Honor Huff leads West Virginia's rally to 59-54 win over Cincinnati

CINCINNATI (AP) — Honor Huff scored 16 points, all in the second half, and dished six assists as West Virginia rallied from a double-digit deficit to defeat Cincinnati, 59-54 on Thursday night.

Huff scored 11 points in a row amid a 16-2 rally midway through the second half that gave the Mountaineers (15-8, 6-4 Big 12) a 42-40 edge. He also made two free throws down the stretch to keep WVU in the lead, and was 5-for-11 from the field and 3-for-8 from deep.

The Mountaineers also got contributions from DJ Thomas (14 points, 4-for-6 shooting) and Brenen Lorient (11 points, 5-for-7). Harlan Obioha led his team with six rebounds, and Treysen Eaglestaff hauled in five.

The Bearcats (11-12, 3-7) began the game on a 14-2 run and led 30-20 heading into halftime. Jizzle James led with 18 points on 7-for-16 shooting (4-for-6 from deep), and Baba Miller added 15 points on 5-for-9 shooting.

WVU struggled from deep, not making a three-pointer until Huff made three straight threes in the second half, shooting 29% overall from beyond the arc.

Huff's three made three-pointers move him into a tie for third in the nation in three-pointers made with 81.

Up next

West Virginia hosts No. 13 Texas Tech on Sunday.

Cincinnati hosts UCF on Sunday.

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Spearman scores 23 in No. 19 Tennessee women's 82-77 OT win over Georgia

ATHENS, Ga. (AP) — Zee Spearman scored 23 points, and Mia Pauldo added 21 for No. 19 Tennessee in an 82-77 overtime win over Georgia on Thursday night.

Talaysia Cooper scored 16 points before fouling out in the extra period. Janiah Barker added nine points and 13 rebounds for the Volunteers (15-5, 7-1 Southeastern Conference).

Dani Carnegie was fouled behind the 3-point arc with five seconds left on the clock, sending her to the line to shoot three attempts for Georgia (18-5, 4-5) She sank all three to tie the game and send it to overtime.

Tennessee started overtime on a 5-0 run to jump ahead. Pauldo scored the final baskets of the game from the free-throw line. She shot 5 of 14 from the field and 9 of 10 from the line.

Carnegie led the Bulldogs in scoring, with 25 points before fouling out in overtime. Rylie Theuerkauf added 15, and Mia Woolfolk scored 14, all in the fourth quarter.

Up next

Tennessee: Visits No. 3. South Carolina on Sunday.

Georgia: Visits Missouri on Sunday.

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Koby Altman clarifies why Cavs didn’t get under the second apron

CLEVELAND, OH - SEPTEMBER 16: Koby Altman speaks during a press conference announcing a WNBA franchise in Cleveland on September 16, 2025 at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse 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. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Brian Kolin/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers will finish this season above the second apron. They made moves — like sending away Lonzo Ball and two second-round picks — that helped them closer to ducking below that threshold. They were just under $3.9 million away from getting out of it going into deadline day, but they weren’t able to make any moves to fully get below the second apron.

The Cavs should be able to get under the second apron during the summer. Doing so would open up avenues for them to aggregate contracts in possible trades. However, some issues come with not getting out of the second apron now.

For one, the Cavs aren’t able to trade a first-round pick seven years out now because they will finish the season in the second apron. And, they will need to be out of the second apron for three of the next four seasons to unfreeze what would be the 2032 first-round pick and trade it. Additionally, that pick moves to the back of the first round until it’s unfrozen.

It’s worth noting that the Stepien rule essentially froze the ‘32 pick anyway, but that’s a longer discussion that may not be germane to this conversation.

In the end, dealing Ball and saving money on the De’Andre Hunter trade merely cut luxury tax payments for the ownership group and made things easier to manage next offseason.

According to Koby Altman, that’s okay. The team didn’t want to make a move to get out of the second apron that hurt this current team.

“At the end of the day, for us to get under the second apron, we would’ve had to lose a rotational piece right now,” Altman said. “That was hard for us to do. Let’s make this run. … What gives us the best chance to win? And it’s certainly not trading a rotational player at the deadline. So we’ll address that in the summer. Sure, we got close, but I still think it was a really, really successful trade deadline for us.”

All of the Cavs’ moves this deadline were to improve the current team. Undercutting those decisions by getting rid of a rotation player just to get under the second apron wouldn’t have made sense. At the same time, there’s reprucutions for not being able to shed a little more salary. And they’ll be feeling those effects down the road.

Harris notches double-double as No. 25 North Carolina women take down Clemson 53-44

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) — Nyla Harris notched a double-double to lead No. 25 North Carolina 53-44 over Clemson on Thursday.

Harris scored 17 on 7-of-13 shooting with 10 rebounds and two steals. It was her fourth double-double of the season for the Tar Heels (19-5, 8-3 Atlantic Coast Conference). Lanie Grant added 16 points, going 6 of 10 from the floor. Indya Nivar added nine points, seven assists and two steals.

Rusne Augustinaite led the Tigers (16-8, 7-5) with 15 points on 5-of-11 shooting.

It’s the sixth consecutive win for the Tar Heels, all in ACC play. It’s their 10th in a row over the Tigers, whose three-game win streak ended.

The Tar Heels dominated the paint with a 32-10 advantage on points in the paint, and a nine-rebound advantage overall.

The Tigers had a 24-22 lead at the half after a 10-2 run over the first seven minutes of the second quarter. The Tar Heels responded with a 13-2 run in the third quarter to build a five-point lead. They built their largest lead in the final minute of the game as it turned into a foul and free throw affair.

Up next

Clemson will host Boston College on Sunday.

North Carolina will face Wake Forest on the road on Sunday. ___

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2026 NBA Trade Deadline Winners, Losers: analysis, recap including James Harden, Anthony Davis deals

The NBA Trade Deadline is in the rear view mirror, and it was wild, both for the trades we did see — James Harden to Cleveland, Anthony Davis to the discount-shopping Wizards — and for the ones we did not. Giannis Antetokounmpo remains in Milwaukee. Ja Morant is still a Grizzly.

Let's break down the winners and losers from a roller coaster week around the NBA.

Winner: James Harden

A month ago, nobody saw a James Harden trade coming, but life moves fast in the NBA. Harden is now in Cleveland, Darius Garland is in Los Angeles with the Clippers along with some good draft picks, and it impacts the race in the East directly.

Out of all that, James Harden is the biggest winner. The Beard wanted two things: 1) To be on a team where he could make a deep run and maybe compete for a ring; 2) Get to a team willing to pay him going forward. He got those things… we think.

Harden goes to a Cleveland team that stumbled out of the gate this season — in large part due to Garland's toe injuries — but had started to find its footing in the East. Cleveland had the No. 1 offense in the NBA a season ago, which had fallen to ninth, but Harden should make the Cavaliers' offense elite again. In part because the Cavaliers struggled when Donovan Mitchell was off the floor, now staggering him and Harden keeps an elite creator on the court at all times. There are concerns about how Harden's isolation-heavy — he runs a higher percentage of iso plays than any lead ball handler in the league this season — will mesh with Mitchell and the Cavaliers' faster tempo and ball movement, but coach Kenny Atkinson said he's not worried, that great players figure out how to make it work.

"The number one thing that stands out is his IQ, his feel for the game," Atkinson said of Harden. "We're "big believers that IQ translates to playoff success."

For the Cavaliers, this was an all-in move — and they needed to make it. While everyone has discussed how Giannis Antetokounmpo can be a free agent in 2027 and the pressure that puts on Milwaukee, Cleveland is in exactly the same place with Mitchell. For the Clippers, it's a realization that the Kawhi Lenard and James Harden era has run its course, and it's better to start pivoting too early rather than too late.

Winner: New York Knicks

New York was a winner on two fronts this trade deadline.

One is that Giannis Antetokounmpo was not traded. The Knicks did not have the draft picks or young players to get a trade done at the deadline, but during the summer they have more picks and more flexibility. Getting Antetokounmpo to Madison Square Garden will still require him to put his thumb on the scale and demand it, but at least the Knicks are still in the race.

They also were a winner by picking up guard Jose Alvarado — the New York native who played his high school ball at Christ the King in Queens comes home. Alvarado is a guy who changes games with his energy off the bench — he could have the kind of impact for the Knicks that TJ McConnell did for the Pacers during their Finals run a year ago. He has that kind of impact with his defense and scoring.

Winner: Milwaukee Bucks

The Milwaukee Bucks do not want to trade Giannis Antetokounmpo. For his part, Antetokounmpo would like to stay in Milwaukee and win there.

"What I want deep down in my heart is I want to be a Milwaukee Buck for the rest of my career and win here," Antetokounmpo said recently in an interview.

By not trading him at the deadline, only good things happen for Milwaukee. First, the Bucks should have a lottery pick in a deep 2026 NBA Draft that they can trade. (Yes, Antetokounmpo said after the deadline he wants to make a playoff push with this team, but he remains out, and this team remains bad.) The Bucks will have up to three first-round picks to trade plus movable salaries such as Kyle Kuzma's — could that be enough to land another star player or two, which convinces Antetokounmpo to stay? It's what has happened in the past: the Bucks traded for Jrue Holiday once and for Damian Lillard another time — and Antetokounmpo signed an extension and stayed in Milwaukee both times. The Bucks will try to go this route.

If that fails and Milwaukee has to trade Antetokounmpo, the offers during the summer — which suitors like the Knicks, Lakers and Heat will have more picks and more flexibility — will be better than the ones they deemed insufficient at the deadline.

Loser: Nico Harrison, Luka Doncic trade

This feels like beating a dead horse, but we're going to do it anyway. Because it's so stunningly bad. We had deemed the Luka Dončić trade a loser when it happened, but this trade deadline cemented its legacy as one of the worst trades in NBA history.

For the record, the Mavericks ultimately traded one of the top five players in the world entering his prime for Max Christie, three first-round picks (with all three likely being in the 20s at best), three second-round picks, and about $50 million in cap space. That's it.

This is not a reflection on the current Dallas front office, which did what it had to do to clean up Nico Harrison's mess with this salary dump trade, getting the team out of the luxury tax and clearing the books to retool around Cooper Flagg. Still, now that Anthony Davis is traded, we couldn't just let this go.

Winner: Nikola Vucevic

Nikola Vucevic is a rock-solid 15-year pro, a two-time All-Star at the center spot who can score in the paint or knock down 3-pointers. But over those 15 years, he has made the playoffs just four times, has never gotten past the first round, and has played in just 16 total games.

Which is why it's good to see him traded to Boston, where he will not just get meaningful minutes but also meaningful playoff minutes. Whether Jayson Tatum returns or not, this Celtics team — with its ability to score behind a brilliant season from Jaylen Brown and its barrage of 3-pointers — is a threat to beat anyone. Vucevic could find himself in the biggest games of his life. He's a free agent after this season, and if he's willing to sign at the right price, he could be back in Boston next year.

He deserves it. I can't wait to see it.

Loser: Sacramento Kings

What is the plan in Sacramento, exactly?

Domantas Sabonis, Zach LaVine and DeMar DeRozan — three veterans that the Kings have talked about trading for more than a year — are still on the roster. While the Kings did find a trade for Keon Ellis, the guys they need to trade — even if it's just a salary dump — are still on the roster. Make it make sense.

Winner: Indiana Pacers

Indiana trading for Ivica Zubac from the Clippers sets them up beautifully to bounce back next season when Tyrese Haliburton is healthy again following his torn Achilles. While the price was a couple of good first-round picks, these are the kind of trades you make when you're a Finals team trying to improve.

Zubac is more of an old-school big compared to Myles Turner (who was there for the Finals run then left in free agency), but he sets some of the best picks in the league, is great on the roll or ducking-in on sets, and he is a much better defender (a big who knows how to use that size to clog the lane). Zubac is averaging 14.4 points and 11 rebounds per game this season, numbers slightly down from last season, but a key factor is that other teams have focused more on slowing him (especially before Kawhi Leonard got healthy).

Indiana got better with this trade.

(About those picks: One is the Pacers 2026 first-round pick, but protected 1-4 and 10-30 — meaning if it's 5-9, the Clippers get it now. Indiana is tanking hard this season. They have the third-worst record in the NBA, and the Pacers want to keep it that way. We're not going to see a lot of Zubac. If the Pacers can add a top-four pick to this roster, they become that much more dangerous next season.)

Winner: Utah Jazz

This is how you hit the accelerator on the rebuild timeline.

Utah developed a strong young core: Point guard Keyonte George; a coveted big man in Walker Kessler (who they have to re-sign); and last year's No. 5 pick Ace Bailey has put in the work and is finding his rhythm (the game is clearly slowing down for him, and he's had some big nights). They also still had Lauri Markkanen.

Now you add Jaren Jackson Jr. and another high lottery pick next June to this group, and Utah is a team on the rise. There are questions to work out about fit, but Will Hardy is a very good coach, and he's going to have some very talented players next year. (And it is next year, Utah is tanking to keep their top-eight protected pick this season — if it's ninth or higher it goes to OKC — so don't expect Jackson to play that much this year.)

How Knicks' trade for Jose Alvarado happened and what's next for NY

If you’re excited about the Jose Alvarado trade, you should thank Guerschon Yabusele.

Late Wednesday night, the Knicks moved Yabusele to Chicago in exchange for Dalen Terry. On Thursday afternoon, they traded Terry and two second-round picks (a 2026 pick and a 2027 pick) to New Orleans.

Why should Yabusele get a "thank you" for the Alvarado deal?

The power forward worked with the Knicks to amend his contract, removing the $5.8 million 2026-27 player option.

This was a crucial detail in the trade. The Bulls don’t do the deal if they have to take on Yabusele’s $5.8 million player option.

Why would Yabusele leave a guaranteed $5.8 million on the table? He wanted to get on the court.

Yabusele has been out of Mike Brown’s rotation for most of the season.

Barring injury, Yabusele wasn’t going to crack the rotation.

If he kept his player option, Yabusele probably would’ve been stuck in New York* for the rest of the year.

(*No team is trading for an out-of-the-rotation player on the books for $5.8 million in 2026-27. The Knicks would’ve had to attach several second-round draft picks to facilitate a Yabusele deal.)

But Yabusele amended his deal and got what he wanted – a chance to play. Chicago is coming out of the trade deadline with a thin front line. Yabusele should get minutes right away. If he plays well, Yabusele should have plenty of NBA suitors in free agency. He will definitely have overseas suitors.

But let’s get back to the Knicks.

In Terry, New York acquired a player entering restricted free agency. So Terry essentially is on an expiring contract. The Knicks used Terry’s contract to seal the Alvarado trade.

They don’t get Terry’s contract without Yabusele waiving his player option.

So if you liked the Knicks' trade for Alvarado, tip your cap to Guerschon Yabusele.

WHAT’S NEXT 

The Knicks saved some money at the trade deadline. According to Yossi Gozlan of the Third Apron, New York shed around $1 million in its two trades.

That means the Knicks have enough money to sign a free agent. Who will they target? I’m not sure. But it’s worth noting that New York explored the trade market for centers. Maybe they find one in free agency. Maybe they decide to add backcourt depth in the wake of Miles McBride’s injury.

Jan 7, 2026; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks guard Miles McBride (2) reacts after a basket against the LA Clippers during the first half at Madison Square Garden.
Jan 7, 2026; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks guard Miles McBride (2) reacts after a basket against the LA Clippers during the first half at Madison Square Garden. / Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

TOUGH NEWS ON DEUCE

McBride had been out for five consecutive games with ankle soreness. He may be out for the rest of the season with a sports hernia. News of McBride’s sports hernia surgery surprised some of his teammates on Thursday. They now have to move forward without one of their most important players.

The trade for Alvarado was not directly connected to the McBride injury. The Knicks had long targeted Alvarado. I believe the deal was getting done regardless of McBride’s status. Now, Alvarado becomes even more important for the Knicks.

‘OFF’ OFFSEASON

The Knicks' offseason signings have not panned out. Yabusele was traded to Chicago. Jordan Clarkson is outside of Brown’s rotation. As noted above, New York did well in offloading Yabusele. But the signings were a miss for Leon Rose and his front office; that same front office, of course, has helped turn the Knicks into a title contender. In my opinion, they’ve earned the benefit of the doubt. But their performance in free agency last summer was underwhelming. Clarkson is on a minimum contract. He’s a low-risk signing. But the Knicks used significant resources to sign Yabusele.

If Alvarado helps lead New York to the NBA Finals this spring, no one will care about the 2025 offseason. But if New York fails to reach the Finals, the moves made last summer will be scrutinized.

Utah Jazz trade for Boston Celtics center

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - NOVEMBER 01: Chris Boucher #99 of the Boston Celtics reacts after being called for a foul against the Houston Rockets during the second half at the TD Garden on November 01, 2025 in Boston, Massachusetts. 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 Brian Fluharty/Getty Images) | Getty Images

According to Shams Charania, the Utah Jazz traded for Chris Boucher of the Boston Celtics.

It was a move with many moving parts that leaked out slowly after it was done. The first, Utah is apparently waiving Chris Boucher.

To make the deal happen, the Jazz sent Boston John Tonje to make everything work.

Why would Utah do this? In the deal, the Jazz were able to pick up the Denver Nuggets’ 2027 second-round pick.

It’s a small move, but a smart one. Utah picks up a trade asset, albeit a small one, for a player who was on the Salt Lake City Stars all season. They make the deal happen because it helps the Celtics with salary cap issues. These are moves that are easy to forget, but they are signs of a front office that is doing its homework and making sure it maximizes all of its assets.

Here’s the new-look Pistons roster after the 2026 NBA trade deadline

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - JANUARY 30: Duncan Robinson #55 and Cade Cunningham #2 of the Detroit Pistons reacts after Robinson made a three-point shot against the Golden State Warriors in the first hald at Chase Center on January 30, 2026 in San Francisco, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Detroit Pistons did exactly what they projected they would do for months — they decided to forgo a big swing that would cost major assets and instead worked on the edges of the roster to ensure that they were shoring up the biggest weakness on the team — shooting.

They didn’t add Michael Porter Jr., they didn’t make a big swing for Kawhi Leonard at the last minute, and they didn’t move any young core players or the big-salaried locker room presence of Tobias Harris. Instead, they gave one player no longer part of the future a fresh start and added a wing with some size who has historically, but not recently, shown that he can hit perimeter shots.

Here’s a summary of where things stand for the team after the NBA trade deadline:

The players the Pistons acquired:

  • Kevin Huerter
  • Dario Saric (likely to be waived)
  • 2026 Pick Swap with the Minnesota Timberwolves (top-19 protected)

The picks and players the Pistons sent out:

  • Jaden Ivey

What it Means

Jaden Ivey is entering restricted free agency and no longer part of the Pistons’ plans. The writing was on the wall, and he wanted out so he could land somewhere with steady minutes and more offensive responsibility as he looks to get healthy and re-establish himself as a quality young player in the NBA.

He is being replaced by Kevin Huerter, a 6-foot-6 wing who has three inches on Ivey and is a 37% 3-point shooter. He’s struggled mightily this season (31%) and last, but he shoots at volume and will likely be more respected by defenses as a perimeter shooter than Ivey would have been.

The Pistons needed to add some size and stretch to the roster, and Huerter checks those boxes. But he needs to hit his shots, and he needs to shoot at volume. Having a second shooter to play alongside Duncan Robinson or to replace Robinson if you need a slightly better defender without losing the shooting threat.

The new, full Pistons roster

  1. Cade Cunningham
  2. Duncan Robinson
  3. Ausar Thompson
  4. Tobias Harris
  5. Jalen Duren
  6. Isaiah Stewart
  7. Ron Holland
  8. Kevin Huerter
  9. Javonte Green
  10. Daniss Jenkins (two-way)
  11. Caris LeVert
  12. Paul Reed
  13. Marcus Sasser
  14. Chaz Lanier
  15. Bobi Klintman
  16. Dario Saric
  17. Tolu Smith (two-way)
  18. Wendell Moore (two-way)

Though nothing is official yet, in the next day or so, the Pistons are expected to waive Dario Saric to create the roster room necessary to sign Daniss Jenkins to a standard NBA contract.

Pistons draft picks remaining

  • 2026 1st (best of Minnesota Timberwolves or Detroit Pistons if Minnesota picks lands between 20-30).
  • 2027 1st
  • 2028 1st
  • 2029 1st
  • 2030 1st
  • 2031 1st
  • 2032 1st

The Pistons also own 15 future second-round picks between 2026-32.

Should the Pistons look for additional help in the buyout market?

The Pistons’ roster is full so adding any additional players would require releasing someone already on the roster. That would likely mean letting go of a developmental player such as Bobi Klintman, rookie Chaz Lanier, or Marcus Sasser, who is buried on the depth chart.

Game Preview #53 – Timberwolves vs. Pelicans

NEW ORLEANS, LA - DECEMBER 4: Anthony Edwards #5 of the Minnesota Timberwolves drives to the basket during the game against the New Orleans Pelicans on December 4, 2025 at the Smoothie King Center in New Orleans, Louisiana. 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 2025 NBAE (Photo by Layne Murdoch Jr./NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Minnesota Timberwolves vs. New Orleans Pelicans
Date: February 6th, 2026
Time: 7:00 PM CST
Location: Target Center
Television Coverage: FanDuel Sports Network – North
Radio Coverage: KFAN FM, Wolves App, iHeart Radio

With the trade deadline officially in the rearview mirror, we can finally stop living in the “refresh the webpage“ portion of the season and look at what the Timberwolves actually are for the stretch run.

And the answer is: they’re the same Wolves we’ve been watching all year, only now with one important twist. The Giannis-to-Minnesota smoke? No fire. No blockbuster. No franchise-altering earthquake. Instead, Tim Connelly went with the kind of move you make when you believe your roster is good enough to win in May and you’re just trying to sand down the one spot that keeps making the chair wobble.

So: out goes Mike Conley Jr., shipped to Chicago for cash considerations in an ending that’s a little sad, a little cold, and also kind of inevitable for a veteran whose role had already shifted this season. Then the bigger practical move: the Wolves send Rob Dillingham, Leonard Miller, and some second-round picks to the Bulls for Ayo Dosunmu and Julian Phillips. Not sexy. Not headline-grabbing. But it’s a real, adult trade deadline decision: add a functional ball-handler who can actually survive minutes in a playoff game.

And then, almost like the basketball gods were testing whether Minnesota could handle a week without spiraling, this team finally did the thing that’s been haunting them for more than two decades: they won in Toronto.

Twenty-two years. A curse that was old enough to buy a drink and play craps in Vegas.

And of course it didn’t come easy. It wasn’t a clean wire-to-wire “take care of business” win. It was Minnesota doing the Minnesota thing: sloppy stretches, casual defense, the deficit ballooning to 18 in the third quarter, the team treating the first 36 minutes like a scrimmage and then trying to win the game in the last 12.

But then the fourth quarter arrived, the screws finally tightened, and the Wolves actually guarded. Anthony Edwards threw on the hero cape, made the big plays, and Minnesota stole the game on the Raptors’ home floor. And afterwards Ant dropped the kind of quote that’s going to live in Wolves lore forever: Minnesota hadn’t won north of the border since Bruce Lee died. Which is both completely unhinged and also… kind of perfect? That’s the exact tone of a franchise trying to exorcise demons.

Which brings us to the next opponent: the Pelicans.

And this is where Wolves fans start making that face. The one where you’re happy, but you’re also bracing for impact. Because the Wolves’ toughest opponent this season hasn’t been OKC or San Antonio or Houston. It’s been the mirror. It’s been the version of themselves that decides effort is optional, that defense is something you can turn on late, that “we’ll figure it out in the fourth” is a personality trait instead of a red flag.

New Orleans is the exact kind of team you can play down to. The exact kind of team you can let hang around. The exact kind of game that becomes dangerous if you treat it like a glorified scrimmage, especially because we’ve already seen this matchup nearly go sideways. The first time these teams met in New Orleans, the Wolves needed overtime to escape. That’s not “easy win.” That’s “you got taken to the brink by a team you’re supposed to handle.”

And so, this game has become a professionalism test. Do the Wolves actually want to climb the standings, or do they want to keep wasting weeks?

And with that question in mind, here are the keys.

#1: Take it seriously from the opening tip, not from the eight-minute mark of the fourth.
The Pelicans are bad enough that Minnesota can beat them while playing a B-minus game… but only if they don’t spend three quarters spotting them confidence. This is where the Wolves have repeatedly gotten themselves in trouble: they play with half-energy, they let the other team feel comfortable, and suddenly you’re in a possession game late where randomness can steal it from you. Minnesota needs to come out like a team that just learned a hard lesson in Memphis and Toronto. They need to win the 50–50 balls, get to rebounds like they matter, and play like they understand that there’s no such thing as a “quality loss” out West. If the Wolves set the tone early, New Orleans doesn’t have the horsepower to keep up.

#2: The perimeter defense has to show up.
It’s incredible how different this team looks when the guards and wings actually treat point-of-attack defense like a job requirement. When Donte, Jaden, and Jaylen Clark are hunting, getting into bodies, cutting off lanes, and closing out with urgency, the Wolves become a miserable team to play. When they’re lazy, it turns into the same movie every time: blow-bys, scrambling rotations, Rudy cleaning up messes until he can’t, and a parade to the rim that makes the opponent look better than they are. The Wolves flipped the switch in Toronto’s fourth quarter. Great. Now do it for 48 minutes at home. The Pelicans can’t keep pace unless Minnesota gifts them easy stuff.

#3: Punish them with size.
Gone are the Jonas Valančiūnas days for New Orleans, but don’t mistake that for “no interior threat.” Rookie Derik Queen gave Minnesota problems in the earlier matchups because he played hard, he competed on the glass, and he didn’t act like he was supposed to be impressed by the Wolves’ bigs. Rudy, Julius, and Naz can’t let a rookie outwork them again, not on their floor. This is where Minnesota should be able to build separation: win the rebound battle, create second-chance points, and turn New Orleans’ misses into demoralizing possessions where the Wolves get a putback, then a lob, then another offensive board. The Wolves have the bodies to make this a paint-nightmare for the Pelicans. They have to actually use them.

#4: Keep the ball moving.
This is the trap game trap: you see a lesser opponent, and suddenly everybody wants to “get theirs.” Ant starts hunting highlights. Julius starts trying to bully through three guys. Possessions get sticky. The ball stops. And before you know it, you’ve turned a comfortable game into a grind because you’re playing exactly the kind of isolation basketball that lets an inferior team hang around. The Wolves need to push pace, and keep the offense from devolving into “my turn, your turn.” Make the Pelicans guard multiple actions. Let the open threes come from movement, not from heat-check ego.

#5: Be professionals, because the schedule is finally giving you oxygen, and you can’t waste it.
This is the broader point. February has been set up pretty nicely for Minnesota. The deadline drama is over. The roster is what it is. The standings are tight enough that a two-week heater changes your life. But the Wolves have to stop acting like the season is something they can turn on whenever they feel like it. This game at Target Center against one of the weaker teams in the conference is exactly the kind of win a serious team banks without drama. And it starts with Ant and Randle setting the tone. If they come out locked in, everyone follows. If they come out casual, everyone follows that too. That’s what leadership is, for better or worse.

And here’s the thing: nobody’s coming to save them now. No Giannis cavalry. No deadline miracle. No external fix. The trade smoke is gone, the reality is here, and the reality is this roster has enough talent to make a real run.

But talent doesn’t win games by itself, not for this team. Not in this conference. Not with this many standings landmines.

So beat the Pelicans. Take the points. Stack the win. Keep climbing. Because if Minnesota is serious about turning Toronto into a turning point instead of a fun trivia answer, it starts with the simplest, least glamorous thing in the NBA:

Show up at home. Play hard. Do your job.

Here’s the new-look Jazz roster after the 2026 NBA trade deadline

SALT LAKE CITY, UT - JUNE 2: Jaren Jackson Jr. #13 of the Memphis Grizzlies looks on during Round 1, Game 5 of the 2021 NBA Playoffs on June 2, 2021 at vivint.SmartHome Arena 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. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2021 NBAE (Photo by Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

It’s been a much more interesting NBA Trade Deadline than Utah Jazz fans ever expected. The trade for Jaren Jackson Jr. has signaled a clear shift toward a more winning focus next season.

Here’s a summary of where things stand for the team after the NBA trade deadline:

The players and picks the Jazz acquired:

  • Jaren Jackson Jr.
  • Vince Williams Jr.
  • John Konchar
  • Jock Landale (traded)
  • Lonzo Ball (waived)
  • Chris Boucher (waived)
  • 2028 Cleveland Cavaliers second-round pick
  • 2032 Cleveland Cavaliers second-round pick
  • Cash considerations (from the Thunder for rights to Balsa Koprivica)

The picks and players the Jazz sent out:

  • 2027 most favorable first-round pick of Cleveland/Minnesota/Utah. Jazz will keep the second most favorable
  • 2027 Los Angeles Lakers first-round pick (top-4 protected)
  • 2031 Phoenix Suns first-round pick (unprotected)
  • Walter Clayton Jr.
  • Taylor Hendricks
  • Kyle Anderson
  • Georges Niang
  • John Tonje
  • Jock Landale (traded to Atlanta for cash considerations)
  • Lonzo Ball (waived)
  • Chris Boucher (waived)

The new, full Jazz roster

  1. Keyonte George
  2. Jaren Jackson Jr.
  3. Lauri Markkanen
  4. Ace Bailey
  5. Walker Kessler
  6. Cody Williams
  7. Isaiah Collier
  8. Vince Williams Jr.
  9. John Konchar
  10. Kyle Filipowski
  11. Brice Sensabaugh
  12. Svi Mykhailiuk
  13. Jusuf Nurkic
  14. Kevin Love
  15. Elijah Harkless (two-way)
  16. Oscar Tshiebwe (two-way)

Jazz draft picks remaining

  • 2026 own first-round pick (top-8 protected. If outside of top-8, goes to Thunder)
  • 2027 second most favorable first-round pick between Cleveland/Minnesota/Utah, the other goes to Phoenix
  • 2028 own first-round pick or swap with Cleveland if more favorable
  • 2029 own first-round pick + most favorable between Cleveland/Minnesota if the Minnesota pick is from 6-30, the least favorable of the three goes to the Charlotte Hornets. If the Minnesota pick is 1-5, Utah gets the most favorable of their pick and the Cleveland Cavaliers’ pick. The other goes to the Charlotte Hornets.
  • 2030 own first-round pick
  • 2031 own first-round pick
  • 2032 own first-round pick

How well did the Jazz do this trade deadline? Let your voice be heard in the comments.

Here are some other things to consider…

Should the Jazz target anyone in the buyout market?

What does a contract for Walker Kessler look like this summer?

Which addition are you most excited about?

Pistons vs Wizards Discussion: Game Time, TV, Odds, and More

INDIANAPOLIS, IN - JANUARY 28: Kevin Huerter #13 of Chicago Bulls arrives to the arena before the game against the Indiana Pacers on January 28, 2026 at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana. 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 Ron Hoskins/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Detroit Pistons made one move near the trade deadline — adding Kevin Huerter for Jaden Ivey — but you could say they were one of the least aggressive teams in the Eastern Conference. You certainly can’t say the same about the Washington Wizards, who have traded for Trae Young and Anthony Davis in the past month. Of course, neither of those players is expected to play much, if at all, this season, as Washington spends one more season tanking before taking basketball seriously again. The Pistons will at least get to see Huerter suit up, and hopefully, he starts hitting 3s at a rate akin to his years with Atlanta. Detroit certainly needs him to. The Wizards are losing, and they don’t want to win, so let’s hope Detroit makes quick work of them tonight. They will have to do it without Tobias Harris, who is sitting out to rest an ailing hip. It’s almost like Detroit maybe should have traded for a legit backup power forward. Alas.

Game Vitals

When: 7 p.m. ET
Where: Little Caesars Arena, Detroit, Michigan
Watch: FanDuel Sports Network Detroit
Odds: Pistons -14.5

Projected Lineups

Detroit Pistons (37-12)

Cade Cunningham, Duncan Robinson, Ausar Thompson, Isaiah Stewart, Jalen Duren

Washington Wizards (13-36)

Bub Carrington, Bilal Coulibaly, Kyshawn George, Justin Champagnie, Alex Sarr

Hornets Fly Into Houston

Get Well Soon. (Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Houston Rockets VS Boston Celtics

February 5th, 2026

Location: Toyota Center — Houston, Texas

TV: SCHN

Radio:KBME Sports Talk 790

Online: Rockets App, SCHN+

Time: 7:00 PM CST

Projected Starting Lineups

Houston:

Amen Thompson

Josh Okogie

Kevin Durant

Jabari Smith Jr.

Alperen Sengun

Charlotte:

LaMelo Ball

Kon Kneupple

Brandon Miller

Miles Bridges

Moussa Diabate

Here’s the new-look Bucks roster after the 2026 NBA trade deadline

SACRAMENTO, CA - JANUARY 4: Jericho Sims #00, Andre Jackson Jr. #44, Giannis Antetokounmpo #34, Thanasis Antetokounmpo #43, and Kevin Porter Jr. #7 of the Milwaukee Bucks stand for the national anthem prior to the game against the Sacramento Kings on January 4, 2026 at Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Rocky Widner/NBAE via Getty Images)

“Reports of my death are greatly exaggerated” is the phrase Jon Horst must be saying after all the rage bait from the national media desperately begging the Milwaukee Bucks to trade Giannis Antetokounmpo. But the Bucks have gotten through the trade deadline with they’re superstar still in Milwaukee and a few new faces.

Here’s a summary of where things stand for the team after the NBA trade deadline:

The players the Bucks acquired:

The picks and players the Bucks sent out:

  • Cole Anthony
  • Amir Coffey

The new, full Bucks roster

  1. Giannis Antetokounmpo
  2. Thanasis Antetokounmpo
  3. Alex Antetokounmpo
  4. Ousmane Dieng
  5. AJ Green
  6. Gary Harris
  7. Nigel Hayes-Davis
  8. Andre Jackson Jr.
  9. Kyle Kuzma
  10. Pete Nance
  11. Kevin Porter Jr.
  12. Bobby Portis
  13. Taurean Prince
  14. Ryan Rollins
  15. Jericho Sims
  16. Gary Trent Jr.
  17. Myles Turner

Bucks draft picks remaining

  • 2026 first (will receive the less favorable of their pick and the Pelicans’)
  • 2026 second from Utah (only if pick 55 or later)
  • 2028 first (will receive the less favorable between theirs, Portland’s, and Washington’s)
  • 2030 first (will receive least favorable between theirs and Portland’s)
  • 2031 first
  • 2032 first

Now that the cloud of Giannis departure rumors is gone for the rest of the season, it will be interesting to see what the Bucks do for the remainder of the season. Do you believe they push for a playoff spot or try to improve their draft lottery odds?

SEC commissioner Greg Sankey sides with NCAA in Charles Bediako eligibility case

Charles Bediako has a new and notable adversary in his ongoing fight to retain his college eligibility and continue to compete for the Alabama men’s basketball team.

In an NCAA affidavit filed on Thursday, Feb. 5 in Tuscaloosa County (Alabama) Circuit Court, SEC commissioner Greg Sankey asked the court to side with the NCAA’s eligibility rules and rule against Bediako.

“I respectfully ask the Court to uphold the NCAA eligibility rules challenged in this case, which are essential to the integrity of college sports, to the educational mission they serve, and to the opportunities they provide for current and future student-athletes,” Sankey wrote in the affidavit.

After playing 82 games across three seasons in the G League, Bediako, who played for Alabama from 2021-23, was granted a temporary restraining order against the NCAA on Jan. 21 by Judge James Roberts Jr. that made him immediately eligible.

Since his legal victory, Bediako has played in four games for the Crimson Tide, averaging 9.5 points, five rebounds and 1.8 blocks per game. Alabama has gone 2-2 in those games, dropping them from the top 25 of the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll.

Roberts, an Alabama donor, has since recused himself from Bediako’s eligibility case. Bediako’s next hearing is scheduled for Friday, Feb. 6, one day before the Crimson Tide play on the road against archrival Auburn. The hearing will be heard by Judge Daniel Pruet.

The NCAA is arguing that Bediako’s multiple professional contracts he signed since leaving Alabama after the 2022-23 season make him ineligible to return to the sport, according to the organization’s longstanding eligibility rules.

Sankey agrees with the NCAA’s stance, writing in the affidavit that the rules are “grounded in the principle that college athletics are reserved for current college athletes who are actively pursuing a degree while also participating in college sports and for future college athletes who seek to benefit from the unique educational, athletic, and leadership opportunities provided through college sports.”

Sankey added that granting Bediako eligibility could “open the door to undermining fundamental principles.”

Bediako’s return to college basketball comes during a period of substantial and rapid change in the sport. The 7-footer is one of several former G League players who have been added to a college roster for this season, though Bediako’s the only one who previously played on a Division I team. Former European professional players have joined teams across the country, as well.

In a message posted on social media, Darren Heitner, one of Bediako's representatives, said the NCAA has contradicted its own rules by granting eligibility to players like Santa Clara's Thierry Darlan and BYU's Abdullah Ahmed, both of whom played in the G League, and Baylor's James Nnaji, who played professionally in Europe and was selected by the Detroit Pistons in the 2023 NBA Draft.

"These waivers demonstrate selective enforcement, undermining Sankey's assertion that inconsistent application fuels disruption," Heitner wrote. "Courts in similar cases have highlighted such inconsistencies as evidence of arbitrary decision-making. Also, Sankey's reliance on outdated principles of amateurism and academic integration is not aligned with the current realities of college athletes and the proliferation of NIL deals."

Heitner added that the affidavit is "littered with conclusory statements that are not tied to specific facts or data."

Bediako has become a source of perpetual controversy since his first game back. Several high-profile coaches have blasted the development, including Michigan State's Tom Izzo, who described it as "utterly ridiculous." During a 100-77 loss at reigning national champion Florida, Gators fans chanted "G League dropout" at him throughout the game.

Sankey’s input to the Bediako case comes as several of his conference’s schools are engaged in high-profile eligibility battles, including Mississippi (with quarterback Trinidad Chambliss) and Tennessee (with quarterback Joey Aguilar).

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: SEC commissioner Greg Sankey sides with NCAA in Charles Bediako eligibility case

Former Indiana high school basketball stars on the move ahead of NBA trade deadline

Trojans big man Trayce Jackson-Davis cuts down his piece of the net after Center Grove won the Johnson County tournament title Monday night at Edinburgh. Dw6h7gxwsaaokdy

Several former Indiana high school boys basketball players were on the move this week with the impending NBA trade deadline on Thursday afternoon.

Few states do a better job of sending talent to the professional ranks than Indiana, so it’s not surprising that so many players found themselves on new teams. It became a bit of a running joke as Thursday wore on, with more and more talent from the Hoosier State popping up in trade news.

Here’s who was moved:

Eric Gordon, North Central High School – Indianapolis

  • From Philadelphia 76ers to Memphis Grizzlies
  • Gordon, who’s been in the NBA since 2008, starred at Indiana for one season under head coach Kelvin Sampson. It’ll be interesting to see where his career goes from here as one of the oldest active players in the league.

Mike Conley Jr., Lawrence North High School – Indianapolis

  • From Minnesota Timberwolves to Charlotte Hornets (waived)
  • Conley starred at Lawrence North alongside Greg Oden before the two took their talents to Ohio State and Thad Matta. Like Gordon, it’ll be interesting to see where Conley goes from here after being waived by the Hornets.

Jaren Jackson Jr., Park Tudor/La Lumiere – Indianapolis/La Porte

  • From Memphis Grizzlies to Utah Jazz
  • Jackson Jr. was sent to the Jazz as the Grizzlies undergo what looks to be a franchise rebuild. With plenty of younger stars in Utah, it’ll be interesting to see how Jackson fits into that mix.

Jaden Ivey, Marian High School/La Lumiere – Mishawaka/La Porte

  • From Detroit Pistons to Memphis Grizzlies
  • Ivey spent two seasons starring at Purdue and developing before being selected in the first round of the 2022 NBA Draft. He’ll look for a fresh start in Chicago as he looks to fit into a rotation that figures to feature plenty of talent in the backcourt.

Trayce Jackson Davis, Center Grove High School – Greenwood

  • From Golden State Warriors to Toronto Raptors
  • Jackson-Davis spent four seasons starring at Indiana before being selected by the Warriors in the second round of the 2023 NBA Draft. He was a rotational piece with Golden State and battled for minutes in the frontcourt, so it’ll be interesting to see what kind of chance he’ll be given with the Raptors.

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