Best NBA Player Props Today for April 7: Ace in the Hole

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It’s a jam-packed day of NBA action with 10 games on the schedule, but as is the case with late-season NBA, we’ve got a lot of massive spreads. Tonight's slate features five games with spreads at -10 or higher.

Sometimes, games with big spreads are best to attack with NBA player props. My NBA picks for today have plays in three of those games, including Ace Bailey continuing his strong play for the Jazz.

Best NBA player props today

PlayerPickbet365
TimberwolvesDonte DiVincenzoOver 3.5 rebounds+102
ClippersJohn CollinsOver 11.5 points-115
JazzAce BaileyOver 17.5 points-115

Prop #1: Donte DiVincenzo Over 3.5 rebounds

+102 at bet365

The Indiana Pacers are just winding down the clock on the season. They obviously have issues everywhere, but one of the best places to exploit them is on the glass.

Indiana enters this matchup against the Minnesota Timberwolves ranked 24th in opponent rebounds per game and 27th in rebounding rate since the All-Star break.

The T-wolves have an obvious rebounding props candidate in Rudy Gobert, but the big man isn’t my favorite value on the board tonight. The honor belongs to guard Donte DiVincenzo

While DiVincenzo hasn’t had much impact on the glass lately, he still averages 4.2 rebounds per game, and we’re getting the Over at 3.5 at plus money.

The other thing to like about this play is that the Pacers take the 12th most threes per game since coming out of the break. That means long boards to grab for DiVincenzo.

  • Time: 7:00 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: FDSN-North, FDSN-Indiana

Prop #2: Ace Bailey Over 17.5 points

-115 at bet365

The Utah Jazz have clearly gone full tank mode down the stretch, but one guy is still getting minutes and making the most of them: Ace Bailey.

Bailey is showing why he was worth a high lottery pick. He’s averaging 19.5 points per game over his last 15 games, which includes him shooting a solid 37.7% from 3-point range.

He gets an interesting matchup against the New Orleans Pelicans. New Orleans has been playing better basketball once the team got healthy, but it was too little too late, and they're out of the playoffs.

On that note, though, Trey Murphy III is out for this game, and Dejounte Murray is questionable, two of their best defenders. That’s not great for a team that still ranks 19th in defensive rating since the All-Star break.

  • Time: 8:00 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: KJZZ, GCSEN

Prop #3: John Collins Over 11.5 points

-115 at bet365

The Los Angeles Clippers are locked into a Play-In spot in the Western Conference, but playing those games at home is still on the table with a strong finish.

They get a good chance to notch another win when they host the Dallas Mavericks and the red-hot Cooper Flagg.

The Mavericks need that offensive outburst because they aren’t stopping anyone from scoring, particularly on the inside. Dallas enters tonight’s matchup ranked 24th in defensive rating and 27th in opponent points in the paint since coming out of the All-Star break.

That has me targeting John Collins. The power forward is in a groove, averaging 19.8 points over his last four games with a .704 effective field goal percentage, putting up at least 15 points in all four.

He keeps that going by dominating the Mavs down low.

  • Time: 10:30 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: KFAA, FDSN-California

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

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College basketball rankings: Michigan leads final USA TODAY Sports Top 25 ranking

Now that the confetti has been swept up and the nets have been cut down, there is one final piece of business to close the book on the men’s college basketball season.

Michigan takes its rightful place as No. 1 in the season-ending USA TODAY Sports coaches poll after claiming the program's second title with a defeat of Connecticut. The Wolverines, who held the top spot for a stretch during the regular season, finishes atop the rankings for the first time since USA TODAY began administration of the coaches poll. Their previous title in 1989. The runner-up Huskies finish at No. 2 overall, though the Huskies did not receive every second-place vote among the 31 panelists.

Arizona lands at No. 3 overall. Duke, which entered the tournament at No. 1 , finishes ahead of semifinalist Illinois for the No. 4 spot despite falling short of the Final Four thanks to UConn’s buzzer-beater.

TOP 25:Complete final USA TODAY Sports men's basketball poll

NEXT YEAR:Our too-early Top 25 for the 2026-27 season

Houston lands at No. 6 in the final rankings, followed by Purdue and Iowa State. Florida, the first top regional seed eliminated, topples to No. 9. St. John’s rounds out the top 10.

It’s an impressive final poll for the Big Ten. In addition to ending its championship drought while sending two representatives to the Final Four, the league ends up with seven ranked teams in all as Wisconsin narrowly edges Utah State for the No. 25 spot.

The SEC lands six thanks to No. 24 Texas’s surprising run from First Four to Sweet 16. The Big 12 is next with five teams in the top 25, and the ACC lands four.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: College basketball final rankings: Michigan leads coaches poll Top 25

Bulls vs Wizards Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight’s NBA Game

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Two teams whose seasons feel like they’ve been in extended garbage time clash on Tuesday, when the Chicago Bulls visit the Washington Wizards.

The Bulls come in riding a seven-game losing streak, while Washington has just a single win in its last 23 games, part of the reason they’re five-point home ‘dogs in the NBA odds.

Even though these are two of the worst scoring defenses in the NBA, my Bulls vs. Wizards predictions and free NBA picks has this coming in Under an exceptionally high total.

Bulls vs Wizards prediction

Bulls vs Wizards best bet: Under 251.5 points (-110)

Except for a one-point loss to Memphis, every other game in the Chicago Bulls’ seven-game slide has been a demolition, losing by double digits in each.

During this skid, they are allowing an NBA-worst 134.7 points per game, with teams shooting 51.4% from the field and 38.9% from 3-point range.

They are also limping into the US Capital, with Josh Giddey, the team’s leading scorer, rebounder and assist man down with a hamstring injury.

Joining him in street clothes are Matas Buzelis (illness), Anfernee Simons (wrist), and Nick Richards (elbow), while Collin Sexton (finger) and Lachlan Olbrich (foot) are probable.

Barring an unforeseen four-game win streak (and help), the Washington Wizards will finish the year with the worst record in the NBA, and a legit shot at the top pick in the 2026 NBA Draft.

They’ve locked that in with a futile 1-22 run, where they’ve allowed a league-worst 129.3 points per game. That includes three games allowing 150+ points, and 10 at 130+.

But a little closer into the numbers, and these teams aren’t locks to combine for 249 points.

The Wiz have hit the Over seven of the last 10, but Overs that cashed at 249+ points (4) came against teams that were in the playoff picture.

The Bulls have actually gone Under the total in three of their last four, and the last 10 head-to-heads between these teams have produced just one Over at this hefty number – and they’ve cashed the Under in each of the last five.

Bulls vs Wizards same-game parlay

Washington has been allowing teams to shoot 37% from three during this skid, and Leonard Miller has had the range of late, hitting at least two triples in three of his last four games.

I’m not sure how a 7-footer has just one game with 5+ rebounds in nine games, but that’s where we are with Tristan Vukcevic. However, he did pull down eight boards against the Bulls in their lone meeting this season.

Bulls vs Wizards SGP

  • Under 251.5 points
  • Leonard Miller Over 1.5 3-pointers made
  • Tristan Vukcevic Over 4.5 rebounds

Our "from downtown" SGP: Silver liners for Wizards

It's been a banner stretch for Washington rookie Will Riley, who's coming off back-to-back 30+ point games, and has actually cracked the 20-point plateau in four of his last six.

He's a far different player than the one that logged just three minutes and recorded one assist in his first game against Chicago on Nov 22.

Bub Carrington has just one game with at least three boards in his last eight, but he’s pulled down at least three rebounds in four of his last five games against the Bulls.

Bulls vs Wizards SGP

  • Under 251.5 points
  • Leonard Miller Over 1.5 3-pointers made
  • Tristan Vukcevic Over 4.5 rebounds
  • Will Riley Over 19.5 points
  • Bub Carrington Over 2.5 rebounds

Bulls vs Wizards odds

  • Spread: Chicago -6 (-110) | Washington +6 (-110)
  • Moneyline: Chicago -225 | Washington +185
  • Over/Under: Over 251.5 (-110) | Under 251.5 (-110)

Bulls vs Wizards betting trend to know

Chicago has covered the spread in 10 of their last 13 games following a loss. Find more NBA betting trends for Bulls vs. Wizards.

How to watch Bulls vs Wizards

LocationCapital One Arena, Washington, DC
DateTuesday, April 7, 2026
Tip-off7:00 p.m. ET
TVCHSN, MNMT

Bulls vs Wizards latest injuries

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Report: North Carolina working to finalize deal to hire Michael Malone as basketball coach

Michael Malone

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

Isaiah J. Downing/Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images

North Carolina is working toward finalizing a deal with NBA championship-winning coach Michael Malone to lead the Tar Heels’ basketball program, according to a report.

The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the school hasn’t publicly discussed its search. Malone would replace Hubert Davis, who was fired March 24 after five seasons as the successor to retired Hall of Famer Roy Williams.

The 54-year-old Malone spent 12 seasons as a head coach in the NBA, including a 10-year run in Denver. He led the Nuggets to the 2023 championship behind three-time league MVP Nikola Jokic.

The Nuggets fired Malone last spring with less than a week left in that regular season. Almost a year to the day, in another surprise move, Malone is on the verge of taking over a blue-blood program with six national titles, a record 21 appearances in the Final Four and alums including Michael Jordan, James Worthy Vince Carter and Atlantic Coast Conference career scoring leader Tyler Hansbrough.

UNC now has big-name former pro coaches leading its two highest-profile programs. The Tar Heels hired six-time Super Bowl champion Bill Belichick as their football coach in December 2024. Belichick struggled to a 4-8 record in his debut season.

Davis’ firing opened one of the top jobs in college basketball for only the fourth time since the late Hall of Famer Dean Smith’s retirement after 36 seasons in October 1997.

The job had stayed in the “Carolina Family” ever since. Longtime assistant Bill Guthridge replaced Smith, followed by former UNC player Matt Doherty, former Smith assistant Williams and then Davis, who played under Smith and worked on Williams’ staff.

Names like Arizona’s Tommy Lloyd, Michigan’s Dusty May and Chicago Bulls coach Billy Donovan — who led Florida to the 2006 and 2007 NCAA titles — had been linked to the job since Davis’ firing. Lloyd announced at the Final Four that he would return to the Wildcats while praising UNC for “the way they’ve handled this.”

Three days later, the search had turned in an unexpected direction with Malone, who never has been a college head coach and has spent most of his career in the NBA. His primary connection to UNC athletics is the presence of daughter Bridget on the Tar Heels’ volleyball team.

During an October appearance on the UNC athletic department’s “Carolina Insider” podcast, Malone recalled hearing his late father, NBA coach Brendan Malone, talk often about Smith and UNC basketball. He also mentioned attending multiple recent practices and Davis asking him to speak to the team at least once.

“I’ve always been a Carolina fan,” Malone said. “And when (Bridget) decided to come here that made it even that much more special, because now I’m ‘Go Heels’ for everything. I root for all the teams, have fallen in love with Chapel Hill.”

Malone’s time in the NBA included a brief stint in Sacramento, where he was fired in December 2014, just 24 games into his second season. He also worked as an assistant with the New York Knicks, Cleveland Cavaliers, New Orleans Hornets and Golden State Warriors.

Malone had stints in college as an assistant at Oakland, Providence and Manhattan. He spent only one season in the Atlantic Coast Conference, working as director of men’s basketball administration at Virginia under Pete Gillen in 1998-99.

David Adelman, Malone’s successor in Denver, said he was happy for his friend, adding that Malone would be comfortable with players earning big money through name, image and likeness deals.

“It’s more of a professional environment now, especially at schools like that, where you have to look at it like these guys are under contract now,” Adelman said. “And I think a lot of NBA coaches understand what it means to coach somebody that’s making money.”

Who will get No. 5 and 6 seeds in East? Breaking down NBA playoff chaos

Perhaps the most intriguing storyline heading into the final week of the NBA regular season, aside from who is eligible for postseason awards, is the race to avoid the play-in tournament.

The only thing settled is that the Detroit Pistons have clinched the No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference and await the return of star Cade Cunningham, who has not played since March 19 after suffering a collapsed left lung.

The Boston Celtics, New York Knicks and Cleveland Cavaliers have secured the other top four seeds, although their exact playoff positioning has yet to be decided.

The race in the Eastern Conference is really intriguing, as the battle for the No. 5 and 6 seeds is heating up, with six teams separated by just 3 1/2 games going into play on Tuesday, April 7.

Here is a look at the current playoff picture: Each of these teams is a lock for at least the play-in tournament. Records through April 7.

5. Atlanta Hawks (45-34)

Remaining schedule: at Cleveland (Wednesday, April 8), vs. Cleveland (Friday, April 10), at Miami (Sunday, April 12)

Magic number to clinch at least No. 5 seed: 3

Magic number to clinch at least No. 6 seed: 2

6. Toronto Raptors (43-35)

Remaining schedule: vs. Miami (Tuesday, April 7), vs. Miami (Thursday, April 9), at New York (Friday, April 10), vs. Brooklyn (Sunday, April 12)

Magic number to clinch at least No. 6 seed: 4; doesn't control destiny for No. 5 seed.

7. Philadelphia 76ers (43-36)

Remaining schedule: at Houston (Thursday, April 9), at Indiana (Friday, April 10), vs. Milwaukee (Sunday, April 12)

Magic number to clinch at least No. 8 seed: 3; doesn't control destiny for No. 5, 6 or 7 seed.

8. Charlotte Hornets (43-36)

Remaining schedule: at Boston (Tuesday, April 7), vs. Detroit (Friday, April 10), at New York (Sunday, April 12)

Magic number to clinch at No. 8 seed: 3; doesn't control destiny for No. 5, 6 or 7 seed.

9. Orlando Magic (43-36)

Remaining schedule: vs. Minnesota (Wednesday, April 8), at Chicago (Friday, April 10), at Boston (Sunday, April 12)

Magic number to clinch at least No. 9 seed: 2; doesn't control destiny for No. 5, 6, 7 or 8 seed.

10. Miami Heat (41-37)

Remaining schedule: at Toronto (Tuesday, April 7), at Toronto (Thursday, April 9), at Washington (Friday, April 10), vs. Atlanta (Sunday, April 12)

Doesn't control destiny for No. 5, 6, 7, 8 or 9 seed

Already eliminated

Milwaukee Bucks, Chicago Bulls, Brooklyn Nets, Indiana Pacers, Washington Wizards

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NBA playoff bracket: Eastern Conference race to avoid the play-In

What We Learned from the Spurs win over the Sixers

SAN ANTONIO, TX - APRIL 6: Keldon Johnson #3, Devin Vassell #24, and Stephon Castle #5 of the San Antonio Spurs huddle up after the game against the Philadelphia 76ers on April 6, 2026 at the Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photos by Michael Gonzales/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

I guess it’s a useful exercise, as we tiptoe ever closer to the promised land, to take one more quick glance at the abyss.

A Victor Wembanyama injury, short term, long term, chronic, you name it, is the proverbial other shoe waiting to drop. It’s not an anchor that weighs the franchise down, and it’s not an albatross slung around its neck. It’s just something that’s there. Existing in the space. A situation that every single person associated with this franchise is keenly aware of, and knows we might eventually have to reckon with.

The availability of our tall Frenchman isn’t just a variable, it’s the variable. It changes everything about everything. When he is at full strength, the world of possibilities is completely open to us. Every game is winnable. Every season could end in a title. I watched Victor Wembanyama for the first time in person last year and immediately came here and wrote a column about how the Spurs franchise might someday rival Real Madrid as a global brand. Like, right? That’s crazy. But look me in the eyes and tell me Victor isn’t going to try to get it there. The point is, when we have access to a generational beam of light like Victor, our kingdom simply becomes everything the light touches.

But that’s not really how best laid plans work, is it?

When Victor isn’t part of the equation, everything shifts a little. The possibilities on the map start to shrink. That confident “every game is winnable” feeling gets quietly replaced by something more like “okay, let’s see.” You stop thinking about winning titles and start thinking about making playoff runs. Putting up a good fight. Things become a bit less lofty. More grounded. More real. Maybe we aren’t the next Real Madrid, just the same plucky small-market underdogs we’ve always been. It’s fine. Good. Nice, even. Things don’t become dark, but there’s more shade than there used to be.

The broadcast kept replaying the collision over and over, and I couldn’t help but sit with that feeling for a moment. Really let it burrow into my brain and hang out there. It’s a jarring thing to be confronted with, you know? The fun. The party. The wins. The expectations. This freight train we’re all riding right now, this new era of Spurs basketball barreling toward something real, can get derailed so very quickly.

And as I sat there in my funk, confronting my own mortality, plotting which British WWI poem would serve as a nice opener for this column, a funny thing continued to play out on the court.

The Spurs didn’t really skip a beat. They made the necessary adjustments to accommodate the 7’6″ hole in the lineup and then continued to do what they’ve done all season. They played hard and pushed the pace. They were physical. They moved the ball and found the open man. Stephon Castle went from tossing lobs to Wemby to tossing the same lobs to Luke Kornet with such nonchalance that I almost wondered if he even knew about the injury that was causing my entire worldview to come crashing down.

It was fun. I had fun watching them just keep the Sixers at bay. Keldon getting in the paint like a bull in a china shop, howling after a layup. Dylan Harper quietly morphing into an assassin from three, never mind the wrong-foot finishes at the rim like he’s been doing it for a decade. Fox filling every hole. Castle being a superstar. Devin providing runs exactly when we need them.

You can’t help but marvel. The performance we saw in the second half was from as complete a team as we’ve seen grace the court in San Antonio in a long, long time. Which is a funny thing to say about a team that was missing its best player.

We don’t say it out loud very often, because obviously. But there are going to be stretches without him. Maybe a playoff game. Maybe a season. Maybe more? That’s just a reality of how the league works. How life works. It’s not something you plan for, it’s an impact you brace for once the sirens go off.

And yet. He is everything to this franchise. He has to be. You can’t play scared when it comes to building around someone like Victor. When he’s out there, he blots out the sun. He bends the whole operation toward himself just by existing on the floor. Every defensive scheme in the league has to account for him. Every possession has an extra dimension. The ceiling becomes genuinely limitless in a way that it isn’t for almost any other team on the planet.

Maybe I’m high off the good vibes from a win. Maybe this season has rocked me out of my pessimism cave just enough to see the light. Maybe I’m just getting old. But last night was a crystal clear demonstration of something important.

Victor might be everything, but he can’t literally be everything.

The Spurs being this good without him on the floor isn’t some consolation prize. It’s a result of the work that’s been put in. It’s the foundation those best laid plans actually built. It’s what happens when you keep pounding on that rock. He’s only everything because everything else works. He needs all of it as much as it needs him. He’s not everything despite the team.

He’s everything because of it.


Takeaways
  • Hey, 60 wins! How about that?
  • Stephon Castle turning into a triple-double machine is such an interesting development this season. It makes sense, his game has always been about doing all the little things, but man, I didn’t dare to dream he’d be doing all of them at this level. I expect him to find the open man. I expect him to grab that board. I expect those soft little mid-range jumpers to fall. The only thing I don’t know is what I’m supposed to expect next.
  • I almost don’t want to talk about Dylan Harper too much because I don’t want to jinx it. That said, it was fun watching him go toe to toe with VJ Edgecombe last night. Edgecombe is a blast. Still pretty glad we’ve got Dylan.
  • I’ve read enough about Joel Embiid to have a deep well of sympathy for him as a person. There’s a version of his career that reads as one of the more tragic arcs in league history. I mean, we talk about existential stress around the health and availability of our superstar big man, and what we’re describing is basically the Joel Embiid experience. I feel for him. I feel for Sixers fans. Truly.
  • I absolutely abhor watching him play basketball.
  • If you caught the broadcast, you heard them mention it, but just in case you didn’t, Spurs play-by-play man Jacob Tobey performed the national anthem before the game on Native American Heritage Night. It was a pretty cool moment. We’re racking up cool moments down here in San Antonio this year! It’s our whole thing!

WWL Post Game Press Conference

What British WWI poems do you think you were circling before the Spurs brought you back into the light?

Oh, I don’t know. There’s so many to choose from when you’re trying to find something about the bleakness of existence within the walls we’ve constructed around us.

Of course. That totally normal feeling we all get watching basketball.

Right. I had a whole plan where I was going to try and recreate “Break of Day in the Trenches” by Isaac Rosenberg and see if maybe the bitter irony of our haunting reality might translate into the Modern NBA landscape.

Isn’t that the one where the soldier talks to a rat?

Yeah, and like, the rat doesn’t care if we’re British or German, Spurs fan or Sixer fan. He sees us for what we are. Meat. Bones. A future home for the poppies.

And this is what you felt, watching Victor walk off the court holding his ribs.

Pretty close, yeah. War is hell. The slog of the NBA season? Not far from it. We spend it down here in the trenches, alive, but just so. We’re showered with indignities and horrors constantly, the false hope of a new dawn only serving to remind us that to be alive only means we haven’t managed to escape.

Wow, uh, thank god the Spurs played well in the second half I guess.

Yeah, maybe I’ll save poetry corner for the off season.

Shaky Monday night for Sixers in Eastern Conference standings

ORLANDO, FLORIDA - APRIL 06: Paolo Banchero #5 of the Orlando Magic dunks the ball against Ausar Thompson #9 of the Detroit Pistons during the third quarter at Kia Center on April 06, 2026 in Orlando, Florida. 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 Rich Storry/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Philadelphia 76ers suffered a disappointing defeat on Monday night to a San Antonio Spurs club that lost star Victor Wembanyama to a rib injury midway through the game. The loss moved Philadelphia out of a tie with Toronto and down into the seventh seed, which would mean an entry in the Play-In Tournament rather than an automatic postseason berth.

Unfortunately, that result wasn’t the only one Monday not to go the Sixers’ way as we enter the home stretch of the 2025-26 NBA regular season. Behind 31 points from Paolo Banchero, Orlando defeated the top-seeded Pistons, 123-107. The Magic now share an identical 43-36 record with the Sixers, with Charlotte joining them in a three-way tie. A silver lining for Sixers fans is that the Sixers currently hold the tiebreaker within that grouping; the difference between seventh and ninth is vast given the Play-In Tournament structure.

One game that did go Philadelphia’s way on Monday was Atlanta narrowly losing to the Knicks at home, 108-105. With the Sixers losing, though, they are still two games back of the Hawks with three to play. With Atlanta holding the tiebreaker, the Hawks are very likely out of reach.

Highlighted above are the games of note tonight. Toronto hosts Miami, and Sixers fans should be rooting for the Heat there, even though that would draw Miami slightly closer to Philadelphia. The reward for moving back up into sixth place is too great to entertain other alternatives. Charlotte is on the road in Boston in a nationally televised affair, so we find ourselves in the extremely dystopian position of rooting for the Celtics.

The Sixers aren’t back on the court until Thursday in Houston. Let’s hope tonight’s contests go their way.

How to watch Charlotte Hornets vs Boston Celtics: TV, live stream info for tonight's game

Tonight's Coast 2 Coast Tuesday features two exciting matchups. First, at 8 PM ET, the Charlotte Hornets head to TD Garden to take on the Boston Celtics. Then, at 11:00 PM ET, it's the Houston Rockets vs Phoenix Suns. Live coverage begins with NBA Showtime at 7:00 PM ET on Peacock. See below for additional information on how to watch each game. Follow all of the NBA action on NBCSN and Peacock. Peacock will feature 100 regular-season games throughout the course of the 2025-2026 season.

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Utah Jazz v Oklahoma City Thunder
The Spurs, Celtics and Pistons round out the top five in this penultimate power rankings of the season.

Charlotte Hornets vs Boston Celtics Game Preview:

After starting the season 16-28, it didn't look like the Hornets would be any closer to ending their nine-season playoff drought—the longest in the NBA. But the Hornets have turned their season around, going 27-8 since January 22.

Charlotte currently sits eighth in the Eastern Conference, in Play-In Tournament position, with three games remaining.

Kon Knueppel, the fourth overall pick out of Duke in last year's draft, has had an impactful rookie season, leading the league with 265 shots made from three-point range. LaMelo Ball is second in the league with 255 3-point field goals.

Together with Brandon Miller, Miles Bridges, and Moussa Diabate, the Hornets boast the highest net rating (+28.5) of any five-man lineup since 2007-2008.

The Hornets look to make their first playoff appearance since 2016.

Boston, currently second in the Eastern Conference, has already clinched a playoff spot. With Jaylen Brown's dominant play and a healthy Jayson Tatum back in the lineup, the Celtics are chasing their 19th NBA title, which would extend their record for most championships in league history.

Oklahoma City Thunder v Boston Celtics
In a deep field of MVP-worthy players, the NBC Sports crew gave a clean sweep to SGA.

How to watch Charlotte Hornets vs Boston Celtics:

  • When: Tuesday, April 7
  • Where: TD Garden, Boston, MA
  • Time: 8:00 PM ET
  • TV Channel: NBC
  • Live Stream:Peacock

What other NBA games are on NBC and Peacock tonight?

  • Houston Rockets vs Phoenix Suns - 11:00 PM ET on NBC and Peacock

How to watch the NBA on NBC and Peacock:

Peacock NBA Monday will stream up to three Monday night games each week throughout the regular season. Coast 2 Coast Tuesday presents doubleheaders on Tuesday nights throughout the regular season on NBC and Peacock. On most Tuesdays, an 8 p.m. ET game will be on NBC stations in the Eastern and Central time zones, and an 8 p.m. PT game on NBC stations in the Pacific and often Mountain time zones.

Check local listings each week. Both games will stream live nationwide on Peacock. Sunday Night Basketball coverage will also be available on NBC and Peacock. For a full schedule of the NBA on NBC and Peacock, click here.

RELATED:NBA Coach of the Year predictions -NBC Sports roundtable gives their picks

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Sign up here to watch all of our LIVE sports, sports shows, documentaries, classic matches, and more. You'll also get tons of hit movies and TV shows, Originals, news, 24/7 channels, and current NBC & Bravo hits—Peacock is here for whatever you’re in the mood for.

NBA on NBC 2025-26 Schedule:

Click here to see the full list of NBA games that will air on NBC and Peacock this season.

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All of the NBA’s ideas make the lottery bigger — 18 to 22 teams — and flatten the odds.

Sportsbooks Struggling to Handicap NBA Rookie of the Year Race

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Sportsbooks are struggling to handicap one of the best Rookie of the Year races in NBA history, thanks to the excellence of Kon Knueppel and Cooper Flagg.

Flagg is currently the odds-on favorite at major sportsbooks, despite Knueppel, his roommate at Duke, claiming a massive lead as recently as Sunday.

Key Takeaways

  • Odds flipped to Flagg after two huge games, despite a recent poll among voters favoring Knueppel.

  • Last year’s Rookie of the Year winner (Stephon Castle) was picked fourth, just like Knueppel.

  • The Charlotte Hornets face three top-five defenses to close their season.

Knueppel was a strong favorite to take home the NBA’s award for the most impressive first-timer in the league. That was compounded Friday when ESPN shared a straw poll of 100 league media members conducted Monday through Wednesday last week.

The results showed that Knueppel received 80 first-place, 19 second-place, and one third-place vote, resulting in 458 total points. Flagg received 20 first-place votes, 79 seconds, and one third, for 338 points, only 74% of his college teammate’s total. Philadelphia 76ers guard VJ Edgecombe was third with 98 points.

The results of the poll empowered DraftKings to shorten Knueppel’s odds from -250 on April 1 to -300 two days later when the results were released. 

Knueppel became an even larger favorite (-330) on Sunday morning, despite Flagg becoming the youngest player in NBA history to score at least 50 points (51) on a Friday night loss to the Orlando Magic. Those odds gave him an implied 76.7% chance to win the award, while Flagg’s +230 odds translated to a 30.3% probability.

Everything changed on Monday, one day after Flagg followed his 51-point explosion with 45 points, nine assists, and eight rebounds in a nationally televised matchup with the Los Angeles Lakers. He flipped to a -200 (66.7% chance) favorite at DraftKings overnight, and Knueppel ballooned to +140 (41.7% chance). 

The total instability in the Rookie of the Year odds leaves everything to play for during the final week of the regular season. The Dallas Mavericks still have four games remaining, while the Charlotte Hornets will play three.

Flagg, Knueppel can’t shake each other

The back-and-forth between the former Duke Blue Devils isn’t anything new. The pair took turns jostling for position on the board, although Knueppel truly hit his stride during Flagg’s near-monthlong absence from Feb. 10 through March 5.

There are strong merits to both players’ cases. Flagg averaged 21.1 points, 6.6 rebounds, and 4.6 assists, putting him on pace to become the fourth rookie since the NBA-ABA merger to average 20/6/4, joining Luka Doncic, Michael Jordan, and Larry Bird. 

He’s also had several individual moments of history, such as only being 19 years and 103 days old when he dropped his first 50-piece.

Knueppel put up a stat line of 18.7 points, 5.3 rebounds, and 3.4 assists, while already establishing himself as a historically efficient shooter. Even more impressively, he produced his 48/43/86 shooting splits while leading the NBA in made threes (265) at the time of writing, having already set the rookie record for made threes in a season. 

He also started all but one game for the Hornets amid their remarkable franchise turnaround, helping to lead them to a 27-8 record since Jan. 22 that was the second-best mark in the league during that span.

Although the team record does not normally factor into the Rookie of the Year race, the Hornets only need to win one more game to have their best season as a franchise since 2015-16.

The final days ahead

Everything about the ongoing NBA Rookie of the Year race has made it clear that the race won’t be over until the winner is officially announced. Even the sportsbooks have had an uncharacteristically difficult time staying on top of the oscillating battle.

Flagg and the Mavericks finish their season by facing the Los Angeles Clippers, Phoenix Suns, San Antonio Spurs, and Chicago Bulls. Those teams rank 18th, 10th, third, and 23rd in defensive rating, respectively, giving Flagg a varying degree of difficulty to bolster his final numbers. 

Knueppel and the Hornets have a tough finish to the year, with matchups against the Boston Celtics, Detroit Pistons, and New York Knicks, who rank third, fourth, and fifth in defensive rating. 

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

Social media reactions to UNC hiring Michael Malone

Mar 9, 2025; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA; Denver Nuggets head coach Michael Malone talks to guard Jamal Murray (27) during a break in the game against the Oklahoma City Thunder during the second quarter at Paycom Center. Mandatory Credit: Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images | Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images

After a couple of weeks of excruciating patience, the North Carolina Tar Heels have their new head coach. Former Denver Nuggets coach Michael Malone is bringing his talents to Chapel Hill, which was an unexpected hire by many. His name started getting brought up near the end of UNC’s coaching search, but nobody really knew how much there was behind that. Now he is the guy that will try his best to return the Heels to the elite ranks in college basketball, and the immediate reviews are pretty mixed.

First, let it be known that former UNC players who have spent time in the NBA really like this move. Theo Pinson and Ty Lawson were two Tar Heels that sounded off immediately via X.

Tyler Hansbrough was one of the first Tar Heels to mention Malone before the school ultimately hired him. He told Field of 68 that he felt like the former Nuggets coach could get some momentum in the coaching search.

After the hire happened, Hansbrough discussed how pumped he was about the hire, saying that he felt like it was the best remaining decision.

On the ACC Basketball Podcast, Joel Berry asked Danny Green about the hire, and Green feels like bringing in a NBA guy that knows how to develop players is huge. He also pointed out that Nuggets star Nikola Jokic was drafted 41st overall in the 2014 NBA Draft, and Malone had a sizable role in developing one of the best players in the NBA.

Finally, Seth Trimble sounded off on Instagram with his approval of the Michael Malone hire.

Outside of the Carolina alumni bubble, things are way more mixed in terms of whether or not this was a good move. In the Field of 68 video that was recorded after Malone was hired, Jeff Goodman pushed back on Hansbrough stating that former NBA guys have not had a good track record in the college ranks. But if that is the case, why did anybody want current Chicago Bulls head coach Billy Donovan so badly? Bomani Jones is one of those people, and he expressed his confusion on The Right Time.

Jones’ reaction signaled what it feels like a lot of fans were going through, which is confusion. Throughout the entire search, we heard a handful of specific names that ultimately did not pan out. One could argue that having such a harsh reaction over the hire is projection for some — there were a lot of people that thought they knew who UNC was actually after that did not see the Michael Malone hire coming. CBS Sports’ Seth Davis expressed this sentiment in his post regarding the hire.

To be fair, Seth Davis wouldn’t like UNC if they hired Coach K in his prime, but the fact remains that a lot of people were caught off guard by the hire. But here’s the thing: Michael Malone didn’t come out of nowhere for those who paid enough attention (and admittedly, I did not pay enough attention). By now everyone has caught wind of the fact that his daughter plays volleyball for the program, and he also had spent time around the basketball program this past fall. He even made time to make an appearance on the Carolina Insider Podcast with Jones Angell and Adam Lucas. One thing he has that Billy Donovan, Tommy Lloyd, and Dusty May didn’t have is some type of tangible tie to the program. It remains to be seen if he’s willing to completely buy in, but this clip of him talking to Kenny Smith while wearing a Tar Heels hoodie should at least warm fans’ hearts a little bit.

For fans that want a reason to be optimistic, it is clear that many players are a big fan of this move. Nobody knows ball like the guys that used to play it, especially the ones that played both for UNC and played in the NBA. For those who seek pessimism, there are more than enough questions that need to be answered. Can Malone handle the NIL/Transfer Portal era? Can he even coach at the college ranks? Will the harsh reality that players at this level aren’t nearly as good as they are in the NBA be too much for him? We can only hope that he can check every box and return UNC to glory, but there’s a lot of work that needs to be done between now and November in order to accomplish that.

Louisville’s Mikel Brown Jr. declares for 2026 NBA draft: Latest mock projection

NBA general managers and scouts are heading home from the 2026 men's NCAA Tournament with plenty to think about after three weeks of incredible action on the court. Now they have to figure out which March Madness performances are indicators of future greatness and which are more of a mirage.

The 2026 NBA draft is expected to take place in late June. In USA TODAY's latest mock draft, Louisville's Mikel Brown Jr.  is expected to go in the first round after declaring for the NBA draft on Tuesday. Here's how USA TODAY currently projects the guard's draft night will play out.

Our draft order is based on ESPN's projected records and factors in trades, including swaps and protections.

Mikel Brown Jr. 2026 NBA Draft prediction: Pick No. 10 overall, Milwaukee Bucks

Kalbrosky's Analysis:

The Milwaukee Bucks need to simply draft the best player available with whatever pick they have and will likely keep Louisville floor general Mikel Brown Jr. highlighted on their big board. The All-ACC guard has deep shooting range and was among the freshmen leaders in 3-pointers made from beyond 25 feet (27) this year, per CBB Analytics. Brown was averaging 29.2 points per game over his last five appearances, including 45 points against NC State on Feb. 9, while hitting 10 shots from beyond the arc, before an injury on Feb. 28 forced him to miss March Madness.

See USA TODAY's full mock draft 9.0 here

Mikel Brown Jr. player profile

(all stats as of March 15)

  • Position: Guard
  • Current Team: Louisville
  • 18.2 points per game
  • 3.3 rebounds per game
  • 4.7 assists per game
  • 41.0 field goal percentage
  • 34.4 three-point field goal percentage

Milwaukee Bucks 2026 projected draft picks

  • No. 10

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Mikel Brown Jr. NBA mock draft projection: Where Louisville star is expected to land after March Madness

Utah Jazz vs. New Orleans Pelicans

OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA - APRIL 5: John Konchar #55 of the Utah Jazz looks to drive the ball during the first half against the Oklahoma City Thunder at Paycom Center on April 5, 2026 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. 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 Joshua Gateley/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Utah Jazz are rolling into New Orleans for a vital end-of-season game. Like their counterparts at the top of the Western Conference standings, every game at this point is important for seeding. For the Jazz, of course, it’s ticking up the losses column that matters most; the Jazz hold the tiebreaker over the Sacramento for fourth (worst) place, monumental for eliminating any remote chance at conveying their pick to the Oklahoma City Thunder.

The Jazz are not in the clear yet, however. The Pelicans remain a poor basketball team that sits at 25-54, despite gaining no advantage from losing this season. And even if Utah comes out with a loss tonight, they face the Memphis Grizzlies on Friday, who share the same record as New Orleans and are looking into rise up the draft board.

The Jazz will likely feature a sparse roster tonight, with both Ace Bailey and Kyle Filipowski questionable:

For New Orleans, lead guard Dejounte Murray is questionable with a left hand contusion and wing Trey Murphy is out with a right angle sprain.

How to watch

Who: Utah Jazz vs. New Orleans Pelicans

When: 6:00 PM MT

Where: Smoothie King Center, New Orleans, La.

How to watch: Jazz+, KJZZ

Knicks Bulletin: ‘I’m good. I’m chilling’

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - MARCH 16: An Atlanta Hawks fan displays his Magic City hoodie prior to the game between the Orlando Magic and Atlanta Hawks at State Farm Arena on March 16, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. 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 Todd Kirkland/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The New York Knicks somehow, some way, silenced the doubters and the haters by beating a .500-plus team for the first time in a month.

Y’all happy now?

Here’s the latest and spiciest quotes coming straight outta Magic City.

Mike Brown

On the Brunson-Towns two-man game against the Hawks:

“KAT and Jalen … they did what they were supposed to do. It’s no secret that we put them in the two-man game, and those guys delivered on the offensive end of the floor along with everyone else.”

On team composure late:

“Our guys stayed with it, and there wasn’t a panic. The bench was really, really good. Just the chatter. Guys were encouraging one another and uplifting one another. Jose hadn’t played the last couple of games, and he was more into the game than anyone else. His words were really good and helped during the times when we got down.”

On Brunson closing Monday’s game:

“It wasn’t necessarily going his way the whole night. But he stayed with it and did what great players are supposed to do and carried us home down the stretch.”

On the heave that could have sent the game to OT:

“It’s tricky. If he misses it, obviously it’s a long heave. But if you foul him on the rebound or you foul him when he’s turning to heave it now they get three free throws. It’s something we’ve talked about before — it’s still a toss-up situation. … The whole thing was at worst they’ll tie it and we’ll go to overtime. Lesson learned on a couple possessions down the stretch.”

On Brunson’s scoring ability:

“It’s huge to know a guy like Jalen can shoot and score the way he does. On top of that, he’s crafty.”

On sticking with the starting five:

“I don’t believe in never ever. But right now we’re going to start that five and that’s how I foresee it. If I feel I need to make a change at any time, I’ll make a change. But I don’t feel that way right now.”

On lineup debates and potential starting-five change:

“There’s debate literally all the time. Obviously there was a debate at the start of the season when we started two bigs. And there was debate almost every day because I was the only one with that plan – and I was getting hammered this angle, that angle, every angle. So we talked about it a lot. That’s just chatter that you have throughout the course of the year, trying to ways to improve your team. So I think there’s always going to be chatter about it. But there’s nothing I’ve felt close to acting on yet.”

Jalen Brunson

On his fourth-quarter surge:

“The ball found a way to go in the hoop for me.”

On the win over Atlanta:

“Happy with the way we finished the game. They came to fight and put us on our heels, but we found a way to come back every time with an answer and find a way to win.”

On maintaining his confidence even after struggling during the first half on Monday:

“Just found a way to keep my confidence. Obviously, things aren’t going to be perfect all the time but you trust your work and find a way.”

On Josh Hart’s late improvements:

“To be honest, it’s all about how you respond. Things aren’t going to be perfect. You’re going to have bad stretches. You’re going to have things that don’t go your way. You’re going to do things that seem easy but don’t go your way. It’s all about how you respond.”

On the need to finish games strong every time out:

“I think everything matters. So regardless if you’re up 30, down 30, if it’s a close game, the way you finish games translates to the next game. So being able to have that rhythm going into the next game is really important for us.”

Karl-Anthony Towns

On the clutch-time execution with Brunson:

“It was great. Obviously, give credit to all of our teammates who put us in the position to be there and have a chance to win. We have one of the best closers in the NBA in Brunson, so you feel good about your chances. We were just ready for the moment. It was funny. I thought, in the moment, I’d have to hit a big shot for us to win, and it ended up being three assists. I just accepted what the defense gave and Brunson hit the shots, which he’s been known to do when the game matters.”

On rising expectations:

“The perception and standards have obviously changed for us ever since we made that stride last year in the playoffs. Getting through the first round, we weren’t supposed to make it out of there. Then the second round, we definitely weren’t supposed to be making it out of there. We showed the world that we can beat these teams, especially in the playoffs. But in doing that, we put the antennas up for the rest of the league as well. They know what we can do and on top of that, coming in with the expectations we had this year, finding a way to win the NBA Cup. Even through all the ups and downs, finding ourselves the third seed. The world is not unaware of how good we are. But it’s up to us to execute in a seven-game series and be disciplined and find a way to win.”

On embracing pressure:

“Me, personally, I’ve been dealing with expectations since before I stepped into the league. Honestly, it’s really the same thing. It’s been the story of my career. Dealing with expectations that are lofty. On top of that, the expectations I have for myself are even higher than what people give me. So I have a lot of work to do. But I’ve been used to it. So it’s a blessing to have pressure.”

On treating the stretch like playoffs:

“The playoffs should’ve started 10 games ago for us. We should be building on our standards all year. That’s what the goal was. We have four good games where we can get some good tape, get our coverages right. See how we can execute different coverages, different things. And we could just find different ways to show what we can do, and have adjustments ready to go in the playoffs.”

On his elbow issue:

“It is what it is at this point.”

Jose Alvarado

On being ready all day every day:

“I’m good. I’m chilling. I’m ready for my moment. I’m ready for my name to get called whenever it is. … So just whenever it’s Jose’s time, whenever that time is, I’m ready.”

NBA power rankings 2025-26: Oklahoma City moves back into top spot, Denver shows it's a contender

There are five teams in the contender tier, the big question heading into the playoffs is could one of the "in the hunt" teams knock a contender off?

Title Contenders

1. Oklahoma City Thunder

(62-16, last week No. 3)
If the ESPN straw poll is to be believed (and it is), Shai Gilgeous Alexander has a massive lead in the MVP race. The Thunder, however, do not have a massive lead in the race for the No. 1 overall seed and need to pick up a few more wins this week to keep the Spurs at bay (San Antonio has the tiebreaker, if it comes to that). If the Spurs win out, the Thunder need to go at least 2-2, not easy with the Clippers, Nuggets and Thunder on the schedule (the game against the Lakers Tuesday is less threatening now). Getting the No. 1 seed in the West matters less for home-court advantage throughout the playoffs (though that helps) and more about avoiding Denver in the second round.

2. Denver Nuggets

(51-28, last week No. 5)
It feels like all season long we've been saying, "If Denver just gets healthy, watch out." Well, they're healthy, have won nine in a row, and if you have any questions just ask the Spurs just how good Nikola Jokic and company are. That Jokic fadeaway over Victor Wembanyama might have been the single best shot of the season. Jokic is on pace to be the first player in league history to lead the league in rebounds and assists (and yet he likely finishes third in MVP voting).

3. San Antonio Spurs

(60-19, last week No. 1)
Victor Wembanyama leaving the Spurs game at half Monday night against Philadelphia with a rib contusion is concerning. That said, this is not an injury that usually keeps players out for long, and Wembanyama needs to play 20+ minutes in just one of the Spurs' games this week to remain eligible for postseason awards. The Spurs have a few questions to answer this postseason, but the loss to Denver brought one into focus: How well will Wembanyama hold up when he has to play 35+ minutes a game in every game?

4. Boston Celtics

(53-25, last week No. 2)
Jaylen Brown is very likely to finish in the top five in MVP voting and get a First Team All-NBA nod for his work this season. He has stepped up his playmaking this season and remained largely healthy — a genuine question coming in — and deserves all the accolades coming his way. Boston is 12-2 with Jayson Tatum in the lineup and will enter the playoffs as the favorites to come out of the East.

5. Detroit Pistons

(57-22, last week No. 4)
Cade Cunningham has been upgraded to doubtful, a sign that he might return for a game or two this week, getting his legs under him before the start of the playoffs. The same is true for Isaiah Stewart. Don't read anything into Detroit's loss in Orlando on Monday night, the Pistons had already sewn up the No. 1 seed in the East and had nothing to play for. Don't be shocked if there's another ugly loss for Detroit this week, as they take their foot off the gas a little.

In The Hunt

6. New York Knicks

(51-28, last week No. 7)
This may be the biggest concern for the Knicks heading into the playoffs: Mike Brown's preferred starting five — Jalen Brunson, Josh Hart, Mikal Bridges, OG Anunoby, Karl-Anthony Towns — has a pedestrian +1.1 net rating. That lineup's offense is more than three points per 100 possessions worse than the team average, and the defense is a little bit worse than average, too. New York too often finds itself trying to dig out of a first quarter hole created by the starters, as they did against Houston last week. That loss to the Rockets was their third straight, but the Knicks have bounced back with three straight wins, including a key comeback against the Hawks Monday. Tough week ahead with games against Boston and Charlotte, but New York needs wins to hold off Cleveland and keep the No. 3 seed (unless the Knicks want to fall to fourth and get out of the Celtics side of the bracket).

7. Houston Rockets

(49-29, last week No. 10)
Houston has won six in a row — including an overtime win over the Warriors, spoiling Stephen Curry's return — and now is just one game back of the shorthanded Los Angeles Lakers for the No. 4 seed in the West and hosting their first-round playoff series (likely against that same Lakers team). That said, Los Angeles has the tiebreaker so Houston needs to make up two games, not just one. That will have to come against a fairly tough schedule that includes Phoenix, Philadelphia and Minnesota.

8. Cleveland Cavaliers

(50-29, last week No. 8)
Cleveland has won 50 games, is 8-2 in its last 10, sits fourth in the East with a chance to move up to third if New York stumbles, yet it's not striking fear in anyone's hearts. Maybe it's that they had to overcome fourth quarter deficits to the Pacers, Jazz and Curry-less Warriors. Maybe it's that they have James Harden, who has his share of playoff duds. It seems likely that Cleveland and Atlanta will play each other in the 4/5 series in the East — and they play each other twice this week.

Playoff Teams

9. Minnesota Timberwolves

(46-32, last week No. 9)
The Timberwolves are essentially locked in as the No. 6 seed in the West — exactly where they were a season ago when they made a run to the conference finals. What Minnesota needs to reach those heights again starts with getting healthy, which includes Anthony Edwards (who is now ineligible for postseason awards because of time missed), but also Jaden McDaniels.

10. Atlanta Hawks

(45-34, last week No. 11)
Atlanta's hot streak — going 7-3 in its last 10 and winning 18-of-21 — has it as the No. 5 seed in the East, 1.5 games up on Toronto and two games ahead of No. 7 Philadelphia and the play-in. Meaning the Hawks need wins in the season's final week. Atlanta also has two games against No. 4 seed Cleveland, very possibly a first-round preview. That leaves coach Quin Snyder with some interesting choices: If he has a matchup he really wants to exploit, or sees something he thinks can be a huge advantage for Atlanta, does he tip his hand and go at it in these two games to get the regular season win, or does he keep it in his back pocket for the playoffs?

11. Charlotte Hornets

(43-36, last week No. 13)
Kon Knueppel's march to be Rookie of the Year now includes another milestone: Most 3-pointers in a season in Hornets history. And Knueppel will be the ROY winner — don't get sucked in by recency bias (with all due respect to Flagg). Charlotte needs to focus not on getting Knueppel buckets this season, it needs wins to hold on to the No. 8 seed and keep Orlando at bay. It looks like a brutal schedule on paper, but the games later in the week against Detroit and New York will be against teams with nothing to play for.

12. Los Angeles Lakers

(50-28, last week No. 6)
What a brutal week for the Lakers. Luka Doncic is out and is now in Spain getting specialized treatment for his strained hamstring (does Spain have some magical trick for better healing muscle injuries?). Austin Reaves is out with a strained oblique. Both are out for the rest of the regular season — meaning the Lakers sliding to fifth in the West is very possible — and may be out for part or all of the first round of the playoffs. Right now, the role of primary offensive creator falls on 41-year-old LeBron James. The challenge for the Lakers is that their theory of winning is that their offense is spectacular and the defense is good enough, but as seen in the loss to Dallas, the offense isn't quite the same (and the defense has holes). It was a brutal week for the Lakers and the next couple may be the same way.

13. Phoenix Suns

(43-35, last week No. 15)
Things nobody saw coming before the season: Collin Gillespie setting the Suns' franchise record for 3-pointers in a season. This is a franchise with Steve Nash, Devin Booker, and even Dan Majerle back in the day, and Gillespie is the best of them. Phoenix has stumbled down the stretch, going 4-8 in its last dozen, but it needs a couple of wins this week to hold off the Clippers and keep the No. 7 seed. That includes a big game Tuesday night against Houston, part of Coast 2 Coast Tuesday on NBC and Peacock.

14. Toronto Raptors

(43-35, last week No. 14)
The Raptors need wins this week to hold off the 76ers and keep the No. 6 seed in the East, avoiding the play-in (which is why last week's loss to Sacramento was so brutal, Toronto cannot drop more games like that). Toronto hosts Miami for two games and needs both of them, then the Raptors travel to face the Knicks (who may not have anything to play for at that point). The Raptors need Brandon Ingram and Scottie Barnes to step up this week.

Play-In Teams

15. Portland Trail Blazers

(40-39, last week No. 17)
Portland had pushed up to the top eight in the West — and an easier path out of the play-in to the playoffs proper — by racking up wins against a soft part of the schedule, but they also beat the Clippers last week in a critical win, then took Denver to overtime on Monday. Portland is going to the play-in, but if they are the No. 8 or 9 seed may well come down to Friday night's rematch with the LA Clippers, one of the biggest games of the week.

16. Los Angeles Clippers

(40-38, last week No. 12)
That the Clippers are headed to the play-in after an ugly 6-21 start to the season — and trading away James Harden and Ivica Zubac at the deadline — is a testament to how well Kawhi Leonard is playing and Tyronn Lue's coaching. That said, to hold on to the No. 8 seed, the Clippers need to head to Portland this week and beat the Trail Blazers, who sit ninth (and beat LA last week). That is one of the biggest games of the week. Lose and the Clippers have a much tougher path out of the play-in.

17. Orlando Magic

(43-36, last week No. 19)
Franz Wagner returned to the court last week after missing 22 games, and while that didn’t help much in his first game back — a loss to Atlanta — Orlando has won three straight after that (including over Detroit, although it had clinched the No. 1 seed and had nothing to play for) and now is tied with Charlotte for the No. 8 seed (and a much easier path out of the play-in). Orlando will need another win in a tough game against Minnesota on Wednesday, and they close the season at Boston but the Celtics likely will have nothing to play for in that one.

18. Miami Heat

(41-37, last week No. 18)
What happened to the Heat defense? Before the All-Star break it was fourth in the NBA, after the break it is 5.8 points per 100 possessions worse and 17th in the league. Miami has given up 130+ points in 6 of its last 9 games [BEFORE THURSDAY]. It is going to be tough to even win a game in the play-in if the Heat can’t get stops. Miami sits 10th in the East and if it doesn’t want to have to win a couple of games on the road to make the playoffs it needs wins this week, including two against Toronto. Which is a big ask.

19. Philadelphia 76ers

(43-36, last week No. 16)
Philadelphia has its three stars healthy for the stretch run and the playoffs, but it needs a little more from them to climb out of the play-in and into the top six in the East. The 76ers have a +4 net rating when Joel Embiid, Paul George (looking like an All-Star), and Tyrese Maxey are all on the court together, a good number but not as dominant as one might hope. The 76ers lost to the Spurs and have a tough game against Houston next, but then get tanking Indiana and whatever Milwaukee is in the final two games — and Philly needs wins in maybe all of them to avoid the play-in.

20. Golden State Warriors

(36-42, last week No. 20)
Stephen Curry was back and showed very little rust in his return. Golden State will be the No. 10 seed in the West — losing Jimmy Butler to an ACL tear and Curry missing 25 games in February and March will do that — but with Curry back they are a threat to win two games on the road and reach the playoffs as the No. 8 seed. If nothing else, it will be entertaining to watch.

Tanking Teams

21. New Orleans Pelicans

(25-54, last week No. 21)
The Pelicans have gone 10-13 with a -1.3 net rating since the All-Star break, a radical improvement from the 15-41 with a -5.6 net rating before the break. Mostly, the Pelicans were just healthy, but can it be a building block for next season? Maybe, but a lot of changes are coming to the Big Easy this offseason.

22. Dallas Mavericks

(25-53, last week No. 23)
Cooper Flagg becoming the first teenager in NBA history to put up 50+ points has been framed by many as his late-season push for Rookie of the Year. I see it more as a reminder that he is going to be the best player out of this class long term, regardless of what happens with the postseason awards this year. Dallas has a cornerstone to build around.

23. Chicago Bulls

(29-49, last week No. 22)
Front office decision makers Arturas Karnisovas and Marc Eversley are out, and the list of potential replacements includes former Bull (now Hawks assistant general manager) Kyle Korver and former Bulls front office person (now with Minnesota) Matt Lloyd. The new GM will have about $65 million in cap space this summer and a lottery pick, but will that be enough to get them out of the middle, where the Bulls have been stuck for too long?

24. Milwaukee Bucks

(31-47, last week No. 25)
What a mess in Milwaukee as Giannis Antetokounmpo is pushing to get back on the court to play with his brothers, but the team is saying he refused to take part in a 3-on-3 scrimmage and is not taking the steps needed to play again. For all the times we heard rumors about Antetokounmpo trades in the past that turned out to be nothing, this just feels different. Also, there is little chance Doc Rivers is back with the Bucks next year.

25. Sacramento Kings

(21-58, last week No. 30)
This year things were going to be different. They have not been — for the 19th time in the last 20 years, the Sacramento Kings will miss the playoffs. Take some solace in the fact that the Kings have gone 9-14 since the All-Star break if you want, but they still have a -9.5 net rating in that time. Changes are coming to Sacramento this summer, to the coaching staff, the roster, all of it. Which means next year is going to be different, right?

26. Indiana Pacers

(18-60, last week No. 26)
It feels like we can already start writing those "biggest statistical one-season turnaround in NBA history" stories we will see in a year for the Pacers. This team is poised for a massive leap, and the only question is where they fall after the NBA Draft Lottery and how a win-now team's approach to picking high in the lottery compares to a rebuilding team.

27. Memphis Grizzlies

(25-54, last week No. 24)
LeBron James caught a lot of flak for saying he doesn't like playing in Memphis and the team should move to Nashville, but what he said publicly has been a quietly discussed topic around the NBA for a long time. It may or may not happen, but the idea of an in-state move to a larger city did not come out of nowhere.

28. Brooklyn Nets

(19-59, last week No. 29)
It's a tankapalooza for the Nets, who beat the Wizards over the weekend and their three remaining games are against the Bucks (twice) and Pacers. Their draft lottery odds are not set.

29. Washington Wizards

(17-61, last week No. 27)
The Wizards are on pace to have fewer than 20 wins in a season for the third straight year. That will change next season with Trae Young and Anthony Davis on the roster, but it doesn't make the final week of this season any prettier.

30. Utah Jazz

(21-58, last week No. 28)
Much like Washington and Indiana, there is going to be a rapid turnaround in Utah next season when Jaren Jackson Jr. joins Lauri Markkanen and Keyonte George in the starting lineup. This team may well be deep enough next year that Ace Bailey, despite a late-season surge this season showing promise, will be coming off the bench. There is real reason for optimism in Utah.

Former Celtic will play at TD Garden for first time

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - APRIL 13: Sam Hauser #30 of the Boston Celtics hugs Grant Williams #2 of the Charlotte Hornets after a game at the TD Garden on April 13, 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 Brian Fluharty/Getty Images) | Getty Images

BOSTON — Grant Williams has yet to play at TD Garden since he signed with the Dallas Mavericks in 2023. But the former Celtics forward will return to the Garden when the Celtics face the Charlotte Hornets on Tuesday night, with the Hornets fielding a clear injury report.

For the first time all year, the Celtics also have a completely clear injury report. With Nikola Vucevic back in the lineup, they will be at full strength when they face the Charlotte Hornets on Tuesday night.

Vucevic, who was out for a month due to a ring finger fracture, made his return on Sunday against the Toronto Raptors, tallying 4 points and 4 rebounds in 13 minutes.

“He just wants to win,” Joe Mazzulla said of the 35-year-old. “He’s been in the league a long time. If anything, making sure he’s aggressive enough to where we have the best version of him, so we could add another layer to what we want to accomplish, is the most important thing.”

Vucevic has averaged 9.9 points and 6.1 rebounds in 21 minutes per game through 13 games with the Celtics.

Jayson Tatum — who has only missed two games since returning from his Achilles injury — is not on the injury report. Jaylen Brown, who missed two games with Achilles tendinopathy, is also available.

How the Celtics, Hornets stack up

The Celtics and Hornets have faced off twice this season — both in March. The Hornets beat the Celtics 118-89 on March 4th, and the Celtics bounced back with a 114-99 win in Charlotte on March 29th.

Now, the two teams will face off in a third and final match-up in what could be a first-round preview; the Hornets currently have the 8th-best record in the East.

Provided that the Celtics hold onto the No.2 seed, the Celtics will face the winner of the No. 7 vs No. 8 game (the Toronto Raptors currently have the 7th-best record in the East at 43-35).

The Hornets have been exceptional as of late; they’re 22-8 since January 31st, the 5th-best record in the NBA. The Celtics have the third-best record in that span — they’re 23-7, the third-best record in the league.

Celtics-Hornets tips off at 7:30pm ET on Tuesday night.