Warriors guard Brandin Podziemski has been stuck in the middle of Steve Kerr’s erratic rotation roulette.
Podziemski shone alongside Jimmy Butler in Sunday’s 123-91 win in Chicago despite not getting the start, teasing a triple-double with a team-high 21 points, eight rebounds and seven assists.
He spoke to the media after practice on Wednesday and detailed how he embraces competing for minutes with eight other guards on the Warriors’ roster besides Steph Curry.
“I think it brings the best out of people,” he told reporters. “I think it’s going to bring out the best of all eight of us.”
The Warriors extended their team option on Podziemski’s contract back in October 2025, and Kerr has used him interchangeably in the starting lineup while Curry has been out with a quad injury.
“Steve’s going to play who he plays,” he said, “But I think having competition and not being complacent, it’s a good thing for our team.”
Podziemski additionally complimented Pat Spencer’s recent offensive emergence, whose playtime has also increased in Curry’s absence.
“I think Pat’s a great basketball player and just understands how the game flows and functions,” he praised, referring to Spencer’s on-ball fundamentals, “Just making simple plays, and I think simple equals a lot bigger than what most people think,” he said.
Podziemski replaced the red-hot Spencer with less than four minutes to go to close out the 124-112 loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder back on Dec. 2nd at Chase Center.
"Both guys really played great games."
Steve Kerr on his decision to take out a red-hot Pat Spencer for Brandin Podziemski at the 3:56 mark in the 4th quarter.
"It was a consideration. We wanted to get Brandin back in the game because he was also playing at a high level." pic.twitter.com/g1gSzSwje2
Curry is slated to make his return on Friday against the Minnesota Timberwolves. Podziemski will have to continue playing smart and remind the Warriors why they extended him in order to receive more minutes. Until then, the Warriors hold a 13-12 record and play four of the next six games at home.
Lakers guard Austin Reaves is double teamed in the paint by San Antonio Spurs center Luke Kornet, left, and guard Dylan Harper in the first half Wednesday. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
The answer was entirely predictable: “Good.”
The question that elicited the response above from Austin Reaves: How was he feeling physically?
Reaves doesn’t make excuses, and he wasn’t about to start now, not in the wake of a 132-119 defeat by the San Antonio Spurs at Crypto.com Arena on Wednesday night.
He finished with a modest 15 points, including only four in the first half.
The underwhelming performance followed an 11-point game against the Philadelphia 76ers three days earlier.
“Just didn’t get the ball to go in the basket,” Reaves said.
Or was it something more?
Was the offensive burden he shouldered up to this point starting to take a toll on him?
Had the former undrafted free agent really elevated his game to a new level or was he just on a six-week heater?
The answers will be revealed in the coming weeks.
The Lakers, however, already know they can’t win with Reaves playing the way he did against the Spurs, when he made only two of six shots in the opening half.
Reaves has to score for this version of the Lakers to beat a team like the Spurs. He has to score because they can’t stop anyone.
Their on-ball perimeter defense is atrocious.
Their three-point defense is dreadful.
Their transition defense is shocking.
“Very few teams don’t have something that you can expose and we consistently got exposed to the same things,” coach JJ Redick said.
Bill Parcells once said you are what your record says you are, but that might not be the case with the Lakers, who are 17-7.
In their last six games, Lakers opponents have shot 49%, including 45% on threes. Redick’s team has allowed an average of 122 points per game.
“The things that help you win on the margins, we’re just not very good at right now,” Redick said.
The defense against the Spurs was particularly awful, the visitors making 50% of their threes in the first two periods to take a 70-58 lead into halftime with their franchise player Victor Wembanyama sidelined with a calf injury.
The Spurs’ athleticism clearly troubled the Lakers, who lack footspeed on the perimeter.
“They were just going downhill, driving and [kicking],” Lakers guard Luka Doncic said. “They scored like 10 three-pointers in the first half. They got up real quickly.”
Spurs guard Stephon Castle finished the game with 30 points. He was one of seven players to score in double figures. The Lakers were behind by as many as 24 points.
“Obviously, it’s a unique team,” Lakers forward LeBron James said. “They got six or seven guys that can break you off the dribble. Super fast, super quick.”
Unlike the Lakers, who have slow-moving guards in Doncic and Reaves, a 40-year-old player in James and an inconsistent center in Deandre Ayton.
The Lakers were eliminated in the playoffs last season by a more physically gifted team in the Minnesota Timberwolves and they once again look incapable of overcoming such a disadvantage this time around.
Asked what they could do to remedy their defensive shortcomings, James replied: “I mean, obviously, you can’t do it individually by yourself. It has to be five guys on a string, communication always at an all-time high, letting you know what’s going on behind you and things of that nature.”
Redick shared a similar view, but made it sound as if the process could take time. In the meantime, he said he expected Reaves to recover from his two-game slump.
Even after the Spurs game, Reaves ranked ninth in the NBA in scoring at 27.8 points per game.
“Yeah, look, the reality is the guy carried us for six weeks and that takes a toll on you,” Redick said. “He kept fighting and I appreciate that. But he’s gonna have a lot more great nights than frustrating nights.”
He better. More frustrating nights for Reaves figure to result in more frustrating nights for the Lakers.
Week 8 in the NBA is underway as the NBA Cup series takes center stage. Now is a good time to look back and rank the top 10 teams with the obvious Oklahoma City Thunder tipping the list off. All Championship odds are courtesy of DraftKings.
Oklahoma City is riding a 15-game winning streak and at 24-1 through their first 25 games, it makes you start to think if they can beat the 2015-16 Warriors 73-9 record?
The Thunder went 18-1 without Jalen Williams and hasn't skipped a beat since he's returned. Oklahoma City is loaded again and I think it's about time to bet them to win back-to-back titles. This team is looking like a dynasty.
2. Denver Nuggets (17-6)
NBA Finals odds: +650 Points Leader: Nikola Jokic (29.2) Rebound Leader: Nikola Jokic (12.3) Assist Leader: Nikola Jokic (11.0)
Despite injuries to Aaron Gordon and Christian Braun, Denver has stood tall with the third-best record in the NBA. The Nuggets have three consecutive games and four of the past five, plus they are 5-3 without both Gordon and Braun.
Nikola Jokic and Jamal Murray have picked up the slack in the meantime. Jokic averages a 29-point triple-double and Murray is posting a career-high 25.0 points per game, which ranks 16th in the league.
3. Los Angeles Lakers (17-6)
NBA Finals odds: +1300 Points Leader: Luka Doncic (35.0) Rebound Leader: Luka Doncic (9.0) Assist Leader: Luka Doncic (9.0)
Since LeBron James returned to the Lakers, Los Angeles is 6-2 and he averages 16.2 points, 7.6 assists, and 6.0 rebounds per game. While it's obvious, LeBron isn't what he used to be, he's still made highlight reel plays and dished out game-winning passes rather than keeping his record 10-point streak alive.
This Lakers team has a high ceiling, but it's mostly because of their offensive potential. Los Angeles has the seventh-ranked offensive rating, the fourth-best effective field goal percentage (58%), and second-best true shooting percentage (62.2%) ahead of the Thunder (62.1%) and behind the Nuggets (63%).
4. Houston Rockets (15-6)
NBA Finals odds: +1000 Points Leader: Kevin Durant (25.3) Rebound Leader: Steven Adams (9.2) Assist Leader: Alperen Sengun (7.1)
Houston is 10-3 over the last 13 games, ranking fifth in offensive rating and fourth in defensive rating during that span. The Rockets have dealt with injuries to their role players lately, Tari Eason and Dorian Finney-Smith, plus they're without Fred VanVleet for the season. Despite three starters being 23-years-old or younger, Houston has played at one of the slowest tempos (27th) and maintained elite defensive numbers. If they clean up the turnovers (22nd in turnover percentage), then Houston can be a threat to Oklahoma City.
After the Pistons 13-game winning streak was snapped, Detroit has gone 4-2 since the loss and won four of the past five games. Detroit has remained hot and has the best road record in the East at 8-3.
After 24 games, Detroit is fourth in defensive rating and surprisingly ninth in offensive rating, plus Cade Cunningham is fourth in MVP odds! Cunningham ranks top 11 in points per game (27.5) and assists per game (9.3) — both current career-highs.
New York is on a heater! The Knicks have won four straight and eight of the past nine as they prepare to take on the Magic for a chance to advance in the NBA Cup. New York has only lost to two teams with losing records this season and are 10-2 versus those teams overall. Versus teams with current winning records, the Knicks are 7-5 with recent losses to the Magic and Celtics.
7. San Antonio Spurs (16-7)
NBA Finals odds: +3000 Points Leader: Victor Wembanyama (26.2) Rebound Leader: Victor Wembanyama (12.9) Assist Leader: Stephon Castle (7.3)
The Spurs are 4-1 over the last five games and advancing in the NBA Cup after a win over the Lakers. Since losing Victor Wembanyama for 12 games, the Spurs have gone 9-3 compared to 7-4 with him. San Antonio boasts the seventh-best offensive rating over the last 12 games, but ranks 22nd in defensive rating without their franchise player.
Luckily, Wemby could return in the next stage of the NBA Cup versus the Thunder, if not against the Wizards or Hawks next week.
8. Orlando Magic (15-10)
NBA Finals odds: +3000 Points Leader: Franz Wagner (22.3) Rebound Leader: Paolo Banchero (7.9) Assist Leader: Jalen Suggs (4.7)
Orlando's season continues to excite fans around the NBA and an upcoming cup matchup with the Knicks shouldn't disappoint. Orlando is 8-3 over the last 11 games and rank top nine in offensive and defensive rating during that timeframe.
Despite being dominant at home with a 10-4 record, the Magic are 5-6 on the road. Only two teams in the top six of the East have losing records on the road — the Magic and Knicks.
9. Boston Celtics (17-7)
NBA Finals odds: +3500 Points Leader: Jaylen Brown (29.1) Rebound Leader: Neemias Queta (8.2) Assist Leader: Derrick White (5.3)
Here they come! The longest winning streak in the Eastern Conference belongs to the Boston Celtics at five consecutive wins.
Jaylen Brown has scored 30 points in three straight games and six of the previous seven games. He's now sixth in the NBA with 29.1 points per game, while Derrick White and Payton Pritchard have chipped in a combined 34.6 points per game. Boston's bench has been a bright spot with al the chances to the Celtics rotation. The bench ranks fourth in three-point percentage (39.9%) and could help relieve Brown when his heater cools off.
10. Phoenix Suns (14-11)
NBA Finals odds: +70000 Points Leader: Devin Booker (25.0) Rebound Leader: Mark Williams (8.4) Assist Leader: Devin Booker (6.7)
Minnesota's five-game winning streak was snapped against Phoenix and despite wanting to make the Timberwolves my 10th-ranked team — I couldn't do it. The Timberwolves have struggled against teams with winning records (2-8) and have basically feasted on the bottom of the NBA. The Suns beat the Timberwolves in both meetings and haven't had Devin Booker healthy, so I'll roll with Phoenix to end up my top 10.
If the Raptors or Heat didn't lose four straight games, or the Cavaliers were consistent to any degree, then either of those teams would be my No. 10 ranked squad. Golden State at 13-12 has a case to be on this list after two straight wins, but the Suns deserve some respect.
Stock Up
Boston Celtics (17-7)
NBA Finals odds: +3500 Points Leader: Jaylen Brown (29.1) Rebound Leader: Neemias Queta (8.2) Assist Leader: Derrick White (5.3)
The Celtics have won seven of the past eight games and 10 of the last 12. Over the last 12 games, the Celtics come in at 18th for defensive rating, but have the NBA's top-ranked offense in that span.
Stock Down
Toronto Raptors (15-11)
NBA Finals odds: +10000 Points Leader: Brandon Ingram (21.5) Rebound Leader: Jakob Poeltl (8.0) Assist Leader: Immanuel Quickley (6.2)
After nine straight wins, Toronto has gone 1-6 over the last seven games with four straight losses. Granted four of those losses came against top 10 teams, it's also worth noting that two of those losses came to the Hornets with the lone win over the Trail Blazers. It appears the Raptors have come back down to Earth after a 14-5 start.
Miami Heat (14-11)
NBA Finals odds: +6500 Points Leader: Norman Powell (24.6) Rebound Leader: Kel’el Ware (10.1) Assist Leader: Davion Mitchell (7.8)
The Miami Heat have dropped four consecutive games and five of the past six to follow up a season-long six-game win streak. The Heat lost at home to the Kings and at the Mavericks during this losing streak, so the stock is way down on Miami.
Be sure to check out DraftKings for all the latest game odds & team props for every matchup this week on the NBA schedule!
How to Watch the NBA on NBC and Peacock
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Warriors superstar guard Steph Curry, who missed five games with a left quad contusion, officially will return for Friday’s game against the Minnesota Timberwolves at Chase Center.
Curry was not listed on Golden State’s latest injury report on Thursday, while forward Draymond Green (personal reason) and Al Horford (sciatica) officially are out for Friday’s game.
After sustaining the injury in the Warriors’ loss to the Houston Rockets on Nov. 26, Golden State had Curry stay back and rehab in the Bay Area during the team’s recent three-game road trip.
The team initially was targeting Friday’s game against Minnesota for Curry’s return, and after two good days of practice, it appears the 37-year-old is good to go.
With Curry back in the fold, the Warriors, once Green and Horford return, could have their entire roster fully healthy and available for the first time all season.
The Boston Celtics do not have as much talent as they did last season.
That’s what happens when you lose Jrue Holiday, Kristaps Porzingis, Al Horford and Luke Kornet in one offseason. And they also have had to deal with losing a perennial first team All-NBA player in Jayson Tatum to an Achilles injury.
When you don’t have as much talent as some of the opponents you play, the work ethic has to increase. You have to outwork and outhustle the other team. You need to win every 50-50 ball, set good screens, rebound well, commit to tough defense, get to the free throw line, etc.
Playing hard means doing the little things well. For example, Boston leads the league with 9.2 screen assists per game. The C’s also rank No. 4 in box outs, No. 6 in defensive loose balls recovered and No. 10 in charges drawn.
The Celtics have been one of the hardest-working teams in the league, and it’s one of many reasons why they are 10-2 in their last 12 games — a run that has seen them rise up from the play-in tournament spots to sole possession of third place in the Eastern Conference standings.
“(Head coach Joe Mazzulla) just wants our guys to be the hardest playing team every night,” Celtics assistant coach Sam Cassell said on the latest episode of NBC Sports Boston’s Celtics Talk Podcast. “And sometimes it may not happen, but we have enough depth on our team that we — Joe’s going to find the pieces to play hard. It may not be for 48 straight minutes, and no team does that, but we want to get like 40 minutes or 42 minutes of hard-playing basketball.
“If we can do that, we don’t worry about guys making shots or missing shots. We worry about how hard we’re playing and if we’re competing. Joe just wants guys who can compete at a high level and bring some force. If you’re out there, make an impact doing something.”
Not only do the Celtics play hard, but the players are coached hard. Mazzulla and his staff are pretty demanding.
“If Joe Mazzulla is yelling at you, that means he really cares about you,” Cassell said. “He wants you to be better. He’s taking this time out to give you instruction and direction.”
This style of coaching has produced fantastic individual results, especially in regards to Jordan Walsh and Josh Minott — two key bench players for Boston.
Walsh has been a breakout star for the Celtics. The C’s are 10-2 since he entered the starting lineup, and he’s making a tremendous impact on both ends of the floor. Walsh is averaging 14 points on 76.5 percent shooting (63.6 percent from 3-point range) over the last five games.
“He just needed the opportunity,” Cassell said of Walsh. “He’s been in our system for three years now, and it hasn’t been easy for him at all. We coach him hard, and the thing I like about our team this year is they allow us to coach them hard.
“They allow us to get in their face and tell them they aren’t doing A, B or C. But when they do do things right we always congratulate them and we praise them. But the praise isn’t a lot. It’s like a second or two and then we gotta get back to work.”
Minott is an interesting case because Mazzulla seems to have taken a particular interest in coaching him hard during games. He is often seen giving detailed feedback and instruction to Minott during timeouts.
“He plays a tough role because of his versatility. He’s defending ball handlers, he’s defending screeners,” Mazzulla said after last Friday’s win over the Los Angeles Lakers. “They’re changing matchups on him. Just continuing to grow and execute, and he has a willingness to learn. He has an open-mindedness, and he wants to get better.
“I think he’s gotten a lot better. It’s just a credit to him. He cares about the details. He cares about wanting to get it right, but he plays a unique role for us, where he’s seeing a bunch of different reads over the course of the game on both ends of the floor. The growth of him is to get to the point where he can just make those on his own consistently.
“He does a great job studying those things, but it’s just a communication and teaching. I really enjoy coaching him.”
Minott clearly enjoys the hard coaching from Mazzulla.
“I love it. You know why? Because it means he’s thinking about me,” Minott said after the Lakers game, per John Karalis of Boston Sports Journal. “Every time Joe yells at me, I love it because it’s like, I’m a priority in that moment … I’ll yell back. We love each other.”
Not every player likes or responds well to hard coaching. It’s up to the coaches to determine how best to reach their players and maximize their on-court production. It’s something that Mazzulla and his staff have done very well over the last few years, and the results speak for themselves.
Boston has developed a lot of good players in the three-plus years since Mazzulla took over as head coach.
Also in this episode:
Sam Cassell on his expectations heading into this season.
Cassell on the leadership of Jaylen Brown.
Cassell on watching Jayson Tatum work his way back to the court.
Lakers guard Marcus Smart challenges Spurs forward Kelly Olynyk for a rebound during their NBA Cup game on Wednesday night at Crypto.Com Arena. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
LeBron James’ emphatic one-handed dunk brought the crowd at Crypto.com Arena to its feet. It left Luke Kornet shrinking under James’ intense glare and scream. It will live on in the soon-to-be 41-year-old’s highlight reel, but for this night, James wanted it to fade into the background.
Because even though the moment left his teammates jumping on the bench and gasping for air, it did nothing to stave off a Lakers loss.
“It was just a play,” James said after the Lakers lost 132-119 to the San Antonio Spurs on Wednesday, getting eliminated from NBA Cup play and setting up a regular-season matchup at Phoenix on Sunday at 5 p.m. PST.
The Lakers (17-7) went 2-3 during a revealing five-game stretch against teams with winning records, and needed fourth-quarter heroics to squeeze out both of their wins that came by a combined seven points. The Lakers’ plus-1.5 scoring margin ranks 15th in the NBA after their last three losses came by an average of 16.3 points.
“We really got to look ourselves in the mirror and figure out what we're gonna do,” guard Marcus Smart said. “We're going to lay down and get punked or we're going to fight back. And I'm not the one that's going to lay down and get punked.”
Here are three takeaways from the loss:
Marcus Smart adds a spark
After missing six games because of a back injury, Smart returned to score a season-high 26 points in 27 minutes, going eight for 13 from three-point range with three rebounds and one assist.
Smart struggled with injuries while with Memphis and Washington after getting traded from Boston in 2023. He hoped that coming to the Lakers, with their eternal championship ambitions, could help him revitalize his career. He got off to an uneven start, missing two of the first five games while shooting only 25.4% from three-point range.
Then he hit his highest three-point total in a game since Jan. 5, 2024, on Wednesday.
“All I can do is control how I prepare, and that's to make the shot,” Smart said. “I've been doing it — everything right. Tonight was the night for me, and hopefully that starts a trend for me to start making some shots consistently.”
Playing his highest minute total since Nov. 14 against New Orleans, Smart said his back “felt good” during the game. His only physical shortcoming was getting his wind back after being sidelined for two weeks. Coach JJ Redick, who called Smart the team’s tone-setter on defense, commended Smart’s “care factor," even when the Lakers fell behind by 18 in the second quarter.
Smart didn’t score any points during a late second-quarter run that cut the Spurs lead from 17 to eight, but he played key roles on both ends of the court. His block on De’Aaron Fox's shot led to a Jaxson Hayes alley-oop dunk. Smart screened two Spurs players to clear the way for Luka Doncic on a driving layup with 1:51 remaining in the second quarter. Doncic immediately turned and pointed to Smart in appreciation.
“When he guards, when he talks to us, we listen,” said Doncic who finished with 35 points and eight assists, including three on Smart three-pointers in the third quarter. “Just got to be a little bit more of what he’s doing.”
Bench falls flat
Outside of Smart’s 26 points, the Lakers bench produced only five points. Three came from Dalton Knecht on a garbage time three-pointer.
The Lakers have prolific scorers on their bench. Jake LaRavia’s 27-point outburst in Minnesota made him a viral sensation and earned him a custom “Who is No. 12?” T-shirt designed by general manager Rob Pelinka. Gabe Vincent shot a sizzling 55.6% from three-point range during the preseason before he suffered a sprained ankle in the third game of the regular season.
But LaRavia and Vincent combined for only two shots Wednesday. The only other regular rotation player who scored off the bench was Hayes.
Redick credited some of the bench struggles to San Antonio’s defensive coverages. Despite not having Victor Wembanyama (calf), the Spurs used center Luke Kornet similarly to how Phoenix used Mark Williams to dare Doncic and Austin Reaves to shoot shots in the paint instead of letting the star guards play-make for others.
Reaves struggled offensively for the second consecutive game, shooting six for 16 from the field for 15 points. Reaves, who leads the team in total minutes while also ranking second in points per game with 28.4, has made nine of 32 shots in the last two games.
Even Rui Hachimura, who had scored in double figures in each of the previous three games and made the game-winning shot in Toronto, had just two shot attempts in the first three quarters Wednesday. He finished with a quiet eight points.
Redick has marveled at the way Hachimura can go long stretches of games without touching the ball then still make crucial shots. Teammates have asked him for his advice on how to stay ready when coming off the bench.
“[The ball is] gonna come eventually,” Hachimura said before Wednesday's game. “And then that time comes, you have to make some moves. You have to do something about it, so you don't want to be surprised when it gets [to you].”
No strings attached
The Lakers entered Wednesday’s game ranked 21st in defensive rating. They were the fifth-worst team in opponent three-point shooting percentage, allowing teams to shoot 38.2% from three. The percentage will get even worse after San Antonio (17-7) shot 44.7% from three on Wednesday.
Opponents have shot better than 40% from beyond the arc in six of the last seven games against the Lakers. The Pelicans and Celtics both shot better than 50% from three.
Without Wembanyama, the Spurs showcased their dynamic backcourt, led by Fox. The speedy guard who missed the last matchup against the Lakers had 20 points while Stephon Castle, last year’s rookie of the year, dropped 30 points to go along with 10 rebounds and six assists on the Lakers, who simply had no answers for the quick, athletic guards.
“Being able to contain the basketball is probably the most difficult thing for our team right now,” Redick said.
Doncic and Reaves have become the highest scoring duo in the league, but the guards will never be known for their defensive prowess. The soon-to-be 41-year-old James is well past his time of being a regular defensive standout. If the Lakers can compete defensively, it has to be as a unit, James stressed.
“Five guys being on a string,” James said. “Obviously, you can't do it individually by yourself. It has to be five guys on a string, communication, always at an all-time high.”
It is no secret that Boston sports fans are a different breed.
Celtics owner Bill Chisholm recently tried to get that point across by comparing Celtics fans to Warriors fans and seemingly dissing Dub Nation.
“I love the slogan, ‘It’s different here,’ because if you don’t live here or you didn’t grow up here, I don’t think people understand,” Chisholm said on Celtics guard Derrick White’s “White Noise Podcast with Derrick & Welsh.” “I’ve spent a lot of time in California and the Warriors are great. I don’t like the Warriors, but the Warriors for people that live there are great.
“But people go to the game, they go home and they have their dinner. The Warriors win [or] lose, yeah, it’s fine. There’s other things. You go to the beach, you go up to Tahoe. The Celtics lose and people are depressed. … People really internalize it here.”
“When the Warriors lose, [fans] go to the beach or whatever… when the Celtics lose, people are depressed.”
— White Noise Podcast w/Derrick White (@whitenoisepod_) December 9, 2025
Bay Area sports fans might disagree.
Between the Warriors, San Francisco 49ers, San Francisco Giants, San Jose Sharks and others, Bay Area residents have had their fair share of ups and downs supporting their favorite sports teams.
And just because they might not display their emotions the way Boston and East Coast fanbases do, certainly doesn’t mean they don’t care.
Still, Chisholm has his own perspective.
“It’s different here,” he said. “Other places, they got to put it up on the jumbotron, like, ‘Let’s cheer’ or ‘Make it louder,’ the fans here, they just get it. And to your point, this is the Boston Celtics. There’s a standard here.”
No one knows what the future holds for Jonathan Kuminga, not even his own coach.
Fresh off a DNP-CD (Did Not Play – Coach’s Decision) in the Warriors’ win over the Chicago Bulls on Sunday, Kuminga’s role with Golden State — once again — is in question moving forward. A two-year, $48.5 million contract resolved a months-long standoff this past offseason between Kuminga’s camp and the Warriors. However, his fluctuating minutes and being in and out of Kerr’s rotations — as he has been over the last four years with Golden State — reintroduce some questions and concerns.
Kerr, speaking to reporters after practice Wednesday, shared that the offseason contract saga isn’t affecting things on his end, but the coach could see it lingering over Kuminga.
“It’s not impacting anything for us. So you’d have to ask him. I can imagine it’s not easy for him, and we’ve talked about the situation. My desire for JK is to become the best player he can possibly be, regardless of where he ends up, whether it’s here or elsewhere.
“I tell my guys a lot, there’s so few players who end up playing for one team their entire career. It rarely happens. I played for six different teams. None of us know what’s going to happen with JK or pretty much any of our guys, although I would advise Mike [Dunleavy] not to trade Steph [Curry].”
Kuminga’s DNP-CD in Chicago was his first of the 2025-26 season, and just the latest bump of his up-and-down Warriors tenure.
Kerr later explained the reasoning behind his decision to bench Kuminga, frankly stating that the young wing hadn’t been playing well at that time.
Almost instantly, trade rumors began to fly as ESPN’s Anthony Slater reported that the Warriors are expected to explore Kuminga’s trade market in the coming weeks, with the possibility of a divorce before the NBA’s Feb. 5 trade deadline remaining “strong.” One of Kuminga’s offseason trade interests, the Sacramento Kings, reportedly still are open to continuing negotiations with Golden State.
“But this is part of being in the league,” Kerr told reporters. “I’ve talked to Moses [Moody] about this, I’ve talked to JK about it. I’ve talked to most of our guys, really. It’s a really weird league. It’s a weird business to be in because you have to fully commit to the team that you’re playing for, knowing full well that that team may trade you or cut you. And that’s a really hard thing to reconcile as a player. But the sooner guys can recognize it, the better. The guys who end up playing for a long time figure that out, and they understand that you can’t just say, ‘Fine, I’ll be a mercenary’ either.
“You really do have to commit to whatever group you’re with. But if you’re getting moved around, it’s not easy to deal with, especially if you’ve never been traded. That first one is weird and difficult. And I can speak from experience. It’s not an easy situation, but nobody knows what’s going to happen. My goal is to get JK to play at the highest level that’ll help us win that he can.”
The Warriors host the Minnesota Timberwolves on Friday, and it’s evident there will be extra eyes on how — and if — Kerr plugs Kuminga back into his rotation or not.
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is averaging 32.8 points per game this season [Getty Images]
The Oklahoma City Thunder equalled the best 25-game start to a season in NBA history as they overpowered the Phoenix Suns 138-89 in the NBA Cup quarter-finals.
Defending champions the Thunder have won 24 of their first 25 games, equalling the Golden State Warriors' record from 2015-16.
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, last season's Most Valuable Player, scored 28 points at Paycom Center, hitting the 20-point mark for a 96th straight game.
It was a franchise record 16th straight win for the Thunder, who face the San Antonio Spurs in the semi-finals in Las Vegas on Saturday.
"Winning is never boring," said Thunder forward Jalen Williams.
The Thunder have won 92 of their 107 regular-season games since the start of 2024-25, having topped last season's Western Conference with a 68-14 record.
The record for most wins in an NBA season is 73, achieved by the Warriors in 2015-16.
The Spurs reached the semi-finals by beating the Los Angeles Lakers 132-119 at Crypto.com Arena.
The NBA Cup is the competition's annual in-season tournament, with all matches except the final counting towards the regular-season standings.
The Thunder were beaten in last year's final by the Milwaukee Bucks.
LOS ANGELES — Before his San Antonio Spurs went on to beat the Lakers with him watching in street clothes Wednesday night, Victor Wembanyama was out on the court, getting in a little light work. He looked good, moved well and didn't have any kind of wrap on his strained calf.
Is there a chance we see Wembanyama on the court in Las Vegas on Saturday for the NBA Cup semifinals against the Thunder?
"Very much," Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said after the Spurs' win. "He had a really good day today. He had a very intense day this morning, and we have to see how he responds and reacts tomorrow."
It has been reported that Wemby was close to a return, and his on-court pregame work on Wednesday evening after an intense workout earlier in the day is a good sign.
Wembanyama has been out since Nov. 15 with a calf strain, missing a dozen games. Behind inspired play from De'Aaron Fox, Stephon Castle and Dylan Harper as a guard trio the Spurs have gone 9-3 in those 12 games, including beating the Lakers Wednesday to advance to the NBA Cup semifinals in Las Vegas.
Already an All-Star, Wemby looked like a player making another leap this season, averaging 26.2 points, 12.9 rebounds and 3.6 blocked shots a game prior to his injury. He looked like an All-NBA player and someone who, in his third season, could even end up on a lot of MVP ballots.
San Antonio will need that guy to have a chance against the 24-1 Thunder in the NBA Cup semifinal Saturday in Las Vegas.
With the NBA Cup creating an unusual schedule, this is an ideal moment to reassess your roster and dig into the latest fantasy basketball news. Evolving NBA depth charts and unexpected injuries are reshaping roles across the league, creating new opportunities to add impact players before the rest of your league reacts. Let's break down six widely available options worth consideration.
Top Fantasy Basketball Waiver Wire Picks
Derik Queen, New Orleans Pelicans (48% rostered)
Queen made history Monday when he recorded 33 points, 10 rebounds, 10 assists and four blocks in a loss to the Spurs. He became one of five players ever to post a 30-point triple-double before turning 21 years old. The other four on that list are big names in LeBron James, Luka Dončić, Victor Wembanyama and De'Aaron Fox.
Zion Williamson (adductor) is out for at least the next three weeks. Given his checkered injury history, it's difficult to have much faith in him staying on the floor, even when he does return from his most recent ailment. With their 3-22 record, the Pelicans aren't likely to push Williamson to play if he's not completely healthy. Queen has the potential to be a fantasy difference maker from here on out.
Neemias Queta, Boston Celtics (38% rostered)
Queta is logging 24 minutes per game as the starting center for the Celtics. That's not exactly a hefty workload, but it has still enabled him to average 10.1 points, 8.2 rebounds and 1.4 blocks per game. He has also shot 65.8% from the field. Although his 62.8% shooting from the free-throw line isn't great, he's not tanking fantasy managers in that department because he has only averaged 2.0 free-throw attempts per game.
Despite the moves that the Celtics made to weaken their roster during the offseason, they are 15-9 out of the gate. It would be a shock if they didn't at least make the Play-In Tournament at this point. If Jayson Tatum (Achilles) comes back, they could really make some noise in the Eastern Conference. They are still thin at center, though, so unless they make a trade, Queta is in line to play a prominent role in their playoff push.
Jay Huff, Indiana Pacers (30% rostered)
The writing was on the wall with Huff when he averaged 0.9 blocks in just 12 minutes per game with the Grizzlies last season. It took him some time to work his way into a prominent role with the Pacers, but he has now started six straight games. During that span, he averaged 10.5 points, 4.8 rebounds, 2.3 assists, 1.8 three-pointers and 3.7 blocks. The key is, he logged 25 minutes per game.
The Pacers are 4-2 since moving Huff into their starting lineup. Given his contributions on the defensive end, he has a great opportunity to remain in the role moving forward. His only real competition for minutes right now is Isaiah Jackson, who has played just 18 minutes a game since Huff became a starter. Fantasy managers who need blocks should make adding Huff a priority.
Jeremiah Fears, New Orleans Pelicans (29% rostered)
Queen isn't the only exciting rookie on the Pelicans. They didn't waste much time putting Fears in a prominent role, moving him into the starting lineup in their third game of the season. He hasn't relinquished the job. As a starter, he has averaged 15.4 points, 3.5 rebounds, 3.2 assists, 1.5 steals and 1.3 three-pointers. The downside has been him shooting 42.3% from the field.
Jordan Poole (quadriceps) is nearing a return, but even when he does come back, it's not likely that he removes Fears from the starting five. If anything, the Pelicans might be looking to trade Poole. The long-term concern with Fears is that Dejounte Murray (Achilles) is aiming to return in January. Still, when he does come back, he could be on a minutes restriction for a while. We could get at least another month of Fears being a significant fantasy contributor, and possibly longer.
Ryan Nembhard, Dallas Mavericks (23% rostered)
After being inserted into the Mavericks' starting lineup, Nembhard immediately provided some juicy fantasy stat lines. He was then tested in his last two games with difficult matchups against the Thunder and Rockets, who are the top two teams in the league in defensive rating. First, he produced 10 points, four assists and two three-pointers against the Thunder. He followed that up with 11 points, seven assists and a steal against the Rockets.
Nembhard playing well against the best defensive teams in the league is certainly encouraging for his fantasy outlook moving forward. The Mavericks lost to the Thunder (who doesn't?), but they pulled off the upset over the Rockets. With Nembhard as a starter, they have a 4-2 record. That should help him retain his starting job moving forward.
Maxime Raynaud, Sacramento Kings (22% rostered)
Domantas Sabonis has played at least 70 games in each of the last three seasons. That won't happen this season, as he is currently out with a partially torn meniscus in his left knee. Drew Eubanks was provided an opportunity to start when Sabonis got hurt, but he wasn't able to make much of an impact. That has resulted in Raynaud surpassing him on the Kings depth chart. Across the last five games, the rookie center has averaged 15.6 points, 6.8 rebounds, 2.0 assists and 1.0 blocks.
The Kings can make some odd lineup decisions, but with how well Raynaud has played, it would be shocking if he lost minutes to Eubanks moving forward. Those in deeper formats who need a big man should look for Raynaud on their waiver wire.
LOS ANGELES — Oklahoma City continues to look dominant, and San Antonio earned the right to be the next team to test them — and maybe with Victor Wembanyama back in the lineup. Here is what happened on Wednesday night in the Western Conference quarterfinals matchups in the NBA Cup.
Spurs 132, Lakers 119
San Antonio came in with a plan.
First, get out in transition. Trust the team's depth of ball handling guards to run past the Lakers — and the Spurs executed that, with a ridiculous 188.9 net rating in transition (stat via Cleaning the Glass).
"I think our pace was great from the start of the game kind of opened up the court for us," said Stephon Castle, who led the Spurs with 30 points. "They had a couple loud plays, but I feel like we came together and clamped down when we needed it most."
The Spurs also wanted to make Luka Dončić a scorer, and avoid fouling and putting him and Austin Reaves on the line, which is what cost the Spurs when they lost to the Lakers earlier in the season. That part of the Spurs plan worked, too. Doncic had 35 points and eight assists, but never got his teammates going until one too-little, too-late push in the fourth. The Spurs also got to the free-throw line 36 times to the Lakers' 23, and San Antonio finished with a dozen more points from the line.
Finally, San Antonio wanted to trust its depth and 3-point shooting. The Spurs won the bench scoring battle 48-31 and shot 17-of-38 (44.7%) from beyond the arc.
The result was a 132-119 San Antonio win that sends them to Las Vegas and the semifinals against the Thunder on Saturday.
After the game, multiple Spurs players spoke about the spark Keldon Johnson provided off the bench. He was red-hot to open the game, shooting 3-of-3 from beyond the arc (5-of-6 overall) with 13 first-quarter points, and behind him and that pace, the Spurs led 39-30 after one.
The Lakers started the second quarter 0-for-6 from the field, while the Spurs were knocking down 3-pointers and San Antonio stretched its lead to 17.
Midway through the second quarter, after coach J.J. Redick picked up a technical, the Lakers started playing harder on defense — not coincidentally, Marcus Smart was in the middle of it — and cut into the Spurs' lead with an 11-2 run. It's then that LeBron had the highlight of the night.
Still, the Spurs showed some composure and pushed their lead back up to a dozen, 70-58, at the half.
That trend continued into the third — every time the Lakers made a play that fired up the crowd and started to close the gap, the Spurs answered.
The Lakers made a fourth-quarter push behind a small-ball lineup with LeBron James (or maybe Rui Hachimura) as the center, cutting the lead to eight in the fourth quarter. Once again, the Spurs responded.
"You don't want to speak it to existence, but when you play a team like that, it's not a matter if, it's a matter of when that run is going to happen," Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said. "You're not going to blow out a team like that for 48 minutes. And so when they start making some plays… you just got to maintain the course, play the game and what's being called upon, and execute. I thought we did a phenomenal job of that."
Johnson also said postgame that Victor Wembanyama had "a very good day" and there is "very much" a chance we will see him in Las Vegas against Oklahoma City. Wemby warmed up pregame, without any kind of sleeve or wrap on his strained calf, and seemed to move well and without pain.
The Spurs could use him, they are going to need everything to beat the Thunder.
Oklahoma City 138, Phoenix 89
Any other questions?
Oklahoma City went up double-digits within the first four minutes of the game. That lead reached 20 less than 10 minutes into the contest. By halftime, it was 74-48 Thunder, and in the third quarter they put up 36 points and had a 17-6 run in the middle of the frame.
Oklahoma City came into the most meaningful game of the young season — with a trip to Vegas and a larger player bonus on the line — and just thrashed the upstart Phoenix Suns, ultimately winning by 49, 138-89.
With the win, Oklahoma City improves to 24-1 on the season, tying the 2015-16 Golden State Warriors — the team that set the NBA record with 73 wins in a season — for the fastest start in league history.
As has been the pattern all season, the Thunder offense gets the headlines — Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 28, Chet Holmgren 24 — but it was really their defense, holding the Suns to under 40% shooting (39.3%) that was the real difference on the night. OKC forced 21 Phoenix turnovers and converted those to 34 points (the shorthanded Suns were without Devin Booker and Jalen Green, their two best shot creators).
28 for Shai on 11-15 shooting. 24 for Chet on 9-13 shooting.
That win gave the Thunder a franchise-record 16th straight victory, and they head to Las Vegas to face the Spurs on Saturday in the NBA Cup semifinals.
Phoenix showed some fight — literally. Grayson Allen got ejected for leveling Chet Holmgren on a screen.
Grayson Allen has been ejected from Suns-Thunder after being assessed a flagrant 2 for his hard foul on Chet Holmgren.
At that point, the Suns were down 36, and Allen's move did not spark some kind of Phoenix run. Dillon Brooks led the Suns with 16 points, but on 4-of-16 shooting. It was that kind of night for Phoenix, but Oklahoma City is doing this to a lot of teams.
Luka Doncic reacts after he is called for a foul in the first half Wednesday. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
LeBron James refused to look too far into the future to say what kind of team the Lakers might be when the playoffs arrive in April while they are still playing games in December.
Even though it was the NBA Cup quarterfinal game the Lakers lost to the San Antonio Spurs, 132-119, James didn’t want to venture into how things would unfold.
Two years ago, when the Lakers went to Las Vegas and won the inaugural NBA Cup championship, James cautioned then that they had a long way to go and that that wasn’t an indicator or what that team could accomplish.
Not making it to Las Vegas this time and instead now having to play the Suns in Phoenix on Sunday, James was asked where the Lakers stand long term when it comes to competing for the playoffs.
"It's December what?" James responded.
He was told it was December 10.
“And you're talking about the playoffs? Nah, can't do that. It's not OK. Not my mindset,” James said. “I don't. I can't think about what we can do in the playoffs in December. What I can say is that the habits that we built throughout the regular season each month, if we are in a position to make it to the postseason and be able to get to that point, well, we have to build it now. But as far as talking about what type of damage we're gonna do in the postseason in December, that's not right for the basketball gods, not for me."
James’ team showed they still have so many holes to fill on defense, a sign of how far they have to go to be a championship-quality team.
The Lakers allowed the Spurs to shoot 50% from the field, 44.7% from three-point range, seemingly being unable to slow down the faster and more athletic young Spurs who were playing without their best player, center Victor Wembanyama (left calf strain).
Still, the Spurs had seven players score in double figures, led by Stephon Castle’s 30 points and De’Aaron Fox’s 20.
They will face the defending NBA champion Oklahoma City Thunder in the semifinals in Las Vegas on Saturday.
“Obviously, it's a unique team. They got six guys that can literally, six or seven guys that can break you down off the dribble,” James said about the Spurs. “Super fast, super quick. Some of them are stronger, some of them are faster, some are quicker ball-handlers. Unique team and they definitely got the best of us."
For the 17-7 Lakers, they will improve on defense.
“I think it was more defensively tonight,” said Luka Doncic, who had 35 points and eight assists. “ They were just dragging us. We scored (119) points. So, I think it’s enough to win. We just got to be better (on defense).”
The Lakers got down by as much as 24 points in the fourth and made a run to get to within eight points late in the fourth quarter.
Marcus Smart came off the bench to score 26 and James had 19 points, 15 rebounds and eight assists.
When the Lakers needed someone to lift them when they got down by 18 points in the second, they got it from the oldest player on the court, 40-year-old James.
James drove down the lane and threw down a thunderous dunk over Spurs 7-1 center Luke Kornet, bringing the Lakers to within eight points and charging up the crowd in the process.
James growled and yelled in the face of the reeling Kornet. The crowd stood and cheered, now happy that there was a Lakers’ awakening.
Lebron James and Jaxson Hayes react after James dunked against Spurs center Luke Kornet in the first half. (Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times)
But the Lakers couldn’t hold on to that momentum, falling behind 70-58 at the half.
And then when the third quarter started, the Lakers came out flat, giving up back-to-back threes and two more easy baskets for the Spurs to fall into an 80-60 hole early in the third.
“It was just a play. You always wish, you hope that momentum plays would carry over,” James said. “And that was a moment where we had an opportunity. We had two straight turnovers after that. It went from an eight-point game to a 12-point game to end the half. So we did have some momentum going into the halftime and then started the third, we went back down 20.”
Joe Dumars, newly in charge of the New Orleans front office, made what was seen as the biggest blunder in the 2025 NBA Draft — and Derik Queen was catching strays. Dumars and the Pelicans traded control of their first-round pick in the 2026 NBA Draft — seen as an incredibly deep draft at the top — to Atlanta for the rights to move up 10 spots and get Queen, a big man from Maryland. To say that trade was ripped to shreds by the media and other front offices is an understatement.
Queen, however, is making Dumars look much better with his play this season, including a recent 30-point triple-double.
DERIK QUEEN: 33p, 10r, 10a, 4b
The FIRST ROOKIE since blocks began being tracked in 1973-74 to record a 30-point triple-double with 4 blocks! pic.twitter.com/VRk0dvbcqk
"I get it. So much of today's NBA narrative is around picks and different things like that," Dumars told ESPN. "I'm trying to build culture here with some really good young players, and I gave up some draft capital to do that. And I love the two young players we have [Jeremiah Fears and Queen]. I hope that doesn't get lost in all of this."
I've been [hearing] it all my life," Queen said. "Like everybody hated me [before the season started]. I played a little bit at the beginning, and the whole media was hating me. And then once I got to that Charlotte game [and had 12 points, eight rebounds and seven assists on Nov. 4], the whole media started liking me.
"[I'm used to] pretty much people not liking me at one moment, then liking me later on in life."
Two things can be true: Queen can be better than expected and a future star, and the process and price to move up 10 spots to get him can also be very flawed.
Queen's potential was no secret around the draft, despite a rough NBA Draft Combine that led to a slide down draft boards. In grading the June draft I wrote: "Queen is the most skilled power forward/center in this draft... Queen has potential, but the cost of that 2026 pick was steep." Watch Queen in person and his ability to get off his shot and his touch are impressive. He is better than I thought he would be.
Queen should not be catching strays in this debate.
That said, right now the Pelicans have the worst record in the NBA — Dumars traded away the rights to what right now would be a guaranteed top-five pick with a 40% chance of landing in the top three. Whatever happens between now and June, that is going to be a very high draft pick in what is projected to be one of the deepest drafts at the top in a long time. There is a reason other teams have been hoarding picks in this draft rather than trading them away.
Queen, to his credit, looks like one of the best rookies in what has been an impressive 2025 draft class so far.
Clippers coach Tyronn Lue talks to guard Chris Paul during a game against the Charlotte Hornets on Nov. 22. Lue has denied a report that he and Paul weren't on speaking terms in the weeks leading up to the 40-year-old player's dismissal from the team. (Nell Redmond / Associated Press)
“Stuff’s been a little crazy in the past few days — to say the least,” Paul told People magazine in an interview published Tuesday. “But honestly, I’m home. My daughter had tryouts yesterday. My nephew had a basketball game. My son has a game coming up on the 12th.”
Paul's son, Chris Paul II, is a sophomore guard for the Campbell Hall varsity basketball team, which plays Newbury Park on Friday.
“I have never seen my son play a game in person," the elder Paul said. "Not a middle school game, not a high school game. So I’m excited about seeing him play.”
Also on Tuesday, Clippers coach Tyronn Lue denied an ESPN report from last week that he and Paul hadn't been on speaking terms in the weeks leading up to the team's decision to part ways with one of its most iconic players.
“That ain’t true. We were talking," Lue told reporters at practice. "I mean, he played. How he gonna play [if] I’m not talking to him?
"I mean, there was a stretch when we said he wasn’t gonna play, he’s gonna be out of the rotation. That was tough for him because he’s a competitor and what the game means to him and what he brings every single day. But after that it wasn’t really much.”
Paul is a 12-time All-Star and two-time Olympic gold medalist who ranks second in NBA history with 12,552 assists. He was the first player with at least 20,000 points and more than 10,000 assists.
This season, Paul averaged career lows in points (2.6), assists (3.3.) and minutes (14.3). He didn’t play at all in five consecutive games in mid-November. The Clippers, off to a disastrous 5-16 start to the season, were in Atlanta for a game against the Hawks when Paul made a surprise announcement on social media.
“Just Found Out I’m Being Sent Home,” Paul posted Dec. 3 on social media at around 3 a.m. Eastern time.
Later that morning, Clippers president of basketball operations Lawrence Frank confirmed the move.
“We are parting ways with Chris, and he will no longer be a part of the team,” Frank said in a statement. “We will work with him on the next step of his career."
Frank indicated that the team will attempt to trade Paul, who becomes trade-eligible on Monday.
A league source not authorized to discuss the issue publicly told The Times last week that Paul had called out teammates, coaches and Frank this season. Paul apologized, but “everyone was fed up,” the source said.
Lue insisted Tuesday that his relationship with Paul wasn't an issue.
"I had no problem with Chris," Lue said. "The guy’s a competitor, he wants to play. You can understand that. So, you know, he was a little frustrated at first, but we got over that. … That’s my guy, my friend before he got here. So you don’t want to see that happen to anybody no matter what the circumstances are."
Asked why the team ultimately decided the situation with Paul couldn't be fixed, Lue responded, “You gotta ask Lawrence.”
In his interview with People, Paul didn't offer any insight on what happened between him and the Clippers. Instead, he seems to be focused on the present — "I’m excited to be back here with my family,” Paul said — and the future.
“More than anything, I’m excited about being around," he said, "and getting a chance to play a small role in whatever anything looks like next."
Staff writer Broderick Turner contributed to this report.