Spurs vs Knicks Expert Picks & Game 4 Best Bets

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Despite walking into a raucous Madison Square Garden trailing the series 2–0, the San Antonio Spurs have regained traction after a road win in Game 3.

With Game 4 set to tip off at 8:30 p.m. ET tonight, bet365 has New York billed as 2.5-point favorites to bounce back at the Garden, and our Covers experts have you primed with their best NBA picks for Wednesday, June 10.

Spurs vs Knicks Expert Picks Tonight

PickOdds
Jon Metler Jon Metler: Knicks Karl-Anthony Towns o17.5 points-115
Jason Logan Jason Logan: Knicks Josh Hart o10.5 points+100
Joe Osborne Joe Osborne: Spurs Spurs TT o107.5-108

Odds courtesy of bet365.

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Jon Metler's expert pick: Karl-Anthony Towns Over 17.5 points

Price: -115 at bet365

Jalen Brunson is facing constant pressure from the San Antonio Spurs and is having to work far too hard for every point. With officials allowing a physical style of play, the New York Knicks need to make a concerted effort to feature Karl-Anthony Towns more in Game 4.

Towns is playing with tremendous confidence right now, and his five-out spacing presents a unique challenge for both the Spurs and Victor Wembanyama. Towns can stretch the floor, attack hard closeouts, and put the ball on the deck to finish at the rim, making him one of the toughest matchup problems on the court.

I expect Towns to benefit from the defensive attention Brunson commands, serving as a natural pressure-release option throughout the game. Whether it's a direct feed from Brunson or a touch against a rotating defense after the ball swings through Mikal Bridges or OG Anunoby, Towns should consistently find himself in advantageous scoring situations.

At 17.5 points, I'm backing the Over, a number I make closer to -165.

Jason Logan's expert pick: Josh Hart Over 10.5 points

Price: +100 at bet365

It’s wild to think that Josh Hart was the Knicks’ best shooter in the Game 3 loss (6-for-10), but it’s a fact the Spurs are happy to live with. San Antonio is assigning Wembanyama to Hart, allowing him to sag off and stay closer to the rim with little long-range threat from New York’s wily guard.

However, with the Knicks preaching more off-ball activity in Game 4 and Towns operating as a passer from the high post against smaller defenders, Hart will find even more room to operate tonight. He’s taken 19 shots in the NBA Finals, and 13 of them haven’t had a defender within at least six feet.

Hart also does his best work in MSG, averaging almost 13 points per home game in the playoffs on 46% shooting, compared to just 8.4 points on 40% shooting on the road.

Game 4 models range from 10.8 to a ceiling of 12+ points, with my number north of 11 points. That should have the Over 10.5 priced at -115, but we’re getting EVEN money on Hart to build on a 16-point effort in Game 3.

Joe Osborne's expert pick: Spurs team total Over 107.5

Price: -108 at bet365

I'm backing the Spurs to keep their offensive momentum rolling in Game 4. They came alive again in Game 3, producing a series-high 115 points, which continued a theme we've seen throughout the playoffs.

San Antonio has consistently been a better offensive team away from home, posting stronger numbers across most key metrics and clearing this mark of 107.5 in all 10 of their road playoff games.

The MSG spotlight clearly wasn't too big for them, and I expect another productive offensive performance tonight.


More Spurs vs Knicks Game 4 picks


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Warriors' Steph Curry named to TIME100 Most Influential People in Sports 2026

Warriors' Steph Curry named to TIME100 Most Influential People in Sports 2026 originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Steph Curry’s career achievements and accomplishments number far too many to list concisely in one article.

Now, he gets to add one more bullet point to his résumé with his inclusion on the 2026 edition of TIME Magazine’s list of the 100 most influential people in sports.

Curry was one of seven active and retired NBA players included on the list, which also included LeBron James, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Cooper Flagg, Victor Wembanyama, Jalen Brunson and Michael Jordan. The list also includes seven individuals for their influence on women’s basketball.

Curry is a four-time NBA champion and two-time NBA Most Valuable Player. He also has 12 All-Star nods, 11 All-NBA team selections, one NBA Finals MVP and the most made 3-point field goals of all time to his name.

In addition to the accolades, Curry is credited as the pioneer of the 3-point revolution. His, and the Warriors’, success prioritizing the 3-point shot has changed the way basketball is played at all levels, not just the NBA.

The list is divided into four categories, with Curry being placed in the “Leaders” category. Curry recently was ranked third on The Athletic’s top 40 leaders in sports, a list led by Warriors coach Steve Kerr.

Other members with Bay Area ties include Oakland’s Olympic gold medalist Alysa Liu, San Francisco-born Olympic gold medalist Eileen Gu, former Cal quarterback Fernando Mendoza, former Bay FC forward Asisat Oshoala, and Kristin Juszczyk, fashion designer and wife of 49ers fullback Kyle Juszczyk.

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NBA trade rumors: Hornets targeting All-Star center, Jaylen Brown update, and more

BOSTON, MA - MAY 2: Jaylen Brown #7 of the Boston Celtics shoots a free throw during the game against the Philadelphia 76ers during Round One Game Seven of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on May 2, 2026 at TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. 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 Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The NBA offseason will officially arrive in a matter of days, and while the New York Knicks and San Antonio Spurs slug it out in the 2026 NBA Finals, the league’s other 28 teams are already positioning themselves for their summer moves. The league’s trade landscape is already coming into focus, with Giannis Antetokounmpo as a possible first domino and more big names potentially on the move.

Let’s dive into some rumors already popping up during the NBA Finals.

Hornets, Kings talking Domantas Sabonis trade

The Charlotte Hornets could make a big leap in the Eastern Conference next year, but they need more toughness inside. Charlotte caught fire once the calendar flipped to January 1, finishing the regular season 33-16 with the league’s best net-rating, but their lack of size was exposed in their play-in tournament elimination.

The Hornets are talking to the Sacramento Kings about a trade for Domantas Sabonis, according to Sam Amick of The Athletic. Charlotte holds the No. 14 and No. 18 pick in the 2026 NBA Draft, and Sacramento reportedly wants one of those selections to part with their highly productive big man. So far the Hornets haven’t been willing to meet that asking price.

Sabonis is a three-time All-Star and two-time All-NBA selection who recently turned 30. He has two years, $94 million remaining on his contract. The Kings are potentially over the luxury tax next season if they don’t cut salary, and could be motivated to get a deal done. Sabonis is one of the very best rebounders in the league while also being a gifted playmaker, solid interior scorer, and efficient low-volume three-point shooter.

This feels like a good match for both teams, but Charlotte would be smart not to give up a top-20 pick for him at that salary.

Celtics not looking to trade Jaylen Brown, per report

Jaylen Brown had a career year for the Boston Celtics this season during Jayson Tatum’s prolonged absence, going as far to call it his “favorite year” of his basketball career. That rubbed some Boston fans the wrong way given that Brown was named NBA Finals MVP on the Celtics 2024 championship team, and it sets up a potentially odd dynamic with Tatum fully back in the mix next season.

The Celtics have been mentioned as a possible Giannis suitor, and that would require shipping Brown out to a third team. NBA insider Sam Amick said pump the breaks on any Brown trade talk, telling a local Boston outlet “There’s no sign that they’re putting Jaylen out there at all.”

Brown is owed $183 million over the next three seasons. That’s a massive contract even for someone as good as he is. The Celtics will be one of the most fascinating teams to monitor this summer as they look to challenge the Knicks at the top of the East in the 2027 playoffs.

Want Trey Murphy III? The Pelicans reportedly want help now, not picks

Trey Murphy III is one of the most coveted players potentially available on the trade market this summer. The Pelicans’ wing will be 26 years old for next season, and he’s one of the better shooters and off-ball scorers in the NBA.

Don’t think the Pelicans are going to trade Murphy for picks just because the team has finished with 21 and 26 wins the last two seasons. New Orleans wants players who can help now, not future assets, for Murphy if he is moved, according to insider Jake Fischer.

The rest of the NBA should be circling the Pelicans’ front office to make a deal. New Orleans’ was panned for giving up its unprotected 2026 first-round pick for Derik Queen last summer, though that pick only came in at No. 8 overall in the lottery. Front office leaders Joe Dumars and Troy Weaver aren’t shy about trying to make a big splash, and that could put them in a desperate position to improve the team.

Knicks fans outraged over Victor Wembanyama escaping NBA punishment for Jalen Brunson shove: ‘Golden boy’

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows A basketball player in a white and red jersey bends over as an opposing player in a black and white jersey stands behind him, Image 2 shows Two Spurs players attempting to defend another player on the ground, while a third Spurs player in the foreground holds a basketball, Image 3 shows New York Post Sports section front page with a World Cup 2026 header and main headline
Wemby Knicks fans

The NBA took care of its superstar.

That’s the general consensus from the NBA social media community after the league did not charge Victor Wembanyama with a flagrant foul for shoving Jalen Brunson in the face during Game 3.

The NBA did not call a foul on the play during San Antonio’s 115-111 win on Monday, and then passed on assessing him one upon reviewing the play.

“No way the NBA was going to do the correct thing and upgrade Wemby’s uncalled foul to the flagrant on Jalen Brunson that it was obviously glaringly was,” famous sports pundit Skip Bayless posted to X.

“The Alien is now the face of the league the new ratings magnet, the most protected player in the NBA. This is exhibit A.”

Wembanyama may not be a Trae Young-level villain to Knicks fans quite yet, but he’s Public Enemy No. 1 at the moment after shoving Brunson.

As Brunson stood near the 7-foot-4 big man from France in the first quarter, Wembanyama shoved the back of Brunson’s head, which sent the much smaller Knick toward the court.

Brunson raised from the floor quickly and went toward Wembanyama, who smirked while play continued since the referees did not call a foul.

NBA senior vice president of referee operations Monty McCutchen told ESPN on Tuesday: “I think we can all agree a foul was missed on that play.”

The post-game review allowed for the NBA to upgrade the foul if the league deemed it necessary, and that review meant quite a bit since Wembanyama is at risk of being suspended for flagrant fouls.

He has two points this postseason and receiving a flagrant 2 foul would disqualify him for the next game, while a pair of flagrant 1 fouls would also lead to him missing a game.

ESPN reporter Shams Charania’s tweet revealing the league’s decision drew considerable backlash from Knicks fan.

One Knicks-centric accounted tweeted: “Golden boy.”

Another X user wrote: “This is the 2nd egregious action he’s had with no consequence this playoffs. It’s honestly comical.”

One account posted: “It was obvious Wemby wasn’t getting suspended for Game 4. The NBA isn’t dumb they know global viewership would’ve taken a massive hit without the generational talented Wemby in MSG tonight.”

The New York Post’s backpage on June 10, 2026. NY Post

All eyes will now be on the referees Wednesday night with a spotlight on how they call the pivotal Game 4 at Madison Square Garden.

Knicks coach Mike Brown already has tried greasing the referees for a more favorable whistle by complaining about the 24-8 free-throw advantage for the Spurs in the second half of Game 3.

“I never thought I would be in the NBA Finals and see a team get 24 free-throw attempts in the second half to another team’s eight,” Brown said. “I don’t think I complain much about officials or the fairness when it comes to the free-throw attempts. San Antonio is a great team. They are a great team, OK. It’s going to lower our odds big time, big time, if we play Game 4 and in the second half, they get 24 free-throw attempts to our eight. Maybe we were fouling. Maybe we were fouling. But they fouled, too.” 

NBA Comparisons For Every Realistic Wizards Draft Target

DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA - MARCH 07: Caleb Wilson #8 of the North Carolina Tar Heels looks on prior to the game against the Duke Blue Devils at Cameron Indoor Stadium on March 07, 2026 in Durham, North Carolina. Wilson will miss the game due to injury. (Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The exercise of comparing draft prospects has driven me nuts for years. For a time, seemingly every wing with a good vertical was the next Michael Jordan. Tall kid who can dribble? The Next Magic. White forward who can shoot? Larry Bird.

In this draft, AJ Dybantsa has been comped to Tracy McGrady and Andrew Wiggins, who are basically nothing alike. There’s a draft site out there that lists Dybantsa’s comps as McGrady and…Scottie Pippen? What?

Darryn Peterson’s NBA comp, according to this site is Devin Booker. Maybe?

Cam Boozer got Al Horford, which might make sense if Horford had been a big-time scorer with top-shelf three-point shooting.

Caleb Wilson, who could theoretically be a Wizards target in a trade down scenario, was tagged with Jermaine O’Neal and Chris Bosh, who once again were not very similar as players.

This site says comps for Darius Acuff Jr., the last player FanDuel says has a chance to be the number one pick in the draft, are Tim Hardaway and Damian Lillard, which…I guess? I mean, they’re both smaller guards, but Hardaway played more of a PG role — lower usage, more steals — and didn’t shoot as well. Lillard played in an era where more rigid roles were dying out and did more scoring along with playmaking. And he shot better than Hardaway.

Anyway, I’m a stat dork, so I modified the statistical doppelganger machine I made for NBA players and deployed it on Ye Olde Draft Analyzer (YODA), my stat-based draft prospect evaluation tool. Now, the doppelganger machine doesn’t work quite as well on draft prospects, but I’m still asking it to work with YODA and give us who they think are the top NBA comps for the five theoretical possible Wizards draft picks at number one.

AJ Dybantsa | F | BYU

Is AJ Dybantsa’s best NBA comparison really Blake Griffin? | Getty Images

Top Comp: Blake Griffin. Interesting because one of the first things that jumps off the screen is a difference — Griffin was a big-time rebounder at Oklahoma (17.3 per 40 minutes) and Dybantsa is not. But, the usage, scoring, overall efficiency, and steals are close. Both had superb verticals, as well.

Runners-Up:

  • Michael Beasley — impressive college player (also grabbed many more rebounds than Dybantsa) who scored in bunches. Crashed and burned in the NBA.
  • Brandon Ingram — lower usage and not as efficient or productive overall as Dybantsa, but similar scoring forward profile.

Darryn Peterson | G | Kansas

Is Darryn Peterson more like Kyrie Irving or Devin Booker? | Getty Images

Top Comp: Kyrie Irving. Not what I was expecting. But as I eyeball the numbers, I see similar scoring (though Irving was more efficient), steals and blocks. Peterson did more rebounding. Irving did more playmaking. Both missed significant chunks of the season due to injury or health issues.

Runners-Up:

  • Jalen Suggs — psychotic competitor who keeps hurting himself by attempting to make plays with complete disregard to his health and safety.
  • Jalen Green — similar pattern of production

Cam Boozer | F | Duke

Which comp feels more right for Cam Boozer, Anthony Davis or Kevin Love? | Getty Images

Top Comp: Anthony Davis. Worth mention that basically no one in the database shows up as a strong statistical comp for Boozer. He’s a unique conglomeration of hyper-efficient, high-volume scoring, plus elite rebounding. Davis was a dominating defender with similar efficiency on lower volume. He blocked lots more shots than Boozer. Boozer got more assists. Overall YODA score was pretty similar — both have grades in YODA consistent with being the number one pick in nearly any draft I’ve evaluated.

Runners-Up:

  • Marvin Bagley III — This guy was so good at Duke that a number of teams had him rated ahead of Luka Doncic.
  • Kevin Love — This one feels the most right. Love was accused of lacking the athleticism to be an effective NBA player. He ended up a five-time All-Star and two-time second team All-NBA. He’d likely have tallied more of each if he hadn’t played for a dumpster-fire franchise. Seriously, one season he was the only member of the Minnesota Timberwolves with an above average PPA. The Wizards should be so lucky.

Caleb Wilson | F | North Carolina

The Machines look at Caleb Wilson and see the next Kevin Love. | Getty Images

Top Comp: Kevin Love. Which doesn’t feel right at all. Except, the numbers are reasonably similar. Love was the more prolific and accurate three-point shooter, but the rebounding, assists, blocks, turnovers, fouls, scoring and overall efficiency are pretty close. Wilson generated more steals. Fascinating.

Runners-Up:

  • Blake Griffin. Again. I’m starting to wonder if the doppelganger machine and YODA are just hitting ctrl+c over and over. But…when I look at the numbers, it makes some sense — Love and Griffin were fairly similar, so if a guy is similar to one, he’s similar to the other.
  • Victor Wembanyama — There are some definite differences. The Machines are picking up similar usage, poor three-point shooting (Wemby shot 27.2% from deep in the season he entered the NBA Draft), rebounding, and scoring. Wemby was less efficient and higher usage, and he blocked a lot more shots. There overall YODA scores are very close — Wemby’s season in France wasn’t mind-blowingly great. He still had a score consistent with being the top pick in most drafts, as does Wilson.

Darius Acuff Jr. | G | Arkansas

Should the Wizards draft Darius Acuff Jr., who The Machines say might be the next John Wall. | Getty Images

Top Comp: John Wall. This makes some sense considering they were both coached by John Calipari, who’s still running the dribble drive motion system he used when Wall played for him at Kentucky. There are differences — Acuff was lots more efficient — especially from three-point range. The other stats are pretty similar — Wall had some rebounds, but assists, free throw attempts, and fouls were about the same. Wall produced more blocks and steals, as well as more turnovers. Still, it all tallies up to similar YODA scores — top 3-5 in most drafts, top pick in a few.

Runners-Up:

  • Ty Lawson — Superb shooter and playmaker, who played at North Carolina. He had some quality performances in the NBA, though is career got derailed by some personal issues.
  • Derrick Rose — Hmm, another Calipari guy. Have The Machines figured it out?

A Fork in the Road for NBA Officiating

MINNEAPOLIS, MN - MAY 8: NBA referee Tony Brothers #25 looks on during the game between the San Antonio Spurs and Minnesota Timberwolves during Round Two Game Three of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on May 8, 2026 at Target Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota. 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 Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

“Pretty unprofessional, huh?”

Wolves coach Chris Finch sat behind a table in the Target Center media room after a 115-108 Game 3 loss to the San Antonio Spurs in the Western Conference semifinals. Clearly ready to get something off his chest, he was asked about a second-half mid-court conflict with veteran NBA official Tony Brothers.

Wanting to call a timeout and reorganize his group, he felt as though Brothers disregarded his job and ignored him.

He let him know that. Brothers took exception.

Instead of a typical technical foul and a warning issued to go back to the bench, the grizzled crew chief took things a step further…quite literally.

“He clearly heard me,” Finch said when recounting the situation of asking for a timeout and getting ignored. “It almost cost us a turnover…he lost it.”

Following a six-point loss in which the Wolves were -12 in the free-throw disparity, and a game that saw plenty of stoppages, you might think that the website you’re reading this on prequalifies this piece to be a “the refs cost the Wolves the series” soliloquy.

Not quite. Much of the Wolves’ free-throw discrepancy throughout the series came from a tentativeness in attacking the basket after saying they would be unrelenting in doing so after Game 1.

However, when themes keep coming up from multiple people who are given a microphone around the league, one thing to me remains relatively common. Including Castle himself recently, talking about selling contact and the trend in doing so around the league.

Simply put, the NBA and its officiating crews are at an inflection point on how they go about their night-to-night jobs.

As seasons keep going, tension between players, coaches, and officials keeps boiling over.

By my count, more than six coaches called out officiating specifically during the season in postgame press conferences.

That doesn’t count some of the playoff tangents we’ve had, including tenured veteran Devin Booker going out of his way after Game 2 of the Phoenix Suns’ series with Oklahoma City to call James Williams out BY NAME.

There are plenty of examples of frustration with NBA officiating. Perhaps brought to its peak when the Oklahoma City Thunder played a series against a Los Angeles Lakers team that always has millions of eyes on it and a fanbase not afraid to speak its mind, questions and tension between fans, players, coaches, and those instructed to keep the game together have reached a point where the NBA simply has two options.

1). Completely ignore the situation – The worst option. This pisses fans off more who clearly want answers to why games are so different from a flow perspective on a nightly basis

2). Address the issue with changes – I’ll talk about this soon, but I believe there are a couple of clear-cut, subtle ways in which the NBA can make the game easier on its officials while making a game already played a rapid pace more fun to watch.

So, blog boy, what issues could be smoothed over that could be the cure-all, if you know so much?


PHOENIX, ARIZONA – APRIL 25: Devin Booker #1 of the Phoenix Suns talks with referee Tyler Ford #39 during the second half in Game Three of the Western Conference First Round NBA Playoffs at Mortgage Matchup Center on April 25, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. The Thunder defeated the Suns 121-109. 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 Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Stop Discouraging Pace

It’s truly underrated how much faster the NBA has gotten over the last 20 years.

In the 2011-12 regular season, the Sacramento Kings led the NBA with a PACE metric of 97.3 (the number of possessions a team uses per game).

This past season, the slowest team in PACE was the Boston Celtics, with a metric of…97.7.

Shots go up quicker. Teams move faster. And for some reason, games could not go any slower.

It’s simple. Refs are having a hard time making the right call with a game moving as fast as it is, and the fear of getting every call right tends to send them to the monitor more than they should. Furthermore, the amount of time spent at the monitor for simple calls like an out-of-bounds play, flagrant, or goaltend is painstaking.

Adam Silver has come out and said the NBA plans to augment this with an AI officiating system for calls like this. I’m not sure AI is necessarily the answer here, but could something similar to what the NFL has with the sky judge be implemented here? Perhaps a 10-second stoppage in play if the call is extremely questionable to hear from a sky judge, or additional official watching 2-3 different angles in Seacaucus that can call this out?

With gambling culture becoming rampant, I understand officials wearing an earpiece can be shady, but it’s better than what we have now.

Imagine games that aren’t completely smeared with reviews. Where up and down basketball is back. Go back and watch a few games from the early 2010s. The contrast to now is so unbelievably stark in a good way.

Now take that, hit the 1.5x fast forward, and get an idea of what the potential of this league could be. These players are awesome, and I don’t need 100% accuracy on out-of-bounds calls and weak flagrant calls in exchange for what could be a far more entertaining product.

PHOENIX, ARIZONA – MARCH 05: Head coach Billy Donovan of the Chicago Bulls talks with referee Josh Tiven #58 during the second half of the NBA game at Mortgage Matchup Center on March 05, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. The Bulls defeated the Suns 105-103. 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 Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We Can’t Get Rid of “Grifting”, But There Are Steps to Take

You know those fouls at the baseline that get called all the time?

Where a team has no other shot against good defense, so they drive from the elbow to the baseline, try and catch the defender at a bad angle, and completely fall backwards, hoisting the ball up in a situation where it’s surely not going to go in, but it gets called a shooting foul anyway?

It seems to happen all of the time, and more often than not, they award the out-of-control player. Finch has said it before, and my main gripe matches it. For some reason, out-of-control players are being awarded more than ever now. Fall on a fast break? Sure. Fall on a drive? You got it.

Fouls like the one I laid out could be given the rip-through treatment, as always, being a foul on the floor. There’s no intent to actually score the ball during game action with the embellishment of contact, and it’s obvious it’s a move players practice because they know it’s a cheap way to get to the line if the shot clock is breaking down.

A simple way for something like that to not get the rip through treatment? Playing through the content to show actual scoring intent.

The baseline fallaway is just one example. So many times, a defender could be in complete control while the offensive player is not, and the latter will tend to get rewarded. It might be a place that the league is at, but seeing more play-ons through marginal contact and making things like the above fouls on the floor could be ways to curb what’s happening and also prevent further stoppages.


All in all, I don’t want something like this to take away what’s shaping up to be an awesome finals, and frankly, a finals that’s being officiated extremely well with plenty of contact.

But where we’re at can’t continue to happen. It ruined the discourse of the playoffs this year, it’s slowly ruining the NBA product, and giving a bad example for youth hoopers on what to build their game around.

Is Adam Silver the right guy to figure out? I’m not sure, but man, do I sure hope he is. Basketball can’t keep getting played and talked about like this at the highest level.

Fans, players, coaches, and organizations are clearly getting tired of it. Hell, I’m sure refs are too. Now it’s time for those who run the league to show they are, too.

The (Short) History of the Utah Jazz and the 2nd Overall Pick

PISCATAWAY, NJ - CIRCA 1980: Darrell Griffith #35 of the Utah Jazz drives on Mike Newlin #14 of the New Jersey Nets during an NBA basketball game circa 1980 at the Rutgers Athletic Center in Piscataway, New Jersey. Griffith played for the Jazz from 1980-91. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Jazz are lined up to select 2nd overall in the upcoming NBA Draft, and this is a unique position for the franchise. They have finished with a losing record in only 18 of their 52 seasons in the league, and in those rare losing seasons, they are rarely subsequently blessed with a high draft selection – only 1 time in the 42 year history of the draft lottery have the Jazz jumped above their expected placement. Ever since the days of Stockton, Malone, and Sloan, the Jazz have not been bad and they have not been lucky. With this upcoming 2nd overall pick, Utah needs a star.

Famed collegiate icon, best-in-the-world level shooter, explosive athlete, and ferocious competitive fire – if I told Jazz fans we’d be picking a guy with these attributes at #2, they’d be ecstatic, regardless of whether the prospect’s first name is Darryn, AJ, or Cam. While it doesn’t seem that any of those guys check all 4 boxes, Forty-six years ago to the day Jazz fans were blessed with a player who did – Darrell Griffith, the sole #2 overall pick in the franchises history, was selected to bring winning and excitement to a team that hadn’t yet given the new home fans in Utah something to care about. Clearly, he succeeded, as his #35 jersey hanging in the Delta Center’s rafters indicate. The history of the Jazz and the 2nd pick starts and ends with Darrell Griffith, but who is he? Today, in honor of the fast approaching future and the nostalgia of the past, we’ll study Griffith’s career and diagnose whether Dr. Dunkenstein was the right pick for Utah’s sole #2 selection in the history of the franchise.

Pre-NBA: Louisville Legend

UNITED STATES – MARCH 24: College Basketball: NCAA Final Four, Louisville Darrell Griffith (35) victorious, getting carried off court by team after winning game vs UCLA, Indianapolis, IN 3/24/1980 (Photo by Rich Clarkson/Sports Illustrated via Getty Images) (SetNumber: X24328 TK2)

Almost from the day he was born, Griffith was a phenom – it’s reported that he began dunking at the age of 10 by launching himself off the walls of his family garage, which his brother Michael speculates built up the leg muscles necessary to propel him 48 inches in the air at his peak. Griffith’s youthful successes (state championships in the basketball-crazed state of Kentucky, high school All-American in 1975) convinced the ABA’s Kentucky Colonels that he was the real deal, and they offered him a contract if he skipped college and went professional right away. For context, the 1975 Colonels were no joke – they featured stars Dan Issel and Artis Gilmore, and that year won the ABA championship. Instead, after a high profile recruiting period, Griffith ended up at the hometown University of Louisville.

Griffith took his time to reach the heights expected from such a dominant high school force, but once he reached his senior season, he was nigh-unstoppable at the collegiate level. Winning the Wooden award and Louisville’s first ever National Championship, Dr. Dunkenstein finished a storybook college career – home town kid who had to overcome adversity before becoming a historically great NCAA player. Steep professional expectations accompany a man this accomplished at the amateur level, so when the Jazz selected him at #2 overall in the 1980 NBA draft, they did so with the hope that this was the player to ignite a fire under Salt Lake City and lead the team to their first EVER winning season (the franchise’s record to this point was 39 wins while they were still stationed in New Orleans).

NBA: The Doctor Is In

PHILADELPHIA, PA – CIRCA 1980: Darrell Griffith #35 of the Utah Jazz shoots over Maurice Cheeks #10 of the Philadelphia 76ers during an NBA basketball game circa 1980 at The Spectrum in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Griffith played for the Jazz from 1980-91. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Griffith didn’t immediately contribute to much more success on the court (24 wins in 1980 to 28 in his first season in 1981) but he wasted no time getting acclimated to the NBA. Averaging 20 points, 3.5 rebounds and 2.5 assists, Griffith narrowly won the 1981 Rookie of the Year award by a single vote over now-obscure Blazers point guard Kelvin Ransey (Basketball Reference lists Ransey’s nickname as Mrs. Butterworth which took me aback, but Ransey himself says his true nickname, Butter, was coined by Mychal Thompson because his game was “rich and thick”).

In terms of accolades, Griffith is unimpressive after his rookie year – despite 4 out of his first 5 years featuring scoring averages over 20 points per game, Griffith never earned All-Star honors. This is not due to lack of popularity among the voters, however – once the Jazz quit their losing ways (their first winning record with Griffith occurred in 1983-84), Darrell began receiving some of the most votes of Western Conference guards, placing 5th in 1984 and 4th in 1985. If he were ever to be an All-Star, it would’ve been 1985 – the Jazz had a respectable record, Griffith had his highest scoring year, and Rickey Green took a small step back so the votes for Utah guards were less dispersed. However, even though the fans were taken with him, the coaches deciding the bench were not, and he was passed up for Norm Nixon and Rolando Blackman.

Griffith still had a spot during the ‘84 and ‘85 All-Star Weekends, however – he participated in the first two NBA Slam Dunk Competitions. I’ve attached tape from his 1984 4th place finish below; watch it for Griffith, for the beautiful green Jazz jerseys, or for an interesting moment in history when the Dunk Contest featured 4 legitimate stars (Griffith, Dr. J, Dominique Wilkins, Larry Nance).

Griffith wasn’t only a dunker, as he also pioneered the three point shot during its early years in the NBA. For one glorious offseason (1985), before Larry Bird took hold of the honor, a Jazzman held the all-time three-pointers made record, after Griffith paced the league in 3PM for two straight seasons. To this day, Darrell Griffith and Mike Dunleavy Sr. are the two players in NBA history to have led the league in three-pointers made and three-point percentage – Griffith was decidedly not a one-trick pony.

However, both of those tricks suffered after Griffith’s successful 1984-85 season. Very soon before the ‘85-86 season, Griffith broke his foot during a pickup game in his hometown Louisville, and missed the entire year during his recovery. After coming back, Griffith wasn’t quite the same – he lost a few inches off of his mythical 48 inch vertical, and even more importantly, he lost efficiency. He was a part of a fun 1988-89 team (first 50 win squad in franchise history!), starting in the backcourt with a young John Stockton, but he wasn’t anywhere near the almost-All-Star of yesteryear, retiring just 2 years later at the age of 32. Still, Griffith ended his career a Jazz-lifer, and an interesting one at that; he functioned as a bridge between eras, starting his career as a key piece of Adrian Dantley teams, and ending it as a veteran presence for a young Stockton and Malone.

Post-NBA Conclusion: Once a Jazzman, Always a Jazzman

SALT LAKE CITY, UT – FEBRUARY 23: Darrell Griffith and Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Utah Jazz share his dunk contest trophy with the crowd at vivint.SmartHome Arena on February 23, 2018 in Salt Lake City, Utah. 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 2018 NBAE (Photo by Melissa Majchrzak/NBAE via Getty Images) SALT LAKE CITY, UT – FEBRUARY 23: on February 23, 2018 at vivint.SmartHome Arena in Salt Lake City, Utah. 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 2018 NBAE (Photo by Melissa Majchrzak/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Post retirement, Griffith faded softly from the limelight. He returned to a town that named his childhood street after him (“Darrell Griffith Way, AKA Dr. Dunkenstein Way”!) and now works as an ambassador and community outreach specialist for his alma mater. Regarding the Jazz, he made a rare appearance in Salt Lake City as he presented a rookie Donovan Mitchell with his 2018 Dunk Contest trophy, a contest in which Donovan paid an electrifying tribute to Griffith by donning his jersey for one of his dunks (reportedly, one of Griffith’s ACTUAL jerseys, from the archives). Griffith acted as a mentor for Donovan before Spida was ever drafted to the Jazz, with the two of them meeting during Donovan’s time at the house that Darrell built.

While history suggests that Kevin McHale, the 3rd pick in 1980, would’ve been the right one for the Jazz, one should not use that to discredit Darrell Griffith’s legacy with the franchise. Griffith brought excitement and genuine star power to Utah’s first NBA team (even if that was never reflected with All-Star appearances), and could’ve been a key third star into the 90s if not for a series of unfortunate injuries. Even with his career falling apart, he never abandoned ship – he played every game of his professional career wearing the Jazz’s purple and green. We can all hope that the franchise’s upcoming #2 overall pick will have better luck against the injury bug and perhaps be a better defender (Griffith tried hypno-therapy as a last-ditch effort to improve on that end), but we can’t ask for much more in terms of talent and loyalty. So far, the Jazz are 1/1 on their selections at #2 – if they can get that hit rate to 2/2, the Jazz are set to begin one of the most exciting eras in franchise history.

Have any favorite Griffith stories that I didn’t touch on? Sound off below!

NBA Finals Game Preview: Knicks vs. Spurs, Game 4, June 10, 2026

Jun 8, 2026; New York, New York, USA; San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama (1) shoots the ball as New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) defends during game three of the 2026 NBA Finals at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images | Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

The New York Knicks host the San Antonio Spurs tonight at Madison Square Garden in Game Four of the NBA Finals. New York leads the series 2-1. A victory would put the Knicks one win away from their first championship since 1973. A loss? That would turn this into a best-of-three series heading back to cactus country. No bueno!

The Spurs earned a 115-111 win in Game Three on Monday night, ending New York’s 13-game postseason winning streak and handing the Knicks their first loss in 46 days. Victor Wembanyama led San Antonio with 32 points, eight rebounds, six assists, and three blocks. Stephon Castle added 23 points. For New York, OG Anunoby scored 28 points on 9-of-13 shooting while Jalen Brunson matched Wemby with 32 points.

The question entering Game Four: can the Knicks rediscover their offensive identity?

Game Three was not a case of San Antonio completely overwhelming New York. The Knicks generated quality looks throughout the night and remained within striking distance until the final possession. What doomed them was stagnation. For long stretches, New York looked nothing like the team that spent the last month and a half steamrolling opponents. The ball stuck. Players stood around. The offense became predictable. They recorded just 18 assists, their second-lowest total across 99 regular-season and playoff games, while committing 13 turnovers that the Spurs converted into 21 points. (H/t Fred Katz of The Athletic.)

The Spurs deserve credit for creating those conditions. After dropping the first two games at home, San Antonio came into Madison Square Garden desperate and aggressive. Castle’s size bothered Brunson, Josh Hart, and several other Knicks all night. Wembanyama spent less time defending pick-and-roll actions, instead acting as a help defender and erasing opportunities around the rim. And the adjustments worked. Rather than forcing Wembanyama into repeated screening actions and making him defend in space, the Knicks often attacked the defense directly. That resulted in fewer driving lanes, fewer paint touches, and a greater reliance on jump shooting.

Wembanyama’s elite rim protection often forces you to make your bones beyond the arc. Sometimes those shots fall, sometimes they do not. On Monday, there was a lot of not. New York missed 10 consecutive three-pointers to open the fourth quarter. It cost them the game.

The Knicks played tight and tentative while the Spurs played loose and aggressive. New York spent much of the evening trying not to make mistakes instead of imposing its will. That showed up in the turnovers, hesitation, and an absence of the off-ball movement that has defined its postseason success.

Still, one bad night does not erase six weeks of dominant basketball. All the aforementioned issues are correctable. Protecting the basketball tops the list. The Knicks cannot afford unforced turnovers or unnecessary fouls that gift San Antonio easy points. They also need a bigger fourth-quarter impact from Karl-Anthony Towns, who was held scoreless in the final period of Game Three and attempted 15 fewer shots than Brunson overall.

The Knicks must contain Wembanyama in pick-and-roll situations. The Spurs repeatedly generated lobs and paint finishes by getting him behind New York’s defenders. The good guys have to cut off those interior passes and do more to keep the big fella away from the rim (easier said than done, I know, I know).

And Mikal Bridges needs to bounce back after recording two points in Game Three. He’ll be better tonight (could he be much worse?). Anunoby has arguably been New York’s best player in the series, and Captain Clutch continues to deliver in big moments. The Knicks are at their best, however, when all five starters contribute and their bench lends some support. Landry Shamet had his worst game in a while, making 1-of-8, and Miles McBride looks smaller than ever among the taller Spurs, averaging 3.7 points in these three games. A couple of three pointers from each would help.

ESPN.com likes New York to win at 57%. Giddy up. If our heroes move the ball, protect possessions, and return to the sharp cutting and unselfish offense that fueled their postseason run, they will have an excellent opportunity to regain control of the series. We trust in them. Knicks by 5.

Game Details

Who: New York Knicks (2-1) vs San Antonio Spurs (1-2)
Date: Wednesday, June 10, 2026
Time: 8:30 PM ET
Place: Madison Square Garden, Manhattan, NY
TV: ABC
Follow: @ptknicksblog and bsky

Victor Wembanyama avoids flagrant foul for Game 3 shove

Tuesday evening, the NBA announced that San Antonio Spurs center Victor Wembanyama would not be assessed a flagrant foul for his push of New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson during Monday's Game 3 of the NBA Finals.

Wembanyama, who discarded Brunson with a push to the back of his head during the first quarter, was not called for a common foul on the play. In the aftermath, NBA Senior Vice President of Referee Development and Training Monty McCutchen acknowledged that a foul should have been called.

However, after reviewing the play, the league decided that the foul would not be upgraded to a flagrant. Wembanyama has two flagrant foul points due to his ejection for an elbow to the head of Minnesota's Naz Reid during the second round. In the postseason, four flagrant foul points trigger an automatic one-game suspension.

Game 4 of the NBA Finals is on Wednesday night, with the Knicks holding a two games to one lead.

What the Spurs did differently in Game 3 and how the Knicks will respond

Jun 8, 2026; New York, New York, USA; San Antonio Spurs guard Stephon Castle (5) guards New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) during game three of the 2026 NBA Finals at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images | Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Game 3 of the NBA Finals wasn’t much different than Games 1 and 2: the Spurs got ahead early after a classic slow start from the Knicks, they eventually responded, then everything was once again down to the wire in crunch time with the winner being the team that made one or two more clutch shots. The difference? The location was Madison Square Garden, and the winner was the Spurs, who barely but admirably avoided falling into a 3-0 hole. I continue Fraternizing with the Enemy with with Russell Richardson, editor-in-chief of our Knicks sister site Posting and Toasting, as we discuss what the Spurs did differently to get back in the winners column and how the Knicks, who aren’t used to having to bounce back from a loss these days, will respond.

This has been an enjoyable series so far — the Fraternizing, but I guess the basketball too — so click on the links if you would like to revisit parts 1, 2 or 3.

J.R. 

So, the Spurs showed a few things last night and we now know that they can:

1. Beat NY

2. Win in MSG

3. Stay composed in an intense clutch game in the Finals. 

All of those are important, but I’d say the third is the biggest deal. First, it unlocks the other two. Second, because they’ve been shaky down the stretch in games going back to before Wemby joined the team. 

For years, the knock on San Antonio was that despite their talent, and even though they could stay with teams through three quarters, they couldn’t win games. (I call that a talent gap, but some people call it not knowing how to win — potato potahto). Then the gripe became that they could build a lead, but couldn’t hold onto it. Then they could hold onto leads but couldn’t win close games. Then they could win close regular season games but not close playoff games. Close playoff games but not close Finals games…

You can see where this is going; it’s not like it’s a particularly rare development path. What’s unusual about it is how quickly they’ve moved through these stages to the point that now it’s reasonable to wonder whether they could be the first team to come back and win The Finals after trailing 0-2 at home. I know I brought up pressure in our last conversation but it seems even more important after Game 3, because the series is for sure going back to San Antonio now, and none of the Knickerbockers are going to feel comfortable about the possibility of coming back home for Game 6 down 3-2. Which means they have to go up 3-1. Which brings us to mental toughness. 

I’ll be honest, there were several times last night that I felt like the Knicks were about to put the game and the series away. After the flagrant review of Castle’s ugly looking foul on Brunson, I thought you guys had it. After the challenge that turned Victor’s three into zero points, I thought you guys had it. After Jaylen’s layup cut it to, (whatever it was) I thought you would take it home. But Wemby and the boys kept believing and kept making plays and now we are where we are. And my question is, at what point did you realize Game Three was slipping away?

R.R.

One summer, I took my kids out in a four-pedal paddle boat. We struggled to fit everyone in—my oldest was already over six feet tall, my stepson and I each weighed about 200 lbs., and my third son was scared for his life. Sam had good reason to be worried. We didn’t get more than 10 feet from the dock when the boat started to noticeably move in a vertical direction. Down. We all foot-pedaled furiously back toward the dock, but slowly, ever so slowly, the SS Guppy approached and broke the waterline. Despite our frantic attempts to save ourselves, we watched the disaster unfold in slow motion as we all sank into the drink.

That was how it felt to watch the Knicks shoot 7-of-27 in the fourth quarter of Game Three.

Expecting the Knicks to win 15 straight playoff games was unrealistic. But they had not lost in 46 days, so a little irrationality was permissible.

We always assume that the bright lights and stars at MSG will rattle the opponent. Sometimes it swings the other way. In Game Three, the young Spurs were cold-blooded from the start, while the home team stumbled in the spotlight. Anyone watching on Monday with virgin eyes could not have identified which team was a squad of steady vets, trained under the cruel tutelage of Master Thibs, and which was a group of youngsters who jumped the development line.

One thing we might assume about confident vets is that they will dictate the pace of a game from tip-off. Not so with these Knickerbockers. All season long, they started games flat and played from behind after the first quarter. It was maddening. That changed through the first three rounds of the playoffs, but lately they have returned to their woeful ways. From my recap:

This was the first time they looked like the “old Knicks” since the first round. The lead guys started slow, the reserves provided a second-quarter lift while Towns and Brunson were split up, the play went stale again after halftime, and they hoped for Captain Clutch magic in the fourth. It was as if, after being away from the Garden for 19 days, they’d forgotten what a juggernaut they had become and, returning to their home court, reverted to their bad habits.

I say it often: first-quarter mistakes are just as impactful on the outcome as those in the fourth. New York started the game with two unforced errors and fell behind by seven points, putting themselves on the back foot for the rest of the game. With both teams so evenly matched and deserving of a championship, every brain fart is another nail in the coffin.

On that note, will the Knicks ever win a first quarter? They lost the first in Game One, 27-19, then 34-25 in Game Two, and 33-22 in Game Three. Playing from behind, they won the second quarter in all three contests. Great. But why must they put themselves at a disadvantage every single time? Every first quarter, they turn me into a sputtering, seething Lewis Black.

We must give them credit—the Spurs played their best game of the series. Castle was cooking (and boy, I dig that kid). Their distribution was excellent, their defense was hard-knuckled, and they were wise to keep Wemby away from KAT for long stretches. Both of these things can be true: San Antonio did an admirable job of keeping KAT out of the offense, and the Knicks did a lousy job of incorporating KAT into the offense. Brunson shot 15 more times than Towns. They could have at least split the difference!

Would you believe that Towns finished +8 and Bridges +11? I don’t, but it is true. It’s difficult to fathom because Bridges could not buy a bucket, and Shamet was worse. He crashed back to earth with 1-of-8 shooting and a -22 plus-minus. Shamet’s marksmanship has been a big part of New York’s postseason success. In his return to the Garden, ShamWow went ice cold. If he had made just one or two more threes, New York would be lining up the brooms.

If Mikal plays like that, Mike Brown knows better—he’s gotta sub in Shamet or Clarkson (OK, not Shamet this time). When Bridges is down, it seems like he doesn’t want to be on the court, which is weird for the guy with the longest active streak of consecutive games played. His foul on Wemby, when he had linked into his limbs like they were playing Twister, is the kind of stuff Bridges does when his confidence is shaken. If things are going well, Mikal is great. He has been in eight straight games now. After a few bad turns, though, he tends to ruminate, and it affects his performance. Brown has benched him in fourth quarters before. He should have last night.

Towns can get lost in his head, too. His anxiety reveals itself differently: he gets giddy and does a lot of Gorsh, can you just believe this?-type pantomiming. When that happens, it doesn’t affect his shooting per se, but it does result in forehead-slapping fouls. Which kills momentum and leads to foul trouble . . . which sends him to the bench . . . which reduces New York’s offensive options. . . . Sigh.

Josh Hart is different. He will randomly lose confidence in his shot and then play hot potato for a few games before snapping out of it. But that never affects his overall play, he’s the same maniac throughout. Brunson is mostly a killer, but if he’s getting smacked around without calls, his anger either leads to a turnover or a dagger three to win the game.

Occasionally, in late-game, high-stakes situations, OG Anunoby gets the yips at the charity stripe. It’s one of the few flaws in my favorite Knick; otherwise, he is one of the most unflappable hoopers to ever play. While his missed free throw late in the fourth was costly, his corner three redeemed him and nearly saved the game. When it came time for that last shot, we would rather that OG had taken it (“NOT BRIDGES, NO!!” I yelled), but even if it went in, a Manhattan Miracle was still needed. They were losing by four with five seconds left. (Note that if OG had made that free throw, a longball would have tied it. . . .)

Nevertheless, despite so much going wrong, I also thought the Knicks were right about to bust open the game many times. There is a lot of complaining in NY about the officiating (some warranted), but ultimately, the Knicks lost because they missed too many shots. We doubt they will misfire so badly in Game Four. From your side of the aisle, did this feel like a Spurs victory or a Knicks collapse? And what do you expect on Wednesday night?

J.R. 

It certainly didn’t feel like New York collapsed. Every team goes through dry spells, and after winning a few dozen games in a row (I honestly lost count), eventually you might have a poorly timed dry spell and drop a contest once a millennia or so. I’m just saying it’s a thing that happens, though it’s understandable if you’ve forgotten what it’s like in the interminable time since Knicks fans have had to suffer the indignity of taking an L.

As far as starting slow goes, man, the Spurs have been there. It was such a thing that it led to the team getting upset after a loss and shaving their heads. (I sure hope I’m remembering the timing of this right. Someone correct me if I’m wrong.) To be precise, Keldon Johnson, and Wembanyama shaved their heads. There were a few other guys who trimmed their hair and some others who were threatened. Carter Bryant was told that if he blew three more dunks before the season ended that he’d have to shave his head. Instead of the ambitious dunks that he’d been missing repeatedly during games, he switched to easy two-handed shove-it-in-the-basket for a few weeks out of fear KJ wasn’t joking. 

Anyway, the first game after going bald, Wemby and the team started sprinting out of the gate and they have won first quarters, or at least the beginning of the game, like clockwork ever since. It sure is fascinating when a team flips a switch like that. Makes you wonder about how it’s done, when sometimes it takes players years to get out of some ruts. 

You said you love Castle, so I’ll admit that I’m crazy about OG. He’s the guy I’ve wanted on the Spurs ever since his name was tossed around while SA came to terms with Toronto on the Leonard/DeRozan deal. Can’t tell you how jealous I was when NY nabbed him. That said, my heart belongs to Josh Hart. I don’t know what it is about guys like him and Alex Caruso, but I can’t ignore it. Hart seems to always be in the right place at the right time making the right play precisely the way necessary to end an opponent’s run or preserve his team’s flow. Plus, he plays with so much passion and savvy and he reads exactly where weird rebounds are headed so frequently it’s infuriating. 

Anyway, thanks for the player personality breakdown, it’s helpful to understand the opposition better when I haven’t been watching them much this season and only know them by the way they play against San Antonio. I’d have never thought that about Bridges, who’s always seemed imperturbable to me. 

As for what I expect in Game 4, I’ll begin with what I don’t expect: another impeccable shooting performance from Hart and Clarkson. I also don’t expect KAT to Chet the bed again. He’s too good a player to disappear two games in a row, right? I also don’t expect Fox to go 4-14 again, no matter how bad his ankle is. I could see the Spurs continuing to get Wemby closer to the rim. So far, across the three games, his average shot distance has gone from 17 feet to 13 to 10.6. I don’t know that it’ll get lower than that, but I like SA’s chances as long as it doesn’t start going up again. I expect more great defense from both teams, and I expect a tied series heading back to Texas. 

What do you expect from G4, and who do you think will have the biggest bounce back game?

R.R.

Chet the bed. That’s so deliciously mean, I have to add that to my repertoire.

I shaved my head once, either just before or at age 21. I had applied midnight black hair dye and, while waiting for it to set, I drank too much Goldschläger (any Goldschläger is too much Goldschläger). After a while, I checked and saw that my hair had turned Smurf blue. Hammered, impatient, and disappointed, I decided to shave it all off. The next day I shambled into work, hungover and looking like I was wearing a blue skullcap. The dye had stained my scalp. My coworkers assumed I’d been in some accident. How come nobody told me that shaving one’s head is the secret to improving basketball skills? If I’d known, I would’ve gone straight to the Y to school some fools . . . with my bald, blue head . . . covered in nicks from the dull razor I had used. . . .

The Knicks don’t do anything quite as interesting when the team needs a jolt. Brunson, the team captain, calls a meeting. They air it out. They play better afterward. Since the entire Knicks organization keeps secrets tighter than the Genovese crime family, details of team meetings are never leaked. If any Knick ever shows up on the injury report with broken thumbs, rest assured he’s a rat.

You and I seem to appreciate similar qualities in hoopers. I have equal amounts of affection for Anunoby and Hart. On any given day, I’ll call either one my current favorite Knick. When Josh arrived in New York in a swap with Portland for Cam Reddish, I was unfamiliar with his game but a friend from Seattle said, “You are going to love him.” ‘Tis true. These days, I consider him a modern-day Dennis Rodman with better offensive skills. Although I’ve mentioned this in posts, no one has congratulated me for this genius comp. You watched the Worm play, I assume. Is the comparison apt?

That’s an interesting stat about Wemby inching closer and closer to the rim. I expect Mike Brown to scheme a response to that. As for who will have a bounce-back game, can I answer “the whole team”? Shamet will sink three to four threes, Bridges will get his shot count up, and KAT will log a 20-10 double-double. With their cold shooting spell snapped, I predict the Knicks to take a 3-1 lead back to Texas.

By the way, congratulations to us for not mentioning the officiating. That grenade would blow up the comments section. Oh, but look at the time! I’ve overstayed my welcome already. Good luck to you tonight (but Knicks Forever, of course).

J.R.

Congratulations, Russell, you have activated: Fraternizing with the Enemy’s, lightning round! Ready, begin!

I see your nicked-and-dyed scalp story and raise you a Wemby in the park sketching a statue on the day of the game story. 

If broken thumbs means a rat, what does a broken hand mean? 

The “Rodman, but with offense” comp is pretty apt, but I gotta go back to Alex Caruso. Both guys embody modern basketball through the lens of Wayne Gretzky, the man who skated to where the puck was going to be. Josh teleports across the court to materialize with the ball in his hands. 

No, you may not answer, “the whole team” but thanks for playing! See you on the road back to San Antonio!

Fraternizing with the Enemy: Paddle Boats, Blue Skulls, and the Battle for Game 4

Jun 8, 2026; New York, New York, USA; San Antonio Spurs guard Stephon Castle (5) guards New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) during game three of the 2026 NBA Finals at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images | Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Here is my latest conversation with J.R. Wilco of Pounding the Rock. On Monday night, the Knicks shooting went cold and the Spurs handed them their first loss in 13 games. Now, with New York clinging to a 2-1 lead in the NBA Finals, they must defend home court and prevent a series tie before heading backing to San Antonio. Can they do it? Read on to find out what these dashing, highly-paid basketball experts think.

Here are links if you missed part 1part 2, and part 3.

J.R. 

So, the Spurs showed a few things last night and we now know that they can:

1. Beat NY
2. Win in MSG
3. Stay composed in an intense clutch game in the Finals. 

All of those are important, but I’d say the third is the biggest deal. First, it unlocks the other two. Second, because they’ve been shaky down the stretch in games going back to before Wemby joined the team. 

For years, the knock on San Antonio was that despite their talent, and even though they could stay with teams through three quarters, they couldn’t win games. (I call that a talent gap, but some people call it not knowing how to win — potato potahto). Then the gripe became that they could build a lead, but couldn’t hold onto it. Then they could hold onto leads but couldn’t win close games. Then they could win close regular season games but not close playoff games. Close playoff games but not close Finals games…

You can see where this is going; it’s not like it’s a particularly rare development path. What’s unusual about it is how quickly they’ve moved through these stages to the point that now it’s reasonable to wonder whether they could be the first team to come back and win The Finals after trailing 0-2. I know I brought up pressure in our last conversation but it seems even more important after Game 3, because the series is for sure going back to San Antonio now, and none of the Knickerbockers are going to feel comfortable about the possibility of coming back home for Game 6 down 3-2. Which means they have to go up 3-1. Which brings us to mental toughness. 

I’ll be honest, there were several times last night that I felt like the Knicks were about to put the game and the series away. After the flagrant review of Castle’s ugly looking foul on Brunson, I thought you guys had it. After the challenge that turned Victor’s three into zero points, I thought you guys had it. After Jaylen’s layup cut it to, (whatever it was) I thought you would take it home. But Wemby and the boys kept believing and kept making plays and now we are where we are. And my question is, at what point did you realize Game Three was slipping away?

R.R.

One summer, I took my kids out in a four-pedal paddle boat. We struggled to fit everyone in—my oldest was already over six feet tall, my stepson and I each weighed about 200 lbs., and my third son was scared for his life. Sam had good reason to be worried. We didn’t get more than 10 feet from the dock when the boat started to noticeably move in a vertical direction. Down. We all foot-pedaled furiously back toward the dock, but slowly, ever so slowly, the S.S. Guppy approached the waterline. Despite our frantic attempts to save ourselves, we watched the disaster unfold in slow motion as we all sank into the drink.

That was how it felt to watch the Knicks shoot 7-of-27 in the fourth quarter of Game Three.

Expecting the Knicks to win 15 straight playoff games was unrealistic. But they had not lost in 46 days, so a little irrationality was permissible.

We always assume that the bright lights and stars at MSG will rattle the opponent. Sometimes it swings the other way. In Game Three, the young Spurs were cold-blooded from the start, while the home team stumbled in the spotlight. Anyone watching on Monday with virgin eyes could not have identified which team was a squad of steady vets, trained under the cruel tutelage of Master Thibs, and which was a group of youngsters who jumped the development line.

One thing we might assume about confident vets is that they will dictate the pace of a game from tip-off. Not so with these Knickerbockers. All season long, they started games flat and played from behind after the first quarter. It was maddening. That changed through the first three rounds of the playoffs, but lately they have returned to their woeful ways. From my recap:

This was the first time they looked like the “old Knicks” since the first round. The lead guys started slow, the reserves provided a second-quarter lift while Towns and Brunson were split up, the play went stale again after halftime, and they hoped for Captain Clutch magic in the fourth. It was as if, after being away from the Garden for 19 days, they’d forgotten what a juggernaut they had become and, returning to their home court, reverted to their bad habits.

I say it often: first-quarter mistakes are just as impactful on the outcome as those in the fourth. New York started the game with two unforced errors and fell behind by seven points, putting themselves on the back foot for the rest of the game. With both teams so evenly matched and deserving of a championship, every brainfart is another nail in the coffin.

On that note, will the Knicks ever win a first quarter? They lost the first in Game One, 27-19, then 34-25 in Game Two, and 33-22 in Game Three. Playing from behind, they won the second quarter in all three contests. Great. But why must they put themselves at a disadvantage every single time? Every first quarter, they turn me into a sputtering, seething Lewis Black.

We must give them credit—the Spurs played their best game of the series. Castle was cooking (and boy, I dig that kid). Their distribution was excellent, their defense was hard-knuckled, and they were wise to keep Wemby away from KAT for long stretches. Both of these things can be true: San Antonio did an admirable job of keeping KAT out of the offense, and the Knicks did a lousy job of incorporating KAT into the offense. Brunson shot 15 more times than Towns. They could have at least split the difference!

Would you believe that Towns finished +8 and Bridges +11? I don’t, but it is true. It’s difficult to fathom because Bridges could not buy a bucket, and Shamet was worse. He crashed back to earth with 1-of-8 shooting and a -22 plus-minus. Shamet’s marksmanship has been a big part of New York’s postseason success. In his return to the Garden, ShamWow went ice cold. If he had made just one or two more threes, New York would be lining up the brooms.

If Mikal plays like that, Mike Brown knows better—he’s gotta sub in Shamet or Clarkson (OK, not Shamet that night). When Bridges is down, it seems like he doesn’t want to be on the court, which is weird for the guy with the longest active streak of consecutive games played. His foul on Wemby, when he had linked into his limbs like they were playing Twister, is the kind of stuff Bridges does when his confidence is shaken. If things are going well, Mikal is great. He had been in ten straight games. After a few bad turns, though, he tends to ruminate, and it affects his performance. Brown has benched him in fourth quarters before. Maybe he should have last night.

Towns can get lost in his head, too. His anxiety reveals itself differently: he gets giddy and does a lot of Gorsh, can you just believe this?-type pantomiming. When that happens, it doesn’t affect his shooting per se, but it does result in forehead-slapping fouls. Which kills momentum and leads to foul trouble . . . which sends him to the bench . . . which reduces New York’s offensive options. . . . Sigh.

Josh Hart is different. He will randomly lose confidence in his shot and then play hot potato for a few games before snapping out of it. But that never affects his overall play, he’s the same maniac throughout. Brunson is mostly a killer, but if he’s getting smacked around without calls, his anger either leads to a turnover or a dagger three to win the game.

Occasionally, in late-game, high-stakes situations, OG Anunoby gets the yips at the charity stripe. It’s one of the few flaws in my favorite Knick; otherwise, he is one of the most unflappable hoopers to ever play. While his missed free throw late in the fourth was costly, his corner three redeemed him and nearly saved the game. When it came time for that last shot, we would rather that OG had taken it (“NOT BRIDGES, NO!!” I yelled), but even if it went in, a Manhattan Miracle was still needed. They were losing by four with five seconds left. (Note that if OG had made that free throw, a longball would have tied it. . . .)

Nevertheless, despite so much going wrong, I also thought the Knicks were right about to bust open the game many times. There is a lot of complaining in NY about the officiating (some warranted), but ultimately, the Knicks lost because they missed too many shots. We doubt they will misfire so badly in Game Four. From your side of the aisle, did this feel like a Spurs victory or a Knicks collapse? And what do you expect on Wednesday night?

J.R. 

It certainly didn’t feel like New York collapsed. Every team goes through dry spells, and after winning a few dozen games in a row (I honestly lost count), eventually you might have a poorly timed dry spell and drop a contest once a millennia or so. I’m just saying it’s a thing that happens, though it’s understandable if you’ve forgotten what it’s like in the interminable time since Knicks fans have had to suffer the indignity of taking an L.

As far as starting slow goes, man, the Spurs have been there. It was such a thing that it led to the team getting upset after a loss and shaving their heads. (I sure hope I’m remembering the timing of this right. Someone correct me if I’m wrong.) To be precise, Keldon Johnson, and Wembanyama shaved their heads. There were a few other guys who trimmed their hair and some others who were threatened. Carter Bryant was told that if he blew three more dunks before the season ended that he’d have to shave his head. Instead of the ambitious dunks that he’d been missing repeatedly during games, he switched to easy two-handed shove-it-in-the-basket for a few weeks out of fear KJ wasn’t joking. 

Anyway, the first game after going bald, Wemby and the team started sprinting out of the gate and they have won first quarters, or at least the beginning of the game, like clockwork ever since. It sure is fascinating when a team flips a switch like that. Makes you wonder about how it’s done, when sometimes it takes players years to get out of some ruts. 

You said you love Castle, so I’ll admit that I’m crazy about OG. He’s the guy I’ve wanted on the Spurs ever since his name was tossed around while SA came to terms with Toronto on the Leonard/DeRozan deal. Can’t tell you how jealous I was when NY nabbed him. That said, my heart belongs to Josh. Hart. I don’t know what it is about guys like him and Alex Caruso, but I can’t ignore it. Hart seems to always be in the right place at the right time making the right play precisely the way necessary to end an opponent’s run or preserve his team’s flow. Plus, he plays with so much passion and savvy and he reads exactly where weird rebounds are headed so frequently it’s infuriating. 

Anyway, thanks for the player personality breakdown, it’s helpful to understand the opposition better when I haven’t been watching them much this season and only know them by the way they play against San Antonio. I’d have never thought that about Bridges, who’s always seemed imperturbable to me. 

As for what I expect in Game 4, I’ll begin with what I don’t expect: another impeccable shooting performance from Hart and Clarkson. I also don’t expect KAT to Chet the bed again. He’s too good a player to disappear two games in a row, right? I also don’t expect Fox to go 4-14 again, no matter how bad his ankle is. I could see the Spurs continuing to get Wemby closer to the rim. So far, across the three games, his average shot distance has gone from 17 feet to 13 to 10.6. I don’t know that it’ll get lower than that, but I like SA’s chances as long as it doesn’t start going up again. I expect more great defense from both teams, and I expect a tied series heading back to Texas. 

What do you expect from G4, and who do you think will have the biggest bounce back game?

R.R.

Chet the bed. That’s so deliciously mean, I must add that to my repertoire.

I shaved my head once, either just before or at age 21. I had applied midnight black hair dye and, while waiting for it to set, I drank too much Goldschläger (any Goldschläger is too much Goldschläger). After a while, I checked and saw that my hair had turned Smurf blue. Hammered, impatient, and disappointed, I decided to shave it all off. The next day I shambled into work, hungover and looking like I was wearing a blue skullcap. The dye had stained my scalp. My coworkers assumed I’d been in some accident. How come nobody told me that shaving one’s head is the secret to improving basketball skills? If I’d known, I would’ve gone straight to the Y to school some fools . . . with my bald, blue head . . . covered in nicks from a dull razor. . . .

The Knicks don’t do anything quite as interesting when the team needs a jolt. Brunson, the team captain, convenes a meeting. They air it out. They play better afterward. Since the entire Knicks organization keeps secrets tighter than the Genovese crime family, details of team meetings are never leaked. If any Knick ever shows up on the injury report with broken thumbs, rest assured he’s a rat.

You and I seem to appreciate similar qualities in hoopers. I have equal amounts of affection for Anunoby and Hart. On any given day, I’ll call either one my current favorite Knick. When Josh arrived in New York in a swap with Portland for Cam Reddish, I was unfamiliar with his game but a friend from Seattle said, “You are going to love him.” ‘Tis true. These days, I consider him a modern-day Dennis Rodman with better offensive skills. Although I’ve mentioned this in posts, no one has congratulated me for this genius comp. You watched the Worm play, I assume. Is the comparison apt?

That’s an interesting stat about Wemby inching closer and closer to the rim. I expect Mike Brown to scheme a response to that. As for who will have a bounce-back game, can I answer “the whole team”? Shamet will sink three to four threes, Bridges will get his shot count up, and KAT will log a 20-10 double-double. With their cold shooting spell snapped, I predict the Knicks to take a 3-1 lead back to Texas.

By the way, congratulations to us for not discussing the officiating. That grenade would blow up the comments section. Oh, but look at the time! I’ve overstayed my welcome already. Good luck to you tonight (but Knicks Forever, of course).

J.R.

Congratulations, Russell, you have activated: Fraternizing with the Enemy’s, lightning round! Ready, begin!

I see your nicked-and-dyed scalp story and raise you a Wemby in the park sketching a statue on the day of the game story. 

If broken thumbs means a rat, what does a broken hand mean? 

The “Rodman, but with offense” comp is pretty apt, but I gotta go back to Alex Caruso. Both guys embody modern basketball through the lens of Wayne Gretzky, the man who skated to where the puck was going to be. Josh teleports across the court to materialize with the ball in his hands. 

No, you may not answer, “the whole team” but thanks for playing! See you on the road back to San Antonio!

Cavs 2026 mock draft roundup: Should they draft for skill or fit?

NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE - MARCH 15: Meleek Thomas #1 of the Arkansas Razorbacks lays in the confetti after defeating the Vanderbilt Commodores 86-75 in the 2026 SEC Men's Basketball Tournament Championship at Bridgestone Arena on March 15, 2026 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by Carly Mackler/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers will have the 29th pick in this month’s NBA Draft. We’ll see if they can find an impact player at that position.

Let’s take a look at some of the recent mock drafts to see who the experts have the Cavs taking.

The Athletic – Meleek Thomas

Sam Vecenie has the Cavs taking the 6’3”, 19-year-old from Arkansas.

Vecenie writes:

The Cavaliers will have to find a way to cut money from their books, with Dennis Schröder representing one of the easiest ways to do that. If they find a taker on the trade market for Schröder, they’ll need more instant offensive contributions off the bench, and Thomas fits that bill. He’s a highly effective shooter who can attack and handle the ball, but he does need to rein in some of his wilder decision-making issues.

Thomas was an efficient, microwave scorer during his one season at Arkansas. He averaged 15.6 points on .433/.416/.843 shooting splits. The lack of playmaking was a concern for a player of his size. Thomas averaged just 2.5 assists to one turnover per game.

The Cavs struggled to find players who could create their own shot off the bench throughout most of the regular season. Thomas has the skill set to do so, but it’s fair to wonder if the Cavs need another undersized two guard that can’t shift up to the three or handle point guard duties.

SB Nation – Henri Veesaar

Ricky O’Donnell has the Cavs selecting a seven-foot, 22-year-old from Estonia.

O’Donnell writes:

The Cavs have plenty of talent in their frontcourt already with Jarrett Allen and Evan Mobley, but they’ve never had a real stretch-five option. Veesaar could be that after hitting 42.6 percent of his threes on 94 attempts with North Carolina this season. I really enjoyed watching Veesaar’s high-low game with Caleb Wilson, and I think he could have similar success

The Cavs could certainly use an additional big to back up Allen and Mobley. Veesaar should be able to do so.

Veesaar spent three years at Arizona before transferring to UNC this past season. He averaged 17 points, 8.7 rebounds, 2.1 assists, and 1.2 blocks in 31 contests. Veesar showed that he could be a decent outside shooter as he connected on 42.6% of his three outside attempts per game.

It’s always risky to draft for need, especially this far into the draft. Getting the best talent available is usually the best bet. That said, it’d be easy to talk yourself into a center with this skillset helping the Cavs.

Yahoo Sports – Koa Peat

Kevin O’Connor has the Cavs taking a 6’9” wing from Arizona with their lone first-round pick. He writes:

The Cavaliers need some toughness in the frontcourt. There may not be a better choice in this range than Peat, whose bloodline is so loaded with offensive linemen that it’s almost funny he ended up playing basketball. His father played nine NFL seasons. His uncle was a Pro Bowl tackle. Two brothers played college ball on the line. And you can absolutely see it in how he plays: powerful, physical, relentless, and it genuinely takes something special to stop him from getting to where he wants to go. He opened the season with a 30-point game against defending champion Florida and backed it up as one of Arizona’s best players all year. The concern is that he doesn’t really shoot, doesn’t create for himself off the dribble without assistance, and he’s not going to wow anyone as a vertical athlete.

You aren’t going to get a perfect wing prospect this late in the draft. Peat certainly isn’t that. But there are plenty of reasons to talk yourself into someone who plays with his level of physicality, even if there isn’t much polish to his game yet.

Peat averaged 14.1 points, 5.6 rebounds, and 2.6 assists as a freshman. He did this on .528/.350/.623 shooting splits.

We’ll see what direction the Cavs go. The first round of the draft will be on Monday, June 23.

Do Wolves Need to Re-Sign Ayo Dosunmu?

SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS - MAY 12: Ayo Dosunmu #13 of the Minnesota Timberwolves dribbles against the San Antonio Spurs in Game Five of the Second Round of the NBA Western Conference Playoffs at Frost Bank Center on May 12, 2026 in San Antonio, Texas. 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 Alex Slitz/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Minnesota Timberwolves face an important offseason as they need to figure out how to keep pace in a competitive Western Conference.

The Wolves have a chance to remain one of the top teams in the West with the San Antonio Spurs, Oklahoma City Thunder and Denver Nuggets, among other teams, but they will need to make changes as Donte DiVincenzo’s Achilles injury will compromise his availability for at least part of the season.

“DiVincenzo’s Achilles tear has created an opening in Minnesota’s backcourt. Yet while the Timberwolves could retain Conley, who’s a free agent this summer, they’ll more likely re-sign free agent Ayo Dosunmu and use him as their fifth starter going forward,“ ESPN analyst Zach Kram wrote.

With DiVincenzo tearing his Achilles in late April, there’s potential that he may not participate in the 2026-27 season at all. This means the Wolves have to pivot and go in a different direction, but there is a natural solution with Dosunmu, who is a free agent this offseason.

The Wolves acquired Dosunmu in a trade with the Chicago Bulls back in February and acquired his bird rights in the deal. This means the Wolves have the potential to offer him money that exceeds the luxury tax and apron.

Perhaps the Wolves could trade DiVincenzo to a team that can absorb his salary to give Minnesota some cap room, but it isn’t completely necessary. That being said, with a year remaining on his contract and an injury that could keep him out for the entire season, it might be wise to move on from him and give Dosunmu a long-term extension that will establish the future of Minnesota’s backcourt.

Canis Hoopus community, how do you feel about Dosunmu’s future with the Wolves? Let us know in the comments section below.

How much more will we see from Adem Bona next season?

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - MARCH 23: Adem Bona #30 of the Philadelphia 76ers reacts during the second half against the Oklahoma City Thunder at Xfinity Mobile Arena on March 23, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 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 Emilee Chinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Through all the athletic highs and exciting signs of his potential, Adem Bona’s 2025-26 season was a mixed bag.

The flaws are clear with Bona. Unfortunately, issues like his tendency for errors and spells of too many fouls, somewhat lacking defensive rebounding, and questionable touch around the rim can be glaring when he’s having an off night. And despite some games where he’s a asserting himself as a physical rebounder, there are others where he comes short with his boxing out and positioning in that area. Considering his size, strength and explosiveness, averaging 9.0 total rebounds per 36 minutes (when he does a good job on the offensive glass with 3.7 offensive rebounds) is a touch underwhelming.

All of that led to him falling out of Nick Nurse’s rotation come the end of the playoffs. After averaging 17.4 minutes per game through the regular season and 19.3 minutes through the first three games of round one against Boston (before Joel Embiid returned), he averaged a mere 5.3 minutes through the rest of the playoffs and wasn’t a factor. Thankfully for the Sixers they had other options that could get them by (at least in the epic 3-1 comeback against the Celtics — we don’t need to relive what happened after that again). For instance, with Dominick Barlow stepping up the Sixers do have the option to downsize and embrace faster, more versatile lineups, and that takes a little pressure off Bona for next season. He’s clearly not in a position to be the Sixers’ sole option at backup five right now. But they need a reliable, genuine big to count on.

All these areas will be key to how Bona can progress in year three. His personal fouls started trending down slightly (from 6.8 per 100 possessions as a rookie to 6.0 this season), but he needs to take that a few steps further. He needs to be reliable controlling the ball, catching passes, finishing more of his opportunities in the paint that require some touch, and being a more consistent presence on the defensive glass.

All that said, Bona deserves credit for what he does do well, though. Because when he is a positive on the court, he really can excel in certain areas.

Shot-blocking rate is somewhere Bona thrives. He ranked ninth in the NBA this season in blocks per 100 possessions at 3.2. Even on a per game basis in only 17.4 minutes a night, he averaged 1.2 blocks — good enough for 18th in the league.

He has the leaping ability to elevate under the rim and deter shots in an instant, with the recovery speed and motor to get back for blocks when he’s beat. The explosiveness to fly around as a help defender, or the agility to switch onto a range of positions and stay with drivers from the perimeter all the way to the basket. When Bona is avoiding fouls and alert off the ball, he can truly energize the Sixers’ defense and be a major playmaker protecting the paint.

At the other end of the floor, Bona can do some of the simple things well. When it comes to finishing plays, Bona can explode as a lob catcher and dunk with force when he gets good opportunities. His length and vertical make it easy for him to rise above opponents at times, and his speed down the floor in transition is impressive. He also improved his free throw shooting a little this year, up from 67.0 percent as a rookie to a respectable 70.8 percent.

When things become a little more complicated, though — whether he has to make a catch in traffic and requires more touch and control to finish off the glass or through defenders — is where Bona can fall short. It’s why despite having what should be a very simple and efficient shot profile, he made a modest 66.9 percent of his shots within three feet of the basket this season. For reference, Kelly Oubre Jr., who clearly takes on far more difficult drives, shot 68.9 percent on such attempts. Any improvement there would be key for Bona being able to reliably contribute on offense and maintain increased minutes.

With Andre Drummond set to hit free agency, we could see the Sixers bring in a new veteran center to give Bona some new competition next season. The young big should still have some more opportunity to play and develop next year.

His shot-blocking, athleticism, and defensive versatility with his rare mobility are traits that can’t be taken for granted. If he can add any more polish to his offensive ability and reduce some of his defensive miscues, there’s still a clear path to him becoming a quality backup center.

But Nick Nurse’s patience is only going to get shorter in Bona’s third season. The Sixers can’t wait forever for Bona, and he still has a way to go. It’ll be interesting to see how he looks after another offseason and what he has to offer come October.

Knicks vs. Spurs – NBA Finals – Game 4 – predictions: Odds, recent stats, trends and best bets for June 10

Game 4 of the NBA Finals is tonight at Madison Square Garden with the Knicks holding a 2-1 series lead following San Antonio’s 115-111 win in Game 3. After stealing the first two games on the road, New York looked poised to take full control of the series with a seven-point lead at halftime, but the Spurs responded in a must-win spot, snapping the Knicks’ 13-game playoff win streak. Game 4 offers the Knicks a second opportunity to all but end the series but the Spurs can even the series and grab all the momentum with a win that would even the series as it heads back to San Antonio for Game 5.

The Spurs’ second-half adjustments were the obvious difference in Game 3. Victor Wembanyama (32 points, 8 rebounds, 6 assists) and Stephon Castle (23 points, 5 rebounds, 5 assists) set the tone throughout the game with their physical play and ability to get to the rim. The Spurs tightened defensively and dictated the pace late, outexecuting the Knicks down the stretch despite multiple New York rallies. De’Aaron Fox (8 assists, 2 turnovers) and the Spurs were also better at controlling pace and limiting turnovers. San Antonio had eight turnovers while New York turned the ball over 13 times.
             
A series is always about adjustments. San Antonio got Wembanyama involved early and lower in the post in Game 3 AND Castle really pressured Brunson. The Knicks did not move the ball on offense as they did in the first two games and that allowed the Spurs’ defenders an extra beat to switch and help as needed. Other than OG Anunoby who appears able to get to his spots whether that be in the corner for a spot up three or at the rim, the Knicks looked uncomfortable in Game 3.

The biggest storylines to watch in Game 4:
-Can the Knicks start faster than they have to date in this series?
-Can the Spurs keep the Knicks from dominating the Second Quarter?
-Can the Knicks get Karl-Anthony Towns (11 points) and Mikal Bridges (2 points) back on track?
-Will the Knicks respond to the Spurs’ physicality of Game 3?

Lets take a closer look at tonight’s matchup and take into consideration lineups, injuries, and other factors affecting the line and total.

We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on how to catch tipoff, odds courtesy of DraftKings recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.

After 24 years, the NBA was back on NBC and Peacock this season. Thanks for tuning in and all the positive feedback as we combined the nostalgia of an iconic era with the innovative future of basketball coverage. The NBA on NBC YouTube channel continues to deliver fans must-see highlights, analysis, and exclusive and unique content. 

Game Details and How to Watch Game 4 Live: Knicks vs. Spurs

  • Date: Wednesday, June 10, 2026
  • Time: 8:30PM EST
  • Site: Madison Square Garden
  • City: New York, NY
  • Network/Streaming: ABC

Rotoworld has you covered with all the latest NBA Player News for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!

NBA Finals Game 4 Odds: Knicks vs. Spurs

The latest odds as of Wednesday courtesy of DraftKings:

  • Moneyline: New York Knicks (-130), San Antonio Spurs (+110)
  • Spread: Knicks -2.5
  • Total: 216.5 points

This game opened with the Knicks favored by 1.5 and the Game Total set at 215.5.

Be sure to check out DraftKings for all the latest game odds & player props for every matchup this week on the NBA schedule! 

Expected Starting Lineups for NBA Finals Game 4: Knicks vs. Spurs

New York Knicks

  • PG Jalen Brunson (32 points, 5 assists, 5 turnovers in Game 3)
  • SG Mikal Bridges (2 points, 2 assists in Game 3)
  • C Karl-Anthony Towns (11 points, 8 rebounds in Game 3)
  • SF Josh Hart (16 points, 9 rebounds in Game 3)
  • PF OG Anunoby (28 points, 3-7 from 3-point range in Game 3)

San Antonio Spurs

  • PG De’Aaron Fox (12 points, 8 assists in Game 3)
  • SG Stephon Castle (23 points on 8 of 14 shooting in Game 3)
  • SF Devin Vassell (11 points, 4 rebounds in Game 3)
  • PF Julian Champagnie (12 points, 1 rebound in Game 3)
  • C Victor Wembanyama (32 points, 8 rebounds, and 6 assists in Game 3)

Injury Report: Knicks vs. Spurs

New York Knicks

  • No injuries to report

San Antonio Spurs

  • David Jones Garcia (ankle) has been declared OUT for tonight’s game

Important stats, trends and insights: Knicks vs. Spurs – Game 4

  • The Knicks are 36-12 at home this season
  • The Spurs are 36-15 on the road this season
  • The Spurs are 58-44-2 ATS this season
  • The Knicks are 56-43-1 ATS this season
  • The OVER has cashed in 47 of the Knicks’ 100 games this season (47-53)
  • The OVER has cashed in 48 of the Spurs’ 104 games this season (48-56)
  • Mikal Bridges has been a positive factor in the scoring column every other game scoring 20 points in Game 2 sandwiched by games of 9 and 2 points in the 1st and 3rd games
  • Dylan Harper is just 2-15 from beyond the arc in this series but is 15-25 from inside the three-point line
  • Jalen Brunson scored 32 points in Game 3 but took 25 shots (11-25)

Rotoworld Best Bet

Please bet responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, call the National Gambling Helpline at 1-800-522-4700.

Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the NBA calendar based on data points like recent performance, head-to-head player matchups, trends information and projected game totals.
 
Once the model is finished running, we put its projections next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Monday’s Game 4 between the Knicks and the Spurs:

  • Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Knicks on the Moneyline
  • Spread: Rotoworld Bet is recommending a play on the Knicks -2.5
  • Total: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Game Total OVER 216.5

Player Props:

  • Devin Vassell 3+ 3-pointers (+111) – the volume continues to be there and the prop has cashed in the last 2 games and 5 times in the last 9 games
  • Karl-Anthony Towns 4+ Assists (-148) – did not cash in Game 3 but if you expect the Knicks’ offense will flow through him as it has so often in the playoffs, the opportunity will be there again tonight
  • De’Aaron Fox 6+ Assists (-143) – could ladder this - 7+ (+132), 8+ (+242) – IF you believe the Spurs ultimately tie the series tonight.

Follow our experts on socials to keep up with all the latest content from the staff: 

  • Jay Croucher (@croucherJD)
  • Drew Dinsick (@whale_capper) 
  • Vaughn Dalzell (@VmoneySports) 
  • Trysta Krick (@Trysta_Krick)