Jazz forward Jaren Jackson Jr. undergoes surgery to remove growth in left knee

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Utah Jazz forward Jaren Jackson Jr. underwent surgery on Tuesday to remove a growth in his left knee.

The Jazz said Jackson will begin rehabilitation and be re-evaluated in four weeks to determine his recovery status. Dr. Travis Maak performed the procedure in Salt Lake City.

Utah acquired Jackson from Memphis in an eight-player trade on Feb. 3. A post-trade physical revealed the localized pigmented villonodular synovitis growth.

Jackson was acquired as a key building block with Lauri Markkanen.

The 26-year-old was drafted by the Grizzlies with the No. 4 pick in the 2018 draft. He was a two-time All-Star in Memphis and the 2023 NBA Defensive Player of the Year.

Jackson, who played in three games for Utah, has averaged 19.4 points, 4.7 rebounds, 2.0 assists and 1.4 blocks in 48 games this season.

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AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba

The Long Forecast: Anderson rises, Wilson falls as Flemings leads the pack

SALT LAKE CITY, UT - FEBRUARY 10: Kingston Flemings #4 of the Houston Cougars drives while being defended by Terrence Brown #2 of the Utah Utes during a college basketball game between the Houston Cougars and the Utah Utes on February 10, 2026 at the Jon M. Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City, UT. (Photo by Aaron Baker/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

As the college basketball season pushes deeper into the winter stretch, the picture surrounding the 2026 NBA draft class is continuing to evolve.

In the newest installment of The Long Forecast on NetsDaily, we take a closer look at the latest risers, fallers, and the latest in the NCAA as we continue to inch closer to June.

Where do the Nets’ picks sit?

The Nets lost their lone game after last week’s column, falling to the Indiana Pacers, 115-110, at home.

They currently hold the NBA’s fifth-worst record at 15-38, while their second-round selections currently sit at Nos. 35 and 41 overall.

Here are the latest mock drafts from Tanakthon and Bleacher Report.

Risers

Christian Anderson, Texas Tech

Christian Anderson has taken a meaningful sophomore leap at Texas A&M this season.

In 24 games, he averages 19.1 points and 7.7 assists, shooting 43.5% from 3-point range across 38.8 minutes per contest.

Against the No. 1-ranked Arizona Wildcats on Saturday, Anderson erupted for 19 points and eight assists while knocking down 40% of his 3-point attempts, leading the Red Raiders to an overtime road victory.

He can score at all three levels and is an elite shot creator, standing 6’3” and 178 pounds.

Aderson currently projects as a late first-round pick, but at this pace, he will rise even further as the draft approaches.

Fallers

Caleb Wilson, North Carolina

This has absolutely nothing to do with performance.

Caleb Wilson had been putting together a tremendous freshman campaign, flashing his two-way versatility and high defensive upside that made him one of the most intriguing prospects in this year’s draft class.

However, a broken hand halted that momentum. Wilson is still only a freshman, but he will need to get back on the court, re-establish his rhythm, and show scouts he can produce at the same level post-injury.

If he returns healthy and looks like himself, the long-term outlook won’t change, but in the short term, the injury will inevitably raise questions about his draft stock.

Spotlight of the week

Kingston Flemings, Houston

Kingston Flemings has been one of the most productive guards in the country at Houston this season, averaging 16.4 points and 5.3 assists while shooting 49.2% from the field in 31.1 minutes per game.

Beyond that, his poise has stood out while operating the Cougars’ offense as a freshman.

The Nets also seem to be interested.

Speaking on the “Locked on Nets podcast,” with Erik Slater of Clutch Points, No Ceilings’ Corey Tulaba said that the Nets have expressed interest in the 19-year-old.

Standing at 6’4” and 190 pounds, Flemings is highly athletic, can score at all three levels, and is making a case as the top point guard in this year’s draft class. Finally, the kid can play defeense.

Sleepers

David Mirković, Illinois

At 6’9” and 250 pounds, David Mirković is beginning to catch fire at Illinois during his freshman season.

Against Indiana on Sunday, he turned heads, pouring in 25 points, while collecting seven rebounds and shooting 62.5% from the field.

On the season, Mirković is averaging 13 points and eight rebounds in 29.1 minutes while shooting 47.9% from the field and 39% from beyond the arc.

Mirkvoić is unique because he can use his size to dominate the rebounding game, yet he is also productive as a perimeter shooter.

It is a skill set worth monitoring as evaluators search for upside beyond the consensus tier.

This week’s watch guide

Here is a list of NCAA games fans should tune in to this week.

  • February 18, 7:00 PM tip-off: Arkansas @ Alabama
  • February 18, 10:00 PM tip-off: Illinois @ USC
  • February 21, 1:00 PM tip-off: Cincinnati @ Kansas
  • February 21, 3:00 PM tip-off: Arizona @ Houston
  • February 21, 6:30 PM tip-off: Michigan @ Duke
  • February 23, 9:00 PM tip-off: Houston @ Kansas

Lakers reportedly eyeing blockbuster offseason trade for NBA superstar: ‘The big prize’

If Milwaukee is ready to part ways with Giannis Antetokounmpo this offseason, the Lakers reportedly have big interest in being at the forefront of trade talks.

At least one Western Conference executive believes if the Bucks intend to shop their nine-time All-Star following the end of the 2025-26 season, the Lakers view him as the “big prize,” according to ESPN.

The Lakers would reportedly have big interest in trading for Giannis Antetokounmpo if he’s made available this offseason. Getty Images

And, the outlet added, Lakers sources believe they’d be “on a very short list” of teams Antetokounmpo would like to be sent to if he is indeed getting moved this summer.

Of course, whether or not Antetokounmpo is available is a big if.

The Lakers stood relatively pat at the trade deadline earlier this month. NBAE via Getty Images

He’s been with the Bucks for all 13 of his NBA seasons, and while there’s been loud chatter recently that he’d prefer to play for a team in serious championship contention, Milwaukee could always find a way this offseason to retool around him and keep him on the roster.

A Lakers potential offer of three future first-round picks, though, could help sway things, ESPN reported.


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Los Angeles chose to stand relatively pat at the trade deadline earlier this month, making just one minor move for guard Luke Kennard — which does set them up for bigger possible acquistions at the conclusion of the season.

Luka Doncic could be paired up with Giannis Antetokounmpo if the Lakers make a deal with Milwaukee this summer. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

LeBron James’ future with the team will certainly impact any moves the team makes.

The future Hall of Famer and the Lakers were reportedly headed for divorce, but ESPN claimed Tuesday the Lakers would welcome him back if he wanted to return in 2026-27.

There are still plenty of games left for the Lakers this year, but barring a huge playoff run, the real fireworks for the Lakers in 2026 might not begin until the summer.

NBA News: Wolves Re-Sign Former All-Star and All-Defensive Vet, Mike Conley

HOUSTON, TEXAS - JANUARY 16: Mike Conley #10 of the Minnesota Timberwolves looks on during the game against the Houston Rockets at Toyota Center on January 16, 2026 in Houston, Texas. 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 Kenneth Richmond/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It was all but official about two weeks ago at the NBA trade deadline.

Now, it’s official.

As reported by numerous sources, Mike Conley is returning to the Minnesota Timberwolves. For those of you curious about the timeline and why this signing is just happening now, here’s a general breakdown.

  • February 3 @ 1:24 pm: Mike Conley traded to the Chicago Bulls as part of a salary dump for the Wolves to get under the first apron.
  • February 4 @ 1:56 pm: Conley traded to the Charlotte Hornets as part of the Coby White transaction.
  • February 5 @ 8:55 am: Wolves trade for Ayo Dosunmu.
  • February 5 @ 2:15 pm: Conley waived by the Hornets.
  • February 6 @ 10:15 am: Conley reported to re-sign with the Wolves after buyout.
  • February 17 @ 11:52 am: Officially signed with the Wolves.

Why was there an 11-day delay in Conley coming back to rejoin his team? Essentially, it was a simple dollars and cents situation. The Wolves waited to re-sign him after the All-Star break because his prorated veteran minimum rate now affords Minnesota to sign another minimum player in addition to Conley. Had they signed him back on February 6th, the Wolves likely would have been capped at 14 players instead of the option of adding a 15th due to their cap situation.

Something like that.

On to basketball. Though the veteran has seen his play spiral downwards this season, but what he brings to Minnesota goes much beyond what happens on the hardwood. The former NBA All-Star (2021) and All-Defensive Team (2013) point guard has been a cliché “locker room presence” that has helped guide Minnesota to two straight Western Conference Finals. Players like Anthony Edwards and Rudy Gobert have openly talked about wanting the 38-year-old back.

It will be interesting to see how Wolves Head Coach Chris Finch handles his return. It’s no secret that Finch would trust Conley with his life. However, the addition of two-way dynamo Ayo Dosunmu, increased consistency from Bones Hyland, and the imminent return of Terrence Shannon will likely interfere with Finch’s desire to run Conley onto the court.

Someone will have to sacrifice.

In this current season, Conley has averaged the seventh most minutes (18.5) on the team despite being 11th in Win Shares per 48 minutes. He’s suffering career lows across the board. Conley’s 32.1% mark from beyond the arc is his worst ever, despite a career-high in three-point rate. A once undeniably reliable float game is now unrecognizable, shooting a horrendous 32.6% from two-point range on a not nice 6.9% mark within three feet of the hoop.

In the meantime, almost everyone is happy to see Conley back in a Wolves uniform despite his flaws on the court. Let’s turn those tears of sadness into tears of happiness. As Ricky Rubio once said, “Change this face, be happy!

Lakers would reportedly welcome LeBron James returning next season

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 12: LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers looks on during a game against the Dallas Mavericks at Crypto.com Arena on February 12, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Wally Skalij/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The union between LeBron James and the Lakers has been a long and prosperous one, but with no contract for next season and retirement questions swirling, what happens next is a mystery.

LeBron will be an unrestricted free agent this summer, and he can either retire as a Laker, go to another team, or return to LA for another season.

Retirement will be entirely up to LeBron, and so far, he hasn’t decided whether that’s the route he wants to take. If James wants to play for other teams, he will most certainly find a franchise that will take him. The Cavs, for example, would reportedly “gladly welcome” LeBron back.

When it comes to the Lakers, his desire to return is clear. LA has been his home for eight years, and his son plays for the team. If the Lakers make the right trades this summer, it could be the best place for him to pursue his fifth title.

The question is, do the Lakers want him back?

In a recent article, Dave McMenamin of ESPN stated that the franchise would welcome James’ return next season if that’s what he desires.

If James wants to play a 24th season, he would be welcomed back in L.A., sources told ESPN.

Pelinka declared before the start of this season that he would love it if James retired a Laker, and, sources told ESPN, that sentiment was meant to reflect a 2026 retirement or a 2027 retirement, if James intends to extend his career.

While rumors swirl, the Lakers have consistently said they’d welcome LeBron back if that’s what he wants.

Lakers President of Basketball Operations Rob Pelinka said he would “love” to have LeBron retire in LA. NBA insiders have also speculated that if LeBron plays next year, it’s likely to be with the Lakers.

LeBron is in a rare position where he truly has all the options available and can pick whichever one is best for him. The Lakers are known for treating their stars right and making an effort to ensure things end on good terms.

LA signed Kobe Bryant to a two-year, $48.5-million contract extension back in the summer of 2013 when few thought that was the right financial decision. However, it mattered to the franchise that Bryant remain in LA and also for him to be the highest-paid player.

While LeBron’s scenario is different, it is similar. James is a legend in his own right, helped LA win a championship and has been the face of the franchise during most of his tenure.

Whether his career concludes this season, next season, or in a couple of years, the Lakers ideally want it to be a happy ending. And, if LeBron wants one more dance in LA, the Lakers will gladly oblige.

You can follow Edwin on Twitter at @ECreates88 or on Bluesky at @ecreates88.bsky.social.

What happened to the Bucks’ once-prolific three-guard lineup? Part 1

SACRAMENTO, CA - MARCH 22: AJ Green #20, Gary Trent Jr. #5 and Kevin Porter Jr. #3 of the Milwaukee Bucks looks on during the game against the Sacramento Kings on March 22, 2025 at Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Rocky Widner/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

In the Bucks’ third preseason game, not only did Giannis make his preseason debut, but so did the starting lineup of Kevin Porter Jr., AJ Green, Gary Trent Jr., and Myles Turner around the two-time MVP. Playing these three guards together is curious, and a bit unconventional: Trent and Green have (or at least had, last year) overlapping skillsets, and neither was big enough to be a true three. But a similar small-ball “death lineup” with the three guards was so effective late last year that it became the talk of the offseason: Marques Johnson called the guard trio “the triumverate” in his appearance on our podcast Deer Diaries, as well as on his own, Hear District.

After Damian Lillard went down with deep vein thrombosis late in the year and missed the last fourteen games, the lineup of Porter, Green, Trent, Giannis, and Bobby Portis in Brook Lopez’s stead became an increasingly key part of victories, particularly during their season-ending eight-game win streak. It never started a game, but was the closing lineup for several important wins, notably against Minnesota and Detroit. We didn’t actually see that much of those five—after all, Porter didn’t join the team until February—but by the numbers, it was perhaps their most successful group, according to two sources:

  • NBA.com Lineups Tool: 42 minutes, 144.6 offensive rating, 93.4 defensive rating, +51.2 net rating
  • Cleaning The Glass: 88 possessions, 151.1 offensive rating, 96.6 defensive rating, +54.6 net rating

NBA.com ranked KPJ/Green/Trent/Giannis/Portis eighth in the entire league among lineups that played at least 30 minutes. CTG ranks it 100th percentile in net rating and offensive rating, and 95th in defensive rating. Compare these numbers with every lineup that played more minutes than them:

LineupPoss.Net%tileORtg%tileDRtg%tile
Lillard/Jackson/Prince/Giannis/Lopez653-2.234th110.927th113.052nd
Lillard/Prince/Kuzma/Giannis/Lopez428+6.757th116.445th109.664th
Lillard/Trent/Prince/Giannis/Lopez388+1.344th122.468th121.122nd
Rollins/Prince/Kuzma/Giannis/Lopez294+13.073rd130.389th117.234th
Lillard/Green/Trent/Portis/Lopez250+20.486th122.870th102.487th
Lillard/Green/Prince/Giannis/Lopez225+16.980th115.040th89.293rd
Lillard/Trent/Prince/Portis/Lopez167+3.751st120.463rd116.737th
Lillard/Trent/Middleton/Giannis/Portis112+34.198th141.199th107.074th
Lillard/Green/Trent/Giannis/Lopez108+17.782nd125.978th108.370th
Lillard/Jackson/Middleton/Giannis/Lopez96-4.530th107.318th111.856th
Porter/Green/Trent/Kuzma/Sims96+4.251st106.317th102.088th
Lillard/Green/Trent/Kuzma/Sims92-27.23rd101.18th128.38th

If Doc had given them more run, they’d still probably be elite, even with some regression. Among groups with at least 100 possessions, the league’s best was the Clippers’ James Harden, Kris Dunn, Norm Powell, Amir Coffey (lol), and Ivica Zubac at +47.7 in 121 possessions. Hell, with the minimum set to 88 possessions, the Portis group was still tops—the only higher net belonged to one also broken up last offseason: Fred VanVleet, Amen Thompson, Dillon Brooks, Tari Eason, and Alperen Sengun in Houston. No other lineup came very close to these Bucks and Rockets “death lineups,” unless you lowered the threshold even further to find ones like Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Isaiah Joe, Lu Dort, Aaron Wiggins, and Jalen Williams in OKC at +63.0 in 73 possessions.

Of course, Lopez left this offseason, and Turner assumed his mantle. The logic went that slotting Turner alongside Giannis and the guards, rather than Portis or Lopez, would work. Ergo, if you ask most Bucks fans online last offseason which five players they wanted Doc Rivers to play from the jump this year, their answer was Porter/Green/Trent/Giannis/Turner. That’s indeed what they got, as we saw in the season opener against Washington. But we haven’t seen it at a tipoff since, thanks in part to KPJ’s and Giannis’ injuries, plus Ryan Rollins’ emergence. In fact, since Porter sprained his ankle on opening night, that fivesome has played just 10 more minutes in only two games.

It’s been exceptional in the little time we’ve seen it: Cleaning The Glass, which filters out heaves and garbage time, has their net rating at +43.2 in 37 possessions, with a 154.1 offensive rating (both rank in the 100th percentile leaguewide) and a 110.8 defensive rating (85th). NBA.com has them at +48.9 in 17 total minutes this year, with an offensive rating of 156.8 and a defensive rating of 107.9. When asked how Porter, Green, and Trent were gelling so far in the preseason, here was Doc from his comments on October 12th, when we first saw them start with Giannis and Turner:

“They like it… They gotta keep moving to ball… there’ll be nights where we can’t go with three guards. When we go with [Kyle Kuzma] or [Amir Coffey] or [Taurean Prince]. But for the most part, we think we can do it. Our guards got a lot of toughness about them, so we think we can do it.”

Well, it turns out there were a lot of those nights, but Doc isn’t necessarily wrong. In all lineups where the three guards have played together, CTG gives them a +3.8 net in 129 possessions, though that’s based on defense: their defensive rating is 105.5, in the 97th percentile. Perhaps because of Trent’s decline, their offensive rating is a putrid, way down in 11th. That’s still a good lineup, but of course, these stats are buoyed by the opening-night starting five that includes Giannis. Remove that lineup from the equation, and you have eight with even stinkier offense—a 91.3 offensive rating (oth)—and elite defense—a 103.3 defensive rating (99th). That results in a -12.0 net over 92 possessions (8th). None of those eight other lineups include Giannis, meaning he’s barely played alongside these three guards this year.

Milwaukee has used last year’s +54.6 net “death lineup” (featuring Portis only once this year), not even for a full minute. That’s not too surprising because of injuries to two of its key members, so what about its effectiveness with Turner? Given his similar scoring ability and vastly superior defense to those of Portis, it’s easy to infer that swapping Turner in would work swimmingly. Similar formula: three guards with three-and-D capability, a big who also has an outside shot, and two ballhandlers, one of whom is freaking Giannis Antetokounmpo.

Nevertheless, I’m probably not the only one who both wanted the KPJ/Green/Trent/Giannis/Turner quintet on opening night, but also wondered if the success with Portis—and by extension, starting three guards—was a mirage. So I decided to do a little exercise comparing lineups from one year to the next around the league and see how they fared. But I had some parameters to set, given how relatively little the Portis group actually played. Even though they use minutes instead of possessions and don’t filter out garbage time, here I used NBA.com’s stats because I could set my minimum to 30 minutes.

Given the amount of annual roster turnover in the NBA, it’s not easy to find lineups that succeeded significant action in their first year and kept it up with a similar or larger minute load the following season. Trickier yet was to find a killer group that went from much more limited exposure—like our Portis example—to a modestly featured group. Or from under 100 minutes to a starting lineup that played most of the season. It would be even more cumbersome to go back years and years using these parameters. For now, let’s stick to 2023–24 and 2024–25, so we have full-season data. How did groups translate their success in limited playing time to the next league year? Here’s what I found:

LineupTeamMP23–24 NetMP24–25 NetDiff.
Mitchell/Allen/Strus/Garland/WadeCLE5519.8488.3-11.5
LeVert/Niang/Mitchell/Struss/MobleyCLE4210.472-18.5-28.9
SGA/Dort/Joe/Holmgren/J. WilliamsOKC10116.0534.7-11.3
SGA/Dort/Wiggins/Holmgren/J. WilliamsOKC3420.2318.6-11.6
SGA/Dort/Joe/Wallace/J. WilliamsOKC3231.15833.2+2.1
Horford/White/Pritchard/Hauser/TatumBOS3150.838-9.6-60.4
Horford/White/Porzingis/Brown/TatumBOS11816.236-9.4-25.6
Horford/Holiday/Porzingis/Brown/TatumBOS5513.63610.1-3.5
Horford/Holiday/Porzingis/Brown/WhiteBOS5617.27711.4-5.8
Horford/Holiday/Porzingis/Tatum/WhiteBOS8713.0568.0-5.0
Horford/Holiday/Pritchard/Tatum/HauserBOS10516.83110.2-6.6
Holiday/Tatum/Kornet/Pritchard/HauserBOS9633.73838.8+5.1
Brown/White/Kornet/Pritchard/HauserBOS3420.9397.8-13.1
Holiday/Porzingis/Brown/Tatum/WhiteBOS62311.03570.0-11.0
Turner/Nembhard/Toppin/Haliburton/NesmithIND3619.34726.7+7.4
Turner/Siakam/Nembhard/Haliburton/MathurinIND1040.243511.9+11.7
Gordon/Jokic/Murray/Porter/BraunDEN288.642610.6+2.0
VanVleet/Brooks/Green/Sengun/ThompsonHOU2717.9323-7.6-25.5

I threw in a weaker example from 2023–24—the +0.2 net Pacers group with Siakam—because of all the lineups I found that stayed together over both seasons, that one improved the most, from net-neutral to solidly above average. Granted, a few of these were only moderately successful in the first place, though it comes as little surprise that the best teams are generally keeping these groups together—it’s why those teams are good, after all. On the surface, the stats aren’t very encouraging; only five of the 18 lineups improved. And on average, their net dropped by 10.6 points per 100 possessions.

The good news is that 12 of these 18 lineups were at least productive (for reference, CTG says any lineup with a net of +10 or better was at least in the 64th percentile last year). And all these teams had at least one in 2023–24 that was really good, at +15.1 or better in at least 100 possessions, the top 20% of the league. Only three of those lineups improved in 2024–25, but the really elite groups—+31 or better, 95th percentile on up—stayed elite, except for the Boston example with Pritchard.

It’s worth pointing out that several more of the best 2023–24 lineups were broken up by player movement, most notably with Julius Randle and Isaiah Hartenstein leaving the Knicks, plus Josh Giddey leaving the Thunder. But much like the Bucks did with Turner, those teams replaced those guys with serious talent, so let’s see if any of the best 2023–24 lineups benefited from a personnel upgrade the following season. This will be a bit inexact (New York was especially tricky because of the Mikal Bridges acquisition), but I sought out successful 2023–24 lineups from teams that incorporated a high-profile offseason acquisition into similar 2024–25 lineups, or at least lineups that featured prominent returning players. I considered some other moves, like Paul George to Philadelphia, but there was too much turnover on these teams’ rosters between seasons to find similar-enough lineups. Anyway, onto the numbers, with offseason additions in bold (for the Knicks’ purposes, we’ll treat Quentin Grimes for Cam Payne as a wash):

LineupTeamMP23–24 NetMP24–25 NetDiff.
Anunoby/Hart/McBride/Grimes/AchiuwaNYK4120.9
Anunoby/Hart/McBride/Payne/TownsNYK3910.6-10.3
Anunoby/Hart/Brunson/Grimes/AchiuwaNYK4145.5
Anunoby/Hart/Brunson/McBride/TownsNYK8434.4-11.1
Randle/Grimes/Robinson/Hart/BrunsonNYK109-12.2
Towns/Anunoby/Payne/Hart/BrunsonNYK9825.7+37.9
Randle/Anunoby/Hartenstein/Hart/BrunsonNYK4160.2
Towns/Anunoby/Payne/Hart/BrunsonNYK9825.7-34.5
SGA/Wallace/Joe/J. Williams/K. WilliamsOKC5535.6
SGA/Wallace/Joe/J. Williams/HartensteinOKC38-24.1-59.7
SGA/Dort/Joe/Wallace/J. WilliamsOKC3231.1
SGA/Dort/Hartenstein/Wallace/J. WilliamsOKC31615.9-15.2
SGA/Dort/Giddey/Wallace/J. WilliamsOKC35-3.4
SGA/Dort/Hartenstein/Wallace/J. WilliamsOKC31615.9+19.3
SGA/Dort/Joe/J. Williams/HolmgrenOKC10116.0
SGA/Dort/Hartenstein/J. Williams/HolmgrenOKC16715.0-1.0
SGA/Dort/Giddey/J. Williams/HolmgrenOKC79910.2
SGA/Dort/Hartenstein/J. Williams/HolmgrenOKC16715.0+4.8
SGA/Wallace/Joe/Wiggins/J. WilliamsOKC425.8
SGA/Wallace/Hartenstein/Wiggins/J. WilliamsOKC30-1.9-7.7
Conley/Gobert/Towns/Edwards/McDanielsMIN6417.9
Conley/Gobert/Randle/Edwards/McDanielsMIN7143.2-4.7
Conley/Gobert/Towns/Edwards/Alexander-WalkerMIN1247.6
Conley/Gobert/Randle/Edwards/Alexander-WalkerMIN4531.2+23.6
Alexander-Walker/Gobert/Towns/Edwards/McDanielsMIN1066.4
Alexander-Walker/Gobert/Randle/Edwards/McDanielsMIN1468.0+1.6
Alexander-Walker/Reid/Towns/Edwards/McDanielsMIN4444.5
Alexander-Walker/Reid/Randle/Edwards/McDanielsMIN78-3.5-48.0

Coincidentally, these examples are all teams that added a new big man. These lineups’ net dropped by an average of 7.5 points per 100—better, but still not good. Again, most of the new lineups were great overall, though: eight of the 14 were at least +15.0. And ones that were excellent in small sample sizes were generally still great with more playing time. As before, these are some of the league’s teams, adding to groupings that already proved effective.

You might think I’ve strayed from the premise of this article a bit, but there were plenty of three-guard lineups above in OKC and New York. In part two, we’ll figure out whether three guards is still a look Milwaukee should use, with or without Turner. Spoiler alert: Gary Trent Jr. is exactly not part of the answer. And we’ll see if these patterns still hold when other teams add a prominent big man to their lineups, much like the Bucks did this offseason.

2026 NBA Draft Preview: second round sleepers

ATHENS, GA - JANUARY 31: Guard Blue Cain #0 of the Georgia Bulldogs looks to pass the ball during the college basketball game between the Texas A&M Aggies and the Georgia Bulldogs on January 31, 2026, at Stegeman Coliseum in Athens, GA. (Photo by Jeffrey Vest/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Second round draft picks move around a lot and are usually not valued very highly. But, as things currently stand, it looks like the Washington Wizards will be selecting two or three players in the second round of the 2026 NBA Draft. 

Players drafted in the second round rarely end up factoring into a team’s long term plans. Nikola Jokic (No. 41, 2014), Manu Ginobili (No. 57, 1999), Draymond Green (No. 35, 2012) and Jalen Brunson (No. 33, 2018) are the exceptions, not the rule, and more often than not second round picks end up fizzling out after a few seasons of toiling between the G-League and the NBA.

Despite the relatively low chances of success, there is still legitimate talent after the first 30 picks. From this year’s Rising Stars Game, Memphis Grizzlies guards Cam Spencer (No. 53, 2024) and Jaylen Wells (No. 39, 2024) were both taken in the second round.

For second round prospects, I generally look at guys who I think have a specific skillset that would allow them to play a small role in a rotation rather than more “boom or bust” players. 

Here are a few sleepers the Wizards could target in this year’s second round that could make a real impact on their NBA roster:

Motiejus Krivas, 7’2” Junior Center from Arizona

TUCSON, ARIZONA – FEBRUARY 14: Motiejus Krivas #13 of the Arizona Wildcats posts up on JT Toppin #15 of the Texas Tech Red Raiders during the second half at McKale Center at ALKEME Arena on February 14, 2026 in Tucson, Arizona. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Motiejus Krivas has flown a bit under the radar this season for No. 4 Arizona, who were undefeated before two recent back-to-back losses to Kansas and Texas Tech. The freshman duo of forward Koa Peat and guard Brayden Burries have gotten most of the headlines, but Krivas has arguably been the Wildcats’ most important player, anchoring their defense as one of the country’s best rim protectors. 

The Lithuanian native, who played in the Lithuanian second division before making his way to the United States college basketball and has lots of experience at the international level, is averaging 11.1 points, 8.7 rebounds and 1.9 blocks per game while shooting 59.4% from the field and 79.2% from the free throw line. Krivas is the exact type of high floor, low ceiling type of player teams should be targeting in the second round. A player with that combination of size, shot-blocking and touch around the rim should be able to stick around as a backup center for almost any NBA team.

Blue Cain, 6’5” junior guard from Georgia

Jan 28, 2026; Athens, Georgia, USA; Georgia Bulldogs guard Blue Cain (0) dribbles against Tennessee Volunteers guard Amari Evans (1) at Stegeman Coliseum. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-Imagn Images | Dale Zanine-Imagn Images

Georgia basketball often takes a back seat to the football team down in Athens, but the Bulldogs have put together a solid season and are currently projected to be a 10 seed in ESPN’s Joe Lunardi’s latest bracketology. Blue Cain is one of the biggest reasons why. Cain has elite athleticism, can pour in points and is truly elite at finishing around the rim, averaging 13.6 points, 5.3 rebounds, 2.4 assists and 1.4 steals per game. 

The biggest knock on Cain is his three point shooting. This season, Cain is shooting 27.9% from three but is making up for it with an impressive 62.1% two-point field goal percentage. There is hope that Cain could develop a three though. He shot 34.1% and 35.0% from three the past two seasons and is an 89.4% shooter from the free throw line. If Cain bulks up a bit and his shot becomes more consistent, it is easy to envision his role as a microwave scorer off the bench, similar to a Donte DiVincenzo or an early-career Immanuel Quickley. 

Kashie Natt, 6’3” senior guard from Sam Houston State

I am not going to lie, this is a bit of an outside-the-box prospect. Low-major college players like Kashie Natt who spent three seasons at a junior college are rarely, if ever considered potential NBA players. Natt’s highlights recently came across my Twitter timeline, and I have not been able to stop thinking about his defensive potential. Despite his non-traditional background, Natt has one of the most fascinating skillsets in all of college basketball and could carve himself out a role in the NBA if he is given the chance. 

At 6’3”, 190 pounds, Natt is averaging 2.1 steals, 0.6 blocks and 7.4 rebounds in just 24.9 minutes per game.  He has a ridiculous 4.7% steal rate and 2.9% block rate. Natt can also hold his own on the offensive side of the ball, averaging 10.7 points per game while shooting 41.8% from three. Natt’s defensive instincts and on-ball prowess are tantalizing, and even if he is not able to be a league-average shooter, should be enough to earn him a spot on most NBA rosters. Natt is certainly a risk, but it may be worth taking a shot for someone with his defensive potential in the second round.

Paul McNeil, 6’5’ sophomore guard from N.C. State

Jan 27, 2026; Raleigh, North Carolina, USA; NC State Wolfpack guard Jr. Paul McNeil (2) dribbles the ball during the first half of the game against the Syracuse Orange at Lenovo Center. Mandatory Credit: Jaylynn Nash-Imagn Images | Jaylynn Nash-Imagn Images

I have had my eye on Paul McNeil ever since I was on the broadcast of the 2024 Capital Classic high school All-Star game and saw him hit a buzzer-beater three to give his team the victory. After a disappointing freshman season at N.C. State that saw him struggle to carve out his spot in the rotation, McNeil has thrived this year under new head coach Will Wade. The best part of McNeil’s game is his shooting, and that usually translates well to the next level. He can create his own shot off of the dribble and uses a high release to be able to get his shot off through traffic and above taller defenders.

McNeil is averaging 13.6 points per game while shooting an ACC-best 43.5% from three on 7.2 attempts per game. He can be a bit of a streaky scorer though. McNeil’s best game of the season came in December when he scored 47 points on 11-17 shooting from three and was a perfect 12-12 from the free throw line against Texas Southern. On the flip side, he has also had multiple zero point performances this season. His perimeter shotmaking should be enough to get him looks during the second round this year despite some of those consistency issues and concerns about his slight frame and defensive deficiencies. 

Former NBA champ blasts Ron Harper for LeBron James dig: ‘Come on, bro’

Jeff Teague believes Ron Harper was out of line for throwing shade at LeBron James during NBA All-Star Weekend.

Teague, 10-year NBA vet, went after the Bulls legend on the “Club 520 Podcast” this week, after Harper insinuated during a chat with reporters that James forced his two sons, Bronny and Bryce, to follow in his basketball footsteps.

“The last people who needed to hoop was Bronny and Bryce,” Teague, a former NBA champion, said. “They could be just chillin’, bro, if they wanted to, bro. They probably just like basketball.

Ron Harper took a dig at LeBron James during NBA All-Star Weekend in Inglewood, Calif. NBAE via Getty Images

“Respect to Ron Harper, because he’s a legend. But, come on, bro. Leave ‘Bron out of there, bro. Leave ‘Bron out of that.”

Harper threw his barb James’ way following a question about if he had a “vision” of seeing his sons, NBA players Dylan and Ron Jr., play in All-Star festivities.

“I’m not LeBron James,” Harper said. “I’m not going to tell my kids what they have do.”

Teague went on for over a minute about why he felt the remarks were petty.

LeBron James’ son, Bronny, plays on the Lakers. His other son, Bryce, is a freshman at Arizona. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

“He act like Bronny and them didn’t want to hoop,” Teague said. “I’m protecting LeBron today. F—k that. 

“He’s the last n—a whose kids got to do anything.”

Both Bronny and Bryce began their basketball careers as toddlers. Bronny, of course, went on to play at USC before joining his dad on the Lakers in 2024. Bryce, meanwhile, is in the middle of his redshirting his freshman season at Arizona.

None of the Jameses have addressed Harper’s jab, though Harper’s kids certainly seemed displeased with the comments, as they both gave stunned reactions after the words left their famous father’s lips.

The perfect NBA roster doesn’t exist and the buyout market won’t change that

INGLEWOOD, CA - OCTOBER 24: A generic basketball photo of the Official Wilson basketball before the game between the Phoenix Suns and the LA Clippers on October 24, 2025 at Intuit Dome in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Jim Poorten/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Oh? Is that a soapbox over there? Well, it would be rude of me not to step upon it for a few moments, so step I shall…

I have some news that I’m not sure everybody knows to be true. This may come as a shock. This may come as a surprise. Or you may have already navigated to this level of philosophical understanding as it pertains to NBA roster construction. We’ll see shortly. That news? The perfect roster in the NBA sounds great in theory, but it does not actually exist.

Did you drop your tea? Is that blood boiling, making your face red, or were you out in the sun too long at the Goldfield Mine Ghost Town this past Saturday? Sunblock. You should use it.

It’s true. The perfect roster? Not a thing. One team wins the championship every year, and even that fan base can rattle off a list of things they wish were better. A little more shooting here, a little more size there, another defender they trust when things get tight. That is the reality of the league, and quite honestly, sport in general. There is always room to improve. Perfection is the pursuit, but it is not attainable. The goal is to be as perfect as possible, knowing perfection cannot be reached.

Even if you somehow checked every box on paper, size, speed, rim pressure, shooting, defense, and versatility, there is still a hard truth waiting for you. A basketball game only has 48 minutes. There are only so many possessions, only so many lineups, only so many moments where the right five can be on the floor together. You can build the cleanest roster imaginable, but if the wrong guys are playing at the wrong time against the wrong opponent, you can still walk off the floor with a loss.

That is the part that never shows up in roster diagrams or trade deadline grades. Talent matters, construction matters, but timing, trust, and deployment matter just as much. The league is littered with great rosters that never quite figured that part out.

This is the time of year when a few predictable things happen, and for whatever reason, a lot of people still struggle to grasp how the machinery actually works. One of them is the tension between chasing short term improvement and protecting long term viability as a franchise. Every team has needs. That part is obvious. And every time a player hits the buyout market after the trade deadline, the cycle begins all over again.

Fans rush to their phones, hit the message boards, and start building the case. This is the guy! This is the piece! This is the move that fixes everything that has been bothering us since November! Positional need solved! Fate altered! Season saved!

Rotations, chemistry, and fit are treated like minor details that will sort themselves out later, because the idea of the player is doing a lot more work than the reality ever could.

I never knew so many people thought, nay, BELIEVED that Jeremy Sochan was the answer to every Suns question. Ultimately, he signed with the Knicks. And just you wait for the monstrous impact he’ll have with New York this season. And wait. And wait…

What gets lost in all of the noise is the basic math of where this Suns’ season actually is. This team is already two-thirds of the way through the year. Roles have been defined. Minutes have been carved out. Trust has been built, or not built, over months of reps. There are only so many minutes to go around, and dropping a new player into the middle of that ecosystem, even one who checks a positional or archetypal box, does not automatically translate to success.

Basketball is not a plug-and-play sport at this stage of the calendar. Fit matters. Timing matters. Chemistry matters. And the idea that a buyout addition is going to swoop in and change the trajectory of a team without disrupting the balance that already exists is more wishcasting than strategy. It feels productive, it feels proactive, but more often than not, it ignores the reality of how late in the process we actually are.

The other piece that tends to get forgotten during buyout season is the simplest one, and it gets ignored every single year. The player who is available is available for a reason. He was bought out. Teams do not walk away from impact players for fun.

There are plenty of reasons why a buyout happens. Maybe the player does not match the team’s timeline. Maybe there was a quiet agreement to let him go so the organization could prioritize youth or pivot in a different direction. Maybe the situation simply ran its course. All of that can be true at the same time.

But the reality still holds. If that player was truly moving the needle, he would still be on a roster. What you are most often talking about with buyout additions is the fourteenth or fifteenth man, someone filling depth, insurance, or situational minutes. Year after year, we go through this cycle, and year after year, the results look the same. Buyout players rarely decide a game. They rarely swing a playoff series. They almost never change a championship path.

It is not impossible, but it is incredibly uncommon. The buyout market is not where seasons are saved or transformed. It is where margins are adjusted, bodies are added, and options are created. Expecting anything more than that is setting yourself up to be disappointed by something that was never designed to carry that kind of weight in the first place.

I do get a kick out of it, honestly. The Suns move some size in Nick Richards, even if it is at a different position, and suddenly everyone is begging for size like there is a mythical power forward wandering the buyout market who can step in, play 25 minutes a night, and magically solve every structural issue on the roster.

It shows up in the reaction to the Haywood Highsmith signing. Why not a power forward? It is a fair question on the surface. But in the same breath, who exactly are we talking about? There is no player sitting out there waiting to be signed who checks every box and slides cleanly into a real rotation role this late in the season. That is not how the NBA works.

Whoever you bring in right now, Highsmith included, is living at the end of the bench. He is not walking in and claiming steady minutes. The Suns took a swing on Highsmith because they want to see what he can be as a wing option looking ahead, not because he is some immediate fix. That is long-term thinking. That is roster management with the offseason in mind, where other decisions can open pathways for a player like him to matter more.

But so much of the conversation is trapped in short-term panic. We need a power forward. We need size. And in that urgency, people miss the bigger picture. This is not an argument that the Suns do not need one. It is an argument that the player people are dreaming about does not exist. Size, speed, rim pressure, shooting, lockdown defense. If you find someone with two of those traits, that is a win. And even then, he is still competing for minutes in a rotation that already has priorities baked in.

Development is still a priority for this organization. Chemistry is still the oil to their engine. The Suns did not get to this point by accident, and the idea that the fifteenth man on the bench is going to swing the season continues to amaze me every year. I guess that is sports. Everyone chasing the idea of a perfect roster with no flaws, even though it has never existed.

And for a Suns team that is exceeding expectations, it is still surprising how quickly that context gets lost in the noise.

That is fandom, though. It lives in conversation, in debate, in the constant search for how things could be better, because there is always room to get better. That part is healthy. That part is fun. Where it goes sideways is when those conversations turn into calling each other idiots instead of actually engaging with the ideas.

The truth is, armchair GMs — myself very much included — would benefit from stepping back and seeing the whole picture more often, rather than locking onto one perceived flaw and treating it like the root of all evil. Every roster has holes. Every night presents a different problem. Every matchup exposes something. That is the NBA. That is the season. That is the sport.

Focusing on a single deficiency without context ignores how teams actually function, how minutes are distributed, how chemistry develops, and how progress is rarely linear. Improvement is usually incremental, sometimes invisible, and almost never solved by one name scribbled onto the end of the bench.

So argue. Debate. Dream about upgrades. That is part of the joy. But maybe do it with a little more curiosity and a little less certainty, because the picture is always bigger than the one weakness staring us in the face.

Lakers reported offseason plans: Giannis Antetokounmpo is Holy Grail, LeBron's return up to him

Lakers fans have come to accept this team for what it is: Good but flawed, the No. 5 seed in the West, not built to maximize Luka Dončić's talents, a playoff team but not a title threat. You can trust me on this. As a SoCal-based NBA writer, friends ask me about the Lakers all the time, and right now it's all about plans for this summer to upgrade and get back to the top of the mountain, not about whether they can get a good first-round matchup and advance in the coming playoffs.

What are those offseason plans? Many of them have been reported before — going after two-way wings, re-signing Austin Reaves, beefing up the scouting and basketball operations sides — but Dave McMenamin did an excellent deep dive into the Lakers’ plans at ESPN. Let's use that as a jumping-off point to discuss the future of this team.

Giannis Antetokounmpo

Yes, the Lakers would love to pair Luka Dončić and Giannis Antetokounmpo. Here is how McMenamin put it at ESPN.

The Lakers, team sources told ESPN, obviously see the appeal in Antetokounmpo and believe they would be one of the teams on a very short list if the Bucks star asks for a trade out of Milwaukee.

If Antetokounmpo pushes his way out of Milwaukee — and despite some of the national narratives, that is not certain — the Lakers likely would still need Antetokounmpo to put his thumb on the scale to make that happen. This summer, the Lakers could offer three first-round picks (including whoever they draft this year) as well as Austin Reaves in a sign-and-trade (plus matching salary), but if the Bucks go to the marketplace there will be better offers on the table. Antetokounmpo has a player option in the summer of 2027, so he has leverage in any trade scenario because he can say he won't re-sign with a team, but does he want to force his way to the stacked Western Conference?

If Antetokounmpo pushes for a trade and the Lakers are one of a handful of teams on his short list, they have a chance — but not the kind of chance where you want to bet the rent money. The Lakers need to have other, more likely plans.

Re-sign Reaves, go get wings

Dallas has already shown the Lakers the model on how to build a Finals team around Doncic: Have a high-level secondary ball handler to take some of the load off, have a bouncy two-way center who sets a big pick and rolls to the rim hard, and get 3&D wings. Surround Doncic with defense and shooting, then let him cook.

Austin Reaves has shown this year that he can be that secondary playmaker, and he and Doncic have a good relationship. Reaves will opt out of his team-friendly contract this summer, but both sides want to continue the partnership, and the only question is how much the Lakers will pay. Reaves' max with the Lakers would be five years, $241 million (other teams could offer four years, $178.5 million max), but the number likely comes in under that, maybe in the $40 million a year range.

Doncic and Reaves give the Lakers a dynamic offense, but both are minus defenders, which means the Lakers need to surround them with quality defenders and a high-level rim protector. The Lakers could have up to $51 million in cap space (assuming LeBron James does not return, more on that below). Here is what McMenamin wrote at ESPN.

An unrestricted free agent who has been discussed internally, sources told ESPN, is Andrew Wiggins, but he has a player option with Miami he could exercise. Tobias Harris, Quentin Grimes and Dean Wade are other players who fit that profile. The Lakers have also privately discussed restricted free agents Tari Eason and Peyton Watson, sources told ESPN, and could land the latter if Denver, which already has $215 million in salary committed to returning players for next season, doesn't match the offer sheet.

There may be other guys in play this summer, but the mold is clear: The Lakers want long defenders who can shoot to go around Doncic. The challenge is that 29 other teams are looking for those kinds of wings, too.

LeBron James

LeBron James just "wants to live" and has not decided if he will play next season, he said during All-Star weekend. That's someone keeping their options open, but also someone who may have a lean but does not know for sure what his plans are after this season.

LeBron will be an unrestricted free agent this summer at age 41 and entering his unprecedented 24th NBA season. He can still play at a high level — coaches picked him to be an All-Star — but he would be the third offensive option on the Lakers and he is no longer the plus defender he once was.

The Lakers would welcome LeBron back, McMenamin reports, but the question is at what price? LeBron isn't going to get offered the $52 million he is making this season, but every dollar he takes cuts into the $51 million in cap space the Lakers could spend on other players.

The hot rumor in league circles is a LeBron return to Cleveland (for a third time), but there are a lot of questions there: That team is already over the second apron of the luxury tax and just added James Harden (who wants an extension), the Cavs are not going to be able to offer much money. And how they do in the playoffs will impact what moves the Cavaliers make next offseason. In the end, a return to the Lakers might be the call, but again at what price?

Growing scouting, basketball operations

One thing seems certain with the Lakers this season: New owner Mark Walter is going to spend to beef up the Lakers' basketball infrastructure.

There are things Walter did when he bought the Los Angeles Dodgers to turn them into back-to-back World Series champions that do not translate to the NBA — team building is very different with the tax apron penalties in the NBA CBA, you can't just buy every big free agent — but there are things that do translate. The Dodgers invested in their scouting and farm system, and as a result have one of the strongest minor league systems in the league.

The Lakers have long had a very lean scouting department, analytics staff and the rest of it (although the analytics side has grown in recent years) — that is about to change. The Lakers are going to start spending like the biggest brand in basketball, and with that will come a flood of information and changes, not all of which will be visible.

As McMenamin noted, Lakers GM Rob Pelinka said he would be in charge of the Lakers' offseason, and there is no reason to doubt that. It's also fair to think he will be under the microscope and will have to continue to earn his place at the top of basketball operations long term.

One way or another, there will be big changes coming to the Lakers this summer.

Twins right-hander Pablo López has a major elbow injury that likely will need season-ending surgery

FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) — The Minnesota Twins suffered a major setback during their first full-squad workout, an elbow injury that likely will sideline ace Pablo López for the entire season.

General manager Jeremy Zoll told reporters at the club's spring training facility on Tuesday that López has a “significant tear” in his right ulnar collateral ligament. He was seeking a second medical opinion but expected to need Tommy John surgery, Zoll said. López ended his bullpen session early on Monday after experiencing soreness in his throwing elbow.

The team's opening day starter in each of the last three years, López was grappling with a double disappointment with the probable loss of not only the upcoming major league season but the World Baseball Classic next month, when he was scheduled to pitch for his native Venezuela.

“I already feel I’m letting a lot of people down,” said López, who was limited to 75 2/3 innings last year because of injuries. "I’m letting myself down. I’m letting the Twins down. I’m letting my family down.”

López, who turns 30 on March 7, is making $21.75 million this season. He is signed through next year.

“We know injuries are part of the game. You're always trying to get through spring training as healthy as possible,” Zoll said. “It's definitely a blow, but we're going to just do the best we can to push forward.”

López made his major league debut with the Miami Marlins in 2018 and spent five seasons with them before being traded to the Twins. López made the All-Star team in his first year with the Twins and helped the franchise end an all-time record 18-game postseason losing streak for North American professional sports, going 2-0 with an 0.71 ERA in two starts in the 2023 playoffs.

When López was in the Seattle Mariners organization, he had Tommy John surgery that kept him out of the 2014 minor league season.

“We’re not designed to throw things that hard for an extended time,” López told reporters at the Lee Health Sports Complex. “Having done it once, I can do it again. Doesn’t mean I want to, but I’m going to have to and I know I can.”

López missed about three months last season with a shoulder injury. As the Twins were slashing payroll, he was mentioned often as a prime trade candidate, but the front office opted to keep him and right-hander Joe Ryan at the front of what was expected to be a strong rotation.

Now the Twins are missing their most important piece, with Ryan, an All-Star in 2025, now the ace and right-hander Bailey Ober under pressure to bounce back and be a reliable No. 2 starter.

Simeon Woods Richardson, Zebby Matthews and David Festa are all 25-year-old right-handers who have combined to make 98 starts over the past two seasons, with at least one or two of them likely to make the opening rotation. Taj Bradley and Mick Abel were acquired in the flurry of trades during the week leading up to the deadline last summer and also are firmly in the mix.

“In a lot of ways, we view this as a real opportunity for someone to step up and take advantage of that,” Zoll said. “We’ll pick up the pieces once we have a better handle on things.”

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AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Milwaukee Bucks Poll: What are the futures of Cam Thomas and Ousmane Dieng?

Feb 11, 2026; Orlando, Florida, USA; Milwaukee Bucks guard Cam Thomas (24) is fouled by Orlando Magic guard Jase Richardson (11) during the second half at Kia Center. Mandatory Credit: Mike Watters-Imagn Images | Mike Watters-Imagn Images

The Bucks’ final two games before the break were a coming-out party for their only deadline trade acquisition, Ousmane Dieng. A combined 13/22 from the floor—with 8/14 from deep—resulting in 36 points over 59 minutes, plus 14 boards, 4 blocks, 6 assists, and 0 turnovers. A career-best three-point performance in the second Orlando game. Certainly something to dream on in the years ahead.

Those two weren’t a coming-out party for Cam Thomas, not because he was a meh 5/13 (12 points) in the OKC win, nor because he took over with a game-high 34 in Orlando the night before. It’s because that’s what the dude does—he apparently introduces himself as “a bucket,” after all. Well, this Bucket also appears to be the spark Milwaukee desperately needs in non-Giannis minutes, and he might be a long-term fit with the team moving forward.

But both guys are free agents this summer. Dieng will be a restricted free agent if the Bucks extend an $8.8m qualifying offer, meaning they can match any contract another team presents him with in the offseason. If they decline that QO (like they did with Ryan Rollins in summer 2025), he’ll be unrestricted and can sign anywhere. But in either case, Milwaukee owns his Bird rights, so they can pay him any amount up to the max without worrying about the salary cap, whether it’s their own contract offer or another team’s.

With Thomas, however, the Bucks only have Non-Bird rights, since he just changed teams in free agency. That means they’d have to use an exception to give him a new deal in July (since they don’t project to have cap room), and here are their options…

  • The full (non-taxpayer) midlevel exception: starting salary between $6.1m and $15.1m, up to four years
  • The taxpayer midlevel exception: starting salary of $6.1m at most, up to two years
  • The biannual exception: starting salary of $5.5m at most, up to two years
  • The Non-Bird exception: starting salary of $3.6m, up to four years

In this week’s Tuesday Tracker, let’s look ahead to the summer and pick the Bucks’ best option with these two: should they re-sign them or not? If yes, how? We also have a bonus question about the All-Star game format, and of course, the debate between tanking and going for the playoffs.


As always, this poll will be open until midnight Central on Friday, and we’ll post the results later that day. Thanks for voting!

Italy pulls off a stunner in Olympic men's speedskating team pursuit, earns first gold since 2006

CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy (AP) — The Italian men's speedskating team is back on top in team's pursuit.

Davide Ghiotto, Andrea Giovannini and Michele Malfatti beat U.S. world record-holders Casey Dawson, Emery Lehman and Ethan Cepuran by 4 1/2 seconds to win the men’s team pursuit gold medal in speedskating on Tuesday at the Milan Cortina Olympics.

Buoyed by raucous cheering from the home crowd at the Milano Speed Skating Stadium, the Italian men finished in 3 minutes, 39.20 seconds to give their country its first Olympic title in this event since the 2006 Turin Games.

The United States started the final well and led for the early stages. But the Italians charged ahead over the closing laps, extending their advantage. When it ended, Ghiotto, Giovannini and Malfatti raised their arms and pumped their fists. On the opposite side of the track, silver medalists Dawson, Lehman and Cepuran leaned over, hands on knees.

Canada collected its second consecutive Winter Games title in women’s team pursuit when Ivanie Blondin, Valerie Maltais and Isabelle Weidemann — the same athletes who won gold four years ago in Beijing — finished in 2:55.81, nearly a full second ahead of runner-up Netherlands.

Snow postpones women's slopestyle snowboarding

The Olympic final for women’s snowboarding slopestyle was scrubbed off Tuesday’s schedule due to a heavy snowstorm in Livigno.

The slopestyle final was scheduled to start at 1 p.m. local time, but organizers said it was called off. A new date for the final has not been announced.

It delays New Zealander Zoi Sadowski-Synnott’s attempt at a repeat. She qualified first on Sunday — an opening round that was moved up a day because of the storms rolling in.

Late surge lifts France to gold in biathlon relay

France went from last place on the first leg to being first on the final lap to secure the country’s first Olympic gold medal in men’s biathlon relay.

World Cup champion Eric Perrot, skiing the final leg for France, missed two shots in his last standing shooting bout and was only seven seconds ahead of Norway’s Vetle Sjaastad Christiansen as they headed out to ski tracks packed with fresh snow.

Perrot stayed ahead of Christiansen and took his team of Fabien Claude, Emilien Jacquelin and Quentin Fillon Maillet across the line first, in a time of one hour, 19 minutes and 55.2 seconds.

Sweden was able to hang on for the bronze.

Norway's Oftebro earns second Nordic combined gold

Norway’s Jens Luraas Oftebro won his second Nordic combined gold medal in a week, taking the large hill ski jump and 10-kilometer ski race. Johannes Lamparter of Austria earned his second silver in Italy and Ilkka Herola of Finland won bronze.

The event begins with a single ski jump in the morning, where distance and style points are calculated to create a time advantage for the best jumper. The rest of the field starts the cross-country ski race behind the leader according to the ranking from their jump.

Oftebro, who finished atop the podium in the normal hill competition event last week, started 22 seconds behind in fifth place. Herola started 32 seconds back in seventh place.

Support and protest at Nordic combined

U.S. team skier Annika Malacinski attended the Nordic combined at the Milan Cortina Olympics on Tuesday to cheer for her younger brother Niklas. She came to protest, too.

Nordic combined — ski jumping and cross-country in one — remains the only Winter Olympic sport that does not include women, even though women compete on the World Cup circuit and at world championships.

“It’s heartbreaking, it really is,” Annika told The Associated Press while wrapped in a long pink and white coat, before taking her seat in the stands.

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AP Winter Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/milan-cortina-2026-winter-olympics

The NBA needs to put the dunk contest out of its misery

Inglewood, CA - February 14: Jaxson Hayes of the Los Angeles Lakers during the Slam Dunk competition during NBA All-Star Saturday at Intuit Dome in Inglewood on Saturday, February 14, 2026. (Photo by Keith Birmingham/MediaNews Group/Pasadena Star-News via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images

The 2026 NBA Slam Dunk contest wasn’t just bad — it was pathetic. The decline of the dunk contest has been well documented, but Saturday night was the competition’s rock bottom. Serving as proof the NBA needs to cancel the event and replace it with something else, rather than watch it fade into irrelevancy like Chris Paul.

Every single facet of the event sucked. Keshad Johnson of the Miami Heat won with a dunk that barely would have made it out of the first round a decade ago. Even the NBA’s hype tweet felt sad and forced.

Still, this was somehow the best dunk of the night. The only other remotely impressive thing was Johnson jumping over rapper E-40 — which was fine, but not mind-blowing. E-40 is 6’1, and this is a competition where dunkers have jumped over Shaq, a car, and hell, Aaron Gordon went over the Magic mascot and under both legs, while the mascot stood on a hoverboard.

While Johnson was the best of a horrible group, he should have been disqualified for his dancing. Before every dunk, during every dunk, after every dunk, there was this pathetic, manufactured dancing that Johnson did that seemed to be less about any genuine enthusiasm about the event, and more because someone told him it would be good for his brand if he became the “dancing guy” during the dunk contest.

We also had Jase Richardson almost knock himself out.

And this from Jaxson Hayes, which would have been a mediocre in-game dunk.

The only thing worse than the dunks was the judging. The NBA used a panel of notable dunkers: Dominique Wilkins, Dwight Howard, Corey Maggette, and Brent Barry — a good group, except they were given an absolutely nonsensical rubric that nobody could score less than a 40, out of 50. It was clearly only put in place to make sure nobody’s feelings were hurt, because getting to say “I scored 42 out of 50” sounds a lot better than “2 out of 10.”

If the scoring format wasn’t bad enough we had Dwight Howard handing out 50s like candy for the crappiest dunks imaginable. Don’t believe me? This was a 50 in Howard’s book.

A windmill jam from barely past the dotted line that Johnson couldn’t even manage to dribble for. At least he did his dancing afterwards.

There’s a simple reality that basketball has changed. In the 90s and 00s kids would practice dunks like Michael Jordan or Vince Carter on Nerf hoops attached to their bedroom doors — now they’re trying to shoot from deep like Steph. Interior defense is more refined, giving less obvious lanes to the rim for in-game dunks. Euro steps, step-throughs, and floaters are now the in-lane currency of the NBA, rather than trying to power through everyone with dunks. There’s ample reason why dunking isn’t as flashy as it once was, but there is no excuse for the absence of creativity. There have never been more resources to imagine new dunks or learn from the greats of the past to push the limits of athleticism. Instead, we’ve seen unbelievable regression as players struggle to do anything past the most rudimentary of dunks. There’s no pride, no desire to put on a show — and the NBA is shielding feelings by making sure nobody can score lower than a 40. The stars of the past would never.

There’s an entire generation of basketball fans who are too young to remember how great the NBA Slam Dunk Contest was. Relegated to watching retrospectives on YouTube, they’ll never understand the excitement that led up to seeing some of the biggest stars in basketball show off their athleticism, creativity, and pride in being known as the best dunker in the NBA. There was palpable excitement as we wondered how players could go bigger and better. That’s gone now.

Nobody wanted Old Yeller to die. He was a beloved member of the family until that old dog got rabies and was destined to descent to madness. The NBA Slam Dunk Contest is past that point, and we need to save its legacy from itself by killing the contest all together and inventing something else — because this is too sad to continue in its current form.

Fantasy Basketball Stock Up Stock Down: Jarrett Allen hitting his stride

The post-All-Star Weekend push is upon us, with most fantasy leagues concluding their regular seasons in the next month or so.

As the playoffs creep closer, here are some players to consider adding or avoiding down the stretch of the season.

DON’T MISS: Celtics vs. Lakers on Sunday at 6 p.m. ET (NBC and Peacock)

NBA: Indiana Pacers at New York Knicks
While Indiana addressed its need for a starting center by acquiring Ivica Zubac, they’ve risked their 2026 lottery pick to do it.

STOCK UP

Cam Thomas — SG/SF, Bucks

A 34-point game and some kind words from the head coach are enough to be optimistic about Thomas’ immediate future with the Bucks, right? Probably — a change of scenery and a track record as a high-volume scorer certainly helps. How much Thomas plays on a nightly basis could be tricky, however, given that Kevin Porter Jr. and Ryan Rollins are commanding fairly big minutes in the starting backcourt. He’ll have to make the most of his opportunities off the bench, which he did against the recent back-to-back against the Magic. Otherwise, there could be some unspectacular final stat lines. The upside may be worth the risk, though.

Kris Dunn — PG/SG, Clippers

With James Harden departed and two more big-name guards, Darius Garland and Bennedict Mathurin, added, the minutes allocation suddenly felt concerning for Dunn, who’s spent the majority of his tenure with the Clippers as a starter, logging heavy minutes. Those concerns still remain, but with Garland yet to debut, Dunn has essentially functioned as the team’s point guard of late. As a result, he’s tallied at least five assists in each of L.A.’s last six games, while making his usual impact as a defender. He also made four three-pointers in the most recent win over the Rockets after producing four steals the game prior. It’s rare that everything clicks for Dunn on the same night from a statistical standpoint, but he’s been productive and could be considered a useful streaming option while the Clippers wait on Garland, perhaps even after.

Jarrett Allen — C, Cavaliers

We can all make an educated guess that Allen is enjoying the James Harden experience thus far. In three games, he’s scored over 20 points in each and been the beneficiary of several of Harden’s passes from downhill attacks. Others have also gotten him involved, and Allen has done a nice job of cleaning up the offensive glass for second-chance points. Yet, he’s having one of his most productive stretches of the season, all coming shortly after a recent 40-point game before Cleveland’s big trade. His stock is most certainly up, and could realistically keep improving as reps build with Harden.

STOCK DOWN

Lauri Markkanen — SF/PF, Jazz

This designation is by no means a reflection of what Markkanen has done or will continue to do when on the court — he’s having one of the best statistical seasons of his career. Rather, this has to do with his usage going forward. Is he healthy? How much will he play each night? The Jazz were recently fined for the “management of their roster,” with Markkanen among multiple players who were notably not playing in fourth quarters over consecutive games despite the games being competitive. Whether the reasons are valid or not, he’s played fewer than 30 minutes in Utah’s last five games, and that should be a concern for fantasy managers, despite Markkanen’s production in his limited time. It’ll be interesting to see what his playing time looks like after the All-Star break.

Ivica Zubac — C, Pacers

Zubac was traded from Los Angeles to Indiana on the day of the trade deadline, but has yet to suit up for the Pacers. Apparently, he played through an ankle injury with the Clippers and may not see the floor for a while with his new team. His potential return this season will be to a Pacers team lacking the table-setting that James Harden provided in L.A. — in the two games prior to the trade that Harden missed, Zubac combined for 8 total shot attempts. He’s still a difference maker on defense and will be great on the boards, but I wouldn’t expect his fantasy production to improve, or even remain the same, until playing alongside Tyrese Haliburton next season. I’d love to be wrong, though!

Paolo Banchero — PF, C, Magic

It’s been an interesting season for the Magic, who are currently the No. 7 seed out East. Banchero, the team’s franchise player, has been a bit more inconsistent as a scorer this season, especially of late. The former first-overall pick in the 2022 NBA Draft has shot sub-40-percent from the field in four of the six game’s appeared in during February and has failed to tally 20 points in all but two games during that same period. Add on top of the shooting struggles his lower production on the glass and continued lack of stocks on the defensive end, and you get a player who’s having a down season as far as fantasy basketball impact is concerned.