Is AJ Dybantsa finally the player who ends the Wizards’ rebuild?

BROOKLYN, NY - JUNE 23: AJ Dybantsa poses for a portrait after being drafted by the Washington Wizards during the 2026 NBA Draft - Round One on June 23, 2026 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Steve Freeman/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Happy Wednesday everyone. In case you haven’t heard, the Washington Wizards selected AJ Dybantsa No. 1 overall in the 2026 NBA Draft. So after one entire month of spamming you this guy’s name (and even a few other prospects), we finally know what the Wizards are moving in with their young roster.

The last time the Wizards selected a No. 1 overall pick, it was in 2010. John Wall was the selection, he was the franchise player, but he was also the first player for Washington’s rebuild at the time. Unlike 2010, the Wizards have been rebuilding for three seasons. They only very recently have acquired two All-Stars in Trae Young (who will be a Wizard for the next four seasons) and Anthony Davis. Now that Dybantsa is in the mix, there’s a lot of optimism right?

First, let’s look at where people put their money. How good do they expect the Wizards to be? Unfortunately, according to FanDuel as of 6 a.m. ET on June 25, 2026, the Wizards are the 11th most likely team to win the Eastern Conference with +20000 odds. Based on that number alone, NBA fans nationwide (and beyond) would say no. They expect the Wizards to still be rebuilding, even if they are no longer expected to be the absolute doormat.

That said, betting markets can’t be the only way we look at this kind of stuff. How do the fans think? Let’s go to the Wizards’ Draft Party last night at The Anthem, a concert venue at The Wharf.

Let’s also get some schadenfreude from looking at how Salt Lake City reacted while we’re at it.

How about the Wizards front office when they called him? (I still wonder how NBA teams get the phone numbers of players … it’s probably an agent phone and it’s probably a scripted call for social media. But still.)

How about player reactions?

And to make this full circle? How about Wall himself?

Sometimes, you have to go off of vibes when you’re talking about a “rebuilding” vs. a “contending” era. And my vibes give me a clear answer: Yes, AJ Dybantsa is the player who ends the Wizards’ rebuild. Sure, the Wizards will change their roster over the next few years. Sure, the Wizards are NOT NBA championship contenders. Hell, they probably won’t contend for the Southeast Division in 2026-27 because the Miami Heat (as usual) are bringing in superstars.

But is the worst stretch of Wizards basketball in franchise history over? Do we know WHO the Wizards WILL have five years from now? Yes. And that means the rebuild (at least from a tanking perspective) is finally over.

2026 NBA Draft: First Round Review

Jun 23, 2026; New York, NY, USA; NBA commissioner Adam Silver under the board showing the 2026 NBA draft first round results at Barclays Center. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images | Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Though the stakes weren’t as high as recent drafts for the San Antonio Spurs, it was a consequential one due to the glaring roster holes revealed during the recently concluded NBA Finals loss. They made an attempt to address them last night by drafting two big, defensive-minded centers using their own pick at 20th and trading for the Denver Nuggets 26th pick:

  • 20th selection: Jayden Quaintance (Kentucky) – 6’10” 255 lb.
  • 26th selection (via trade with Denver) Tarris Reed, Jr. (UConn) – 6’11” 265 lb.

Below is a review of the entire first round, but first, a few quick observations:

  • Gratitude: That the Giannis trade happened (no more speculation on the sports networks and interwebs, AND we only have to play that team twice a season!)
  • It was really nice to have them formally introduce the entire draft class (well, the ones that they anticipated would go in this first round) in alphabetical order by last name from A-Z before the festivities began.
  • Did not realize that University of Houston’s Chris Cenac, Jr.’s last name was pronounced “SEH-NACK“.”
  • Santa Clara’s Allen Graves came in noticeably trimmer than what his highlights showed.
  • Coolest names: Labaron Philon, Jr., Dailyn Swain, Anicet Dybantsa (not AJ!)
  • Was anyone surprised that Julius Randle was moved so quickly after the Western Conference semis?
  • Surprisingly undrafted players: Isaiah Evans (Duke), Ja’Kobi Gillespie (Tennessee)

And now onto the picks! (For the Spurs-specific comparisons, the following players were not eligible for actual considerations: Tim Duncan, Victor Wembanyama, and Manu Ginobili.)

1. Washington Wizards

PLAYER: Anicet Dybantsa (BYU)

OBSERVATION: He looked genuinely happy to be taken here and especially to end up with the Wiz!

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: early Tracy McGrady / Spurs: springy Sean Elliott


2. Utah Jazz

PLAYER: Darryn Peterson (Kansas)
OBSERVATION:
It feels like this whole rookie campaign for him will be a vendetta against not being the top selection.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Dwyane Wade with a jumpshot / Spurs: Dylan Harper with a reliable outside shot


3. Memphis Grizzlies

PLAYER: Cameron Boozer (Duke)

OBSERVATION: If he can have a career mimicing fellow Dukie Elton Brand, that would be great.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Carlos Boozer with better hair / Spurs: Terry Cummings with playmaking skills


4. Chicago Bulls

PLAYER: Caleb Wilson (UNC)

OBSERVATION: An excellent young man who pours into his community? Future Spur in 2035!

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Antonio McDyess before the knee injuries / Spurs: early David Robinson before he refined his offensive repertoire


5. LA Clippers (via Indiana)

PLAYER: Keaton Wagler (Illinois)

OBSERVATION: I can’t help but to keep thinking of Tyrese Haliburton. It doesn’t seem like he gets rattled.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Tyrese Haliburton / Spurs: Derrick White (after his Austin stints)


6. Brooklyn Nets

PLAYER: Mikel Brown, Jr. (Louisville)

OBSERVATION: Exudes confidence and I’m hopeful that he remains injury-free.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: 3rd year Cade Cunningham / Spurs: Rookie year Stephon Castle


7. Sacramento Kings

PLAYER: Darius Acuff, Jr. (Arkansas)

OBSERVATION: So. many. point. guards. in. this. franchise’s. history.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Damian Lillard / Spurs: What I think San Antonio wanted to turn Dejounte Murray into.


8. Atlanta Hawks (via New Orleans)

PLAYER: Kingston Flemings (Houston)

OBSERVATION: It seems like the University of Houston keeps churning out these tough defensive-minded guards over the last decade.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: a merge of VJ Edgecombe and Tyrese Maxey / Spurs: running out of excellent point guards here – 2014 Cory Joseph?


9. Dallas Mavericks

PLAYER: Morez Johnson, Jr. (Michigan)

OBSERVATION: Dusty May hired. Morez Johnson, Jr. selected!

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Taller Shawn Marion / Spurs: if Malik Rose were fully realized on defense


10. Milwaukee Bucks

PLAYER: Brayden Burries (Arizona)

OBSERVATION: Best son / father interaction in terms of meaningfulness.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Sacramento-era Harrison Barnes / Spurs: George Hill


11. Golden State Warriors

PLAYER: Yaxel Lendebourg (Michigan)

OBSERVATION: His well-traveled journey woud seem to indicate him ‘getting over himself.’

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Detlef Schrempf with range / Spurs: Boris Diaw (with the weight-based contract conditions)


12. Oklahoma City Thunder (via LA Clippers)

PLAYER: Aday Mara (Michigan)

OBSERVATION: Goodbye Chet Holmgren AND Isaiah Hartenstein! The highlight dunks for Castle and Harper will look that much more convincing.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Scared that he ends up like Zach Edey (injuries) / Spurs: Futuristic-version of Boban Marjanovic


13. Milwaukee Bucks (via Miami Heat)

PLAYER: Nate Ament (Tennessee)

OBSERVATION: He looks like he can easily fill out to about 235 lb. in several years.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Scottie Pippen / Spurs: early Kawhi Leonard with a jumper


14. Charlotte Hornets

PLAYER: Hannes Steinbach (Washington)

OBSERVATION: It seems like Charlotte has the guy that can pick up after the starting lineups wealth of shooters.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Mo Wagner (now) -> Franz Wagner (later) / Spurs: 2007 Fabricio Oberto


15. Chicago Bulls (via Portland)

PLAYER:Dailyn Swain (Texas)

OBSERVATION: Used his NIL money to pay off his mother’s college loans. That is a good son.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Rip Hamilton / Spurs: Derek Anderson (oof)


16. Memphis Grizzlies (via Phoenix)

PLAYER:Bennett Stirtz (Iowa)

OBSERVATION: He was later traded to Oklahoma City for 2 second round picks (and swapped first round picks). Perhaps a replacement for Cason Wallace?

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Marco Belinelli / Spurs: 1994-1995 Vinny Del Negro


17. Oklahoma City Thunder (via Philadelphia)

PLAYER:Ebuka Okorie (Stanford)

OBSERVATION: This pick was traded to Memphis, and then ultimately ended up in Detroit. Memphis received the 21st pick and 5 future second round draft picks.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Right-handed Jalen Brunson (throwing my keyboard out the window) / Spurs: Taller Patty Mills


18. Charlotte Hornets (via Orlando)

PLAYER:Christian Anderson, Jr. (Texas Tech)

OBSERVATION: I lost track of how many 6’1″ 180 lb guards there were in the top part of the draft by this point.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Daniss Jenkins / Spurs: Tre Jones by the time he left the team


19. Toronto Raptors

PLAYER: Allen Graves (Santa Clara)

OBSERVATION: “Just one selection before ours!” (Cried many Pounders)

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: ground-bound Jaime Jaquez, Jr. / Spurs: Phoenix-era Boris Diaw


20. San Antonio Spurs (via Atlanta)

PLAYER: Jayden Quaintance (Kentucky)

OBSERVATION: An athletic big 4 with a motor! A second unit of Quaintance and Bryant could help preserve some 2nd and 3rd quarter leads.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Kenneth Faried / Spurs: DeJuan Blair


21. Detroit Pistons (via Minnesota)

PLAYER: Karim Lopez (NZ Breakers)

OBSERVATION: This pick was part of the previous complicated trade and ultimately went to Memphis – essentially cementing Ja Morant’s departure.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: (ancestrally) Eduardo Najera / (stylistically) Ricky Rubio / Spurs: what they thought Kyle Anderson would turn out to be


22. Philadelphia 76ers (via Houston)

PLAYER:Labaron Philon, Jr. (Alabama)

OBSERVATION: Not sure of the fit alongside Maxey and Edgecombe – unless they want to have a closing line-up resembling Fox, Castle, and Harper.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Tyler Herro / Spurs: Tall Tony Parker


23. Atlanta Hawks (via Cleveland)

PLAYER:Zuby Ejiofor (St. John’s)

OBSERVATION: A really enjoyable player to watch.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Elton Brand with musculature / Spurs: what Charles Bassey could have become


24. New York Knicks

PLAYER:Cameron Carr (Baylor)

OBSERVATION: For all the fanfare that ESPN showed heading into the pick, it ended up being a pick swap with the Los Angeles Lakers (#25).

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Norman Powell / Spurs: I do see the resemblances to Devin Vassell.


25. Los Angeles Lakers

PLAYER:Sergio De Larrea (Spain)

OBSERVATION: I know nothing, but he seems like a decent spot-up shooter.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Reed Sheppard / Spurs: Doug McDermott


26. Denver Nuggets (traded to San Antonio)

PLAYER:Tarris Reed, Jr. (UConn)

OBSERVATION: San Antonio sent Denver a 2026 second round pick (and 2 future seconds) for the UConn big man. The fact that they went after Reed instead of Alex Karaban was an eye-opener.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Nene Hilario / Spurs: college-level LaMarcus Aldridge


27. Boston Celtics

PLAYER:Chris Cenac (Houston)

OBSERVATION: His shooting form looked fairly smooth from the highlights.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Naz Reid / Spurs: Portland LaMarcus Aldridge


28. Minnesota Timberwolves (via Detroit)

PLAYER:Joshua Jefferson (Iowa State)

OBSERVATION: This selection went to Brooklyn as part of the trade featuring Julius Randle earlier in the week. It is really cool to see when players not featured in the draft room come straight out of the crowd like Jefferson did.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Domantas Sabonis / Spurs: late career Rudy Gay


29. Cleveland Cavaliers (via San Antonio)

PLAYER:Alex Karaban (UConn)

OBSERVATION: Each draft typically fits an ‘ultimate winner’ type and this guy is it.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Shane Battier / Spurs: Late career Robert Horry


30. Dallas Mavericks (via Oklahoma City)

PLAYER:Koa Peat (Arizona)

OBSERVATION: As with so many of the preceding picks, this one went to the Phoenix Suns.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: / Spurs: regular season Keldon Johnson

I hope you all enjoyed tonight’s recap. I look forward to seeing how Round 2 plays out tomorrow night!

What Celtics fans need to know about draft pick Chris Cenac Jr.

What Celtics fans need to know about draft pick Chris Cenac Jr. originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Celtics did not trade the No. 27 overall pick in the first round of the 2026 NBA Draft and used it to select Houston big man Chris Cenac Jr.

Cenac started 36 games for a Houston team that finished with a 30-7 record and advanced to the Sweet Sixteen of the NCAA Tournament.

One of the most glaring roster weaknesses for the Celtics coming into the offseason was a lack of frontcourt depth and talent. Cenac has an exciting skill set and can play power forward or center.

Here’s a breakdown of what Celtics fans need to know about the team’s newest rookie.

Basic info

Age: 19

Position: Power forward or center

School: University of Houston

Height, weight: 6-foot-11, 240 pounds (7-foot-5 wingspan)

2025-26 Stats (with Houston): 9.5 ppg, 7.9 rpg, 33.3% 3PT 

How will he help the Celtics?

Cenac has an intriguing skill set at just 19 years old, and he improved a lot during his freshman season.

“He’s raw. That’s the first thing we have to mention,” CBS Sports’ Isaac Trotter said on NBC Sports Boston’s draft show Tuesday night. “He could only play (for Houston coach Kelvin Sampson) if he rebounded. Rebounding is literally the lifeblood of that program, and he was one of the best rebounders in this class. I put him up there near the top. He rebounds outside of his area, he chases offensive rebounds, he was a high-motor player all the time.”

Cenac also has the ability to shoot 3-pointers or attack from the midrange.

“I think what Boston’s idea here is — he has great measurables at 6-foot-11 with a 7-foot-5 wingspan,” Trotter added. “He plays really hard, so you don’t have to teach effort. He can stretch the floor. He made over 30 3-pointers this season and took a bunch of pull-up jumpers.”

Cenac played a little too much on the perimeter for Houston and didn’t get to the basket enough offensively, but with the athleticism and size he brings to the floor, the Celtics should be able to correct those weaknesses.

“Just a good young player, energetic, plays hard,” Celtics president of basketball operations Brad Stevens said after making the pick. “Excellent athlete, long, fits a position of need. Some things that we were a little short on this year from an athletic perspective, I think with this size and his strength.”

Can he make an impact right away?

Unless injuries crush the Celtics’ frontcourt depth, Cenac probably won’t be a consistent part of the rotation during the 2026-27 campaign.

He’s only 19 years old and needs to develop in a lot of ways, including adding some strength and muscle to his frame.

“I hope we’re good enough that it’s hard for any 19-year-old to come in here and be good right out of the gate,” Stevens admitted Tuesday night.

The Celtics, to their credit, have done a good job developing centers of late. They turned Neemias Queta into a Most Improved Player Award candidate and a legitimate starter. Luke Kornet made a meaningful impact in his time in Boston. Luka Garza had a productive 2025-26 season, too.

Cenac also should benefit from not being thrown into the fire too early. He should be able to develop his skill set at a pace that’s best for him and not be rushed.

“With his size and his length, when you play in the program he’s played for, he’s been taught well and been held to a high standard,” Stevens said. “I like that and he’ll undoubtedly come here and be eager … he’s got a lot to learn.”

Highlights

NBA draft 2026 first-round winners and losers: triumph of the tankers and the Jalen Brunson Effect

The 2026 draft class is loaded with talent. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

Winners

The tanking teams

After a season that featured multiple teams participating in the most egregious display of tanking in NBA history, Adam Silver responded by implementing new rules that will supposedly stop the tactic. However, those rules will not go into effect until next season, which means the biggest losers were the biggest winners on draft night.

The Washington Wizards (AJ Dybantsa), Utah Jazz (Darryn Peterson), Memphis Grizzlies (Cameron Boozer), and Chicago Bulls (Caleb Wilson) picked up generational players in what is considered the deepest draft in years. Among the teams who won by tanking, the Wizards stand out – they are poised to improve significantly after drafting Dybantsa No 1 overall. Adding Dybantsa as the centerpiece on a team that features two former All-NBA picks, Trae Young and Anthony Davis, could lead to the Wizards making the playoffs for the first time since 2021. ​

The Jalen Brunson Effect

After leading the New York Knicks to their first NBA championship since 1973, Brunson proved that shifty guards with a knack for scoring can anchor title-contending teams. In an era where 3-and-D wings were previously considered the gold standard, Brunson’s feats may have reshaped the NBA: six guards were selected in the top 10 of this year’s draft.

Peterson, Keaton Wagler, Mikel Brown Jr, Darius Acuff Jr, Kingston Flemings, and Brayden Burries are all aggressive guards who, like Brunson, can take over in the fourth quarter and dictate the outcome of games in critical moments.

Peterson will battle Dybantsa for rookie of the year honors and garner more attention for the often-forgotten Jazz. Brown (Brooklyn Nets) and Acuff (Sacramento Kings) will have multiple explosive scoring nights. And Wagler (LA Clippers) and Flemings (Atlanta Hawks) will be essential lead guards as their teams fight for playoff positions.

The new big men of the Thunder and Spurs

Big men Aday Mara, Jayden Quaintance, and Tarris Reed Jr are set to play key roles as the Thunder and Spurs aim for a title run. Mara (7ft 3in) will attempt to solve the Thunder’s glaring inability to stop Victor Wembanyama.

On the Spurs’ end, Wembanyama appeared fatigued at times while battling the physicality of Karl-Anthony Towns and Mitchell Robinson in the NBA finals. The Spurs’ backup center, Luke Kornet, failed to stabilize the team during the non-Wemby minutes.

Quaintance (6ft 10in) and Reed (6ft 11in) will allow Wembanyama to play more minutes at power forward, freeing the Frenchman to utilize his overall skillset. And the Thunder will hope that Mara’s pairing with Chet Holmgren becomes Wembanyama’s kryptonite.​

Losers

Labaron Philon Jr

In some cases, a player can lose by entering the draft a year too early or too late. If Philon had entered the 2025 draft, he probably would have been selected as a late lottery pick or mid-first rounder.

The highly-skilled guard from Alabama averaged 22 points a game and erupted for 35 points against Michigan in the NCAA Tournament. However, Philon fell to the Philadelphia 76ers at No 22 because an abundance of elite guards were present in this year’s draft.

Philon would be a starter on most NBA lottery teams. Instead, he will begin his career behind Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe for the Sixers.

Dusty May’s first draft

In 24 hours, Dusty May was announced as the new head coach of the Dallas Mavericks, and his former Michigan player Morez Johnson Jr was drafted by the Mavs. Johnson is an enforcer who will do the dirty work in the paint next to the versatile Cooper Flagg.

Although there’s a feelgood story here somewhere, drafting Johnson at No 9 appears to be an overreach.

Johnson was projected to be a mid-first round selection, with the ceiling of a high-value role player. With Kyrie Irving returning from injury, the Mavs should have drafted a high-scoring guard such as Burries or Dailyn Swain.

Blockbuster moments

​One of the most intriguing aspects of past NBA drafts was the drama of the unexpected. At any moment, a shocking blockbuster trade could change the landscape of the league while becoming fodder for a desperate news cycle.

This year’s draft lacked the suspense and intensity of moments such as Kobe Bryant being traded from the Charlotte Hornets to the Los Angeles Lakers; the Philadelphia 76ers trading Jayson Tatum to the Boston Celtics for Markelle Fultz; and the Atlanta Hawks trading Luka Dončić to the Dallas Mavericks for Trae Young.

But while this year’s draft lacked intrigue and controversy, the overall talent will be analyzed for years to come.



ESPN NBA draft broadcast gets really awkward over Jay Williams’ motorcycle crash

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows A man in a suit is speaking into a microphone, Image 2 shows Two bald men in suits sitting on black chairs, Image 3 shows Man in a suit and a smiling man in a lavender shirt hold up a white
Jefferson-Smith

The Richard Jefferson Comedy Tour won’t be making its way across America anytime soon.

The ESPN analyst turned a discussion about broadcast teammate Jay Williams’ 2002 draft night experience and the motorcycle accident that changed his life into a cringe-fest segment with two jokes that absolutely bombed.

After Kevin Neghandi asked Williams about why he received such a loud ovation after being drafted in New York by the Bulls with the No. 2 pick, with Williams joking that most folks who attended Duke lived in New York and New Jersey, Jefferson made things uncomfortable.

“Well, they also didn’t see the future coming, so they were cheering kind of pre-empt — sorry, I apologize,” Jefferson said while indirectly referencing Williams’ career-altering motorcycle accident in 2003 .

“Wow,” Williams responded flatly.

Williams lasted just one season in the NBA due to the multiple injuries he suffered in a horrific motorcycle accident in 2003, with the Bulls cutting him due to the injuries and him violating his contract.

He referred to the accident as “the day I almost died” — per CBS — in his autobiography, “Life is not an Accident: A Memoir of Reinvention.”

Smith, a veteran from “Inside the NBA,” tried to steer the conversation back into normalcy.

Jefferson’s jokes about Williams’ career didn’t land. @awfulannouncing/X

He complimented how Williams had been an “unbelievable talent” whose career trajectory would have been different if he “didn’t like motorcycles,” a remark that landed well with Williams.

Williams said, “Yes, that’s on record. I wrote a book about it.”

And that’s when Jefferson got himself in trouble again.

Williams is one of the biggest “What ifs?” in Bulls history. NBAE via Getty Images

He first offered a Jim Halpert-esque moment by seemingly looking toward a side camera before attempting another joke.

“I guess everybody that goes to Duke isn’t that smart,” he said, which resulted in Smith putting his head down and going, “Ohh.”

Williams didn’t seem to like Jefferson’s remarks. @awfulannouncing/X

Jefferson, realizing his routine wasn’t hitting the right chords, tried to defend himself.

“What? He wrote a book about it, I’m agreeing with him,” Jefferson said.

Smith then referenced the book line before realizing they should move on, saying, “But, anyway” to mercifully move on from the Jefferson comedy hour.

It shows how segments such as those contrast to when Jefferson is behind the mic with Mike Breen and Tim Legler for NBA Finals games, where there is better chemistry and fewer spontaneous moments.

Knicks Bulletin: ‘Let’s go MO’

BROOKLYN, NY - MARCH 12: (NEW YORK DAILIES OUT) Former New York Knick Charles Oakley and rap artist Ice Cube attend a game between the Brooklyn Nets and the Knicks at Barclays Center on Sunday, Mar. 12, 2017 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. The Nets defeated the Knicks 120-112. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Day one of the NBA Draft is in the books…

…and oh, shocker, there was a trade down completed by the Knickerbockers!

Here’s the latest batch of quotes in what is likely going to become a dying Bulletin, at least throughout the dry summer.

Josh Hart

On the meaning of New York to the NBA and the Knicks’ title:

“No one understands—besides y’all—the weight that that wearing that jersey has sometimes. And, you know, we kind of talk around it and dance around it, but New York is a special place, but there’s a lot of pressure when you put that jersey on. So we want to thank you and celebrate you (Carmelo Anthony) a little bit, man, for laying the foundation, but also, you know, talking to us during it.”

Jalen Brunson

On announcing his debut children’s book:

“I’m beyond happy to share that JALEN PLAYS IT ALL, written by me and illustrated by the incredible [Neely Daggett], will be released (next year) by Feiwel & Friends. This children’s book is a story about discovering that success doesn’t happen overnight. There are mistakes, setbacks, and moments when giving up may feel easier than pushing forward. And while basketball was always at the center of my journey, every sport I played helped build the habits, character, and work ethic that made me who I am.”

Charles Oakley

On Patrick Ewing:

“Patrick (Ewing) always been like that. He never stood up for nobody. Even when they offered him the D-League job, I said something. And the coldest thing out of this all, I took a case for Patrick on an airplane. Put that out there. I took a case from him. Ask any teammate, Chris Childs, Charles, Allen, John, they might not say nothing, but I took a case to better his self. And this happened to me, he don’t say nothing.”

On Jalen Brunson vs. Patrick Ewing as the Knicks’ GOAT:

“Brunson is a better Knicks than Patrick.”

On Dolan supposedly blocking his appearances on the Roomates Show and elsewhere:

“I was supposed to be on the Roommate podcast. I get a call the day before. They said, ‘We have to cancel you.’ And then three weeks later, guess who was on there? Dolan. Dolan. I was shooting a commercial right across from the Garden and Cafe 31, and something else. We shot for one day, the next day, somebody said we had to shut it down. We had permission and everything. So he bullying me around the city, too.”

Guerschon Yabusele

On prioritizing the NBA over a return to Europe:

“Well, actually, I will never say no. I will never say no. But where, uh, it has to be clarified is that for me today, it is the NBA first. Why? Very simple. Uh, if the NBA, I do not go back there this summer, let’s say, I think it is going to be finished. We all agree. I do not think I would have a second chance to be able to go back.”

On his frustration with his lack of playing time in New York:

“The games go on, the games go on, and well, I still do not play. I still do not play. And sometimes, zero minutes, sometimes… And me, there, actually, it hit me, where I say to myself, ‘Ah, but I feel like I am in Boston, actually.’ When I look at Boston, we are in 2026, and it was ten years ago. It hit me. I said to myself, ‘Damn, ten years. A ton of things have happened, you know, since then, and I am still getting zero minutes. It is not possible.’ The frustration was there. I would go home, I did not know what to do anymore. I said to myself, ‘But it is not possible. I am not going to go back into that for the whole season.’ And I signed there for two years. And I say to myself, ‘He signed for three years or four years, the coach. I am not going to not play for two years.’”

Becky Hammon

On publicly admitting being wrong about Jalen Brunson:

“I was wrong. I was wrong. My opinion was wrong.”

On Jalen Brunson proving history wrong:

“Jalen, all he did was prove history wrong. He proves he’s an outlier, so you can put his name next to Steph Curry and Isiah Thomas, and I thought he played brilliantly, especially down the stretch. I mean, he was that 1A dude.”

On initially refusing to apologize for her wrong opinion:

“But apologize… I’m never gonna apologize for having an opinion. That’s what ESPN pays me for.”

On Brunson’s place in Knicks history:

“Let me just piss off Knicks fans again and say, I think he’s the greatest Knick ever. Give them something else to talk about… I’ve always been a Jalen Brunson fan. I was a fan of his at Villanova, in Dallas and why this comment went off the rails, I have no idea, because it was clearly a historical and analytical take.”

Adam Silver

On the NBA’s anti-tanking system:

“We’ll never go back to where we were. We ended up in a situation where fans of teams were actually rooting for their teams to be bad. It was particularly bad this year, I think, because of the perceived depth of (the 2026 NBA) Draft.”

On why the league changed course:

“It just caught up with us over the years. It was a practice by a very few teams over time where they could genuinely say they were rebuilding. Every team in all sports is focused on analytics, and everyone — sort of the guardrails went off — and said there’s an advantage if you’re not really good, to be really bad, and it doesn’t work to be in the middle. So once roughly a third of our teams were acting under those incentives, everyone came together, and I would say it was agreement across the league from every constituent group, but most importantly, our fans.”

On evaluating the new system before making further changes:

“Part of the agreement with the teams was that this system would be in place for three years. In essence, it’s grandfathered in. We all agree that would give us an opportunity to assess how this is working, and also look at some other approaches, which we thought, in fairness, the teams needed to be built in over time. But most importantly, we will not be returning to a system where there is an incentive to be bad.”

On NBA expansion:

“If we were to expand, most likely in the 2028-29 season, I bet that’s when they would come into the league, but no decisions have been made yet. What we’ve made clear to our teams, we’ve at least specifically said it’s Las Vegas and Seattle. We’re looking at some other great cities that are interested in having franchises. We’re focused on those two right now. We could decide ultimately to go to new cities. One or two bids are being solicited at this time. The groups are coming together, talking to bankers, talking to the league office, and I think what we’ve said, in fairness to everyone, let’s make a decision by the end of this calendar year, at the latest.”

On the timeline for expansion:

“If we expand, at least, we’re thinking ’28-29 season. The only two cities, at the moment, we’re looking at are Las Vegas and Seattle. We haven’t had a vote on it, it’s not a foregone conclusion, but we’re in the process of talking to groups that are interested in getting an expansion team in those two cities.”

On the possibility of adding one, two, or no teams:

“We’re currently looking at two teams, but what we’ve said is it’s possible we won’t expand at all, and we could expand to just one market. But we’re officially looking at both those markets right now.”

On conference realignment after the expansion:

“We’ll want to likely even out the conferences, so there will be some movement then.”

Ben Stiller

On Mohamed Diawara’s extension:

“Let’s go MO.”

Zohran Mamdani

On the rappers attending the Knicks parade:

“It feels like a homecoming. It’s a chance for us to appreciate people who have written the soundtrack to the city. I’m just so happy to see many of them getting their due; you cannot disentangle those songs from our own stories and memories as New Yorkers.”

NBA Draft Day 2: Who should the Golden State Warriors pick at No. 54?

It's the second day of the NBA Draft.

Teams may be satisfied with their first round selections, but they have to follow it up with additional pieces to compliment their team.

The Golden State Warriors made a splash selection grabbing Michigan's Yaxel Lendeborg, a wing player who is seemingly ready to step in and contribute in the Bay Area.

The Warriors were plagued by injury last year and it revealed some of the team's deficiencies. Golden State still requires more two-way wings, versatile small forwards and power forwards. They will also need to focus on adding more bigs. They lack size in the middle. And even if they bring back Kristaps Porzingis, they will need someone who can compliment his offensive game with tenacious hustle on defense.

They have Brandin Podziemski, but taking a peek at another ball handler, facilitator and shot creator could be the best bet for the Dubs.

Here's a look at the players in the second round the Warriors should consider taking with the No. 54 pick.

Who should the Golden State Warriors target on Day 2?

Warriors general manager Mike Dunleavy Jr. and company will need to be decisive on Day 2. There are sleeper prospects they can bring in to contribute to their system. They can take their pick between wings, guards and bigs that are versatile in skill. Ideally, Golden State should identify talented glue guys who will come in and play a role, but also possess the talent to be a key contributor. Here are some of those guys the Warriors should keep an eye on:

  • Meleek Thomas (Arkansas, Guard): Thomas might not be available when the Warriors pick at No. 54. However, he is a talented shooting guard who can score with ease. He averaged 15.5 points for the Razorbacks. He's a confident, polished scorer who spaces the floor and attacks closeouts.
  • Darrion Williams (N.C. State, Wing): The Northern California native could be a good piece to add for the Warriors. He stands 6-foot-6, giving him size that Golden State is looking for. He's the prototypical Swiss army knife. He averaged 14 points a North Carolina State including 40.4% from three-point range as a senior and 38.8% over his four-year NCAA career.
  • Trevon Brazile (Arkansas, Forward): If Brazile is available, the Warriors need to act fast. Simply because the 6-foot-10 forward can make life simple for your defense. Check this, last season at Arkansas he became the first player to record at 40 three-pointers (45), blocks (58) and steals (53) in a season.
  • Izaiyah Nelson (South Florida, Big): Standing at 6-foot-9, Nelson gives up some size as a big man, but that doesn't take away from his productivity. He's a unit. And defense is where he can shine for the Warriors. He was the 2025-26 American Conference Player of the Year, Defensive Player of the Year and Newcomer of the Year in a season where he averaged 1.4 blocks and 1.6 steals per game.
  • Aaron Nkrumah (Tennessee State, Wing): Nkrumah could become the first HBCU player drafted since Kyle O'Quinn was selected by the Orlando Magic out of Norfolk State in 2012. Nkrumah is a 6-foot-6 standout who ranked second in total steals (98) and steals per game (2.8).

2026 NBA Draft: Best available players

  1. Isaiah Evans (Duke, Wing)
  2. Meleek Thomas (Arkansas, Guard)
  3. Henri Veesaar (North Carolina, Forward)
  4. Baba Miller (Cincinnati, Big)
  5. Richie Saunders (BYU, Wing)
  6. Ryan Conwell (Louisville, Guard)
  7. Jack Kayil (International, Guard)
  8. Trevon Brazile (Arkansas, Forward)
  9. Bruce Thornton (Ohio St., Guard)
  10. Braden Smith (Purdue, Guard)
  11. Ugonna Onyenso (Virginia, Big)
  12. Emanuel Sharp (Houston, Guard)
  13. Jaden Bradley (Arizona, Guard)
  14. Dillon Mitchell (St. John's, Big)
  15. Ja'Kobi Gillespie (Tennessee, Guard)
  16. Izaiyah Nelson (South Florida, Big)
  17. Maliq Brown (Duke, Wing)
  18. Otega Oweh (Kentucky, Guard)
  19. Felix Okpara (Tennessee, Big)
  20. Nick Martinelli (Northwestern, Wing)
  21. Tyler Nickel (Vanderbilt, Wing)
  22. Aaron Nkrumah (Tennessee St., Wing)
  23. Tyler Bilodeau (UCLA, Forward)
  24. Rafael Castro (George Washington, Big)
  25. Milos Uzan (Houston, Guard)
  26. Tobi Lawal (Virginia Tech, Big)
  27. Quadir Copeland (N.C. State, Guard)
  28. Nate Bittle (Oregon, Big)
  29. Tobe Awaka (Arizona, Big)
  30. Bryce Hopkins (St. John's, Wing)
  31. Tamin Lipsey (Iowa St., Guard)
  32. Kylan Boswell (Illinois, Guard)
  33. Keyshawn Hall (Auburn, Wing)
  34. Vsevolod Ishchenko (International, Guard)
  35. Noam Yaacov (International, Guard)
  36. Nick Boyd (Wisconsin, Guard)
  37. Duke Miles (Vanderbilt, Guard)
  38. Jaden Henley (Grand Canyon, Wing)
  39. Lamar Wilkerson (Indiana, Wing)
  40. Trey Kaufman-Renn (Purdue, Big)
  41. Jaron Pierre Jr. (SMU, Wing)
  42. Tucker DeVries (Indiana, Wing)
  43. Darrion Williams (N.C. State, Wing)
  44. Oscar Cluff (Purdue, Big)
  45. Jalen Washington (Vanderbilt, Big)
  46. Mark Mitchell (Missouri, Wing)
  47. Seth Trimble (North Carolina, Guard)
  48. Malik Reneau (Miami FL, Big)
  49. Elijah Mahi (Santa Clara, Wing)
  50. Graham Ike (Gonzaga, Big)
  51. Kowacie Reeves Jr. (Georgia Tech, Wing)
  52. Ernest Udeh Jr. (Miami FL, Big)
  53. Donovan Atwell (Texas Tech, Guard)
  54. Michael Ajayi (Butler, Big)
  55. William Kyle III (Syracuse, Big)
  56. Tre White (Kansas, Wing)
  57. Robert McCray V (Florida St., Guard)
  58. Lajae Jones (Florida St., Wing)
  59. Wyatt Fricks (Marshall, Forward)
  60. Tre Donaldson (Miami FL, Guard)
  61. Peter Suder (Miami OH, Guard)
  62. B.J. Edwards (SMU, Guard)
  63. Chad Baker-Mazara (USC, Forward)
  64. Malique Lewis (International, Forward)
  65. Jaylin Sellers (Providence, Wing)
  66. Carson Cooper (Michigan St., Big)
  67. Cade Tyson (Minnesota, Wing)
  68. Corey Camper Jr. (Nevada, Wing)
  69. Melvin Council Jr. (Kansas, Guard)
  70. Fletcher Loyer (Purdue, Guard)

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY Sports: Who should Golden State Warriors take in second round of NBA Draft?

Who should the Sacramento Kings take at No. 45 on Day 2 of NBA Draft?

It's Day 2 of the 2026 NBA Draft.

The Sacramento Kings were active on Day 1, taking an anticipated franchise cornerstone prospect in Darius Acuff Jr. at No. 7 and pairing another shooter and winning role player with him at No. 29 in Alex Karaban, following a trade with the Cleveland Cavaliers sending the No. 34 pick and a future second round pick.

Sacramento aims to follow up on its first round wins in the second round. The Kings have the No. 45 pick in the second round of the NBA Draft.

The second round has a wide variety pool of talent featuring some players that can help contribute to a NBA team in the immediate future and others might need a year or two.

The Kings need guys who are defensive-minded. They are stacked at the wings. It would be ideal for Sacramento to target a big or another guard to backup Acuff.

Here's a list of players that the Kings should look to select if they're available:

Who should the Sacramento Kings target in round 2?

There is a bevy of guys that can contribute to a team like the Kings. Guys can contribute to secondary roles where they find their niche within a team whether it's as a knockdown shooter, board man, hustle guy, playmaker or lockdown defender. The Kings focus lies within perimeter defenders, interior defenders and additional ball-handlers. These following players fit within that mold.

  • Henri Veesaar (North Carolina, Forward): Veesaar likely won't be available but the Tar Heels big man is an example of what the Kings should look for.
  • Braden Smith (Purdue, Guard): Smith is someone who can facilitate with the best of them. The proof? He finished his collegiate career as the NCAA Division I career assists leader with 1,103.
  • Emanuel Sharp (Houston, Guard): Sharp is sharp offensively. The two-guard is a true shooting guard. He can knock it down from deep, he can slash and get to the rim. He averaged 15.5 points for the Houston Cougars. However, an area that needs improvement is shooting percentage, averaging 41% from the field.
  • Felix Okpara (Tennessee, Big): Okpara played a huge role for Tennessee, as an anchor to their defense. If that translates to the NBA, the Kings could beef their frontline with aggressors who play physical, giving Sacramento an edge.
  • Ugonna Onyenso (Virginia, Big): Onyenso could be a project but with huge defensive upside. He led the ACC in blocks and ranked second nationally with 2.92 swats per game in 2025-26 in just 18.6 minutes.

2026 NBA Draft: Best available players

  1. Isaiah Evans (Duke, Wing)
  2. Meleek Thomas (Arkansas, Guard)
  3. Henri Veesaar (North Carolina, Forward)
  4. Baba Miller (Cincinnati, Big)
  5. Richie Saunders (BYU, Wing)
  6. Ryan Conwell (Louisville, Guard)
  7. Jack Kayil (International, Guard)
  8. Trevon Brazile (Arkansas, Forward)
  9. Bruce Thornton (Ohio St., Guard)
  10. Braden Smith (Purdue, Guard)
  11. Ugonna Onyenso (Virginia, Big)
  12. Emanuel Sharp (Houston, Guard)
  13. Jaden Bradley (Arizona, Guard)
  14. Dillon Mitchell (St. John's, Big)
  15. Ja'Kobi Gillespie (Tennessee, Guard)
  16. Izaiyah Nelson (South Florida, Big)
  17. Maliq Brown (Duke, Wing)
  18. Otega Oweh (Kentucky, Guard)
  19. Felix Okpara (Tennessee, Big)
  20. Nick Martinelli (Northwestern, Wing)
  21. Tyler Nickel (Vanderbilt, Wing)
  22. Aaron Nkrumah (Tennessee St., Wing)
  23. Tyler Bilodeau (UCLA, Forward)
  24. Rafael Castro (George Washington, Big)
  25. Milos Uzan (Houston, Guard)
  26. Tobi Lawal (Virginia Tech, Big)
  27. Quadir Copeland (N.C. State, Guard)
  28. Nate Bittle (Oregon, Big)
  29. Tobe Awaka (Arizona, Big)
  30. Bryce Hopkins (St. John's, Wing)
  31. Tamin Lipsey (Iowa St., Guard)
  32. Kylan Boswell (Illinois, Guard)
  33. Keyshawn Hall (Auburn, Wing)
  34. Vsevolod Ishchenko (International, Guard)
  35. Noam Yaacov (International, Guard)
  36. Nick Boyd (Wisconsin, Guard)
  37. Duke Miles (Vanderbilt, Guard)
  38. Jaden Henley (Grand Canyon, Wing)
  39. Lamar Wilkerson (Indiana, Wing)
  40. Trey Kaufman-Renn (Purdue, Big)
  41. Jaron Pierre Jr. (SMU, Wing)
  42. Tucker DeVries (Indiana, Wing)
  43. Darrion Williams (N.C. State, Wing)
  44. Oscar Cluff (Purdue, Big)
  45. Jalen Washington (Vanderbilt, Big)
  46. Mark Mitchell (Missouri, Wing)
  47. Seth Trimble (North Carolina, Guard)
  48. Malik Reneau (Miami FL, Big)
  49. Elijah Mahi (Santa Clara, Wing)
  50. Graham Ike (Gonzaga, Big)
  51. Kowacie Reeves Jr. (Georgia Tech, Wing)
  52. Ernest Udeh Jr. (Miami FL, Big)
  53. Donovan Atwell (Texas Tech, Guard)
  54. Michael Ajayi (Butler, Big)
  55. William Kyle III (Syracuse, Big)
  56. Tre White (Kansas, Wing)
  57. Robert McCray V (Florida St., Guard)
  58. Lajae Jones (Florida St., Wing)
  59. Wyatt Fricks (Marshall, Forward)
  60. Tre Donaldson (Miami FL, Guard)
  61. Peter Suder (Miami OH, Guard)
  62. B.J. Edwards (SMU, Guard)
  63. Chad Baker-Mazara (USC, Forward)
  64. Malique Lewis (International, Forward)
  65. Jaylin Sellers (Providence, Wing)
  66. Carson Cooper (Michigan St., Big)
  67. Cade Tyson (Minnesota, Wing)
  68. Corey Camper Jr. (Nevada, Wing)
  69. Melvin Council Jr. (Kansas, Guard)
  70. Fletcher Loyer (Purdue, Guard)

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY Sports: Who should Sacramento Kings draft in second round of NBA Draft?

Open Thread: Spurs are bringing back the Silver Dancers

Jun 5, 2014; San Antonio, TX, USA; San Antonio Spurs silver dancers perform during a timeout from the game against the Miami Heat in game one of the 2014 NBA Finals at AT&T Center. The Spurs beat the Heat 110-95. Mandatory Credit: Bob Donnan-Imagn Images

On Monday, the Spurs issued this press release:

The San Antonio Spurs today announced the expansion of their in-game entertainment lineup with the return of the Silver Dancers for the 2026-27 season. The Silver Dancers will join the Spurs Hype Squad as part of a dynamic entertainment team designed to elevate the game-day experience and connect with fans both in the arena and throughout the community.

The Silver Dancers were supplanted by the Hype Squad is 2018. They will now share the spotlight as they integrate into the current rotation of in arena entertainment.

Jordan Mandelkorn, Vice President of Marketing, Creative & Retail for Spurs Sports & Entertainment, stated:

We’re always looking for ways to make the Spurs game-day experience more exciting and engaging for our fans. The Silver Dancers and Hype Squad each bring their own energy, skillset and connection to our fans, and we’re excited to expand our entertainment lineup in a way that reflects the spirit of the Spurs both on the court and in the community.”

Those interested in auditioning for either the Silver Dancers or Hype Squad can do so through Sunday, June 28. Information is available at Spurs.com/Auditions.


Welcome to the Thread. Join in the conversation, start your own discussion, and share your thoughts. This is the Spurs community, your Spurs community. Thanks for being here.

Our community guidelines apply which should remind everyone to be cool, avoid personal attacks, not to troll and to watch the language.

Kentucky Wildcats News: NBA Draft Day 2

CHICAGO, IL - MAY 12: Otega Oweh looks on during the 2026 NBA Draft Combine on May 12, 2026 at Wintrust Arena in Chicago, Illinois. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Melissa Tamez/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Good morning, BBN!

Day 1 of the NBA Draft was a success, with so many kids realizing their childhood dreams.

For Kentucky specifically, Jayden Quaintance was drafted by the San Antonio Spurs with the 20th pick.

Despite the up-and-down story of his time at UK, I’m happy for the kid. He’s worked really hard to get to this point, and I hope he has a very successful NBA career.

However, with Day 1 wrapped up, Day 2 should bring some great stories as well. Most important for UK fans is seeing where UK legend Otega Oweh ends up.

He’s been all over NBA Draft boards for the second round, with some not even having him be taken. Hopefully, that’s not the case, and he gets drafted sooner rather than later.

Where would you like to see Otega end up?

Tweet of the Day

Very exciting.

Headlines

Gymnastics Announces 2027 Home Opponents – UK Athletics

Should be another great year!

Sources: Falcons, TE Kyle Pitts agree to 3-year, $54M deal – ESPN

Pretty shocking deal here, I can only imagine what Bijan’s deal will be.

One transfer portal addition who could swing College Football Playoff hopes for every post-spring top 25 team – CBS Sports

Good read.

Trail Blazers hire Minnesota assistant Micah Nori as next head coach – NBC Sports

You get what you pay for.

World Cup 2026: Record-breaking Cristiano Ronaldo leads Portugal’s 5-0 rout of Uzbekistan – Yahoo Sports

Awesome to see Ronaldo score.

No 2026 supplemental draft; Brendan Sorsby’s NFL path paused – ESPN

I have a lot of thoughts about this, but it doesn’t matter. The NFL won’t change anything.

Pat Riley got his guy (again) in Giannis Antetokounmpo; now the real work on the Heat roster begins – CBS Sports

The former Cat has the best trade track record of any NBA President.

Mike Boynton promoted to interim coach at Michigan as Dusty May leaves for the NBA – NBC Sports

Wild situation for the reigning champs to deal with.

Hammon not apologizing for opinion, says Brunson NBA ‘outlier’ – ESPN

I love it, more fuel for JB.

NCAA votes to approve age-based five-year eligibility rule, reshaping college football, basketball landscapes – CBS Sports

Big fan of this.

Brad Stevens addresses Jaylen Brown's Celtics future amid trade rumors

Brad Stevens addresses Jaylen Brown's Celtics future amid trade rumors originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Celtics selected Houston center Chris Cenac Jr. with the No. 27 overall pick in Tuesday’s first round of the 2026 NBA Draft, but the main topic of discussion during team president of basketball operations Brad Stevens’ press conference at the end of the night was Jaylen Brown’s future with the franchise.

Brown reportedly was part of a trade offer the Celtics made to the Milwaukee Bucks for superstar big man Giannis Ante. The Bucks ultimately chose to send Ante to the Heat late Monday night and accept Miami’s trade package instead.

ESPN’s Shams Charania reported Tuesday afternoon the Celtics were “listening” to teams calling about Brown.

Stevens said he’s been in contact with Brown throughout the offseason.

“We had a couple of meetings earlier at the end of May, also before he went back overseas a couple of days ago, or 10 days ago or so,” Stevens said. “Spent a lot of time just the two of us sitting down together, and then have been, like every offseason, in regular touch with his agent all the way through the last couple of days. Obviously, with all the rumor mill and all that stuff, and his name being splashed all over the place, that’s not easy – but we certainly wanted to be as proactive and upfront with that as possible, and I thought we had really good, candid conversations.”

Stevens was asked if Brown will be on the Celtics at the beginning of next season.

“Jaylen Brown is a big part of us,” Stevens said. “I’m never going to predict the future, but every indication, everything that I think about over the past few years has been building around those guys, right? So obviously, you never know.

“But at the same time, the one thing I want to make very clear is how valued he’s always been. He’s been amazing. He’s been an amazing teammate, a great person to be around. And whether that run ends 10 years from now when he retires, or before, there’s a lot to celebrate. We have a great relationship, an open relationship where we talk about everything. But I don’t want to predict the future. I look at it as, this is our team.”

Brown is eligible for an extension in July. Stevens said he doesn’t talk about contract stuff publicly.

When asked if he feels Brown and Jayson Tatum are still a championship-caliber duo, Stevens emphatically answered “yes.”

What they're saying: Analysis of Sixers' pick Labaron Philon Jr.

What they're saying: Analysis of Sixers' pick Labaron Philon Jr. originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Sixers new President of Basketball Operations Mike Gansey made his first significant move since joining the franchise last night, selecting Labaron Philon Jr. out of Alabama with the 22nd pick in the 2026 NBA Draft. The pick was a bit of a surprise to many, including Gansey himself, who had Philon higher on the team’s draft board.

“Little bit surprised he fell to us,” Gansey said. “but there’s so many good guards in this draft that all those guys who went in the teens, they might be top 10 in normal drafts. … He was someone we just couldn’t pass up.”

As with every draft pick, the people that made the Sixers’ pick were pleased. But what about the self-appointed “experts” across the NBA universe? How did they evaluate Philon? We scoured the Interwebs to find out.

Sam Vecenie and John Hollinger, NBA Senior Writers, The Athletic – Grade: B+

Vecenie: “His improvement as an on-ball player this season while transitioning into that role could not have gone better, as he led the Alabama offense to a top-three mark in the country while putting up video-game-like numbers.”

Hollinger: “A scoring guard with a splendid array of finishes, Philon should add some juice to the non-Tyrese Maxey minutes in Philly once he gets his NBA sea legs. The Sixers have no viable backup point guard at the moment, so Philon could play right away.”

Bobby Marks, ESPN – Calls Philon the best pick of the first round

“I ranked the Alabama guard as the 13th-best prospect in the draft. What stood out for me is how Philon took the constructive criticism from the 2025 draft combine and applied it this past season. He improved his 3-point shooting from 32% to 40%.

The biggest takeaway is that NBA teams wanted to see Philon as a primary playmaker — he averaged 5.1 assists as a sophomore at Alabama. With the 76ers, Philon will join an explosive backcourt with Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe.”

Kevin O’Connor, Yahoo! Sports Senior NBA Analyst – Grade: B

“While Philon appears to be a good value pick at this point, it’s an odd fit for a Philly backcourt that suddenly feels a bit light with him, Tyrese Maxey, and VJ Edgecombe… Philon is also a below-the-rim athlete and is listed under 180 pounds, so his slight frame remains the one thing standing between him and stardom. Is this a team that actually cares about competing today or is this more of a pick for the future?”

Adam Finkelstein, CBS Sports Director of Basketball Scouting – Grade: B+

“Philon gives Philadelphia a dynamic scorer who attacks with pace, has worked his way into a shot-maker, and showed more defensive chops as a freshman.  A gifted shot creator, Philon stuffed the stat sheet as the focal point of one of college basketball’s fastest offenses, and did it with 50/40/80 shooting splits. If he can tap back into some of the defensive tools he showed as a freshman, there could be real value here.”

Kurt Helin, Lead NBA Writer, NBCSports.com – Grade: B

“In the modern NBA, you can’t have enough shot creations, and while the 76ers have some dynamic guards in-house already (Tyrese Maxey, VJ Edgecombe), Philon could be a high-level reserve. He is a high-IQ, very skilled player who can run a team and get buckets. There are questions about his ceiling, but at pick 22 it’s worth the risk.”

Steph Noh, Senior NBA Writer, The Sporting News – Grade: B+

“Philon is a crafty guard who figures out ways to get into the paint and get his shot off. He greatly improved his shooting as a sophomore, hitting 40 percent from deep last season. He’s a good-not-great passer who can add some secondary playmaking. His defense wasn’t great last season, but he did show better skill two years ago with a smaller offensive role as a point-of-attack menace.”

Warriors reportedly had one NBA draft prospect ranked above Yaxel Lendeborg

Warriors reportedly had one NBA draft prospect ranked above Yaxel Lendeborg originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Warriors clearly thought very highly of University of Michigan forward Yaxel Lendeborg.

Not only did Golden State select the 6-foot-9 wing with the No. 11 pick in the 2026 NBA Draft on Tuesday night, but had him ranked as one of its top prospects in what was widely considered a very deep draft.

The San Francisco Standard’s Tim Kawakami reported in his latest column, citing a team source, that the Warriors only had one other prospect ranked higher on their board than Lendeborg.

“One team source indicated that the Warriors had Lendeborg rated about even with [Brayden] Burries and only had Duke’s Cam Boozer clearly placed on a higher level in this draft,” Kawakami wrote.

“That might or might not be some slight retro-editing of their true big board (they weren’t going to take a lead guard in this draft and that position dominated the top nine selections). But either way, the Warriors definitely always were very high on Lendeborg and definitely always weren’t so worried about his birthdate.”

The soon-to-be 24-year-old Lendeborg was one of a few prospects frequently mocked to Golden State in the weeks leading up to the draft for his potential fit with the Warriors, which the team, according to Kawakami’s report, clearly valued over some of the other consensus top prospects, most of which were guards, in the picks leading up to Golden State’s No. 11 selection.

Boozer, the only prospect the Warriors reportedly had ranked higher on their board than Lendeborg, was selected by the Memphis Grizzlies with the No. 3 pick.

Of course, as Kawakami alludes to, teams frequently state after the fact that the player they ended up selecting was one of, if not their highest-ranked prospect coming into the draft.

Whether or not that actually was true.

Regardless of where the Warriors actually had Lendeborg ranked pre-draft, it’s no secret the organization genuinely is excited about the pick.

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Jayden Quaintance could have procedure that sidelines him for 6 months

Jayden Quaintance is a very talented basketball player.

Need proof? Quaintance was drafted 20th overall by the San Antonio Spurs in the NBA Draft Tuesday night, despite potentially needing a procedure that could sideline him for a good chunk of his rookie season.

Players have to have talent to be drafted into the NBA, so that tells you how talented Quaintance is. Even though we only saw him for four games in Kentucky last year, he showed why the Cats coveted him in the transfer portal.

Quaintance missed most of last season, either recovering from a torn ACL or managing the same knee he injured in his freshman season in 2025 at Arizona State. While that knee is fully intact, Dr. Riley Williams III — head team physician and orthopedic surgeon for the Brooklyn Nets and famous for performing surgery on Paul George’s gruesome open tibia-fibula fracture with USA Basketball in 2014– recommended a follow-up procedure that could keep him off the floor for six months, according to KSR’s Jack Pilgrim

Six months. That’s at least until December.

You have to feel for Quaintance. None of this is his fault. Injuries happen. By the time he takes the floor with the Spurs, if he has this procedure, it will have been nearly two years since he originally tore his ACL. That’s a long time to be dealing with a significant injury.

The good news is that San Antonio is a great destination for Quaintance. A model organization that is coming off an NBA Finals berth and has a budding superstar in Victor Wembanyama. We will see a lot of Quaintance once he’s able to take the floor, given that the Spurs will be on national television many times this upcoming season.

The goal for Quaintance is a long career. That is why caution may be the best approach.

ANALYSIS: Brooklyn Nets on the come up? Sean Marks thinks so.

Arturo Holmes/Getty Images

What a difference a year makes.

Following the first round of the 2025 NBA Draft, Sean Marks faced, through a screen, bewildered media simply trying to make sense of what the hell had just happened. The Brooklyn Nets not only did not trade any of their five first-round picks, but, judging by consensus, reached on plenty of prospects. The first season of tanking had come and gone without an exciting swing to show for it. Consensus can be and is often wrong, but after June 25, 2025, the Nets felt like a franchise gone haywire.

On the morning of June 24, 2026, the Nets are a franchise ready to face the day. They have not been handed ideal circumstances. The road ahead is not going to be easy. But cautious optimism is warranted.

Brooklyn took Mikel Brown Jr. at #6 overall, a prospect they were heavily linked to in the days leading up to the draft but by no means the safe option. He missed a handful of games at Louisville with a bad back, posted a 45.7 eFG% against top 50 NCAA teams, didn’t play much defense, and struggled to protect the ball. But one look at the highlight tape — full of strong finishes, whirlwind passes, and pull-ups from another county — lights a fire…

Jordi Fernández has squeezed more than he had any right to out of his guards over the last couple seasons, providing Shake Milton an NBA swan song, Dennis Schröder the best stretch of his career, and Nolan Traore (perhaps the league’s worst scorer as a rookie) weeks of decent production. Now, Fernández has Mikel Brown Jr.

When asked what stood out about the 20-year-old, Sean Marks said: “Just how dynamic of a player he is. A playmaker, a scorer, the pace with which he played the game. I think he’s a cerebral player, has really great feel, and just excited to get a guy like that who has some intangible skills as well. When you look how athletic he is, as I mentioned before, the speed with which he can play, those things translate to our league. And then you get to meet the guy, you know, and he really has a chip on his shoulder, he really has something to prove, and I think those are some of the things that stood out to us.”

By trading Nic Claxton for Julius Randle, Brooklyn’s short-term mission is clear: Win a few more games. They have a stable of decent rotation players that, if nothing else, shouldn’t be destructive in their minutes, from Ziaire Williams to Day’Ron Sharpe to Josh Minott. Even Egor Dëmin fits that bill as a complementary piece with room to grow.

Brown Jr. is what they didn’t have, a dynamic young player whom fans can dream about. He is not Yaxel Lendeborg or Aday Mara or even Kingston Flemings; they could all be better than Brown Jr., who was not the safe pick … but that’s exciting.

During his rocky season at Louisville, Brown Jr.’s commitment was questioned repeatedly by a rabid college fanbase, and later by NBA scouts. His maturity, his resiliency, his father’s involvement were all put under a microscope. The Brooklyn Nets, per MBJ’s admission, met with him three times including a visit to his home in Florida.

“It’s really important to see how what makes these guys tick,” said Marks. “Where they come from, why they have the habits they have, you know, and their parents have a lot to do with it. And it was an absolute pleasure to meet the parents of Mikel, and get to see his family background and see where he’s from, and sort of the history of how he’s grown up, and so forth.”

Brooklyn did far more than their due diligence and took Brown Jr. anyway. For a franchise infamously committed to off-court character, this should relieve Nets fans. It is the inverse of what the Sacramento Kings did, taking Alex Karaban at #29 overall due to his winning reputation as a UCONN Husky, a clear attempt to bring a “high-character” rookie into their locker room even if his basketball talent did not merit a first-round selection.

Said Marks: “I think something that we saw with Mikel … was just how anxious and excited he was about getting out there in the NBA. Getting out there: ‘I’ve got something to prove.’ You know, it’s hard to measure but I think that’s something that will definitely translate, when you have a chip on your shoulder and you’re an extreme competitor.”

At #28, the Nets drafted another competitor, lauded for not just his playmaking but his toughness in Joshua Jefferson. And, finally, a guy with a BMI over 20! Our tremendous draft guide over at Swish Theory called the Iowa State product “one of the best 240-pound passers in the world” already, and it’s tough to argue with…

“Josh was a guy that we have absolutely been all over all year long,” said Marks, “and watched just how he played the game. You know, his skill set definitely translates. High IQ, and I think when you watch him play, and I said before: Iowa State plays through him. His teammates feed off of him, he’s definitely a facilitator out there, the toughness that he has, there was a lot of intangibles, and then he’s a winner. An absolute, flat-out winner.”

Jefferson, of course, does not arrive without concerns. As a 22-year-old, he’ll be expected to produce quickly even in a crowded forward room with Danny Wolf and Noah Clowney, not to mention Julius Randle. He is not a plus-vertical athlete for his size, and his scoring numbers left much to be desired in his senior season, perhaps plagued by a loose handle and lack of burst around the rim.

But Jefferson can clearly play, and throughout the season frequently got late-lotto buzz. This feels like the happy medium of Brooklyn valuing pedigree and production, even if he is an older prospect.

Sean Marks is already thinking about where the burly forward can fit in, too: “The way Josh plays with the ball, the DHOs, the reads, the passing ability — that is absolutely going to fit within Jordi’s system and Jordi’s style, and how he wants to play. Mikel, the same thing: He can break down defenses his speed, his craftiness, and obviously, athleticism yet again. Those things — you hear Jordi talk about paint touches all the time.”

It’s not that Mikel Brown Jr. and Joshua Jefferson are guaranteed to be productive NBA players. Far from it. Rather, it feels like the Brooklyn Nets have made the most of a mediocre situation, unafraid to trade for Julius Randle even if it invites insulting comparisons to the New York Knicks. They made no bones about selecting a potentially electric scoring guard, giving fans something to cheer about while doing their homework on the kid. What does it mean for Nolan Traore and Ben Saraf? That doesn’t matter right now; if Jefferson is quickly better than Wolf and Clowney, that shouldn’t matter either.

“I’m excited to see the current roster grow,” said Marks. “I’m going to start to see what falls our way, whether it’s in free agency or trades. I mean, we’ve kept ultimate flexibility over the last year or two, and I think we’ll continue to do that. And then, at the right particular time, when guys that we feel have that real Brooklyn grit — which is what we want to add — and we see them in here long term with us and they can continue to take us to another step in the right direction, we’ll add those guys to this to this group.”

I begrudge no Nets fan for bemoaning the results of the last two NBA Draft Lotteries. Egor Dëmin seems like a functional rotation piece, alas it’s hard not to wonder about what could have been. Same goes for this year, even if Brown Jr. explodes out of the gate. But while Brooklyn may not be a championship contender anytime soon, they are putting one foot in front of the other. They should be easy, if not enjoyable to watch next season. And as Marks alluded to, they still have 11 future firsts to throw around in the trade market.

Much is riding on Mikel Brown Jr.’s thin shoulders. He is not just the most exciting, but the most important rookie the Nets have had since moving into Barclays Center.

Things could be worse.