Rui Hachimura tried to replace LeBron in Lakers pregame ritual and it went terribly wrong

LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 1: The Los Angeles Lakers celebrate before the game against the Sacramento Kings on March 1, 2026 at Crypto.Com Arena in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Lakers’ pregame routine has gone viral across social media this season. Led by LeBron James, the Lakers wrap up their warm-up with a bit of synchronisation before walking off the floor.

Is it a bit silly? Sure. But basketball is a game and not everything has to be serious. It’s a fun tradition the team does every game, home or away.

However, for reasons unclear, LeBron wasn’t around pregame on Sunday and, unfortunately, disaster struck. Rui Hachimura attempted to step in and lead things, but failed miserably at just throwing the ball up in the air in the right direction.

Fortunately, this did not set a tone for the night as the Lakers comfortably took care of business, blowing out the Kings for their second win in as many days. Those good vibes from the win meant the elephant in the room could be addressed pregame.

What in the world happened pregame?

“I literally said no to everybody, but they all pointed at me,” Rui said. “I don’t know…You know what it is, I think because I was doing it before [when] [LeBron] was coming back from the injury. So, they all pointed at me, but I wasn’t really feeling doing it. I was like ‘No, no, no.’ The time was going on, so I was like, ‘Alright, come on.’ I did it. I got booed.”

Luka, the de facto leader of the team, could only react in one way to Rui’s performance: disgust.

“I don’t know why,” Luka said postgame. “Never again. Never again. It was terrible.”

In a contract year, you’d expect a better showing from Rui. Will this hurt him in contract negotiations? Do the Lakers want to bring back someone who struggles to throw the ball up in the air?

If the Lakers want to move into the post-LeBron era seamlessly, then someone is going to need to go through a crash course over the final weeks of the season to learn how to properly toss the ball into the air. Otherwise, that could be another skillset they will look to acquire this offseason.

You can follow Jacob on Twitter at @JacobRude or on Bluesky at @jacobrude.bsky.social.

Cavs vs. Pistons: How to watch, odds, and injury report

DETROIT, MI - FEBRUARY 27: Evan Mobley #4 of the Cleveland Cavaliers dunks the ball during the game against the Detroit Pistons on February 27, 2026 at Little Caesars Arena 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. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Chris Schwegler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers had plenty of chances to defeat the Detroit Pistons on Friday. They failed to close the game out on the free-throw line, didn’t get the stops they needed to, and also didn’t get any help from the officials. That all added up to a narrow 122-119 defeat.

Fortunately for the Cavs, they don’t have to wait long to get even. They take on the Pistons again on Tuesday and should be healthier. James Harden returned to the lineup Sunday and looked like he didn’t miss a beat as he nearly put up a triple-double in his return against the Brooklyn Nets.

This is the Cavs’ and Pistons’ last meeting of the regular season. And it should give us our best chance to see how these two teams match up if they were to meet in the playoffs this spring.

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WhoCleveland Cavaliers (38-24) vs. Detroit Pistons (45-14)

Where: Rocket Arena – Cleveland, OH

When: Tue. March 3 at 7 PM

TV: FanDuel Sports Network – Ohio, FanDuel Sports Network App, NBA League Pass

Point spread: Pistons -1

Cavs injury report: Donovan Mitchell – OUT (groin), Dean Wade – QUESTIONABLE (ankle), Max Strus – OUT (foot), Riley Minix – OUT (G League), Darius Brown – OUT (G League)

Pistons injury report: Isaac Jones – OUT (G League), Bobi Klintman – QUESTIONABLE (G League), Chaz Lanier – QUESTIONABLE (G League), Wendell Moore Jr. – OUT (G League), Tolu Smith – QUESTIONABLE (G League)

Cavs expectedstarting lineup: James Harden, Sam Merrill, Jaylon Tyson, Evan Mobley, Jarrett Allen

Pistons expected starting lineup: Cade Cunningham, Duncan Robinson, Tobias Harris, Ausar Thompson, Jalen Duren

Previous matchup: The Pistons defeated the Cavs in overtime last Friday.

Here’s a look at both teams’ impact stats via Cleaning the Glass.

Offensive RatingDefensive RatingNet Rating
Cavs118 (9th)113.9 (10th)+4.1 (8th)
Pistons117.3 (11th)108.8 (2nd)+8.5 (2nd)

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Timberwolves bring back veteran Kyle Anderson after his release by the Grizzlies

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The Minnesota Timberwolves signed 12-year veteran forward Kyle Anderson on Monday, bringing back a popular role player after he was waived by the Memphis Grizzlies.

Anderson played two seasons for the Timberwolves, contributing to their run to the Western Conference finals in 2024. He then signed with the Golden State Warriors in free agency and has been traded three times since, most recently to the Grizzlies by the Utah Jazz.

The 32-year-old Anderson has averaged 7.5 points, 3.3 rebounds, 2.7 assists and 20.4 minutes in 24 games this season between the Jazz and the Grizzlies.

Anderson started 56 games over two years with the Timberwolves, averaging 25.3 minutes for the highest mark of his tenure with any of the six teams he's been with in his NBA career. The 2014 first-round draft pick by the San Antonio Spurs had three triple-doubles with the Timberwolves and became a fan favorite for his toughness, leadership and deliberate style on offense that has drawn him the nickname, “Slo Mo.”

The Timberwolves host the Grizzlies on Tuesday.

___

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

Fiorentina and Pisa lose on grim night for clubs fighting Serie A relegation

PISA, Italy (AP) — Fiorentina went down to Udinese 3-0 and Pisa lost to Bologna 1-0 on an unhappy night for the relegation-threatened sides in Serie A on Monday.

In Udine, the home side went ahead after 10 minutes when Christian Kabasele nodded in a Nicolo Zaniolo corner.

Udinese's leading goal-scorer Kelman Davis made it 2-0 from the penalty spot in the second half.

And Adam Buksa added a third in stoppage time to decisively halt Fiorentina’s recent revival and torpedo its hopes of winning three games in a row for the first time this season.

It remained fifth from bottom of the league, but equal on points with Cremonese and Lecce, the club occupying the third relegation spot.

One of the two teams below it, Pisa, lost at home to Bologna and remained joint last with Verona.

Pisa had three shots on target while Bologna had only one, but it was that 90th-minute strike from Jens Odgaard that decided the match.

The Danish forward hit the net from around 25 meters out to break the home fans' hearts and ensure Pisa was still looking for a second win in the league.

The result leaves it on the same points as bottom club Verona. Both are nine points from safety with 11 league matches remaining.

The win was Bologna’s third in a row and lifted it above Sassuolo into ninth place. It has not lost a league game at home to Pisa since February 1985.

___

AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Lakers relishing Maxi Kleber’s success: ‘He does everything right’

Familiar scenes played out early in the second quarter of the Lakers’ blowout win over the Kings on Sunday night even though the actual plays were rare.

The first: after cutting off Malik Monk’s drive out of a pick and roll to force a pass to Drew Eubanks, who fumbled the ball after Marcus Smart’s deflection, Maxi Kleber getting back into the play and blocking Eubanks’s layup attempt at the 9:17 mark of the second, which started the Lakers’ transition attack. 

The second: after the Lakers ran their Stack action, Luka Doncic whipped a one-handed pass to a rolling Kleber inside of the paint, with Kleber taking two quick steps before dunking over Precious Achiuwa a couple of minutes later after the blocked shot.

Los Angeles Lakers forward Maxi Kleber dunks as Sacramento Kings guard Daeqwon Plowden watches during the second half of an NBA basketball game in Los Angeles, Sunday, March 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Kyusung Gong) AP

Sunday was the second straight game that Kleber, who finished with six points, six rebounds and a blocked shot against the Kings, was in the rotation after playing 13 minutes against the Warriors on Saturday night. 

But for most of the season, Kleber’s playing time has been sporadic, mainly being in the rotation if the Lakers are dealing with injuries or foul trouble. 

Which is why everyone on the Lakers’ bench stood on their feet and celebrated Kleber’s plays — customary when a teammate makes highlight plays, but the moments had extra juice to them because it was Kleber who made the plays.

“We have a lot of good guys on our team,” coach JJ Redick said. “Love these guys. [Kleber’s] teammates love him. He’s a terrific teammate. It’s easy to root for his success.”

What makes Kleber so easy to root for?

“He does everything right, man,” Smart told the Califorinia Post. “And he’s such a good person. He wants to see everybody win, even though he’s not winning in certain circumstances of not getting playing time as much as he would like, probably. Not getting the ball as much as he would like. But he doesn’t let that deter him from cheering on his teammates and being there for his teammates. And then when he does get in and his opportunity comes, taking full advantage of it.”

The 11 minutes per game Kleber’s averaging through 60 games is easily the fewest of his career, almost six minutes fewer than the 16.8 he averaged during his rookie season.

And it isn’t just his playing time that’s taken a decline. He’s averaging career-lows across the board in a variety of statistical categories.

But the 34-year-old Kleber remains a valuable teammate and veteran presence inside of the Lakers’ locker room. 

“There’s not a negative bone in his body towards anybody,” Smart told the Post. “When you got a guy like that, sometimes it’s easy to take him for granted. But it’s also easy to root for him like hell when he does get his opportunity because he does so much for us that doesn’t show up on the stat sheet at all. 

“Just his ability to be able to talk to guys. Uses his experience and his understanding of the situation he’s in to help guys. Not allowing that to bring him down and also help bring other guys up even when he could sit over there and pout. And nobody would blame him. But he chooses not to. And when you got a guy like that, that’s contagious.”

Which makes big plays Kleber makes when he is able to get on the floor, and the energy they spark, contagious.

Maxi Kleber of the Los Angeles Lakers drives to the basket during the game against the Sacramento Kings on March 1, 2026 at Crypto.Com Arena in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images) NBAE via Getty Images

“He always brings good energy,” Rui Hachimura said. “We always talk about how we wanna be like him. We always talk about that. Whether playing or not, he’s always on the bench, cheering for the team, trying to help the team win. [That] kind of stuff is really big. He knows exactly what his role [is].”

The energy Kleber provides for the Lakers comes back around to him.

“Every time I do something, you look to the bench, everybody’s celebrating,” Kleber said. “Obviously, it’s [a] good push for me, good push for the team.”


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Boston Celtics (40-20) at Milwaukee Bucks (26-33) Game #61 3/2/26

BOSTON, MA - FEBRUARY 1: Bobby Portis #9 of the Milwaukee Bucks dribbles the ball during the game against the Boston Celtics during the 2026 NBA Pioneers Classic on February 1, 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 David Dow/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Boston Celtics (40-20) at Milwaukee Bucks (26-33)
Monday, March 2, 2026
7:30 PM ET
TV:  NBA-TV, NBCSB, FDSWI
Radio: 98.5 Sports Hub, WTMJ (103..3),  Sirius XM
Regular Season Game #61,  Road Game #32
Fiserv Forum

The Celtics visit the Milwaukee Bucks for the third of 4 games between these two teams this season. The Bucks won 116-101 in Milwaukee on December11 and the Celtics won 107-79 in Boston on February 1. They will play their final game in Milwaukee on April 13. Due to the in-season tournament, they face the anomaly of playing 3 times in Milwaukee and just once in Boston.

The Celtics won the series 3-0 last season. They are 122-113 overall all time against the Bucks and they are 44-73 against the Bucks all time in games played in Milwaukee. Both teams are playing in the second of back to back games. The Bucks played in Chicago on Sunday while the Celtics played at home against the 76ers on Sunday.

The Celtics are 2nd in the East, 5.5 games behind 1st place Detroit. They are 1.5 games ahead of 3rd place New York , 3 games ahead of 4th place Cleveland, 5 games ahead of 5th place Toronto, 7 games ahead of 6th place Philadelphia and 8.5 games ahead of 7th place Orlando. The Celtics are 26-13 against Eastern Conference opponents and 8-5 against the Atlantic Division. They are 20-11 home and 8-2 in their last 10 games. They have won their last 2 games.

The Bucks are 11th in the East, 19 games behind 1st place Detroit, 5 games behind 7th place Orlando and 8th place Miami, 3.5 games behind 9th place Atlanta 3 games behind 10th place Charlotte. They are 2 games ahead of 12th place Chicago. They are 19-21 against Eastern Conference opponents. They are 14-14 at home and 6-4 in their last 10 games. They have lost their last 2 games.

After this game at Milwaukee, the Celtics are back home for games against Charlotte and Dallas before a tough 3 game road trip through Cleveland, San Antonio, and Oklahoma City. Then they host Washington, Phoenix and Golden State. Next, it is one game at Memphis before a 3 game home stand against Minnesota, Oklahoma City and Atlanta.

For Milwaukee, this is the first game of a 5 game home stand. After the Celtics, they will host Atlanta, Utah, Orlando and Phoenix. Then they are on the road for games at Miami and Atlanta before hosting Indiana and Cleveland. Next they have a 4 game western road trip through Utah, Phoenix, the LA Clippers, and Portland before returning home to host San Antonio, the Clippers and Dallas.

For the Celtics, Jayson Tatum has been ruled out for this game but may be close to a return. Jaylen Brown (illness) and Neemias Queta (rest) were late scratches for this game and will be out. I’m taking a wild guess that Hugo Gonzalez and Luka Garza start in their places. For the Bucks, Giannis Antetokounmpo has missed the last 16 games but has been cleared to play in this game. Taurean Prince is out after having neck surgery. Thanasis Antetokounmpo is questionable due to an illness.

Probable Starting Matchups
PG: Derrick White vs Ryan Rollins

Derrick White
Derrick White | NBAE via Getty Images
Ryan Rollins | Getty Images

SG: Baylor Scheierman vs Kevin Porter, Jr

Baylor Scheierman | NBAE via Getty Images
Kevin Porter Jr | Getty Images

SF: Hugo Gonzalez vs Kyle Kuzma

Hugo Gonzalez | Getty Images
Kyle Kuzma | NBAE via Getty Images

PF: Sam Hauser vs Giannis Antetokounmpo

Sam Hauser | Getty Images
Giannis Antetokounmpo | Getty Images

C: Luka Garza vs Myles Turner

Luka Garza | Getty Images
Myles Turner | Getty Images

Celtics Reserves
Payton Pritchard
Hugo Gonzalez
Luka Garza
Amare Williams
Nikola Vucevic
Jordan Walsh

2-Way Players

Ron Harper, Jr
Max Shulga
John Tonje

Injuries/Out

Jayson Tatum (Achilles) out
Jaylen Brown (illness) out
Neemias Queta (rest) out

Head Coach

Joe Mazzulla

Bucks Reserves

Thanasis Antetokounmpo
Ousmane Dieng
Gary Harris
Andre Jackson, Jr
Bobby Portis, Jr
Cormac Ryan
Jericho Sims
Cam Thomas
Gary Trent, Jr

Two-Way Players
Alex Antetokounmpo
Pete Nance

Injuries/Out

Giannis Antetokounmpo (calf) available
Taurean Prince (neck) out
Thanasis Antetokounmpo (illness) questionable

Head Coach

Doc Rivers

Key Matchups
Baylor Scheierman vs Kevin Porter, Jr.
Porter is averaging 18.0 points, 5.2 rebounds, 7.6 assists and 2.2 steals per game. He is shooting 46.9% from the field and 32.8% from beyond the arc. He didn’t play in the February 1 game against Boston and finished with 18 points, 10 rebounds, 13 assists and 1 steal while shooting 60% from the field and 33.3% from beyond the arc on December 11. They need to be aware of him in the passing lanes as he is a threat to steal the ball.

Sam Hauser vs Giannis Antetokounmpo
Giannis is averaging 28 points, 10 rebounds, and 5.6 assists while shooting 64.5% from the field and 39.5% from beyond the arc. He missed both of the games between these teams so far this season. He has been out for 5 weeks so he may be a bit rusty but regardless, he makes them tougher to beat. I wouldn’t be surprised to see Joe start double bigs this game to counter the Bucks’ double bigs.

Honorable Mention

Derrick White vs Ryan Rollins 
Rollins is averaging 17.1 points, 4.6 rebounds, 5.4 assists, and 1.5 steals per game.  He is shooting 47.1% from the field and 41.8% from beyond the arc.  In the 2 games against the Celtics this season he averaged 17.5 points, 4 rebounds, 7 assists, and 1.5 steals per game while shooting 51.3% from the field and 62.5% from beyond the arc.  Rollins is a good 3 point shooter and so the Celtics need to defend him on the perimeter. 

Keys to the Game
Defense –  Defense is always the biggest key to winning.  Defense really does win championships.  The Celtics are 7th with a defensive rating of 112.1  The Bucks are 24th with a defensive rating of 116.7.  In the first game between these two games the Celtics allowed the Bucks to shoot 58.2% from the field and 44.8% from beyond the arc.   The Celtics must work harder on defense in this one and keep their focus on the defensive end so as not to allow any easy baskets for the Bucks. They especially need to defend the perimeter as the Bucks are 2nd in the league shooting 39.1% from beyond the arc as a team.

Rebound – Next to defense, rebounding is always a big key to winning.  As Pat Riley once said, “No rebounds, no rings.” The key to rebounding is effort and focus.  The Celtics are 30-8 in games that they tie or out-rebound opponents. They are just 9-12 in games tin which they are out-rebounded.  The Bucks are 27th with 41.1 rebounds per game while the Celtics are 7th with 45.8 rebounds per game.   The Celtics have to fight to beat the Bucks to rebounds.

Don’t Underestimate the Bucks – The Bucks do not have their best player and often the Celtics relax and understimate short handed teams.  However,  the Bucks are still a rival in the Eastern Conference that can play hard.   The Celtics have to give max effort on the boards and on defense and they have to give that effort for the entire game and not just 1 or 2 quarters. 

3 Point Shooting – The Celtics are 3rd in the league, averaging 42.2 three pointers per game.  They are shooting 36.5% as a team from beyond the arc.  The Bucks are 13th, averaging 37.7 threes a game and they are 2nd in the league shooting 39.1% on threes as a team. The Celtics make 15.4 threes a game while the Bucks make 14.7 thees a game.  The Celtics need to work to get open and move the ball to find the best shots.  If the 3’s aren’t falling,  they need to take the ball inside.  And they need to defend the perimeter or the Bucks will bury them in 3s. 

X-Factors
Back to Back On the Road – The Celtics are on the road and so will have the distractions of travel, staying in hotels, and playing in front of a hostile crowd.  They need to stay focused and not allow any of those distractions to take away from playing their game.  Both teams are playing on the second night of back to back games and so fatigue may factor in for both teams.  Historically, the Celtics are just 44-73 in Milwaukee.  They need to stay focused and play hard and not let up. 

Coaching – Doc Rivers coached the Celtics from 2004 until 2013 and quit when the Celtics traded Pierce and Garnett to start a rebuild.  The Celtics had a relatively short rebuild and have been largely successful since he left.  Doc has struggled in each of his stops with the Clippers, 76ers and now the Bucks.  Doc would love nothing more than to beat his former team while Joe just wants to beat everybody, no matter who they are. 

Officiating – The officiating can always be an x-factor.  Some referees call the game tight and others let them play.  Some favor the home team and others call it evenly.  Some refs just seem to have an agenda that doesn’t fit the play on the court.  And sometimes the refs are simply bad.  The Celtics have to play through however the refs call the game, whether it is tight or they let them play or they make terrible calls.  The Celtics can’t allow bad calls or no calls to take away their focus on the game. 

Boston Celtics Daily Links 3/2/26

DENVER, CO - FEBRUARY 25: The sneakers worn by Christian Braun #0 of the Denver Nuggets during the game against the Boston Celtics on February 25, 2026 at Ball Arena in Denver, Colorado. 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 Garrett Ellwood/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

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Trae Young to make Wizards debut Thursday against Jazz

Trae Young #3 of the Washington Wizards looks on during the game against the Milwaukee Bucks on January 29, 2026 at Capital One Arena in Washington, DC. 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 Stephen Gosling/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Washington Wizards guard Trae Young will make his Wizards debut Thursday against the Utah Jazz, per ESPN’s Shams Charania.

Young, 27, was acquired by Washington on Jan. 5 in a trade that sent CJ McCollum and Corey Kispert to the Atlanta Hawks. The All-Star guard had yet to appear for the Wizards as he nursed an MCL sprain and a quad contusion.

Young had been “ramping up” in recent weeks. And now, he’ll make his home debut alongside Washington’s young core of players with 25 games remaining this season. It’ll mark his first game since Dec. 27.

It’s likely Young returns on a minutes restriction, as the Wizards have done with most of their premier players who returned from injury this season. But nonetheless, Washington’s star guard will make his home debut at Capital One Arena in front of Wizards fans who have awaited his debut for several weeks.

Young has a $49 million player option for the 2026-27 season. It was reported Monday by TheSteinLine that the expectation is Young and the Wizards agree on a multi-year contract extension this summer.

Lakers’ two blowout wins were equal parts meaningless and crucial

Here’s what you need to know about the Lakers’ back-to-back blowout wins. 

They didn’t mean much. And they meant everything. 

On Saturday, they beat a Warriors team (129-101) that was without Jimmy Butler, Steph Curry and Kristaps Porzingis. And on Sunday, they beat the Sacramento Kings (128-104), who have the worst record in the league. 

LeBron James hits a fadeaway jumper against the Sacramento Kings at Crypto.Com Arena. NBAE via Getty Images

Those weren’t standout wins by any means. But they were important because of their timing. 

Heading into this weekend, the Lakers had lost three straight games. Morale was down. They were finally healthy. They had no excuses. But they couldn’t figure things out. 

Of course, their failings dominated the national sports discourse last week. 

Former Laker Byron Scott said he hopes this is LeBron James’ last season with the Lakers in an appearance on local radio. Multiple pundits questioned whether Luka Doncic was really a winning player. 

In other words, the message was clear: Sound the alarm

With these wins, the Lakers let out some steam from the pressure cooker. 

The last two games were not only check marks in the right column, they were fun. 

Luka Doncic drives to the basket against the Warriors. AP

Against the Kings, there were so many highlights.

There were electric dunks from James, who had 24 points, six assists and two steals. But his favorite moment of the game undoubtedly was when his son, Bronny, made a 3-pointer in the fourth quarter. James held his arms straight and moved them up and down in celebration. 

As for Doncic, he had a circus-level highlight reel play. During the third quarter, he slipped, somehow got up fast enough to recover the ball and then made a wild, contested fadeaway 3-pointer. 

“I tripped on purpose,” said Doncic, who had 28 points, nine assists and five rebounds. “It was, how do you say, the And-1 Mixtape.”

The good vibes continued into the locker room, where James controlled the aux, dancing to Lauryn Hill and Mary J. Blige as he got dressed. 

It was a breath of fresh air for a Laker team that needed a break from all of the negativity around them.

Heading into this weekend, not much was going right for them. They had gone 4-4 on their recent eight-game homestand. Then they lost three straight for their third time this season. There were questions over whether their Big Three of James, Doncic and Austin Reaves could make things work. 

Austin Reaves works in the post against the Kings. NBAE via Getty Images

Things didn’t feel good in Los Angeles. 

But in the NBA, things can shift quickly. And they did beginning Saturday in San Francisco. 

Here’s the thing: You can tell when James is about to have a good game. He’s either so loose that he looks like a teenager hanging out with his buddies. Or he’s so focused that he drowns out everything around him, zeroing in on whatever’s playing on his headphones as if it were the gospel. 

(If James is somewhere in the middle, the Lakers are in trouble that night.)

Well, James was as loose as ever Saturday. 

Before the game, he shot around with his 11-year-old daughter, Zhuri, who was on her first father-daughter road trip of James’ 23-season career. She made a trick shot, as well as throwing her father a lob as he completed a two-handed dunk. 

After the game, when reporters asked James about Zhuri’s basketball skills, he balked. “She’s a volleyball player,” he said, flashing a smile. “Don’t get my wife mad. My wife is done with this basketball s–t.”

Former Laker Byron Scott said he hopes this is James’ last season with the Lakers IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

James also trolled his good friend Draymond Green before the Warriors game, blocking his shot as he warmed up. When Green turned around, the two players, who have met in the Finals four times from 2015-2018, exchanged a giant hug. 

Against the Warriors, Doncic and James combined for 48 points, 13 rebounds and 17 assists.

Doncic felt the joy, too. The Lakers’ win over the Warriors fell on his 27th birthday.

Before the game, a video surfaced of his teammates singing him happy birthday and giving him a cake. After the game, he quipped in his walk-off interview with ESPN, “No one gave me a gift yet. It’s crazy.”

For the Lakers, things started turning around over the last two games. James, who’s shooting 31.1 percent from beyond the arc this season, made eight of his 11 attempts from that distance. The ball moved among the Big Three seamlessly. They all played with joy. 

Now, the test will be whether they can replicate that against teams that aren’t decimated by injuries or in the cellar of the Western Conference. 

This weekend marked the Lakers’ first consecutive blowout wins of this season. 

The wins may not have been impressive considering their opponents. 

But they were crucial considering their necessity.

NBA power rankings 2025-26: San Antonio holds on to top spot but watch out for healthy Thunder

Just a few games in a week against a tanking team can really spike the short-term numbers for a team, but who really deserves to be on top? We have no movement in the top 10 of our NBC Sports NBA Power Rankings this week.

1. San Antonio Spurs

(43-17, last week No. 1)
San Antonio holds on to the top spot despite the fact that Sunday's loss in New York was the Spurs' worst loss of the season. You can be sure other teams took note of how the Knicks attacked and spaced out Victor Wembanyama and they will follow suit. That said, don't read too much into one loss after San Antonio didn't lose a game in February, and they stay on top of these rankings because of the recent win over Detroit. Don't look for the Spurs to rest Wembanyama down the stretch of the season. He may have looked a little tired lately (three straight games under 40% shooting before looking better against the Knicks on Sunday, with 25 points and 13 rebounds). Part of the reason to play him is that the Spurs are chasing the Thunder for the No. 1 seed in the West — they need to make up three games with 22 games to play. The other part is that Wembanyama can only miss four more games and still be eligible for postseason awards (and he is on track to win Defensive Player of the Year and be in the top five in MVP voting).

2. Detroit Pistons

(45-14, last week No. 2)
JB Bickerstaff made his case for Cade Cunningham to be MVP. "Right now, again, if the season were to end today, the best player on the team with the best win percentage, to me, is the guy that deserves to be the MVP. What he does for us on both ends of the floor, he doesn't take nights, or times, or possessions off defensively. We'll put him on the other team's best perimeter player, and he'll go down on the offensive end and score his 25 points, but create for his teammates. He's second in the league in assists and makes his teammates better also. And, then the game's on the line, you can give him the ball, and he's one of the best clutch players we have in this league. So, I'm hard pressed to find a better example or statement of who the MVP should be."

3. Oklahoma City Thunder

(47-15, last week No. 3)
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is back and dropped 36 points on the Nuggets in his return and he didn't play in overtime (due to a minutes restriction). SGA missed nine games and the Thunder went 5-4, holding on to the top spot in the West, now three games up on the Spurs. Count me in the group that, despite the ejection, thought Lu Dort got off light for the cheap shot hip check into the sore knee of Nikola Jokic this weekend — that was not a basketball play. Fun showdown with the Knicks on Wednesday (unfortunately, the second night of a back-to-back for OKC).

4. Boston Celtics

(40-20, last week No. 4)
It's a bit unexpected, but the Celtics play at the slowest pace in the league: Their pace of 95.5 possessions per game is more than one possession less than any other team. Just 13.6% of their plays start in transition (third lowest in the league, via Cleaning the Glass). They make up for it by having the league's lowest turnover rate. Part of that is Payton Pritchard, the reigning Sixth Man of the Year, who has thrived since returning to that role after the trade deadline, averaging 19.8 points and 5.8 assists a game, shooting 45.1% from 3-point range. (Pritchard started 48 games to open the season, so he's not going to repeat as Sixth Man). It was great to see Neemias Queta have a huge game on NBC against the 76ers on Sunday, he has been fantastic all season, one of the key reasons Boston is a threat in the east (especially with Jayson Tatum possibly returning as early as this week) and he deserved the flowers on NBC's Sunday Night Basketball.

5. Cleveland Cavaliers

(38-24, last week No. 5)
Cleveland made a statement win over the Knicks early in the week… and then they lost to Detroit (a respectable OT loss without Donovan Mitchell) and Milwaukee (not so respectable), then didn't look sharp beating Brooklyn. Reality is injuries are hitting the Cavs at a tough time, with Mitchell missing time and Harden playing through a finger fracture on his off hand. Only two games on the schedule this week but both are huge for East playoff seedings, with Cleveland hosting Detroit and Boston.

6. New York Knicks

(39-22, last week No. 6)
It's been a roller coaster week for the Knicks, but it ended on a high note. The Knicks' defense against San Antonio on Sunday — holding the Spurs to less than a point per possession, a 91.2 offensive rating — is what the Knicks need to do in the postseason if they want to reach the Finals. OG Anunoby was on another level. They slowed down a big, athletic, talented team. The low this week came on Tuesday, in a loss to the Cavaliers. Mike Brown was brought in to give New York an offense that wasn't as predictable as what Tom Thibodeau did (having Jalen Brown pound the ball out top). Brown installed a player-and-ball-movement system that, in theory, would work better in the playoffs. We're now three-quarters of the way through the NBA season what's clear is that the Knicks don't have the personnel to effectively run that style of offense night in and night out. That said, it worked well enough against an Elite Spurs defense on Sunday.

7. Minnesota Timberwolves

(38-23, last week No. 7)
Anthony Edwards is the All-Star Game MVP and is getting mentioned as a guy who could be on a lot of MVP ballots. If he's going to take his game to another level, how does that even happen? "I think it's high-level defense. I think he's got another gear there," Minnesota coach Chris Finch said. "When he does play that way for us, he's transcendent. There's been some games where he's just kind of taking over, and it leads to a lot of other great plays, not just the defense, but it's kind of inspirational plays for us." Inspirational plays like this insane dagger 3 against the Clippers.

8. Denver Nuggets

(37-24, last week No. 8)
The Nuggets were tested this week, beating the Celtics but losing to the Thunder (in overtime) and the Timberwolves. Injuries remain the big issue in Denver, and this team will look a lot better when Aaron Gordon and Payton Watson return — this is where Cameron Johnson was supposed to step up, but he went scoreless on Sunday against Minnesota. Denver needs more from him. What has kept the Nuggets afloat through a tough patch in the schedule has been their defense, which ranks in the top four in the league through the last five games. The offense has good but not elite, as we have come to expect around Jokic. Tough Thursday/Friday back-to-back this week against the Lakers and Knicks.

9. Houston Rockets

(37-22, last week No. 9)
The worst place to be in the West to start the playoffs is the 4/5 matchup, which promises to be stacked. As of today, Houston and Minnesota are tied for the 3/4 seeds in the West, and while the Rockets have the easier schedule the rest of the way (according to the Elias Sports Bureau) and have a better net rating since the All-Star break, they also have some ugly fourth-quarter meltdowns, like the one against Miami last week where Alperen Şengun, Amen Thompson, Tari Eason and Reed Sheppard combined to shoot 4-of-18 in the fourth quarter as the Heat came back to win. Big Texas showdown coming Sunday against the Spurs.

10. Toronto Raptors

(35-25, last week No. 10)
Toronto is predictable: They beat the teams they are supposed to, going 23-7 against teams under .500 this season, but are 11-18 against teams over that mark. That does not bode well for the postseason, where the Raptors appear likely to be the No. 5 or 6 seed in the East, giving them a tough first-round matchup. There are a couple of tough games ahead this week against the Knicks and Timberwolves.

11. Philadelphia 76ers

(33-27, last week No. 16)
Give Tyrese Maxey his flowers — he is having an All-NBA season, carrying a 76ers offense where nothing around him is consistent. In his last five games, he's averaged 31.8 points and eight assists per game. In that same time Joel Embiid made his return to the Philadelphia lineup, but that lasted just two games before he went out with an oblique strain. Which means he will miss Tuesday night's game against Victor Wembanyama and the Spurs, which will be a throwback game with a 1990s feel on NBC: Bob Costas will do the play-by-play, Doug Collins and Mike Fratello will be the analysts, and the courtside reporter will be Jim Gray. Just like the vintage NBA on NBC days in the 1990s. Worth watching for that alone.

12. Miami Heat

(32-29, last week No. 14)
All-Star Norman Powell is now week-to-week with a groin strain, a concern as he gives them 22.5 points a game while shooting 39% from 3-point range this season. Even without Powell, the Heat picked up a quality come-from-behind home win over the weekend against the Rockets, with seven players scoring in double figures (led by Bam Adebayo at 24). A lot of people nationally sleep on just how good Bam is. Expect Tyler Herro to step up into Powell's role as the Heat have a huge game Friday night against a hot Charlotte team looking to pass them and get into the top eight in the East (and with that, at least an easier route out of the play-in).

13. Orlando Magic

(31-28, last week No. 15)
Orlando needs wins: They sit as the No. 7 seed, but are just 1.5 games out of the No. 6 seed (Philadelphia) and avoiding the play-in altogether, but they are also 1.5 games out of the No. 9 seed and having a much tougher route out of the play-in. Orlando is not consistent without Franz Wagner (he should return at some point in March), it looked good going 3-1 on a post-All-Star road trip (including sweeping the Los Angeles teams), but fell at home to Houston and Detroit. The game to watch this week is when Orlando travels to Milwaukee on Sunday (the second game of a back-to-back), that's the kind of game Orlando needs to win to hold on to, or improve, its standing in the East.

14. Los Angeles Lakers

(36-24, last week No. 11)
The Lakers are in a race with the Suns for the No. 6 seed in the West, so Los Angeles dropping a game in Phoenix last Thursday — on a night the Suns were without Devin Booker or Dylan Brooks (while the Lakers were basically at full strength) — hurts. A lot. The Lakers are 12-16 against teams over .500 this season. The problem is simply this: The Lakers have a -1.8 net rating when Luka Doncic, LeBron James, Austin Reaves, and Deandre Ayton share the court (that is, in non-garbage-time minutes, via Cleaning the Glass). And those numbers got pumped up by a couple of blowout wins recently over tanking teams, it was -7.8 per 100 with those four on the court recently. The reality is the Lakers could really use a big man like vintage Clint Capela.

15. Golden State Warriors

(31-29, last week No. 12)
Stephen Curry has missed the last 10 recovering from "runner's knee," and the Warriors are 4-6 in that stretch with a bottom-10 offense in the NBA (being without Jimmy Butler due to his torn ACL only adds to the shot creation issues). Curry said he has not done any on-court work as part of his rehab and would be out "a little bit longer", which is going to be at least five more games. On the bright side, the Warriors did extend Brazilian forward Gui Santos, who was headed to restricted free agency but has stepped up in Steve Kerr's rotation since Butler went down. This is a good deal for both sides.

16. Charlotte Hornets

(30-31, last week No. 17)
Coby White made his Hornets debut, and he looked a little rusty — he even forgot to take his leg wrap off when he first went in. Through three games, all with him coming off the bench, White is averaging 12.3 points and 3.7 assists a game, although he has struggled with his shot. The Hornets have found their groove again, winning four in a row, and are just 2 games back of Miami for the No. 8 seed (and easier route out of the play-in) — which is why Friday night's showdown with the Heat is a massive game. Charlotte is also 3.5 games back of Philadelphia and the No. 6 seed (avoiding the play-in altogether).

17. Phoenix Suns

(34-26, last week No. 13)
Devin Booker could return from his hip issue as early as Tuesday and the Suns need him — they have the worst offense in the NBA across the last nine games (dating back to before the All-Star break). Dillon Brooks is gone for most of the rest of the season with a fractured hand, so more falls to Booker. The Suns picked up a key win in their quest to get into the top six in the West last week, beating the Lakers, and this week is filled with very winnable games, plus a real test against Charlotte.

18. Atlanta Hawks

(31-31, last week No. 21)
It's only been three games, but Jonathan Kuminga is fitting in just fine in Atlanta. In his debut he dropped 27 on Washington, then it was 17 (also on Washington, easy week for the Hawks) and then 20 on Portland on Sunday. Most importantly, he's doing it efficiently, shooting 67.7% (and 5-9 from 3-point range). The question is can he keep doing this consistently? Kuminga has had great stretches — even in the playoffs last year when Curry went down — but consistency has not been his strength. Still, great start in his new home, it's promising.

19. Los Angeles Clippers

(28-31, last week No. 18)
After trading away James Harden and Ivica Zubac, what is the goal for the No. 10 seed Clippers for the remainder of the season? "Our mindset is trying to get to seven or eight [seed], so we have two opportunities to win one game…" coach Tyronn Lue said, looking ahead to a path out of the play-in. "Getting to six is going to be tough, you know, looking at the standings, but we got to try to get to seven or eight." The Clippers are currently the No. 9 seed (tied with Portland), 2.5 games back of the No. 8 seed Warriors. Getting Darius Garland to make his debut and play for the team starting Monday against the Warriors will be a big help toward that goal — and you can watch it and a key postseason seeding game against Golden State live on Peacock.

20. Portland Trail Blazers

(29-33, last week No. 19)
Portland's offense has not been consistently great all season, but with Deni Avdija missing 9-of-13 (back) and now Shaedon Sharpe maybe out for all of March (calf), points are going to be hard to come by. Portland has the 24th-ranked offense in the league across its last 10 games, with a -7.3 net rating, yet has still gone 5-5. The Trail Blazers are not in danger of falling out of the play-in simply because everyone behind them is tanking. That said, games against Memphis and Indiana this week are potential wins.

21. Milwaukee Bucks

(26-33, last week No. 20)
After missing 15 games with a right calf strain, Giannis Antetokounmpo is set to return to the Bucks lineup Monday night against Boston. Milwaukee went 8-7 in this stretch without the Greek Freak, including an 8-2 run in which it had the league's third-best offense. That kept the Bucks in the mix for the postseason, and Antetokounmpo's return should be a huge boost toward getting into the play-in. That said, it's not going to be easy: Milwaukee currently sits as the No. 11 seed, three games back of a hot Charlotte team at No. 10 (Atlanta is No. 9, 3.5 games up on Milwaukee). The Bucks are just 15-15 in games Antetokounmpo has played this season, despite his MVP-like numbers (28 points, 10 rebounds, and 5.6 assists a game while shooting 64.5%). Big game this week against Atlanta in that chase for the postseason.

22. New Orleans Pelicans

(19-43, last week No. 22)
Dejounte Murray is back on the court, which is an impressive accomplishment considering all he has been through personally — it's much more than the Achilles tear — in the past couple of years. The other great story this season in New Orleans is Saddiq Bey, who missed all of last season with a torn ACL and then was traded to the Big Easy as part of the CJ McCollum deal, and now he's having the best season of his career averaging 17.4 points and 5.8 rebounds a game, all with improved efficiency (plus he's up for a new contract after this season and has earned himself a healthy raise). One final note, Zion Williamson had played in 35 consecutive games, the longest streak of his career, but on Saturday, he tweaked his ankle against Utah, and that streak ended Sunday against the Clippers.

23. Memphis Grizzlies

(23-36, last week No. 23)
Zach Edey is undergoing another ankle surgery, since the last one never got him right and back on the court. He's done for the season, but hopefully this gets him back next season. With Edey, Brandon Clarke and Santi Aldama all missing time lately, 6'7" Oliver-Maxence Prosper has been the team's starting center. Memphis may be the best of the tanking teams, but it's still a tanking team, so we can expect things like last week's loss to Sacramento.

24. Dallas Mavericks

(21-39, last week No. 25)
Cooper Flagg has missed seven games with a sprained foot and the Mavericks are 2-5 in those games as they continue to tank toward another high draft pick. Dallas has lost 13-of-15 games and those two wins were against fellow tanking teams (Indiana, Memphis). Things do not get easier as Dallas heads out on the road for 8-of-9, with only one tanking team in that stretch.

25. Chicago Bulls

(25-36, last week No. 27)
Bulls win! Bulls win! After a winless February where it dropped 11 in a row, Chicago had a 27-0 run at one point and beat the Milwaukee Bucks on Sunday as the calendar flipped to March. Watching Josh Giddey and Matas Buzelis (plus Collin Sexton off the bench) have that kind of game is a reminder that there are some players on the roster now who can and should be part of a good Bulls team in the future. The cupboard isn't bare. Tough stretch coming up with OKC followed by a five-game road trip through the Pacific Division.

26. Utah Jazz

(18-42, last week No. 24)
Add Lauri Markkanen to the list of the injured in Utah, recovering from a hip impingement suffered at practice. It's not a coincidence: The Jazz learned the lesson from Adam Silver's $500,000 fine and are going to sit guys with injuries to make sure they hold on to their top-eight protected pick. (A common talking point in league circles is that Silver came down so hard on the Jazz because of how the Jazz tanked, sitting Markanen and JJJ in the fourth quarter, messing with the league's gambling partners.) On the bright side in Utah, Mo Bamba is back.

27. Washington Wizards

(16-43, last week No. 26)
Can Bub Carrington be Trae Young's backup point guard next season in Washington? He's getting an extended tryout right now as the starter and the results are... mixed. To be kind. In his last five games, he's averaged 5.8 points per game on 29.7% shooting, but with 5.2 rebounds and 5.2 assists per night. His 3-point shooting has to be consistent (38% for the season but 23.5% the last five games). Washington has a tank-a-thon showdown with Utah this week.=

28. Indiana Pacers

(15-46, last week No. 28)
Interesting game on the schedule this week as Indiana travels to Los Angeles to take on the Clippers and Bennedict Mathurin — he has had some big games since being sent to LA as part of the Ivica Zubac trade (Zubac remains out for the tanking Pacers). Mathurin is averaging 19 points a game since coming to Los Angeles, and while Tyronn Lue has leaned on him less and less in the last week or so, expect Mathurin to get all the shots he wants against his former team. Pascal Siakam has missed a lot of time lately and the Pacers are 1-8 when he is out this season.

29. Sacramento Kings

(14-48, last week No. 30)
There was good news at the Golden 1 Center this week — leading up to the Kings being in a rare nationally televised game on Tuesday night, taking on Phoenix in a game on NBC and Peacock. First, not only did the Kings snap their 16-game losing streak, they won twice last week, beating two other tanking teams in Memphis and Dallas. The other good news is that Keegan Murray avoided any serious injury when he sprained his ankle last week, an MRI determined this was just a mild sprain. The bad news is that he is still going to be sidelined for two weeks, which means he will not be available against the Suns on Tuesday.

30. Brooklyn Nets

(15-45, last week No. 29)
Part of what the Nets are doing as they try to tank their way to a high draft pick is find guys who can be part of the rotation for whatever is coming next. Nolan Traore is looking like he might be one of those guys. Traore, a point guard out of France and one of five first-round picks Brooklyn held on to last year (he was No. 19) is averaging 13 points and 5.6 assists a game over his last 10. He's still got to improve his 3-point shot and turn the ball over less, but watch Brooklyn play and you start to see there may be something there for the future. Despite his improved play, the Nets have dropped eight in a row and it's going to be tough to turn that around on the road this week with two in Miami and one in Detroit.

US half marathon women's leaders guided off course in error. One asks officials to 'make it right'

ATLANTA (AP) — The runner who was leading the women's race at the U.S. half marathon championships until she was mistakenly led off the course by a guide vehicle is calling for USA Track & Field to make right an outcome that cost her a spot in the world road running championships this fall.

Jess McClain was ahead by a wide margin with about 1.5 miles to go Sunday when she and three other runners followed the guide vehicle on a wrong turn.

McClain said in an Instagram post that she followed a police escort, official lead vehicle and a media motorcycle off the course for about one kilometer.

“I had to come to a stop, make a tight & complete u-turn & run back onto course as a national championship title & a world team spot slipped away,” she wrote. “I’m going try my hardest to walk away from this weekend remembering the joy I felt in those moments where I thought I was on my way to becoming a National Champion & finally make Team USA outright.”

McClain, who is from Phoenix, ended up finishing ninth. The next two runners who followed her off the course — Emma Hurley of Colorado Springs, Colorado, and Ednah Kurgat of Roswell, Georgia — were 12th and 13th, respectively.

Molly Born of Chapel Hill, North Carolina, crossed the finish line first in 1 hour, 9 minutes, 43 seconds.

“I don't really feel like the U.S. champion just because of the whole situation that went down at the end," Born said in an interview with the Fast Women YouTube channel.

McClain and three other runners who followed the lead vehicle appealed after their protest of the order of finish was rejected. USATF said in a statement the jury of appeals found "the event did not meet USATF Rule 243 and that the course was not adequately marked at the point of misdirection. This violation contributed to the misdirection taken by the athletes within the top four at the time of misdirection. However, the jury of appeals finds no recourse within the USATF rulebook to alter the results order of finish. The results order of finish as posted is considered final.”

The top three finishers qualify for the world championships Sept. 20 in Copenhagen, Denmark. The USATF noted that the American team would not be officially selected until May and that the governing body would continue to review what took place in Atlanta.

“While we understand athletes are eager to resolve this issue expeditiously, our process will ensure an ultimate decision is in the best interest of all the athletes involved,” the USATF said.

The USATF said lead vehicles are provided and managed by the local organizing committee, which was the Atlanta Track Club.

“Mistakes happen & I am sure those who were leading us feel terrible about the outcome,” McClain wrote. “I just hate that the athletes are ALWAYS the ones who pay the price (literally $$$)… time & time again.”

She said she trusts USATF and the Atlanta Track Club “can somehow make it right for the athletes who were led off course... It sounds like conversations are still being had, so I am choosing to remain hopeful that we’ll soon have a little more clarity than what we left Atlanta with & actionable steps forward.”

___

AP sports: https://apnews.com/hub/sports

Luke Kornet calls on Atlanta Hawks to cancel 'Magic City Monday' promo

An NBA player from an opposing team has called on the Atlanta Hawks to cancel their upcoming game promotion that revolves around celebrating a well-known local gentleman's club.

San Antonio Spurs center Luke Kornet asked the Hawks to reconsider their "Magic City Monday" plans for a March 16 game against the Orlando Magic in a letter posted to Medium on Monday, March 2. Atlanta's ownership group and front office recently touted the one-night collaboration as an ode to an "iconic cultural institution," citing Magic City's role and impact in Atlanta's Black communities and hip-hop culture in the announcement.

But Kornet wrote that "the Hawks failed to acknowledge that this place is, as the business itself boasts, 'Atlanta’s premier strip club.' "

"The NBA should desire to protect and esteem women, many of whom work diligently every day to make this the best basketball league in the world," Kornet continued. "We should promote an atmosphere that is protective and respectful of the daughters, wives, sisters, mothers, and partners that we know and love.

"Allowing this night to go forward without protest would reflect poorly on us as an NBA community, specifically in being complicit in the potential objectification and mistreatment of women in our society."

Magic City Kitchen is also slated to serve two versions of its "world famous" lemon pepper wings – Louwill Lemon Pepper BBQ – at the March 16 game. The flavor is named after three-time NBA Sixth Man of the Year-winner, Lou Williams. Rapper T.I. is scheduled to perform at halftime and limited edition Magic City merchandise will be available to purchase at the game.

Magic City celebrated 40 years with a five-part STARZ docuseries, ‘Magic City: An American Fantasy,’ that was produced by Hawks principal owner Jami Gertz and Atlanta native Jermaine Dupri. Magic City founder Michael “Mr. Magic” Barney and T.I. are scheduled to record a live podcast from inside Atlanta's State Farm Arena before the game.

Kornet, 30, hopes the Hawks and NBA officials listen to him instead.

"I’d like to encourage the league, its owners, employees and fans to hold the Atlanta Hawks to a higher standard of what they find worthy of promoting," Kornet wrote. "I and others throughout the league were surprised by and object to the Hawks’ decision. We desire to provide an environment where fans of all ages can safely come and enjoy the game of basketball and where we can celebrate the history and culture of communities in good conscience. The celebration of a strip club is not conduct aligned with that vision."

Luke Kornet stats

Kornet is averaging a career-best 7.1 points, 6.5 rebounds and 1.9 assists in his first season with the Spurs. This is the sixth team he's played for in his nine NBA seasons, with his previous four years spent on the Boston Celtics.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Luke Kornet asks Atlanta Hawks to stop Magic City strip club promotion

NBA power rankings: Is a new contender emerging out West?

We’re entering the final months of the 2025-26 NBA season, and action is heating up.

For one, players have started to chirp and fire back at one another as rivalries and stakes intensify. That has led to a tightening in the battle for seeding and positioning in both the Eastern and Western Conferences.

But that hasn’t stopped teams at the bottom of the standings to seemingly sabotage the remainder of their seasons in an attempt to preserve their draft positioning. That apparent tanking, against the backdrop of a loaded NBA draft class, has led to a fairly wide discrepancy between teams at the top and those at the bottom.

Here are USA TODAY Sports’ NBA power rankings after Week 17 of the 2025-26 regular season:

USA TODAY Sports NBA power rankings

Note: Records and stats through Feb. 8. Parentheses show movement from last week’s rankings.

NBA Week 18 power rankings: Top 10

1. Detroit Pistons, 45-14 (—)

2. Oklahoma City Thunder, 47-15 (—)

3. San Antonio Spurs, 43-17 (—)

4. Boston Celtics, 40-20 (—)

5. New York Knicks, 39-22 (—)

6. Minnesota Timberwolves, 38-23 (+4)

7. Cleveland Cavaliers, 38-24 (-1 )  

8. Houston Rockets, 37-22 (-1)

9. Denver Nuggets, 37-24 (-1)

10. Los Angeles Lakers, 36-24 (-1)

It is clear who are the top three teams in the NBA. For weeks now, a combination of the Pistons, Thunder and Spurs have all alternated positioning atop this list. But the most compelling narrative is between the Pistons and Thunder, who are still not quite fully healthy, but got a massive boost with the return of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. Oklahoma City, though, will be waiting for Jalen Williams (hamstring) to fully heal.

The Timberwolves secured a massive, nine-point victory Sunday, March 1 over the Nuggets to move into fourth place in the West and are the big movers in this week’s power rankings. Anthony Edwards is finding ways to lead his team; the Nuggets forced the ball out of his hands with double teams, so he made the right plays. But in the previous four games, he averaged 33.3 points per contest.

And over the last week, each of the Cavaliers, Rockets, Nuggets and Lakers have suffered questionable losses to dip them further.

Minnesota Timberwolves guard Anthony Edwards (5) dunks the ball during the first quarter against the Los Angeles Clippers at Intuit Dome in Inglewood, California, on Feb. 26, 2026.

NBA Week 18 power rankings: Nos. 11-20

11. Toronto Raptors, 35-25 (—)

12. Phoenix Suns, 34-26 (—)

13. Philadelphia 76ers, 33-27 (—)

14. Orlando Magic, 31-28 (+2)

15. Miami Heat, 32-29 (-1)

16. Atlanta Hawks, 31-31 (+4)

17. Charlotte Hornets, 30-31 (+1)

18. Golden State Warriors, 31-29 (-2)

19. Los Angeles Clippers, 28-31 (-2)

20. Portland Trail Blazers, 29-33 (-1)

Toronto’s most recent four losses have come against the Spurs, Thunder, Pistons and Timberwolves — all elite teams. For the Raptors to crack the Top 10, they’ll need to take some of those games. The resurgence of the Charlotte Hornets continues, as no team has posted a higher net rating — a massive figure of 16.7 — over the last five games.

And the Hawks appear to be big winners, at least initially, from the trading deadline. Acquiring Jonathan Kuminga on a low-cost flier could be a move that gives them a big bump headed into the push for the playoffs. Atlanta has won four consecutive and Kuminga has averaged 21.3 points per game on a wildly efficient 67.7% shooting rate since joining the team.

NBA Week 18 power rankings: Nos. 21-30

21. Milwaukee Bucks, 26-33 (—)

22. Memphis Grizzlies, 23-36 (—)

23. Chicago Bulls, 25-36 (—) 

24. Dallas Mavericks, 21-39 (—)

25. New Orleans Pelicans, 19-43 (+1)

26. Utah Jazz, 18-42 (-1)

27. Washington Wizards, 16-43 (—)

28. Indiana Pacers, 15-45 (+1)

29. Brooklyn Nets, 15-46 (-1)

30. Sacramento Kings, 14-48 (—)

Can Milwaukee make a push into the play-in picture? Giannis Antetokounmpo is set to return Monday, March 2, and his rapport with recent buyout acquisition Cam Thomas will be crucial for the Bucks.

After that, this bottom third is a bunch of teams who are far more interested in their draft position than they are in winning. The Jazz are shutting everyone down with injuries, the Nets have lost eight consecutive and the Kings can’t seem to find any traction whatsoever.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NBA power rankings have Pistons, Thunder battle as Timberwolves rise

US gold medal-winning captain Hilary Knight reveals she played at the Olympics with a torn MCL

NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. women's hockey gold medal-winning captain Hilary Knight revealed Monday in a television appearance that she played in Milan with a torn medial collateral ligament in one of her knees.

“I’m not walking around the best, and I’m missing a few games for the (PWHL’s) Seattle Torrent,” Knight said on “CBS Mornings.”

"To be able to play through injury was definitely a mental sort of gymnastic challenge for myself and also physical, but we’ve got some amazing support staff that did their best to get me out there and perform at my best — as best as I could.”

Knight, playing at what she said was her final Olympics at 36, tied the final against Canada with just over two minutes left in regulation. Knight, teammate Kendall Coye Schofield and Canada’s Erin Ambrose were all put on long-term injured reserve by their respective PWHL teams upon returning for the resumption of the season.

Knight and U.S. men's gold medal-winning players Jack and Quinn Hughes are set to appear on “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon” on Monday night. That is coming 48 hours since their memorable cameo alongside women’s golden goal scorer Megan Keller on “Saturday Night Live.”

Jack Hughes also scored to beat Canada in overtime, like Keller did three days earlier. The men's gold medal is the country's first since the 1980 “Miracle on Ice” in Lake Placid.

Jack with the New Jersey Devils and Quinn with the Minnesota Wild have returned to play games in the NHL. The Devils gave Jack a day off from practice ahead of their appearance with Knight on Fallon's show, which is expected to be the final stop on the brothers' whirlwind media tour since returning to North America.

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AP Olympic coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/milan-cortina-2026-winter-olympics

Doc Rivers told on himself after Sunday’s embarrassing blowout to the Bulls

Mar 26, 2025; Denver, Colorado, USA; Milwaukee Bucks head coach Doc Rivers in the second quarter against the Denver Nuggets at Ball Arena. Mandatory Credit: Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images | Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images

I’d like to preface this by saying that while I know my sarcasm in this article might suggest otherwise, I don’t take any of the salty comments you’ll read below that Rivers addressed towards me personally. His team had just been embarrassed by another team that had just lost 11 straight games. He wasn’t in a good mood, I get it. Our past interactions have been fine, and I respect him as a person. Though he’s spoken this way to other reporters a fair bit recently, I know he is a nice enough guy and very personable. And one more note: he didn’t answer every question with “what do you think? I mean, honestly.” I’ve included that for effect.

Yesterday afternoon, I sat down ahead of Doc Rivers’ postgame press conference at the United Center, expecting that I might touch a nerve with what I was about to ask. His Bucks had just been punked in a staggering 23-point loss thanks to a truly horrendous fourth quarter. You can see the grisly numbers on that here; I won’t rehash them in full. Suffice it to say, it was an utter meltdown.

Usually, Rivers is on the podium pretty quickly after delivering a postgame talk to his players. I wasn’t checking the time, but it felt like it took longer to get out of the locker room and to the presser. Perhaps it was a longer address. But once we sat down, the comments that followed felt to me like a self-own. Instead of going chronologically through them, I’ll start with the two questions I asked, first the more banal: why did the Bucks’ run of 18 consecutive missed field goals happen?

“You tell me. I literally just said that. All in-between jump shots and overdribbling the basketball.”

Ok, fair enough. Now the contentious one: what are you doing in huddles and during gameplay to address giant scoring droughts like that 27-0 run?

“What do you think? I mean, honestly.”

“I’m asking you.”

“We do it every time. We set the right stuff up offensively, we just didn’t get to it… We ran the same plays we ran all game that worked, and then they didn’t work because we overdribbled the basketball.”

Coach, I don’t know what you’re doing to stop the bleeding; that’s why I asked you. I’ve never coached basketball at any level. If you can’t give me a straight answer, what exactly are you telling your guys in those timeouts? You have eyes; you know the run happened in part because of bad shot selection:

“I don’t know how many contested, in-between jumpshots we took in the third. I can’t wait to look at it. It felt like every other shot was a contested, off-the-dribble, 16-dribble, in-between jumpshot. And that’s the worst shot in the game.”

Yes, your team took oodles of bad shots and missed them. What are you doing to fix it?

“What do you think? I mean, honestly?”

I’m asking you. During the disaster run, they took five shots inside the arc, and a Bulls defender was within four feet—defined as “tight” or “vert tight by the league—on all of them. Only one of those shots came within six feet. Yet players kept putting these shots up, and seemingly no effort was made to stop them.

That’s a long-term problem with the Bucks under Rivers. After Milwaukee’s incomprehensible loss to Washington back on December 1st, my colleague Jack Trehearne discussed the lack of accountability Rivers has with his players. Our Jackson Gross brought it up the next morning too. During that game and at his other stops around the league, we’ve seen this in action—this can also be thought of as being a “player-friendly coach”—but mostly regarding stars. Yesterday, it extended down a starless roster:

“Once we got down 10, I thought everybody was trying to win the game for us. They felt the pressure of losing that game.”

Yeah man, your guys are irresponsibly playing hero ball. What are you doing to fix it?

“What do you think? I mean, honestly?”

I’m asking you. Perhaps they need more accountability. But Rivers definitely needs to take more for himself. Yesterday, one look at the plus-minus column will tell you that Milwaukee’s starters were bad. The figures for the bench look better, but most of that was due to their first-half performance. Here’s Rivers on how the second unit was responsible for their 17-0 second-quarter run and how the starters struggled to maintain the positive momentum:

“The second group… they got us the 15-point lead. (The) first group came in before halftime, lost it, and then regained it, and then lost it again [in the second half]. They lost two 15-point leads. The second group—there was a stretch in the second quarter where it couldn’t have been more beautiful in the way the game was played. No dribbles, into the paint—they did everything you’re supposed to do as a team, and then the first group came back in and did the exact opposite.”

Ok dude, your starters were crap. What are you doing to fix it?

“What do you think? I mean, honestly?”

I’m asking you. Granted, you are missing your best player, and what you have active is easily a lottery team. But there are several other head coaches around the league known for getting the most out of what they have, and even bad teams manage to piece together productive lineups (note Milwaukee’s and Utah’s quintets here).

Back to shot selection. Rivers pointed out that it was better from the last minute of the third quarter on… which was exactly when the 27-0 Bulls run began. And he’s right: of the Bucks’ 14 shots during that debacle, 9 were from three and six were wide open. He brought this up after my initial “why?” question, and though I did not ask the question that precipitated this response, he gestured and looked at me during the emboldened part:

“I don’t care if it’s not in the paint. We’re getting wide-open threes. For you, we’re one of the best shooting threes in the NBA. So if we take 30 of those, I can live with it.“ 

If you want to see his face and hear his tone, here’s a video:

Cool cool, your team was missing clean looks from deep. What are you doing to fix it?

“What do you think? I mean, honestly?”

I’m asking you! Cold stretches happen when teams are shooting boatloads of threes. It’s an efficient shot, but not as efficient as anything in the restricted area or free throws. As I brought up yesterday, Chicago only had two players active above 6’8” while Milwaukee had five. With a size and talent advantage, there is no excuse to abandon interior scoring completely—as I mentioned, their closest shot during the 27-0 run was a Bobby Portis five-foot floater—while you’re frigid from deep.

Not to get too meme-y, but we’re all trying to figure out who the problem is. And what exactly you do here. As far as I can tell, nothing of consequence is happening in these huddles, or at least nothing that portends winning basketball. Is this a tank job? Usually, it’s the front office directing that, not the coach. Rivers being in on the tanking is the most understandable explanation, but it belies the approach the team seemingly has to make the play-in once Giannis returns, which will apparently happen tonight.

I’d like to add that just before this, Rivers said they had a “36-point third quarter” as evidence that they do know how to “play right.“ No sir, your team gave up 36 points in the third quarter. That box score you’re looking at? The bottom line is for the Bulls, not you. Maybe he meant the second quarter, where the Bucks scored 34 and played beautifully, an appraisal I agree with. I’ll give him the benefit of the doubt, I guess.

But back to my question. Recall that Rivers’ reply was “we ran the same plays we ran all game that worked, and then they didn’t work because we overdribbled the basketball.” Last week, Bucks sideline reporter and friend of the site Melanie Ricks overheard what Rivers was telling his players during a timeout and relayed it to viewers at home. Essentially, he told them, “I’m the coach, run the plays I call! Not your own!”

Hey! An ounce of accountability Rivers refreshingly levied on his players. But on the other hand, maybe these are the wrong plays. If guys are overdribbling, maybe there needs to be more off-ball movement to give them somewhere to pass. Maybe guys are trying to call their own plays that might work better. Critically, maybe this is a sign that players are tuning him out?

The overdribbling might be indicative that they are. Moreover, there’s a bigger lesson to be learned here, and it’s very simple. If the same plays stop working, for whatever reason, stop using them. Or fine, if they’d work if only your guys stopped dribbling so dang much, tell them to stop doing that.

I know, I know. As he’s so fond of saying, Doc is just a nickname. He’s not a real doctor. But I’m reminded of this classic joke, which I learned comes from the repertoire of vaudeville comedian Henny Youngman (of “take my wife, please” fame):

“Doctor, it hurts when I do this.”

“Then don’t do that!”

You don’t need to be a doctor of anything to grasp this. A Hall-of-Fame coach who amassed a playbook over 26 years in the NBA has alternatives to plays that stop working. If it’s not working when you do it, stop doing it. That’s what I think, honestly.