LeBron James makes history as he plays 23rd NBA season against players who weren’t alive when he started in the league

LeBron James became the first player to feature in 23 NBA seasons on Tuesday (AP)

LeBron James made history Tuesday, becoming the first player to span 23 NBA seasons, facing seven Utah Jazz players who weren’t even born when he debuted.

“That just made my back hurt,” the 40-year-old Los Angeles Laker joked to reporters when told the stat, surpassing Vince Carter’s 22 seasons.

Five other players have played 21 seasons, including Robert Parish, Kevin Willis, Kevin Garnett, Dirk Nowitzki, and Chris Paul. James is now 48 games shy of Robert Parish’s record of 1,611 regular-season games.

Despite admitting his lungs were "burning," the Akron, Ohio, native set the NBA’s career-length record, playing 29 minutes and posting 11 points, 12 assists, and three rebounds in the Lakers’ 140-126 win over the Jazz.

Tuesday also marked James’ return to the court after a nearly seven-month absence due to sciatica, which sidelined him at the start of training camp. The four-time NBA champion missed the entire preseason and the Lakers’ first 14 regular-season games.

LeBron James made his first appearance of the season on Tuesday night (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)
LeBron James made his first appearance of the season on Tuesday night (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

New Lakers center Deandre Ayton was also impressed with James’ performance, recalling that an alley-oop he received for a dunk was only the second lob from James he’d ever caught.

“I was just telling him a fun fact. I said, ‘That’s my second alley for me from you, the first one was when I was in eighth grade at your camp,’” Ayton told the media.

James, who had previously never missed a season opener in his nearly three-decade career, returned to basketball last week, practicing with the Lakers for the first time Monday.

"The pace tested me, but I was happy with the way I was able to go with the guys," James commented after the game.

"As the game went on, my wind got a lot better. Caught my second wind, caught my third wind. Rhythm is still coming back, obviously. First game in almost seven months, so everything that happened tonight was to be expected."

Some observers had questioned whether James’s return might disrupt a Lakers side that had started strongly with a 10-4 record in his absence. James dismissed such notions with a laugh.

"I can fit in with anybody," he asserted. "I don’t even understand why that was even a question. What’s wrong with these people out here? I can fit in right away with anybody.

“Just watching the guys the first 14 games, I was putting myself (mentally) in position while I was watching the games of how I could help the team and how I could be successful to help those guys. I’m still able to gain a lot of eyes when I’m driving the ball or have the ball."

Approximately 30 minutes before tip-off, the team confirmed James would make his 1,561st start in his 1,563rd regular-season game, receiving a loud ovation when announced in the Lakers’ starting line-up.

Though he didn't score in his first 11 minutes, James soon found his stride, hitting two three-pointers in the second quarter and dishing out eight assists in the second half, including six in just over three minutes early in the fourth quarter.

Denadre Ayton was visibly impressed by James’ performance (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)
Denadre Ayton was visibly impressed by James’ performance (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

Lakers coach JJ Redick praised James’s unselfishness: "He played with the right spirit. Very unselfish all night. Was a willing passer. Didn’t force it. Took his drives and his shots when they were there. The defence is going to pay attention to him, and I just thought he made a lot of great decisions tonight. Really great to have him back."

James already holds the NBA record for combined regular-season and playoff games (1,855) and most total minutes played.

James became the NBA’s all-time leading scorer in February 2023 and, last March, was the first player to accumulate 50,000 total points in the regular season and playoffs combined.

His illustrious career, which began with the Cleveland Cavaliers in October 2003, includes four NBA Finals MVP awards, four league MVP awards, and 21 All-Star selections.

James has now played in 23 NBA seasons, surpassing the record he previously jointly-held with Vince Carter (Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)
James has now played in 23 NBA seasons, surpassing the record he previously jointly-held with Vince Carter (Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

He led the Lakers to their 17th championship in 2020 and saw them reach the Western Conference finals in 2023, winning the Pacific Division title last spring after acquiring Luka Doncic, whom James describes as his favourite current player.

Despite admitting his body isn’t yet in ideal game shape, James remains eager to continue his career.

He has repeatedly stated he isn’t assuming this will be his last season, though he hasn’t decided on playing another year.

His most recent off-season was plagued by injuries, including two months of recovery after spraining his knee ligament during the Lakers’ first-round playoff loss to Minnesota, followed by the painful bout of sciatica.

The Lakers’ next fixture is on Sunday, again against the Jazz in Salt Lake City. With at least two practices scheduled before then, James will have further opportunities to establish his chemistry and role within the team.

"I don’t have to worry about chemistry," James affirmed. "This is a great group. Everyone enjoys being around each another, sacrificing for one another, playing for one another. (Just got to) get my wind, get my rhythm back.

“Missed a couple of chippies tonight that I’m used to making. But that will come around."

Anthony Davis trade rumors: Davis must get healthy to garner serious offers from Bulls, Raptors, others

From the moment Nico Harrison was fired, rumors have run rampant that the Dallas Mavericks should and would pivot to trade Anthony Davis and start building around Cooper Flagg. Count me among the many who have said that’s the direction the Mavericks should head.

While that makes for fun speculation — and many around the league think it is a little more likely than not — a whole long line of dominoes needs to fall before we can seriously discuss a Davis trade.

Reportedly, there is some trade interest in Davis — the Knicks, Warriors, Bulls and Kings have come up as potential destinations — but actually constructing a trade that works for everyone is incredibly difficult. And we have to get to the point where teams would make an offer first.

Davis needs to get healthy

Davis has missed the last 10 games with a calf strain and, in a precautionary measure, will be out at least another week before he returns to the court, something coach Jason Kidd confirmed (the extended time off reportedly was pushed for by Dallas' owner Patrick Dumont, and director of health and performance Johann Bilsborough).

Before any talk of a Davis trade can get serious, he has to get back on the court and prove he is healthy and still able to play at a near All-Star level — and do so for an extended period of time, league sources told NBC Sports. This reporting echoes what NBA insider Marc Stein wrote on Substack, that league sources told him Davis must "demonstrate sustained productivity through December and January" to generate the level of trade demand that Dallas will want.

Another under-discussed aspect of this is the Dallas front office situation. Michael Finley and Matt Riccardi are serving as interim co-general managers while the search for a full-time person to take over that role is underway. Would Dallas let those interim GMs trade Davis and set the future direction of the franchise?

Whether it's the rumored interested party, Dennis Lindsey (the former Jazz GM), or anyone else who eventually takes over in Dallas, they will want control over this process. The new GM will want a say as to who and what they would accept in a Davis trade. Also, the Mavericks rightfully can say they want to see what this team looks like with a healthy Davis alongside Kyrie Irving (also out injured) and next to Cooper Flagg. That may not be the move many of us would make, but it's on the table.

If Davis proves he's healthy, and if Dallas is ready to make a move, there will be some interest. However, there is another big challenge.

Davis’ salary, extension

Anthony Davis is in the first year of a three-year, $175 million contract extension and is making $54.1 million this season. He is guaranteed $58.5 million next season, then has a $62.8 million player option for the 2027-28 season. He is extension-eligible this summer and would likely decline the player option for a couple more guaranteed years and more total money. Think two years, $130+ million, with a deal that would then stretch to the summer of 2029.

That's a lot to take on for any team, and any team that trades for him has to be going all-in and banking on a healthy Davis to be a key part of their championship window. There is a small market of those teams.

One other challenge in constructing an in-season Davis trade: Dallas is right up against the second apron and will look to shed salary in any trade (it might even try to drop as much as $16 million to get below the luxury tax line). This is why constructing a trade to teams also constrained by the tax aprons — the Knicks, the Warriors — is next to impossible. Even if those teams want to do it.

What teams would have an interest in Davis? Let's break down the teams mentioned most often.

Chicago Bulls

John Wall popularized the idea that Davis wants to go home to his native Chicago. That sounds good on paper, Davis would be an upgrade at the center position for the Bulls defensively, but there are three main issues.

1) Arturas Karnisovas almost never makes in-season trades. Why would the Bulls GM break that pattern this season? While the East is more wide open than in years, how far is a Josh Giddey and Anthony Davis core really going to go? The second round? Are the Bulls willing to give up young players and picks for that ceiling?

2) What direction are the Bulls going? We've been asking that for years as the team seemed to tread water, but with Chicago moving on from DeMar DeRozan and Zach LaVine, this feels like they were finally pivoting to their youth. Davis is 32, has a long history of nagging injuries, and is going to expect a contract extension after this season. That's not youth; getting Davis is a win-now move.

3) The Bulls need more rim protection, and a healthy Davis provides that, except that coach Billy Donovan would need to convince AD to spend most of his minutes at the five. Davis, famously, prefers to play the four most of the game and not deal with the physical wear-and-tear of being an NBA center defending on the block.

There are three-team trade constructions that work (adding the Nets because they have cap space), with the Bulls sending out the expiring contract of Nikola Vucevic, as well as young point guard Coby White and another player (Kevin Huerter or Isaac Okoro?). Plus, Chicago would need to throw some picks into the deal (the Bulls have those). From the outside, it doesn't make a ton of sense for the Bulls to trade away parts of the future for a win-now move, but if Karnisovas felt his seat was getting warm, might he make a big move?

Golden State Warriors

Golden State fits the "would spend money on an older player to try and win now" mold better than any team in the NBA. They want to try to win one more with Stephen Curry. Golden State also needs help along the front line. On paper there is a logic to this…

Until you actually try to construct a trade. Both the Mavericks and Warriors are hard-capped at the second apron and less than $2 million below that line, so any trade has to be even financially.

Jimmy Butler for Davis straight up works financially (they make the same amount), but that trade doesn't improve either team in the ways they want.

Golden State could construct a three-team trade for Davis (with Brooklyn) that sends Draymond Green, Jonathan Kuminga, and another player, such as Buddy Hield, out, plus picks. While a healthy Davis is a better player than Green in a vacuum, they have to give up two key role players and picks to make it happen. Is Davis that much better than Green? Plus, Curry and Green have chemistry that's hard to replicate. It's just incredibly difficult to find a deal that works financially, and even harder to find one that makes any sense.

New York Knicks

This is not happening.

On paper, a Karl-Anthony Towns for Davis swap works (they make the same salary), and AD is a better defender, but the Knicks get older, and KAT is a better fit in Mike Brown's offense. Do the Knicks want to blow up an Eastern Conference Finals team on the bet that Anthony Davis will be healthy and playing his best ball in the postseason? For the Mavericks, the Knicks don't have quality picks to throw in, so now they are just pairing Towns and Flagg, which brings in more shooting, but how much better do they really get?. Long term, they would need to flip Towns in another trade.

Other trade constructions — either an expansion of the KAT/Davis trade, or one based around OG Anunoby and Mikal Bridges —exist, but they all run into the same issues. The Knicks are better off going with the guys they have.

Minnesota Timberwolves

Minnesota has been to the Western Conference Finals each of the past two seasons, but early on in this season, it looks more like a team taking half a step back, not one forward. Yet.

The trade would have to be Rudy Gobert and Mike Conley based, and as Zach Lowe noted on his podcast, the Mavericks would likely ask for Rob Dillingham to be thrown in (betting on his development). Davis and Julius Randle become the front line, which should open up more driving space for Anthony Edwards. It's a win-now move for Minnesota if they feel they need to make a change near the deadline.

Dallas would get Dillingham and try to flip Gobert over the summer (Dereck Lively II is their center of the future — and present — when healthy). Is that enough? It may depend on how highly they rate Dillingham.

Los Angles Clippers

The Clippers are the oldest team in the league, they are struggling to open the season, and there is a sense of desperation to try and win during the Kawhi Leonard era — could they make another push all in, trying to add Davis to James Harden, Ivica Zubac and (an eventually healthy) Leonard?

As Lowe noted on his podcast, a deal would have to be based around John Collins, Bogdan Bogdanovic, Brook Lopez (or Derrick Jones Jr.), plus the Clippers' 2031 first-round pick. As tempting as that 2031 pick may be, that's not an offer that will thrill Dallas (but it's also closer to the reality of what the Mavericks will get back in any AD trade). The vibe in Los Angeles is more that this franchise is ready to pivot and rebuild, not trade for another expensive short-term solution, but maybe things change.

Toronto Raptors

This is my favorite of the trade options. Toronto is 9-5 to start the season, sees a much more open East, has a new management team that wants to make its mark and might see a healthy Davis as the upgrade they need in the paint.

The most likely trade scenario sends RJ Barrett, Jakob Poeltl, Ja'Kobe Walter and two first-round picks to Dallas for Davis. For Toronto, it pairs AD with Scottie Barnes, Brandon Ingram, Immanuel Quickley, and Collin Murray-Boyles — that's an interesting group. For Dallas, it's two first-round picks and a couple of players who can be flipped in future trades. It might be as good a deal as they can get.

• Detroit gets mentioned a lot, in part because everyone expects them to make one more move to contend now (hello Lauri Markkanen). Here's the thing: Davis is not an upgrade (or, at least not enough of one) the way Jalen Duren is playing right now. Especially with Isaiah Stewart also in the front-court mix. If the Pistons are going to make a trade, it should be for wing shot creation and scoring. Davis just makes Detroit older without the other benefits they need. Detroit would have to give up Jaden Ivey and Tobias Harris to make this work. The trade might be great for Dallas, but why would the Pistons break this up to get older along the front line?

• Miami is required by law to be brought up in any conversation about a trade for a star… but this doesn't make much sense for them. Or Dallas. The trade would have to involve Terry Rozier — currently away from the team and under federal indictment for gambling violations, but they need his salary to make a trade work — Tyler Herro, and a couple of picks. While the Heat would love to get off Rozier's contract, how does Davis fit next to Bam Adebayo (they won gold together on Team USA)? And is Herro and picks enough for Dallas? The Mavericks could ask for Norman Powell instead of Herro, but Powell is older. This just seems DOA.

• Both the Kings and Suns come up as teams in some speculation, but those are teams that know they are not winning now and are trying to pivot and get younger. Neither is trading for Davis.

Stats show Warriors' lopsided early 2025-26 NBA season game, travel schedule

Stats show Warriors' lopsided early 2025-26 NBA season game, travel schedule originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Warriors have been put to the test early on to begin the 2025-26 NBA season.

Golden State (9-7) not only has played the most games (16) of any NBA team this season, but will play in its fifth back-to-back of the season when it faces off against the Miami Heat on Wednesday at Kaseya Center.

The Warriors’ five back-to-backs are, as Tom Haberstroh highlighted in a post on X, the most in the league.

Fans on X also pointed out that Golden State, throughout its 11-games-in-18-days marathon since Nov. 4, will have traveled 9,492 miles, which also is far and away the most in the league during that timeframe.

Warriors coach Steve Kerr has been vocal about his team’s lopsided early season schedule, stating it has been the “toughest” early season schedule he has experienced throughout his entire NBA playing and coaching career.

Golden State has opted to rest veteran players like Steph Curry, Draymond Green, Jimmy Butler and Al Horford at times this season, and once again will be without all four players for Wednesday’s game against the Heat.

The Warriors, as ESPN’s Shams Charania reported Wednesday, are optimistic all four veterans will be available for Friday’s game against the Portland Trail Blazers at Chase Center, where Golden State will begin a five-game homestand that features zero back-to-backs.

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Jimmy Butler, Draymond reportedly ruled out vs. Heat alongside Steph Curry

Jimmy Butler, Draymond reportedly ruled out vs. Heat alongside Steph Curry originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Warriors will be without, perhaps, their four best players as they close out their six-game road trip.

Steph Curry (ankle soreness) and Jonathan Kuminga (bilateral knee tendinitis) officially were ruled out of Wednesday’s game against the Miami Heat before ESPN’s Shams Charania reported shortly after on “NBA Today” that both Jimmy Butler and Draymond Green also are not expected to play.

Curry told reporters after Tuesday’s game against the Magic that he tweaked his ankle in San Antonio and re-aggravated it against Orlando.

“Those are the things that you just try to play through and try to figure out how to build momentum,” Curry said (h/t ESPN’s Anthony Slater). “We all know what the schedule’s been like. We try not to think about it too much, knowing it is what it is. You have to find a way to overcome it.”

Charania also reported that the Warriors are “optimistic” that all three of Curry, Butler and Green will return for Friday’s game against the Portland Trail Blazers at Chase Center.

After missing three games due to an illness, Curry joined the Warriors on the road and has been on a heater. In five games, he’s averaging 29.8 points on 48-percent shooting from the field and 39 percent from 3-point range in 30.4 minutes.

In Tuesday’s loss to the Magic, Curry scored 34 points in 34 minutes.

After the game, he told reporters he would see how he felt before determining his status in Miami.

“We’re just looking at how it responds because I did it again in the first half tonight,” Curry said Tuesday. “I don’t think it’s anything crazy, but we’ll see how it responds during the flight and how I feel tomorrow.”

Veteran guard Buddy Hield (illness) also was listed as questionable on the Warriors’ injury report, while center Al Horford (toe/injury management) will miss the second game of the back-to-back.

For Miami, Tyler Herro (ankle) is out and Bam Adebayo (toe sprain) is questionable against Golden State.

While the Warriors’ “Strength in Numbers” mantra let them down in Tuesday’s loss, they might have to rely on it to end the road trip with a win.

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Steph Curry out vs. Heat with ankle injury; Jimmy Butler, Draymond questionable

Steph Curry out vs. Heat with ankle injury; Jimmy Butler, Draymond questionable originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Warriors will be without their best player as they close out their six-game road trip.

Steph Curry was ruled out of Wednesday’s game against the Miami Heat with right ankle soreness, per the NBA’s latest injury report. Curry told reporters after Tuesday’s game against the Magic that he tweaked his ankle in San Antonio and re-aggravated it against Orlando.

“Those are the things that you just try to play through and try to figure out how to build momentum,” Curry said (h/t ESPN’s Anthony Slater). “We all know what the schedule’s been like. We try not to think about it too much, knowing it is what it is. You have to find a way to overcome it.”

After missing three games due to an illness, Curry joined the Warriors on the road and has been on a heater. In five games, he’s averaging 29.8 points on 48-percent shooting from the field and 39 percent from 3-point range in 30.4 minutes.

In Tuesday’s loss to the Magic, Curry scored 34 points in 34 minutes.

After the game, he told reporters he would see how he felt before determining his status in Miami.

“We’re just looking at how it responds because I did it again in the first half tonight,” Curry said Tuesday. “I don’t think it’s anything crazy, but we’ll see how it responds during the flight and how I feel tomorrow.”

Jimmy Butler III (back), Draymond Green (illness) and Buddy Hield (illness) are all questionable.

Warriors center Al Horford (toe/injury management) will miss the second game of a back-to-back. Jonathan Kuminga, who’s been sidelined for the last three games while dealing with bilateral knee tendonitis, will miss his fourth consecutive game on Wednesday.

For Miami, Tyler Herro (ankle) is out and Bam Adebayo (toe sprain) is questionable against Golden State.

While the Warriors’ “Strength in Numbers” mantra let them down in Tuesday’s loss, they might have to rely on it to end the road trip with a win.

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Numbers don't lie: Fourth Quarter Derrick is vital to Celtics' success

Numbers don't lie: Fourth Quarter Derrick is vital to Celtics' success originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Every season, we tie ourselves is knots trying to figure out if there are any not-so obvious bellwethers for the success of the Boston Celtics.

Give us a small enough sample size and we can convince ourselves that the presence of Kelly Olynyk’s headband or the color of Jayson Tatum’s shoes can, on their own, predict the success of those individual players on a night-to-night basis. Sometimes it feels as if the color of the Celtics jersey is enough to determine the final result. 

It is, of course, deeper than that. Crunch the numbers over a larger sample and most of these sartorial predictors get exposed.

But over the past three seasons, there is one very telling, non-apparel-related indicator of Boston’s success: Did the Celtics outscore their opponent during Derrick White’s fourth-quarter floor time? If so, there’s a good chance they won that night.

You see, “Fourth Quarter Derrick” and his knack for winning plays on both ends of the court is a very real thing.

On Tuesday night in Brooklyn, as the Celtics stumbled their way through a turnover-plagued outing against the lowly Nets at the Barclays Center, White channeled some of his familiar fourth-quarter heroics. He knocked down two timely 3-pointers. He drew a charge. He swatted Michael Porter Jr. to force a 24-second violation.

White finished with a team-high eight points in the fourth quarter as the Celtics outscored the Nets by 10 and emerged with a 113-99 triumph.

The Celtics are now 67-7 over the past three seasons when they outscore opponents during White’s fourth-quarter floor time. That’s a .905 winning percentage. Boston was 33-1 last season when the team won White’s fourth-quarter time. The C’s are 6-2 this season.

On the flip side, when the Celtics either tie or are outscored during White’s fourth-quarter floor time, they are 40-27 over the past three seasons (.597 winning percentage). That includes a 2-4 mark this season, as White has struggled to have his familiar fourth-quarter impact in the infancy of this new campaign.

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Balk if you’d like. We wouldn’t blame you for saying, “Thanks, Captain Obvious: If the Celtics’ starters outscore their opponent in the fourth quarter, there is a very good chance the team wins.” But we ought to know by now: As goes Derrick, so go the Celtics. And his fingerprints were all over getting Boston to the finish line of an otherwise sloppy night in Brooklyn.

Like everything White does, the numbers don’t leap off the page. He didn’t even rank in the top 30 last season for fourth-quarter scoring. But he simply had a knack for big plays in big spots, especially on the road. White did rank fifth in the NBA in fourth-quarter 3-pointers made last season, with 66. Only Stephen Curry, Malik Beasley, Anthony Edwards, and Zach LaVine made more. 

This season, White ranks 21st in the NBA in fourth-quarter points (26). He easily leads the NBA with 43 fourth-quarter 3-point attempts (eight more than second-place Grayson Allen), but has only connected on 30.2 percent of those shots. On the bright side, White is sixth in the NBA in fourth-quarter assists with 21 final-frame helpers (with only four turnovers in 139 minutes of floor time). 

In an eyesore of a game in Brooklyn on Tuesday night, a rare glimpse of Fourth Quarter Derrick was an encouraging sign, especially as he pulls himself out of an-early season shooting funk. We have a lot of data now, and all signs point to the Celtics’ success when White is at his best in the final frame.

LeBron James reflects on ‘rise to the top' of NBA mountain alongside Steph Curry

LeBron James reflects on ‘rise to the top' of NBA mountain alongside Steph Curry originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

From NBA archnemeses to friends to teammates on the global stage, LeBron James and Steph Curry have come a long way.

If you told the NBA superstars 10 years ago that they’d be sitting side-by-side doing a podcast together, they probably wouldn’t have believed you. But growing in the game over the last two decades has made James and Curry as close as ever, and it’s something James is deeply appreciative of.

“When you’re trying to rise to the top of the mountain, you have guys that’s trying to stop me from getting there and vice versa,” James said after making his 2025-26 season debut Tuesday night. “Steph has been one of those guys throughout our career, we’ve been trying to get to the mountaintop, and we’re trying to knock each other off of it. That competition was brewing for a long time and every time we play against each other, it still brews.

“When you get to a certain age and you get to a certain level and you understand that appreciating greatness and appreciating things that you won’t be able to have for a long time ever after, when you’re done. You can look back on those moments, you don’t want to waste an opportunity to be able to build a relationship with somebody that you kind of share some of the same, I guess, goals in life. Our families. The way we go about our profession. The way we go about our everyday, trying to uplift people, inspire.”

James recently had Curry as a guest on his “Mind the Game” podcast that he co-hosts with NBA great Steve Nash.

The three discussed a variety of topics, including a nearly 10-minute segment where they broke down and analyzed their NBA Finals film from their many championship clashes.

Two of the greatest to play the game, breaking down film — it’s like being a kid in a candy shop for basketball lovers around the world.

“There’s so much mutual respect,” James shared, “and now it’s just even more respect just out of the simple fact that we can hop on a phone call or text or whatever. It was great [for] us to talk basketball in just the most easy, organic way with the two episodes and have that time, so it’s been cool.”

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Fantasy Basketball Trade Tips: Week 5 Buy, Sell, Hold

A month past your fantasy basketball draft, initial fantasy basketball rankings matter less than analyzing real-time production. With the injury report constantly shuffling NBA starting lineups, impacting stars like Giannis Antetokounmpo and Paolo Banchero, values are shifting rapidly. This week, we'll be talking about buying low on Desmond Bane, selling high on Michael Porter Jr., or holding VJ Edgecombe. Use our updated NBA player projections and the latest fantasy basketball news to capitalize on these opportunities.

Fantasy Basketball Trade Tips in Week 5

Buy

Desmond Bane, Orlando Magic

Bane began his career with the Magic on a rough note, crashing his value in fantasy basketball rankings. Over his first 10 games, he averaged just 14.2 points and 1.2 three-pointers. He shot 43.1% from the field during that span, including 29.3% from behind the arc. The only saving grace was that he still provided 4.2 rebounds and 4.1 assists during that span.

Bane has shown signs of turning things around lately, shooting 44.3% from the field and 34.4% from behind the arc over his last five games. During that stretch, he averaged 22.4 points, 4.8 rebounds, 5.2 assists and 2.2 three-pointers. While he has been given more shot attempts with Paolo Banchero (groin) out, it's his improved efficiency from behind the arc, which should excite fantasy managers. His buy-low window might be closing.

Myles Turner, Milwaukee Bucks

In his first eight games since signing a big contract with the Bucks, Turner averaged just 9.8 points and 6.5 rebounds. His minutes were down a bit at 28 per game, and he shot just 40.0% from the field. Since then, Turner has averaged 15.3 points and 32 minutes across his last seven games. He shot 47.9% from the field during that span, while also averaging 6.0 rebounds, 1.9 steals, 1.3 blocks and 3.0 three-pointers.

Turner seems to be getting more comfortable in his new surroundings. His efficiency should continue to improve as the season moves along, given that he has shot at least 48.1% from the field in each of the last four seasons. Another reason to consider buying low on him is that Giannis Antetokounmpo landed on the NBA injury report with a groin strain Monday that is expected to sideline him for at least 1-2 weeks. Turner could see significantly more shot attempts during that stretch.

Sell

Michael Porter Jr., Brooklyn Nets

Porter has been nothing short of dominant with the Nets. He is currently on pace to set new career highs in points (24.2), rebounds (7.7), assists (3.2) and three-pointers (3.2) per game. His usage rate is up to 29.0%, which is more than seven percentage points higher than his career mark. With Cam Thomas (hamstring) sidelined, Porter should continue to receive all of the shot attempts that he can handle.

As good as Porter has been, the Nets are 2-12 and barreling towards another dreadful season. Amazingly, the Pacers and Wizards have fewer wins, while the Pelicans have equaled the Nets with two victories. Since the Nets are in the early stages of a rebuild, we might not see much of Porter down the stretch as they try to improve their lottery odds. Porter is at his peak right now, so start shopping him to see if someone will take the risk of rostering him off your hands.

Andrew Wiggins, Miami Heat

Before his 3-for-15 shooting performance against the Knicks on Monday, Wiggins was playing well for the Heat. Even with that line factored in, he is shooting 48.4% from the field for the season. That has helped him average 16.7 points and 1.8 three-pointers, to go along with 4.9 rebounds, 2.9 assists and 1.1 steals per game.

Wiggins' improved efficiency is masking the fact that his usage rate has fallen from 26.7% with the Heat last season to 20.9% this season. That's with Tyler Herro (ankle) yet to play and Bam Adebayo (toe) having missed six games. When those two get healthy, they will combine with Norman Powell to lead the Heat's scoring attack. With even fewer shots possibly coming for Wiggins, now is the time to try and trade him.

Hold

VJ Edgecombe, Philadelphia 76ers

Edgecombe provided 19.1 points, 5.9 rebounds, 4.9 assists, 1.6 steals and 2.6 three-pointers over his first seven games. Since the 76ers were missing so many players because of injuries, Edgecombe was immediately put in a prominent role. As the team's health situation has improved, the rookie has started to see his production slide. Over their last six games, he has averaged 11.2 points, 5.5 rebounds, 3.7 assists, 0.8 steals and 1.5 three-pointers.

It was too much to expect Edgecombe to continue producing at the rate that he did out of the gate. It's also not a good thing for him that Paul George made his season debut Monday against the Clippers. However, George and Joel Embiid have a checkered injury history, so they could be in and out of the lineup for much of the season. Even with George back in the fold, Edgecombe isn't going to relinquish his starting role. Don't let George's return force you into a panic move. Hang onto Edgecombe for the long haul.

Devin Vassell, San Antonio Spurs

A deep Spurs team has suddenly become very thin. De'Aaron Fox is back, but Victor Wembanyama (calf), Stephon Castle (hip) and Dylan Harper (calf) are all currently sidelined. With that trio out Tuesday, Vassell played 35 minutes versus the Grizzlies. He finished the game with 10 points, three rebounds, five assists, two steals, two blocks and two three-pointers.

Although he is only averaging 13.6 points per game right now, Vassell had averaged at least 16.3 points in each of the last three seasons. Wembanyama, Castle and Harper could be out for at least a couple of more weeks, so the Spurs are going to need more scoring and minutes from Vassell. We could be getting at least a couple of weeks of improved production from him, so don't look to sell low on him right now while he could provide fantasy basketball sleeper value. 

James breaks NBA record with first game of season

LeBron James
Last season James became the first player in NBA history to score 50,000 combined points across regular season and play-off games [Getty Images]

LeBron James became the first player to take part in 23 consecutive NBA seasons when he stepped onto the court for the Los Angeles Lakers on Tuesday.

The 40-year-old, who missed his side's opening 14 games of the season because of sciatica, contributed 11 points, 12 assists and three rebounds in 30 minutes of a 140-126 home win over the Utah Jazz.

James - the NBA's record scorer - overtook Vince Carter's mark of having played in 22 successive NBA seasons, while his two three-pointers also moved him above Reggie Miller into sixth place in the NBA's all-time list of most three-pointers made.

"It's been a long time since he played basketball, so I think for the first game back, he looked amazing," said Lakers team-mate Luka Doncic.

"He's going to keep getting his rhythm, and help us a lot."

Doncic had a game high 37 points and four steals in the win against the Jazz as he also contributed 10 assists and five rebounds.

Austin Reaves scored 26 points for the Lakers, while Keyonte George and Lauri Markkanen scored 34 and 31 points respectively for Utah.

The win puts the Lakers fourth in the Western Conference, with the Jazz in 10th place.

Nets remain winless at home after 113-99 loss to Celtics

NEW YORK (AP) — Jaylen Brown scored 29 points, Payton Pritchard had 22 points and 10 rebounds, and the Boston Celtics beat the Brooklyn Nets 113-99 on Tuesday night to move above .500 for the first time this season.

Derrick White added 15 points for the Celtics, who won their third straight game to improve to 8-7. They played the Nets even for about three quarters before smothering them defensively in the fourth, allowing just one basket for the first 10 minutes of the period.

Michael Porter Jr. scored 25 points for the Nets, his career-best seventh straight game with at least 20. But after his 3-pointer gave Brooklyn a 90-89 lead with 9:08 left, the Nets didn’t make another basket until 1:56 remained.

Day’Ron Sharpe added 16 points for the Nets, who fell to 2-12 overall and 0-7 at home.

The Celtics started the season 0-3 and then won their next three. They dropped the next two games and hadn’t gotten their record back to even again until beating the Los Angeles Clippers on Sunday.

Porter had 18 points at halftime and Pritchard scored 17. The teams combined for 22 2-pointers and 21 3-pointers in the first half, which ended with Boston leading 62-61.

The Celtics opened their first double-digit cushion when Brown followed a three-point play with a 3-pointer to cap an 8-0 burst and make it 75-65 with 7 1/2 minutes remaining in the third. Brooklyn cut it to one late in the period before Brown made another 3-pointer to send the Celtics to the fourth with an 89-85 edge.

With the Celtics leading 97-92, they chased down three missed shots on one possession to set up White’s 3-pointer. After a Brooklyn free throw, he made another 3 to make it 103-93. Brown’s 3 with 2:55 left capped an 18-3 run to make it 107-93.

Up next

The teams meet Friday night in Boston.

It's official: LeBron James to make season debut for Lakers Tuesday vs. Jazz

LOS ANGELES — It's official: LeBron James will make his season debut Tuesday night at home when the Lakers host the Utah Jazz.

He is listed in the starting five, though he is likely to be on a minutes limit in his first few games.

"I thought he looked great," Lakers coach J.J. Redick said of LeBron's practice with the team Monday. "He's smart enough and there's enough carryover from last year, both with personnel and with our schemes, that I think it'll be, you know, easy for him to be integrated right away."

LeBron started suffering from sciatica on his right side back in August, and it caused him to miss all of training camp as well as the first 14 games of the season. The Lakers and James' medical team had agreed not to rush his return, and mid-November has long been the target date.

LeBron was assigned to the Lakers' G-League team last week to get in a couple of full practices, then was recalled and went through a full practice with the varsity Lakers on Monday. "Got to see how the body responds over the next 24 hours-plus," he said after the practice.

He obviously felt well enough to play.

"My lungs feel like a newborn baby," LeBron said after Monday's practice. "That's the most important thing: I've got to get my lungs back up to a grown man. My voice is already gone (from) one day back barking out calls and assignments and stuff. Got to get my voice working again. Be a lot of tea and rest tonight. Feels good to be out here with the guys. Missed them."

By stepping on the court tonight, LeBron will set a record by becoming the first player to play in 23 NBA seasons.

LeBron averaged 24.4 points, 7.8 rebounds, and 8.2 assists per game last season, earning Second Team All-NBA honors and coming in sixth in MVP voting. He makes the Lakers' offense much more dangerous. While Redick has the Lakers running the offense through Luka Doncic, more and more teams are blitzing and trapping Doncic more to get the ball out of his hands and dare any other Laker on the floor to beat them. That ball now goes to LeBron, who gets to lead an attack on the defense in a 4-3 situation when that happens.

After Tuesday's game, the Lakers are off until Sunday, when they face the Jazz in Salt Lake City. At that point, they return home to face the Clippers in a critical West Group B NBA Cup game, which you can watch on Nov. 25 on NBC and Peacock.

How to Watch the NBA on NBC and Peacock

Peacock NBA Monday will stream up to three Monday night games each week throughout the regular season. Coast 2 Coast Tuesday presents doubleheaders on Tuesday nights throughout the regular season on NBC and Peacock. On most Tuesdays, an 8 p.m. ET game will be on NBC stations in the Eastern and Central time zones, and an 8 p.m. PT game on NBC stations in the Pacific and often Mountain time zones. Check local listings each week. Both games will stream live nationwide on Peacock. NBC Sports will launch Sunday Night Basketball across NBC and Peacock on Feb. 1, 2026. For a full schedule of the NBA on NBC and Peacock, click here.

Lakers star LeBron James set to make season debut tonight vs. Jazz

ARCHIVO - El alero de los Lakers de Los Ángeles, LeBron James, aparece durante la primera mitad de un partido de baloncesto de la NBA contra el Jazz de Utah, el 10 de febrero de 2025, en Los Ángeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill, Archivo)
LeBron James will make his season debut tonight at Crypto.com Arena when the Lakers host the Utah Jazz. (Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press)

LeBron James will make his season debut Tuesday when the Lakers host the Utah Jazz, according to a person with knowledge of the situation who spoke on condition of anonymity, after sciatica kept James sidelined for the Lakers’ first 14 games.

James is “trending in the right direction,” coach JJ Redick said before Tuesday's game, which will mark the beginning of James' NBA-record 23rd season. The 40-year-old missed the beginning of a season for the first time in his NBA career after starting to feel discomfort in his right side this summer.

James missed all of training camp and the preseason. The Lakers put together a 10-4 record despite playing without their biggest star. In his place, Luka Doncic has emerged as the NBA's leading scorer and guard Austin Reaves is off to a career season.

The star trio played together for several months last year after Doncic joined the Lakers in a blockbuster trade, helping the team grab the third seed in the Western Conference. Redick expects the experience to help James integrate smoothly this year.

“He's smart enough and [there's] enough carry over from last year, both with personnel and with our schemes, that I think it'll be easy for him to be integrated right away,” Redick said.

James said after practice Monday he was not yet pain-free, but he has been able to manage the nerve injury enough to progress through practices with the G League team, the full NBA squad and then Tuesday's shootaround. James said dealing with sciatica came with unexpected challenges. He often could only hope he wouldn't feel pain when he woke up in the morning or when he went to sleep.

Read more:LeBron James knows there will be a 'feel-out' process when he returns to Lakers

Redick said the team and James are approaching “uncharted territory” when it comes to managing the superstar's health. Conversations have been consistent and will be ongoing as the season progresses.

“We'll figure out ways to get him rest when he needs rest,” Redick said.

Staff writer Broderick Turner contributed to this report.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Knicks Injury Tracker: Jalen Brunson, Josh Hart questionable for Monday's game vs. Mavericks

Here are the latest news updates and possible return dates for Knicks players...


Jan. 18 5:20 p.m.

Jalen Brunson (right ankle sprain) and Josh Hart (right ankle soreness) are both being listed as questionable for Monday's game against the Dallas Mavericks.

The former college teammates did not play on Saturday night in a loss to the Phoenix Suns.

Brunson has already missed 2-plus games since suffering the injury on Wednesday against the Sacramento Kings, as the Knicks have dropped their last three straight contests.

Jan. 17, 5:58 p.m.

After initially being listed as questionable, Knicks head coach Mike Brown ruled out Josh Hart (ankle) and Jalen Brunson (ankle) for Saturday's game against the Suns.

Jan. 17, 1:15 p.m.

The Knicks are listing Josh Hart as questionable for Saturday's game against the Phoenix Suns due to right ankle soreness.

Hart has played in New York's past three games after missing eight games with an ankle injury suffered on Christmas Day. The team went 3-5 in his absence.

He's averaging 12.1 points, 7.7 rebounds, 5.3 assists, and 1.3 steals per game over 31 contests this season.

Jalen Brunson (ankle) is also questionable for Saturday night and still listed as day-to-day after suffering a right ankle sprain against the Sacramento Kings on Wednesday. He did not play in Thursday's loss to the Golden State Warriors.

Jan. 15, 8:20 p.m.

The Knicks will be without Jalen Brunson on Thursday, but they will receive reinforcement in the rotation.

Landry Shamet has officially been ruled available for the meeting with the Warriors.  

Shamet's been out since Nov. 22 with a shoulder injury, but he's been working his way back and was officially upgraded to questionable heading into the matchup. 

It's unclear whether or not he'll be on a minutes restriction, but his return is certainly a welcome sight. 

Shamet was averaging 9.3 points on 45 percent shooting from the field in 15 games prior to the injury.

Jan. 10, 5:00 p.m.

Josh Hart (ankle) has been upgraded to questionable for Sunday's game against the Portland Trail Blazers.

The wing has not played since Christmas Day, missing the past eight games.

New York has gone 3-5 without him, including dropping five of their last six games.

Jan. 6, 5:20 p.m.

The latest Knicks injury report lists Josh Hart and Landry Shamet as out for Wednesday's tip against the Clippers at MSG.

Hart (ankle) will miss his seventh consecutive game, in which the Knicks are 2-4 in his absence. SNY's Ian Begley said on The Putback that Hart is "close" to coming back. The team had said last week that they would re-evaluate Hart in a week, and it seems enough progress hasn't been made.

After Wednesday's game, the Knicks travel west to take on the Suns in Phoenix on Friday.

Jan. 3, 2026, 1:41 p.m.

The Knicks are listing Karl-Anthony Towns as questionable for Saturday night's game against the visiting Philadelphia 76ers due to illness. Towns missed Friday night's defeat to the Atlanta Hawks with the same ailment.

Mitchell Robinson (ankle injury management) is off the injury report for Saturday after not playing the previous night.

Josh Hart (shoulder) is making improvements, but remains out alongside Landry Shamet (shoulder). 

Dec. 30, 10:27 p.m.

Mitchell Robinson (ankle injury management) is out for Wednesday's game against the San Antonio Spurs.

New York's big man is one of three players who have been listed as out for the NBA Cup rematch on New Year's Eve. Robinson joins Josh Hart (right ankle sprain) and Landry Shamet (shoulder) as those unavailable for the game.

Tyler Kolek (right ankle soreness) is listed as probable, while Ariel Hukporti (lip laceration) is questionable for Wednesday's game.

Dec. 27, 6:10 p.m.

On the last injury report ahead of Saturday's tip against the Hawks, the Knicks listed Miles McBride (ankle) as out.

McBride was listed as questionable as recently as Friday, but it seems the guard will miss his eighth game.

Dec. 26, 3:42 p.m.

The Knicks will be without forward Josh Hart when they play the Atlanta Hawks on Saturday. The forward left the Christmas Day win over Cleveland in the fourth quarter and has been diagnosed with an ankle sprain. 

But there was some good news: reserve guard Miles McBride (ankle) has been upgraded to questionable. That's an indication that he is very close to making a return to the court after missing the last seven games.

Landry Shamet (shoulder) remains sidelined.

Dec. 22, 4:20 p.m.

The Knicks will be short-handed on Tuesday night in Minnesota against the Timberwolves.

Jalen Brunson (right ankle management), OG Anunoby (left ankle soreness), and Guerschon Yabusele (illness) are all listed as out.

Additionally, Miles McBride (ankle), Landry Shamet (shoulder), and Pacôme Dadiet (G-League assignment) will remain out as well.

New York has gone 2-1 since winning the NBA Cup last Tuesday and face a hot Minnesota squad, winners of four out of their last five games.

Dec. 19, 5:25 p.m.

Head coach Mike Brown confirmed that Karl-Anthony Towns and Josh Hart will play against the 76ers on Friday, hours after they were listed as probable on the injury report.

Dec. 19, 2:00 p.m.

On the heels of a back-to-back, the Knicks will get some of their core back in the lineup on Friday night against the Philadelphia 76ers.

Karl-Anthony Towns (knee soreness) and Josh Hart (rectus abdominis strain) are listed as probable, while Mitchell Robinson and OG Anunoby aren't on the injury report and should be available. Towns, Hart, and Robinson all did not play in Thursday's win over the Indiana Pacers

Miles McBride (ankle) and Landry Shamet (shoulder) will remain out for New York on Friday. Additionally, Pacôme Dadiet was assigned to the Westchester Knicks.

The Sixers will be without former MVP Joel Embiid (illness, right knee injury management), who was downgraded from questionable. Embiid has played in just 11 of Philly's 25 games this season, averaging only 20.5 points and 6.6 rebounds when on the court (26.2 minutes per game). Philadelphia will also be without Kelly Oubre Jr. (left knee sprain) and Trendon Watford (left adductor strain).

Dec. 18, 5:15 p.m.

Fresh off the NBA Cup triumph, the Knicks are going to be without a host of players for Thursday night's matchup with the lowly Indiana Pacers (6-20).

Karl-Anthony Towns (knee soreness), Josh Hart (rectus abdominis strain),  and Mitchell Robinson (ankle management) will all not feature due to slight injuries. New York will already be without Miles McBride and Landry Shamet, who are on the shelf with longer-term injuries.

OG Anunoby (knee contusion) was on the injury report, but will play.

Dec. 7, 3:22 p.m.

Knicks guard Miles McBride exited Sunday's win over the Orlando Magic in the first half, and according to SNY NBA Insider Ian Begley, the guard is still in the process of being evaluated for a left ankle injury.

The Knicks say they will know more on McBride's status on Monday. 

As a starter or a bench player, McBride has been terrific this season. In 19 games (nine starts), McBride has averaged a career-best 15.8 points per games while shooting 46.2 percent from beyond the arc.

Dec. 4, 5:10 p.m.

The Knicks are seemingly close to getting OG Anunoby back. According to SNY NBA Insider Ian Begley, Anunoby (hamstring) has been upgraded to questionable for Friday's game against the Utah Jazz at MSG.

Begley noted on Thursday's episode of The Putback that this weekend's games are a target for the Knicks to get Anunoby back on the court.

Anunoby has missed every game since suffering the injury on Nov. 14 against the Miami Heat.

Head coach Mike Brown said that Anunoby has progressed to taking contact in practice and it seems as though the forward is reacting to it in a positive manner. Of course, this doesn't mean Anunoby will play on Friday, but it leaves open the possibility.

Dec. 3, 6:40 p.m.

Knicks head coach Mike Brown gave a short update on OG Anunoby (hamstring). The coach said that Anunoby has progressed to taking contact in practice.

“It’s still the same, he’s still progressing in the right direction," Brown said of Anunoby before Wednesday's game against the Hornets. "We’re not going to rush him."

Brown also confirmed that Mitchell Robinson (injury management) will miss Wednesday's game, as it's the second of a back-to-back. 

Nov. 19, 9:05 p.m.

Jalen Brunson (ankle) will return to the court and start on Wednesday night in Dallas against the Mavericks, the team announced prior to tip-off.

Brunson suffered a Grade 1 right ankle sprain against the Orlando Magic on Nov. 12 and missed the team's next two games against the Miami Heat. New York split the two contests, winning at home and losing on the road. The team is still searching for its first road win of the season, dropping all four games away from the Garden.

Over 11 games this year, Brunson is averaging 28.0 points on 46.7 percent shooting and 6.5 assists per game. 

Meanwhile, the Mavs will be without rookie Cooper Flagg (illness) on Wednesday night as he'll miss the first game of his career.

Nov. 18, 6:50 p.m.

The Knicks upgraded Jalen Brunson (ankle) to questionable for their Wednesday tip against the Mavericks in Dallas. 

Brunson had missed the team's last two games since suffering a right ankle sprain back on Nov. 12 against the Orlando Magic at MSG. Already without OG Anunoby (hamstring), the Knicks could use their captain to try and get their first road win of the season. 

Oct. 28, 7:18 p.m.

Before the Knicks' tip-off against the Bucks, the Knicks announced that Towns (right quad strain) will play, but Yabusele (left knee sprain) will be out, joining McBride (personal) and Robinson (ankle sprain management) as players who are unavailable for Tuesday's game.

Oct. 28, 3:35 p.m.

Miles McBride has been downgraded from questionable to out for the Knicks' game on Tuesday at the Milwaukee Bucks, the team announced. This is the second-straight game the guard missed due to personal reasons. He was out for Sunday's loss against the Miami Heat.

Oct. 27, 6:45 p.m.

Mitchell Robinson still isn't ready to make his season debut, as the Knicks have officially ruled him out again for Tuesday night's game against the Milwaukee Bucks. 

Robinson has been sidelined for the first three games due to left ankle injury management, and it's still unknown when he'll make his return to the court. 

New York has also listed Karl-Anthony Towns (right quad strain), Miles McBride (personal reasons), and Guerschon Yabusele (left knee sprain) as questionable for the contest. 

Yabusele is the only new addition to the injury report. Towns has been included heading into each of the first three games, but played in all three, and McBride missed Sunday's game against the Heat for personal reasons. 

Yabusele left Sunday's game at one point and had his knee checked, but he was able to return and saw regular time off the bench down the stretch.

Oct. 23, 6:10 p.m.

The latest NBA injury report has been released and the Knicks have designated center Mitchell Robinson (left ankle injury management) as out for Friday's home game against the Celtics.

Robinson missed Wednesday's season opener and the Knicks are being cautious with their big man this season as they want to have him at close to full strength for an anticipated long playoff run.

The Knicks have also designated both Josh Hart (lower back) and Karl-Anthony Towns (right quad strain) as questionable. 

Hart also missed the season opener but has not seen action since the first preseason game where he tweaked his back. Towns almost missed Wednesday's game but toughed out his quad strain and to help the Knicks' win against the Cavaliers.

OG Anunoby, who played Wednesday despite being questionable with an ankle sprain, is probably for Friday's game.

Oct. 22, 10:59 p.m.

Karl-Anthony Towns was questionable, then doubtful, then questionable again in the hours leading up to the Knicks' win over the Cavaliers and now we know exactly why.

The Knicks forward told reporters after Wednesday's win that he is playing through a Grade 2 quad strain. 

"I’ve been banged up and haven’t really got a chance to practice or play in the last two preseason games," Towns said. "I didn’t want to disappoint the fans, dealing with a Grade 2 quad strain. It’s not something that’s easy to do. We made it happen tonight. Glad the fans respect the effort I put in to play tonight, and my teammates, too. Shoutout to them for supporting me, knowing the situation that I was in."

Towns played through the pain to give the Knicks 19 points and 11 rebounds in 30 minutes.

Giannis Antetokounmpo reportedly to miss 1-2 weeks with 'low grade' groin strain

Giannis Antetokounmpo is expected to miss one to two weeks due to a "low-grade" groin strain, reports Shams Charania of ESPN.

The Bucks are not required to make anything official until Tuesday, and the team did not practice or meet on Monday. However, coach Doc Rivers did appear on the Bucks' official podcast Courtside and said this (hat tip Eric Nehm of The Athletic):

"I don't know what grade it is, but I know it's not a bad one, so that's good news for us...Probably two weeks he'll be out — hopefully less."

Antetokounmpo had to leave Monday night's game against Phoenix late in the second quarter after injuring his groin on a drive to the rim, though it might have started earlier, coach Doc Rivers said after the game.

"He grabbed his groin, I think in the first quarter, and I asked him right away. He said it was fine," Rivers said, via the Associated Press. "Then I think he grabbed it again and said it was fine. And then on the third time, you know, that's when it happened. But I think it happened before, in my opinion."

Antetokounmpo is playing at an MVP level early in the season, averaging 31.2 points, 10.8 rebounds and 6.8 assists a game, carrying the Bucks early in the season. The concern for the next two weeks is that the Bucks have a -13 net rating when he is off the floor. The Bucks' offense is 21.8 points per 100 possessions better when he is on the court.

Jericho Sims started the second half on Monday with Antetokounmpo out, and both he and Bobby Portis likely see increased run until the Greek Freak returns.

Giannis Antetokounmpo Groin Strain: Bucks' outlook and fantasy impact

The Milwaukee Bucks suffered a critical loss on Monday, as star forward Giannis Antetokounmpo exited the team's defeat in Cleveland with a right groin injury. Ahead of the team's practice on Tuesday, Bucks head coach Doc Rivers said that Giannis would likely be out for two weeks.

ESPN's Shams Charania reports that the forward has been diagnosed with a low-grade strain. Let's look at how Antetokounmpo's absence will impact the Bucks' rotation and fantasy basketball.

Who will move into the Bucks’ starting lineup?

With Kyle Kuzma (24 percent rostered, Yahoo!) already in the starting lineup, filling that role the last four games, the Bucks will need to turn elsewhere to fill the void. One possibility is that Gary Trent Jr. (seven percent) returns to the lineup after coming off the bench the last three games. As a starter, he's averaging 10.0 points, 1.8 rebounds, 2.3 assists, 1.2 steals and 2.3 three-pointers in 28.1 minutes, shooting 37.7 percent from the field and 70.6 percent from the foul line. Trent has primarily been a points and three-pointers option, offering limited value in the other categories.

Another option, if Milwaukee were to go big, would be veteran forward/center Bobby Portis (25 percent). However, like Trent, his fantasy production has been underwhelming this season. Averaging 9.7 points, 5.5 rebounds, 1.1 assists and 1.3 three-pointers in 20.9 minutes, this is the least productive that Portis has been since his second season in the NBA (2016-17). However, according to Cleaning the Glass, Portis and starting center Myles Turner have only shared the court for 120 possessions this season. Given that number, Portis' chances of starting may be slim.

Even if he comes off the bench, there will be opportunities for Portis to provide greater value, but fantasy managers can't assume that he'll come through.

NBA: Golden State Warriors at San Antonio Spurs
The Spurs will be without Wemby for at least 2-3 weeks after he strained his left calf.

How does Giannis’ absence impact the entire rotation?

The gravity that Antetokounmpo has offensively opens things up for the entire team, even with his lack of a reliable perimeter shot. Ryan Rollins (51 percent) has emerged as a fantasy standout this season, sitting just outside the top-50 in nine-cat, per-game value. Turner (97 percent), one of the league's better pick-and-pop big men, will also be impacted by Antetokounmpo's absence. AJ Green (seven percent), who has provided solid three-point value, could be in a challenging spot in terms of delivering consistent value while the Bucks await Giannis' return.

Turner and Rollins are the safest bets to benefit from Giannis' absence, with the latter being the only appealing option who's still available in 12-team leagues. Outside of those two, fantasy managers may be best served taking a patient approach to see how Rivers handles the rotation, or simply looking to other teams to help account for Antetokounmpo's absence.