Steve Kerr reveals whether Moses Moody has solidified role as Warriors starter

Steve Kerr reveals whether Moses Moody has solidified role as Warriors starter originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Warriors have been rolling since Moses Moody was reinserted into the starting lineup, an adjustment that likely won’t change anytime soon.

Since suffering a blowout road loss to the defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder last week that resulted in several team meetings, Warriors coach Steve Kerr changed some things around and plugged Moody into the first five, alongside Steph Curry, Will Richard, Jimmy Butler and Draymond Green.

Since then, the Warriors have won three games in a row, and Moody is averaging 18.3 points on 48.6-percent shooting from the field and 50 percent from 3-point range, with 3.3 rebounds, 1.3 assists and 1.0 steals in 30 minutes.

On 95.7 The Game’s “Willard & Dibs” on Monday, Kerr was asked if he believes Moody has solidified a spot in his starting lineup going forward.

“Well, he started the last 30 games last year. One of the reasons we liked him in that role is because we had lost [Andrew Wiggins] in the trade for Jimmy and Moses was the best-suited guy to guard the ball,” Kerr explained. “He’s doing a great job of that. So he’s a really good fit next to Steph, Jimmy and Dray. He guards the ball and he’s very efficient offensively. He doesn’t turn it over and knocks down shots.

“I never want to say for sure that everything is set in stone because things happen and combinations change and all that stuff, but I don’t foresee Moses coming out of the lineup, I would say that.”

Moody is coming off a career game in which he erupted for 32 points with seven 3s in the first quarter of Golden State’s 124-106 win against the New Orleans Pelicans on Sunday.

The 23-year-old underwent right thumb surgery to repair a torn UCL that affected him during the NBA playoffs last season.

That offseason surgery — combined with inspiration from former teammate Klay Thompson — led Moody to make a slight tweak with his shot. So far, that adjustment has made all the difference as Moody is shooting 45 percent from beyond the arc on 6.6 attempts per game this season.

Now that the Warriors have figured out a lineup that’s proven to work thus far, Moody’s role appears to be solidified at least for now.

Why fix something that isn’t broken, right?

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NBA issues warning to Warriors' Draymond Green after viral encounter with fan: Report

NBA issues warning to Warriors' Draymond Green after viral encounter with fan: Report originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Draymond Green received a slap on the wrist for his encounter with a fan in the Golden State Warriors’ 124-106 win over the New Orleans Pelicans on Sunday at Smoothie King Center.

With 2:02 remaining in the second quarter, Green was seen interacting with a fan sitting courtside, who the Warriors forward later revealed was taunting him by repeatedly referring to him as Chicago Sky forward Angel Reese after he failed to tip in a missed layup several times, among other things.

Well, the NBA did not approve of Green’s heated interaction with the fan, and issued him a warning, ESPN’s Shams Charania reported Tuesday, citing a source.

The fan was not ejected from Sunday’s game, but similarly to Green, was issued a warning by arena security.

In the end, both sides were warned, and it’s safe to assume that when Golden State returns to New Orleans on Feb. 24, everyone will be on their best behavior.

Right?

Steve Kerr reveals De'Anthony Melton is ‘not very close' to Warriors return

Steve Kerr reveals De'Anthony Melton is ‘not very close' to Warriors return originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Warriors continue to take a cautious approach with De’Anthony Melton’s ACL injury recovery.

Steve Kerr recently revealed the veteran guard still has a way to go before returning to the court for Golden State and making his season debut.

“Melton is with us on the trip and really putting in the work, starting to scrimmage and that kind of stuff,” Kerr said Tuesday on 95.7 The Game’s “Willard & Dibs.” “But he’s not very close because, as you know, he missed all of last year pretty much. So he needs to really do a lot of on-court scrimmaging and rhythm work.

“The good news is he’s getting healthier and stronger every day, and he’s definitely going to play a part of the season coming up. We just don’t have an exact date yet.”

Melton signed with Golden State during the 2024 offseason and suffered a season-ending ACL injury just six games into the 2024-25 season. He later was traded to the Brooklyn Nets before returning to the Warriors this past offseason.

In six games (two starts), Melton averaged 10.3 points on 40.7-percent shooting from the field and 37.1 percent from 3-point range, with 3.3 rebounds, 2.8 assists and 1.2 steals in 20.2 minutes.

In the two contests Melton started, he dramatically helped elevate the offense alongside Curry, averaging 16.5 points on 47.8 percent shooting from the field and 50 percent from distance, with 7.0 rebounds, 3.0 assists and 2.0 steals in 26.5 minutes.

The Warriors were 4-2 with Melton in their lineup.

Golden State has had an up-and-down start to the early portion of the 2025-26 season and sits in seventh place in the Western Conference with a 9-6 record.

While the Warriors are eager to get Melton back into the mix, it’s clear they’ll be as patient as possible with his return.

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Lakers' LeBron James won't play in 2028 Olympics; Warriors' Steph Curry unlikely

Lakers' LeBron James won't play in 2028 Olympics; Warriors' Steph Curry unlikely originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

It appears we have seen Steph Curry and LeBron James playing together on the court in meaningful games for the final time.

After the two superstars and longtime rivals joined forces to help secure a gold medal for Team USA at the 2024 Paris Summer Olympics, both were asked by James’ co-host, Steve Nash, on the latest episode of the “Mind The Game” podcast if they intend to participate again at the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles.

“You already know my answer,” James told Nash. “Don’t even ask. I will be watching from Cabo.”

“It is the opposite answer of what I told him last year,” Curry said. “It was like, God willing, I still have the choice and the physical option to be like, I could actually impact the team. Never say never, but I highly doubt it. Love to be a part of the movement.”

James will be 43 years old and Curry will be 40 at the time of the 2028 Olympics, and it’s fair to assume that both could be retired by then.

Team USA’s gold medal win in Paris last summer was so special, because the league’s iconic elder statesmen, like Curry, James and Kevin Durant, all joined forces to create a super team with other NBA stars that rivaled, and perhaps exceeded, the talent of the famous 1992 “Dream Team.”

Their heroics last summer, specifically Curry’s, made for some of the most memorable moments in basketball history, and James doesn’t believe it could get much better in 2028.

“We can’t top what we just did,” James added. “How are we going to top those last two games?”

Without James, Curry, and perhaps Durant, who also will be 40 in the Summer of 2028, it appears Team USA will need new leadership at the next Olympics as it looks to secure another gold medal.

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The Luka Era begins: inside the transformation powering the post-LeBron Lakers

Luka Dončić is the LA Lakers’ franchise player-in-waiting.Photograph: Patrick McDermott/Getty Images

It’s been nine and a half months since the trade that rocked the sports world was broken via a Shams Charania tweet. It was such a shock that the majority of his followers assumed he’d been hacked. Fresh off of a trip to the NBA finals, the young Slovenian superstar Luka Dončić was shipped off in the middle of the night to the Los Angeles Lakers for Anthony Davis, and the NBA as we know it was changed for ever. The fallout from one of the most shocking trades in sports history is still evolving: disgraced Mavericks general manager Nico Harrison, who spearheaded the transaction, was let go by the team last week, in a move Mavericks fans have been loudly clamoring for since news broke that their homegrown franchise player was being abruptly cast out to sea. But on the other side of the coin was a mixed blessing and a new beginning: Dončić, who had imagined spending his entire career in Dallas like his mentor Dirk Nowitzki, suddenly found himself recast as the face of the NBA’s most famous franchise under the bright lights of Hollywood. And, as it turns out, the future is now.

While Dončić’s breakup with the Mavericks was both very public and very messy (the Mavs were not shy about vocalizing their reasoning for the move, and painting the 26-year-old in an unflattering light in the process), the silver linings showed themselves quickly. Dončić might not have considered himself suited for the Los Angeles spotlight, but with his flair for the dramatic and a feel for the sport’s theater, playing for such a high-profile franchise has proved an unexpectedly good fit. And it couldn’t have worked out better for the Lakers: the team had been staring at an uncertain future, with the retirement of 40-year-old LeBron James looming, and Davis’s injury history creating a cloud of doubt around his ability to be the No 1 option in the eventual aftermath. Enter Luka stage right: a ticket to franchise salvation, equipped with the newfound motivation that can only be borne from being publicly and mercilessly dragged through the mud.

Of course, James’s retirement has been far less imminent than anyone anticipated; his unprecedented longevity and level of play continue to shatter records and defy logic. So instead of a passing of the torch, the months after Dončić’s arrival looked more like a torch collaboration. But James’s bout with sciatica this summer, which has sidelined him for the first month of the season and caused him to miss the first opening night of his 23-year career, brought about a dress rehearsal for the post-LeBron Lakers era. The roster remains a bit clunky, but Dončić is beginning to lean into his newfound leadership role – and those around him are convinced he’s the man for the job. And not only because his 34.4 points per game lead the NBA by a wide margin. The Lakers are 10–4, fourth in the Western Conference behind only Oklahoma City, Denver and Houston, and the prospect of life after LeBron suddenly looks, well, not so scary after all.

Dončić has always been special, and the brightest minds in the NBA have recognized it from the start. When the Miami Heat visited Los Angeles in early November, I asked Erik Spoelstra what he believes sets Dončić apart. “Just an incredible competitive spirit,” he told me. “I remember the first time I saw him play – I’ll never forget it. I went to watch Goran Dragić at EuroBasket, so I stopped by their training camp. Luka was 18, and everyone in the gym was stunned by how cerebral his game already was. He could make all the rotations, all the reads, just pick you apart. His fundamentals, his footwork, his skill level – all elite. But more than anything, even then, he could rise to the level of competition. That’s what all the great ones do: competition brings out something most players can’t reach.”

“Quiet” was the word Lakers guard Marcus Smart used to describe Dončić’s leadership style in the early days of the season, shortly after the former Defensive Player of the Year had logged his first few games with his new team. “He leads by example,” Smart said. But something is starting to shift for Dončić, whose career-long approach to leadership has largely been, as Smart suggests, to be brilliant without saying much.

There’s a newfound maturity and commitment in Dončić’s approach this year, even if he still shows more youthful exuberance than almost anyone in the league. It became apparent as early as the summer, when rumblings spread that he’d undertaken a drastic overhaul of his diet – followed soon after by a striking Men’s Health feature revealing a noticeably leaner, more sculpted Dončić. The transformation (and the PR push around it) was almost certainly fueled by the Mavericks’ smear campaign in the wake of Dončić’s exit, which sought to question everything from his work ethic to his relationship with alcohol.

Off the court, Dončić is soft-spoken and even-keeled, happiest laying low with his wife, his baby daughter and his video games. On the court he’s a demon: one of the league’s fiercest competitors, a player who seems to take genuine delight in tormenting opponents. For all his gifts, that almost manic competitiveness may be his defining trait. And seeing it up close makes something obvious: there was never a version of reality in which being cast off the way he was in February led to anything other than this, the moment he turned into the Terminator.

Dončić acknowledges that his approach has shifted. He’s been noticeably more vocal this season, and when asked whether that’s intentional, he doesn’t hesitate. “Definitely [more vocal], just trying to help the guys,” he says. But he credits the change partly to improved chemistry, stressing that he still wants leadership to feel shared. “I think leadership shouldn’t be just one player – it should be more players, and I think we have that. Everyone talks a lot. It feels like everyone is on the same page.”

Those around him have noticed the growth. Lakers head coach JJ Redick says he’s seen a real shift from last season: “I think he’s letting his teammates in right now,” he says. Austin Reaves – the Lakers guard who has developed an easy, teasing rapport with Dončić in the months since his arrival – sees it too, and isn’t surprised it took some time. “It’s human nature when things like last year happen. Nobody ever thought that was gonna happen … I’m sure he was in a state of shock,” Reaves says. “Having to move, move his family – it was tough. But now I think he’s just getting comfortable, having a good time.”

When James returns to make his season debut, which could happen as soon as Tuesday night against the Utah Jazz, the soft opening of the Lakers’ Luka Era will come to a temporary close. But the forward momentum won’t halt: the progress Dončić has made with the keys to the franchise in hand are palpable, and likely here to stay. He knows the future is his, and he seems more comfortable with that fact than ever.

NBA reportedly issues Warriors' Draymond Green warning after viral fan encounter

NBA reportedly issues Warriors' Draymond Green warning after viral fan encounter originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Draymond Green received a slap on the wrist for his encounter with a fan in the Golden State Warriors’ 124-106 win over the New Orleans Pelicans on Sunday at Smoothie King Center.

With 2:02 remaining in the second quarter, Green was seen interacting with a fan sitting courtside, who the Warriors forward later revealed was taunting him by repeatedly referring to him as Chicago Sky forward Angel Reese after he failed to tip in a missed layup several times, among other things.

Well, the NBA did not approve of Green’s heated interaction with the fan, and issued him a warning, ESPN’s Shams Charania reported Tuesday, citing a source.

The fan was not ejected from Sunday’s game, but similarly to Green, was issued a warning by arena security.

In the end, both sides were warned, and it’s safe to assume that when Golden State returns to New Orleans on Feb. 24, everyone will be on their best behavior.

Right?

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Knicks still searching for first road win following 115-113 loss to Heat

The Knicks lost to the Miami Heat, 115-113, on Monday night despite an exciting comeback late in the fourth quarter and are still in search of their first road win this season.

Here are the key takeaways...

-- Without starters OG Anunoby and Jalen Brunson, New York went with a starting five of Landry Shamet, Miles McBride, Mikal Bridges, Karl-Anthony Towns and Mitchell Robinson. That unit struggled to get things going offensively from the jump as the Knicks managed to score just 20 points in the opening quarter. 

In fact, only McBride, Bridges and Josh Hart were able to hit a shot in the first 12 minutes in which New York shot 3-for-9 from deep and 7-for-21 overall. But thanks to an equally poor offensive showing from Miami (25 points on 9-for-25 from the field), the Knicks trailed the Heat by only five points heading to the second quarter.

-- New York changed its tune in the first few minutes of the second quarter and took the lead on a 7-0 run with Jordan Clarkson and Shamet getting in on the action. Things went back and forth from there as both teams exchanged buckets which lead to multiple ties and lead changes. 

The Knicks' last lead in the quarter came on Hart's two-pointer with 2:33 left in the half that gave his team a 46-44 advantage. From there, the Heat went on an 11-5 run, including Davion Mitchell's 25-foot three-pointer with less than 10 seconds remaining, to enter halftime with a four-point lead.

-- Out of the break, Towns took over offensively for New York, which needed someone to step up without two of its starters. Towns scored eight of the team's first 10 points of the second half, making his presence felt underneath the rim. Along with Towns were Robinson, Bridges and Hart, who all scored their points inside the paint.

-- Amazingly, the Knicks scored 31 points in the third quarter without making a single three-pointer after they finished the quarter 0-for-5 from deep. As for Miami, it went 4-for-7 from beyond the arc, but the team missed multiple mid-range shots to allow New York to climb back with its patient but effective offensive approach.

-- Down one headed to the fourth quarter, the Knicks took multiple leads in the first few minutes. They even hit a three-pointer when McBride drilled a deep one to untie the game with 10:44 left in the game. It would be the only triple made by either team for nearly eight minutes as both offenses leaned on attacking the rim.

-- During that time, the Heat went on a 14-3 run to take the lead and separate themselves by 10 points with 3:10 to play. However, McBride would hit two threes to cut Miami's lead to four points and after Towns drilled two free throws with 1:10 left the Knicks were down by just two points. 

After a Norman Powell two-pointer upped the Heat's lead back to four, Towns buried one from deep to make it a one-point game with 22.4 seconds left. New York immediately fouled on Miami's next possession and had a chance to tie or take the lead on its next possession after Mitchell made one of two free throws. 

-- It appeared as though the Knicks did tie it after Kel'el Ware was called for goaltending on Towns' two-point shot with 13.2 seconds remaining, but after a ref-initiated review the goaltending call was overturned. New York had another chance to tie it or win the game, but McBride missed a shot from four feet out and the game was over.

-- McBride finished with a game-high 25 points on 10-for-23 shooting (5-for-12 from deep), but came up short on the biggest shot of the night.

-- The Knicks are now 0-4 away from MSG this season.

Game MVP: Kel'el Ware

Not only did his controversial block (one of three on the night) at the end serve as the game-winning play, he also had a double-double (16 points, 14 rebounds).

Highlights

What's next

The Knicks continue their road trip with a bout against the Mavericks in Dallas on Wednesday night. Tipoff is set for 9:30 p.m.

Bucks' Giannis Antetokounmpo leaves Monday's game with groin injury, won't return

Milwaukee Bucks' All-Star forward Giannis Antetokounmpo injured his groin just three minutes before halftime in the Milwaukee Bucks' game on Monday against the Cleveland Cavaliers.

The nine-time All-Star appeared to tweak something earlier in the game but had played through it. Then, with 3:16 left in the second half, he attempted a layup through contact and missed. As soon as he landed, he winced in pain but was able to get down the court to commit a foul on defense. He immediately walked off the court and into the locker room and was later ruled out for the remainder of the game.

It's too early to have any firm timeline on how long Antetokounmpo could be out, but the way that he was unable to run and the quickness with which he left the court and headed to the locker room are not positive signs. Even groin injuries that don't appear significant at first, like the one suffered by Magic forward Paolo Banchero last week, can lead to at least a week's absence. Teams also tend to be more cautious with stars like Antetokounmpo, especially this early in the season, as we saw with the Spurs deciding to hold Victor Wembanyama out for 2-3 weeks with a calf strain.

Antetokounmpo was in the middle of another solid performance on Monday, posting 14 points, five rebounds, four assists, and one steal in 13 minutes on 6-10 shooting from the field. On the season, the 30-year-old is 2nd in the NBA in points per game with 32.6, while also averaging 11.3 rebounds, 7.1 assists, and 1.3 blocks for the Bucks.

Milwaukee started the second half with Jericho Sims in the lineup for Antetokounmpo. That was the first time Sims had entered the game on Monday, and the 27-year-old came into the game averaging 1.0 points, 1.8 rebounds, and 0.3 assists in 6.8 minutes per game on the season. If Antetokounmpo were to miss an extended period of time, it remains to be seen how Milwaukee would try to plug the hole in their lineup, but his loss would be close to an insurmountable one.

Victor Wembanyama out with left calf strain, reportedly will be re-evaluated in 2-3 weeks

Victor Wembanyama missed his first game of the season on Sunday due to a sore calf, a condition the Spurs had been playing down (he was wearing a sleeve over his calf postgame, but no walking boot), and the team went out and earned a win over Sacramento without him. San Antonio will need more of that in the next couple of weeks.

An MRI determined that Wembanyama has a strained left calf and the team has listed him as out. Multiple reports have said he is expected to be re-evaluated in 2-3 weeks.

Wembanyama has been a force this season on both ends of the court, playing at a level that gets him mentioned in the early MVP conversation. Wembanyama is averaging 26.2 points a game while shooting 34.5% from beyond the arc (but he has lowered his number of attempted 3s and is getting closer to the basket), plus grabbing 12.9 rebounds and dishing out four assists a night. His 3.6 blocked shots a night leads the league.

When Wembanyama is off the court, the Spurs' defense is 10.8 points per 100 possessions worse. Still, thanks to strong guard play, the Spurs still outscore teams by 1.5 per 100 without him.

Expect just returned De'Aaron Fox to have a couple of big weeks carrying the San Antonio offense, he had 28 points and 11 assists on Sunday. Luke Kornet will move into the starting center slot (he had a solid game against the Kings Sunday with 13 points and 11 boards), and veteran big man Kelly Olynyk also should see more run off the bench.

Wembanyama joins No. 2 pick Dylan Harper in street clothes for the Spurs due to a calf strain. In the wake of what happened with Tyrese Haliburton in the Finals last season — when he tried to play through a sore calf and tore his Achilles — and similar injuries, teams are being far more cautious this season with calf strains.

LeBron James practices with Lakers, has yet to decide if he will return to court Tuesday vs. Jazz

LeBron James went through his first full practice with the Lakers, coming off a couple of practices with the franchise's G-League team, but his status for the Lakers' game Tuesday against the Utah Jazz remains "TBD," as Lakers coach J.J. Redick put it.

"Just trying to get back to where I feel like myself again," LeBron said after practice, via the Associated Press. "Got to see how the body responds over the next 24 hours-plus."

The Lakers have the front end of a home-and-home with the Utah Jazz on Tuesday night at Crypto.com Arena. After that, the Lakers are off until Sunday, when they face the Jazz in Salt Lake City, before returning home to face the Clippers in a critical West Group B NBA Cup game, which you can watch on Nov. 25 on NBC and Peacock.

LeBron said he's feeling good.

"My lungs feel like a newborn baby," LeBron said. "That's the most important thing: I've got to get my lungs back up to a grown man. My voice is already gone (from) one day back barking out calls and assignments and stuff. Got to get my voice working again. Be a lot of tea and rest tonight. Feels good to be out here with the guys. Missed them."

LeBron missed all of training camp as well as the first 14 games of the season due to sciatica on his right side. This started back in August, and from the first days, the plan has been for him to take his time and return to the court in mid-November. This week fits that timeline.

Whenever he does set foot on an NBA court this season, LeBron will set a record as the first player ever to reach 23 seasons in the league. Even without LeBron, the Lakers are 10-4 to start the season, led by a top-10 offense sparked by Luka Doncic playing at an MVP level.

LeBron James knows there will be a 'feel-out' process when he returns to Lakers

Lebron James wears a backwards cap and holds his left hand to his chin as sits on the Lakers bench.
Lakers star Lebron James sits on the bench during a preseason game against the Sacramento Kings on Oct. 17. (Jae C. Hong / Associated Press)

LeBron James said his lungs felt like those of a “newborn baby” and his voice was “already gone” after his first Lakers practice Monday as he moved a step closer toward making his season debut after being sidelined by sciatica.

The Lakers listed James as questionable for Tuesday night against the Utah Jazz at Crypto.com Arena, and he sounded as if he was close to playing in his NBA-record 23rd season.

"We got a long time,” said James as he wiped sweat from his face while speaking to reporters. “I mean, we've been taking literally one minute, one hour, one step at a time throughout this whole process. So, see how I feel this afternoon, see how I feel tonight. When I wake up in the morning. ... We'll probably have [a] shootaround [Tuesday]. So, just gotta see how the body responds over the next 24 hours-plus."

James, who will turn 41 next month, was asked how long it took him to become pain-free.

“I wouldn’t take it that far,” James said. “Like I said, if you ever had it, you go about it and you wake up one day and you hope that when you step down from the bed that you don’t feel it. You go to bed at night, and you hope that when you’re in the bed that you don’t feel it. So I’ve been doing pretty good with it as of late. There’s a lot of exercises and a lot of mobility things and a lot of things you can do to help it. So I’m just keeping a positive mindset.”

Lakers coach JJ Redick said it was like having a new player in practice with James on the court.

Read more:Plaschke: LeBron James is 'maybe' retiring? This is going to be fun

James agreed, saying, “Definitely feels new, for sure.”

The Lakers have four days off after Tuesday's game against Utah — including three practice days — before playing the Jazz in Salt Lake City on Sunday.

"One day back, barking out calls and assignments and stuff, getting my voice working again," said James about his first day at practice. "Be a lot of tea and rest tonight."

James, the NBA's all-time leading scorer (42,184 points), admitted he had to mentally adjust to missing the start of a season for the first time in his career.

"It sucks. It definitely sucks,” James said. “Never in my life since I started playing the game of basketball have I ever not started the season — in my life. It's been a mind test, but I'm built for it and it's been putting in the work, both mentally and physically trying to get myself ready to rejoin the team.

"It's just been kind of the same revolving door. Just repetition, repetition, repetition; rehabbing, rehabbing, rehabbing. Just trying to get back where I can feel like myself again. It's great to be out here today."

James said this wasn’t the first time in his career that he had sciatica.

“I had it two years ago,” he said. “You had it, then you know what the hell it’s about. If you ain’t never had it and people are making jokes about it, I pray you never get it. It’s not fun.”

James practiced with the Lakers’ G League team, the South Bay Lakers, twice last week, getting in some five-on-five work.

"It was great,” James said. “I got cleared to play some five-on-five for the first time since ... hurting my MCL versus Minnesota. And that was the blessing."

The Lakers have gone 10-4 without James. Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves have led the way as one of the most potent two-way tandems in the early part of the NBA season.

Read more:‘I don’t know’: Lakers’ LeBron James unsure when it comes to future

Doncic leads the NBA in scoring (34.4 points per game) and Reaves is ninth (28.3). Doncic is fifth in assists (8.9) and Reaves is seventh (8.2).

James, who is 50 games away from breaking Robert Parish’s all-time record of most games played in NBA history (1,611), knows he'll have to adjust things when he returns.

“I have to work my way back into it,” James said. “The guys have been going on road trips, shootarounds, flights. So it’s kind of like a kid going to a new school again. Got to learn the guys and everything. So they got some great chemistry. Feeling my way back in and do it organically. It shouldn’t be hard. But it’s definitely a feel-out process.”

Etc.

Redick said all 14 players practiced for the first time this season and that Rui Hachimura (left call soreness) and Marcus Smart (viral illness) will be available to play against the Jazz after sitting out against Milwaukee on Saturday.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Victor Wembanyama Calf Strain: Spurs' outlook and fantasy impact

San Antonio Spurs phenom Victor Wembanyama missed the team's most recent game with a left calf injury, and he will reportedly miss additional time. On Monday, the team announced that the 7-foot-4 center has been diagnosed with a left calf strain and is expected to be re-evaluated in two to three weeks.

To say that this is a critical blow to the Spurs and to fantasy basketball teams would be an understatement. From a value standpoint, only Denver's Nikola Jokić has been better thus far, with Oklahoma City's Shai Gilgeous-Alexander next in line. Where will the Spurs turn to fill the resulting void? And where else can fantasy managers look for reliable value? Let's look at the impact of Wembanyama's absence on fantasy basketball.

Who will replace Wembanyama in the starting lineup?

The answer to this question is straightforward: Luke Kornet (nine percent rostered, Yahoo!). Signed as a free agent this past summer, the 7-foot-2 center started Sunday's win over the Kings and finished with 13 points, 11 rebounds, one assist and three blocked shots. Kornet won't provide the three-point or assist value that Wemby brings to the table, but he's worth a look for managers needing a high field-goal percentage, rebounds and blocked shots.

Kelly Olynyk (one percent) played 18 minutes off the bench on Sunday but is only worth a look in the off chance the Spurs were to lose Kornet. Bismack Biyombo (less than one percent) is a non-starter in fantasy; he played the final two minutes of Sunday's game due to the result no longer in question.

Who else will Wembanyama’s absence impact?

The entire Spurs rotation will be impacted, albeit to varying degrees. De'Aaron Fox, who made his season debut on November 8 after missing the start of the season with a hamstring injury, is the player who may see his fantasy value increase the most. Over his last two games, Fox has totaled 52 points and 21 assists, shooting 21-of-42 from the field. In his first three appearances, the point guard attempted 14 shots in each.

The key for fantasy managers who have Fox rostered is that his efficiency remains the same as it has been in the last two games. After totaling 10 assists and 12 turnovers in the two games prior, he only committed six turnovers in the next two.

The efficiency is also key for Stephon Castle, who began the season as the starting point guard and continued to serve as a primary playmaker once Fox was cleared to play. However, the reigning Rookie of the Year exited Sunday's game before halftime with a hip injury and did not return. As long as he isn't out for an extended period, Castle (70 percent) stands to receive a bump to his fantasy value with Wembanyama out.

NBA: Atlanta Hawks at Utah Jazz
The Hawks forward has exceeded the expectations of many fantasy managers this season, especially after Trae Young went down.

Suppose Castle were to join Wembanyama on the sideline for an extended period. In that case, Julian Champagnie (three percent) is the most likely replacement, as he filled the resulting void to begin the second half on Sunday. Also, he started the season as a starter due to Fox's absence, averaging 10.1 points, 6.3 rebounds, 1.5 assists, 1.4 steals and 2.0 three-pointers in that role.

Devin Vassell, who has started all 14 games for the Spurs, is another player who could have the ball in his hands a bit more while the team looks to compensate for Wembanyama's absence. He dished out seven assists in Sunday's victory, but the wing's start to the season has been underwhelming from a fantasy standpoint. Injuries are never good, but Vassell's role becoming more critical could serve as a catalyst for him.

Observations after George returns, Maxey scores 39 in Sixers' comeback win

Observations after George returns, Maxey scores 39 in Sixers' comeback win originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Led by Tyrese Maxey’s 39 points, the Sixers battled back to snag a nervy win Monday night over the Clippers.

In Paul George’s season debut, the Sixers earned a 110-108 victory at Xfinity Mobile Arena. 

James Harden had two cracks at a go-ahead three-pointer on the game’s final possession, but he missed both. 

George had nine points on 2-for-9 shooting, seven rebounds and three assists in his return from offseason arthroscopic surgery on his left knee. Quentin Grimes scored 19 points. Andre Drummond posted 14 points and 18 rebounds.

Harden tallied 28 points. Ivica Zubac had a 14-point, 13-rebound double-double.

The Sixers were down Joel Embiid (right knee injury management), Kelly Oubre Jr. (left knee LCL injury) and Adem Bona (right ankle sprain).

The Clippers were missing four players, including Kawhi Leonard (right ankle sprain) and Bradley Beal (left hip fracture).

Sixers head coach Nick Nurse said pregame that Embiid remains day to day and he doesn’t think the star big man is far away from returning, although Embiid is “not quite pain-free,” According to Nurse, Oubre had a meeting with doctors set for Monday night. 

The 8-5 Sixers will face the Raptors on Wednesday night in Philadelphia. Here are observations on their win over the Clippers:

George’s 1st action

George scored the first hoop of the game, sinking a catch-and-shoot three-pointer on the right wing off of a Maxey feed. He then drew a foul on a jumper beyond the arc and made 2 of 3 free throws to give the Sixers a 5-0 lead. 

The Clippers followed with a 14-0 run. After George missed a jumper, Harden walked into a pull-up three and Nurse called timeout.

The Sixers’ offense was cold in the early going. Maxey started 0 for 3 from the floor and the Sixers began 2 for 11 as a team. George subbed out with 6:21 to go in the first quarter and the Sixers trailing by nine points. 

Nurse had expressed the reasonable hope that George would improve the Sixers’ defense right away. He certainly did not make an immediate positive impact. The Sixers had a poor start in transition and Los Angeles scored the night’s first nine fast-break points.

George finished with 21 minutes and seemed to have no trouble with conditioning. His movement appeared fine and George looked to be unbothered by contact, although the 35-year-old forward didn’t have many forceful moments as a driver. He and the Sixers will expect better nights ahead in his 16th NBA season.

Harden starts hot, Sixers adjust 

In addition to George, the Sixers started Maxey, VJ Edgecombe, Dominick Barlow and Drummond.

They used five men off the bench, including Jabari Walker in backup center minutes. Jared McCain checked in to open the second quarter alongside George.

Justin Edwards guarded Harden late in the first and had a tough time. Harden crossed over Edwards and waltzed in for an easy layup that extended the Clippers’ lead to 33-20. He racked up 17 points in the first quarter.

Edwards and the Sixers effectively contained Harden in the second quarter. They shaded help more strongly toward the 11-time All-Star when he surveyed the defense from the top of the floor. The Sixers also hedged pick-and-rolls and sent the occasional double team.

Still, with their offense light on any sustained success, the Sixers entered halftime down double digits. Brook Lopez’s long-range jumper with 2.3 seconds left in the second quarter put the Clippers up 56-46. 

Sixers capitalize on Clippers’ fatigue

For the second straight game, Nurse tweaked his starting lineup to begin the third quarter. Grimes replaced Barlow. When Barlow subbed in, he took over as the Sixers’ backup center.

The team’s new lineup put together a promising stretch. George sealed a stop with a block on John Collins and the Sixers scored on their ensuing possession with a Grimes three. Maxey knocked down a mid-range jumper to cut the Clippers’ lead to 64-61.

The Sixers were unable to maintain momentum in the third quarter. Harden’s and-one layup with 1.1 seconds remaining in the third built L.A.’s advantage to 83-73.

Eventually, the Sixers made the Clippers look like a fatigued team playing the second game of a back-to-back on the road.

Harden’s jumpers kept coming up short and he couldn’t create much against Grimes, who defended him very well. Maxey spearheaded a Sixers run. He nailed a three off of beautiful ball movement, converted an and-one bucket and knifed through the defense for a layup that gave the Sixers a 95-94 edge.

Once the Sixers grabbed the lead, the Clippers’ chances seemed slim. Edgecombe, Maxey and Grimes all drained clutch threes.

The Sixers couldn’t cement a win in convincing fashion. With his team up four points, Edgecombe missed a pair of free throws. And with the Clippers down two and pressuring the Sixers in the backcourt, Maxey turned the ball over.

The initial call on the floor was a foul, but Los Angeles won its challenge and got the ball with 11.7 seconds left. Harden’s misses meant the Sixers avoided what would have been a stinging loss.

Grizzlies' guard Ja Morant will miss two weeks with a strained calf

The Memphis Grizzlies announced Monday that All-Star point guard Ja Morant will be sidelined for the next two weeks with a Grade 1 calf strain.

Morant suffered the injury in the first quarter of Saturday night's road game against the Cleveland Cavaliers. He had scored seven points in six minutes before being subbed out of the game at the 6:01 mark with Memphis up 18-14 and not re-entering. The team will re-evaluate him in two weeks to determine how quickly he can return to the court.

The injury is another roadblock in what has been a tough start to the season for Morant and the Grizzlies.

Memphis is sitting at 4-10 on the season and has been without forward Brandon Clarke, guard Ty Jerome, guard Scotty Pippen Jr., and center Zach Edey for the entirety of the season up until this weekend. Edey returned for the first time this season in that same Cavaliers game in which Morant got hurt. Morant himself also missed one game with an ankle injury and was suspended for one game for conduct detrimental to the teamafter a loss to the Lakers on Halloween.

On one hand, this injury is another misstep in a season that is seeing the two-time All-Star post career lows in field goal percentage (35.9%), three-point shooting percentage (16.7%), effective field goal rate (38.5%), three-pointers made per game (0.8), and rebounds (3.0). He's also posting the lowest scoring mark since his rookie season at just 17.9 points per game.

However, on the other hand, this continues a concerning injury track record for the 26-year-old. He has never played 70 games or more in any of his six NBA seasons coming into this year. Last year, he was limited to 50 games, and the year before that, he played in just nine, in part due to a suspension for gun-related gestures and off-field behavior.

Despite Memphis insisting that they have no interest in trading Morant, the suspension and mounting injuries may force it to behave otherwise. Of course, a mounting injury toll for a player in the third year of a five-year, $197.2 million contract also could dampen any value on the trade market.

For now, the Grizzlies will move forward without Morant for the next two weeks. That should mean additional playing time for Vince Williams Jr., who started for Morant when he was forced to sit last week against the Celtics with an ankle injury. Williams had 12 points, five rebounds, and two assists in that game, and the 25-year-old is averaging 8.0 points, 4.2 rebounds, and 2.7 assists on 39.7% from the field in 19.3 minutes per game this season. We should also see a minutes increase for Cam Spencer off the bench and perhaps more of a scoring burden placed on starting shooting guard Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and starting small forward Cedric Coward, who has been a lone bright spot for the Grizzlies in his rookie season.

We'll get out first look at how the Grizzlies approach these next two weeks without Morant when they face off against the Spurs on Tuesday at 8 pm ET on NBC and Peacock.

Draymond Green criticizes Pelicans fan using Angel Reese's name to insult him

Draymond Green criticizes Pelicans fan using Angel Reese's name to insult him originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Draymond Green isn’t here for any Chi Barbie slander.

After the Warriors star’s odd courtside confrontation during Golden State’s 124-106 win over New Orleans on Sunday at Smoothie King Center, Green revealed on his podcast that the mouthy Pelicans fan repeatedly referred to him as Chicago Sky forward Angel Reese.

While Green admitted he chuckled about the taunt at first after failing to tip in a missed layup several times, he ultimately took issue with the fan using a prominent WNBA player’s name as a diss.

“By the way, to use Angel Reese’s name as a negative connotation, I really don’t like that for a young queen,” Green said on Monday’s episode of “The Draymond Green Show.” “Because she’s done what she’s done to become who she is, and so I really don’t like that in itself.”

Reese entered the WNBA in 2024 as a NCAA champion out of LSU with countless collegiate accolades to her name, earning All-Star honors in her first two professional seasons while leading the league in rebounds both years.

Green added that the fan hurled other “filler” insults at him as well, and he had to shut it down.

“I am Draymond Green, but make no mistake about it, you’re not going to continue to just call me a woman name and add other fillers to where your message, your underlying message, is becoming more and more clear,” Green continued. “And so I said something to him, you know, Hey, man, relax, like, like, watch yourself. Now you’re getting real disrespectful.”

The fan minded his own business after Green got involved and arena security issued him a warning.

And hopefully, said fan hears Green’s message about using a woman’s name to tear someone down.

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