Player development is an underrated ingredient in the Celtics’ sustained success

Payton Pritchard has taken his game to the next level in recent years. | Getty Images

Over the past decade, the Celtics have posted at least 48 wins in all but one season.

They’ve made the Eastern Conference Finals six times in that span, the NBA Finals twice, and of course won a championship in 2024.

Much of that sustained success stems from a blend of talent, roster management and drafting at a high level. But, there’s another ingredient that doesn’t always get as much love as it should: player development.

Look at each roster in the past decade. So many players have joined the Celtics with untapped talent and have maximized their potential thanks to the culture and coaching in the organization. Of course there are exceptions, but the list of players who expanded their skill set is an impressive one.

With this year’s team, that trend is even more pronounced. Each player has made concrete, tangible improvements to his game over the years and taken it to the next level this season.

Look at Jaylen Brown. He could always put the ball in the hoop, but his playmaking ability, defense and leadership have skyrocketed in recent years. He identified his weaknesses and turned them into strengths.

Look at Derrick White. He was a steady presence with the Spurs (who also excel in this area), but has blossomed as a 3-point shooter, shot blocker, passer and more. He’s taken his opportunity and run with it, and the staff is responsible for giving him the necessary freedom to excel.

Look at Payton Pritchard. Pritchard deserves credit on his own for taking his skills to the next level, but he wouldn’t be where he is without the staff. He’s upped his scoring total each of the last four seasons and is averaging career highs in assists (5.4) and rebounds (4.2) while still only turning it over 1.3 times per game.

Look at Neemias Queta. He’s always had the athleticism, but he was very raw and unproven when he got to Boston. Now, he’s one of the best defensive players in the NBA and is also a steadily improving offensive weapon. Queta has great hands, is an excellent screener and is starting to add some legit post moves to his repertoire. It wouldn’t surprise me to see him periodically shooting 3-pointers in a year or two.

Look at Sam Hauser. That dude has always been able to shoot the basketball, but he’s incorporated some tricks in recent years to make himself even more dangerous. His no-dip 3 is impressive, his upfake and one dribble move is reliable and his drive-and-dish package is improving by the day. Hauser has also become a steady defender and someone the Celtics can trust in key moments.

Look at Baylor Scheierman. He came into the league as an average defender and has become a force on that side of the ball. At first, the game seemed too fast for him. Now, it’s starting to slow down, and much of that development stems from the coaches’ ability to put him in spots that cater to his skill set. Scheierman is starting to figure it out, and his ceiling is higher than many initially thought.

Look at Jordan Walsh. He had more bounce than he knew what to do with, and the coaches have helped him take a breath and make the right reads. One play against the Suns stood out, when he let two defenders fly by, drove to the rim and elevated for a thunderous dunk. He might have forced that shot last year, but now, he’s taking what the defense gives him and responding appropriately more often than not.

The list goes on and on, but these are the most prominent examples. Lasting in the NBA is all about meeting the moment when you get your opportunity. Celtics players do exactly that, and while they deserve a great deal of credit, so do the coaches.

Luka Dončić explains why he didn’t take final shot in loss to Magic

LOS ANGELES, CA - FEBRUARY 24: Luka Doncic #77 of the Los Angeles Lakers looks to pass the ball during the game against the Orlando Magic on February 24, 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 ended their eight-game homestand disappointingly, losing to the Magic 110-109. While the loss certainly stung, how it happened made it all the more painful.

Los Angeles led for the majority of the game against Orlando, but the Magic rallied in the fourth to flip the game in their favor. In the closing seconds, the Lakers had a chance to win, but Luka Dončić passed up a shot, forcing LeBron James to take a tough jumper that he missed.

Luka’s game has been called many things, but shy, timid, or hesitant are words never used regarding his play, so this moment was out of character.

After the game, Luka explained why he didn’t take that final shot.

“I know I was open but I just thought it was little bit far,” Luka said. “I tried to take one dribble closer and probably shouldn’t have picked up the ball. I was just trying to attack.”

The shot would’ve been a deep three, but considering how often Luka takes those and that the Lakers were losing, it was jarring to see him pass it up. Also, he didn’t just opt not to shoot the ball, you could see that he hesitated. He held the ball for a moment, pump-faked, and dribbled before ultimately passing it to LeBron.

Considering that Lakers head coach JJ Redick drew up a wonderful play to get Luka open, it was a shame that he didn’t take the shot.

LeBron wasn’t in a great situation here to win the game, but he also had a chance.

“I just saw him open,” LeBron said. “I didn’t want to lose the ball. We didn’t have timeouts. But like I said, I shouldn’t have picked up the ball. I should have attacked…That’s on me.”

With a few seconds left, it probably would’ve been best, as LeBron said, for him to drive to the rim instead of taking the turnaround three. After all, LA was down by just one, so they didn’t need a shot from beyond the arc to win the game.

The sloppiness of this play was emblematic of the offensive woes the Lakers were having all game long.

This is an experience for Luka to grow from. He is the face of the franchise, the play was clearly drawn up for him to take the shot. Luka had a chance to do so, and he didn’t.

Hopefully, this is the last time we ever question why Luka didn’t take a game-winning shot attempt when the ball was in his hands.

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

Three questions as Celtics wrap up road trip in Denver

BOSTON, MA - MARCH 2: Nikola Jokic #15 of the Denver Nuggets battles Neemias Queta #88 of the Boston Celtics for position under the basket during the first quarter at TD Garden on March 2, 2025 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. (Photo By Winslow Townson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Can the Celtics keep the momentum?

The Boston Celtics have played three games since the All-Star break and won all three by double digits.

A West Coast road trip is never easy. There’s the time change, the altitude in Denver, the constant travel and the quick recovery before the next tipoff. However, Boston has made light work of the trip so far. Its final stop is against the Denver Nuggets tonight before returning to the Garden on Friday.

Boston has relied on different contributors in each win. Against the Golden State Warriors, it was Jaylen Brown who posted a triple-double. Against the Los Angeles Lakers, Payton Pritchard did what he does best, providing instant offense off the bench, finishing with 30 points and eight assists. On Tuesday, without Brown and with Pritchard struggling offensively, Boston leaned on strong performances from Ron Harper Jr. and Neemias Queta to secure the win.

Now the Celtics head to Denver for the second night of a back-to-back. The Nuggets are fourth in the Western Conference and are coming off a loss to Golden State. The teams met in Boston in January, when Denver,  without Nikola Jokić, stunned the Celtics 114-110.

How will Boston handle Jokić?

To keep it simple, Jokić is the best player in the league. His stats and awards speak for themselves.

He’s a matchup nightmare because of his size, three-level scoring and unreal playmaking for a center. With that said, Boston’s main concern might not be who starts on him, it’s whether the off-ball defenders can stay locked in for the full 24 seconds.

Jokić is going to score. He’s just that good. Queta and Nikola Vučević are expected to spend time on the Serbian star, and staying out of foul trouble will be critical.

What makes Jokić the best in the game is his ability to elevate everyone else. He’s the focal point of Denver’s offense. If Boston can limit his assists and force others to create late in possessions, its chances of winning increase.

The Nuggets don’t stand still offensively. They’re constantly cutting, whether it’s Cam Johnson, Jamal Murray or Christian Braun. Boston’s wings will be tested all night. Derrick White, Brown (if available), Jordan Walsh, Baylor Scheierman and Hugo González must stay disciplined and avoid taking possessions off. That’s when Denver is at its best, especially with Jokić orchestrating.

Can Boston start strong? 

Sometimes the best way to quiet a home crowd is to start fast and drain the building’s energy.

Since the All-Star break, the Celtics have won the first quarter just once — a 36-32 edge over Golden State. They lost the opening quarter to the Phoenix Suns and played even with the Lakers.

On the final game of a West Coast trip, legs can feel heavier than usual. A fast start would go a long way. Denver has shown lapses in effort at times this season. When the Warriors beat the Nuggets 128-117, Denver fell behind 39-27 after one quarter and never fully recovered.

If Boston can build an early cushion, it can manage the game with tired legs instead of scrambling to erase a deficit late.

Lakers’ longest homestand of the season was a bust

The Lakers had a golden opportunity. 

An eight-game homestand spanning 2 1/2 weeks from before the All-Star Game (which was in Los Angeles) through Tuesday against Orlando. 

Consider it squandered

Luka Doncic of the Los Angeles Lakers reacts after a swipe to the face by Moritz Wagner of the Orlando Magic during an NBA game at Crypto.com Arena on February 24, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. Getty Images

The Lakers went 4-4, punctuated by a 110-109 loss to the Magic. This was the Lakers’ chance to climb the extremely crowded Western Conference standings. Instead, they hung one-handed on a rung with their legs treading the air.

Lakers coach JJ Redick’s assessment of the Lakers’ longest home stretch of the season?

“We’re a work in progress,” he said. 

As for James, he didn’t hesitate when asked if this was a blown opportunity. 

“Yeah,” he deadpanned. 

The Lakers’ loss to the Magic especially stung because the effort was there, something that couldn’t be said of their 111-89 stinker against the Celtics on Sunday

But something else was lacking this time around: Clarity. 

LeBron James of the Los Angeles Lakers looks on during the game against the Orlando Magic on February 24, 2026 at Crypto.Com Arena in Los Angeles, California. NBAE via Getty Images

On the final play, with the Lakers trailing by one point and just over 6 seconds left, Doncic caught the ball ahead of the 3-point line and was open. But instead of creating a shot or driving, he dribbled once and then threw a grenade to James, who was forced to heave a 27-foot 3-pointer with 2.7 seconds left that rimmed out. 

Said Doncic: “I shouldn’t have picked up the ball. I should have attacked. …That’s on me.”

Added James: “I thought [Doncic] had a good look and it looked like he kinda just lost his balance, you know. Didn’t have a rhythm with the ball, whatever the case may be. And it kinda allowed them to get back in front of him. And I was kind of off-balance when he gave it to me. I thought he had a great look. That’s my POV.”


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It was a microcosm of everything that’s wrong with the Big Three.

There’s too much deferring. There’s confusion over what to do when. There’s so many stars but no clear constellation.

For the Lakers, Tuesday’s loss was frustrating. They led by as many as 12 points in the second half in a grind-it-out game that had 13 lead changes and eight ties. 

Sure, the Lakers were outrebounded, 47-39, and they gave up 58 points in the paint. But this game also saw Doncic diving over courtside seats for a loose ball, James dunking as though he were two decades younger and Austin Reaves recovering from going scoreless in the first half to finish with 18 points. Deandre Ayton even played with force. 

The Lakers wanted this one. 

Los Angeles Lakers guard Austin Reaves reacts after fouling Orlando Magic forward Paolo Banchero (5) during the second half of an NBA basketball game Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026, in Los Angeles. AP

But there are no moral victories in the Western Conference, especially against a Magic team that was missing Franz Wagner (ankle) and Jalen Suggs (back). 

During this homestand, the Lakers beat the 76ers without Paul George, the Warriors without Steph Curry and Jimmy Butler, a Mavericks team that’s in tank-mode and a Clippers team that sat Kawhi Leonard in the final 5 minutes and 10 seconds because of ankle soreness.

None of those were wins to write home about. 

In addition to the Lakers falling to the Magic and Celtics, they dropped games against the Spurs and Thunder, the top two teams in the West. 

Sure, the Lakers were without Doncic (hamstring) in four of their eight games, including missing him, James and Reaves against the Spurs on Feb. 10 in the second leg of a back-to-back. But still, this was the team’s longest homestand of the season and a unique chance to make up some ground. 

“We just got to be more consistent,” said Doncic who had 22 points, 15 assists and nine rebounds against the Magic. “I think we should have won a couple more games, so we got to be more consistent.”

Luka Doncic of the Los Angeles Lakers looks to pass the ball as Paolo Banchero of the Orlando Magic plays defense during the game on February 24, 2026 at Crypto.Com Arena in Los Angeles, California. NBAE via Getty Images

The funniest part of this all is the Lakers’ record is 34-23. It’s pretty dang good. In fact, they’re only 1 1/2 games behind the third-place Houston Rockets.

They’re still very much in the thick of things.

But for some reason, home court hasn’t been much of an advantage for the Lakers this season. They have a higher winning percentage on the road (18-11, 62%) than at home (16-12, 57%),

When asked why, James himself was stumped.

“I don’t know,” said James, who had 21 points, six rebounds and four assists.

The Lakers are a good team. But they can’t seem to get their act together enough to be thought of as real contenders. 

This was a chance to stop knocking on the door and kick it open. 

But instead, their effort ebbed and flowed and they fell from fifth in the West to sixth in their extended stay in front of their home crowd.

It was a missed chance for a team that needed an infusion of belief in itself.

Rather, they were left more confused than ever.

New Lakers president says Rob Pelinka 'empowered' to run basketball operations

Heading into what will be a critical offseason for the Los Angeles Lakers as they try to reshape their roster around Luka Doncic, Rob Pelinka will be the man making the decisions.

That may leave Lakers fans uneasy, but it came from new Lakers president of business operations Lon Rosen (the long-time Dodgers executive) at his introductory press conference Tuesday, with the quote via Dan Woike of The Athletic.

"Rob's empowered to do what he does. He's talked about it, and I can talk about it," Rosen said Tuesday. "[Dodgers executives] Andrew Friedman and Farhan Zaidi, they have involvement helping Rob a bit. It gives you a deeper bench, and I think Rob appreciates that. It is unique, but they have a skill set (where) they can transfer some of it here. That's really how we look at it.

"I have a really good relationship with Rob. I've known Rob Pelinka from when he was representing Kobe."

That echoes what Pelinka himself said recently.

"[Pelinka, Walter, and team governor Jeanie Buss] are working really, really strongly and well together," Pelinka said. "It's also been great to have, you know, outside allies and advocates, looking at the Dodgers and the success they've had and what they've built over there and being able to tap into a person like Andrew Friedman for best practices. He's so incredibly smart and has done such an amazing job bringing championships to the Dodgers. So, just to have another head of another team that you can, whether it's a roster move, whether it's a staff move, talk to has been an incredible resource. It's been tremendous working with Mark and everybody around him."

Pelinka may be in charge this offseason, but it also feels like a test for him. If what he builds falls short of expectations, Pelinka's seat likely gets very hot.

With LeBron James and his $52.7 million coming off the books (he is a free agent and the expectation around the league is he will return to Cleveland for a season, although LeBron has said no decision has been made), the Lakers will have at least $47 million in cap space and a lot of flexibility. The Lakers could go star hunting — Giannis Antetokounmpo, but he'd have to force his way to Los Angeles, or maybe Kawhi Leonard, depending upon how things play out with the Aspiraton investigation — but what the Lakers really need is defenders and floor-spacing shooters. Dallas reached the Finals with Doncic running the offense because they surrounded him with good centers who could set a pick-and-roll hard to the rim, drawing a defense in, and shooters and defenders on the wing. The Lakers are widely expected to re-sign Austin Rivers this summer, but first will try to find those other pieces via trade or free agency (Payton Watson, Tari Eason, Tobias Harris, Andrew Wiggins and Dean Wade are brought up as players the Lakers could target).

The Lakers are going to look very different next season. What they look like could well determine Pelinka's future with the Lakers.

Cavaliers vs Bucks Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight’s NBA Game

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While the Milwaukee Bucks’ season has not gone anywhere near according to plan, the Cleveland Cavaliers have pushed a pile of chips across the table to contend this season. And so far, the James Harden addition is working.

My Cavaliers vs. Bucks predictions and these NBA picks trust Harden to keep cooking on Wednesday, February 25.

Cavaliers vs Bucks prediction

Cavaliers vs Bucks best bet: James Harden Over 19.5 points (-120)

James Harden has cleared this prop in just four of his seven games with the Cleveland Cavaliers, but facing the Milwaukee Bucks should assure a fifth success.

The Bucks’ disastrous defense cannot be entirely ascribed to Giannis Antetokounmpo’s absence; in the month prior to his most recent injury, Milwaukee’s defensive rating ranked No. 24, so falling to No. 25 in the month since is hardly notable.

But against a top-three offense thanks to the addition of Harden, that defense should be a massive liability tonight.

Cavaliers vs Bucks same-game parlay

Betting on Harden to score but not distribute makes sense, in part because this assists prop is a touch lofty. He has cleared it just three times in seven games with Cleveland. In fact, this exact same-game parlay has cashed three times in those seven games.

Cavaliers vs Bucks SGP

  • James Harden Over 19.5 points
  • James Harden Under 8.5 assists
  • Cavaliers moneyline

Our "from downtown" SGP: Cleveland Cruises

Cleveland’s offensive rating rising to No. 3 in the NBA from No. 5 in the two months prior to Harden’s arrival may seem modest, but jumping to 121.7 in these seven games from 117.3 in the two months beforehand stands out as something that everyone in the NBA should worry about.

Cavaliers vs Bucks SGP

  • James Harden Over 19.5 points
  • James Harden Under 8.5 assists
  • Cavaliers -8.5
  • Over 227.5

Cavaliers vs Bucks odds

  • Spread: Cavaliers -8.5 | Bucks +8.5
  • Moneyline: Cavaliers -340 | Bucks +270
  • Over/Under: Over 227.5 | Under 227.5

Cavaliers vs Bucks betting trend to know

Cleveland is 4-2 against the spread in its last six games. Find more NBA betting trends for Cavaliers vs. Bucks.

How to watch Cavaliers vs Bucks

LocationFiserv Forum, Milwaukee, WI
DateWednesday, February 25, 2026
Tip-off8:00 p.m. ET
TVFDSN Ohio, FDSN Wisconsin

Cavaliers vs Bucks latest injuries

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Make no mistake, Indiana is a football school. It's not even close

Indiana is a football school.

It's not even a question.

On the same day IU football sold out season tickets in just hours, the men's basketball team — once the school's golden goose — lost to Northwestern for the sixth straight time, while Assembly Hall's balcony seating remained empty.

Over the past 20 years, Indiana fans have banked far more core memories from football than basketball. An entire generation has grown up without tasting any sense of sustained hoops success — in a place that worships the sport like no other.

While Curt Cignetti flipped the campus' priorities on its head the past two seasons, the basketball rot was well entrenched.

Since 2015:

  • Indiana football has reached the postseason six times.
  • Indiana basketball has reached NCAA tournament four times.

Keep in mind, before Indiana football won this year's national championship, it entered this past season as the losingest program in FBS history. And even with that albatross around its neck, football has seen more success over the past decade than its basketball counterpart.

If the Hoosiers (17-11, 8-9) miss out on the 2026 NCAA tournament, which looks entirely possible, it would mark the eighth time in the past 10 years Indiana has sat out March Madness.

At Indiana. And in an era where it's seemingly harder to miss the tournament than make it with the expanded field of 68.

It gets worse.

Indiana hasn't reached an Elite Eight since 2002, when the Hoosiers upset top-ranked Duke in the Sweet 16 en route to a national championship game loss to Maryland.

Since that run, 60 teams (SIXTY!) have reached at least one Elite Eight, including the likes of St. Peter's, Florida Atlantic, George Mason, Loyola Chicago, VCU, Dayton, St. Joseph's and Davidson.

Already on its sixth full-time head coach since firing Bob Knight, Indiana has been chasing ghosts ever since. The Hoosiers' five national titles still rank tied for fifth with Duke for most in NCAA history, but the last one was in 1987, and besides that outlier 2002 season under Mike Davis, Indiana hasn't come anywhere close since.

Love him or hate him, Knight won. He had a .731 winning percentage and won 11 Big Ten titles and 659 games in his 28 seasons in Bloomington. His successors have won 493 games (.581) in 26 combined seasons with just three conference titles.

Tom Crean came closest to replicating Knight's success. He inherited a program beset by sanctions caused by Kelvin Sampson, won the Big Ten twice and had Indiana ranked No. 1 for 10 weeks in the 2013 season, but was undone by a Syracuse zone in March. (Meanwhile, Sampson has turned Houston into a team no one wants to play.)

Archie Miller was supposed to be "a home-run hire." He wasn't, and has a losing record over his four seasons at Rhode Island.

Indiana next looked to a "Bob Knight guy" — something a large portion of the fan base had been screaming for. No one else was hiring Mike Woodson, but because his diploma said "Indiana", he was their guy. IU fans ran him out of town after missing back-to-back NCAA tournaments.

Darian DeVries is the latest to try his hand at getting it right in Bloomington.

IndyStar IU Insider Zach Osterman had this to say after Tuesday's latest setback versus Northwestern:

"To the media, he unpacked, calmly, what led to that loss. In more private moments, DeVries might have considered in some way the wider lesson: Basketball, in this place and this time, has become harder — much harder — than it really ought to be. And restoring even some baseline measure of success here will require resetting a lot of once-sacred conventions that are now tired, worn, withered and perhaps even dead.

"That is an almighty task.

"Making too much of any one loss can be dangerous. No single night should act as a referendum on an entire program.

"... It is justifiably difficult for a fan base so routinely let down by what once was its flagship program to stop itself from defaulting toward anger, frustration and blame. But impatience is a weed, not a flower. It will overrun and smother the garden long before anything blooms.

"... At a certain point, benefit of the doubt runs thin. Impatience becomes ingrained. The sins of prior failures are passed down through coaching tenures.

"DeVries carries that weight now. Few of these problems are of his own making. This program’s many ills and cultural difficulties predate his coming to Bloomington. These games cannot be referendums, but the relentless eroding of faith makes them so."

Indiana basketball is as well-resourced as any program in the country. But with Hoosiers donors getting a taste of unimaginable football success, a lot of that money may be headed across the parking lot from Assembly Hall to Memorial Stadium.

The fans have already.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Indiana is a football school now, as Hoosiers basketball keeps sinking

Best NBA Player Props Today for February 25: Dishing in Denver

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We’ve got some great matchups on the hardcourt tonight, including the Oklahoma City Thunder taking on the Detroit Pistons and the Boston Celtics facing the Denver Nuggets.

Games like those are loaded with talent, and I’ve found my favorite player props for those matchups and more NBA picks for Wednesday, February 25. 

Best NBA player props today

PlayerPickbet365
Pistons Tobias HarrisOver 5.5 rebounds+120
Grizzlies Ty JeromeOver 16.5 points+100
Celtics Derrick WhiteOver 6.5 assists-105

Prop #1: Tobias Harris Over 5.5 rebounds

+120 at bet365

The Oklahoma City Thunder are really good. They’re 5-3 and ranking 10th in net rating, without Shai Gilgeous-Alexander in the lineup.

But they might be overmatched when they visit the Eastern Conference-leading Detroit Pistons in the second half of a back-to-back.

The Pistons already had a big edge on the glass, ranking third in rebounding rate to the Thunder’s 22nd. Heavy legs mean more missed shots and fewer boards for OKC.

That has me backing Tobias Harris to go Over 5.5 boards. He’s averaging 6.7 over his last 11 games, hauling down six or more eight times over that stretch.

  • Time: 7:30 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: ESPN

Prop #2: Ty Jerome Over 16.5 points

+100 at bet365

The Memphis Grizzlies don’t have many bucket-getters these days. So, getting Ty Jerome back has been a big help. 

And while sportsbooks have adjusted his point totals after some solid performances, it's not enough to scare me away against the Golden State Warriors.

Jerome has played just seven games since returning at the end of January. He’s averaging 19.3 points while shooting 39.5% from three and has topped 16.5 points in six of those games. 

Tonight, he plays a Warriors team that is stumbling and ranks 17th in defensive rating since the start of February.

  • Time: 7:30 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: NBCSBA, FanDuel Sports Network Southeast-Memphis

Prop #3: Derrick White Over 6.5 assists

-105 at bet365

The Boston Celtics continue to impress. They’ve won nine of their last 10 and now close out their West Coast road trip against the Denver Nuggets.

The Celtics aren’t known for moving the ball, but the guys who do, specifically Derrick White and Payton Pritchard, will try to pass the ball a little more with Jaylen Brown nursing a knee injury.

Today, my favorite bet is White to go Over 6.5 assists. He’s averaging 7.5 per game over his last 10 games and has topped this number seven times over that stretch. Denver ranks 20th in opponent assists per possession.

  • Time: 10:00 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: ESPN

These props are available now at bet365, one of our best betting sites.

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Editor-in-chief mailbag: Joel Embiid is back

Feb 24, 2026; Indianapolis, Indiana, USA; Philadelphia 76ers center/forward Joel Embiid (21) shoots the ball while Indiana Pacers guard/forward Andrew Nembhard (2) defends in the first half at Gainbridge Fieldhouse. Mandatory Credit: Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images | Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images

Joel Embiid returned from a prolonged four-game absence without looking like he missed a beat. He scored 27 points in 26 minutes as the Sixers rolled against a Pacers team whose injury report looked like a CVS receipt. We’ll see what he looks like against stiffer competition and when the games start piling up again, but it was an encouraging outing.

Tyrese Maxey also seems to have found his stride again. He dropped 39 this past Sunday in Minnesota and nearly recorded a triple-double in Indy. Most importantly — he got the entire four quarter off agains the Pacers. Rookie VJ Edgecombe is also looking like the All-Star break did him some good, averaging over 20 points a game over his last four.

After things appeared to be teetering a bit with four straight losses, the Sixers have won the last two. They still sixth in the East, but the Orlando Magic, who have been playing better, are tied in the loss column. The schedule doesn’t let up, as games against the Heat, Celtics and Spurs loom.

Hit me with your questions and comments below.

I also wanted to take everyone’s temperature on doing a sort of an AMA-style deal in The Feed. Basically I would sit in The Feed post for like an hour and get to as many questions as I can. If enough of you are into it, maybe we can make it a weekly thing.

Lakers’ heartbreaking loss reveals truth in who they are

Everything felt heavy Tuesday night inside Crypto.com Arena. Not loud. Not electric. Just heavy.

The Lakers led the Magic for nearly 90 percent of the game. They built up multiple 12-point cushions. They shot over 48 percent from the field. Made more threes. Blocked more shots. On paper, it should have been a comfortable win. 

Instead the paper will read 110-109 Magic. Another disappointing loss by the Lakers to a more physical team. 

Wendell Carter Jr. of the Orlando Magic dunks the ball against Luka Doncic of the Los Angeles Lakers at Crypto.com Arena on February 24, 2026. Getty Images

“I thought we played well enough to win tonight,” said Lakers head coach J.J. Redick. “We played hard enough to win.”

This wasn’t a loss to juggernauts like the Thunder or Spurs from the start of their homestand. This was an Orlando team hovering above .500 without Jalen Suggs and Franz Wagner — two of their stars. 

The Lakers were rested, they were at home. They were favored. This was supposed to be their bounce back game after an embarrassing loss to the Celtics with former legends putting them on blast. 

Instead, it was another entry in the growing catalog of evidence that these Lakers are not contenders. They are pretenders wearing expensive clothes and jewelry.

“We need to be more consistent,” said Luka Doncic who finished with 22 points and 15 assists. “We should have won a couple more games [on this homestand].”

The Lakers had no answer for Paolo Banchero, who has struggled to regain his All-Star form this season. Nonetheless, he looked like an All-Star Tuesday night, bullying his way to 36 points like a man crashing a private party. He attacked a defense that continues to talk toughness but rarely delivers it. 

Orlando outscored the Lakers 58-50 in the paint and out-rebounded them 47-39. They surrendered 12 offensive rebounds, including two on the game-winning putback by Wendell Carter Jr. 

“With their size and their strength you know it’s going to be a rock fight,” said Redick. “We lose points in the paint by eight in a one-point game. That’s the difference. We had more turnovers than them, and they had more offensive rebounds than us.”

If you’ve watched the Lakers over their eight-game homestand that saw them fall to 16-12 at home on the season, then you’ll notice a familiar pattern: jump out to an early lead, get outhustled and collapse in the second half.

Wash. Rinse. Repeat.

Doncic started hot, but fizzled. He shot 8-for-24. He went 2-for-10 from three. He missed five free throws. His poor shooting from beyond the arc must have been in his head when he picked up his dribble and didn’t shoot on the game’s final play. Instead he passed to James who had to force an off balance fadeaway three-pointer at the buzzer. 

I’ll let you answer how that went. 

LeBron James of the Los Angeles Lakers looks to pass the ball during the game against the Orlando Magic on February 24, 2026 at Crypto.Com Arena in Los Angeles, California. NBAE via Getty Images

The Lakers should have never lost this game. Not with three different closers on the court in James, Doncic, and Austin Reaves.

Every time Doncic had the ball in his hand late in the game his possessions devolved into isolation theater, everyone standing around waiting for brilliance instead of manufacturing advantage. The ball stopped moving. The oxygen thinned.

James was efficient — 8 for 13 for 21 points, including a dunk for the final Lakers points of the evening — but his five turnovers came at critical moments. The Magic scored 14 points off the Lakers 12 turnovers, Los Angeles only scored four. That’s basketball malpractice.

They led most of the night and yet it still felt like they were barely hanging on. 

In early December, the Lakers were the second seed in the West. Now they sit 34-23, clinging to sixth, two games clear of the play-in undertow. They just finished an eight-game homestand and won four of them. Four. At home. In a conference that punishes hesitation.

Contenders slam the door. Pretenders admire the hinges.

The Lakers admired too much.

Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic reacts after scoring during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Orlando Magic, Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026, in Los Angeles. AP

Orlando dictated terms on the glass and in the paint. The Lakers reacted instead of imposing their will. They played as if the game would simply tilt their way because it usually does for talented teams.

It doesn’t work that way in late February.

The Western Conference doesn’t care about potential. It cares about execution under pressure. And right now, this group tightens when the moment demands clarity.

Thursday in Phoenix looms large against a Suns team missing key stars. Another “should win.” Another trap disguised as opportunity. Win, and they give themselves breathing room. Lose, and the standings squeeze even tighter.


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Inside Crypto.com Arena, you could feel the doubt settling like dust in the rafters. Fans didn’t explode in anger. They exhaled in recognition. They’ve seen this movie before — double-digit lead, stalled offense, defensive lapses, one-possession heartbreak.

If the Lakers want to be taken seriously in May, then nights like this suggest they’re not even ready for March.

Talent alone does not make you a contender. Toughness does. Discipline does. Killer instinct does.

On Tuesday night, the Orlando Magic had all three.

The Lakers had none.

And that’s why they walked off their own floor pretending to be something they are not.

Celtics vs. Nuggets predictions: Odds, recent stats, trends and best bets for February 25

The Boston Celtics (38-19) wrap up a four-game road trip tonight at Ball Arena against the Denver Nuggets (36-22) in a battle of NBA heavyweights.

The Celtics have won each of the first three games on this West Coast road trip and four games in a row overall while the Nuggets have alternated wins and losses over their last six games.

Denver’s lack of consistency is in large part due to the absence of the injured Aaron Gordon (hamstring). Sunday night they lost in San Francisco to the Warriors, 128-117. The loss came in spite of another triple double from Nikola Jokic (35 points, 20 rebounds, 12 assists).

Boston takes the court tonight after winning last night in Phoenix, 97-81. Jaylen Brown (knee) was out injured but Derrick White scored 22 and Sam Hauser was 4-10 from deepto pace the attack against a Suns’ team minus their starting backcourt of Dillon Brooks and Devin Booker.

With Brown’s availability in question for the Celtics, Denver’s ability to defend the perimeter will be that much more critical. No doubt they will rely on their efficiency from inside the arc and their rebounding in an attempt to counter Boston's 3-point heavy approach.

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

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

After 24 years, the NBA is back on NBC and Peacock, combining the nostalgia of an iconic era with the innovative future of basketball coverage. The NBA on NBC YouTube channel delivers fans must-see highlights, analysis, and exclusive and unique content. 

Game Details and How to Watch Live: Celtics at Nuggets

  • Date: Wednesday, February 25, 2026
  • Time: 10PM EST
  • Site: Ball Arena
  • City: Denver, CO
  • Network/Streaming: ESPN

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

Game Odds: Celtics at Nuggets

The latest odds as of Wednesday courtesy of DraftKings:

  • Moneyline: Boston Celtics (+136), Denver Nuggets (-162)
  • Spread: Nuggets -3.5
  • Total: 228.5 points

This game opened Nuggets -3.5 with the Total set at 228.5.

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

Expected Starting Lineups: Celtics at Nuggets

Boston Celtics

  • PG Derrick White
  • SG Ron Harper Jr.
  • SF Baylor Scheierman
  • PF Sam Hauser
  • C Neemias Queta

Denver Nuggets

  • PG Jamal Murray
  • SG Julian Strawther
  • SF Christian Braun
  • PF Cam Johnson
  • C Nikola Jokic

Injury Report: Celtics at Nuggets

Boston Celtics

  • Jaylen Brown (knee)is listed as questionable for tonight’s game
  • Jason Tatum (Achilles) has been declared OUT of tonight’s game

Denver Nuggets

  • Jamal Murray (hamstring) is listed as probable for tonight’s game
  • Julian Strawther (toe) is listed as probable for tonight’s game
  • Aaron Gordon (hamstring) has been declared OUT of tonight’s game
  • Jalen Pickett (knee) has been declared OUT of tonight’s game
  • Peyton Watson (hamstring) has been declared OUT of tonight’s game
  • Tamar Bates (foot) has been declared OUT of tonight’s game

Important stats, trends and insights: Celtics at Nuggets

  • The Nuggets are 15-11 at home this season
  • The Celtics are 20-10 on the road this season
  • The Nuggets are 32-26 ATS this season / 12-14 at home
  • The Celtics are 33-23-1 ATS this season / 20-9-1 on the road
  • The OVER has cashed in just 21 of the Celtics’ 57 games this season (21-36)
  • The OVER has cashed in 37 of the Nuggets’ 58 games this season (37-21)
  • The Celtics are 8-2 ATS in their last 10 games
  • The Game Total UNDER has cashed the last 3 times these teams have played
  • The Celtics are 14-6 this season against the Western Conference
  • Nikola Jokic is AVERAGING 28.8 points, 12.5 rebounds, and 10.5 assists per game this season

Rotoworld Best Bet

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

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for tonight’s Celtics and Nuggets’ game:

  • Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Nuggets on the Moneyline
  • Spread: Rotoworld Bet is recommending a play on the Nuggets -3.5 ATS
  • Total: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Game Total OVER 228.5

Want even more NBA best bets and predictions from our expert staff & tools? Check out the Expert NBA Predictions page from NBC Sports for money line, spread and over/under picks for every game on today’s calendar! 

If you’re looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our NBA Top Trends tool on NBC Sports!

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

  • Jay Croucher (@croucherJD)
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Cal Raleigh not focused on trying for another 60-homer season in Seattle

PEORIA, Ariz. (AP) — Cal Raleigh has already gone deep this spring, yet the switch-hitting Seattle Mariners catcher isn't focused on trying to hit 60 home runs again this season.

Raleigh, who had an MLB-leading 60 homers last year, hit a 427-foot homer against the Chicago White Sox in an exhibition game Tuesday. His first spring homer came in his third game.

“I think the elephant in the room is 60 home runs. That’s not something I’m setting out to do,” Raleigh told Seattle Sports this week. “To me, I’m just trying to be as consistent as possible, trying to do what I did last year.”

His 60 homers last season were the most for a player who was primarily a catcher, having started 119 games behind the plate and another 38 at designated hitter. The 29-year-old Raleigh, nicknamed “Big Dumper,” also had a career-high 125 RBIs and finished second in the American League MVP voting behind New York Yankees slugger and third-time winner Aaron Judge.

Judge and Raleigh are both set to play for Team USA in the World Baseball Classic, which begins pool play next week. Judge set the AL record with 62 home runs in 2022.

They are among only seven players with a 60-homer season, and Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa are the only ones to do so in consecutive seasons (1998 and 1999). McGwire and Sosa are the only players with multiple 60-homer seasons, and Sosa had a third in 2001.

___

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

Hornets rookie Kon Knueppel becomes fastest player to 200 3-pointers

It took just 58 games.

That's all sharpshooting Hornets rookie Kon Knueppel needed to get to 200 3-pointers made — he set a new NBA record for fastest to 200 3s, besting former record holder Duncan Robinson by 11 games.

Knueppel has made an NBA-leading 201 3-pointers this season and needs just six more to pass Sacramento's Keegan Murray for the most threes made by a rookie.

Knueppel is averaging 19.3 points and 3.5 made 3-pointers a game while shooting 43.6% from beyond the arc. What really has him neck-and-neck with Dallas Cooper Flagg for Rookie of the Year is that Knueppel has shown off more playmaking and offensive diversity than was expected, as is the fact that he's doing this for a hot Hornets team that appears headed to the play-in in the East.

The Suns must distinguish between rust and reality with Jalen Green

PHOENIX, AZ - FEBRUARY 24: Jalen Green #4 of the Phoenix Suns handles the ball during the game against the Boston Celtics on February 24, 2026 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 2026 NBAE (Photo by Barry Gossage/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

When the Phoenix Suns moved Kevin Durant to Houston last summer, the financial backbone of that deal centered on Jalen Green. The deal could not have happened without his $33.6 million price tag. At the same time, Phoenix brought in a young, explosive, athletic guard, along with Dillon Brooks and future draft capital. Green was the most fascinating piece of the return. He arrived with upside, volatility, and the kind of ceiling that still invites conversation about what he can become.

Green’s time in Houston did not close the way anyone with the Rockets hoped for or envisioned. He spent a season as the primary scoring option, averaging 21.0 points on 42/35/81 shooting splits. The postseason told a different story. Over seven games, he averaged 13.3 points on 37/30/67. Houston supported him the way teams typically do with young talent, and eventually pivoted, sending him to Phoenix as part of their push to acquire Durant and accelerate their timeline.

He is one of the most intriguing players on the Suns roster. Maybe the most. Jalen Green fits cleanly into the “new place, new opportunity, different results” narrative. A change of scenery can matter, and Phoenix represents that chance. At the same time, this opportunity carries real weight. This is not a Ryan Dunn conversation. This is not a late first round pick on a rookie scale deal. Green was the second overall pick in 2021. And he has two years left, totaling $72.3 million.

That reality turns this season into a meaningful evaluation. The Suns need to understand who he is, what he can be, and how he fits into their long-term picture. That was always the plan, even before the season tipped. Injuries disrupted the timeline. A hamstring issue cost him 48 games in what was supposed to be a defining year for both player and organization. Now the questions sharpen. Following this season, do the Suns continue to give him runway, space to grow, room to fail, and the opportunity to respond? Or do they begin gauging his value on the open market and make decisions with the broader future in mind?

Injuries continue to shape the evaluation of Jalen Green, and they are muddying the picture in real time. During his first extended stretch of health this season, he is not playing in the role the Suns actually need to study. With Devin Booker sidelined and without Dillon Brooks enforcing, Green has slid into the primary option role. We already know what that version looks like. Houston gave him plenty of runway in that role, and the results are well documented.

Even in this limited sample, and within a role he is not built to sustain, familiar tendencies are creeping back in. Inefficiency. Inaccuracy. Three-point attempts that stall possessions and tilt momentum the wrong way.

If you look at the last three games, the numbers are rough. He is shooting 28.3% from the field on 20.0 attempts per game. From three, he is at 15.4%, with four makes on 26 attempts, one of those being the game-winner against Orlando. You can acknowledge the rust, given how much time he spent in street clothes earlier this season, but it still grabs your attention. Not as a conclusion, more as a note being written in pencil.

This is not the moment to pass judgment. It is part of the evaluation, not the verdict.

There is still a long runway ahead for Jalen Green, and more opportunity for him to settle into a defined role once that role actually exists again. We have seen him operate as a number one in Houston, but this environment is different. With injuries piling up, he is pressing, trying to ignite the offense on his own. At times, that urge turns into forcing the issue, and you can feel it possession to possession.

Jalen Green is the kind of player you want to root for. The personality pops. The athleticism is undeniable. The upside is obvious. If it all ever clicks, the deal looks like a steal for Phoenix. Having someone with that kind of quick twitch, someone who can get to the rim whenever he wants and do it with real explosion, is not something this franchise has had in a long time. Gerald Green is probably the closest comparison, and even he had a ceiling. That is the concern here. Jalen Green likely has one too, and given the contract and the investment, the window to understand what that ceiling is feels smaller.

The hope is that this stretch ends up as a blip. That the rust fades. That efficiency starts to follow. Because when he is right, you can feel how much gravity he carries. He is a microwave scorer who can tilt a game in a hurry and shoulder an offense for stretches. That version exists. It becomes harder to access without Devin Booker on the floor, when defenses can load up and treat Green as the primary every possession. Still, recognizing those coverages and navigating them is part of growth.

Right now, with the roster thinned and the responsibility shifted, Green is being asked to carry real weight. So far, that load has been heavy. The hope is that as health returns and roles settle, things begin to look different.

This is the uncomfortable middle of the evaluation, where inefficiency is loud, and answers are still quiet. The shooting has been rough, the decision-making uneven, and the burden heavier than the role he is ultimately meant to carry. All of that is real, and it deserves to be acknowledged. It is also not a reason to panic.

This stretch is information, not a conclusion. Green is playing through rust, injuries around him have distorted the ecosystem, and the context matters. The Suns are not searching for perfection right now. They are collecting data, watching habits, and learning how he responds when things are hard. That process takes time, and patience is still the most valuable currency they have.

Pistons vs. Thunder preview: League’s top two teams square off on ESPN

NBA: Oklahoma City Thunder at Detroit Pistons

Who would have thought just two years ago that a Pistons vs. Thunder game would be getting flexed onto ESPN because both teams are number 1 in the Conference. Obviously, that isn’t a huge surprise for the reigning NBA Champs, but the Pistons lost 28 games in a row just 2 years ago, they aren’t supposed to be here this fast.

Monday’s game against the San Antonio Spurs lived up to the hype, but the Pistons ultimately fell as their offense sputtered in the 2nd half. With how reliant they are on inside shooting, facing off against a game-wrecker like Victor Wembanyama is not a good matchup. The Spurs might be the worst matchup for the Pistons for that reason alone.

This isn’t to downplay the Thunder at all, they have the best record in the West for a reason and also sport the number 1 defense in the NBA, just in front of the Pistons. They have length, they are physical, and play just like the Pistons, so this game could get ugly.

Game Vitals

Where: Little Caesars Arena in Detroit, MI
When: Wednesday, February 25 at 7:30 pm EST
Watch: ESPN or Fan Duel Sports Network Detroit
Odds: Detroit (-7.5)

Analysis

You might be looking at those odds and be in shock, but there is a pretty good reason for it. The Thunder will be without Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Jalen Williams, and Ajay Mitchell. That does not mean that this will be an easy game. Just like the Pistons, the Thunder are a very deep team and their defensive infrastructure is still in place no matter who is on the court.

It goes without saying how important SGA and Jalen Williams are to the Thunder, but missing Ajay Mitchell is a very underrated loss. He has been a key player off the bench during his breakout season after going in the 2nd round last year. Just another example of the rich getting richer.

With those 3 players out, the Thunder will be forced to rely on Chet Holmgren and Cason Wallace to provide more offense. Both players are capable of providing more on offense, but there is a reason why they are complements to SGA and Jalen Williams to a lesser extent.

One player who has really stepped up in the absence of SGA is Isaiah Joe, who scored 22 points on 6-11 shooting from beyond the arc last night against the Raptors. He also had the exact same shooting line in a win against the Cavaliers on Sunday. He is a lethal shooter who can take over a game if left open, so the Pistons will need to adjust their defensive gameplan so they are not leaving him open like they did for the Spurs shooters on Monday.

The easy explanation for that is that the San Antonio Spurs have Victor Wembanyama, who is such a threat on both ends of the court that you have to change everything about how you play in order to stop him. For the Pistons, that meant putting extra pressure on him and leaving shooters open and letting your half court offense get completely stifled by his rim pressence.

Luckily, the Thunder don’t have anybody like Wemby. Chet Homgren is close, especially on defense, but he doesn’t have the same length and can be put in check a little bit with physicality. He also is not as skilled on offense, but can still make you pay if you don’t guard him. Whether he is able to step up offensively is a key factor in this game, as he is coming off a 7-point performance against the Raptors last night.

I would not be surprised to see some Paul Reed and Jalen Duren minutes to counter the Holmgren-Hartenstein frontcourt. This would have been a great matchup to unleash the Isaiah Stewart-Jalen Duren frontcourt, but Stewart is still out with his suspension. Tobias Harris should be able to handle Holmgren for some of the game, but is at a severe size disadvantage.

Another reason for the offensive struggles for the Pistons against the Spurs on Monday, and Cade Cunningham in particular, was the constant ball pressure by Stephon Castle. He was able to stay in front of him and had the strength to match his physicality. Castle is near the top of the list of defenders in the league capable of givng Cade Cunningham trouble.

Cason Wallace is at that level on defense with being able to pressure the ball and stay on his man, but he doesn’t quite have the size that Stephon Castle has, so the Thunder may opt to have Lu Dort guard Cade so he cannot get into rhythm offensively by outmuscling a smaller guard.

There is a reason these two teams are the top two teams in the league defensively, both are very physical and great at playing passing lanes to generate turnovers. With SGA being out, the Pistons are at least on an even playing field offensively, so this could be a very ugly game that ends with double digit scores for both teams.

With how tough the Pistons schedule is this week and next week, facing the Thunder while missing three key players is the perfect time to face them, so the Pistons need to take advantage of it. Don’t let the odds fool you, the Pistons have a great shot at winning, but the Thunder are where they are for a reason and it will not be easy.

Lineups

Detroit Pistons (42-14): Cade Cunningham, Duncan Robinson, Ausar Thompson, Tobias Harris, Jalen Duren

Oklahoma City Thunder (45-14): Cason Wallace, Isaiah Joe, Lu Dort, Chet Homgren, Isaiah Hartenstein

Question of the Day

How concerned are you with the Pistons performance on Monday against the Spurs. Was it just a bad night or a sign of things to come in the playoffs?