Michael Porter Jr. becoming part of Nets future but a big decision awaits

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - FEBRUARY 07: Michael Porter Jr. #17 of the Brooklyn Nets looks on during the first half against the Washington Wizards at Barclays Center on February 07, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Jordan Bank/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Michael Porter is relaxing this weekend somewhere in the tropics. One might think that he’s toning down the anxiety from all those trade reports concerning him at the deadline…

Probably not. It become quite obvious during the weeks leading up to the trade deadline that Michael Porter Jr. was not going anywhere, indeed not available. Brian Windhorst said it. Michael Scotto said it. Shams Charania said it and Jake Fischer said it, all one way or another. While some fans wanted the Nets to trade MPJ for more draft assets — Brooklyn already has 13 firsts and 20 seconds — and/or to deepen the tank.

That was not the way ownership and management looked at the 27-year-old who may not have made the All-Star Game tonight but is having all-Star caliber season: averaging 25.0 points, 7.2 rebounds and 3.2 assists while providing leadership to a young team. He has even become a fan favorite after some weird podcast performances last summer. Virtually all his numbers are at career highs. Despite the rumors, it has become more than apparent that while the Nets aren’t going to build around him, they want him around for the good times.

This week, Porter himself in a conversation with Tommy Alter and Cam Johnson of Old Man and the Three, indicated in the strongest terms yet that he wants the same thing and despite enduring something he’s been unfamiliar with — losing — he’s ready for the challenge, happy in Brooklyn:

“I think that we are on the right path to being a good team,” Porter said in one of the lesser quoted lines in the hour-long back-and-fourth. “We’re the youngest team in the league. They got a lot of money over there to spend, and they got the most picks. We’re looking at a high draft pick this next season. So I understand the vision of the organization.”

Porter also told the podcast how he wants to see things through to what he calls “a really dope thing” in Brooklyn.

“Sometimes I have to remind myself of that, because I’ve just won a lot of basketball games, and it can be tough because I wanna play winning basketball and compete. If I’m putting my body through all this recovery, all this work, I wanna see the W at the end of the day. But we are building something, and we’re developing really good young players. It’s not far off from being a really dope thing in Brooklyn.”

It shouldn’t be that much of a surprise. He and Jordi Fernandez have re-bonded after spending five years together in Denver, just before the Nuggets won it all. Fernandez made it clear from the moment the Nets got him — and an unprotected first rounder in 2032 — that he was going to be a big piece going forward for his team.

Now, of course, the Nets are approaching some big decisions. The pundits listed above also shared the belief that Sean Marks & co. plan on making big moves this summer, without details other than MPJ is likely part of them. The first component of those plans has been taking shape since last June’s historic, five first round picks. The trade deadline brought minor adjustments, but with the Draft Lottery on May 10 and the Draft itself six weeks beyond that, things will likely go into high gear including a decision on MPJ’s contract extension.

Porter makes $38.3 million this year. The Nets are also on the hook for $40.8 million next season. But on July 6, the mutual love affair will face a milestone. How much will Joe Tsai be willing to spend to extend MPJ beyond 2026-27. The Nets do have time to decide: through June 30, 2027.

Yossi Gozlan, the free lance capologist who runs capsheets.com and the “Third Apron” podcast, recently laid out the extent of the extension to NetsDaily: four years and max salary projected at four years, $234 million, beginning in 2027-28 when he’ll still be only 29 years old.

“In reality I think he’s looking at something in the 20-25% of the salary cap range.” Gozlan told ND, citing the lack of competition. “As great as he’s been, he’s not going to replicate this production elsewhere since any good team that acquires him probably makes him their second or third option. I could see him getting something closer to four years, $160 million, but it’s way too early to project his next contract.“

For the record, the projected salary cap for 2027-28, is $174.3 million, meaning a starting salary around $44 million.

This is also where the Nets strategy of rebuilding from within comes into play. Next season, the Nets will likely have seven players on rookie deals: Noah Clowney who’ll be on the last year of his rookie deal (and also eligible for an extension starting in 2026-27), the Flatbush Five of Egor Demin, Nolan Traore, Drake Powell, Ben Saraf and Danny Wolf in their second or four years, plus whoever they take in the Draft in June. Depending on how high they draft, the total for the seven players, roughly half the team, will be around $40 million, a quarter of the salary cap.

So they’ll have an ability to sign or trade for players AND keep their payroll within reason. (And yes, a lot depends on those seven players, perhaps none more so than the draft pick.)

MPJ of course alluded to that when talking with Alter and Johnson, saying, “we’re developing really good young players.” As for what would make things “really dope in Brooklyn” that no doubt will have to be a superstar who will either develop from all those draft picks or have to be convinced Brooklyn will have enough good players to produce the W’s needed to lure him.

The Nets have kept Porter out of the line-up in recent days, but in discussing his injury, they expressed no real concern about his health which is a long-term issue. He’s been troubled by tendinitis in the same right knee in which he suffered an MCL sprain earlier this season.

“It’s the same knee, but it’s unrelated. Tendonitis is something athletes deal with in different parts of the body,” said Fernández. “It’s good for him to take this game, see how he feels and get him back feeling great. That’s the most important thing. Nothing to be concerned about. A lot of guys deal with it, but it’s good that Mike can focus on his body right now.”

In the meantime, he’s taking time off with the family…

2026 NBA All-Star Game Preview: Luka, LeBron represent Lakers

LOS ANGELES, CA - FEBRUARY 14: A detailed shot of NBA All-Star Los Angeles signage during All Star Saturday Night as part of the 2026 NBA All-Star Weekend on February 14, 2026 at Intuit Dome in Inglewood, 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 Hagy/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

This year’s All-Star weekend main event, the All-Star Game, will take place on Sunday. The selected All-Stars will be divided into three teams: Team World, Team Stars and Team Stripes.

Start time and TV schedule

What: NBA All-Star Game

When: 2 p.m. PT, Feb. 15

Where: Intuit Dome

Watch: NBC, Peacock


This year’s All-Star Game will feature a format that many have been clamoring for over the years: a game between American and international superstars. It’s one way the league is attempting to revive the All-Star Game, which has frankly been a brutal watch over the last couple of years. Even Adam Silver admitted it.

So this year, the All-Star Game will see a three-team round-robin tournament. There will be four games, each 12 minutes long. Each team will play each other at least once and the top two that prevail will advance to the championship round. Note that Team World’s roster is stacked with international All-Stars while 16 American All-Stars are spread between Team Stripes and Team Stars.

The Lakers superstars, LeBron James (Team Stripes) and Luka Dončić (Team World), will be on different teams, so it’ll be fun to watch them go at it. It would also be nice to witness one of them bring home the All-Star Game MVP, which hasn’t been awarded to a Laker since Kobe Bryant won it back in 2011.

But more importantly, it would be ideal to see an entertaining All-Star Game, especially with this new format. This year’s All-Star weekend could use a little more excitement and frankly, it’s about time the main event becomes one that’s worth watching.

Notes and Updates:

  • James — who didn’t address the media during player media availability on Saturday — will do so prior to tip-off on Sunday. Given how he’s approached the All-Star Game over the past few years, there could be a chance that he doesn’t suit up.
  • Luka is expected to suit up, but only play for a short stint after missing the last four games for the Lakers.
  • Here’s a preview of what each team’s jersey kits look like for the All-Star Game:

You can follow Nicole on Twitter at @nicoleganglani.

Chris Paul retires after 21 seasons

TORONTO, CANADA - MARCH 1: Stephen Curry #30 and Chris Paul #3 of the Golden State Warriors stand during a break in play in the second half of their NBA game against the Toronto Raptors at Scotiabank Arena on March 1, 2024 in Toronto, Canada. 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 Cole Burston/Getty Images) | Getty Images

When we look back on the Steph Curry era of the Golden State Warriors, the most prominent enemy of the team was clearly LeBron James. If the Warriors were the X-Men, James is Magneto, leading an ever-changing, ever-relocating Brotherhood of Evil Mutants. But Chris Paul was more like the Doctor Octopus to Curry’s Spider-Man, a highly intelligent, stocky man doomed to continually fall short against his rival, undone by injuries, bad luck, the resourcefulness of his opponent and too much whining. Wait, that last one doesn’t really describe Doc Ock.

Paul ended his 21-season NBA career Friday after being waived by the Toronto Raptors. It really ended when his fairy tale return to the Los Angeles Clippers turned into one of those old, gruesome fairy tales, and Paul was sent home by the team for yelling at his teammates and coaches too much. In other words, acting too much like Chris Paul.

It’s the culmination of a career that saw Paul made 12 All-Star teams, win six steals titles, and lead the league in assists five times. He finishes with this second-most steals and assists in NBA history while playing for seven different teams, including a strange year with the Warriors in 2023-24. That was like the rare occasions when Doctor Octopus and Spider-Man teamed up, to shut down a nuclear reactor or save someone from being poisoned or dump Jordan Poole’s long-term contract while pretending they were going to trade Doctor Octopus for a veteran superhero.

But for the Warriors, he was absolutely a supervillain. Paul’s Los Angeles Clippers defeated the Warriors in the 2014 playoffs in a physical series that may have been responsible for Curry’s mid-career visit to the gun show. Paul and the Clippers lost to the Oklahoma City Thunder in the next round, thanks to Paul trying to get a three-shot foul late in the fourth quarter, turning the ball over, and losing on the cusp of victory, a common theme for both supervillains and Chris Paul.

In 2015, the Warriors seemed on a collision course with the Lob City Clippers on the way to their first title, but the Clippers blew a 19-point lead late in a closeout game to the Houston Rockets and lost in the second round. Paul never made the conference finals with the Clippers.

Paul moved to the Houston Rockets, where he solidified a very good team alongside James Harden. The Rockets were about to go up 3-2 in the Western Conference Finals against the Dubs when Paul tempted fate by doing Curry’s shimmy in his face.

The basketball gods responded by tearing Paul’s hamstring late in Game 5. The Rockets would lose with Paul on the sidelines and lose to the Warriors again with a healthy Paul in 2019. Then Paul became an NBA nomad, going from the Oklahoma City Thunder to the Phoenix Suns, who lost the Finals in Paul’s only career trip in 2021.

It looked like the Warriors might have a fourth playoff battle with CP3 in 2022, but it was not to be. Leading the Dallas Mavericks 3-2, the Suns were outscored by 60 combined points in their Games 6 and 7 losses. New owner Mat Ishbia made trades for Kevin Durant and Bradley Beal in 2023, and Paul headed to Golden State for a very weird partnership.

Honestly, it’s kind of like when Doctor Octopus inhabited Spider-Man’s body for a while. Like Paul, Doc Ock’s body was wasting away from years of physical battles, wear and tear, and illegally grabbing people. Somehow he switched minds, inhabited Peter Parker’s body and fell in love with a little person named Anna Maria Marconi, which is a lot like Steve Kerr’s preferred guard-heavy lineups that season. Ultimately, Doctor Octopus lets his consciousness fade away from Spider-Man’s body, just like how the Warriors let Paul’s large contract expire instead of using it in trades.

It’s a common comic book trope: The villain joins up with the heroes and shows he’s not that bad, even though he moves on and proves, like Paul did with the Clippers this season, that ultimately the villain won’t change their evil annoying ways.

Paul had a great career and was one of the most impactful ultra-short players in NBA history, joining Isiah Thomas, Allen Iverson, Tim Hardaway, Nate “Tiny” Archibald, and Slater Martin. There’s no word yet whether his twin brother Cliff Paul will also be retiring from his job as an insurance agent, but Jake from State Farm is scheduled to make an announcement next week.

Photos: Highlights from NBA All-Star Game weekend in Inglewood

The Miami Heat's Keshad Johnson soars through the air to dunk a basketball during the NBA All-Star Game dunk contest.
The Miami Heat's Keshad Johnson soars through the air to dunk during the NBA All-Star Game dunk contest on Saturday at the Intuit Dome. (Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)

The world’s best basketball players are in the Los Angeles area this weekend for NBA All-Star weekend. It is first time the annual midseason festival is being held at the Intuit Dome in Inglewood, the recently-opened home of the Clippers. Festivities started Friday and included the celebrity all-star game, during which one team of celebrities was coached by NBA star Giannis Antetokounmpo and the other was coached by actor Anthony Anderson. Team Giannis got the win 65-58, led by an MVP performance from “How to Get Away with Murder” star Rome Flynn. The dunk contest, three-point contest and skills challenge were showcased on Saturday. This year’s dunk contest participants included Carter Bryant of the Spurs, Jaxson Hayes of the Lakers, Keshad Johnson of the Heat and Jase Richardson of the Magic. The three-point contest featured eight players, including five All-Stars. The Trail Blazers' Damian Lillard, who isn't playing this season while recovering from a torn Achilles, managed to win the three-point contest.

Fans cheer are illuminated by Intuit Dome lights as they cheer during all-star festivities Saturday.
Fans cheer are illuminated by Intuit Dome lights as they cheer during all-star festivities Saturday. (Ronaldo Bolanos/Los Angeles Times)
Carter Bryant moves the ball between his legs in midair before dunking during the all-star dunk contest on Saturday.Dodgers star Mookie Betts is welcomed to the court during the celebrity all-star game by the Clippers cheerleaders.Celebrity Keegan-Michael Key kneels and laughs with teammates sitting on a bench during a game.
The Spurs' Carter Bryant moves the ball between his legs in midair before dunking during the all-star dunk contest on Saturday. Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles TimesDodgers star Mookie Betts is welcomed to the court during the celebrity all-star game by the Clippers cheerleaders at the Kia Forum in Inglewood on Friday. Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles TimesCelebrity Keegan-Michael Key laughs with teammates during the all-star celebrity game at the Kia Forum in Inglewood on Friday. Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times
Team Vince Carter celebrates as Philadelphia 76ers guard VJ Edgecombe wins rising stars game most valuable player honor.
Team Vince Carter celebrates as Philadelphia 76ers guard VJ Edgecombe wins the Rising Stars game most valuable player honors Friday at the Intuit Dome. (Ronaldo Bolanos/Los Angeles Times)
Smoke fills and lights are deployed during the NBA All-Star events Saturday at the Intuit Dome in Inglewood.
Smoke fills and lights are deployed during the NBA All-Star events Saturday at the Intuit Dome in Inglewood. (Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)
Magic guard Jase Richardson completes a reverse dunk during NBA All-Star dunk contest Saturday at the Intuit Dome.Pelicans guard Jeremiah Fears rises for a lay up while being guarded by Wizards guard Kyshawn George Friday.Lakers forward Jaxson Hayes throws up peace signs as he introduced before the NBA all-star dunk contest.
Magic guard Jase Richardson completes a reverse dunk during NBA All-Star dunk contest Saturday at the Intuit Dome. Ronaldo Bolanos/Los Angeles TimesPelicans guard Jeremiah Fears (0) rises up for a lay up while being guarded by Wizards guard Kyshawn George (18) during the final of the NBA rising stars game at Intuit Dome on Friday. Ronaldo Bolanos/Los Angeles TimesLakers forward Jaxson Hayes throws up peace signs as he introduced before the NBA all-star dunk contest Saturday at the Intuit Dome. Ronaldo Bolanos/Los Angeles Times
The Trail Blazers' Damian Lillard competes in the NBA All-Star three point contest on Saturday at the Intuit Dome.
The Trail Blazers' Damian Lillard competes in the NBA All-Star three point contest on Saturday at the Intuit Dome. (Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)
Actor Rome Flynn holds up a trophy and smiles after winning NBA all-star celebrity game MVP honors at the Kia Forum.
Actor Rome Flynn holds up a trophy and smiles after winning NBA All-Star celebrity game MVP honors at the Kia Forum Friday. (Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

How would you fix the NBA All Star weekend? (daily topic)

Feb 14, 2026; Los Angeles, CA, USA; NBA commissioner Adam Silver speaks to the media during a press conference before 2026 NBA All Star Saturday Night at Intuit Dome. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images | Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Are you not entertained?

The All Star Weekend is supposed to be one of the main showcases for the NBA product. The stars are on display, the game’s elite all come out, there are events all around the town, giving it a festival feel at times. So what’s the problem?

Well, the whole idea is to entertain and recently the general consensus is that it just isn’t very entertaining. The lead-up events are confusing and/or just odd. The dunk contest has jumped the shark (don’t give them any ideas, please). The 3 point contest still delivers but doesn’t always have the best shooters involved. And of course the All Star game itself has devolved into a half-speed pickup game (no matter how much the league has tried to guilt them into trying harder).

The league has tried a number of gimmicks to spice things up. New events, captain led drafts, the Elam Ending, and now the World vs. the US. None of it seems to have moved the needle much yet. So how would you change things to make it more interesting?

Incentives for winning the game? Monetary or team related? Format changes? Or just scrap some of the events? Maybe move it to the offseason after the Finals (like the NFL Pro Bowl)? Feel free to be creative!

What are your thoughts? You are the commissioner and you can call the shots. How are you changing things?

Jaylen Brown: ‘I’ve talked to Dana White’ about possible UFC fight after NBA career

Jaylen Brown
DALLAS, TEXAS - FEBRUARY 03: Jaylen Brown #7 of the Boston Celtics looks on during the second half against the Dallas Mavericks at American Airlines Center on February 03, 2026 in Dallas, 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 Sam Hodde/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Jaylen Brown comes from a fighting background and after his basketball career is over, perhaps he’ll take his talents to the octagon.

The Boston Celtics star, who is getting set to play in the NBA All-Star Game on Sunday, discussed that idea when asked a question by a media member who claimed to have trained with his father in the boxing gym in the past during All-Star Media Day.

“To be honest, I’ve toyed with this, and I’ve talked to some people, maybe post part of my career, I would love to take part in something like UFC, or even boxing,” Brown told reporters. “I’ve talked to Dana White about some stuff, but we’ll see as things go on.”

Fighting and combat sports are generational in Brown’s family. The 29-year-old’s father was a WBU champion, while his grandfather Willie Brown was also a former boxer.

Of course, the five-time All-Star, two-time NBA Finals participant, and one-time world champion and Finals MVP, still has some work left to do on the hardwood. But with Celtics had coach Joe Mazulla also being a massive combat sports fan, Brown will get the chance to watch UFC fights quite often.

Adam Silver says tanking feels worse this year, league looking for answers. He also talks expansion.

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Adam Silver hates that there are fans actively rooting for their favorite team to lose.

There's a lot of that this season. As we head into the final 30 games of the NBA season, a full one-third of teams are actively tanking ahead of what is expected to be one of the best and deepest drafts in a couple of decades.

"Are we seeing [tanking] behavior that is worse this year than we've seen in recent memory? Yes, is my view," Silver said Saturday at his annual press conference during All-Star Weekend. "Which was what led to those fines [of Jazz and Pacers], and not just those fines but to my statement that we're going to be looking more closely at the totality of all the circumstances this season in terms of teams' behavior, and very intentionally wanted teams to be on notice."

The Jazz were fined $500,000 because in two games last week they played their starters and two former All-Stars — Lauri Markkanen and Jaren Jackson Jr. — about 25 minutes over the first three quarters, then sat them in the fourth despite the game still being in the balance. Orlando came back to beat Utah in one of those games, Miami was unable to complete a comeback..

To be clear, it's not the players who are tanking — they play hard when on the court — or the coaches, these are orders from the front office to sit people. Or the team extends a player's time out with an injury.

What is the league doing about it? There is only so much they can do.

Anyone who watches basketball knows it takes talent to win, and the best (and for many teams, only) way to acquire that kind of high-level talent is through the draft.

"Many of you in this room have written, understandably about our teams, that the worst place to be is to be a middle-of-the-road team," Silver said. "Either be great or be bad, because then that will help you with the draft. In many cases, you have fans of those teams -- remember, it's not what they want to pay for to see poor performance on the floor, but they're actually rooting for their teams in some cases to be bad to improve their draft chances."

Still, teams actively looking to lose and putting an inferior product on the court are bad for the sport. It's a black eye, and Silver said the league is taking a two-pronged approach to dealing with this.

"One is, again, focusing on the here and now, the behavior we're seeing from our teams and doing whatever we can to remind them of what their obligation is to the fans and to their partner teams," Silver said. "But number two, as I also said in that statement, the Competition Committee started earlier this year reexamining the whole approach to how the draft lottery works."

Silver sounded like someone ready to step back and consider major changes. The challenge is that every change to the system — small or large — will have unintended consequences.

"Ultimately, we need a system to fairly, I think, distribute players," Silver said. "But we've got to look at some fresh thinking here. What we're doing, what we're seeing right now is not working; there's no question about it. Yes, is there more I can do? Have I attempted not only to respond to behavior we've seen but send a clear message that we're going to be scrutinizing everything we see going forward? Absolutely."

Has there been talk about taking draft picks away from teams?

"There is talk about every possible remedy now to stop this behavior," Silver said.

NBA Expansion

The other big focus of Silver's pregame speech was on league expansion.

Silver reiterated something he said before, "We will make decisions in 2026." Just not in March, the next time the Board of Governors meets.

"My sense is at the March Board of Governors meetings we'll be having further discussions around an expansion process," Silver said. "We won't be voting at the March meeting, but we will likely come out of those meetings ready, prepared to take a next step in terms of potentially talking to interested parties...

"I think the logical next move would be to say, all right, we've had those discussions internally, we've made decisions about cities to focus on and what the opportunity is, and now we've got to go out into the marketplace. I think that's probably the most important step, to find out who is potentially interested in owning a franchise in particular cities, what's the value of that franchise. There's some work to do in terms of potential conference realignment. That's the next step there."

The reality is everyone knows the cities — Seattle and Las Vegas — and there are ready-to-go ownership groups in those places. Things are going to get more formal, but we can see where the train is headed.

There has been speculation about relocation — an existing team moving to Seattle, or maybe Las Vegas. Silver shot that down.

"Relocation is not on the table right now," he said.

Other Topics

• Silver pushed off any comment on the ongoing investigation into the Clippers. He said there is no timeline for when that will be completed, while reminding people that an outside law firm, not the NBA, is conducting that investigation.

"I haven't come to any decisions whatsoever yet on the Clippers' matter," Silver said.

He also said he would follow the league rules when making a decision.

"I am completely beholden to the constitution and the CBA," Silver said, putting on his lawyer hat. "I believe in the rule of law. I have broad powers in certain areas, but those are broad powers that are granted to me by those very documents."

• Giannis Antetokounmpo's investment in prediction market Kalshi raised eyebrows — a player investing in a platform where you can bet… er, buy a prediction contract on whether he gets traded this summer, has the potential for disaster. Silver, however, said that because his investment is for less than 1% of the company, he's in the clear. That was the rule established for players investing in legal gambling companies, and Silver said they are applying the same rules to prediction markets.

"That does not violate the rules that have been collectively bargained with the Players Association," Silver said.

France tears apart Wales with eight tries and is only unbeaten Six Nations team

CARDIFF, Wales (AP) — France inevitably racked up a record win against struggling Wales on Sunday and was the only unbeaten team in the Six Nations after two rounds.

Favored to win back-to-back titles, France scored eight tries, the first after just 88 seconds. The 54-12 scoreline eclipsed its previous high against Wales of 51-0 in 1998 at Wembley Stadium.

France didn't overpower Wales as it could easily have. Instead, France played sevens style, keeping the ball alive, offloading, stepping and slicing the Welsh apart. The loose and slippery nature of France's game — 28 line breaks — didn't allow Wales time to reset its defense.

The speed suited France's new and young centers, Pau clubmates Fabien Brau-Boirie, 20, and Émilien Gailleton, 22. They both touched down and Gailleton was replaced late by another debutant Noah Néné, 21. Flyhalf Matthieu Jalibert was the man of the match after scoring one try and assisting on three more.

“When you're pushed to the edge of the cliff you're capable of doing great things, but when you're being praised it can sometimes be hard to get fired up in a combat sport,” France coach Fabien Galthié said.

“There's great maturity in this team but also lots of young guys. And we need those (older) players to keep us on the straight and narrow and make sure we don't get carried away.”

Wales' Six Nations losing streak since 2023 was extended to 13 matches. The game attracted only 57,744 spectators, the smallest Wales home crowd since the tournament expanded in 2000.

Wales supporters wanting their side to work hard and fight to the end were rewarded, even though their team was outgunned everywhere. Wales kept France scoreless for more than 20 minutes in the first half and for the last 19 minutes of the match.

But the end result was familiar. Wales, yet to hire a full-time defense coach, has conceded 50-plus scores in five of its last six home matches, to England (68-14), Argentina (52-28), New Zealand (52-26) and South Africa (73-0).

“If you look at the athletes France have, if we kick a little too far or if there's an offload they come alive,” Wales coach Steve Tandy told the BBC. "You have to tip your hat to France and where they are as a team.

“For us it's transitioning, we're not where we want to be. Ultimately we're at this point in our journey.”

France was on the board after 88 seconds and had the bonus-point fourth try by halftime.

Gailleton crossed first, set up by Antoine Dupont, Theo Atissogbe and Charles Ollivon.

Left wing Louis Bielle-Biarrey then took a kick-pass from Jalibert and notched his 12th Six Nations try in 11 matches.

Bielle-Biarrey's initial break led to Jalibert sending Brau-Boirie flying in and France was 19-0 up after 15 minutes.

Wales won the restart and prop Rhys Carre eventually crashed over but Wales couldn't hold out France before halftime when right wing Atissogbe put in Jalibert for 26-7.

The second half was a procession for France with four more tries in 17 minutes.

Hooker Julien Marchand scored from a lineout drive, Attisogbe bagged a pair thanks to Bielle-Biarrey and Jalibert, and Ollivon grabbed the last. Thomas Ramos had target practice and converted seven of the eight tries.

Captain Dupont was rested before the hour mark. France welcome Italy in Lille next weekend.

Wales had the last say through replacement back Mason Grady and stays at home to face Scotland. There were still nearly 7,000 tickets unsold for that game.

“It's our job to make people want to come and watch games," Wales captain Dewi Lake told the BBC. “We're a side that are not getting results but all we can ask is that people stick with us, come on the journey with us, because we're growing as a team.”

___

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

What are the Suns’ best wins of the season so far?

PHOENIX, AZ - NOVEMBER 21: Collin Gillespie #12 of the Phoenix Suns shoot the game-winning shot during the game against the Minnesota Timberwolves during the 2025-26 Emirates Cup on November 21, 2025 at PHX Arena in Phoenix, Arizona. 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 Kate Frese/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

55 games into the season, the Phoenix Suns have had a lot of memorable wins amid their surprising start to the year. With a few comeback victories and wins against both the Eastern and Western Conference’s number 1 seeds, the Suns have left their fans with a lot of opportunities to cheer so far.

Here’s how I’d rank their top-three wins of the season, but before I start, the Suns’ 130-118 win over the San Antonio Spurs deserves some recognition. Phoenix held Victor Wembanyama to his worst game of the season, holding him to nine points, and handed San Antonio their first loss of the year.


#1: Booker’s Dagger vs OKC

Down as much as 18 points, the Suns rallied in the second half to beat the Oklahoma City Thunder 108-105 on January 4th. Devin Booker hit the game-winning three with less than a second remaining that had the Mortgage Matchup Center go into a frenzy.

After being humiliated by Oklahoma City just a few weeks before in the knock-out round of the In-Season Tournament, Phoenix did not let being down nearly 20 get in the way of staying competitive with the team with the best record in the NBA. The performance was one of the highlights of the team’s best month of the season so far that ended with Jordan Ott winning his first ever Coach of the Month award.

#2 A Miraculous Comeback Against Minnesota

The most absurd game of the Suns season, Phoenix was down eight with less than 50 seconds remaining with Devin Booker fouled out. That being said, the Suns ended the game on a 9-0 run that included a myriad of crazy turnovers and Dillon Brooks also fouling out, culminating in Collin Gillespie hitting a game-winner over Donte DiVencenzo for a 114-113 win over the Minnesota Timberwolves on November 21st.

The win demonstrated the team’s ability to win without Booker. Before he fouled out, the All-Star was having one of the worst nights of his season, scoring 16 points on 4-18 shooting from the field with nine turnovers. The Suns had six different players score in double-digits, including Gillespie, who had his season high at the time with 20-points, scoring his most important two when it mattered most.

#3 The Detroit Domination

With no Devin Booker, Phoenix clobbered the Detroit Pistons 114-96 on January 29th. Dillon Brooks had a career-high 40 points and Grayson Allen chipped in 24. Detroit was playing at full strength and not on a back-to-back, and the Suns held All-Star Starter Cade Cunningham to 8/22 shooting from the field and Detroit to 21% shooting from three.

What was impressive about this victory for the Suns was not just that Booker wasn’t playing, it was that Phoenix held the team with the best record in the Eastern Conference (now the best record in the NBA), at bay for the entirety of the contest. Detroit made some little runs throughout the game but the Suns responded everytime.


With 27 games left, will the Suns have any wins that top these?

‘Arizona is always gonna be home’ for new Ring of Honor member Caleb Love

TUCSON, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 14: NBA player Caleb Love of the Portland Trail Blazers attends the game between the Texas Tech Red Raiders and the Arizona Wildcats at McKale Center at ALKEME Arena on February 14, 2026 in Tucson, Arizona. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images

On the day that Caleb Love returned to Arizona for his Ring of Honor induction, Tommy Lloyd’s Wildcats could have used his shot-making the most.

Love’s reputation as an uninhibited shooter with a knack for making baskets in clutch moments made him a polarizing college basketball figure. Like him or loathe him, Love’s game was well-suited for Arizona’s style of play.

Arizona’s style helped prepare Love for a career in the NBA, the Portland Trailblazers guard said Saturday upon visiting McKale Center at ALKEME Arena.

“I thank Tommy a lot because he kind of runs an NBA-style offense with how fast paced it is, heavy ball screens, things like that,” Love said. “I definitely give a lot of credit to him and the coaching staff with how they run things.”

Love is one of the NBA’s best surprises through the first half of the season. An undrafted free agent, Love signed on with the Trailblazers with the hope of making the opening night roster.

Love has since surpassed all expectations, becoming a core player in the Trailblazers’ rotation. He ranks ninth among all rookies in points per game (11.3). He’s made 93 three-points in 45 games, fourth-most among the rookie class.

Love has also adjusted to a different role than he was accustomed to in college.

“(My) welcome to the NBA moment is probably coming off the bench,” Love said. “I never came off the bench ever in my life. Let alone I’ve got DNPs.”

He’s getting used to not being the guy.

“You got to be a pro,” Love said. “You can’t be looking down or being sorry for yourself or saying ‘I deserve this or I deserve that’ because it’s a business at the end of the day and you got to come in and be a professional.”

Love was prepared for the mental side of a professional career well before he got to NBA, Lloyd said last week. The St. Louis native has been under the spotlight since he was a teenager. First as a McDonald’s All-American signed to North Carolina, then as a Tarheel, and followed by his time at Arizona.

Love experienced the highest of highs as a college basketball player, both at UNC and Arizona. His lows were just as well documented, from an infamous falling out at Chapel Hill to tough stretches in Tucson.

“A lot of times when a young player goes to the NBA, they haven’t yet experienced the lowest,” Lloyd said. “So I think in order for you to ultimately be successful at that level, we have to know how you’re going to respond to a struggle. And he had been through the struggle, and he had come out of it the other side. So I was really confident that he was going to earn his opportunity, and once he earned his opportunity, he was going to take advantage of it.”

Love’s induction into the McKale Center Ring of Honor marked the first time Arizona fans have seen him in Tucson since finishing his Wildcats. It won’t be the last.

“I’ve been watching every game,” Love said. “Even if we we sometimes have games on the same day. I’m in the locker room before the game because, you know, I’m so invested in it, and I’m so happy to see, you know, the start that we’ve had. Halftime, I’m checking my phone to see what the score is. So I’m definitely invested in it. When I left for Arizona, this is always gonna be home.“

Arsenal routs Wigan 4-0 on no-surprise Sunday as Premier League teams advance to 5th round

LONDON (AP) — Arsenal enjoyed a 4-0 rout of Wigan as five Premier League teams avoided upsets to reach the fifth round of the FA Cup on Sunday.

Third-tier struggler Wigan was overwhelmed against the Premier League leader in front of a 60,000 crowd at Emirates Stadium, with all the goals coming in the first half.

Forwards Noni Madueke, Gabriel Martinelli and Gabriel Jesus were on the scoresheet along with Jack Hunt's own-goal as he tried to cut out a cross from Bukayo Saka.

Big-money summer signing Eberechi Eze set up two goals for Arsenal, which won the last of its record 14 FA Cups in 2020. Wigan won the FA Cup for the first and only time in 2013, beating Manchester City 1-0 in the final, but was relegated from the Premier League in the same season.

Premier League teams Fulham, Leeds, Sunderland and Wolverhampton joined the Gunners in the last 16.

Fulham rallied to win 2-1 at second-tier Stoke, with Harrison Reed slotting in a late winner after intercepting Stoke goalkeeper Tommy Simkin’s misjudged pass. Brazilian winger Kevin equalized for Fulham early in the second half after South Korean midfielder Bae Jun-ho's early goal for Stoke.

Midfielder Habib Diarra's penalty earned Sunderland a 1-0 win at second-tier struggler Oxford, and midfielder Santiago Bueno's goal gave Wolves a 1-0 victory at fourth-tier Grimsby at a soggy and rain-soaked Blundell Park.

Leeds needed penalty kicks to win at second-tier Birmingham after a 1-1 draw after 90 minutes and extra time.

German forward Lukas Nmecha put Leeds ahead early in the second half after being set up by Noah Okafor, but Patrick Roberts equalized in the 89th minute with a powerful shot.

In the shootout, Leeds goalkeeper Lucas Perri denied Tommy Doyle before Roberts blazed over, leaving Sean Longstaff to score and send Daniel Farke's side through 4-2.

Cup upsets

On Saturday, third-tier Mansfield pulled off an upset by knocking out Premier League Burnley to heap more pressure on coach Scott Parker.

Non-league Macclesfield caused arguably the biggest upset in the competition's history when it beat titleholder Crystal Palace in the third round last month.

Macclesfield faces Premier League Brentford on Monday. ___

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

Florida moved on from Denzel Aberdeen after failed 'negotiations.' Gators' move validated in win over Kentucky

GAINESVILLE, Florida – The question of whether Florida basketball should have let Denzel Aberdeen leave in the offseason seems to have been answered.

Aberdeen likely would have been a starter for the Gators, who were fresh off a national title. However, failed ‘negotiations’ led to Aberdeen transferring to Kentucky and joining the Wildcats’ reported $22 million roster.

Regardless of the rationale on either side as to whether Aberdeen should have been rewarded a lucrative deal or if the Gators were smart to move on and invest elsewhere, it’s safe to say the latter was the better deal for Florida (19-6, 10-2 SEC).

In Aberdeen’s return to the O’Dome, Xaivian Lee outdueled him and scored a game-high 22 points that fueled Florida’s 92-83 win against Kentucky on Saturday, Feb. 14.

“I mean, he's playing great, right?” said Florida coach Todd Golden of Lee. “I mean, he was fantastic at Georgia, he was great at Vanderbilt. He’s stacked some really good games over the last couple of weeks, and I thought he was fantastic today.”

Aberdeen, who has had a respectable year at Kentucky, went 8-of-21 from the floor, but led Kentucky with 19 points and four assists.

“I think it was a good matchup,” said Florida’s Alex Condon, who scored 14 points. “I knew ‘Zel was going to be aggressive tonight and try to fuel off the crowd a little bit. Credit to him. He played a solid game, was aggressive. I think our guys did a great job making him take tough 2s, running him off the 3-point line. Yeah, as a whole, I was really proud of the team.”

The Gators’ defense also held UK’s leading scorer and the SEC’s Preseason Player of the Year, Otega Oweh, to 13 points as he went 4-of-14 from the floor.

“I thought we did a great job on (Aberdeen),” Golden said. “I thought he’d get some tough shows.

“But if we could cut their water off then we would give ourselves a good chance to win. They’re both really good players, and you’re not going to make them miss every time. But you know to go combined 12-of-35, that’s winning basketball for sure.”

Not to mention, Urban Klavzar, who opted to stay with UF after barely seeing the floor last season, delivered 19 points off the bench. Klavzar and Lee combined for nine 3-pointers, as UF has become slightly more effective beyond the arc in its recent five-game win streak.

“I think the message before was also how good, you know, what our ceiling can be as shots start to fall,” Lee said. “I think we're seeing that a little bit now, for sure. But, honestly, I don't think that's really what we're focusing on, to be honest. I think it's more just controllables, and then when that happens, it makes us that much harder to beat.”

Yes, Aberdeen and Kentucky will get another shot at Florida in the regular-season finale in Rupp Arena, but for now, the answer to move on seems straightforward as the Gators have gotten better.

“I think when we hit 10 3s, I think it was in back-to-back games, I don't think anyone in the country can play with us,” Condon said. “We’re a dangerous team. Inside, especially rebounding is a big emphasis. That's our DNA. Every game we try to win the rebound count by at least 12, and it sucks the guys inside, and then you throw it out, and these guys hit 3s. It's really unbeatable basketball I think.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Florida basketball gets best of Kentucky, transfer Denzel Aberdeen

Iowa State win over Kansas a reminder of Cyclones' Final Four potential

AMES, Iowa – In the attention economy, “What have you done lately?” has been largely replaced by, “What have you done right this second?” There’s no patience nor hardly any memory, but there certainly is an urgency bordering on frantic. 

That makes for a tough environment to appreciate what Iowa State basketball has done. The Cyclones (22-3, 9-3 Big 12) are ranked fourth nationally, so it’s not as though they’re being overlooked or undervalued, but they’ve mostly only been in the national college basketball consciousness for their failures since the calendar flipped to 2026.

Getting stomped at Kansas and then no-showing at Cincinnati that same week. Taking an upset just days ago at TCU. 

That 3-0 run through the Players Era Festival or that dismantling of Purdue on the road got their due at the time, but, heck, that was all the way back in 2025. That might as well be 1985 for the way we chew up and spit out takes on TikTok these days.  

Mowing down five-straight Big 12 teams after those back-to-back losses was nice, sure, but, like, whatever? You can only get so excited about blowouts against the unimpressive middle and bottom of the Big 12. 

Not only has it been two months since Iowa State beat the Boilermakers (and Iowa days after that), but it’s been two months since we’ve even seen the Cyclones play well against a high-level team. 

You can reset that clock to zero on that front, and put the Cyclones right at the front of the national college basketball conversation.

That happens after outplaying and overwhelming the country’s hottest team, No. 9 Kansas, 74-56, to snap the Jayhawks’ eight-game winning streak, get a measure of revenge for last month’s 21-point loss and reassert themselves as a Final Four contender. 

“I’d definitely say we made a statement,” Iowa State freshman Jamarion Batemon said. “This is a huge opportunity to bounce back and show that we’re one of the best teams, if not the best team, in the country.  

“It was a great opportunity, and I feel like we definitely made that impact.” 

How far the reverberations from that impact travel will no doubt be influenced by what the Cyclones do 48 hours later when No. 3 Houston comes to Hilton Coliseum for Big Monday. But for this weekend, at least, the Cyclones offered up a compelling case for just how damn good they are. 

Five days after Kansas became the first team to beat Arizona, the Jayhawks got bullied, beaten and, at times, embarrassed by the Cyclones. 

Iowa State’s ball pressure would have had Isaac Hayes singing falsetto.  

The Jayhawks were consistently on their heels, playing backward and even had a pair of backcourt violations as the Cyclones allowed them no quarter. Much of Iowa State’s issues in its trio of losses came from an inability to disrupt opponents, but their dialed-up intensity against the Jayhawks kept their visitors uncomfortable and unsuccessful all afternoon. 

“Our whole mindset was just to not let them be comfortable,” Tamin Lipsey said after a three-steal day. “We wanted to push them up the floor as much as we could.” 

Just as important as the harassment Iowa State doled out defensively was a whole-of-rotation effort that saw all eight Cyclones who played make real contributions to winning. 

Batemon, who by any measure is the last man in the rotation, set a tone with a level of aggression we haven’t seen from the freshman. His two 3-pointers and forceful drive and layup in the first half helped lift an offense that was struggling. Reserve center Dom Pleta’s offensive rebounding did much the same. Nate Heise had five boards and a steal in 26 minutes that also saw him provide a defensive presence on the perimeter. 

And those are just the reserves. 

It’s almost an afterthought that Joshua Jefferson had 11 points, five rebounds, four assists and a steal, or that Lipsey had 11 points, three boards and four assists. Blake Buchanan? A cool 11 and six while going 5 of 6 from the floor. 

There was, though, no missing Milan Momcilovic. 

The country’s best 3-point shooter had 18 points on 7-of-13 shooting, including 4-of-9 from deep. His fading-to-his-left, falling-to-the-floor, over-the-arm-of-6-10-Flory-Bidunga triple might be the best of his career and one of the more incredible makes Hilton Coliseum has seen in its half-century. 

“That was probably the craziest shot I’ve seen in person,” Lipsey said. 

It, simply, was a great game from a team whose greatness seemed to have been forgotten.

“I’m proud of our guys for how they worked this week,” said Iowa State coach T.J. Otzelberger, “and for the effort that they sustained for 40 minutes.  

“That’s not easy to do, and I felt like that was as complete of a 40 minutes as we’ve had this season.” 

If there was concern about the victory poisoning the Cyclones ahead of Monday’s huge matchup with Houston, well, they didn’t sound too impressed with themselves Saturday evening. 

“I feel like we could have beat (Kansas) by more,” Momcilovic said after the Cyclones toppled KU by the largest margin of victory ever at Hilton Coliseum in the series. “Our offense got a little stagnant in that little five-minute stretch in the second half. 

“I think it shows we’re still  really good, and we can beat anyone night in, night out.” 

If nothing else, the Cyclones have everyone’s attention. 

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Iowa State basketball win over Kansas a reminder of March Madness potential

Adam Silver details NBA Europe launch plan with $1 billion expansion fees

NBA Commissioner Adam Silver

The NBA is on the brink of something seismic. So when NBA Commissioner Adam Silver stepped to the podium Saturday for his annual state of the league address, he wasn’t just talking about the midseason showcase. He was outlining a continental land grab. 

The NBA’s proposed “NBA Europe” league, tentatively targeting an October 2027 launch, is no longer a whisper campaign. It’s now a blueprint.

Anadolu Efes’ Shane Larkin in action against Real Madrid’s Guerschon Yabusele in Belgrade, Serbia in May 21, 2022. AP

Silver made it clear the league office has moved into what he called a “new phase,” working alongside financial heavyweights JPMorgan Chase and the Raine Group, with dozens of prospective ownership groups already signed to nondisclosure agreements and reviewing projections. The message was unmistakable: This is real money, real infrastructure, real ambition.

The structure being discussed reads like a hybrid between American franchise stability and European meritocracy. A 12- to 16-team model is under serious consideration, with 10 to 12 permanent “A-license” spots reserved for elite clubs, and four to six places earned through qualification from existing European competitions. 

“We want to be respectful of the existing teams,” Silver said. “We want to be respectful of a passionate fan base and move as quickly as possible.”

That respect, however, does not mean retreat.

The NBA is targeting some of the most powerful brands in global sport: Real Madrid, FC Barcelona, Bayern Munich, Fenerbahçe Spor Kulübü and Anadolu Efes. These are institutions with soccer empires and basketball pedigrees, clubs that command hundreds of millions of global followers. Silver understands the leverage that comes with attaching NBA intellectual property to those crests.

“If someone is a Real Madrid football fan,” Silver said, “and they also have a great basketball organization, a relaunch league may bring a lot of those historic fans with them.”

The financial threshold will not be for the faint of heart. Expansion fees are projected to range from $500 million to $1 billion. Silver did not sugarcoat the timeline for profitability. “People who are looking for a short return should probably look elsewhere,” he said. This is generational thinking — a decades-long build designed to reshape the basketball map.

Fenerbahçe players celebrate winning the Euroleague final between Monaco and Turkey in Abu Dhabi, May 2025. AP

The league is also exploring modern arena infrastructure across Europe, acknowledging that world-class competition requires world-class buildings. It’s part sport, part urban development strategy.

“One of the things we’re focused on is building a new arena infrastructure in Europe,” said Silver regarding the need to invest in new structures in which teams can play. “It’s badly needed.”

And then there’s ownership.

Silver confirmed the NBA is in discussions with the Players Association about allowing current NBA players to invest in NBA Europe franchises. Lakers superstar Luka Dončić is already in talks with former Mavericks GM Donnie Nelson to purchase Italian basketball team Vanoli Basket Cremona, with plans to relocate it to Rome. 

Roughly 15% of the NBA is European-born. Some of its brightest stars — from Serbia, Greece, France and Slovenia — already define the league’s MVP conversation. The idea of global superstars becoming transcontinental stakeholders is not a side plot. It’s the future.

Of course, the elephant in the room is the EuroLeague, the continent’s current top-tier competition. Silver struck a diplomatic tone, citing “constructive discussions” with new EuroLeague CEO Chus Bueno. Still, make no mistake: Coexistence will require compromise. The NBA’s semi-closed model, salary cap principles and revenue-sharing philosophy are foreign concepts in much of European sport. Translating that system overseas will test lawyers and economists as much as coaches.

Silver admitted as much. “Nothing is easy here,” he said. “There are reasons why this hasn’t been done before. But I think we’re up to it.”

Behind the scenes, the league is already contemplating cross-continental competitions — perhaps a basketball version of a Club World Cup — pitting NBA teams against their European counterparts.

As Silver fielded questions about NBA expansion in Las Vegas and Seattle, he joked about the bags under his eyes. But when he spoke about Europe, the fatigue vanished. This is the heavy lift. This is the swing-for-the-fences opportunity to take the game to even higher heights than ever before.

NBA Commissioner Adam Silver at the Emirates NBA Cup trophy presentation in Las Vegas, Dec. 2025. Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

If October 2027 becomes reality, it won’t simply mark the birth of a new league. It will signal the NBA’s transformation from a North American powerhouse with global reach into a truly bicontinental empire.

The commissioner knows the clock is ticking. Europe’s basketball culture is rich, proud and fiercely independent. Silver isn’t asking it to freeze in time. He’s asking it to evolve.

And in typical NBA fashion, he’s betting big that the world will follow.


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