Why Kerr believes Warriors' 2024-25 season is worth celebrating

Why Kerr believes Warriors' 2024-25 season is worth celebrating originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

While the Warriors’ 2024-25 NBA season ended on a sour note, Golden State coach Steve Kerr still believes there are plenty of positives to take away from the this campaign.

In speaking to reporters Friday, Kerr revealed why it’s important to not lose sight of all the progress the Warriors made after looking destined for mediocrity midway through the season.

“Well, first of all, pretty good run,” Kerr said. “We’re .500 at midseason, floundering, clearly weren’t going anywhere and then [Golden State general manager Mike Dunleavy] makes the trade for [Jimmy Butler] and our fortunes changed entirely. That’s how good Jimmy is. From that point on, we had the No. 1 ranked defense in the league, we were eighth in offense.

“I would say we started the season in Hawaii in training camp, the big focus offensively was shooting a lot of threes, and I believe we finished in the top three or four in the league in 3-point attempts, and that’s with multiple versions of our team. Before the trade, after the trade and everything inbetween.

“So, I think we accomplished a lot of what we wanted from the beginning of the year in terms of how we played. I think the defense really picked up after we got Jimmy for obvious reasons. We get to the conference semis and win Game 1. I think we put ourselves in a great spot, and obviously [Steph Curry’s] injury changed things and Minnesota was great.

“All in all, are there things we can do better? Absolutely. But this was a season where we accomplished a lot, a lot of good things happened, and it’s important to celebrate that.”

The Warriors’ championship dreams came to a screeching halt the moment Steph Curry exited Game 1 of the Western Conference semifinals with a hamstring injury — the last time the superstar point guard would see the floor during the 2024-25 season.

But the fact Golden State was even in a position to envision a realistic path toward the NBA Finals is impressive in its own right, as Dunleavy’s blockbuster move to acquire Butler sparked one of the more miraculous midseason turnarounds you’ll ever see in professional basketball.

Dunleavy explained how Golden State’s abrupt end to the season complicates the evaluation process as the Warriors’ front office looks to retool around its stars for another run next year.

“I think it’s a little unsettling, disappointing to be sitting here today in May with a team that has Steve, Steph and Draymond [Green],” Dunleavy told reporters. “We’re always looking to win championships. So, in some ways it’s tough, we obviously fell short of that. But the way this team battled in the second half of the season, winning in the playoffs, winning a seventh game in Houston, going into Minnesota and winning Game 1 and then obviously the injury with Steph really put us behind the eight ball.

“It’s a weird thing to process here, obviously we’re disappointed but I kind of feel good about how things went this year, I just hate how it ended. So, here we are, turning the page, got to figure out some stuff this summer, how do we make our team better? I think from my standpoint going into the postseason, whether we lost in the first round or we went to The Finals, not much would change from my end in terms of we have to be better next year.”

Dunleavy also pointed out how Butler’s addition puts the Warriors in a much better position than Golden State was in entering last offseason.

“I think we made a big jump adding Jimmy Butler. This time last year, I was probably concerned about our ability to have a No. 2 guy,” Dunleavy explained. “We went out this year, we got that. So now I feel better going into next season having a guy like Jimmy on our roster. We’ll build around that with him, Steph, Draymond and some of the other players we have. But I just overall feel like we’re in much better shape right now than we were a year ago and we’ll keep chipping away at this thing.

“As long as Steph, Draymond, Steve … as long as they still got their fastball, we’re going to keep pursuing titles and I think if every year we can be in the mix and we can be in the conversation like we were this year, you need a little bit of luck, you need a little bit of good fortune. We didn’t neccesarily get that right here in the last couple weeks, but if we’re in the mix these guys have a chance and I think that’s the most you could ask for.

“Weird way to process the season, I feel pretty good about it, but I hate that we didn’t find out more about how far this team can go.”

Five things to watch in Game 7 between Nuggets, Thunder

It's this simple for me: The winner of this game will win the NBA championship.

Oklahoma City and Denver have been the two best teams in the NBA this postseason, going head to head in what has been the best series of the playoffs. While the Thunder are +32 for the series, remove the Game 2 blowout from the mix and it is Nuggets +11. Denver has shown more offensive weapons that coach David Adelman can trust night-to-night, but the Thunder are deeper and have the better defense.

Here are the five things to watch in Game 7 between these teams on Sunday (3:30 ET on ABC).

MVP Face-Off

Nikola Jokic vs. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.

Basketball doesn't get better than this. Savor it.

The two leading MVP candidates — the league has delayed handing out the actual hardware until this series ends — have lived up to the billing this series: Gilgeous-Alexander is averaging 28 points, 7 rebounds and 7 assists a game, adding 1.3 steals into the mix; Jokic is averaging 29.8 points, 14.7 rebounds, 5.7 assists and 2 steals a game.

These might be the two best basketball players walking the face of the earth right now (at worst, they are both top three), and they are living up to the billing. Enjoy one last game between these two.

Aaron Gordon’s hamstring

With just a couple of minutes left in Game 7, Aaron Gordon seemed to tweak his hamstring, he was walking around, rubbing it, then subbed himself out of the game with less than a minute to go.

Gordon has a strained hamstring and is unlikely to play in Game 7.

That is a huge blow. In this series, Gordon has averaged 14.5 points and 9.2 assists a game, shooting 45.2% from 3, and he hit the game-winner in Game 1 of this series.

If, as expected, he cannot play, that is a huge setback for an already thin Nuggets team. The pressure falls on Peyton Watson, who must have a monster game for Denver.

Which Jalen Williams shows up?

Oklahoma City fell to Dallas in the second round a year ago partly because Jalen Williams was not ready to step up and be the No. 2 option this team needed.

This year… it's too much of the same. Williams had 32 points on 21 shots in Game 3 (an OKC loss), but in the last three games Williams has shot 2-of-13, 5-of-14 and 3-of-16, a combined 23.3%. That will not be good enough in Game 7.

Williams is an All-Star, and the Thunder will offer a five-year max contract extension this summer, but this is where that money is really earned. He needs to step up and be that guy. If he — and Chet Holmgren as well — can't be the running mates Gilgous-Alexander needs, it means Sam Presti has some hard decisions coming up.

Which MVP gets help?

This is the real story of the series.

As noted above, Jokic and Gilgeous-Alexander have lived up to the billing. The question game-to-game is which team's role players step up and provide enough help to their star. With everyone tight in Game 7, that becomes an even bigger question. Does Christian Braun have a big game because he's been there before and handles the moment? Is this a good Williams and Holmgren game for the Thunder? Is this another Julian Strawther game?

The safest bet on the board is whichever team's role players step up will win.

What about Thunder defense?

In the regular season, Oklahoma City had a 107.6 defensive rating, the best in the league (using Basketball-Reference's numbers). In the first round against Memphis, the Thunder had a defensive rating of 99.6, allowing less than a point per possession.

In this series, here are the Thunder's defensive ratings in each of the last four games: 99.8, 92.1, 107.3, 116.5. Jokic's high-IQ mind tends to figure teams out over the course of seven games. Has that happened here? As great and athletic as the Thunder defense has been this season, has Jokic solved the puzzle? He's making the right passes, he has found his counters to OKC's adjustments. Or, do the Thunder — likely behind more minutes from Alex Caruso, who has been fantastic this series — have one more game of stops in them.

If the Thunder defense performs to its potential, the Thunder will take Game 7 and advance.

Jaylen has partial meniscus tear, played through injury: Report

Jaylen has partial meniscus tear, played through injury: Report originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Jaylen Brown has been dealing with a right knee injury since March, and we now know severity of his ailment.

The Boston Celtics star has a partially torn right meniscus, ESPN’s Ramona Shelburne reported Saturday. Brown will be “evaluated this week to determine if surgery is needed,” per Shelburne.

Brown missed six games over a 13-game span in March as well as the final three games of the regular season due to a knee injury the team labeled as “right knee posterior impingement.” After an April 3 loss to the Miami Heat, Brown admitted he was dealing with consistent knee pain but planned to play through it.

“I’ve had to come to grips that every night I’m not gonna feel my normal self,” Brown said at the time, “but that doesn’t mean I still can’t make plays and things like that. So, it’s just something that we are working through.”

Brown didn’t miss a game in the postseason, and while his typical explosiveness was limited, he still averaged 22.1 points, 7.1 rebounds and 3.9 assists per game.

With Jayson Tatum sidelined due to a ruptured Achilles suffered in Game 4, Brown helped keep Boston’s season alive in a Game 5 win over the New York Knicks with 26 points, eight rebounds and a playoff career-high 12 assists.

“I don’t make excuses,” Brown said after the Celtics’ season-ending loss in Game 6 on Friday. “Obviously, it’s tough the way we went out like tonight, but the way we finished the year, personally, the way I finished the year, persevering through some physical stuff that I was battling through, I’m proud of our group.”

How long Brown needs to recover remains unclear and will depend on whether he elects to have surgery, but his injury adds another wrinkle to an already uncertain offseason in Boston.

NBA Trade Rumors roundup: Lakers likely hang on to Reaves, Lonzo suggests LaMelo Ball move

With the NBA Draft next month and free agency a week after that, NBA trade rumors are starting to fly fast and furious around the league's back channels. Here are a few worth noting.

Lakers likely keep Austin Reaves

Rob Pelinka faces a challenge this offseason: He needs to upgrade the roster around Luka Doncic and LeBron James — landing a rim-protecting, vertical spacing center is at the top of the list — but has limited trade assets to do it.

One player a lot of teams want is Austin Reaves, who averaged 20.2 points and 5.8 rebounds a game last season, shot 37.7% on 3-pointers and is on a steal of a contract that will cost just $13.9 million next season. The Lakers, however, wisely like Reaves as the third option, and it will take a lot to get him, something Dan Woike put well at the Los Angeles Times.

"The team has shown no interest in using Reaves in a trade that nets them anything less than a top-tier big, and there really aren't any of those available, with the two most common names linked to them in the earliest stages of the offseason — Brooklyn's Nic Claxton and Dallas' Daniel Gafford.

Claxton would be the best available fit — he is just 26 and two seasons ago averaged 12.6 points a game on 70.5% shooting, grabbed 9.6 rebounds and blocked 2.5 shots a night. He's an athletic, switchable defender who J.J. Redick could employ a variety of ways, however, he's slight of build and with that not the screen setter that Gafford or others are. The cost for Claxton would be the Lakers' 2030 first-round pick (plus matching salary, such as Rui Hachimura and Gabe Vincent).

Whether the Lakers land one of those two centers or someone like Clint Capela from Atlanta, don't expect Reaves to be in that trade. It would take an All-Star level big to change that dynamic.

LaMelo Ball headed West?

Lonzo Ball was on the What an Experience podcast and dropped this:

"I lowkey got Dylan Harper going to the Hornets and I got Melo going to the Clips."

Um… no. First, there is zero chance Dylan Harper makes it past No. 2 on the board, he has put himself in his own tier on that front, and the Hornets pick at No. 4. San Antonio will take him (making their guard rotation an impressive De'Aaron Fox, Rookie of the Year Stephon Castle, and Harper ho might be the best of the group in a couple of years). If the Spurs trade that pick (hello, Milwaukee), that team will be trading to get Harper (Charlotte could try to trade up to No. 2, but the cost would be exorbitant).

Second, LaMelo to the Clippers doesn't make much sense from the Clips' perspective. Los Angeles is looking to keep its long-term books clear to make a pivot after the Kawhi Leonard/James Harden era ends (likely the summer of 2027, maybe sooner). Ball has four years, $168.7 million remaining on his max extension, running through 2029. Having LaMelo would take the ball out of Harden's hands, and while the youngest Ball brother averaged 25.2 points and 7.4 assists a game he is not seen around the league as a guy who contributes to winning because of his lack of defense and style of play.

Other rumors of note:

• With Boston likely trimming payroll this summer, look for a lot of interest from playoff teams in Jrue Holiday, an elite defensive guard who has helped the Bucks and Celtics win rings. The Rockets and Spurs might be teams to watch.

• Interesting comment from the well-connected Sam Amick of The Athletic on any potential Giannis Antetokounmpo trade and how the Bucks GM plans to play it (from his appearance on The Ringer NBA Podcast):

"Jon Horst is going to go for blood here, I'm telling you. He just got a new extension. He has the organization's backing. Jon is not going to just try to be on good terms with Giannis—he's trying to do right by the Bucks. And that means that if every scenario in play leaves the other team so gutted that Giannis might not actually be in that much better of a situation, then maybe that's where he looks at the room and says, "All right, let me stay put."

• Speaking of an Antetokounmpo trade, the buzz that the Warriors likely sit this one out — unless the Greek Freak pushes an "only to Golden State" agenda — has now been confirmed by multiple sources. The reality is the Warriors know they can't win a bidding war with Houston, San Antonio, and Brooklyn, so unless they can get a friendly deal, it's not happening. If you think the Warriors might get a friendly deal, reread the note above this one.

Will Horford stay in Boston? C's veteran noncommittal as free agency looms

Will Horford stay in Boston? C's veteran noncommittal as free agency looms originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Celtics’ offseason of potentially substantial change has begun. Whether Al Horford is part of that change remains to be seen.

The veteran big man, who turns 39 in June, will be an unrestricted free agent this summer when his two-year, $19.5 million contract expires. Horford has the option to re-up with the Celtics for a fifth consecutive season — likely on a team-friendly deal, given Boston’s salary cap constraints — pursue a bigger contract with another team, or retire after 18 NBA seasons.

One day after the Celtics’ season-ending Game 6 loss to the New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden, Horford declined to discuss any of those options.

“For me, it’s just too soon to talk about that stuff,” Horford told reporters Saturday in Boston. “I’m going to take some time here with my wife and my kids and just — it’s not even been a day, so there’s still a lot for me to process. I’m just feeling everything out from last night; that was difficult.”

Horford hinted last month that he plans to play at least another year while praising Florida point guard Walter Clayton Jr. after his Gators won the college basketball national championship.

“I know that I’m going to be playing against him next year in the NBA,” Horford said in early April. “Maybe he’ll be with us, who knows? I’m sure he’ll be playing in the NBA.”

But will Jayson Tatum’s ruptured Achilles change Horford’s calculus? If the Celtics superstar misses most or all of the 2025-26 season and Boston is forced to take a “bridge year,” would Horford be willing to be a part of that in his 19th season?

“Yeah, I’m just not ready to talk about that right now,” Horford replied. “I just need some time with my wife and my family, and that’s what I plan on doing these next few weeks.

“I just think everything is just still very fresh for me,” he added. “Those are all things that I’ll be thinking about these next few weeks.”

Horford has had an immeasurable impact in Boston, from becoming the first big-ticket free agent to sign with the Celtics back in 2016 to serving as the stabilizing force on the 2024 championship squad. While his 3-point percentage dipped from 41.9 percent last season to 36.3 percent this season, he still averaged 9.0 points over 60 games played and helped pick up the frontcourt slack with Kristaps Porzingis sidelined to begin the season.

If Horford’s teammates had their say, the veteran big man would be suiting up in Celtics green next season.

“You can’t replace Al,” guard Payton Pritchard said Saturday. “So, I definitely hope we can get that figured out, because just his locker room presence alone is crucial. And then having him on the court, just for all the young guys to see how he goes about his business how professional he is, he’s just a leader.

“We definitely need him back.”

The unofficial start to NBA free agency isn’t until June 30, so Horford will have some time to ponder his future. In the meantime, Brad Stevens and the front office will need to consider making several hard decisions to avoid draconian luxury tax penalties.

Draymond admits he ‘lost' matchup vs. Randle in Warriors-Wolves

Draymond admits he ‘lost' matchup vs. Randle in Warriors-Wolves originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Draymond Green had to give credit where credit was due.

After Julius Randle and the Minnesota Timberwolves got the best of Green and the Warriors in the Western Conference semifinals, ending their 2024-25 NBA season, the four-time NBA champion tipped his hat to Randle’s playoff performance.

“I think that was my [31st] playoff series. The only other playoff series where I felt like I lost my matchup like that I didn’t completely dominate my matchup and take over my matchup, the only other series in my career where I feel like I lost my matchup was Toronto,” Green said on “The Draymond Green Show with Baron Davis.” “I feel like I lost my matchup to Pascal Siakam. Game 1, he crushed me. Game 2, I stifled him. Game 3, he was on. Game 4, I had a better game. But I felt like I lost my matchup in that series.

“And this series also reminds me of that series where I don’t feel like I lost my matchup — I lost my matchup. Julius was incredible. He played great basketball. Honestly, some of the shots he was taking were shots you want him to take, and he made them. He made the shots. At the end of the day, the game comes down to shotmaking and he made the shots. So I got to give Ju a lot of credit.”

Randle is in the midst of his first season with the Timberwolves after being traded from the New York Knicks to Minnesota as part of a three-team trade that also sent Karl-Anthony Towns to New York.

During the regular season, he averaged 18.7 points on 48.5 shooting from the field in 32.3 minutes through 69 games (69 starts).

After the Timberwolves beat LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers in five games in the first round of the playoffs, Randle came up big-time for Minnesota against Golden State.

Randle, mostly defended by Green over the five-game series, averaged 25.2 points on 53.3 percent shooting from the field, with 6.6 rebounds, 7.4 assists in 37.6 minutes against the Warriors.

Afterward, Green had no choice but to tip his hat.

Respect.

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SEE IT: NYC back pages react to Knicks advancing to Eastern Conference Finals

The Knicks dominated the Boston Celtics in Game 6 on Friday night to advance to the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time since 2000.

Here's how the NYC back pages reacted...

What Draymond's mom savagely texted him after Warriors season ended

What Draymond's mom savagely texted him after Warriors season ended originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Sometimes, it’s your own family.

After the Warriors’ 2024-25 NBA season came to a heartbreaking end with a Game 5 loss to the Minnesota Timberwolves in the Western Conference semifinals on Wednesday night, Draymond Green received a savage text message from his mother that he has yet to respond to.

“Well, you got your fishing stuff out of storage?” Green said as he read his mom’s text message aloud on the latest “The Draymond Green Show with Baron Davis.” “It’s time for you to go fishing.”

Davis instantly burst into laughter, and Green couldn’t help but chuckle himself despite the ruthless message.

“Gone fishin” was started by TNT’s “Inside the NBA” crew and refers to when a team is knocked out of the playoffs — or a team outright failed to make the playoffs — and is usually accompanied by doctored photos of players on the team, and notable figures from the team’s home city, on fishing boats with analyst Kenny Smith.

Over the years, Smith, Charles Barkley, Shaquille O’Neal and Ernie Johnson have had loads of fun with the segment. The victims … maybe not so much.

But Green kept it lighthearted and was a good sport about the message he received, even if his mother thinks otherwise.

“I still ain’t text her back and I know she thinks I’m mad,” Green said. “I actually thought it was hilarious.”

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Kerr, Dunleavy address Kerr's ‘year-to-year' Warriors future

Kerr, Dunleavy address Kerr's ‘year-to-year' Warriors future originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

This NBA offseason will hold plenty of uncertainty for the Warriors after their 2024-25 season ended with a second-round playoff exit.

But one thing is for sure: Steve Kerr will return as head coach next season. And for as long as he wants to.

“At this point, just year to year,” Kerr said of his Warriors future while speaking to reporters Friday during end-of-the-season exit interviews. “I love my job. It’s so much fun. I loved this season. This was a really gratifying year in terms of the players, the commitment to each other, their ability to get through individual adversity. … I just think up and down the roster, we had guys who were committed, and when you’re a coach, that’s all you can really ask for.

“So I loved every second of this year. I love my job. But I know where the team is. I know where the organization is. So I’m perfectly comfortable going year by year at this point.”

Warriors general manager Mike Dunleavy appears to be on the same page.

“Yeah, for sure. He’s as big a part of this as anyone,” Dunleavy said. “He’s been great. I love him as a partner in this profession. I think it’s one of those things where we want him here as long as he wants to be here. And if that means going year to year, or doing an extension, I think we can figure stuff out.

“Of the things on my radar and agenda, no offense to Steve Kerr, but it’s not the highest thing up there because I know Steve will be around for a while.”

Touché.

Dunleavy’s to-do list will be quite lengthy this summer as he looks to build a winner around Steph Curry, Draymond Green and Jimmy Butler.

But it should give Dub Nation some reassurance that the nine-time NBA champion will return as Warriors coach next season.

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Fork in the road: What's next after jarring end to Celtics' title defense?

Fork in the road: What's next after jarring end to Celtics' title defense? originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

NEW YORK — The end is never as fun as the start. And yet it just doesn’t seem right that the end was this unsightly.

When Brad Stevens built a championship roster, acquiring Kristaps Porzingis and Jrue Holiday after a disappointing early exit in the 2023 Eastern Conference Finals, we all knew there was a short window for this current group. The Celtics put together a historic season that culminated with Banner 18, then had maybe the quietest offseason in NBA history while deciding to basically run it back this year.

But the 2024-25 season ended badly. Boston never quite found the same mojo from a season ago, even while piling up 60-plus wins and showing glimpses of that title squad. The Celtics reverted to some bad habits — blown leads, turnovers, cold shooting — and couldn’t get out of their own way against the New York Knicks in Round 2 of the Eastern Conference semifinals.

Jayson Tatum got hurt, Kristaps Porzingis battled a mystery illness, and the short-but-sweet ride for this core ended Friday night with a 38-point thumping that spawned a delirious party throughout midtown Manhattan.

🔊 Celtics Talk POSTGAME POD: C’s season comes to end with Game 6 loss to the Knicks | Listen & Subscribe | Watch on YouTube

What seemed so certain last summer is so very murky now. Tatum could miss the entirety of the 2025-26 season while rehabbing from Achilles surgery, as the Celtics have set no timetable on his return. A team hovering $20 million over the second apron must cut costs to ensure it can reliably chase titles deep into the future.

A new owner will take the reins during the offseason and hear some grumbles about Boston’s cost-cutting ways, even if it was inevitable regardless of who was writing the checks.

For the first time in years, it doesn’t feel like there’s an immediate pathway to Banner 19. The Celtics, depending exactly on what pieces return, will be too good to tank but not quite good enough to fully contend until Tatum is back at full health. What the roster will look like when that happens is truly a mystery.

Which left the Celtics in a weird spot after Friday’s Game 6 loss. Even with their long odds to advance, Boston players never fully entertained the idea that the end was near. After the lopsided loss, they were asked to reflect on the two-year run of this title core and ponder what might come next. Most players politely declined to do either. 

They raved about the locker room. They admitted it wasn’t fun to think about the changes ahead. But they were still processing the reality. Jaylen Brown, who very well might be the central figure in a potential bridge season, tried his best to balance the emotions.

“Losing to the Knicks feels like death,” said Brown. “But I was always taught that there’s life after death. We’ll get ready for whatever is next. Whatever is next in the journey, I’ll be ready for.”

So what exactly comes next? We laid out the financial hurdles ahead in the aftermath of Tatum’s injury. The Celtics are committed to $228 million in contracts next season, already $20 million over the second apron, and that’s before decisions on free-agents-to-be in Al Horford and Luke Kornet.

Changes are inevitable. The difficult part is that there are no easy answers to trimming costs while trying to maintain talent around the desired core of this team. Celtics president of basketball operations Brad Stevens has the daunting task of figuring out how all these puzzle pieces fit together.

We feel pretty confident that next year’s roster will feature Tatum, as he rehabs, along with Derrick White, Payton Pritchard, Baylor Scheierman, and Jordan Walsh. We’re not sure anything else is certain.

Brown should be back as the focal point in the leading role. But the Celtics do have to at least consider all options to trim costs, and his $53.1 million salary — in Year 2 of a five-year, $286 million contract — is a gaudy number. Porzingis and Holiday were luxuries acquired to chase a title but their $30-plus million price tags could force the team to explore cheaper options at those spots.

Would a young team in need of a proven champ splurge to take on the three years and $104.4 million left on Holiday’s deal? What is Porzingis’ trade value after a mystery ailment sapped his energy at the finish line of the season?

Porzingis said he hopes a brief downturn in activity will jumpstart his body. He still hopes to compete in FIBA play with his native Latvia later this summer, which might offer answers to whether he’s able to reboot his body before the NBA season starts. He’ll have value as an expiring contract, but the Celtics would be rolling the dice a bit if they waited until next year’s trade deadline to potentially move off his money and his trade value feels diminished at the moment given his health woes.

Sam Hauser’s four-year, $45 million extension kicks in this summer. His 3-point shooting was vital in Boston’s title march, but the team might need to ride cheaper shooting threats if it can’t otherwise trim salary.

Does Horford, who will turn 39 next month, want to be back if Boston isn’t an immediate title threat? And at what price? Can the Celtics do some maneuvering to free up enough cash to reward backup big man Luke Kornet, who continues to blossom and came back on the cheap this season to keep the band together?

All decisions must be done through the lens of what puts this team in the best position to compete when Tatum is back on the floor. If Tatum misses all of next season, the calculus changes a little bit from whatever the team might have planned previously. 

In Brad we trust. Stevens made the bold decisions to ship out core pieces in Marcus Smart and Robert Williams III in order to acquire Porzingis and Holiday. Even the most ardent Smart/Williams fans (this writer’s hand is raised high) can’t help but admit those deals elevated Boston’s ceiling and delivered the title that will cement the short legacy of this core. 

Now Stevens has to do it again. The moves, in the moment, will almost certainly feel painful. But it also seems fair to suggest that Boston needed some tweaks after this season, particularly as familiar issues returned. The new acquisitions might not be as immediately talented as what goes out, but their fit and cost could aid this team in building the next version of a championship roster. 

It’s unsavory that the collective bargaining agreement is what will prevent this team from trying to preserve more of the core moving forward. But it’s also the reality. The Celtics knew this crossroads was coming when they got ahead of the curve two summers ago. The interest on Banner 18 is coming due.

In this moment, everything feels uncertain. Which is simply jarring because everything felt so secure for the past 20 months. That’s life in the NBA. Things change quickly. You can’t sit around feeling sorry for yourself. You have to dust yourself off and put the focus on the next challenge.

All eyes turn to Stevens and his front office staff. Much like in the summer of 2023, they must work their magic. 

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The Knicks’ transition from laughing stock to title contenders is complete

OG Anunoby of the Knicks is fired up about his team’s chances of an NBA title.Photograph: Frank Franklin II/AP

On Friday night in New York City, more than 19,000 Knicks fans poured out of Madison Square Garden and onto Seventh Avenue, celebrating their team’s improbable 4-2 series victory over the Boston Celtics. The NBA’s social media peanut gallery had previously taken issue with Knicks fans for their overly exuberant early-round victory celebrations, but after landing in the Eastern Conference finals for the first time in a quarter-century, this party was as legit as the Knicks newfound title hopes.

New York had beaten their rivals by a franchise playoff-record margin of 38 points, ending Boston’s reign as NBA champs. If you watched the way they suffocated the Celtics, you know it wasn’t even that close. The way this series ended was as stunning as how it began, with consecutive historic Celtic meltdowns at TD Garden, when the home team surrendered 20-point second-half leads not once but twice. Then New York were moments from wrapping up another improbable victory in Game 4 when Boston cornerstone Jayson Tatum went down with an achilles injury. Back in Boston, down three games to one, with their season on the brink and their all-NBA player in the hospital recovering from season-ending surgery, Boston powered through Game 5 on pure adrenaline. That wave of raw energy had crashed by the start of Game 6, and the Celtics finally tapped out. The Garden crowd let out 25 years of shpilkes as they watched their team bounce the champs.

Related: Rampant Knicks blow out Celtics to advance to first East finals since 2000

And so after a season of trying to figure out who they are and what their identity is, the Knicks have finally found a label: Eastern Conference finalists. Up until the clock struck zero in Game 6, accurate adjectives to describe New York’s on-court personality were quite limited, but “resilient” and “inconsistent” probably summed them up best.

Injuries, trades and roster turnover meant that the lunch-pail defense-first teams that had marked the Tom Thibodeau-coached Knicks prior to this season were no more. The loss of their beastly, rim protecting, offensive rebounding big men – Isaiah Hartenstein to free agency and Mitchell Robinson to an ankle injury until late February – were glaring. That weakness in the paint meant newly acquired defensive stalwart Mikal Bridges, and defensive Swiss army knife OG Anunoby were hopeless against perimeter shooting for most of the season.

That said, Karl-Anthony Towns, who came to New York in a late preseason blockbuster deal, jumped out of the gate early, looking like the alpha dog Minnesota rarely got to see, setting a career high for rebounds while combining with Jalen Brunson to average more than 50 points a game. Knicks fans were being treated to blistering ball movement and some of the most explosive offensive play the franchise has ever produced, but as the games piled up, the warts began to show.

Around mid-season, the excitement that had followed the team since their 2021 playoff appearance seemed to crest, with doubts creeping in about the team’s ceiling. The team was haunted by a stat that followed them around for all 82 games: since 2003, among teams that have won 50 games or more, the Knicks had the worst winning percentage against teams .500 or better. They were whipped by the Celtics, the Cavs and the Thunder. New York winning their first title since 1973? This team couldn’t even beat the pre-Luka Lakers at home. Fans braced themselves for another playoff letdown.

Such negativity has context: the New York Knickerbockers, despite their stature as a pillar of the NBA, are mostly a losing franchise that have had just three extended runs of success in their history, one of which was during the NBA’s prehistoric early-1950s. Under the ownership of James Dolan, their fans’ fandom has repeatedly been tested by a leadership that’s provided two of the most inept, perplexing and sometimes dastardly decades a professional sports team has ever known.

Then suddenly, Dolan hired Leon Rose as team president and finally got out of the way. Knicks fans expected the former prominent player agent to attract sparkly free agents such as Kevin Durant. It didn’t happen, but a meticulous rebuild did, and in the span of five seasons, the team transitioned from NBA laughing stock to legitimate title contenders.

These Knicks are arguably one of the most oddly constructed basketball teams in recent memory, and that’s because the Knicks have consistently been one of the worst drafting franchises in NBA history. In an era where teams have tanked to rebuild their franchises, New York’s renaissance hasn’t been buoyed by a homegrown star, or stars, such as the Celtics’ Tatum and Jaylen Brown, but rather a delicate series of trades and under-the-radar free-agent signings made by their under-the-radar president. Rose has not held a single press conference since being hired in March 2020, which is wild in a town of quote-thirsty tabloids.

The result is a starting five that’s arguably unmatched in the NBA, and now that Mitchell Robinson has worked his way back into impacting games with his menacing paint presence and timely offensive rebounds, Knicks fans are starting to see the full complement of what Rose had in mind when he went all-in on pairing Towns with Brunson, and what he saw in Bridges when he gambled a stack of draft picks on the league’s iron man. They figured out a way to get past the NBA’s new junkyard dogs in Detroit, then ousted the champs in six. When it’s all working, Brunson is pushing the ball and finishing with his footwork, Bridges is sticking mid-range jumpers and ripping the ball from his opponents, Anunoby is stifling opponents’ most prolific players, Robinson’s active hands are flummoxing offenses, Towns is involved early, sticking threes and working the post, Hart’s engine is wearing teams out and bench players like Deuce McBride and Cam Payne are making meaningful contributions.

Now they meet Indiana, who beat them in the Eastern Conference semi-finals last season. A year ago the Knicks’ roster was eviscerated by injuries, allowing the Pacers to sneak past New York over seven games. Now the Knicks are a completely different team, a healthy group that’s figuring it all out at just the right time. Meanwhile the Pacers are also much improved, having played some of the best basketball in the league over the past several months. We don’t know who will emerge in what is sure to be a grueling Eastern Conference finals, but we do know the Knicks are taking nothing for granted. I feel like we have a long way to go,” said Brunson after Friday night’s win. “Just the confidence we have in each other and everything. Just knowing who we are. We have to be unsatisfied.”

Knicks crush Celtics to reach Conference Finals

New York Knicks' Jalen Brunson high-fives team-mate Karl-Anthony Towns
Brunson and Towns were among the Knicks stars on the night [Getty Images]

The New York Knicks eliminated defending NBA champions Boston Celtics from the play-offs with a 119-81 victory to reach their first Eastern Conference finals in 25 years.

Jalen Brunson and OG Anunoby led the way with 23 points apiece as the Knicks completed a 4-2 series victory to set up a showdown against fourth-seeded Indiana Pacers for a place in the NBA finals.

The Knicks will open the seven-game series at home at 01:00 BST on Thursday.

Six Knicks players finished in double figures with the 38-point success the largest winning play-off margin in franchise history.

Mikal Bridges had four three-pointers in his 22 points while Karl-Anthony Towns added 21 and Josh Hart finished with a triple-double of 10 points, 11 rebounds and 11 assists.

The Celtics, who lost star forward Jayson Tatum to a ruptured right Achilles tendon in game four, which is likely to keep him out for around nine months, had given themselves hope after winning game five.

But in front of a Madison Square Garden home crowd, which included celebrities Timothee Chalamet, Lenny Kravitz, Ben Stiller and Spike Lee, the Knicks were in a ruthless mood.

They led 26-20 after the first quarter but did most of the damage in the second, outscoring their opponents 38-17 to take a 64-37 lead into the break to all but end the Boston challenge.

Jaylen Brown led the Celtics scoring with 20 points, with Al Horford adding 10 points and Payton Pritchard finishing with 11.

Derrick White, who scored 34 points in game five, was kept quiet with just eight points.

Actor Timothee Chalamet stands up courtside during the New York Knicks v Boston Celtics game
Actor Timothee Chalamet was a keen spectator at Madison Square Garden [Getty Images]

Brunson is following in a family tradition in the play-offs, with his father Rick a member of the New York team that last played in the Eastern Conference finals in 2000.

"This is great," he said. "I mean, the fact that we haven't been here since my dad was on the team - he's not gonna like that - but it means a lot to this organisation and this city.

"In game five Boston got the best of us and we responded tonight. We just found a way to keep making plays on the defensive side, the offence was just rolling."

Knicks head coach Tom Thibodeau felt his team had delivered a complete performance against the reigning champions.

"I thought from start to finish we were terrific," he said.

"The Celtics are a terrific team on both sides of the ball. They play their style no matter what, and so they're not going to hand you anything. You have to earn it. And I felt we did that.

"But we can't get carried away. Obviously it's a great win and we advance. But you also understand that you have to get ready for the next series. We know that Indiana is a terrific team and we're going to have to be ready."

Despite the defeat, Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla praised his team.

"At the end of the day, we set a goal out and we didn't achieve that goal," he said.

"But that shouldn't take away from the mindset and effort that the players put in - the approach, the process, you can't ask for anymore from the guys. I thought they gave everything they had throughout the season."

Knicks reach one of Jalen Brunson's preseason goals but remain 'unsatisfied' entering Eastern Conference Finals with Pacers

In August, Jalen Brunson was at MSG for a ceremony to celebrate his team captaincy.

Bruson spoke that day about the influence of his parents, Rick and Sandra. He talked about the team-friendly extension that he’d signed a few weeks earlier. He also touched on his goals for the coming season.

One of them?

“How we can get past the second round,” he said.

For most of the 2024-25 season, it seemed like the Knicks had no chance to advance beyond Round 2 of the Eastern Conference playoffs. They’d be facing either the Cavs or the Celtics -- two teams that beat them soundly in the regular season.

So logic told you that the Knicks’ 2024-25 season would end in the same way the previous two had: a loss in the second round.

Obviously, that logic flew out the window over the past two weeks.

The Knicks reached Brunson’s preseason goal by overcoming 20-point deficits to win Games 1 and 2 on the road. They closed the series on Friday night thanks, in part, to stout team defense.

They are now headed to the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time in 25 years.

Knicks fans were celebrating outside of The Garden -- cell phones capturing every moment for social media -- after the win.

Inside the building, the Knicks weren’t interested in toasting their success.

“I feel like we have a long way to go,” Brunson said. “Just the confidence we have in each other and everything. Just knowing who we are. We tend to be unsatisfied.”

May 16, 2025; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson (11) controls the ball against Boston Celtics forward Torrey Craig (12) during the fourth quarter of game six in the second round of the 2025 NBA Playoffs at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images
May 16, 2025; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson (11) controls the ball against Boston Celtics forward Torrey Craig (12) during the fourth quarter of game six in the second round of the 2025 NBA Playoffs at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images / © Brad Penner-Imagn Images

FILM STUDY

The Knicks certainly weren’t satisfied with how things unfolded in Boston on Wednesday. They had a chance to put the Celtics away in Game 5 and fumbled it away with an unfocused effort.

“The whole day of Game 5, it just wasn’t us,” Brunson said. “And we knew that, we reflected on it, and we came back and we said, ‘We need to be ready, we need to be better.’”

Several players mentioned the film sessions and a meeting between Games 5 and 6 as catalysts for what you saw on Friday.

“We had to talk it out, (figure out) how to communicate better,” Miles McBride said of the message from the meeting. “And I feel like we just went out there with a different type of energy.”

May 16, 2025; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) celebrates his three point shot against the Boston Celtics during the first quarter of game six in the second round of the 2025 NBA Playoffs at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images
May 16, 2025; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) celebrates his three point shot against the Boston Celtics during the first quarter of game six in the second round of the 2025 NBA Playoffs at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images / © Brad Penner-Imagn Images

SPARK FROM TOWNS

The energy started with an early lift from Karl-Anthony Towns. After a quiet night in Game 5, Towns was aggressive early against Boston. He and the Knicks took advantage of Boston’s decision to put a smaller defender on Towns. They found Towns in transition and found success in five-out lineups.

“That helped set the tone for the game,” said Tom Thibodeau. “… He got established (offensively), and then the rebounding and his pick-and-roll defense was outstanding. We were able to play off that.”

New York got contributions from all over the roster on Friday. Josh Hart had a triple-double. Mikal Bridges and OG Anunoby both had 20-plus points and helped stifle Boston all night. Brunson had 23 points and six assists. New York was plus-seven on the offensive boards and kept Boston in check on the perimeter (the Celtics were 8-for-30 on threes in the first three quarters).

“The way we prepared, the way we talked out there, the way we made it an emphasis to have each other’s back and to continue to cover for each other (was important),” Brunson said. “It’s focused on the defensive side of the ball, and when we’re doing that and offense, we’re flowing.”

They hope to keep flowing into Game 1 of the ECF on Wednesday. The Knicks will have a few days to prepare for the Pacers. Maybe they’ll even take some time to celebrate the win over Boston. But the focus will quickly turn to Indiana.

“There’s more to do,” Bridges said. “We’re not done. We came out there tonight to play hard and handle business, but our season’s not over. We’ve got so much more to do.”

Josh Hart records first Knicks playoff triple-double in over 50 years to help eliminate Celtics in Game 6

Friday night saw the Knicks slay a number of metaphorical dragons during this playoff run. Game 6 was the first series-clinching win at home in 25 years, which was also the amount of time it's taken for the Knicks to make it back to the Eastern Conference Finals.

But Josh Hart also accomplished a feat not seen in a Knicks uniform in over 50 years.

Hart scored 10 points, came down with 11 rebounds and dished 11 assists all with a black eye suffered by an errant elbow in Game 5. It's Hart's 10th triple-double this season (including playoffs), but it's his first career triple-double in the postseason. In fact, it's the Knicks' first playoff triple-double since Walt Frazier in 1972 -- fitting considering how Hart eclipsed Frazier's franchise mark for triple-doubles in a season this year.

"He's the heart of the team," Frazier said on the MSG broadcast. "The black eye, he was undaunted by that. The good rebounding. he grows on you. You just watch him, he does whatever it takes to win the game. He doesn't worry about the points....he's the heart of the team."

"He impacts the game in a lot of different ways and people get stuck on ‘well, he didn’t shoot the ball or he didn’t do this.’ Josh, what he is is he’s a basketball player," coach Tom Thibodeau said of Hart after the game. "It’s transition, it’s the pace, playing out of the pocket, making corner threes. Dribble handoff, hustle plays, offensive rebounds and defensively just being everywhere and coming up with big rebounds.

"When you play with that kind of effort, it’s inspiring to a team."

Hart's inspiring play was on full display in Game 6. Whether it was crashing to the hoop before kicking out to an open man beyond the arc, or taking it to the basket himself for an and-one. The third-year Knick brought the effort, and it was infectious.

Effort -- or the lack thereof -- was a big talking point after Game 5's loss. Jalen Brunson, Hart, and others criticized how they played in that game, especially letting a nine-point lead in the second quarter devolve into a 25-point loss. The Knicks were determined not to let that happen again.

So, what worked for the Knicks on Friday night? Communication.

"We have to end quarters right, and that’s something that we did and we were able to pick it up in the second, get stops, run and play Knick basketball," Hart explained. "Everyone played well, everyone talked, everyone communicated. Made plays offensively and defensively. That’s something we preach all the time is ending quarters strong."

They'll have to keep that communication and effort when they take on the Indiana Pacers in the Eastern Conference Finals. The Pacers eliminated the Knicks in the second round last season after seven games. But this Knicks team has another streak to break in mind. Going to their first NBA Finals in 25 years.

Kristaps Porzingis showers 'unbelievable' Knicks fans with praise after Celtics' Game 6 loss

Knicks fans have a complicated relationship with Celtics center Kristaps Porzingis.

On one hand, they are upset with his unfulfilled potential and not being "the guy" to bring the franchise to the next level after they drafted him in the first round of the 2015 NBA Draft. Of course, injuries and inept front office folks had a part to play in that, but after some time had passed, whenever Porzingis would come to MSG, whether as a Dallas Maverick or Washington Wizard, he was looked upon fondly by Knicks fans.

And now, as the Celtics' season ended after a 119-81 defeat in Game 6 on Friday night, Porzingis had some interesting comments about the fans and the city.

"Honestly, the support from the Knicks' fans was through the roof tonight and all throughout the playoffs," Porzingis said. "Unbelievable fans, unbelievable city. There's a side of me that's very, very happy for them. I wish them nothing but the best. They're class players we played against and they've done great things, and I wish them nothing but success."

Porzingis finished with four points, five rebounds and one block in 11 minutes of playing time on Friday night. It was the last of a sad slate of games from Porzingis, who has been battling an illness that he has not been able to kick. It affected his play so much that Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla said Porzingis couldn't breathe during Game 5's win on Wednesday.

The 29-year-old said he will take the offseason to get better, let his "immune system even itself out" and come back stronger for the next season. However, who he plays for next year is in question.

Although Porzingis has one more year on his contract with the Celtics, Boston could be looking to retool. Salary cap limitations and the fact that Jayson Tatum will likely not play next season could change Boston's plans. With a title with the Celtics under his belt, Porzingis could see himself back in New York -- he's said so in the past.

But that's speculation for another time.

Porzingis finished his second season in Boston, averaging 19.5 points, 6.8 rebounds, 2.1 assists and 1.5 blocks per game across 42 contests. And while Knicks fans celebrate their first Eastern Conference Finals in 25 years, Porzingis' future is unknown. Porzingis was asked if he's thought about how next season's team could look very different, and he wanted to focus on tonight.

"I haven't thought about that too much. we've been locked in on the playoffs," he said. "We'll see what the future holds. Right now we're just digesting this loss."