Al Horford leaving Celtics to join Warriors in free agency: Report

Al Horford leaving Celtics to join Warriors in free agency: Report originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

At long last, Al Horford’s time in Boston has come to an end.

The veteran big man has agreed to a multi-year contract with the Golden State Warriors in NBA free agency, his agent confirmed to ESPN’s Shams Charania on Sunday. After spending eight of his 18 NBA seasons with Boston (five in his second stint), Horford likely will end his illustrious career in a new uniform.

Horford confirmed his departure on Instagram, posting a farewell message to Boston fans:

Horford, who turned 39 on June 3, remained productive during the 2024-25 season despite his age. The five-time All-Star averaged 9.0 points over 42 regular-season games, then 8.0 points and 6.0 rebounds over 11 playoff appearances.

Above all else, the Celtics will miss Horford’s veteran leadership. Horford was beloved in Boston’s locker room, with superstar Jayson Tatum going as far as to call him his “favorite teammate.”

Horford’s absence will be glaring during what could be Boston’s most challenging season in years. Multiple pieces of the championship core already have been moved — the Celtics traded Jrue Holiday and Kristaps Porzingis, then lost big man Luke Kornet in free agency — while Tatum will spend most (if not all) of the 2025-26 campaign recovering from a ruptured Achilles.

Tatum’s injury as well as the offseason departures of Holiday, Porzingis and Kornet factored into Horford’s decision to sign elsewhere, according to The Boston Globe’s Adam Himmelsbach, but it was still “quite hard” for Horford to leave Boston, “which he considers a second home,” Himmelsbach reported.

With Horford, Porzingis and Kornet out of the picture, Boston’s current frontcourt consists of Neemias Queta, Xavier Tillman Sr., free-agent addition Luka Garza and rookie Amari Williams.

Tatum's latest workout video amid Achilles rehab has NBA world stunned

Tatum's latest workout video amid Achilles rehab has NBA world stunned originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

We now know why Jayson Tatum isn’t ruling out a return to action at some point in the 2025-26 season.

The Boston Celtics forward, who underwent surgery to repair a ruptured Achilles tendon just over four months ago, posted a six-minute video to YouTube on Saturday that featured footage of him lacing up his brand-new Tatum 4s and doing actual basketball drills at the Auerbach Center in Boston.

The good stuff starts around the 5:10 mark, with a clip of Tatum deadlifting a large amount of weight before hitting the court for dribbling, shooting and running drills.

Did we mention that Tatum ruptured his Achilles — an injury that sidelines many professional athletes for a full year — in MAY??

The 27-year-old has attacked his recovery maniacally, however: After getting surgery just hours following his initial injury, Tatum stayed in Boston the entire offseason, essentially treating his rehab like a full-time job and taking only the occasional weekend trip throughout the summer.

Tatum’s hard work appears to be paying off, to the point where he’s leaving his fellow NBA superstars in awe. Houston Rockets superstar Kevin Durant, who tore his Achilles during the 2019 NBA Finals, reacted fittingly on X after seeing Tatum’s workout video:

“Insane. Let’s get it JT,” Durant wrote.

Of course, there’s still no guarantee Tatum will return to action this season. The Celtics likely will take a conservative approach with their superstar, and there are risks associated with throwing Tatum into the fire late in the regular season if Boston is fighting to make the playoffs.

But it’s clear that Tatum is hell-bent on returning to action as soon as possible — Tatum admitted to Sports Illustrated’s Chris Mannix he has a date “circled” on his calendar that he wants to return by — and at this rate, it’s hard not to envision his potential return becoming a serious storyline when the calendar flips to 2026.

How Al Horford addition gives Warriors something they've never had at center

How Al Horford addition gives Warriors something they've never had at center originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Walking into the Warriors’ locker room at Chase Center, looking directly to the left and seeing an emptiness to spaces Klay Thompson used to occupy was an unfillable void left behind by a legend last season. 

Kevon Looney isn’t headed for the Basketball Hall of Fame like Thompson. His locker room presence will be just as missed, or more, when turning to the right and seeing somebody else in that first spot that served as an invitation to laughs and real wisdom for teammates and media members alike. 

“Loon is everything I talked about in terms of committing to the team and sacrifice and getting through adversity,” Coach Steve Kerr said more than four months ago after the Warriors’ 2024-25 NBA season ended. “He is in many ways our moral compass in that regard.” 

The Boston Celtics will find themselves in a similar situation for the 2025-26 season. They’re already in a gap year knowing star forward Jayson Tatum is out for the season after tearing his Achilles in the second round of the NBA playoffs, deciding to make multiple trades and shed money over the offseason. Boston still will have a second star in Jaylen Brown to lean on, as well as Derrick White, Sixth Man of the Year Payton Pritchard and a handful of other talented players. 

Who they won’t have is Al Horford, missing both his play and veteran leadership on and off the court. 

Brown will do his best replacing the talents of Tatum. Horford will be a different kind of absence, especially emotionally

“You can’t replace Al,” Pritchard said the day after the Celtics’ season ended. “I definitely hope we get that figured out because his locker room presence alone is just crucial. We definitely need him back.”

Horford isn’t coming back to Boston, he’s finally coming to the Bay Area to join the Warriors. Golden State and Horford, according to the center’s agent Jason Glushon, have committed to a multi-year contract.

Horford, 39 years old, in his own ways will have influence over the few young players on the Warriors, most notably for 25-year-old centers Quinten Post and Trayce Jackson-Davis. Plus, any help at center is a win for Draymond Green and his health for a full season. Horford also bring something the Warriors have never had at his position. 

Through Horford’s first eight NBA seasons, he attempted a total of 65 threes, making 21 for a 32.3 3-point percentage. Everything changed for him the next year in the 2015-16 season, the same season that Steph Curry won his second consecutive NBA MVP while making a record 402 threes – taking 886 shots from beyond the arc. 

That also was the season Horford took nearly four times as many threes as he had his first eight years in the NBA. Horford went from a total of 65 3-point attempts for his career to making 88 and taking 256 in one season. He now has made the fourth-most threes (877) by a center in NBA history, behind only Karl-Anthony Towns, Brook Lopez and Nikola Vučević, in that order. Horford has made at least 100 threes in each of the last three seasons while connecting on 40.9 percent of them.

This past season he only played 60 games, a career low for a full season, yet still made his second-most threes (114) and also attempted his second most (314). 

Post was an afterthought for the Warriors last season as a rookie until late January. It didn’t take long to notice what a change his ability to stretch the floor as a center made for the Warriors. Post played 42 regular-season games and went 73 of 179 (40.8 percent) on threes. His prowess from deep as a center was a revelation in the Curry era

The 73 threes Post made were the second-most ever by a center to play with Curry, one behind Dario Šarić’s 74 two seasons ago in 64 games. Aside from them, we’re talking about Nemanja Bjelica making 54 threes in the Warriors’ 2021-22 NBA championship season, Omari Spellman making 43 in their 15-win 2019-20 season when Curry only played five games, DeMarcus Cousins making 26 in 2018-19 and Marreese Speights draining 24 in 2015-16. 

Just like in Boston last season, Horford likely won’t play both games of a back-to-back for Golden State, putting more of an emphasis on needed leaps from Post and Jackson-Davis. Horford isn’t the same lockdown defender he once was, but still can be highly effective on that end. He isn’t going to erase the legacy Looney created over his decade as a Warrior. 

Between Kerr and Horford’s new Warriors teammates, that won’t be asked of him. They’ve seen and heard what kind of leader Horford is and won’t want him to change a thing. The Warriors also know what Horford still brings to the hardwood and the history he has against them. 

In the 25 regular-season games Horford has played against the Warriors, he has averaged 14.9 points and 9.4 rebounds, both being career bests of his vs. any team. 

Horford, even at his age, is the player the Warriors had to add this offseason as much as anybody else.

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Al Horford committed to signing multi-year Warriors contract, per agent

Al Horford committed to signing multi-year Warriors contract, per agent originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

With Jonathan Kuminga’s situation potentially nearing a resolution, the Warriors finally have added big man Al Horford to the mix.

The 19-year NBA veteran has committed to signing a multi-year contract with Golden State, ESPN’s Shams Charania reported Sunday, citing Horford’s agent, Jason Glushon.

Horford entered the offseason as one of the league’s top unrestricted free agents after spending the last four seasons with the Celtics — his second stint in Boston. He seemingly will replace longtime Warriors center Kevon Looney, who signed a two-year, $16 million contract with the New Orleans Pelicans at the start of free agency.

The 39-year-old is a career 37.7-percent shooter from 3-point range and a valiant defender. A 2024 NBA champion with the Celtics, Horford averaged 9.0 points, 6.2 rebounds, 2.1 assists and 0.9 blocks during the 2024-25 season, where he admirably played in 60 regular-season games and started in 42 of them. Horford stands as one of five active players with 750-plus triples and 1,000-plus blocks.

Horford’s floor-spacing abilities should fit right into Warriors coach Steve Kerr’s offense centered around superstar Steph Curry. The center, too, should help Golden State combat the shooting limitations that come when co-stars Jimmy Butler and Draymond Green are on the floor, especially at the same time.

The newfound partnership in the Bay makes sense. Boston seems out of contention for the near future with star forward Jayson Tatum recovering from a ruptured Achilles, and Golden State is trying to climb the mountain once again, aiming for a fifth title in 12 seasons.

Horford, entering Year 19, doesn’t have time to waste, making the Warriors a fitting destination for him.

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Edgecombe stands out and learns, Embiid practices at Sixers training camp

Edgecombe stands out and learns, Embiid practices at Sixers training camp  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Asked about his early impressions of VJ Edgecombe, Andre Drummond didn’t first point to the No. 3 overall pick’s bounce or defensive chops.

“The first day I saw VJ I was instantly impressed, because the first thing he did was just ask me a bunch of questions,” Drummond said Friday at Sixers media day. “He even asked me how my day was. He’s like, ‘What do you think about this, big bro? How do you feel about this?’ 

“He’s a kid that wants to soak up knowledge. And he’s a gifted athlete and he’s very, very good. I think he’s going to be very good for us and I’m excited about what’s to come.”

Day 1 of Edgecombe’s first NBA training camp was Saturday. Sixers head coach Nick Nurse named him and two-way contract player Dominick Barlow as standouts. 

As Drummond noted, Edgecombe is fully aware he has tons of NBA-specific knowledge to gain. The 20-year-old has recently been asking teammates about how to prepare for the Sixers’ upcoming preseason trip to Abu Dhabi. Edgecombe’s watched Tyrese Maxey’s shooting and marveled at his range and “muscle memory.” Over the summer, he was curious about “the fouls and physicality.” 

“What is legal, what is not legal? It’s a different game from college, so I’m just trying to learn the rules,” Edgecombe said Friday. “That’s why I ask a lot of questions, especially if I’m trying to box (Drummond) out on a rebound or something like that. Little things like that … just trying to learn. I ask questions to everybody — literally anyone. I ask Justin (Edwards) questions, Jared (McCain), Tyrese, everybody. I’m just trying to get better.” 

Since draft night, Edgecombe has worked to adapt to various aspects of NBA life. That includes his strength and conditioning habits. The 6-foot-4 guard said he’s gained a bit of muscle and is up to the 195 to 200-pound range. 

“I’m just trying to find a routine and stick to that,” he said. “I’ve been lifting a lot more, lifting a lot of weight. I’m resting a lot. I’ve got to get my eight to 10 hours of sleep now. I’m taking recovery more seriously, to be honest with you.”

Edgecombe has also aimed to improve his outside shooting after going 34 percent behind the college line last season. 

While he wasn’t a poor or unwilling shooter at Baylor, Edgecombe was fully on board with mechanical tweaks. 

“I had a flat shot in college,” he said. “Now my arc is really good compared to where it was a month ago … and just more consistent. It’s crazy that it’s now rare for me to shoot flat. Now I know when my shot is flat.”

In terms of Edgecombe’s rookie role, Nurse said Friday he plans to use him both on and off the ball. Nurse can also envision Edgecombe “playing some three” and generally being a part of guard-heavy lineups that play a high-energy, fast-paced style. 

Whatever the assignment, Edgecombe seems like he’ll roll with it (and ask about anything he needs to know). 

“It’s basketball, at the end of the day,” he said. “I feel like everyone on the court is interchangeable, so whoever’s got the ball can bring it up. We have a lot of versatile guys. Sometimes I’m running, sometimes I’m bringing the ball up, sometimes I’m trailing. But I’m just out there trying to make winning plays.”

Embiid in the mix on Day 1 

Joel Embiid emphasized at media day that his health is a day-by-day matter.

He shot jumpers following Day 1 of camp and Nurse confirmed that he took part in practice. 

“He did participate,” Nurse said. “Everything right from the start was live and he was in there, participating in that stuff. He didn’t do everything, but he did quite a bit.

“I think he’s probably told you how he’s feeling, how he’s looking. He was moving good, playing hard and he had great spirit out there today.”

A Sixers official said Trendon Watford (right hamstring tightness) is day-to-day and that Paul George (left knee surgery) did an individual on-court workout.

Celtics' Jayson Tatum on return from torn Achilles: 'I'm not saying that I'm not playing this season'

Jayson Tatum was crushed. Physically. Emotionally. Here he was, a top-five player in the world on a Celtics team with a legitimate chance to be the first NBA repeat champions since Kevin Durant was living in the Bay Area, then suddenly, after diving for a loose ball, he was lying on the court at Madison Square Garden in incredible pain with what he knew was a torn Achilles.

Tatum confided all of this in one of the pillars of his support, his mother, he told Andrew Grief of NBC News.

"It was almost like I felt betrayed," Tatum said of the injury. "I was one of those guys that I never wanted to sit out... I feel like I took care of my body. I didn't cheat the game. When it was time to rest, I rested. When it was time to work out or lift or get treatment or whatever it was, I felt like I always stayed on top of my routine.

"So for this to happen, it was just like, man, this was not supposed to happen to me. And for a while, I was kind of like — it may sound dramatic, but I remember telling my mom, like 'Mom, I might be done. I don't know if I'll be able to overcome this or if I'm up for this challenge.' You know, I just felt defeated. And there was a time I was like, I don't know if I want to do this anymore."

The mental toughness and fight that led Tatum to become one of the top five players in the world eventually kicked in, and he has gotten on top of his recovery routine, working toward a return. Both in his interview with NBC News and in his appearance on TODAY with Jenna & Friends, he emphasized that this is a day-to-day process. And he would not rule out a return this season.

"Like, [day to day] how I've approached this process, is like, man, the most important thing is making a full recovery. I'm not saying that I'm not playing this season.

"I'm not taking that off the table, because, you know, for me as a competitor, every day I go into the weight room and do rehab, I'm working towards something, obviously, coming back 100%, whenever that is."

Whether Tatum returns this season could hinge on several factors, the most important being his body and recovery, but also where the Celtics are in the playoff chase in the later stages of the season. Would it be worth the risk? This is a Boston team that sent out two key veteran players from their championship team — Kristaps Porzingis and Jrue Holiday — because of the NBA's restrictive second apron. There are expectations in league circles that this will be a bit of a gap year for Boston, which will retool next summer with a healthy Tatum and Jaylen Brown and make another title run. New owner Bill Chisholm said he will do whatever it takes for this team to win.

Tatum will be at the heart of that — and maybe even be part of this season. He has a goal, he will not rule it out.

Ex-NBA All-Star argues Warriors, Kings should swap Jonathan Kuminga, Malik Monk

Ex-NBA All-Star argues Warriors, Kings should swap Jonathan Kuminga, Malik Monk originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

As the Warriors’ contract saga with free-agent forward Jonathan Kuminga approaches the three-month mark, there are plenty of opinions across the NBA landscape on how to bring the standoff to an end.

Former NBA All-Star Jeff Teague hasn’t shied away from sharing his thoughts on the situation throughout the offseason, and this week, he advocated for Golden State to make a move that would benefit both itself and Kuminga.

On a recent episode of his “Club 520” podcast, Teague explained why he’d like to see the Warriors complete a sign-and-trade deal that would send Kuminga to Sacramento and guard Malik Monk to the Bay.

“Malik Monk could actually be a fire addition to the Warriors,” Teague stated (h/t Golden State Warriors on SI.com). “But I think they are set on a big — that’s what they need more than anything. I think he’d be a fire addition, though, because they need a spark plug like him. That’s the Jordan Poole type of player right there.”

Across his last three seasons with Sacramento, Monk has averaged 15.3 points per game on 44.3 percent shooting from the field and 34.4 percent from 3-point range. The 27-year-old finished fifth and second in NBA Sixth Man of the Year voting in the 2022-23 and 2023-24 seasons, respectively.

As Teague noted, Monk could provide the Warriors with a similar spark off the bench to former Golden State guard Jordan Poole, who played a pivotal role in their 2022 NBA Finals-winning run.

“I think if he got in that system with those veterans and those players, that could mold him a little more. He’ll probably be better than Jordan Poole, to be honest,” Teague continued on Monk. “I’m not saying he’s a better player. Jordan Poole is cold, but Jordan Poole grew up in that system, so he figured out how to be successful in it.” 

While the Warriors finding a Poole-type replacement sounds great in theory, it might not be all that realistic at this point.

According to a report by NBC Sports Bay Area’s Dalton Johnson on Saturday, the chances of Golden State agreeing to a sign-and-trade featuring Kuminga are slim.

With time running out for both sides to make a decision, a conclusion to this months-long saga should come soon.

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Warriors officially promote Steve Kerr's son Nicholas to assistant coach

Warriors officially promote Steve Kerr's son Nicholas to assistant coach originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Another Kerr will be on the Warriors’ bench for the 2025-26 NBA season.

Nicholas Kerr, son of Golden State head coach Steve Kerr, was promoted to an assistant coach role for the upcoming season, per a Warriors release Saturday.

Kerr, 32, spent the last two seasons as the head coach of the Santa Cruz Warriors, Golden State’s G-League affiliate. He has been with the organization since 2018, previously spending three seasons with Golden State working in player development and as a video coordinator.

Under his father, who is entering his 12th NBA season as Golden State’s head coach, Kerr will join a veteran coaching staff on the Warriors’ bench. Former NBA head coaches Terry Stotts and Jerry Stackhouse are two prominent names on the staff; both were hired prior to the 2024-25 season.

The Warriors also announced a slew of other changes within their basketball operations department. Notably, David Fatoki was promoted to vice president of basketball development after serving as the general manager of Santa Cruz for the last four seasons. Nikola Milojević, son of late Golden State assistant coach Dejan Milojević, has been hired in a video coordinator, player development role as well.

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Everything we learned about Sixers' injuries at media day

Everything we learned about Sixers' injuries at media day  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Injuries again ruled the day as the Sixers formally got the ball rolling on their 2025-26 season.

“Obviously, we know that for us, the biggest thing is health,” Joel Embiid said Friday.

From Embiid’s knee to Kelly Oubre Jr.’s pinkie, here’s what we learned about the team’s health at media day in Camden, New Jersey. 

Joel Embiid 

Embiid had arthroscopic surgery in April on the bothersome left knee that limited him to 19 games last season.

The 2022-23 MVP is pleased with his trajectory since then, although Embiid and the Sixers are not inclined to place any exact public timelines on his next steps. 

“I feel pretty good,” he said. “I think we made a lot of progress over the last couple of months. We’ve got a plan in place, try to check off all the boxes. … This is still kind of like a feel period where we’re just taking it day by day. Keep getting stronger, keep getting better. 

“There’s been a few court sessions, so everything has been on schedule. … I think there’s not necessarily an expectation. It’s more about making sure everything is right and doing everything right, and then going from there.” 

Embiid acknowledged that, as his injury-filled, unlucky history suggests, the season may not be an ultra-smooth ride. 

“I think I want to be as honest as possible,” he said. “I think going forward, I’m just going to listen to the body. I’ll be honest and say it’s going to be unpredictable at times, and that’s OK. We’ve got to work with that. We’ve got to take it day by day and go from there. 

“So I think the only thing I’m focused on is every single time we’re on the right path, keep going. If there’s something that happens in that time, it’s OK. Just focus on fixing it and keep going. That’s my mentality.” 

Rookie Johni Broome provided a bit of insight into how Embiid’s looked in pre-training camp action.

“He’s great. He practiced the other day and I had to guard him. He scored a couple in a row,” Broome said with a smile. “That’s what you kind of expect. You play good defense and he has better offense. That’s the type of player he is, but I’m glad that I’m going against him in practice and I’m going to have him on my side during the year. He’s a great person to learn from and he’s very open to talk to you about things you need to improve on.” 

Paul George 

George underwent a more recent arthroscopic left knee surgery than Embiid’s. 

He said he’s “getting better and better, feeling stronger and feeling” following that July procedure. However, the 35-year-old forward does not expect to participate in the Sixers’ weekend training camp practices. George noted he’s able to do “pretty much everything besides full contact.”

“I’m in the weight room, I’m lifting, I’m working out every day,” he said. “I’m on the court. Not ready to start the full ramp-up of conditioning on court with running and stuff like that, but I’m on the court, I’m working out. I’m doing stationary drills … one-to-two dribble moves. I’m still able to move and be active on the court, I’m just not ready to be a full-on contact participant right now.”

George played in just half of the Sixers’ games last year. He also tried to grind through several significant lingering injuries — knee, groin, pinkie — even when the Sixers were many games below .500. It didn’t work well for him or the team.

Will his attitude be any different moving forward about playing with nagging issues? 

“I’m not a doctor, but I think just trusting my body, trusting the process going into this season,” George said. “The team is allowing me to kind of be as (close) to 100 (percent) as possible, because that’s what I signed up for. That’s what they signed me for, to come in and be the Paul George that they went out and recruited last year. So for me to do that, I do have to be healthy. That’s really it. 

“Again, I’m putting the work in, I’m putting the time in, I’m seeing the progress. I’m feeling more and more like myself each day, and that’s the most important thing as the dates are winding down and we’re getting ready for the season to start. So I like where I’m at, I like how we’ve progressed things, and that’s the only way I can look at it right now.”

Jared McCain 

A day after suffering a UCL tear in his right thumb, McCain was absent from media day.

“He’s still consulting with specialists. … Still gathering that feedback,” Sixers president of basketball operations Daryl Morey said. “We know Jared’s going to attack this just like he did the last (injury) and be back even better.”

Kelly Oubre Jr. 

Oubre went into detail Friday about addressing the long-term finger injuries that he’s previously indicated have posed challenges with his jumper. 

“I have had surgery on my left pinkie and my thumb as well,” he said. “Different years, different surgeries. I got hurt for the first time around (the start of) COVID and the rehab process was kind of non-existent because the world shut down. So I built up a lot of scar tissue in those areas. And then in my thumb, I have a brace. 

“I did attack that really hard this summer. I was able to see my old therapist. Her name’s Mo; shoutout Mo, she’s amazing. Get some more range of motion in my wrist, in my hand, in my fingers. Get my fingers straighter. … I’ve just got to put the ball in the hole and then you guys can talk about it when I do.”

Oubre had an offseason follow-up consultation.

“I actually saw the doctor who did it this summer, just to go over everything, let him know how I’m healing,” he said. “We thought about taking the brace out of my thumb. But I’m going to take that out, gain some range (of motion) but lose something on the back end somewhere else. It’s not really worth it. And over these years, I’ve been able to compensate and my body does a good job of adapting to less flexion and range of motion. 

“I’ve been just figuring it out, honestly. But with this range, I have to re-write the patterns in my brain of shooting like I used to before all of these things. I’m just a hooper, man. I’m just looking forward to going out there and making it work. The triumph will be better than the adversity for sure.”

Andre Drummond 

Drummond had a straightforward report on the left big toe injury that hindered him for much of last year. 

“It was a good summer for me,” the veteran big man said. “I did all the necessary things to build the strength back in my foot and I’m 100 percent to go. I’ve looked great during (offseason workouts) and I’m ready.”

Drummond ventured into new territory with his rehab.

“Honestly, I didn’t know there was such a thing as toe yoga,” he said. “I’ve been doing a lot of toe yoga this summer to be able to really get that strength back in my big toe, being able to move it freely without having to tape it. … If you don’t know what it is, look it up. It’s definitely not a fun experience, but it worked out for me.”

Eric Gordon

The 36-year-old Gordon is back for a second season in Philadelphia. His first ended with right wrist surgery.

“I would say a couple of months after the surgery, I was really able to shoot,” Gordon said. “So I’ve been able to shoot all summer. Anytime you have a surgery, you’re always going to have ups and downs, but so far everything’s been good. I’m looking forward to practice tomorrow with really no limitations.”

Kyle Lowry 

Lowry, 39, spoke with great enthusiasm Friday about mentoring Sixers youngsters like VJ Edgecombe and McCain, who he said have a “pureness” in their approach to the sport.

As far as on the floor, Lowry’s last season was frequently disrupted by a right hip problem. That’s improved over the summer. 

“I feel great,” he said. “I feel really good. I think just being able to be on the court to help these guys the best that I can. But I know my role this year. So if I’m needed, I’ll be there, but my role is to help these guys. I would love to play 25, 30 minutes (per game), but that’s not my role, that’s not my job.” 

Grizzlies' Jaren Jackson Jr., Zach Edey, Brandon Clarke all to miss start of season recovering from surgeries

This is a harsh blow to start the season for a Memphis team needing to prove it can make noise in a deep Western Conference.

Jaren Jackson Jr. and Zach Edey — the team's starting power forward and center — as well as backup center Brandon Clarke are all going to miss training camp and the start of the season recovering from surgeries, the team announced Friday.

An All-Star last season and a former Defensive Player of the Year, Jackson had surgery to help deal with a turf toe injury back in July. Last season he averaged 22.2 points per game, shooting 37.5% from beyond the arc, while playing elite defense. Because of his two-way play as well as Ja Morant being in and out of the lineup in recent seasons, Jackson has become the Grizzlies' best player and losing him is a huge blow. Santi Aldama will move into the starting lineup in his place.

Edey made First-Team All-Rookie last season, averaging 9.2 points and 8.3 rebounds a game, while blocking 1.3 shots a night.

Clarke has recovered from the knee sprain that slowed him at the end of last season but now suffers from right knee synovitis — an inflammation of the synovial membrane that surrounds and helps lubricate the knee — and that required his knee to be scoped. While there is no timeline on Clarke's return, he is going to be re-evaluated in six weeks, reports Shams Charania of ESPN. That likely pushes his return into November.

All these frontcourt injuries will put a lot more pressure on Ja Morant to keep the Grizzlies afloat to start the season until everyone gets healthy. In a West with a minimum of 13 teams thinking playoffs, that will be a big ask.

Portland's Scoot Henderson suffers torn hamstring, out 4-8 weeks

Scoot Henderson showed the kind of development in the second half of last season that had the Trail Blazers and their fans optimistic about the leap the guard could make in his third year. With Anfernee Simons gone via trade, it looked as if Henderson would get his chance to start at the point, plus Damian Lillard and Jrue Holiday are in Portland as mentors. Everything seemed to be falling into place.

Now all that is on hold after Henderson tore his left hamstring in a team workout and hopes to start on-court rehabilitation in 4-8 weeks.

This is a heavy blow for the Trail Blazers.

Notice that the Trail Blazers' release says Henderson is "expected to return to basketball activities in 4-8 weeks," not return to play. Hamstrings are fickle and can be slow to heal, and you can be sure the Trail Blazers will be cautious and not look to rush him back and risk re-injury. The Blazers' timeline suggests that Henderson will start working out toward a return in November and possibly return to the court before or around Thanksgiving.

It seems most likely now that Holiday will start at the point next to Shaedon Sharpe in the backcourt. The Trail Blazers were already a little shorthanded in the backcourt, with Damian Lillard on the roster but not playing this season due to a torn Achilles.

After the All-Star break last season, Henderson averaged 13.4 points, 4.6 assists and three rebounds a game. For the season he shot 35.4% from 3-point range.

Joel Embiid said there is no timetable for his return to court but wants to play 'consistently'

Nineteen games. The season before, 39.

That's how many games Joel Embiid has played since his MVP season. While he remains a dominant force when on the court, he comes into this season off another arthroscopic left knee surgery in April, with no timetable for his return this season, he said at 76ers media day. While that is concerning, Embiid said that there was a plan in place.

"The goal is to play consistently," Embiid said, via the Associated Press. He later added, "I think going forward, we're just going to listen to the body. I'll be honest and say it's going to be unpredictable at times, and that's OK. We're going to work with that."
There was also no timetable for Paul George's return to the court. He had arthroscopic surgery on his knee in July after injuring it during a workout. That said, both George and Embiid are largely expected to be ready to go early in the season (if not opening night).

Embiid and George being healthy is at the heart of the 76ers' potential — if things mostly go right, this team could be a contender in the East. That starts with Embiid, who averaged 23.8 points, 8.2 rebounds, and 4.5 assists per game when he was on the court last season.

"I want to play. I want to play every single game," Embiid said. "I've been pretty unlucky when it comes to that compared to most NBA players."
The 76ers opened training camp this week before flying to the United Arab Emirates for two preseason games in Abu Dhabi (against the Knicks).

Philadelphia already had some unlucky injury news to start the season as second-year guard Jared McCain tore a ligament in his thumb and will miss the start of the season. Philly needs McCain to show that his fast start to last season was not a fluke, and it also needs Tyrese Maxey to play like an All-Star, rookie V.J. Edgecombe to provide athleticism and a spark, and it needs its veterans — guys like Andre Drummond, Eric Gordon, Kelly Oubre and Kyle Lowry — to pump the team up when needed.

However, if the 76ers want to be a threat in the East, what they need most of all is a healthy Embiid.

"I've had so many injuries," Embiid said. "The only thing I've always told myself is you can't give up."

New Celtics owner Bill Chisholm vows to 'do whatever it takes' to bring championships to Boston

BOSTON (AP) — The Boston Celtics are expecting a smooth ownership transition - and not just because much of the old brain trust is sticking around.

New owner Bill Chisholm says he isn't going to mess with the success of the people who won two NBA championships in their 23 years in charge.

“Let’s do whatever we can to win championships and raise banners, and raise as many as we can,” he said in a news conference on Thursday, flanked by former lead owner Wyc Grousbeck, incumbent president Rich Gotham and president of basketball operations Brad Stevens. “I will do whatever it takes, whatever the Boston Celtics need me to do.”

A Massachusetts native who made his money in private equity, Chisholm leads a group that will pay at least $6.1 billion for the Celtics - at the time, a record price for an American professional sports franchise; the NBA unanimously approved the deal last month. He told reporters on Thursday that the opportunity to buy into his favorite team was too good to pass up.

“The Celtics have brought me joy my entire life,” he said. “I feel like I have something to add here. This was an opportunity that was a dream that came true. For me to have this chance, I would never forgive myself if I didn’t go for it.”

Grousbeck and co-owner Steve Pagliuca led a group that bought the Celtics in 2002 for $360 million and presided over an era in which the Celtics won two NBA titles, lost in the Finals two other times and made the playoffs in 20 of 23 seasons. The team’s most recent title came in 2024, led by Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown.

Grousbeck said he will continue with the team as the CEO for five years - with no plans to leave after that. His ownership share will dip below the 15% required for him to continue as the team’s designated governor for league matters, though, so he will serve as alternate governor.

“I’m staying in, shoulder-to-shoulder with Bill,” he said. “I want a third ring. And then I want a fourth ring. I’ve got two, it’s a nice start.”

In all, Grousbeck said, more than half of the old ownership group will be sticking around, along with Stevens, Gotham and coach Joe Mazzulla.

But there should be no question who is in charge.

“There’s a governor, and the governor has the final say, and that’s me,” Chisholm said. “Ultimately, I’m the one responsible.”

Chisholm said he supported the idea of a WNBA team in Boston.

The Connecticut Sun are for sale, and Pagliuca offered to buy them and move them to Boston. (Pagliuca also made an offer for the Celtics but was outbid by Chisholm.)

But the league nixed the deal, saying cities that had already applied for expansion teams were a higher priority.

“It’s definitely something we’re going to look at. And I know the (WNBA) has a process,” Chisholm said. “We’ll do what we can to expedite things. There’s a process there. But philosophically it makes so much sense.”

Chisholm also sounded like he wasn't eager to move out of TD Garden, which the Celtics share with the NHL's Boston Bruins, saying “we've got a great thing going right now.”

“I really like the Boston Garden, personally. More importantly, the team and the players really like the Boston Garden. And equally important, the fans really like the Boston Garden. So that’s a starting point,” he said. “The second thing is I think the Celtics and the Bruins belong together."

Also meeting the media on Thursday was Aditya Mittal, the son of one of India’s richest men and the CEO of a ArcelorMittal, the second-largest steel-producing company in the world. He said he first visited Boston in the 1980s and attended a Celtics game at the old Boston Garden.

“It was magical,” he said. “I fell in love with it.”

Chisholm takes over the team in a bit of a transition just two seasons after its latest title.

Tatum is recovering from surgery to repair the ruptured right Achilles tendon he suffered in Boston’s Eastern Conference semifinal loss to the New York Knicks, dooming the Celtics’ hopes of a repeat.

And in order to avoid the second apron penalties of the NBA’s salary tax, the Celtics traded Jrue Holiday and Kristaps Porzingis - key parts of the title-winning team – this summer. Grousbeck said those deals would have happened even if the team wasn’t sold.

Stevens said the deals weren’t about the financial penalties as much as the roster restrictions: If Boston had been over the second apron at the time, it would not have been able to acquire Porzingis, Holiday or Derrick White in the first place.

“You have to give yourself the flexibility and opportunity to jump at the right deals. You don’t always know when those are present themselves,” Stevens said. “So the second apron was the key.”

Chisholm said his message to the basketball operations crew is “Let’s go for it, but let’s do it in a reasonable way.”

“The flexibility the Brad talks about, I think that’s paramount to doing that," he said. "But, ultimately, we’re going to do everything we can to win. It’s job No. 1.”

Quentin Grimes, 76ers reportedly headed for one-year contract, but will it be qualifying offer or more?

Quentin Grimes wants to capitalize on his red-hot finish to last season after being traded to Philadelphia. The 76ers remain $1.7 million below the luxury tax line this season — despite having two players in Joel Embiid and Paul George making north of $50 million this season — and don't want to mess with future flexibility for a roster where there is great potential but a lot of questions.

That is likely to lead to a one-year deal between Grimes and Philly, something that has seemed likely from earlier reporting and was confirmed by Michael Scotto of Hoopshype. Grimes was seeking a long-term offer starting north of $17 million (approximately $20 million per season or close to it), and the Sixers' first formal offer was significantly below that, at four years, $39 million, Grimes' agent, David Bauman, told Scotto. The Sixers have pushed back on that idea as a formal offer and it was simply part of a negotiation.

However the sides wish to spin it, they are too far apart to find common ground on a long-term deal before the Oct. 1 deadline (when Grimes would have to pick up his qualifying offer). That has the sides moving toward a one-year contract. Scotto added details on that.

At this point, the 76ers have formally offered Grimes a one-year deal that's slightly higher than his qualifying offer of $8.7 million with the caveat that he'd waive his no-trade clause, league sources told HoopsHype. For Grimes to waive his no-trade clause flexibility on any one-year deal, Philadelphia's offer would preferably be somewhere north of the non-taxpayer mid-level exception ($14 million) and $19 million range, league sources told HoopsHype.

Grimes has made a total of $11.1 million across four NBA seasons, so taking the qualifying offer at $8.7 million more than doubles what he made in any one season of his career. That said, he doesn't want to leave money on the table now, and for Philly, if it offers him something like $15 million for the season, it retains his Bird rights and can pay more next summer to keep him if it wishes. That said, anything north of $9.8 million pushes the Sixers above the first apron of the luxury tax, somewhat limiting their ability to make in-season moves.

Grimes wants to cash in on the red-hot 28 games he had with the 76ers after the trade deadline last season, when he averaged 21.9 points, 5.2 rebounds, and 4.5 assists a game. Philadelphia is deep with guards, including Tyrese Maxey, Jared McCain (who will miss the start of the season with a thumb injury) and just-drafted VJ Edgecombe. Grimes' role this season will be a smaller one than he had at the end of last season, but still a key one as a starter or sixth man, and how much are the 76ers willing to pay for that?

We will find out by Oct. 1.

Scottie Pippen claims Steph Curry ‘wouldn't be the same' if he played in the '90s

Scottie Pippen claims Steph Curry ‘wouldn't be the same' if he played in the '90s originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Comparing different eras of NBA basketball is impossible, yet we do it anyway.

Chicago Bulls legend Scottie Pippen was asked who would win between his 1995-96 Bulls team and the 2016-17 Warriors, and Pippen didn’t hold back his thoughts on Golden State star Steph Curry.

“It depends on the rules,” Pippen said in a recent interview with MARCA (h/t Golden State Warriors on SI.com). “If you play by today’s rules, it would be one thing. But with the rules of the ’90s, Curry wouldn’t be the same. If we played in his era, it would be like playing freely: no one holds you, no one stops you. I don’t know who would win.”

Pippen’s take on the subject could be personal. In the 2016-17 NBA season, the Golden State Warriors surpassed the 1995-96 Bulls for the best regular-season record in NBA history, achieving a 73-9 mark.

“We weren’t built to shoot 25-50 3-pointers per game,” Pippen continued. “They would probably win that way because they have two of the best shooters in Steph and Klay [Thompson]. But we played physical. We defended hard. We made teams score only 75-80 points. Today, that’s almost impossible.”

The game was much different in the 1990s compared to now, but the numbers still don’t lie. Curry averaged 25.3 points, 6.6 assists and 4.5 rebounds in 79 games in 2016-17. Michael Jordan averaged 30.4 points, 6.6 rebounds and 4.3 assists in 82 games in 1995-96. Pippen’s numbers were never close to either Curry’s or Jordan’s.

Pippen claimed that his 1995-96 Bulls team is the greatest team of all time “on paper,” but thinks that the Warriors would win in a hypothetical matchup because of their shooting ability.

When comparing the two squads, the only argument Chicago has is that they have the ring to show for their regular-season efforts. Golden State lost to the Cleveland Cavaliers in seven games, giving Lebron James his third championship.

Fans will never know who would win between these two super teams, but the debate will continue for decades.

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