Fraternizing with the Enemy: A Premature Closing Conversation with Pounding the Rock’s JR Wilco

SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS - MAY 12: Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs and Ayo Dosunmu #13 of the Minnesota Timberwolves react during the first quarter 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 Ronald Cortes/Getty Images) | Getty Images

I am joined by Pounding the Rock’s (our Spurs sister site) JR Wilco for yet another parlay about the series as it continues. With the Spurs now up 3-2, on the verge of closing out a competitive second round matchup, much of our conversation shifted to if this series is about to end, or if it has another twist still in store.


J.R. Wilco

Before the series began, I was terrified of Anthony Edwards destroying my playoff hopes and dreams. And the more tape I watch of this series, the more I’m coming to feel like San Antonio is pretty lucky that he’s not 100%. The Spurs are throwing the kitchen sink at him, and he still regularly wins the play. I can’t imagine how frustrated with him I’d be if he was fully healthy.

Is it just me, or are some of the Timberwolves getting frustrated with Julius Randle? I’m not talking about how his scoring has fallen off, everybody goes through slumps. I’m talking about his effort level. Jaden McDaniels’ body language seems to be screaming something like, “Dude, we’re all trying out here. Want to join us?” Anyway, I haven’t been watching the team all year, maybe that’s just a dynamic you’re used to.  

SAN ANTONIO, TX. – MAY 2026: Minnesota Timberwolves forward Julius Randle (30) and Minnesota Timberwolves center Rudy Gobert (27) react as they head into halftime against the San Antonio Spurs in Game 5 at Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas, on Tuesday, May 12, 2026. Minnesota Timberwolves vs. San Antonio Spurs, NBA Western Conference Semifinals, Game 5. NBA Playoffs. (Photo by Carlos Gonzalez/The Minnesota Star Tribune via Getty Images) | Star Tribune via Getty Images

Leading up to Game 5, I was pretty concerned that Minnesota was going to try some bid for retaliation against Victor Wembanyama’s extracurricular elbow. And outside of the one play where Reid went up for a hook shot and chopped at Wemby’s neck, I didn’t see anything other than your basic psychological warfare. So, a couple of questions: were you expecting them to retaliate, and do you think anyone in the Minnesota camp actually thought that mind games would work with Victor?

Thilo

Despite his reputation as a bad boy conflict initiator, Jaden McDaniels has not really gone after anyone in a meaningful way outside of his own hand. If that’s the head of the “I want to fight” snake, I didn’t really expect anyone else on the roster to make that call. 

I also think the Spurs haven’t built up enough hatred from the Wolves for them to try to start anything. The Nuggets deserve that animosity. The Lakers do as well. NBA on TNT (and its modern equivalent) did.

The Randle angle is the larger story. He is, with no exaggeration, playing to the standard of being one of the least valuable playoff players in the past 30 years of the NBA in this run. Especially after last year’s run had the inverse situation (Randle had a career best series against the Lakers as part of their gentleman’s sweep), I think the team is just hugely disappointed. They dragged him forward during the Nuggets series, but you can’t sport a negative star against a team this good.

Randle’s defense on Wemby remains the only silver lining of his play in this series. I feel I can’t accurately describe the level to which the eye test matches the numbers. Randle’s made field goals are keeping pace with his total fouls. His turnovers are doing the same to his assists.

Part of this is that Randle’s favorite passing partner, Donte Divincenzo, is out for the year with a torn achilles. But even that modicum of credit can’t undo all the bad.

In just a few words, Randle has been the Spurs second best player. And, with respect to Dylan Harper, it hasn’t been close. I fully expect Julius to be on another team next year. The question is if Rudy Gobert will join him.

However, let’s go back to that second best player question. It seems clear to me, as it does to most of Wolves twitter, that Harper is the second scariest player for the Wolves outside of that horrifying alien you guys call a center.

While DeAaron Fox and Stephon Castle continue to struggle with the defense looks they’re seeing, Dylan Harper was absolutely fantastic in Games 4 and 5. He was efficient, he got to the line, and in the fourth quarter, it was his constant driving that kept the Spurs in it when their shots went cold.

MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA – MAY 08: Dylan Harper #2 of the San Antonio Spurs knocks the ball away from Anthony Edwards #5 of the Minnesota Timberwolves during the fourth quarter in Game Three of the Second Round of the NBA Western Conference Playoffs at Target Center on May 08, 2026 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. (Photo by David Berding/Getty Images) | Getty Images

I’m curious if you think a move to the starting lineup is coming, as one is almost certainly in store for the Wolves. What would stop you from making that move? What scares you most about a potential Wolves rotational change?

J.R.

My kids are finally old enough and so I’m watching The Office with them for the first time. And right now I feel like Angela trying to choose between Andy and Dwight, because I really like Castle, but Harper is blowing up. I want to complement Dylan and talk about how awesome he has been and what his efficiency is doing for the Spurs in limited minutes, but I don’t want Stephon to know that I’m thinking all these things. 

Fox is such a steady hand and his ability to manipulate the defense has been huge, but the rookie had that one on four fast break where Ayo tried to stop him, but he gave the double behind the back move (which I may not have even known was a thing) and took off to dunk it on everyone’s head. Only none of the four guys in white jerseys even got off the floor, so it turned into a showboat dunk instead. 

Stop asking me difficult questions because I don’t want De’Aaron to drive a Prius over to my house and drive me into the hedges. I could talk about this for much longer, but you’ve asked me other questions so I’ll just adjust my clothes as I come back from the warehouse and hope that nobody notices.

There’s no way Coach Mitch adjusts the starting lineup at this point of the season. The last time, a difficult decision had to be made about the rotation, Johnson handled it perfectly though it took some time. Now Keldon Johnson has a 6MOTY trophy to show for it and the team is excited for him following in Manu’s footsteps. But the playoffs are not the time to mess with touchy situations like that unless the end is nigh. 

As far as what scares me about Minnesota changing things up, that’s easy. I feel like everything I’ve seen so far the series has led me to expect the Spurs to win Game 6. Everybody has shown their cards, tactically, speaking, and so if all else remains the same, there isn’t much to keep the status quo from continuing. The Spurs are up 3-2, and so I like the status quo. If it’s all the same to you I’d prefer to keep things the way they are. Can we do that please?

Thilo

Can we? Maybe. Would I like us to? Absolutely not.

That being said, I’m sure this wasn’t the intention, but after back to back years of getting smacked by teams that are clearly in a different tier from these Wolves, I am more excited for this off-season than I should be considering it (likely) isn’t ending with a title and parade.

I am personally always in favor of tweaking things until the very end. Identity is found in continuity. Ceiling is found in change.

With that in mind, it seems unavoidable now to see that the Wolves are certainly a good playoff team, but not nearly good enough to win a title in the current Western Conference. 

That leads us back to the question of where Randle and Gobert will be. And I am incredibly excited to see what Tim Connely and Co. will do with an off-season full of question marks and two teams that have clearly outpaced them.

The series isn’t over just yet though, and calling Game 6 would be premature. Maybe we’ll be back here, maybe we won’t but all we can hope for is a good game!

Gonzaga Bulldogs in the NBA: 2026 Playoffs Report

Nov 12, 2025; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA; Oklahoma City Thunder center Chet Holmgren (7) drives to the basket against Los Angeles Lakers forward Rui Hachimura (28) during the second quarter at Paycom Center. Mandatory Credit: Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images | Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images

13 former Gonzaga Bulldogs suited up in the NBA this season, setting a new program record. As the 2026 playoffs get underway, seven of them punched postseason tickets, with one more agonizingly close to joining them. From a reigning champion hunting a repeat to a journeyman veteran soaking up garbage minutes on the hottest team in basketball, the Zag pipeline has never looked deeper. Here’s where every former Bulldog stands as the playoff race starts heating up.

Chet Holmgren | Oklahoma City Thunder | Western Conference Finals

OKC swept Phoenix in the first round, and then ran through and swept the Lakers in four (LeBron’s team never led a single game at any point). They’re now sitting in the Western Conference Finals at 8-0 waiting on whoever survives Spurs-Wolves. The defending champs are doing exactly what defending champs are supposed to do.

The Thunder were the #1 seed for the second straight year, Holmgren was a first-time All-Star and DPOY finalist, and he signed a five-year $240 million max extension last July. His regular-season line was 17.1 points, 8.9 rebounds, and a team-high 1.9 blocks across 69 starts.

His playoff numbers are actually better than last year’s championship run: 18.6 points, 9.1 rebounds, 1.8 blocks, 60% from the floor, compared to 15.2 and 8.7 boards across 23 games in 2025. The signature moment came in Game 2 against the Lakers when OKC’s Shai Gilgeous-Alexander landed in foul trouble in the third. Holmgren took over in his absence and finished with 22 points and nine boards. OKC won by 18. 

Only two former Zags have ever won a ring (Adam Morrison and Austin Daye), and neither played a meaningful role for their respective squads. If Holmgren and the Thunder hoist the championship trophy once again, he’ll be the first former Bulldog to win back-to-back titles while actually playing a meaningful role: big minutes on a big contract as the second-best player on the best team in the sport. 


Kelly Olynyk | San Antonio Spurs | SAS leads MIN 3-2

Thirteen years in the league. Seven teams. Kelly Olynyk has seen everything, and this season he landed on the best roster of his career. The role is what it is: 3.2 points, 1.8 rebounds, 1.2 assists in under 10 minutes a night, zero starts across 42 games. But Olynyk is a guy who knows how to stick, and the Spurs are glad to have the veteran insurance behind Wembanyama.

And what a team to be part of. San Antonio went 62-20 this season, second-best record in the league, and have looked every bit that caliber in the playoffs. Wembanyama is doing some unprecedented basketball things: 27 points, 17 rebounds, and 5 blocks in the Game 5 throttling of Minnesota that pushed the Spurs to a 3-2 series lead. 

Game 6 is tonight in Minnesota, and if the Spurs close it out, Olynyk would be heading to the Western Conference Finals for just the second time in his career, the first being that remarkable 2020 Miami Heat run where he dropped 24 in a Finals game against the Lakers. He’s been around long enough to know what this moment is worth. 


Rui Hachimura | Los Angeles Lakers | Eliminated — Second Round (swept by OKC)

The Lakers went out in a sweep, but Rui Hachimura had nothing to do with it. Over 10 playoff games (six against Houston in the first round, four against OKC), he averaged 17.5 points, 4.0 rebounds, and 3.3 threes per game while shooting 54.9% from the floor and 56.9% from three. That three-point percentage is the highest in NBA playoff history.

He scored in double digits in every single game. He hit five or more threes twice. In Game 4 against OKC, with the Lakers’ season on the line and Hachimura coming off 25 points on 9-of-15 shooting, coach JJ Redick pulled him from the floor for the final 12 seconds, trailing by three, and drew up a play for Austin Reaves that didn’t work. The internet did not take it well, and honestly, fair enough.

The kicker is that Hachimura heads into the summer as an unrestricted free agent off the best postseason of his career. His regular season line was a more modest 11.5 points in 32 minutes, but the playoffs revealed what Gonzaga fans already knew: the dude’s a winner. The Lakers would be wise to bring him back. See below for some Zag on Zag playoff violence.


Jalen Suggs | Orlando Magic | Eliminated, First Round (lost Game 7 to Detroit)

The fifth overall pick in 2021 keeps adding chapters to a career that consistently delivers on the defensive end while leaving the offensive ceiling somewhat unresolved. This season was his best yet in terms of playmaking: a career-high 5.4 assists to go with 13.9 points and 1.9 steals across 57 games, though injuries again cost him 25 regular-season games.

The Magic had to claw through the play-in just to face the top-seeded Pistons, which made their seven-game push all the more impressive. Suggs had his moments: 16 points in Game 1, 19 points in Game 2. But Game 7 told the familiar story. Six points on 2-of-9 shooting, four steals and two blocks, a guy who showed up fully on one end and couldn’t find his shot when it mattered most. Orlando lost 116-94 and went home.

At 24, he still has time to round it out, and the defensive reputation is legitimate. But for a former Zag billed as a two-way star coming out of Spokane, the scoring consistency and injury concerns linger.


Julian Strawther | Denver Nuggets | Eliminated, First Round (lost to Minnesota 4-2)

The frustrating part of the Strawther story is the timing. Across a 57-game regular season, he averaged 7.2 points in a limited role, but when Denver’s injury situation opened the door in the final stretch, he walked through it: 22 points against OKC, then 25 against San Antonio in the regular season finale, looking every bit like a guy who belonged in the rotation. Then the playoffs started, the full roster came back, and coach David Adelman dropped him entirely. He was a DNP by Game 2 against Minnesota.

Denver lost to the Timberwolves in six. Strawther watched.

He is 24, still on a rookie deal, and the shot’s still there. But three years in, the NBA has yet to deliver him a consistent role on a team that has consistently needed wings. That’s a front office problem as much as a player one, and next year’s situation bears watching.


Corey Kispert | Atlanta Hawks | Eliminated, First Round (lost to New York 4-2)

Corey’s season has two acts. Act one: a bench role in Washington on a rebuilding team going nowhere. Act two: a January trade to Atlanta as part of the Trae Young deal, landing him on a Hawks squad that nobody expected to make the playoffs, and then proceeded to go 46-36 and win the 6-seed outright. In 39 games with Atlanta, Kispert averaged 9.2 points, 2.3 rebounds, and 1.5 threes in 18.2 minutes off the bench. Solid. Useful. Exactly what a role player on a good team is supposed to be.

The playoff run ended at the hands of the Knicks in six. Kispert’s Game 6 line was four points on 1-of-7 shooting in a 140-89 blowout.

He is under contract through next season and will turn 27 in March. The shooting stroke is as smooth as it’s ever been, and his role in Atlanta is well defined. For a former Gonzaga wing who came into the league with questions about whether the shot would travel, the answer has been yes, consistently, for five years now.


Drew Timme | Los Angeles Lakers | Did Not Make the Playoff Roster

Gonzaga’s all-time leading scorer spent the year bouncing between the Lakers and their G League affiliate in South Bay, once again searching for the right team to make the right choice and just give him an actual contract. When the Lakers’ frontcourt got thin mid-season, Timme stepped in and made the most of it: a career-high 21 points against Portland, LeBron James publicly calling him “an NBA player” after the game, genuine organizational buzz around a guy who had been fighting for a foothold in the league for three years.

Then the playoffs arrived, and the Lakers had one roster spot to fill. They chose guard Nick Smith Jr. over Timme, citing backcourt depth with Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves both banged up. Timme’s two-way contract made him ineligible regardless, and that was that.

He finished the regular season averaging 3.4 points in 23 NBA appearances, numbers that don’t begin to capture what he showed in his best moments. The G League numbers do: averaging over 24 points per game with South Bay this season. At 25, he needs a standard contract and a real role, and there’s enough tape now to suggest he deserves a shot at both.


Thirteen Zags on NBA rosters, seven in the playoffs, one hunting a second straight championship, and another setting all-time playoff shooting records. From Holmgren anchoring a dynasty to Timme scratching for every minute on a two-way deal, the full spectrum of what an NBA career looks like runs right through Gonzaga’s alumni list this year. 

Should the Knicks want to face the Pistons or the Cavs in the Eastern Conference Finals?

DETROIT, MICHIGAN - MAY 13: Cade Cunningham #2 of the Detroit Pistons drives to the basket against Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers during the first quarter in Game Five of the Second Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs at Little Caesars Arena on May 13, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. 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 Gregory Shamus/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Today marks five days without Knicks basketball, as a week-long wait to determine their opponent in the Eastern Conference Finals slowly draws to an end. Whether it’s tonight in Cleveland or Sunday in Detroit, the Knicks will know their opponents soon enough.

But who should Knicks fans want to face with a trip to the NBA Finals on the line? Well, with a massive Game 6 just hours away, let’s break down the pros and cons of both potential opponents as we creep closer to the Knicks finally getting back on the hardwood.

Why they should want the Pistons:

Lack of ballhandlers around Cade Cunningham: The worst-kept secret around Detroit’s offense is their lack of creating offense when Cunningham sits or doesn’t have the ball in his hands. St. John’s product Daniss Jenkins has served as the team’s secondary ballhandler, but has been extremely inconsistent. There have been times when, if Cunningham is held under wraps and is turning the ball over, their offense grinds to a halt.

Limited 3-point shooting: The Knicks’ defense has been one of the best in basketball since late January, but they’ve still struggled in one key metric. Defending the perimeter has been a massive problem all season long, and they’ve allowed teams to grill them from beyond the arc many times, including the Pistons themselves. That said, the law of averages seems to suggest that a team that was 17th in 3pt% and 29th in 3pa per game isn’t much of a threat behind the arc.

They’ve actually shot it pretty well overall in this series against Cleveland, but they continue to attempt under 30 per game. A team shooting 10/25 from three is less impactful than a team shooting 14/35, even if both are 40%, so the Knicks won’t have to worry about Celtics-esque barrages even on good shooting nights.

Jalen Duren’s struggles: You know what’s interesting? Of the 12 games Duren has missed this season, three of them were against the Knicks, so he hasn’t played them since Game 6 of last year’s first-round matchup. Even though we didn’t see him live, he put up an All-NBA caliber season and truly emerged as one of the league’s premier centers.

And then the playoffs started. For some unbelievable reason, he’s been utterly putrid through 12 games, averaging just 10.1 points and 8.3 rebounds on 50% from the field, all massive drops from the regular season. He’s looked timid at the rim and is getting benched late in games for Paul Reed. Unless he can find something in the next two games, you’ll be looking at Detroit’s second-best player entering the series as a startled mess of himself, giving Cade even less help.

Cade’s turnover woes: Speaking of Cade, he cannot stop turning it over. The Knicks thrived off turning over Tyrese Maxey and the Sixers in the four-game sweep in the second round and they suddenly face someone who’s rewriting the record books with turnovers.

In Cunningham’s 18 career playoff games, he’s averaging over five turnovers a night. He’s had three games of at least eight turnovers, five games of at least seven turnovers, and nine games of at least six turnovers. He’s never had a game with fewer than three, and his playmaking impact is similarly diminished as his assist-to-turnover ratio plummets. On a team with not many secondary scorers and playmakers, the scrutiny on the head of the snake becomes all the more focused.

Why they shouldn’t want the Pistons:

🚫 Regular-season struggles: The regular season does not matter in the playoffs; we know this from years of trial and error, but it’s at least a datapoint ahead of any series. The Pistons went 3-0 with a +84 point differential in three meetings with the Knicks this season. For about 10 out of those 12 quarters, it looked like a contender playing a G-League team. The Knicks’ offense, which was 4th best in the sport all season long, was held to 90, 80, and 111 points in three meetings.

Of course, these meetings took place between January 1 and February 20. These teams are very different from what they were in that snapshot of the season, and there are injury factors on both sides. That said, the Pistons would enter this series with a feeling of “we punked these guys all year long” rather than the feeling of last year’s defeat.

🚫 No home court advantage: If the Knicks played the Cavs, they’d get to play four out of seven games at the World’s Most Famous Arena, a place where they’re 34-11. If they played Detroit, they’d have to travel to Little Caesars Arena for a true road game, not like we saw in Atlanta and Philly.

🚫 Ausar Thompson and a hellacious defense: What makes the Pistons an extremely tough team to play is the utter devastation of their defense. Their bigs play physical, they have guards and wings who are willing defenders, and, of course, they have Ausar Thompson. There are not many players in the NBA that I think can properly stick with Jalen Brunson, but the Thompson twins are two of them. No team gave this offense more fits than Detroit this season.

🚫 Revenge factor: Despite dominating the Knicks in the regular season, the Pistons will have a sour taste in their mouths after losing an incredibly competitive first-round series a year ago to a very similar Knicks team. We saw these guys play with a level of fire and desire that you rarely see in the regular season during the three meetings, and with a spot in the NBA Finals on the line, I cannot imagine the intensity would drop one bit.

Why they should want the Cavaliers:

Lack of a Brunson stopper: Jalen Brunson would rather be guarded by another VJ Edgecombe or Kelly Oubre Jr. than by Dyson Daniels. The Cavs have Dean Wade and Max Strus as their primary options to guard the Knicks’ captain, and while both are bigger and more formidable than Edgecombe, they lack the level of sheer smothering that Ausar can give. The key to winning any series is a great series from Brunson, and he’s more likely to do that against Cleveland’s defense.

Overall defensive concerns: Donovan Mitchell and James Harden aren’t two abysmal defenders, but both are relatively small and will be hunted by the likes of Brunson and a hopefully healthy OG Anunoby on switches. Cleveland isn’t the most stout defensively, even if they roster a former Defensive Player of the Year winner.

Turnovers: No team has been more turnover-prone than Cleveland in this postseason (well, except the Lakers) with 16.6 a game. They’re also allowing a playoff-high 22.1 PPG off turnovers, something that plays directly into the hands of a Knicks team that has feasted off turnovers (18.6 points off 14.6 opponent turnovers).

With the on-and-off nature of Mitchell and Harden in this postseason, it seems like there will always be one of them to target and turn over to get easy points in transition.

Mitchell Robinson: Jarrett Allen and Evan Mobley are still recovering from the PR hit from how Robinson victimized them in the postseason three years ago and both have been heavily scrutinized whenever they underperform in the playoffs since.

With Mobley being shockingly absent on the boards over the last few games even with Duren’s disappearing act, you have to imagine Mike Brown is licking his chops at the possibility of deploying Karl-Anthony Towns and Robinson together against Cleveland’s double big lineup.

Home court advantage: No matter if the series ends tonight or on Sunday, the Cavs will have to travel to New York to play just two days later. If they close it out tonight, they’d have to do so with an even shorter turnaround, playing at 3:30 on Sunday.

Why they shouldn’t want the Cavaliers:

🚫 More creation and scoring: Cunningham is the only guy on Detroit who can create his own offense, something it makes their offense easier to gameplan against. With Cleveland, they have two perennial All-NBA guards who are both capable of scoring 30 on any given night and will absolutely look to hunt a Brunson mismatch at any opportunity.

🚫 Challenging defensive assignment: How would you manage to match the starting five with Cleveland’s? Sure, you put Mikal Bridges on Spida, Anunoby on Harden, and KAT on Allen, but after that?

Is Josh Hart able to stick Evan Mobley and impact him the way he did Jalen Johnson? Are we sure Brunson against Strus or Wade won’t lead to problems? Against a team like this, the lineups may need to be more flexible. Could Robinson start?

🚫 Significantly more shooting: Duncan Robinson, Kevin Huerter, and Javonte Green are the biggest perimeter threats for Detroit. When you compare that to Harden, Mitchell, Jaylon Tyson, Sam Merrill, and Strus/Wade for Cleveland, it’s a significant difference. They can grill you with both volume and efficiency.

Game 6 between the Cavaliers and Pistons is set for 7 p.m. ET in Cleveland, with the Cavs holding a 3-2 series lead.

The Lakers are renovating their practice facility with new medical and recovery labs

EL SEGUNDO, CA - OCTOBER 08: Luka Doncic #77 of the Los Angeles Lakers dribbles the ball during the all access practice on October 08, 2025 at UCLA Health Training Center in El Segundo, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

With the Lakers having a new majority owner in Mark Walter, change has been happening quickly in Los Angeles.

We’ve seen this in personnel moves, such as the franchise hiring Lon Rosen as President of Business Operations. There will also be other front-office additions, including the hiring of two assistant general managers.

Beyond these hirings, changes are also coming in the form of relocation and renovations. The South Bay Lakers are moving to the Coachella Valley so they can have their own stadium and no longer play G League games at the Lakers’ practice facility in El Segundo.

This not only gives the G League team more resources but also opens up the Lakers’ practice facility to accommodate some much-needed upgrades.

During his exit interview, Lakers President of Basketball Operations, Rob Pelinka, outlined what these changes will be and when they’ll be taking place.

“As you guys saw, our G League team is relocating to a brand new, beautiful, 10,000-seat arena in Coachella Valley,” Pelinka said. “What that does in our building is it opens up all of this space and we actually have a space in the back where, working in collaboration with some of the Dodgers folks, we’re bringing in a biomechanics lab, new movements labs, a recovery lab.

“Those things are super expensive to do and super thoughtful but we’re doing the planning with Lon [Rosen] and his team around that and that construction is going to happen this offseason. They’re going to be redoing aspects of the court as well. It’s a full rebuild and retool and it’s adding to the great things that are already here which have led to success but elevating and bringing it to the next level. So, ongoing process that we’ll be doing throughout the offseason, probably hopefully culminating in and around the Summer League in Vegas.”

It seems that Walter is copying his Dodgers playbook and making sure the Lakers have everything they could possibly need to play their best.

The Dodgers are considered one of the best-run franchises in baseball, and part of the reason is that they spend heavily to win in the margins. The Lakers can’t fully emulate the Dodgers because the NBA has a salary cap, but it’s good to see the organization investing in its practice facility this way.

These kinds of upgrades were unlikely under the previous regime, but now that Walter is in charge, he’s spending the way every fan hopes their owner would.

The downside of the G League affiliate moving to Coachella Valley is that they’ll no longer be working in the same building as the Lakers. That means that the synergy they had with the main team will be weakened.

Overall, though, this is a win-win for the organization. Both the main team and the G League affiliate will have larger facilities and state-of-the-art equipment to be the best versions of themselves.

These changes aren’t the splashiest ones that fans care about, but everything matters, and winning in the margins is how good organizations become great and remain dominant.

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

OG Anunoby fully participates in Knicks' practice for the first time since his hamstring injury

GREENBURGH, N.Y. (AP) — OG Anunoby fully practiced with the New York Knicks on Friday for the first time since injuring his hamstring, moving them closer to having their starting lineup intact for the Eastern Conference finals.

The starting forward missed the final two games of the Knicks' second-round sweep of the Philadelphia 76ers after straining his right hamstring late in Game 2. He took part in some of practice when the Knicks returned on Wednesday, but sat out the portions when they went full speed.

But coach Mike Brown said Anunoby did everything with the team on Friday.

The Knicks would host Game 1 of the East finals on Sunday if Cleveland beats Detroit in Game 6 on Friday night. If that series goes the distance, Anunoby wouldn't have to be ready until Tuesday.

Anunoby is averaging 21.4 points per game in the postseason while shooting 61.9% from the field and 53.8% from 3-point range.

___

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

OG Anunoby a full participant in Knicks' practice Friday: 'Everything we did today, he did'

The Knicks got a big boost ahead of the Eastern Conference Finals as OG Anunoby was a full participant in Friday's practice, head coach Mike Brown said.

“He practiced today in full,” Brown said, adding, “Everything we did today, he did.”

The forward, who made his return to practice in a limited capacity on Wednesday, has been sidelined with a hamstring injury he sustained in New York’s Game 2 win over the Philadelphia 76ers last Wednesday.

Asked if he saw that as an encouraging development, the head coach said that “anytime anybody is able to do anything like that, it’s always encouraging.” 

With the Detroit - Cleveland series playing Game 6 on Friday night, the earliest the Eastern Conference Finals could begin is Sunday. Brown didn’t go as far as to say that Anunoby would be able to return after missing the final two games of the sweep of the Sixers. 

“At the end of the day, I’m a wait and let the medical group tell me each day what he can do,” he said. "We'll see if they tell me something different tomorrow. But it's definitely encouraging to see somebody be able to go out there and practice a full practice like OG did."

SNY NBA Insider Ian Begley reported last week that Anunoby's hamstring strain was minor and truly a day-to-day thing, adding that the general feeling about it was "optimism" inside the locker room. 

Begley also noted at the time that it was possible Anunoby could suit up for Game 3 or Game 4 against Philadelphia. However, once the Knicks took a 3-0 series lead, it made little sense to have Anunoby play in Game 4. 

If the Pistons win on Friday to extend the series with the Cavaliers, the ECF would not begin until Tuesday.

Caitlin Clark unveils awkward celebration after 3-pointer frustration

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Caitlin Clark of the Indiana Fever dribbles the ball while guarded by a Los Angeles Sparks player, Image 2 shows caitlin clark head slap three pointer

Caitlin Clark has put her own twist on the NBA’s iconic “three to the dome” celebration.

The Indiana Fever star sank a trey in the fourth quarter of Wednesday’s 87-78 win over the Sparks and smacked her forehead five times as she ran back down the court.

Carmelo Anthony popularized the “three to the dome” celebration — tapping his temple are hitting a shot — during his Knicks days, and it’s since become a staple, often duplicated and personalized, throughout basketball since.

Clark’s move may have signaled more of her frustration than it did any good vibes, though — the 3-pointer was her first make on seven attempts as she continues to find her game after following a season derailed by injuries.

The Sparks didn’t exactly take it easy on Clark, either.

Cameron Brink set the Los Angels crowd off with a massive first-quarter block against Clark, and things further boiled over at the end of the half when she complained about an offensive foul, earning a technical foul from referee Jason Alabanza.

Clark finished the victory with a game-high 24 points and nine assists, leading Indiana to its first win of the season, and perhaps more importantly, is getting her legs back under her.

Caitlin Clark #22 of the Indiana Fever dribbles the ball during the game against the Los Angeles Sparks. NBAE via Getty Images

“I feel good, I took a couple of hard fouls there at the end, I feel good overall,” she told reporters. “I felt fast tonight. I played 31 minutes — I haven’t played 30-plus minutes in a really long time. Last year, at least half the games, I was on a some sort if minutes restriction not really crossing into 30. Really happy with the way my body responded after the first game going into tonight. … overall, I feel good.”

Through two games, Clark is averaging 22 points, 4.5 rebounds and eight assists on 45.7% shooting — making just 18.8% of her 3-pointers thus far.

She’ll have a chance to build on those numbers — and maybe work on her 3-point celebration a bit more — with the Fever set to host the Washington Mystics on Friday night.

Jason Collins dies at 47

Mar. 20, 2013; Phoenix, AZ, USA: Washington Wizards center Jason Collins against the Phoenix Suns at the US Airways Center. The Wizards defeated the Suns 88-79. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Earlier this week, former NBA player Jason Collins died at the age of 47 after a battle with glioblastoma, a form of brain cancer. He played 13 years in the NBA, including part of the 2012-13 season for the Washington Wizards where he played six games.

While he was with the Wizards, Collins announced that he was openly gay and was the first NBA player to do so. He then played one more season with the Brooklyn Nets. As an NBA player, Collins’ most noteworthy seasons were with the Nets earlier in his career when they made two NBA Finals appearances.

RIP Jason.

2026 NBA Draft: Mountain West stock report

SAN DIEGO, CA - MARCH 20: Mj Collins Jr. #2 of the Utah State Aggies takes a foul shot during the first round of the 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament game against the Villanova Wildcats at Viejas Arena at San Diego State University on March 20, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Mitchell Layton/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We are less than six weeks away from the 2026 NBA Draft, and a pair of former Mountain West players competed in the NBA G-League combine last weekend. Did they help their stock during the 44-player showcase in Chicago, Ill.? Let’s examine!

MJ Collins, G, Utah State:

Skinny: Neither Collins nor Henley were one of the handful of players who were invited to the NBA Draft combine. But Collins was the better of the two in the workouts. The athletic guard had the fourth-highest standing vertical (32.5”), third-highest max vertical (39.5”) and ninth-fastest pro-lane shuttle time (10.64) of the 44 participants.

Additionally, Collins shot the ball fairly well in the workouts. He scored just five points on five made free-throws in the scrimmages (0-3 FG), but Collins netted 24 of his 30 mid-range pull-up jumpers and excelled in the 3-point star drill (the final numbers said he went 26-of-25 … obviously a typo, but I’m not sure in which direction, so I don’t have a final number).

All in all, it was a good combine for Collins, even though his performance in-game didn’t help his stock.

Verdict: Stock Neutral

Projection: Undrafted free agent, two-way

Jaden Henley, G, Grand Canyon:

Skinny: Conversely for Henley, I don’t think he tested particularly well (relative to his peers), but he was as advertised in game.

Henley was a wrecking ball. He led Team 4 with 15 points on 5-of-9 shooting in 20 minutes, totaling eight rebounds, one assist and one steal. He missed his lone two 3-point attempts while knocking down all five of his free-throws.

Conversely, his poor shooting from 3-point range carried over into the workouts, where I wanted to see some improvement. He only made nine threes in the star drill, tied for the third-fewest; only Liberty’s Zach Cleveland, George Washington’s Rafael Castro (who impressed) and North Dakota State’s March Strickland finished with fewer. He shot 11-for-25 on the spot-up shooting drill (one fewer than Collins) and 17-for-30 on the pull-up shooting.

Henley, a hyper-athletic slasher, shot just 30.7 percent from beyond the arc (2.5 3PA) across four collegiate seasons, including 26.8 percent in his lone season at Grand Canyon. He has an intriguing skillset, but one that desperately needs an efficient shot. I think he helped his stock, but that weakness will still exist until it doesn’t.

Verdict: Stock Up

Projection: Undrafted free agent, two-way

Inside the Suns: Rasheer Fleming, Ryan Dunn, Koby Brea

Welcome to Inside the Suns, your weekly deep-down analysis of the current Phoenix Suns team. Each week, the Fantable — a round table of Bright Siders — gives their takes on the Suns’ latest issues and news.

Fantable Questions of the Week

Q1: The Suns need to get bigger at power forward. Rasheer Fleming is the only real choice currently on the roster to accomplish that.

Would you prefer him to be penciled in as the Suns’ starting PF for 2026-27 or should the Suns look for a veteran (either through a trade or free agency) to take on that role for now?

Diamondhacks: The Suns don’t need a bigger power forward. We need defensive rebounds, which is fairly straightforward, and better team shot quality, which is fraught and complicated. Personally, I’d consider acquiring Josh Giddey, who might be uniquely qualified to improve on both deficiencies. Of course, you would have to give him the ball, and there’s only one, so I don’t expect it will ever happen.

Absent acquisitions, I’d pencil in whoever’s our most productive all-around “4”, regardless of salary, history, or potential. That’s how a healthy meritocracy, which elevates the entire team, should work. Right now, O’Neale is better than Fleming in: free throw percentage, three-point shooting, defensive rebounding, outlet passing, (clears throat), screen setting, ballhandling, half-court decision making, and court awareness. Rasheer’s probably better at most everything else, presumably working diligently on the other stuff. He doesn’t need to be better than Royce at everything, of course, but that’s how I would frame the evaluation between now and opening day.

Ashton: Anytime this question is asked, I am left wondering with what money? The Suns have roughly $9 million to commit when it is all said and done, and when a team is that close to staying under the luxury tax through cap gymnastics, my brain turns into a pretzel. So, the writers can unravel it for me.

Summertime is the time to float outlandish trade ideas on the board and I enjoy the takes. I always have. Or Rod can just correct me on what aspects of player retention the Suns are looking at, and then round down or up since pennies aren’t accepted anymore.

I did a quick scroll through available UFAs that might be affordable for the Suns. Not RFAs or team/player options, just using that $9 million in mind and leaving the trades to those who know better than I.

Of course, you keep Fleming, but asking him to man the PF starting role is a big one. And the question was asked about who could be available with size in the power forward free agent market? Okay, I omitted size and went with potential talent.

I like the following:

  • Jeremy Sochan
  • Marvin Bagley
  • Mouhamed Gueye
  • Dean Wade (the name sounds cool – I know nothing about him)
  • Nicolas Batum

But if we are all talking weird trade ideas. The Suns should trade for Bronny James. That would put two of his sons in the Great State of Arizona and LeBron likes to puff about having more family time. Well, coming off the bench and enjoying the heat with Scottsdale golf courses, he might do it at a vet min. This will never happen, of course, he likes LA.

OldAz: I know that this question is really asking about bringing in another STARTING power forward, but when I read the question, I couldn’t help but think of the Old El Paso taco shell commercial (and meme) where the little girl quizzically asks, “Why not both,” to which everyone reacts as if she just cured cancer. That is the only correct answer here.

The Suns should pencil Fleming in as the starter, AND go get the best PF they can get using the assets they have and are willing to use. If that player is on the level of Julius Randle or the version of Brandon Ingram that the Suns faced in the playoffs a few years ago, then no one will complain when Fleming has to come off the bench and compete for minutes. OTOH, when that player is similar to Bobby Portis, 2021 Jae Crowder (ie, a bigger Royce O’Neale), then Fleming has a competent backup, and Ott has no excuse for any more 4 guard lineups that leave their center hanging out to dry.

Rod: I would go ahead and pencil Fleming in as the starting PF for next season while searching for a quality backup. If, however, during that search, they turn up a very good deal for someone who could in fact be the starter they need, they should jump on that. It all depends on what the Suns would have to give up to get another PF to add to the roster. If the price is too high to get anyone who could potentially start, then go after the best quality backup they can afford and roll with Fleming as the starter.

Q2: Across the board, Ryan Dunn’s stats changed little between his first and second seasons. Do you still have faith that he can significantly improve in year three?

Diamondhacks: A Dunn breakout resembling starter quality seems more likely in year four or five. But I’m willing to wait, because outside of our centers, Ryan’s the best two-way rebounder on the team, and to the extent we’re leaning into the likes of Booker, Green, and Brooks hoisting sixty shots a game, there’s going to be a heck of a lot of rebounds.

Ashton: Remember last season when the board was abuzz with Brooks and Dunn? Yeah, that did not quite work out, and I really only like a few country songs. Certainly not this generation of country songs. So, in that vein, Dunn is Done. Those calling for trading him are correct.

In an offensive scheme, you have to show growth. Dunn (and a few others) were unable to do it. A trade to another team may?

For that matter, what is the offensive scheme? Just let Booker and Green hoist shots? This is a bit of a dig on Coach Ott’s system, but I really could not describe it to you.

OldAz: So you’re telling me the stats from his rookie season, where everyone was so high on him and happy, and his sophomore season, where fans have howled about wanting to trade him, were basically the same? It’s amazing how much expectations can change.

In his rookie season, Dunn was one of the only players who looked like they cared at all on the defensive end. Last year, he struggled at times with the new system, but I don’t remember ever questioning his effort. I still believe he can improve on both ends and that his jumper doesn’t look that bad. He just needs time and some consistent effort put into letting him develop, and I think he will be just fine. Whether he gets that opportunity with the Suns, however, is a totally different question.

Rod: After this last season, my hope in Dunn significantly improving has dimmed quite a bit. I still think he can improve in certain areas and that he’ll at least be a solid backup/rotation player, but I’m not really expecting much more than that. I’m not sure at all what goes through his head on the court, but at times I think he’s his own worst enemy. In some games, he’s looked almost timid on offense, and in others, he seemed to throw caution to the wind and play reckless at times. And the only reason I can see for his sub-standard FT shooting is something mental, perhaps a lack of confidence. He seems to have all the tools to get the job done, but just hasn’t managed to put it all together and become more than he currently is yet.

Q3: Some fans have expressed the opinion that the Suns should go ahead and sign Koby Brea to a standard NBA contract this summer instead of another two-way contract if he’s brought back. What’s your opinion on whether Brea should be re-signed and how?

Diamondhacks: In college, Brea’s Treyahs (this rhymes, not a real word, and not a typo 😊 ) speak to Koby’s repeatable stroke and elite concentration. As does his 90% FT standard. But does he have any game, at all, beyond that? When professionals guard? Sub 32% in G-League? His stroke seems sufficiently intriguing to keep on a two-way, but I don’t understand his overall game well enough, if he has one, to commit to a full.

Ashton: Nope. Suns fans were correct in identifying Collin Gillespie as an early riser, and Koby was also identified by many during Summer League as another.

But it comes back to the financials, and this is not something that Suns do. That razor-thin margin between repeater tax, heck, even $10 million more into the first apron is brutal or $20 million more into the second apron.

If they can keep Koby on a two-way, then that is the path to take. CBA and economic realities are what they are.

OldAz: Why would they do this when they don’t have to, and certainly not do it earlier than they need to? Brea has yet to show consistently that he can contribute at the NBA level or even stay on the back end of the roster. I would wait until he proves he belongs and maintain flexibility as long as I can if I was in the Suns front office.

Rod: There’s been a lot of talk about Brea’s three-point shooting. If you take out his 6 of 9 performance in the final game of the season against OKC’s bench players, he made a very modest 33.3% of his three-point attempts this season. He only did slightly better in the G League at 34.9% against lesser competition. At this point, I think the jury’s still out on him as to whether he’ll become more than just another guy with a lot of potential. I’d be fine with bringing him back on another two-way contract, but right now I don’t think the Suns should use one of their standard contract roster spots on him.

As always, many thanks to our Fantable members for all their extra effort this week!


Quotes of the Week

“When I talk about the identity, one of the things that’s really important is … when our fans leave the arena, here’s what I want them saying: Man, that team plays hard!” – Brian Gregory


Suns Trivia/History

On May 16, 1976, the Suns defeated the defending NBA Champions, the Golden State Warriors, 94-86 in game seven of the Western Conference Finals to earn their first conference championship and their first trip to the NBA Finals to face the Boston Celtics.

On May 16, 2000, the Suns were defeated 87-65 by the LA Lakers in Game 5 of the Western Conference Semifinals and eliminated from the playoffs 4-1. The 65 points scored by the Suns is the franchise record for the lowest point total ever in any game, playoff, or regular season. Only one Suns player — reserve player Todd Day — scored in double figures (barely with 10 points). The team made only 28.8% of their shots from the field. None of the starters made more than 27.3% of their field goal attempts and were a combined 11-of-52 from the field.

On May 22, 2006, the Suns defeated the LA Clippers 127-107 in the 7th game of the WC Semi-Finals to take the series 4-3. The Suns played only seven players that night, with two starters playing over 40 minutes (Shawn Marion, 45 mins, Tim Thomas, 42 mins) and the rest of the starters playing between 35 and 39 minutes each. The two bench players utilized that night (Leandro Barbosa and James Jones) played a combined 40 minutes. All seven scored in double figures with Marion leading the Suns with 30 points. The leading scorer for the Clippers was Elton Brand (36 points), who played all but 5 seconds of the game.


Important Future Dates

Mid-June (date TBD) – Teams can begin negotiating with their own free agents (following the Finals)
June 23 – NBA Draft First Round, 8 ET (ABC/ESPN)
June 24 – NBA Draft Second Round, 8 ET (ESPN)
June 30 – Teams can begin negotiations with all free agents
July 6 – Moratorium ends, official free agent contract signings can begin
July 9-19 – NBA 2K Summer League 2026 in Las Vegas

Rockets 2025-2026 season in review: Tari Eason

Headed into this past regular season, the Rockets offered Tari Eason a four-year, $100 million extension with protections tied to injuries given Eason’s already extensive injury history. Eason kindly rejected that offer and chose to bet on himself. Now that the dust has settled on the 2025-2026 season, we can begin to answer the question of whether he won that bet or not.

The 6’8” Forward out of LSU made himself a fan favorite immediately in his rookie season with his intense effort and tenacity on the court, specifically on the defensive end. Eason played all 82 games that season, and it appeared that Rafael Stone may have gotten the steal of the 2022 NBA Draft. While there is a chance that can still be the case, unfortunately Tari Eason hasn’t played more than 60 games in a season since his rookie campaign.

In 2023, he suffered from a lower leg stress reaction and benign bone growth issue. From 2023-2025 he continued to have soreness and would miss a multitude of games for injury management. In 2024, he missed two games due to concussion. He’s missed time this past season with both ankle and oblique strains and only played in 60 games, which was the most he’s played since his rookie season. The positive for Eason is that both of those injuries are not the kind of soft tissue injuries that wouldn’t throw up too many red flags under normal circumstances, like an ACL or Achilles injury would. However, with Eason’s previous health issues it raises some cause for concern.

Aside from the health portion of the question of whether Tari was right to bet on himself, when he was on the court, did he play well enough to earn a max contract as a restricted free agent? In the 60 games Eason played, he logged 25.8 minutes per game, scored 10.4 points, 6.3 rebounds, 1.5 assists, 1.2 steals, and 0.7 blocks per game. Eason shot 41.6 percent from the field including 35.8 percent from the three-point line, 77.6 percent from the free-throw line, and a true shooting score of 51.4 percent. Granted, that Eason is the kind of player that puts up numbers strictly with effort and hustle, having zero plays drawn up to specifically get him a shot, those numbers do not add up to a max contract, which for Eason would be in the range of about five years $240-245 million from the Rockets and four years $178-180 million should another team offer it to him.

For Eason to win this bet he made on himself, he will need to get more than the Rockets initially offered him, either from another team or from the Rockets if they decide to match the offer, but one thing I do know, Tari Eason is not getting a five-year max contract from the Rockets. If I’m wrong, then I will resign my post as a staff writer on this beloved website. There is no chance. However, can he get more than the Rockets initial offer? Well, sure… it’s the NBA, and there is always one team that is willing to overpay or at least pretend to be willing overpay to put the pressure on the Rockets to match in order to keep the player they drafted. But if I am being honest, I don’t believe Tari Eason deserves much more than the initial contract the Rockets offered him. It’s possible he will get less.

The thing I would point out if I were Eason’s agent is that his soft tissue injuries were not severe, and that Tari stepped up his scoring output in the playoffs. He scored 13.8 points per game in 32.5 minutes played per game. He shot 47.7 percent from the field, (I’d point to his career and regular season three-point percentages) 84.6 percent from the free-throw line and a 58.7 true shooting percentage. The one thing I do like is a guy who steps his game up when the stakes are higher. Tari Eason is going to have to convince either the Rockets or another NBA team that he is that exact type of player, that he will continue to be that type of player, and that he is going to be healthy if he wants any shot out pacing the extension he turned down last summer. If not, 2025-2026 will be the season Tari Eason bet on himself and lost.

Giannis Antetokounmpo trade rumors: Nine most likely destinations for Bucks star

After years of seemingly constant rumors, in part fueled by mixed signals from Giannis Antetokounmpo himself — not to mention teams hoarding picks and players just for this moment — an Antetokounmpo trade feels more certain than ever.

Milwaukee is reportedly “open for business” and appears more serious about it than ever — and there is a deadline. Bucks co-owner Jimmy Haslem said he wanted to see a decision made (either Antetokounmpo agrees to sign an extension in Milwaukee or they trade him) and any trade completed before the June 23 draft, less than six weeks away. The Bucks reportedly continue to seek a blue-chip young player and a boatload of draft picks in any deal.

Which teams are calling Milwaukee? Where might Antetokounmpo play next season? Here are nine teams to watch (and a few to rule out).

Remember: Antetokounmpo has a lot of leverage in where he lands. He only has one year guaranteed left on his contract (the second year is a player option), and he can tell a team he will not sign an extension with them, making the price to get him unreasonable. Antetokounmpo can almost control this process, and his representatives will work with the Bucks on any deal that gets done.

Miami Heat

Pat Riley wants to go big game hunting (Pat Riley always wants to go big game hunting), and after a play-in exit this April, he will be willing to push all his chips into the middle of the table. The Heat went after Antetokounmpo at the trade deadline and can do so again with an offer centered around Tyler Herro, Kel'el Ware, three first-round picks including the 13th pick in this draft (Miami has to make the pick then trade the player after the draft), plus 2031 and 2033, and they can throw in the swap rights from up to four years between now and 2033.

Antetokounmpo wants to stay in the East with a contender, and while there would be a lot of roster work to do, he and Bam Adebayo are a very good foundation. Plus, Miami has the draws of no state tax, plus plenty of sunshine and mojitos nearby. If Antetokounmpo pushes for Miami, this would happen.

Boston Celtics

At his end-of-season press conference, Brad Stevens — the man in charge of basketball operations in Boston — talked about the need for this team to put more pressure on the rim. Specifically, the Celtics need players who can drive the lane (and an upgrade at the five).

Nobody puts pressure on the rim like Antetokounmpo. After the Celtics' first-round exit, Boston is suddenly the team on everybody's lips. It can put together an offer around Jaylen Brown and up to four first-round picks — but is that the direction the Celtics want to go? Trade away the player they drafted and developed in Brown to get a mercenary who is older and has been injured often in recent seasons?

Antetokounmpo has expressed admiration for coach Joe Mazzulla and might well be interested, but how aggressive will the Celtics really be in this chase? If Antetokounmpo pushes for it, this could happen.

Orlando Magic

After another early, disappointing exit from the playoffs — including a Game 6 collapse where the Magic missed 23 shots in a row at one point — there are a lot of people around the league who see Orlando potentially going all in on an Antetokounmpo trade. The Magic at least explored the idea of trading for the Greek Freak at the deadline.

Orlando likely would construct a deal around Paolo Banchero and a handful of first-round picks. This trade would dramatically shorten the runway in Orlando because they get much older — Banchero is 23, Antetokounmpo turns 32 next season — but, if everyone is healthy, it gets them closer to the teams at the top of the East next season and for a few years. Antetokounmpo gets to go to a contender in a warm-weather state. If the Magic are convinced the Banchero and Franz Wagner era isn't going to work out and the duo needs to be broken up, this is a path they can choose.

Cleveland Cavaliers

If Cleveland makes it to the Eastern Conference Finals, does it change things for the Cavaliers? Probably not. This is the most expensive team in the NBA this season, and it should be Finals-or-bust. If they are unable to get past the Pistons (Cleveland leads that series 3-2 as of this writing) or the Knicks in the Eastern Conference Finals, changes will be coming. Remember, Donovan Mitchell can be a free agent in the summer of 2027, and he will put pressure on the organization to go all in to get the players who can get him to the Finals.

Cleveland and Milwaukee discussed a trade package centered on Evan Mobley at the deadline, but the sticking point was how much draft capital would go back to the Bucks. If Antetokounmpo decides he wants to stay in the Midwest and go to Cleveland, and he pushes for it, this could be a deal that becomes real.

Minnesota Timberwolves

Minnesota was one of the teams that talked with Milwaukee at the trade deadline, and Antetokounmpo reportedly — and understandably — had interest in pairing with Anthony Edwards.

But there are a lot of hurdles to this trade. It's just hard to construct. The Bucks will want Jaden McDaniels, and he has shown incredible growth and become a foundational piece for the Timberwolves in the last year (and he has had a standout playoffs). Also, Minnesota is short on draft picks to trade, so it would need a third team involved.

Another massive hurdle (for Minnesota and a few more teams on this list): Does Antetokounmpo want to go to the Western Conference, where Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and the Thunder, Victor Wembanyama and the Spurs, and Nikola Jokic and the Nuggets all stand in the way the next few years? The sense is Antetokounmpo wants to stay in the East, league sources have told NBC Sports.

Houston Rockets

Houston has the quality young players and draft picks needed to entice Milwaukee in a trade, and after an early exit from the playoffs despite signing Kevin Durant last summer, might the Rockets go all-in again? Don't bet on it. GM Rafael Stone didn't sound like a guy thinking big moves at his end-of-season press conference.

"We'll look at everything over the offseason, and all potential deals," Stone said. "But we think the players in our locker room can win a lot of games and be very competitive. We have players coming back from injury that will help us. And if we bring back the same group, I think continuity will help us."

Golden State Warriors

Giannis Antetokounmpo and Stephen Curry together and chasing a ring (let's throw LeBron James in that mix, too). It would be entertaining.

It's also unlikely. Golden State pushed hard for a deal at the trade deadline because it knew heading into this summer there would be better offers on the table than its four first-round picks. The matching salary would likely have to be Jimmy Butler or Draymond Green, and an injured Butler (ACL) or Green — neither of whom would want to be there — is not appealing to the Bucks. Plus, again, the Warriors are in the West, and if Antetokounmpo wants to compete for a title, well, he and Curry are at best in the second tier in that conference.

New York Knicks

Never say never, but this team is on the verge of reaching the NBA Finals for the first time since people feared the Y2K bug — do they want or need to break that roster up for Antetokounmpo?

That said, New York is the one team we know Antetokounmpo told Bucks general manager Jon Horst to talk to. The challenge is putting together a trade both sides like. The money works if it's Karl-Anthony Towns for Antetokounmpo, but KAT is a poor fit for a rebuilding Knicks team. A deal also can work with OG Anunoby, Mikal Bridges and Josh Hart, but do the Knicks want to break up the guys who embody the team's identity? Even if Milwaukee is interested in those players, it also will want picks, and the Knicks don't have many to trade, so now a third team is in the mix, and it gets complicated.

Never say never, but this is a long shot.

Milwaukee Bucks

While it seems like a parting of the ways is going to happen, we've all seen this movie before. Antetokounmpo has threatened to leave in the past, used that as leverage to get the Bucks to make a bold (if not always wise) trade, and then signed to stay with the only city and team he has known.

This time it feels different. Antetokounmpo was frustrated last season — especially for the final games when he was not cleared to return and play with his brothers. Antetokounmpo and the Bucks talked, and their general manager, Jon Horst, explored trade offers at the deadline. Around the league, the expectation is that a trade is happening this time.

But would anybody be shocked if it doesn't?

Brooklyn Nets

No doubt the Brooklyn Nets are star hunting after being let down in the NBA Draft Lottery in consecutive years, but this team probably should be in the group below. The Nets have plenty of picks to offer in a trade, but not the blue-chip young talent. Also, Antetokounmpo wants to compete for a title, and even with him healthy and at his peak, the rest of this roster is worse than Milwaukee's. It's hard to see this happening.

That’s not happening group

• Los Angeles Lakers. The Lakers are building around Luka Doncic, and he and Antetokounmpo — two ball-dominant players who are not elite off-ball — would not mesh well. The Lakers' only blue-chip young player is Austin Reaves, and he'd have to agree to a sign-and-trade for this to work, and the Lakers would rather keep him. Plus, Antetokounmpo has said in the past he doesn't love Los Angeles as a city, and he'd be moving to the stacked West. Just hard to see this happening.

• Portland Trail Blazers. New owner Tom Dundon wants to make a statement about how he is there to compete and wants his front office to go after Antetokounmpo. It all feels a bit performative. The Trail Blazers do have two former teammates Antetokounmpo loves in Jrue Holiday and Damian Lillard, plus they have quality young players and some picks. But does anyone see Antetokounmpo agreeing to sign an extension in Portland? He's not going West to be on this team.

• Atlanta Hawks. All the buzz in league circles is that Atlanta is not throwing its hat in the ring, it wants to build something more organically around Jalen Johnson. They want to keep the No. 8 pick in this draft. While the Hawks could use a No. 1 option, this is not the guy they are going to chase.

• Toronto Raptors. Some people see this as possible because the Raptors are in the East, have plenty of picks and can add Collin Murray-Boyles after a strong playoff showing. However, it seems to me that Antetokounmpo would see Toronto as another version of Milwaukee — a good team with him, but not a contender. I just do not see this happening.

JJ Redick’s comments on depth, continuity are revealing for Lakers offseason

EL SEGUNDO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 12: Head coach JJ Redick of the Los Angeles Lakers speaks to the media during a press conference at UCLA Health Training Center on May 12, 2026 in El Segundo, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Luke Hales/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s clear that for right now, the Western Conference belongs to the Oklahoma City Thunder, and the San Antonio Spurs are next up, trying to take them down.

That leaves the Lakers just out of the conversation and trying to improve enough to be a threat to these two young teams. One clear weakness the Lakers have is a lack of depth.

The Thunder were able to play more players for longer stretches in their series against the Lakers. The Spurs have also played nine-plus players for 10 or more minutes in most of their playoff contests.

Meanwhile, LA’s rotation continued to shrink in the postseason, and few players cracked double-digit minutes. In Game 4 against OKC, Lakers head coach JJ Redick essentially played just seven players. The only other players who saw the court were Adou Thiero and Jarred Vanderbilt, and they both played just three minutes.

It’s not sustainable to only play seven guys for months of playoff basketball, but that was the situation Redick was in.

However, now that the postseason is over, the Lakers can assess their roster and bring in guys who can be part of their rotation and contribute to winning basketball.

Redick spoke about depth, continuity and where the Lakers stack up against the best in the West during his exit interview.

“I don’t necessarily view depth as a rotation thing,” Redick said. “Whether you play eight, nine, whether you play 11, 12, you need to have depth and that depth typically comes in the roster spots 10-15. Whether that’s internal development, draft, trade, free agency, whatever that is, we need to build depth beyond just an eight- or nine-man rotation because you’re naturally going to have injuries…It really is about just building that depth.

“We can figure out, as coaches, what a rotation looks like. But you look at OKC’s roster, you look at San Antonio’s roster, those guys, they have 13 high-level rotation players, minimum. That’s a luxury to have in the NBA and it’s one of the reasons those teams are really good.”

Based on how Redick used his roster, it’s clear the Lakers don’t have 13 high-level rotation players. OKC and San Antonio do, and that’s why they are still playing and Los Angeles is not.

Sure, Luka Dončić was out, and he would’ve absolutely helped, but not enough to turn a sweep into a series win.

The tricky part for the Lakers is that they were a very good team, but need to make moves to become great. How can they balance keeping all the things that made them a 50-win team while making enough changes to take a leap?

“I believe in continuity, but…If you’re trying to win a championship, which this organization is, and I’m trying to win a championship, ” Redick said. “I know [Rob Pelinka] is trying to win a championship. I know Jeanie is. I know Mark is.

“We’re trying to win a championship and so you have to be realistic and assess where you’re at. We’re not good enough right now. There probably will be some continuity. There probably won’t be. But that’s what the next two months are for.”

Redick left room for some continuity, but he said it as clear as day that LA isn’t good enough. If they’re trying to win a title, change is needed.

Sure, the Lakers would like to retain Marcus Smart, and bringing back Austin Reaves is a priority, but this is not a run-it-back roster.

Over the summer, we’ll see what that change looks like, but if the Lakers front office does its job, they’ll bring in the players Redick needs so that this time next year, he has enough guys to take on the Spurs and Thunder and have a legitimate shot at beating them.

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

Bucks star reveals team's dysfunction with Giannis and Doc Rivers

The saga surrounding Giannis Antetokounmpo's future with the Milwaukee Bucks got another curveball this week when one of his teammates aired out some behind-the-scenes details about this past season that weren't flattering for former Bucks coach Doc Rivers or the franchise's Greek superstar.

Myles Turner revealed on an episode of his "Game Recognize Game" podcast with WNBA star Breanna Stewart that Rivers had a policy in which he didn't fine any players and "guys were late all the time. Guys were showing up to film whenever they want. Guys were missing meetings. It was one of the craziest things I've personally experienced."

"We literally, if the plane took off 2 o'clock, we weren't leaving until 4:30," Turner continued in comments that were published on Thursday, May 14. "I'm being so serious, bro. It was crazy, dog. Guys were hours late to the plane. It got to the point where I just knew not to show up until like an hour after they said the plane was going to take off. It was crazy."

Stewart asked Turner to name to worst culprit for being late. Turner responded without hesitation: "Giannis."

"Giannis is going to show up whenever he wants, really, you know? I think that kind of just came with the territory of that," Turner added, "and once I kind of saw what was going down, I was like ... more power to you. They ain't going to fine you. Do what you do, except when we're going to Dallas (near his hometown of Bedford, Texas)"

Turner just completed his first season with the Bucks after signing a 4-year, $108-million contract last year to potentially help Milwaukee remain an Eastern Conference contender alongside Antetokoumpo. But the Bucks struggled most of the regular season, with Antetokounmpo in and out of the lineup due to injuries while dealing with steady trade speculation.

Antetokounmpo has one year left on his contract, with a player option for the 2027-28 season. Bucks ownership stated it plans to either sign Antetokounmpo to a new max contract extension or trade him and hopes to have a resolution on his future with the franchise before the NBA Draft. The team's front office is already listening to potential deals, according to reports.

The Bucks parted ways with Rivers after finishing with a 32-50 record and missing the postseason. The team hired former Memphis Grizzlies coach Taylor Jenkins to replace Rivers and received the No. 10 pick in the 2026 NBA Draft.

Turner said he had never been on an NBA team before in which the players weren't fined, and expressed surprise at the lack of structure and disciplinary protocols under Rivers.

"Any other team I've been on, guys got fined. And there was a sense of order and a sense of understanding," Turner said. "So yeah, you're late to the plane? Fine. You're late to treatment? Fine. You're late to film? Fine. But I personally did not experience that last year for the first time in my career. So we'll see what Taylor Jenkins does."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Myles Turner says Bucks, Giannis 'late all the time' under Doc Rivers

Steve Kerr reveals how much input Steph Curry, Draymond Green had on return

Steve Kerr reveals how much input Steph Curry, Draymond Green had on return originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Plenty of factors were at play in the decision of whether or not Steve Kerr would return as Warriors coach this offseason.

And while Kerr’s allegiance to Steph Curry and Draymond Green likely played a significant role from the coach’s side of things, the Golden State stars didn’t meddle in the decision-making process within the organization.

At his first press conference since his new Warriors contract became official, Kerr was asked Friday about his communication with Curry and Green during the weeks of uncertainty, as well as how much input the players had.

“I was in touch with both of them,” Kerr told reporters. “They did not have any impact or influence on whether I was going to be the coach, and that’s a credit to them.

“You know, I think one of the strong points of our organization is that our best player, who is one of the greatest players in the history of the game, is not telling [general manager Mike Dunleavy or owner Joe Lacob] what to do. He understands the repercussions of that if he wanted to go down that path, and it’s not healthy.

“It usually doesn’t work out well when a player tries to dictate what an organization does. So Steph has always recognized the sanctity of that wall that should exist, but we had a lot of discussions and talked about everything, talked about our team and some of the things I’ve just mentioned where we can get better.”

As Kerr stated, Curry has been heralded throughout his career for not interfering with major organizational decisions, despite his superstardom. In the end, though the Warriors haven’t been as successful recently as they have desired, Kerr emphasized the long-standing trust between players and coach in his ultimate decision.

“I know [Curry] wanted me to coach,” Kerr continued. “I know I wanted to coach him, and that mattered, but ultimately we have a really special, strong bond that should carry over into our success as a team. I think I have a better chance of coaching this team than anybody else because of that relationship, my relationship with Draymond, my intimate knowledge of our team and our organization.

“And, as I said from the beginning, I still love what I do. If I were tired and burned out, then I would not be doing this, but I love my job, I love coaching the Warriors, being in this city, being in the Bay. It all worked out.”

So, it seems as though Kerr’s return was the outcome everyone wanted. But now, what remains is whether or not Kerr, Curry and Green can compile one last deep run together in the NBA playoffs.

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