Pistons' Malik Beasley under federal investigation for NBA gambling allegations

Pistons' Malik Beasley under federal investigation for NBA gambling allegations originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Another professional athlete could be in trouble over sports betting.

Detroit Pistons guard Malik Beasley is under investigated by the U.S. District Attorney’s office over gambling allegations for NBA games, ESPN’s Shams Charania first reported Sunday.

“We are cooperating with the federal prosecutors’ investigation,” NBA spokesman Mike Bass said in a statement.

Beasley, 28, is set to be a free agent on Monday after a breakout season with the Pistons. He averaged 16.2 points and didn’t miss a single game for Detroit, which had a drastic turnaround with Beasley leading the second unit.

Over nine NBA seasons since being drafted in 2016, Beasley has played for the Denver Nuggets (2016-20), Minnesota Timberwolves (2020-22), Utah Jazz (2022-23), Los Angeles Lakers (2023), Milwaukee Bucks (2023-24) and Pistons (2024-25). In 2021, he was sentenced to 120 days in jail over a felony charge of threats of violence and was eventually suspended for 12 games by the NBA.

Charania reported that Beasley and the Pistons were in “serious talks” on a three-year, $42 million contract to bring him back to Detroit. Those talks reportedly are on pause as the investigation takes place, but Beasley is free to negotiate with other teams starting Monday at 6 p.m. ET.

“An investigation is not a charge,” Beasley’s attorney Steve Haney told ESPN. “Malik is afforded the same right of the presumption of innocence as anyone else under the U.S. Constitution. As of now he has not been charged with anything.”

The probe into Beasley comes more than a year after Jontay Porter was banned from the NBA over prop bet investigations. He eventually pleaded guilty to committing wire fraud, with sentencing set for this December as prosecutors estimate he could get up to four years in prison.

This past season, Terry Rozier — then of the Charlotte Hornets — was under investigation for activity related to unusual betting patterns surrounding him in a March 2023 game. Now with the Miami Heat, Rozier hasn’t been charged with any crime or faced sanctions from the NBA.

A ban on sports gambling was shot down in 2018, which opened the door for states to legalize betting. Each professional legal has their own set of gambling policies, but there have been several instances of problems across the sports world — from Shohei Ohtani’s interpreter to year-long NFL suspensions.

NBA rumors: Warriors to exercise Quinten Post, Gui Santos team contract options

NBA rumors: Warriors to exercise Quinten Post, Gui Santos team contract options originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Warriors will exercise their team options on former second-round draft picks Quinten Post and Gui Santos for the 2025-26 NBA season, The Athletic’s Anthony Slater reported Sunday, citing a source.

Both Santos and Post found consistent minutes with Golden State this past season, as Santos played more than 13 minutes per game at forward for the Warriors and Post played just over 16 minutes at center.

The Warriors selected Santos in the second round of the 2022 NBA Draft before joining the G League Santa Cruz Warriors. He averaged 14.3 points per game with the developmental team during his two years there.

In 2023-24, Santos split time between Santa Cruz and Golden State before getting a full season with the NBA squad.

The 23-year-old Brazilian played 56 games with the Warriors in 2024-25 and averaged 4.1 points and 3.1 rebounds per game.

Santos will cost the Warriors about $2.2 million in 2025-26 with $225,000 being guaranteed on Sept. 25 and the entirety being guaranteed on Jan. 10, 2026, according to Spotrac.

As for the 7-foot center Post, he also was taken by the Warriors in the second round, but of the 2024 NBA Draft.

The Boston College product played 42 games for Golden State in 2024-25 and made 14 starts while averaging 8.1 points per game and 3.5 rebounds per game.

Post’s ability to stretch the floor was incredibly beneficial for the Warriors as the big man shot better than 40 percent from 3-point range.

The 25-year-old will cost the Warriors $1.9 million this upcoming season.

While the Warriors have some question marks still ahead in NBA free agency, reportedly exercising Santos and Post likely was an easy decision given the cost and the fact that both provided good minutes for coach Steve Kerr’s team last season.

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Report: Oubre exercising his Sixers player option

Report: Oubre exercising his Sixers player option  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Kelly Oubre Jr. has reportedly decided to pick up his Sixers player option.

ESPN’s Shams Charania reported Sunday that Oubre is exercising his option to return to the Sixers for the 2025-26 season. According to Spotrac, his option is for approximately $8.4 million. 

The 29-year-old wing has been a consistent Sixers starter the last two years. He averaged 15.1 points, 6.1 rebounds, 1.8 assists and 1.5 steals in the 2024-25 campaign. Three-point shooting remained a significant weakness for Oubre, who went 29.3 percent beyond the arc.

Sixers head coach Nick Nurse appreciated Oubre’s effort during the Sixers’ dismal, perpetually shorthanded season.

“I think the first thing about Kelly is he’s out there every night playing hard,” Nurse said on Feb. 26. “He’s out there every night competing and playing hard, and that goes a long way, first and foremost. I think he continues … to get to the front of the rim. With or without certain guys, his priority of being a scorer elevates for us. I think he continues to improve at that. I like that part of his game where he’s getting to the front of the rim and finishing. 

“And he competes, man. Nobody can question the effort that he’s giving every single night.”

Oubre missed the Sixers’ final month of the season with a right knee injury but said at his exit interview that he felt “pretty good” and was “just looking forward to this offseason and attacking it head-on.” 

He joins Andre Drummond as a Sixers veteran to exercise his player option in the lead-up to free agency, which officially starts Monday at 6 p.m. ET. 

“At the end of the day, I’m happy,” Oubre said on April 13. “And I feel like I like to finish what I start, and I don’t feel complete.” 

Plaschke: Rob Pelinka and JJ Redick should be safe under Dodgers regime … for now

El Segundo, CA, Monday, June 24, 2024 - Lakers General Manager Rob Pelinka, left, arrives with JJ Redick at the UCLA Health Training Center to introduce the NBA veteran as the team's new head coach. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)
Rob Pelinka, left, the Lakers' general manager and president of basketball operations, and coach JJ Redick will have a new controlling owner in Mark Walter that they will answer to. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

Memo to Mark Walter:

Check your swing.

Now that you’re the majority owner of the Lakers, everyone is expecting you to whack their two most prominent leaders in hopes of transforming the basketball team into your baseball team, but you should instead initially act in terms your Dodgers would understand.

Take a pitch.

Keep Rob Pelinka and JJ Redick in their jobs … for now.

Agreed, this might be a tough call, and certainly there could be temptation to immediately can the two Lakers employees who most epitomize the incestuous decisions that have dragged the once-shining championship organization into dull mediocrity.

Read more:NBA free agency: What to expect from the Lakers and Clippers

Pelinka, the president of basketball operations and general manager, was hired eight years ago because he was the agent and confidant of Kobe Bryant.

Redick, the head coach, was hired last summer because he was LeBron James’ podcast bro.

Neither man came to their current positions with strong qualifications. Both men were beneficiaries of a post-Jerry Buss culture in which daughter Jeanie would surround herself with friends and family.

It is a culture that led to outsized decision-making roles for the likes of Linda and Kurt Rambis. It is a culture that is diametrically opposed to the meritocracy that has made this town’s other glamour team so great.

Now that the Dodgers have basically swallowed the Lakers whole, it might be a foregone conclusion that Pelinka and Redick would be among the first to disappear.

Memo to Mark Walter:

Dodgers owner Mark Walter speaks at a gala.
Mark Walter, the controlling owner of the Dodgers, recently became a majority stakeholder in the Lakers. (Emma McIntyre / Getty Images)

Hold up rounding third.

Both Pelinka and Redick have earned a chance to show their strengths in a new system in which there will certainly be increased scouting, advanced analytics and a new professionalism for an infrastructure that had been difficult for any official to succeed.

Ned Colletti was the Dodgers' general manager when Walter’s group bought the team in the spring of 2012. He lasted two more seasons, Guggenheim Partners pouring money into the team and giving him every chance to succeed before firing him.

Pelinka deserves at least half that chance.

Don Mattingly was the manager when Walter bought the team. He lasted four more seasons, finally parting ways after the 2015 season.

Redick deserves at least a portion of that leash.

Although both men have been viewed as overmatched both in this space and by NBA insiders across the landscape, each has done well enough to not be summarily beheaded the minute Walter walks through the door.

Start with Pelinka. You do know he has an NBA championship on his resume, right? While Alex Caruso dismissed the 2020 title as phony last week after he won another ring with Oklahoma City, that first one still counts, and Pelinka still deserves credit for overseeing it.

Read more:Magic Johnson: 'Mark Walter is the right person' to take over the Lakers

Yes, Pelinka is the villain who ruined everything by letting Caruso walk while gutting the title team to acquire Russell Westbrook. But he’s also perhaps the only executive in NBA history to acquire three players the likes of LeBron James, Luka Doncic and Anthony Davis.

He had lots of help there — Magic Johnson recruited James, and James recruited Davis, and Nico Harrison handed him Doncic — but still, he was the final cog in making it happen.

Pelinka also engineered the splendid undrafted free agent signing that was Austin Reaves, which led to the Lakers finishing this season as the third seed in the West.

You don’t fire a decision-maker the same year his rebuilt team finishes third in basketball’s most competitive neighborhood. You don’t fire a decision-maker two years after his team reached the Western Conference finals. And you certainly don’t fire a decision-maker until you know what’s happening with his best employee.

It seems clear that James is going to opt in to his $52.6 million contract this week and remain with the team — and son Bronny — for at least one more season. If that’s the case, then Pelinka should get the chance to add the rim protector he’s been seeking to maximize Doncic and give James one more opportunity at a ring.

However, if James unexpectedly turns down the money to seek better title opportunities elsewhere — not a bad decision for the Lakers, honestly — then the ensuing roster chaos will not be the right time to make a change at the top.

Either way, the situation is fluid enough that Pelinka should be allowed to see it through.

The same goes for Redick, who did an admirable job in his first regular season before melting down in the playoffs.

Granted, some would consider his first-round series game management against the Minnesota Timberwolves a fireable offense, particularly in Game 4 when he used the same five players for an entire second half. He didn’t do himself any favors when he later reacted to criticism of that decision by bristling at a reporter’s question before stalking away from a pregame news conference.

During the most important moments of the season, Redick was in over his head. But as he admitted, he’ll learn, he’ll grow, he’ll get better, and he did well enough during the regular season to believe him.

Redick coached one team before the arrival of Doncic and the departure of Davis. He coached another team afterward. He deftly handled both of those teams while smartly disarming the potentially divisive distraction that was Bronny. Redick also empowered Reaves to become a legitimate third threat before Reaves joined his coach in a playoff disappearing act.

All of which brings this surprisingly sugary piece to this upcoming week, the start of the NBA’s summer madness, and the pressure is on.

Like it or not, Pelinka and Redick are a pair now, a tandem joined by the appearance of a new owner with new expectations.

Pelinka needs to find a big man who can help carry them deep into the playoffs. No matter who Pelinka acquires, Redick has to scheme around Doncic and make it all work.

They won’t get many chances under a new Dodger regime that demands sustained success, but they deserve at least one chance to take advantage of the massive changes that this new ownership group will surely create in returning basketball’s greatest franchise to new glories.

Memo to Mark Walter:

Keep Pelinka's and Redick’s names in the lineup card.

In pencil.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Pistons' Malik Beasley under federal investigation for NBA gambling allegations

Pistons' Malik Beasley under federal investigation for NBA gambling allegations originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Another professional athlete could be in trouble over sports betting.

Detroit Pistons guard Malik Beasley is under investigated by the U.S. District Attorney’s office over gambling allegations for NBA games, ESPN’s Shams Charania first reported Sunday.

“We are cooperating with the federal prosecutors’ investigation,” NBA spokesman Mike Bass said in a statement.

Beasley, 28, is set to be a free agent on Monday after a breakout season with the Pistons. He averaged 16.2 points and didn’t miss a single game for Detroit, which had a drastic turnaround with Beasley leading the second unit.

Over nine NBA seasons since being drafted in 2016, Beasley has played for the Denver Nuggets (2016-20), Minnesota Timberwolves (2020-22), Utah Jazz (2022-23), Los Angeles Lakers (2023), Milwaukee Bucks (2023-24) and Pistons (2024-25). In 2021, he was sentenced to 120 days in jail over a felony charge of threats of violence and was eventually suspended for 12 games by the NBA.

Charania reported that Beasley and the Pistons were in “serious talks” on a three-year, $42 million contract to bring him back to Detroit. Those talks reportedly are on pause as the investigation takes place, but Beasley is free to negotiate with other teams starting Monday at 6 p.m. ET.

“An investigation is not a charge,” Beasley’s attorney Steve Haney told ESPN. “Malik is afforded the same right of the presumption of innocence as anyone else under the U.S. Constitution. As of now he has not been charged with anything.”

The probe into Beasley comes more than a year after Jontay Porter was banned from the NBA over prop bet investigations. He eventually pleaded guilty to committing wire fraud, with sentencing set for this December as prosecutors estimate he could get up to four years in prison.

This past season, Terry Rozier — then of the Charlotte Hornets — was under investigation for activity related to unusual betting patterns surrounding him in a March 2023 game. Now with the Miami Heat, Rozier hasn’t been charged with any crime or faced sanctions from the NBA.

A ban on sports gambling was shot down in 2018, which opened the door for states to legalize betting. Each professional legal has their own set of gambling policies, but there have been several instances of problems across the sports world — from Shohei Ohtani’s interpreter to year-long NFL suspensions.

Davion Mitchell reportedly staying in Miami on two-year, $24 million contract.

Davion Mitchell embodies "Heat Culture" and how they want to play the game.

That's why they are bringing him back. The Heat and Mitchell have agreed to a two-year, $24 million contract that will keep the restricted free agent in Miami, a story broken by Shams Charania of ESPN and confirmed by Heat reporters.

Mitchell was traded from Toronto to Miami at the trade deadline as part of the five-team Jimmy Butler trade. In 30 games with the Heat, half of them as a starter, Mitchell averaged 10.3 points and 5.3 assists a game while shooting 44.7% from 3 (that number is an outlier for him, Mitchell shot 35.9% from 3 the first half of the season in Toronto, which may be closer to his range). In the playoffs, Mitchell started three games and averaged 15 points and 6.3 points a night against Cleveland. He gives Miami a quality perimeter defender who can hold his own on the offensive end of the court.

This almost certainly means the Heat will not pick up the team option on Duncan Robinson's $19.9 million contract for next season. He is still guaranteed $9.9 million, but the $10 million saved gets the Heat below the luxury tax line. That will make Robinson an unrestricted free agent.

Report: Chicago agrees to trade Lonzo Ball to Cleveland for Isaac Okoro

The Cleveland Cavaliers surveyed what is expected to be a down East next season and see their opportunity. With that, they are looking for roster upgrades, pushing all their chips in on a 64-win team that learned some hard lessons in the playoffs.

Cleveland found one upgrade on Sunday: Trading Isaac Okoro to the Chicago Bulls for Lonzo Ball, a trade broken by Shams Charania of ESPN and quickly confirmed by other reporters. This is a straight-up trade of two players, no draft picks or other compensation moving between the teams.

If Ball can stay healthy, this is a win and an upgrade for Cleveland on the court. The versatile guard averaged 7.6 points, 3.4 rebounds, and 3.3 assists a game in 22 minutes a night off the bench last season, but the counting stats undersell the kind of little winning plays he makes. Ball is a smart facilitator who knows how to run an offense, he shot 36.6% on 3-pointers, and is also a solid defender.

The concern is health. Ball returned last season after missing more than two full seasons and undergoing three knee surgeries. Ball's minutes have to be limited. He played in just 35 games last season, averaging 22 minutes per night. However, Chicago trusted his health enough to sign him to a two-year, $20 million contract extension that kicks in next season (the second year of that, 2026-27, is a team option).

Bringing in Ball suggests that Cleveland is not bringing back free agent Ty Jerome. This is somewhat of a cost issue, with this trade the Cavaliers are about $8.9 million over the dreaded second apron and have four roster spots still to fill.

For Chicago, Okoro fits the mold of young players (24) with experience that the team is trying to bring in, veteran NBA writer K.C. Johnson notes. Okoro likely comes off the bench on the wing, playing minutes behind Coby White/Josh Giddey (whichever you consider the two guard) and Ayo Dosunmu. Okoro was not a favorite of new Cavaliers coach Kenny Atkinson last season and averaged 6.1 points a game, mostly coming off the bench for less than 20 minutes a night. When selected No. 5 overall the hope in Cleveland was that Okoro would fill the team's need on the wing, but he never developed into that player. He's a good (but not elite) wing defender, but his offense has been inconsistent and not what the Cavaliers needed. Chicago is making the bet in their system, playing off White and Giddey, Okoro will live up to his potential.

Financially, this trade hard caps the Bulls at the first apron, but that's more of a technicality than a concern. Chicago is $54 million under that cap number with just a couple of roster spots to fill, it should not be an issue.

NBA free agency: What to expect from the Lakers and Clippers

Los Angeles, CA - February 28: Los Angeles Clippers James Harden steals the basketball from Los Angeles Laker Lebron James in first half action. Lakers vs Clippers at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles Friday, Feb. 28, 2025. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
Clippers guard James Harden and Lakers forward LeBron James, chasing after a loose ball during a game last season, have until Sunday to inform their respective teams if they will pick up contract options for next season or test free agency. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

The Lakers and Clippers put in the work during the NBA’s two-day draft that was completed Thursday night and now they will turn their attention to shaping their rosters.

The first key dates are Sunday, when LeBron James and Dorian Finney-Smith have to inform the Lakers and when James Harden has to inform the Clippers of their decisions to opt in or out of their contracts, and Monday, when the NBA free-agency period begins.

James has a player option for $52.6 million and Finney-Smith has one for $15.3 million.

“At that point, we’ll know the tools we have to go out into free agency and fill out the roster with the draft ending tonight,” Rob Pelinka, the Lakers’ president of basketball operations, told Spectrum SportsNet after the second round of the draft Thursday. “The work for that has already begun, but the focus now will turn from draft focus to free agency and we won’t rest until we get it right.”

Harden, who has a player option of $36.3 million, also has the same day to let the Clippers know his desires.

“He’s our No. 1 priority,” Lawrence Frank, the Clippers’ president of basketball operations, told the media after the first round of the draft Wednesday night. “We’re super hopeful that James is here and he’s here for a long time. He has a player-option, so he can opt-in … or he can opt-out and hopefully we can do a deal that makes sense for both sides. But James, as you guys know, was phenomenal and we hope to continue to see his play.”

Read more:Lakers trade up again to acquire Adou Thiero at No. 36 in NBA draft

The Lakers were able to add an athletic wing player when they acquired Adou Thiero in a trade with the Minnesota Timberwolves, who picked him with the 36th pick of the second round.

The most pressing need for the Lakers remains a center, and they’ll have to look into free agency or via trade to acquire one.

The top big men are Indiana’s Myles Turner, Milwaukee’s Brook Lopez and Atlanta’s Clint Capela.

Turner, who made $19.9 million last season, is probably headed back to the Pacers and will do so at a price the Lakers can’t offer him. The Lakers have the taxpayer mid-level exception of about $5.65 million to spend.

“As I said at the end of the year, we know one of the things we have to address is the center position and that’s clearly going to be one of our focuses as we begin the free-agency period,” Pelinka said on the Lakers’ TV show. “And that’s right around the corner.

"So, we’re looking forward to just putting in the hard work and making sure we take care of all the needs on the roster to give [Lakers coach] JJ [Redick] the tools he needs for this team to be great next season.”

Though the Clippers drafted a center in the first round with the 30th pick, getting Yanic Konan Niederhausher of Penn State, Frank said his team “probably will have at least three centers.”

The Clippers can use their non-taxpayer mid-level exception that’s projected to be about $14.1 million on a player or two, and perhaps even find a center.

Read more:2025 NBA draft: Clippers select Penn State center Yanic Konan Niederhauser

They will also perform due diligence by calling other teams to see about trade opportunities.

“You’re always in constant contact with all the teams,” Frank said. “You have a good sense of the things that you can be involved with and other things that you’re not.”

Free agency begins Monday at 3 p.m. PDT, but players can’t sign contracts until July 6.

Also, Clippers wing Norman Powell is eligible for a contract extension. He has one year left on his deal that pays him $20.4 million next season.

“At the appropriate time, we’ll sit with Norm and his representatives to talk about what kind of an extension and what it would look like and how it would fit in the bigger picture,” Frank said.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Sources: Gary Payton II, Warriors could part ways again in NBA free agency

Sources: Gary Payton II, Warriors could part ways again in NBA free agency originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Gary Payton II, a fan favorite beloved by his teammates, might have played his last game with the Warriors.

Payton will become an unrestricted free agent on Monday, and his return to Golden State is in serious jeopardy, multiple NBA sources told NBC Sports Bay Area on Friday and Saturday.

“It’s looking doubtful,” one source said Friday.

“Golden State still likes him, and there’s still a chance he’s back,” another source said of the Warriors. “But they have a lot of moving parts as they work through the Jonathan Kuminga situation, so Gary could land elsewhere next season.”

A key member of Golden State’s 2022 NBA championship team, Payton is coming off a season of inconsistency while battling several nagging injuries. The 6-foot-3 forward appeared in 62 games (11 starts), with per-36-minute averages of 15.5 points (on 57.4-percent shooting from the field, including 32.6 from distance), 7.2 rebounds, 3.2 assists and 2.0 steals.

Payton made $9.1 million in salary last season, the final year of a three-year $26.1 million contract he originally signed with the Portland Trail Blazers in July 2022. The Warriors reacquired him seven months later and he has since been a fixture in the rotation.

A superior athlete on a roster lacking athleticism, GP2 has been the team’s best point-of-attack defender. He routinely is assigned to such stars as Minnesota’s Anthony Edwards, Milwaukee’s Damian Lillard and Phoenix’s Devin Booker. But availability has been an issue with Payton. He missed 20 games last season and 38 games in 2023-24.

If Payton is not re-signed, Golden State will prioritize adding an elite perimeter defender. 

NBA free agency officially begins at 3 p.m. Monday, when teams can negotiate with those on the market. The direction the Warriors take with their rotational unrestricted free agents – Kevon Looney is the other — will be influenced by the outcome of Kuminga’s restricted free agency.

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Warriors extend qualifying offer to Jonathan Kuminga before 2025 NBA free agency

Warriors extend qualifying offer to Jonathan Kuminga before 2025 NBA free agency originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Warriors made the expected move Saturday when they extended a $7.9 million qualifying offer to Jonathan Kuminga, NBC Sports Bay Area’s Monte Poole confirmed.

Kuminga officially becomes a restricted NBA free agent ahead of Monday’s negotiating period, which begins at 3 p.m. PT.

The Athletic’s Anthony Slater and Spotrac’s Keith Smith were first to report the news.

Kuminga’s restricted free agency is the biggest question the Warriors have to answer this offseason.

The 22-year-old can field offer sheets from other NBA teams Monday, and the Warriors can match the offer, decline to match or work out a sign-and-trade with another franchise.

Kuminga and the Warriors were unable to agree to a long-term contract extension before the 2024-25 NBA season, and he played out the final guaranteed year of his rookie deal.

In 47 games, Kuminga averaged 15.3 points and 4.6 rebounds on 45.4-percent shooting from the field and 30.5-percent shooting from 3-point range.

Kuminga’s fourth NBA season was hampered by an ankle injury sustained in early January, sidelining him for 31 games. When he returned to the lineup, Jimmy Butler had been acquired and the Warriors had a hard time fitting Kuminga into the rotation.

By the time the Warriors reached the NBA playoffs, Kuminga was out of the rotation and received four DNPs in their first-round series win over the Houston Rockets.

But Kuminga rejoined the mix against the Minnesota Timberwolves in the second round when Steph Curry sustained a hamstring injury. In the final four games, the forward averaged 24.3 points on 55.4-percent shooting, showing the Warriors and the rest of the NBA what he’s capable of.

Kuminga believes he can be a “great” NBA player in the right situation, and he understands that might mean leaving the Warriors, who drafted him No. 7 overall in the 2021 NBA Draft.

But the Warriors still could retain a former lottery pick whom they have invested ample time and effort into.

A decision on Kuminga will come in the next few days, and it will have a big impact on the future of both sides.

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Naz Reid reportedly to sign five-year, $125 million extension to stay in Minnesota

Take another name off the potential free agent board.

Naz Reid and the Minnesota Timberwolves have agreed to a five-year, $125 million contract extension, a story broken by Shams Charania of ESPN. This keeps a key part of Minnesota's roster in place, a group that has advanced to back-to-back Western Conference Finals.

Ried will decline his $15 million player option as part of this contract extension. That was expected, and other teams were eyeing the 2024 Sixth Man of the Year, with Chrania describing a "vibrant market developing" willing to pay in the neighborhood of what the Timberwolves paid to keep him, but with some teams offering a starting role. Detroit, a team looking for a stretch big, was one team consistently mentioned as interested in Reid. (As of this writing, only Brooklyn would have the cap space to make that kind of offer, but other teams could get there if they wanted.)

Reid, 25, averaged 14.2 points and six rebounds a game for the Timberwolves last season. He shot 37.9% from beyond the arc, providing a change of pace from starting center Rudy Gobert. Reid also stepped up with some big games in Minnesota's playoff runs.

Minnesota is not done with questions about re-signing big men. They need to decide on Julius Randle, who has a $30.9 million player option that must be picked up by Sunday. He is also seeking an extension.

Naz Ried reportedly to sign five-year, $125 million extension to stay in Minnesota

Take another name off the potential free agent board.

Naz Reid and the Minnesota Timberwolves have agreed to a five-year, $125 million contract extension, a story broken by Shams Charania of ESPN. This keeps a key part of Minnesota's roster in place, a group that has advanced to back-to-back Western Conference Finals.

Ried will decline his $15 million player option as part of this contract extension. That was expected, and other teams were eyeing the 2024 Sixth Man of the Year, with Chrania describing a "vibrant market developing" willing to pay in the neighborhood of what the Timberwolves paid to keep him, but with some teams offering a starting role. Detroit, a team looking for a stretch big, was one team consistently mentioned as interested in Reid. (As of this writing, only Brooklyn would have the cap space to make that kind of offer, but other teams could get there if they wanted.)

Reid, 25, averaged 14.2 points and six rebounds a game for the Timberwolves last season. He shot 37.9% from beyond the arc, providing a change of pace from starting center Rudy Gobert. Reid also stepped up with some big games in Minnesota's playoff runs.

Minnesota is not done with questions about re-signing big men. They need to decide on Julius Randle, who has a $30.9 million player option that must be picked up by Sunday. He is also seeking an extension.

Knicks Notes: What to know heading into free agency, potential targets

A few notes on free agency, the coaching search and the Raptors...


The Knicks are at $199,779,182 in team salary, per Yossi Gozlan’s on the capsheets.com website.

This leaves them roughly $8 million shy of the second apron and roughly $4 million over the first apron.

They can use the $5.6M taxpayer exception to sign free agents. Contracts signed with this exception can be no longer than two years and contain five percent raises. You can split the exception to sign multiple players.

If they decline PJ Tucker’s option, the Knicks could also sign-and-trade their free agents to bring back a player under contract, making up to the $5.6 million exception.

If you use the exception to sign a free agent, you are hard-capped at the second apron. This means you can’t spend more than $207.8 million in team salary. At their current team salary, the Knicks are roughly $8 million below the second apron.

The Knicks can also use the veteran’s minimum exception to sign free agents.

So, they have a couple of tools at their disposal in free agency.

Who are possible targets?

I think the Knicks will take a look at the guard market for a bench player. Also, ESPN reports that Celtics veteran Al Horford will have a robust market this offseason. I think the Knicks will also at least check in on Horford’s situation in Boston. The Celtics shed salary by trading Jrue Holiday and Kristaps Porzingis and they certainly want Horford back, but are limited in what they can offer the veteran big man.

Just as an aside: Horford has a close relationship with Karl-Anthony Towns.

The Knicks also have to decide on Ariel Hukporti’s team option for 2025-26. (Logic says they will pick it up, unless they have a bigger move in mind that requires more financial flexibility.)

What about rookie Mohamed Diawara? The Knicks could use the second-round exception to sign him, but that would put them $1.3 million closer to the second apron. They could also sign Diawara to a two-way deal.

Mar 30, 2025; New Orleans, Louisiana, USA; New Orleans Pelicans associate head coach James Borrego reacts against the Charlotte Hornets during the first half at Smoothie King Center.
Mar 30, 2025; New Orleans, Louisiana, USA; New Orleans Pelicans associate head coach James Borrego reacts against the Charlotte Hornets during the first half at Smoothie King Center. / Matthew Hinton-Imagn Images

COACHING SEARCH

James Borrego is the fourth known interview the Knicks have conducted for their head-coaching search. Mike Brown, Taylor Jenkins and Micah Nori have also interviewed for the job. I’d be lying if I said I knew where things stood entering the weekend, but I know Brown has made a good impression during the interview process and garnered support.

The Knicks have also had interest in Billy Donovan and Jason Kidd. Donovan reportedly has agreed with the Bulls on an extension. Mavericks GM Nico Harrison said definitively on Wednesday that Kidd would be coaching in Dallas next season. I still expect the Knicks to end up with a coach with prior head-coaching experience.

SHAKEUP IN TORONTO

The Raptors parted ways with lead executive Masai Ujiri on Friday. Opposing executives have long believed that the Raptors’ new majority ownership, Rogers Communications, could make a change at the top with Ujiri. Raptors officials downplayed the possibility, with Ujiri saying in April that everything was operating normally under the new structure. Ujiri was under contract for one more season.

The speculation around his future stemmed, in part, from some previous disagreements between Ujiri and executives from Rogers. It also stemmed, in part, due to the sentiment that the Rogers ownership would be hesitant to pay Ujiri the large salary that he was earning on his current deal.

Ujiri is reportedly earning $15 million per year. The team announced that general manager Bobby Webster was given a contract extension.

The Raptors finished 30-52 last season and missed the playoffs.

“We are confident that the Raptors organization, under the guidance of Bobby and his team, is in a great place,” Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment president and CEO Keith Pelley said in a statement. “They have a plan in place for next season and beyond as the team continues its rebuild, and we have confidence in their ability to execute and ultimately, to excel.”

Ujiri built the Raptors into an NBA champion (2019). He joined the Raptors in 2013 as executive vice president and general manager. He was promoted to team president in 2017 and Webster assumed GM duties.

Knicks coaching search update: Kidd not leaving Dallas, James Borrego to interview in New York

The Knicks' coaching search continues to crawl along with another former head coach, James Borrego, set to be interviewed. And if any Knicks fans (or people in their front office) were hoping the Jason Kidd situation in Dallas might change, Nico Harrison squashed that like a cockroach this week.

This weekend, the Knicks will interview former Hornets and current Pelicans assistant coach James Borrego, a story broken by James Edwards III of The Athletic and confirmed by multiple other Knicks reporters.

Borrego has the reputation of a creative, analytics-driven offensive coach, which would be a change in style from the coach he is interviewing to replace, Tom Thibodeau. While Borrego compiled a 138-163 record in four seasons with Charlotte, that undersells the job he did with a rebuilding roster. It felt like he had the team maybe turning a corner, the Hornets appeared to get better each year and won 43 games his final season (which did not make the playoffs in the East that year). Borrego is also a CAA client, the firm where Knicks president Leon Rose had worked.

The Knicks have previously interviewed former Grizzlies coach Taylor Jenkins, former Cavaliers/Lakers/Kings coach Mike Brown, and Timberwolves lead assistant Mikah Nori for the job.

One guy the Knicks will not interview is Jason Kidd. New York reached out to Dallas with a request to interview Kidd several weeks ago and was shot down, but that was not enough to kill the rumors. The theory went that Kidd really, secretly, wanted the Knicks job — despite the Mavericks just landing Cooper Flagg with the No. 1 pick — and he would pressure Dallas to change its mind. Those rumors were presented to Mavericks GM Nico Harrison hours after they selected Flagg, and he seemed surprised that anyone thought that, and then he officially and unequivocally crushed them, as quoted by Christian Clark at The Athletic.

"Are there rumors still out there about J-Kidd?" Harrison said. "I thought I shut them down. Yes, he will be the coach next year."
Can we move on now?

Borrego is now the betting favorite to replace Thibodeau, but there is no clear frontrunner yet. Whoever gets the job will have tough shoes to fill because in his five years at the helm of the Knicks Thibodeau led the team to the playoffs for times — the same number of playoff appearances the team had in the 20 years prior to him becoming coach — and the team's first Western Conference Finals in 25 years. There was a segment of Knicks nation, and apparently a large segment of the Knicks front office, who thought Thibodeau's message and style had worn out in the locker room and he had taken them as far as he could. The idea was that if the Knicks wanted to win a title, they needed a new coach. However, Thibodeau was fired without an upgrade in the wings, or even really a succession plan.

So the process continues as we are three days away from the start of free agency.

International WNBA players often leave their teams during the regular season; why that's changing

The Seattle Storm’s Gabby Williams is enjoying a career season in 2025. She’s averaging the most points (14), assists (4.7) and rebounds (4.5) she ever has in seven WNBA seasons. Her three-point percentage has increased by over 20 percent year-over-year even as her attempts from deep have increased from 2.6 to 4.8 in 2025. Satou Sabally too has had a career year in scoring, leading the Phoenix Mercury so far with 19.3 points per game.

Imagine if both Sabally and Williams had to just pause their WNBA seasons and potential WNBA All-Star campaigns to jet off to Europe to play in EuroBasket from June 18 through June 29. EuroBasket is a biennial continental championship tournament sponsored by the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) that can qualify a national team’s entry into the next Olympics.

For a long time, that was often the case for WNBA players with ties to countries like France, Germany, Belgium, and Italy, who would — and still do — leave their WNBA teams midseason to compete in a week-and-a-half-long tournament. The event can feature up to six games in just 12 days, with only one day of rest between the first three games.

It isn’t only national teams from Europe, however, that often feature WNBA players in these continental tournaments. FIBA also sponsors other continental tournaments such as the Asia Cup and the AmeriCup that serve a similar purpose. The AmeriCup runs from late June into early July and then the Asia Cup begins in the middle of July and runs for a week. The Sky’s Kamilla Cardoso and the Fever’s Damiris Dantas left just this week to compete in the AmeriCup for the Brazilian National team.

As of right now the WNBA has 162 rostered players, which includes players on hardship contracts and 22 of them (13.5 percent) faced a choice to leave in the middle of the season or will be late for the WNBA season because of these continental tournaments.

While 13 players have made commitments to play in these tournaments during the first half of the WNBA season, eight players have firmly decided not to including German national team star Sabally, French two-way wing Williams, New York Liberty French guard Marine Johannès and Sabally’s sister Nyara who also plays for New York in the W.

“It gives the autonomy back to the players,” Satou told reporters about what to glean from this new trend amongst international WNBA players in 2025.

All but three teams in the WNBA including the Mystics, Aces and Dream—teams that don’t roster international players— have been impacted by the decisions that international players have made or will continue to make. Teams like the new expansion franchise, the Golden State Valkyries, have had to adjust the most as the franchise has dealt with one-third of their team leaving for EuroBasket in the month of June. But some teams also have players making different types of decisions that aren’t in line with the desires of international federations. French Rookie Carla Leite decided to stay in San Francisco with the Valkyries rather than return to France to train with her national team prior to EuroBasket and as did No. 2 overall pick Dominique Malonga, who made a commitment to the Seattle Storm.

Explaining the status quo

Until 2023, the expectation for players within the French Federation’s women’s basketball team was that prior to competitions like EuroBasket and the Olympics players would report to the national team’s training camp after their club seasons in either the French league or some other international league concluded.

To be clear, this is what one player on the Connecticut Sun, 2024 No. 10 overall draft pick Leïla Lacan, has had to do this season. She is expected to join the Sun after the French national team completes their stint in EuroBasket which could be as soon as on June 30, a day after the Sun play the Lynx in Minneapolis.

But prior to 2023, French players didn’t really challenge the wishes of the Federation. This wasn’t until Johannès had a desire to fly to New York to get settled with the Liberty and then meet the national team at EuroBasket instead of staying in France for weeks-long training sessions. She and her agent negotiated for months with the Federation but the French body didn’t oblige and instead punished Johannès by not allowing her to compete in EuroBasket in addition to settling in with the Liberty first.

The federation even threatened to ban Johannès from competing in the 2024 Paris Olympics, but they quickly changed course after realizing how this looked optically, banning one of their best players and how they were limiting player autonomy. To be clear, Johannès had come late every other WNBA season she’s played because of her French domestic league and national team commitments.

While not all federations are as strict as the French, it remains notable that both Belgian players in Julie Vanloo and Julie Allemand decided to leave their respective WNBA teams in the Valkyries and the Sparks in favor of competing in EuroBasket. They could begin their seasons in the United States, but both made different decisions compared to Johannès, Williams, and the Sabally sisters.

There is also personal pressure on players to leave their WNBA teams in order to strengthen their national teams and help grow the sport in their home countries. Mercury head coach Nate Tibbets had breakfast with Satou one morning and the two were discussing her decision to stay with the Mercury amid some doubt she had about letting her country down. “I'm sure both [Satou and Nyara] are feeling like they're leaving their country down, not being there, and because I know they've got such a pride for playing for their team,” he said.

Tibbets, who came to the WNBA after 20 years of experience in the G league and NBA, isn’t used to this constant struggle that many WNBA players endure season to season. “Players would never probably leave, or that league wouldn't allow players to leave to go and play for their national team in these tournaments,” he said about the NBA.

Why is that? Typically G league players or college aged players represent international federations and even Team USA. For the FIBA AmeriCup taking place this year, USA Basketball sent some of the United States’ best college players rather than pulling from the WNBA. That’s not always the case for Federations that don’t have the depth of talent available in the United States.

But also with EuroBasket in particular, the next men’s tournament will happen during the NBA offseason later this summer in August. No conflict there.

What sparked a change

Prior to the Tokyo Olympics, Williams had a falling out with her former WNBA team the Chicago Sky. Her plan was to begin the 2021 season in France to prepare for the Olympics after her French league team ASVEL completed its domestic season. Initially the agreement between the Sky and Williams was that they would trade her contract, but then the franchise defected and suspended her contract instead, preventing her from playing at all in the WNBA in 2021.

Williams explained to Andscape’s Sean Heard her frustration with this situation and what she said to Sky owner Michael Alter. “I told him, ‘You have to understand, I don’t make money here,’ ” she said. “Not even about money – I wasn’t getting a lot of minutes. I didn’t feel very important to the team – they didn’t make me feel important – and I was like, ‘You’re asking me to sacrifice this for that.’”

Williams’ dissatisfaction with Sky ownership came down to an endemic WNBA issue. Over the years, the Sky were notorious for being a franchise that didn't treat its players on the level of professional athletes. Back in 2021, teams weren’t in the arms race they are now to provide players with the best experience and player amenities.

The WNBA was also a year into a new collective bargaining agreement (CBA) that had a provision that limited international players or players who chose to play overseas. The owners argued in the 2020 CBA that the quality of the product was suffering because so many of the best players were supplementing their incomes abroad and arriving late to training camp and the regular season.

After Brittney Griner’s ordeal in Russia, more opportunities have opened up for the top players to stay in the United States during the WNBA offseason. But players have their eyes on the next CBA which is being negotiated as we speak and set to go into action next season. Salaries are expected to go up pretty dramatically in addition to requirements for franchises when it comes to the player experience. This is the reason why players like Williams, Satou and Johannès are committing to the WNBA this year.

For Satou her reason to skip EuroBasket was because of her desire to prove to the Mercury how committed she is to them. She, like most of the league, is on a one-year contract that will expire once the current CBA does. She missed more than half of the 2024 WNBA season recovering from injury and preparing for the Paris Olympics. She knew that in 2025 she would need to prove to her WNBA team that she’s committed and deserving of the increase in pay that’s going to come to most players.

“So sometimes you just have to give and take a little bit in your professional career,” Satou said about her decision. “There's so many people that will pull from all sides. So just knowing what you can and can't do is also something that I've learned throughout my time.”

Johannès’ reasoning is similar to Satou’s. She wants to prove to the Liberty and the entire league that she can play an entire season in the WNBA. But she also made a decision for her own physical and mental health.

“I'm 30 right now, and like, I can't be everywhere and nowhere, you know? I know some people were mad about my decision, but they have to understand that I'm not 23 anymore. Like, I need stabilization too.”

Liberty and Australian national team coach Sandy Brondello, who once was a WNBA player who did not grow up in the United States, understands these issues from all sides. She knows how much of a bind international federations put on players, and she knows how much WNBA teams are impacted when star players leave in the beginning of the season. Leonie Fiebich, another German national team mainstay, hasn’t played for the Liberty since June 14, and New York has gone 2-3 since.

Brondello respects all the choices of her players, but sees a deterioration of the status quo that was prevalent in so many international federations.

“I think all the Federations understand that this is their jobs, and this is how they make money,” Brondello said about the WNBA. “And there's a new CBA coming out next year, opportunities to be financially secure. So I just think it's just a different time where there's a little bit more appreciation, and players have more of a voice in what they should be doing for their careers and not being told what they should be doing.”

Li Yueru of the Dallas Wings is a mainstay on the Chinese national team and she forced a trade this year for that same reason. Li knew that if she stayed on the Seattle Storm and continued to get small amounts of playing time, the Chinese Federation would have demanded that she return to China to compete in the Asia Cup. Li wanted to prioritize the WNBA and forced her way to Dallas to prevent conflict between her and her home federation.

While Satou’s sister Nyara’s reasons are different from her sister’s reasons for sitting EuroBasket out, especially since she’s still on her rookie scale contract in 2026, hers are more about her own physical health and overall convenience. She has had a history of issues with her right knee and it flared up again earlier this WNBA season. If she would have participated in EuroBasket, she would have put her health at risk. Another flight would lead to more knee swelling, and then back-to-back games wouldn’t have helped with her load management and injury prevention either.

But it isn’t just physical for players. It’s about how difficult it is mentally to move from place to place so quickly.

“I'm always talking about coming late during the season is not easy,” Johannès told reporters reflecting on her decision. “So I guess I think that coming here first, like going to the national team, it's completely in a different organization, like we don't play the same. So coming back again here, like, it's going to be a lot.”

Challenges will persist moving forward

Because of a new CBA on the way and because WNBA franchises have upped their player experience and amenities, players are more inclined to stay in the United States now during these more minor tournaments.

But what is going to happen when the WNBA season has to once again contend with the 2026 FIBA World Cup which is set to take place in Germany from September 4 through September 13?

The WNBA’s 2025 schedule has 44 games, and it would be foolish to believe that the league would want to decrease the number of games in its season in the year after under the new CBA. Traditionally the WNBA season would end before the World Cup and the Finals would end as the World Cup begins. That might not be possible in 2026. Could the WNBA take a World Cup break in September and then resume later in the fall? That’s a similar approach that the league takes with the Olympics? The possibility is one that still remains to be seen.

Emma Meeseman, a former WNBA Finals MVP who hasn’t played in the league for years because of limits on international players, namely prioritization under the current CBA, has expressed frustration about how often EuroBasket and other FIBA continental tournaments have to happen.

But a source familiar with how FIBA operates explained to NBC Sports why FIBA probably won’t be open to having less EuroBaskets, Asia Cups and AmeriCup tournaments. The tournaments are how the governing body makes money, and so the only compromise would be moving the tournaments rather than eliminating them.

“It's just a really hard scheduling problem,” Nyara said in response to Meeseman’s frustrations. “I'm pretty sure people are also working on it. I think they're probably aware of the issue that's going on and the trend that more and more players ought to stay in the States…so maybe moving it to one of the national team windows would be a possibility but that's wishful thinking.”

But then Nyara noted that if EuroBasket moves to during the winter time, then players who are playing in Europe during the winter will have to miss parts of EuroLeague or their domestic league’s season.

The solution, which is one that’s quite common in the NBA, is that with higher pay more international and domestic WNBA players won’t even have to supplement their incomes overseas. With a new CBA in 2026, the WNBA could become not only the most talented league in the world, but finally a professional women’s league where its players are treated like the money-making superstars they are.