dominating after his return. George was efficient in the ways he needs to be as a secondary creator and dangerous shooter, all while pairing that with sound playmaking. He reliably made crisp extra passes to keep the offense humming, and composed passes to find cutters or kick out to shooters when initiating or running pick-and-rolls.
A fantastic play here from Paul George (and of course Justin Edwards with the smooth shot). PG with the perfect patience and hesitation in the paint waiting for the defense to collapse in on him before kicking out to JE. pic.twitter.com/BLhIlcBLgm
His shooting showcase was exactly what you want to see too, with his three-point volume up at 5.7 attempts per game for the series including two games with nine attempts. Quick-trigger threes from anywhere around the arc off movement, step-backs and side-steps when in isolation, smooth pull-ups when operating in pick-and-rolls. His driving downhill still leaves something to be desired, and needs to be an area of improvement next season if he can build on this play/improved health, but everything else was on display.
Another video from Sixers-Celtics Game 2, looking at Paul George. In addition to his typical solid defense, PG hit some timely buckets + had a few great assists, taking advantage of the C's def collapsing in on him.
George had it all going in a reminder of what he can do.
Paul George was definitely in Playoff P mode for Game 6, combining his usual impressive defense with some scorching hot offensive bursts — like his 10-point Q3 on 4-7 FG, 2-3 3PT shooting 🔥
Defensively, George was everywhere. He played both Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum well, using his length, physicality, sharp anticipation against drives, and improved mobility to give them trouble. From guarding effectively on the ball and breaking up passing lanes, to contesting threes or providing timely help rotations around the paint, George was brilliant in all areas defensively.
If this PG can remain healthy and consistent next season, and maybe add a bit more dynamism attacking downhill, great. A healthy offseason could help him continue this momentum. The Sixers would be a better team — and more enjoyable team — for it. But for now, there isn’t enough evidence to show that George can sustain this healthy version of himself longterm at this stage of his career. We can only wait and see if George can show up at this level more often.
Apart from that, the biggest question around George’s future is whether it takes him to a new team. With the Sixers having so much money tied up in their stars, their only real way to find some financial flexibility and add depth is by trading a contract like George’s, which owes him an eye-watering $54.12 million in 2026-27. Finding any team willing to take that much money, when he also has a $56.58 million player option for 2027-28 which he’ll certainly take at that late stage of his career, won’t be easy whatsoever.
Until we see any reports that indicate that’s actually a possibility, though, I’ll keep focused on George as a Sixer and what that could look like. Hopefully for Philly, that’s something like the version we saw in his comeback after suspension. If he can be that kind of player (emphasis on “if”), that makes the Sixers more interesting.
Pair that with continued growth from Tyrese Maxey and the flourishing Edgecombe, who’s sure to take another step to stardom in his sophomore year, and ideally any extra depth they can find in free agency, and maybe the Sixers can take a step forward from being a 45-win level team.
Health depending, of course. Because, you know… Sixers.
It’s been a long playoff run for the Knicks’ WAGs, but they surely wouldn’t have it any other way.
After a long playoff run starting in mid-April and culminating in a breathtaking NBA championship, Ali Brunson, wife of Finals MVP Jalen Brunson, unloaded her camera roll.
In a 12-picture Instagram post, Ali shared images of their goldendoodle Kona and rescue Stevie, as well as their 11-month-old baby daughter, Jordyn James Brunson.
Ali, who became a doctor of Physical Therapy in 2021, and the other Knicks WAGs have been in the news lately after James Dolan jokingly asked Knicks players to be celibate during the playoffs in a now-famous speech.
Ali Brunson takes a picture with the mirror. Instagram alibrunson11
“I had this idea that maybe you should give up sex for the next 10 weeks,” Dolan told the Knicks on April 3 before the playoffs began. “You don’t have to give up sex for the next 10 weeks, but like Spartans — do you know what Spartans are? — They denied themselves to gain an edge. Get the edge.”
Jalen Brunson was photographed with the Larry O’Brien. Instagram alibrunson11
Ali added a few behind-the-scenes pictures of her and her husband celebrating with the Larry O’Brien Trophy and the Bill Russell NBA Finals Most Valuable Player Award Trophy.
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - NOVEMBER 27: Maliq Brown #6, Isaiah Evans #3, Cameron Boozer #12 and Dame Sarr #7 of the Duke Blue Devils look on against the Arkansas Razorbacks during the second half of the CBS Thanksgiving Classic at the United Center on November 27, 2025 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Every year we do a DBR Mock Draft and The 2026 version is complete, with Jason Evans as Commissioner and @-jk, @CDu, and @brevity deputized to run things in his absence. Notable picks including AJ Dybantsa to Washington, Darryn Peterson to Utah, and Cameron Boozer to Memphis. Fellow Blue Devils Isaiah Evans and Maliq Brown were also selected.
Here is the draft order and the GMs who signed up for each team/pick.Keep an eye on Stickdog!
FIRST ROUND 1. Washington (@coldriver10): AJ Dybantsa, F, BYU 2. Utah (@kinghoops): Darryn Peterson, G, Kansas 3. Memphis (@pfrduke): Cameron Boozer, F, Duke 4. Chicago (@CDu): Caleb Wilson, F, UNC 5. LA Clippers (@brevity): Cameron Carr, G, Baylor 6. Brooklyn (@Daddylawman): Keaton Wagler, G, Illinois 7. Sacramento (@toughbuff1): Darius Acuff Jr, G, Arkansas 8. Atlanta (@JasonEvans): Aday Mara, C, Michigan 9. Dallas (@JNort): Mikel Brown Jr, G, Louisville 10. Milwaukee (@DukeFan1986 defaults, now @phaedrus): Kingston Flemings, G, Houston 11. Golden State (@stickdog): Yaxel Lendeborg, F, Michigan 12. Oklahoma City (@accfanfrom1970): Hannes Steinbach, F, Washington 13. Miami (@tommy): Morez Johnson Jr, F, Michigan 14. Charlotte (@roywhite): Jayden Quaintance, F, Kentucky 15. Chicago (@CDu): Dailyn Swain, G/F, Texas 16. Memphis (@pfrduke): Brayden Burries, G, Arizona 17. Oklahoma City (@accfanfrom1970): Nate Ament, F, Tennessee 18. Charlotte (@roywhite): Chris Cenac Jr, F/C, Houston 19. Toronto (@jam): Labaron Philon Jr, G, Alabama 20. San Antonio (@BlueDevilDog): Allen Graves, F, Santa Clara 21. Detroit (@scottdude8): Isaiah Evans, G/F, Duke 22. Philadelphia (@TheBrianZoubekExperience): Henri Veesaar, C, UNC 23. Atlanta (@JasonEvans): Christian Anderson Jr, G, Texas Tech 24. New York (@Billy Dat): Zuby Ejiofor, F, St. John’s 25. LA Lakers (@Whutadrag): Joshua Jefferson, F, Iowa State 26. Denver (@Kdogg): Bennett Stirtz, G, Iowa 27. Boston (@Furniture): Koa Peat, F, Arizona 28. Minnesota (@pokeresqdefaults, now@phaedrus): Meleek Thomas, G, Arkansas 29. Cleveland (@MrJeffSchwartz0): Luigi Suigo, C, Mega 30. Dallas (@JNort): Karim Lopez, F, New Zealand Breakers
SECOND ROUND 31. New York (@Billy Dat): Trevon Brazile, F, Arkansas 32. Memphis (@pfrduke): Ebuka Okorie, G, Stanford 33. Brooklyn (@Daddylawman): Pavle Backo, C, Mega 34. Sacramento (@toughbuff1): Baba Miller, F, Cincinnati 35. San Antonio (@BlueDevilDog): Tarris Reed Jr, C, Connecticut 36. LA Clippers (@brevity): Maliq Brown, F, Duke 37. Oklahoma City (@accfanfrom1970): Sergio de Larrea, G, Valencia 38. Chicago (@CDu): Ugonna Onyenso, C, Virginia 39. Houston (@godins): Emanuel Sharp, G, Houston 40. Boston (@Furniture): Tobias Jensen, G, Ratiopharm Ulm 41. Miami (@tommy): Nick Boyd, G, Wisconsin 42. San Antonio (@BlueDevilDog): Alex Karaban, F, Connecticut 43. Brooklyn (@Daddylawman): Braden Smith, G, Purdue 44. San Antonio (@BlueDevilDog): Ryan Conwell, G, Louisville 45. Sacramento (@toughbuff1): Jack Kayil, G, Alba Berlin 46. Orlando (@House P): Quadir Copeland, G, NC State 47. Phoenix (@powellhill1981): Tobi Lawal, F, Virginia Tech 48. Dallas (@JNortdefaults, now@AGDukesky): Jaden Bradley, G, Arizona 49. Denver (@Kdogg): Dillon Mitchell, F, St. John’s 50. Toronto (@jam): Felix Okpara, F, Tennessee 51. Washington (@coldriver10): Milos Uzan, G, Houston 52. LA Clippers (@brevity): Tyler Bilodeau, F, UCLA 53. Houston (@godins): Otega Oweh, G, Kentucky 54. Golden State (@stickdog): Richie Saunders, G, BYU 55. New York (@Billy Dat): Nick Townsend, F, Yale 56. Chicago (@CDu): Jaden Henley, G, Grand Canyon 57. Atlanta (@JasonEvans): Tyler Nickel, G/F, Vanderbilt 58. New Orleans (@pcal6vb): Tobe Awaka, F, Arizona 59. Minnesota (@pokeresq defaults, now @AGDukesky): Izaiyah Nelson, F, South Florida 60. Washington (@coldriver10): Keyshawn Hall, F, Auburn
EAST RUTHERFORD, NEW JERSEY - JUNE 16: New York Knicks NBA Champions Deuce McBride, Mikal Bridges and OG Anunoby attend the FIFA World Cup 2026 Group I match between France and Senegal at New York New Jersey Stadium on June 16, 2026 in East Rutherford, United States. (Photo by Jean Catuffe/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The New York Knicks are so good that they attended France’s World Cup game on Tuesday…
…and got a louder ovation than anyone kicking rocks on the turf of MetLife New York New Jersey Stadium.
Here’s a very mixed-up Bulletin as we keep waiting for the most anticipated parade ever.
“It was so amazing to see how this win healed so many people in New York, fan-wise and even to the alumni, and Patrick. When I hugged Patrick, it was like he finally was able to exhale and see a trophy in a Knicks jersey.”
On seeing Ewing with the trophy:
“To finally be able to see that Larry O’Brien in [Ewing’s] hands and not in Michael Jordan’s and all these other people’s hands, I mean, there was just so much healing that I was stunned. I didn’t realize how impactful it really is, and I still honestly don’t think I understand the true magnitude of what we’ve done.”
On the many generations of Knicks fans enjoying this championship:
“You never realize a little kid watched the Knicks play, win a championship with his father, and now he’s the one with his son celebrating the same moment that him and his father.”
On the Knicks’ resilience being key for the title win:
“I think it’s also not just the culture of our team, but the culture of New York City. When you live here in New York City, you have to understand that with a lot of things that happen, and the tides will change quickly. So, for us, just to continue to stay focused, stay disciplined, and continue to appreciate.”
On the Knicks leaving no question unanswered this postseason:
“To win, it’s so difficult just to make it to the conference finals, but it’s a whole another level of difficulty to win the conference final, and then obviously when you’re in the finals, it’s even another level. I just learned a lot about our team, learned a lot about ourselves. There were always questions about all of us, whether our character, our personality, or if we had the mental strength to actually make it happen. I think we answered.”
On his teammates’ contributions through the championship run:
“I could go down the list from everybody on the team. Everyone has such a big part in this season’s success.”
On the title being a healing experience:
“What was so special about this — and I didn’t realize this until after the win — was how much healing that win would do for all of New York City, from the fans to the alumni to even for us as the players in our personal lives. It was a healing experience.”
On James Dolan’s pre-playoff speech:
“I knew the team that [Dolan] was telling that to would hear it because we were all on our first opportunity at an NBA championship, especially after last year, when we didn’t get to see the NBA Finals.”
On confidence and criticism:
“I never needed people’s vindication to feel good about myself. My confidence is built in the work. My confidence is built in the gym in the long hours that no one can see.”
On who the real Knicks celebs are:
“In my mind, the real celebrities are the ones in the 200’s and the nosebleeds.”
🚨 Highlight of the Night 🚨
Throwback to the blockbuster trade that sent Stephon Marbury to the Knicks.
“Even the guys that like don’t like soccer, like they’re watching too, and they’re like enjoying it because like I think as competitors and athletes, you see how hard they’re playing, and then you start seeing the atmosphere, and it’s a beautiful game too, and I think we just appreciate that.”
“We changed coaches at the end of last season because we believed that you, the players, and the rest of the organization, needed to be heard. Needed to work together. Needed to be heard. Not just led or dictated to.
“And Coach Thibs was a great coach. Brilliant. But we thought you needed a coach that would pull you together. That would have you playing as a team. And although that’s not been perfect, we believe that together, a joint effort, would be better. Would give us a shot at winning a championship — rather than relying on one person’s opinion.
“And that’s the team we have now. We believe that instead of relying on the coach that you would discipline each other, that you talk to each other, that you would figure out how to play together with each other. And that was stronger than just hearing that from one voice.”
The kind of beautiful unity that makes you want to drive a warship through land-locked Times Square?
— Pablo Torre Finds Out (@pablofindsout) June 16, 2026
Mike Breen
On the Knicks and their fans:
“It’s a team that pretty much the entire city gets behind and it’s a team that has struggled for so long. But the fans never went away even in the rough years and there were many rough years as we all know so to go from that and stick with them through thick and through thin and see not only a team that have success but a team that that is such representative of the city and the kind of people that you want they’re such high character individuals they’re all about the team the way they carry themselves that’s a big part of it as well and then when you have your star player be the kind of young man that Jalen Brunson is from a player to his toughness to his will of never giving up to overcoming all the yeah he’s good but stuff that’s an important factor as well.”
On Jalen Brunson’s coachability:
“I said this the other day and it might sound a little corny but Brunson has all these these different characteristics that you want in your star player, that you want in your franchise player. One that that sometimes goes underrated he’s extremely coachable. Even at this level, he’s extremely coachable and that’s huge for a team to come together because if if the rest of the team sees okay this guy’s taken some some guff from the coach and and the coach gets on him not just the head coach but of course the assistant namely one Rick Brunson yes then then we can do it too so you put it all together and it just it becomes something really magical and that’s that’s what we always hope for that’s the long long-term dream when we start rooting for a team to have a team like this.”
“I know they waited 53 years. I think they might have a little bit more pent-up excitement. But in terms of pride, no one could be more proud of their guys than we all are at Villanova, than I am.”
On Brunson, Hart and Bridges:
“They did the same thing in Villanova. They’re really unique young men. And I just sat back and watched on this one. I feel like a proud papa.”
“First of all, he’s a great guy. He has a winner mentality that makes him different from other players. We talk all the time. We talked before the last game. I said you’ve got one more, and of course, after he won, I congratulated him on the title.”
Nerlens Noel on IG: "Happy for all the Knicks Fans! What a time it was to play there and now see 'We Here' come to life with this group! Congrats!"
“Congratulations Lil Big Man!! If you think you can, you’re right. If you think you can’t, you’re right.”
Mark Cuban
On why he let Jalen Brunson leave Dallas:
“It was really, really simple. We didn’t see JB, as what he would become.”
On Brunson’s development not fitting the Mavs timeline:
“He showed that star potential when Luka [Doncic] got hurt, and he won those games against Utah for us, but we were trying to get a star to put next to Luka, and JB’s star had not risen yet.”
On the Spurs’ decision not to shake hands after the Finals loss:
“People get mad at athletes when they don’t shake hands. You go back, and you start like the 2000s back. Nobody shake hand. We didn’t care. We lost, we don’t want to talk to you. People like, ‘Well, that’s just not sportsmanly.’ Dude, I am mad in the moment that I got my a** whooped. I ain’t trying to be friends with nobody who kicked my a**. So, I don’t understand when everybody that’s never played a sport gets so upset. ‘Oh, you didn’t shake my hand.’ I just lost. I don’t want to talk right now. That’s even after games. They tell us in the locker room to take a minute before you speak because you don’t want to speak out of anger. And so, when guys shake hands, I’m cool if they don’t shake hands. I’m cool they do shake. But me, I ain’t shake your hand. I’m mad. I walked off the court.”
“They walked off. That was disappointing. Bit disappointing. The reason it was disappointing is because when you go mano a mano, toe to toe, blow for blow with a team, and they get the better of you, those that become champions, look them in their eyes and say, ‘Respect, congratulations, well deserved.’ And then you go to the locker room.”
On how champions handle defeat:
“That’s what those that become champions do. If you leave the court and you don’t look me in my face and I just beat you, I actually know that I own you forever because you couldn’t even look me in the face. And so to see them walk off the court, it was disheartening. I’ll blame it on youth. I’ll blame it on lacking the leader to show them that, ‘Hey, this is what you do, not walk off.’ I blame it on that.”
“The lesson is, you can’t buy a championship. You can’t waltz, you can’t get lucky. You’ve got to earn your way to a championship.”
On James Dolan’s apology to NYK fans:
“And it’s just like when we won, Mr. [James] Dolan gave that speech where he was like, ‘I’m sorry, New York, I was trying,’ you know, ‘I’m sorry it took so long to win this chip.’ That’s how hard it is to be a champion. You’ve got to beat the very, very best.”
On Knicks fans traveling during the playoffs:
“But I want to thank everybody, man, for fighting hard — and the fans, man, we went out there. We went to Cleveland. We went to Atlanta. We went to San Antonio. I mean, by the thousands. There was so many New York fans all over. I like to think we willed them some way or another. We willed them. Like, whenever they had doubts, or whenever it was down, we was like, yeah, let’s go.”
On the celebrations in New York:
“These scenes in New York City will never get replaced.”
"As a professional, you gotta shake hands. … You gotta man up."
Cam'ron weighed in on Wemby not shaking hands at the end of the NBA Finals on First Take 🏀 pic.twitter.com/HnTfekzTkk
On where OG’s tip-in ranks in New York sports history:
“I’m No. 1. I’ll let everybody else argue. I would give him No. 2 because I’m a Knicks fan, it’s not even a shadow of a doubt. It’s No. 2 for me. The argument for me is it’s the Super Bowl, undefeated Patriots. What makes OG No. 2 is you talk about the drought the Knicks had been in. That’s what makes this massively over other moments. It’s a stand-alone reality, what basketball means to New York City, what the Knicks mean to New York City.”
On comparing the two iconic moments:
“When you’re talking about football and beating an undefeated Patriots team that’s still looked at as a top 10 NFL team of all time, there’s probably more narratives in our Super Bowl.”
On OG Anunoby’s legacy:
“Yes, absolutely, the scale of which, I don’t know, he’s got a good amount of basketball in front of him. He’s earned that, especially in relation to what the Knicks mean to New York City. He has earned his lore, he has earned his folklore.”
On Brunson and Anunoby’s roles:
“Brunson is the Eli of the story and OG is the Tyree of the story.”
“I think that’s a special thing, to see the energy and just how devoted the fans are to the team and the city.”
On the added motivation:
“It gives us a little bit of added motivation. We’re motivated already, but, man, just watching those guys win that championship, it has to do something for you as a competitor.”
On New York City’s title celebrations:
“Just seeing just the energy of the city and how the fans are just so happy and excited, to have those bragging rights to be the NBA champion and for that to be at home in New York, I think that’s a special thing, to see the energy and just how devoted the fans are to the team and to the city.”
On the impact of the championship on the Jets:
“It gives us a little bit of added motivation. We’re motivated already, but man, just watching those guys win their championship, it’s gotta do something to you as a competitor.”
“I went to eat wings with Tyler the other day in the city — we were watching UFC fights — and I congratulated him and I’m like, ‘I can’t wait to have that feeling.’”
On positive jealousy:
“So there’s definitely positive jealousy because I want my team to be able to do that as well.”
On seeing the Knicks win:
“I was just talking to some of my boys — it gives you, like, positive jealousy.”
On Mikal Bridges and Tyler Kolek:
“It’s like damn, like I’m very cool with Mikal [Bridges], Tyler Kolek, a lot of those guys, so I was just like, ‘Bro, that’s so lit.’”
On wanting the same feeling:
“I went to eat wings with Kolek the other day in the city and we were watching UFC fights and I congratulated him and I’m just like, ‘I can’t wait to have that feeling.’ So definitely positive jealousy ’cause it’s like I want my team to be able to do that as well. It’s definitely very cool to see.”
On attending Game 5:
“It was crazy. Most of the arena was Knicks fans anyway so I had a suite with some of my boys. I got to chill with Jaxson Dart so me and him got really well acquainted and now we’re really cool, super cool dude. We were there just as fans of another New York team and just cheering the guys on, and after the game went and dapped everybody up.”
Jalen Brunson left a short message on this trading card 👀
On handing out free tickets to the championship parade:
“From packed watch parties in our parks to joyous celebrations that spilled out onto our streets, this championship belongs to New York City. The Knicks brought together New Yorkers from every borough and every walk of life. That’s why we’re making these tickets free and accessible — so working-class people have a chance to be part of this historic moment and celebrate the team that brought a championship home.”
On the Knicks’ meaning to New York City:
“The Knicks belong to New York City. And this championship belongs to the people who waited 53 years for it.”