Magic at Hawks predictions: odds, recent stats, trends and best bets for November 4

One of the premier matchups of the NBA slate is on NBC and Peacock tonight when two up-and-coming teams take center stage. The Orlando Magic and Atlanta Hawks link up for the first of four meetings this season, but this one will be missing a common sight in this divisional rivalry.

Atlanta lost to Cleveland, 117-109 on Sunday, and that was the Hawks first game without Trae Young who will miss nearly a month with a knee injury. While Atlanta has had Orlando's number in recent years, without Young, can the Hawks keep that success going?

Let’s dive into tonight’s matchup and find a potential sweat or two! We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on how to catch tipoff. Odds courtesy of DraftKingsrecent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.

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

Game Details and How to watch the Magic vs. Hawks live

  • Date: Tuesday, November 4, 2025
  • Time: 8 PM EST
  • Site: State Farm Arena Center
  • City: Atlanta, GA
  • Network/Streaming: NBC/Peacock

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Game odds for the Magic at the Hawks

The latest odds as of Tuesday courtesy of DraftKings:

  • Moneyline: Magic (-162), Hawks (+136)
  • Spread: Magic -3.5
  • Total: 227.5

That gives the Magic an implied team point total of 115.5 and the Hawks 112.5.

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

Expected Starting Lineups for the Magic and the Hawks

Magic

PG Jalen Suggs

SG Desmond Bane

SF Franz Wagner

PF Paolo Banchero

C Wendell Carter Jr

Hawks

PG Nickeil Alexander-Walker
SG Dyson Daniels
SF Zaccharie Risacher
PF Jalen Johnson
C Kristaps Porzingis

Injuries for the Magic and the Hawks

Magic

C Mortiz Wagner (knee) was OUT in Sunday's game

Hawks

G Trae Young (knee) is OUT and will be reevaluated in four weeks

Important stats, trends and insights ahead of Magic at Hawks on Tuesday.

  • Atlanta and Orlando are 2-5 ATS, tied for 5th-worst
  • Atlanta and Orlando are 2 of 8 teams profitable to the Under so far (both 4-3 to the Under)
  • Atlanta is 0-2 ATS and 0-2 ML as home team
  • Orlando is 2-2 ATS and 2-2 ML as road team
  • Atlanta is 5-2 on the ML in the last 7 meetings versus Orlando
  • Atlanta is 5-1 on the ML in the last 6 at home versus Orlando

Rotoworld Best Bet

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Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the NBA calendar based on data points like recent performance, head-to-head player matchups, trends information and projected game totals.

Once the model is finished running, we put its projections next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for today’s Hawks & Magic game:

  • Moneyline: Magic ML (medium confidence)
  • Spread:  Magic -3.5 (high confidence)
  • Total: Under 227.5 (low confidence)

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

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2025-26 NBA MVP ladder, race: Odds, power rankings, frontrunners including Luka Doncic, Giannis Antetokounmpo

Week 2 is in the books and it'll likely be a weekly theme of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander attempting to hold his throne atop the MVP polls. Luka Doncic returned from a three-game absence and dropped 44 points before sitting again, while Nikola Jokic triple-doubled in four-straight games but cooled off in his last two. There's been plenty of big games from star players to put the heat on SGA like Giannis Antetokounmpo's game-winner over Indiana.

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

Vaughn Dalzell’s Week 3 MVP Rankings

Oklahoma City Thunder Primary Logo
1. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Oklahoma City Thunder (+190)
Points Per Game: 33.6 (3rd)
Assists Per Game: 5.9 (T-20th)
Rebounds Per Game: 5.1 RPG (T-90th)

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and the Thunder are 7-0 and became the third team in NBA history to start 7-0 in back-to-back seasons and the first since the 1993-95 Rockets. Without Jalen Williams, Oklahoma City hasn't skipped a beat as another example of how valuable SGA is.

SGA is third in usage rate (32.3%) and scored at least 30 points in six out of seven games, including three-straight. The reigning MVP is also getting to the free-throw line 9.6 times per game, which is the most since his 2022-23 season, and 5.9 triples per game — the most in his career.

The "free-throw merchant" as social media likes to call him, continues to find new ways to score while he's in his prime. In reality, SGA has three double-digit free-throw attempt games and four of six or less, so he's not getting to the free-throw line consistently like the world assumes.

San Antonio Spurs Primary Logo
2. Victor Wembanyama, San Antonio Spurs (+300)
Points Per Game: 26.7 (11th)
Rebounds Per Game: 13.7 (2nd)
Blocks Per Game: 4.7 (1st)

The Spurs started off 5-0 for the first time in franchise history (shocking stat) before taking a loss to the Suns on Sunday. Victor Wembanyama was blazing through the first five with 30.2 points, 14.6 rebounds, 4.8 blocks, 3.4 assists, and 1.4 steals per game.

In the loss to Phoenix, Wemby played 34 minutes and went 4-of-14 from the field, 1-of-5 from three with no free-throws for 9 points. The Spurs star added 9 rebounds, four blocks, and two assists, but coming off his worst game of the season means I certainly have to drop him back down to No. 2.

Milwaukee Bucks Primary Logo
3. Giannis Antetokounmpo, Milwaukee Bucks (+650)
Points Per Game: 34.0 (1st)
Rebounds Per Game: 13.3 (3rd)
Assists Per Game: 6.8 (16th)

Giannis Antetokounmpo at the buzzer! The Greek Freak sent the crowd into a disheveled frenzy when he nailed an awkward fadeaway over two defenders at with no time remaining to give the Bucks a 117-15 win over the Pacers in Indiana. Antetokounmpo dropped 33 points and it was his fifth 30-point game in six contests with five double-doubles.

It's early in the year, but point Giannis is averaging a career-high 6.8 assists per game as the main facilitator for the Bucks, while posting a career-high 13.3 rebounds thanks to better spacing thanks to Myles Turner.

The only downfall of Antetokounmpo's awesome season so far once again is his free-throw shooting. Giannis is shooting 61.5% from the charity stripe, which is a career-low. He could lead the NBA in points per game if he was making his freebies, and those time of things make a significant difference come end of the year.

Los Angeles Lakers Primary Logo
4. Luka Doncic, Los Angeles Lakers (+500)
Points Per Game: 41.3
Assists Per Game: 11.5
Rebounds Per Game: 8.3

Luka Doncic returned in glorious fashion against the Grizzlies dropping 44 points on 14-of-27 from the field, 6-of-15 from three, and 10-for-13 from the line. Doncic also double-doubled with 12 boards and added six assists over 39 minutes.

Through four games without LeBron James, Doncic averages 13.5 free-throw attempts, 12.0 three-point attempts, 11.5 rebounds, and 8.3 assists per game. Doncic's 39.3% usage rate leads the NBA with Giannis Antetokounmpo in secluded second (34.3%).

However, Doncic rested against Portland on Monday (Lakers won), which is concerning for his games played mark. Doncic already missed three games and is getting rest seven games in. It's a long season and Los Angeles is without LeBron James, so it makes sense they don't want to push Doncic, but load management hurts an MVP case. We know that SGA, Jokic, and Wembanyama won't have load many, if any load management nights.

Denver Nuggets Primary Logo
5. Nikola Jokic, Denver Nuggets (+425)
Points Per Game: 22.7 (22nd)
Rebounds Per Game: 13.2 (4th)
Assists Per Game: 11.3 (1st)

Through five games, Nikola Jokic triple-doubled four-straight, but failed with nine assists, then seven rebounds in his next two games as his streak ended. Denver has started 4-2 with losses to Portland and Golden State — two of the better defensive squads in a league with limited defense.

Two of the downfalls to Jokic's start is his three-point shooting, which rose from 23.8% to 29% after last night's win over the Kings. Jokic was 5-of-21 entering the game with only 4.4 free-throw attempts per game, but last night he recorded 34 points, 4-of-10 from three, and 2-for-3 from the free-throw line.

Jokic's scoring overall is down at 22.7 points per game, but things are looking up after a season-high 34 versus the Kings. He leads the NBA with 11.3 assists per game and fourth in rebounding (13.2), so he's clearly still top five, but five for me.

Stock Up

Philadelphia 76ers Primary Logo
Tyrese Maxey, Philadelphia 76ers (+7000)
Points Per Game: 33.7 (2nd)
Rebounds Per Game: 4.8 (T-103rd)
Assists Per Game: 9.0 (T-5th)

The player saw the highest rise in odds from last week to this week is Tyrese Maxey. The 76ers have started off a hot 5-1, including four-straight to win the season. Maxey exploded for 39 or more points in three of those five games with at least six assists in every contest and 39 or more minutes. I wouldn't put my money on him because there are far too many factors into how the 76ers season can go with Joel Embiid and Paul George dealing with early season injuries and load management.

Stock Down

Minnesota Timberwolves Primary Logo
Anthony Edwards, Minnesota Timberwolves (+8000)
Points Per Game: 25.7
Rebounds Per Game: 2.0
Assists Per Game: 4.0

As stated last week, Anthony Edwards went down with an injury and his odds moved from +2000 to +3500. Now they are +8000 as he missed his fourth consecutive game and likely going to miss the next handful. Minnesota plays New York, Utah, Sacramento, and Utah again until a break between Nov. 11-14. I would target Edwards to come back after that for one of the back-to-back games versus Sacramento and Denver.

Follow my plays for the season on X @VmoneySports, Instagram @VmoneySports_ and Action App @vaughndalzell.

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

Peacock NBA Monday will stream up to three Monday night games each week throughout the regular season. Coast 2 Coast Tuesday presents doubleheaders on Tuesday nights throughout the regular season on NBC and Peacock. On most Tuesdays, an 8 p.m. ET game will be on NBC stations in the Eastern and Central time zones, and an 8 p.m. PT game on NBC stations in the Pacific and often Mountain time zones. Check local listings each week. Both games will stream live nationwide on Peacock. NBC Sports will launch Sunday Night Basketball across NBC and Peacock on Feb. 1, 2026. For a full schedule of the NBA on NBC and Peacock, click here.

Which NBA star's rise made Steph Curry realize his impact on basketball

Which NBA star's rise made Steph Curry realize his impact on basketball originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

In 2015, former broadcaster and Warriors coach Mark Jackson said that Steph Curry was “hurting the game,” noting that kids learning to play basketball would prioritize 3-point shooting over other areas of development. 

Whether or not Curry’s impact is detrimental can be left for debate, but the existence of that impact itself is clear. The average 3-pointers made per game in the NBA has more than doubled since Curry debuted. 

On the “Mind the Game” podcast with LeBron James and Steve Nash, James asked Curry at what point did he realize his game was transcendent? 

“When [Atlanta Hawks guard] Trae Young came in the league, and that was like the first person they said was the next ‘me’,” Curry said, “even though he’s a different player.” 

Heading into the 2018 NBA Draft, Young often was compared to Curry on account of his 3-point shooting from long range and volume while playing at Oklahoma. The comparison was one of the first times that Curry realized his impact. 

“That might be the first time I thought of it or really experienced what the impact was,” Curry said. “But I got that ‘you ruined the game’ question after Mark said it. Now it’s kind of tongue-in-cheek, just because you understand there is an influence. Now it’s about how can you allow kids to hear the story about the entire journey and not just the finish point.” 

Despite the comparisons solely due to 3-point shooting, Young has not shot at the same volume as Curry in his eight years in the NBA. Young averages 7.5 3-point attempts per game to Curry’s 9.4 3-point attempts per game.  

“When he was a kid, they came to one of our games, I got to talk to him,” Curry recounted. “Next thing you know, he’s getting drafted, like ‘he’s the next [Steph Curry]’. Like no, he’s his own player.” 

Even though the comparison might not be completely accurate, Curry’s impact on the evolution of players like Young is unquestionable. 

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Making sense of the Celtics' early-season slumps, bumps and grumps

Making sense of the Celtics' early-season slumps, bumps and grumps originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The losses were not supposed to sting this much.

We were certain that, with a new-look roster and tempered expectations, the Boston Celtics’ viewing experience would be largely stress free. We were convinced fans wouldn’t feel the bumps in the road as much as they have in past seasons, where every loss in a championship-or-bust campaign felt like a stomach punch. If this new campaign was going to be a bit of a roller coaster, we were prepared with transition-year Dramamine.

We couldn’t have been more wrong. 

The losses still gnaw at you — in large part because, while the team looks different, the losses often look the same.

These Celtics can’t hold double-digit leads. Their play vacillates wildly from quarter to quarter. When their 3-point shots are not falling, they remain a tough watch, particularly given their propensity to let empty offensive possessions impact their defensive effort.

On Monday night, the Celtics should have been eager to dust themselves off after a beatdown from the championship-chasing Houston Rockets at the tail end of a five-game-in-seven-days stretch. That one was easy to chalk up as a schedule loss. But Monday was the ultimate “get right” game against a Utah Jazz team that had gotten pummeled in Charlotte the night before and was missing one of its key bigs in Walker Kessler. 

Yet, somehow, it was Boston that didn’t have enough gas in the tank in the second half Monday night, as offensive rebounds still came back to bite the Celtics.

After a defensive gem of a first half that put the Celtics ahead by double digits, Boston’s defense disappeared in the second half, the team’s effort waning as it repeatedly clanged quality 3-point looks. Keyonte George morphed into Michael Jordan for a stretch, 37-year-old Kevin Love rolled back the clocks, and Jusuf Nurkic’s putback in the final moments lifted Utah to a 105-103 triumph at TD Garden.

The Celtics’ 3-point shooting was historically bad for their volume. The C’s set an NBA record by missing 40 their 51 triples, posting the lowest 3-point percentage (21.6 percent) in league history by a team with 50-plus attempts. 

Would it make you feel any better to know the NBA tracking data suggested all those 3-point looks were pretty good? It probably won’t, right? But 50 of Boston’s 51 attempts came with 4+ feet of space from the nearest defender. The Celtics made just 2 of 21 attempts with 4 to 6 feet of space, and 9 of 29 attempts with 6+ feet of space. 

Derrick White and Payton Pritchard, who both made 3s in the opening minutes when Boston ripped off a 10-0 run, quickly reverted to their season-opening struggles. There are 178 players who qualify on the list of NBA’s 3-point percentage leaders this season. Here’s where Boston players rank:

  • 178th: Payton Pritchard
  • 171st: Derrick White
  • 95th: Anfernee Simons
  • 92nd: Jaylen Brown
  • 69th: Sam Hauser

Pritchard and White were a combined 7 for 19 on Monday night, which is actually progress. Hauser improbably went 1 for 8 from distance. Simons wasn’t much better (2 for 8). Brown missed all nine 3-pointers he attempted, though he kept Boston’s offense afloat by making 13 of 19 shots inside the arc while producing a team-high 36 points. 

It seems impossible that White and Pritchard won’t eventually get on track. But as they struggle from distance to start the season, it only makes the margins that much slimmer for a Boston team with a bunch of new vulnerabilities. And, yet, if the Celtics’ defensive energy didn’t wane in the second half, they very well might have survived a historically bad shooting night.

Spare us all the chatter about the referees’ missed call on a George trip of Brown in the final minute. Yes, it should have been a whistle. No, it’s not a valid excuse for not winning this game. We don’t need a Last 2 Minute report to confirm the referee error.

Our Last 24 Minute report notes the Celtics tripped all over themselves repeatedly in the second half without aid from the Jazz or the referees. 

Brown has been fantastic, and it’s frustrating that Boston’s supporting cast hasn’t been able to help him more. It’s also annoying that, with multiple last-gasp opportunities in tight games against Philadelphia and Utah, the Celtics have been unable to get Brown a clean look at a winning shot. Brown got whistled (correctly) for a push-off before the Celtics’ final possession with 0.6 seconds to play Monday night.

Brown vented about the missed tripping call after the game but, like a good leader, eventually suggested he has to do more to help his team as this group hunts for an identity early in the new season. The truth is the supporting cast has to do more, and Brown’s efforts have been spoiled by the team’s shooting funks.

Neemias Queta will kick himself about a missed late-game free throw and his inability to box out Nurkic on Utah’s winning shot. Josh Minott can’t get in early foul trouble, which limited his floor time. Boston needs more from its bench, where every single player not named Chris Boucher was in the negative for plus/minus Monday night. 

Maybe we shouldn’t be surprised that the Celtics are experiencing these growing pains. But it all seems so preventable, which makes it harder to stomach. Boston has all the potential to outkick its tempered expectations and yet hasn’t played with anywhere near the sort of consistency that would allow that.

Chalk it up to early-season growing pains, but the Celtics’ lack of focus and discipline Monday night was inexcusable. The Rockets were simply on a different level on Saturday and the rest disadvantage didn’t help. But much of Boston’s woes in the team’s other four losses this season were largely self-inflicted.

Maybe all this team needs is White and Pritchard to get off the 3-point schneid. Maybe the Celtics just need to be mentally tougher when shots aren’t falling and lean into their obvious defensive potential instead of losing their minds. 

It’s easy to say we should have braced ourselves for these bumps given the roster changes. But there’s too much talent and potential here to be OK with the Celtics losing games the way they did Monday night.

Jaylen sounds off on late no-call in Celtics-Jazz: ‘It's unacceptable'

Jaylen sounds off on late no-call in Celtics-Jazz: ‘It's unacceptable' originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Boston Celtics star Jaylen Brown was understandably frustrated after officials did not whistle Utah Jazz guard Keyonte George for a tripping foul in the final minute of Monday’s game at TD Garden.

With less than a minute remaining and the Celtics clinging to a one-point lead, George fell to the ground, and Brown tripped over him while trying to drive into the paint. The Celtics star lost the ball as a result of the trip, and the Jazz scored a bucket in transition to take a 103-102 lead with 44 seconds remaining.

“Y’all are going to get me fined,” Brown responded when asked about the play. “You can’t have a mistake like that as an official at that point in the game. It’s fourth quarter. It’s a minute left in the game, or less. And you completely — the whole staff blows the f—ing call. Costs us the game.

“Unacceptable. You can make mistakes at any point in the game, but right there, that wasn’t good. That wasn’t good. It’s unacceptable.

“Then they’re telling me like, ‘We didn’t see it.’ How none of you see it? You can’t trip somebody in the fourth quarter and it just be a no-call. It’s some bulls—,” Brown said.

When asked about the no-call after the game in a pool report, lead official Kevin Scott explained why no foul was called in that situation.

“During live play the crew observed George slip and fall just prior to Brown slipping on the same spot resulting in the ball becoming loose prior to any contact,” Scott told The Boston Globe’s Adam Himmelsbach.

“… The crew observed both players slip and fall prior to any contact. That’s why a foul was not called during live play.”

While that explanation likely won’t satisfy Brown or Celtics fans, that no-call wasn’t the only reason Boston this game. The Jazz outrebounded the Celtics 55 to 36 and racked up 15 offensive rebounds, the last of which was a Jusuf Nurkic putback over Neemias Queta with 0.6 seconds remaining that sealed Boston’s fate.

As for Brown, he should expect to be hearing from the league at some point after sounding off on the officials Monday night.

Kings reportedly agree to contract with Precious Achiuwa, waive Isaac Jones

Kings reportedly agree to contract with Precious Achiuwa, waive Isaac Jones originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Kings have agreed to a contract with free agent forward/center Precious Achiuwa, ESPN’s Shams Charania reported, citing sources.

In a corresponding move to make roster space, the Kings are expected to waive center Isaac Jones, per Charania. 

Achiuwa, in his sixth NBA season, was waived by the Miami Heat on Oct. 18 in their final roster cuts following training camp. He was selected by the Heat with the No. 20 pick in the 2020 NBA Draft. He was traded to the Toronto Raptors before the 2021 season, and was later traded to the New York Knicks in December 2023. 

Last season for the Knicks, Achiuwa played in 57 games and started in 10. He averaged 6.6 points and 5.6 rebounds per game. 

Jones, now in his second NBA season, originally signed a two-way contract with the Kings in July 2024. Last season, he played 40 games for Sacramento and averaged 3.4 points and 1.4 rebounds per game in just 7.6 minutes per game. This season, he played in just three of the Kings’ seven games, totaling just 3 points.  

Jones’ lone field goal this season came during his Oct. 24 start against the Utah Jazz. 

Achiuwa will vie for playing time off the bench with other Kings centers, like Drew Eubanks, Maxime Raynaud and Dylan Cardwell. 

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Andrew Wiggins: how a shy NBA player negotiated growing up a star in the social media era

Andrew Wiggins played a huge part in the Golden State Warriors’ title in 2022. Photograph: Elsa/Getty Images

Andrew Wiggins was among the first superstar prospects of the social media era. Born in Thornhill, Ontario just north of Toronto, Wiggins was known internationally by the time he was 13. It wasn’t always easy for the shy, small-town kid to embrace the spotlight.

After just one full season at Vaughan, Wiggins needed better competition than Canada could provide and moved on to Huntington Prep in Huntington, West Virginia — a relatively new prep school set in a small, blue-collar, sports-oriented college town near Kansas.

The head coach, Rob Fulford, had been recruiting Wiggins since he was 13, at one point watching 24 consecutive CIA Bounce games in person. “We developed a relationship with him,” Fulford said. “We recruited him harder than anyone else.”

What stood out to Fulford was the same quality that would later get the young Wiggins in trouble, which was that everything he did looked so effortless. “He could just dominate a game from a talent perspective,” Fulford says. “It just was a clear difference between Andrew and everyone else.”

But there was nothing quiet about the show Wiggins was putting on the basketball court, as Huntington quickly became the most popular high school team in the country, going from having 50 fans at a regular home game prior to his arrival to packed gyms with over 1,000 fans there to see the Canadian high school phenom with their own eyes. “A lot of people just wanted to see him play,” Rathan-Mayes says. “We tried to go and put on a show the best that we could every single night.”

Related: 7ft 4in (at least) of menace: the Victor Wembanyama Era is already here | Lee Escobedo

But being at the centre of the basketball universe didn’t come naturally to the quiet kid from Vaughan. After all, shyness, like athleticism, runs in the Wiggins family: Wiggins’s father, Mitchell Sr, said the reason it didn’t work at his first college, Clemson, was that “I was so quiet, you couldn’t get a whisper out of me.” While a track teammate of his mother, Marita, said, “She was very quiet, still is very quiet and very unassuming.”

Unlike LeBron James, who was happy to engage with the media and put on a show for the crowd since being crowned “The Chosen One” as a teenager, Wiggins was soft-spoken and shy, preferring to pass the attention on to his teammates instead of beating his chest after a big dunk. Many people wanted Wiggins to be the version of an alpha athlete that they were used to seeing on TV, like James and Kobe Bryant. And that dissonance created a tension with the basketball media and certain segments of the fan base, who wanted more from Wiggins.

“I think we all have a certain kind of perception of what we want a great athlete to look like,” his junior national team coach, Roy Rana, says. “We want them to be fiery. We want them to be emotional. We want them to be extroverted. We want them to be demonstrative. That’s not Andrew.”

The criticism picked up during Wiggins’s second and final season at Huntington Prep when, in February of 2013, a Sports Illustrated article questioned his work ethic, suggesting that he only showed up in big games while lofting through less important ones. “Andrew Wiggins’ work ethic and motor have yet to catch up to his athleticism and raw ability,” it read, bringing up examples of previous Canadian prospects whose careers stagnated as a result of poor decision-making or a lack of skill development. And it questioned the role models in his life, including his father, who was pushed out of the NBA for cocaine use decades earlier.

The day after the article came out, Wiggins dropped a career-high 57 points in a statement win. “I think it pissed him off,” Fulford says. “He wanted to prove a point.”

“Just responding in a positive way,” Wiggins says. “Not saying anything, not … going on Twitter and saying anything … whenever you think you got something to say, just go on the court and do my thing.”

Wiggins compiled one of the most memorable campaigns in high school basketball history that season, averaging 23 points, 11 rebounds, three assists, and three blocks per game and winning the Naismith Prep Player of the Year and the Gatorade National Player of the Year awards, earning a trip to the McDonald’s All-American Game. After that, he left to go to the University of Kansas.

But the spotlight didn’t stop there. In fact, when Wiggins arrived at Kansas City International Airport in June of 2013, he emerged from the gate to find 15 fans waiting for his autograph after his itinerary had been posted on an online message board. When classes started, students began Twitter-stalking him, tweeting pictures of the back of his head in class and posting his whereabouts when he was spotted at local stores. Meanwhile, back home in Canada, Wiggins picked up the nicknames “Maple Jordan” and “Air Canada,” and all of his Kansas games were broadcasted on the national TV network TSN.

While all this might seem normal now, 2013 was the beginning of the social media era. And between the fans stalking him, the student sections taunting him at away games, and the rapidly expanding media landscape criticizing his every move, it was hard for Wiggins to feel comfortable. “We talk about it sometimes, but he doesn’t like talking about it. That’s how bad it stresses him out,” his wife, Mychal Johnson, said at the time. “Sometimes he doesn’t know what to do.”

“It was a lot,” Wiggins says now. “It was a lot.”

Wiggins just wanted to be a normal kid. He happened to love basketball and be really good at it, but he wanted an average life away from the spotlight, playing Call of Duty after games and announcing his college decision without any media present. In fact, his Twitter bio used to read “Just a average kid trying to make it.”

But when he was asked about it during his freshman year at Kansas, Wiggins said, “I used to be an average kid, when I put that up. But that … was a while ago.”

Some of the criticism directed towards Wiggins was warranted. Even Fulford acknowledged that he was no gym rat – that things came so naturally to Wiggins that he needed to fall in love with the process of improving if he was going to reach his ceiling. “I don’t think at any point ever that anyone had to go tell Michael Jordan or Kobe Bryant to pick it up,” Fulford said.

Wiggins quietly improved under head coach Bill Self at Kansas, averaging 17 points, six rebounds, two assists, one steal, and one block as a freshman for the No 2-ranked Jayhawks, who went 24-9 before losing in the second round of the NCAA tournament. He even set the Kansas freshman single-season scoring record with 597 points.

Still, there were times that Self had to get on Wiggins to play harder or be more aggressive offensively, instituting a special rule at some practices that only Wiggins was allowed to shoot. “Andrew is the type of guy who could score 28, and you’d say, ‘Why didn’t he score more?’” Self said. “Critics want him to do more. I understand that because the game comes so easy to him, it’s so natural.”

Some of that on-court reticence came from the way Wiggins was raised, learning the game from his brothers and dad, who carved out a 20-year pro career as a defensive role player. “His dad taught him how to play basketball the right way,” Reid-Knight says, noting that Mitchell Sr always harped on the importance of being selfless and making the right reads. “Playing within your game and not forcing an action.”

After one season at Kansas, Wiggins declared for the 2014 NBA Draft and was selected first overall by the Cleveland Cavaliers – a foregone conclusion since Wiggins was in 10th grade. What made the selection even more amazing was that his CIA Bounce teammate, Brampton native Anthony Bennett, went first overall to Cleveland the year prior, giving Canada back-to-back first overall picks for the first time ever.

The 2014 NBA Draft also featured Canadians Tyler Ennis, Nik Stauskas, and Dwight Powell, giving Canada a record 12 NBA players. That year Canada overtook France as the second-most represented country in the league behind the United States – a record it has held ever since.

However, the best player in the world, James, returned to his hometown Cleveland in free agency that same summer. And before playing a single game in the NBA, Wiggins and Bennett were both traded to the rebuilding Minnesota Timberwolves in exchange for Kevin Love, making Wiggins the cornerstone of a franchise that had not been to the playoffs in 10 years. “I just gave in to it and figured I’d be good wherever I go,” Wiggins said. “The whole thing has worked out. [Minnesota has] put me in a situation where I can grow a lot more than on the team that drafted me.”

Wiggins got off to a slow start in his NBA career before breaking out against the team that snubbed him, dropping 27 points in his first game against James’s Cavaliers. He followed it up with a stretch of six straight 20-point games, eventually becoming the first Canadian to win the NBA Rookie of the Year award after averaging 17 points, five rebounds, and two assists a game in 2014–15.

While he never turned into the NBA superstar that many people had him pegged to become when he was a teenager, Wiggins went on to have an incredible career, spending five and a half seasons in Minnesota before getting traded to the Golden State Warriors in 2020. In the Bay, Wiggins became the third Canadian NBA All-Star and won an NBA championship as the team’s second-leading scorer in the 2022 NBA Finals, when he averaged 18 points and nine rebounds.

But, for better or worse, the huge spotlight and unbalanced criticism that started to shine on Wiggins when he was a teenage phenom never left him, especially in Canada – a basketball-crazed nation that was growing hungry for a superstar.

As Wiggins once said, “I know I can never live up to expectations.”

  • This is an edited extract from The Golden Generation: How Canada Became a Basketball Powerhouse by Oren Weisfeld. It’s published by ECW Press for $19.95 (USD) wherever you get your books.

Warriors' defense adjusting to next steps in NBA's pace and space evolution

Warriors' defense adjusting to next steps in NBA's pace and space evolution originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO – From what he’s seeing on the Warriors’ sidelines to reviewing film, the game Warriors coach Steve Kerr is watching isn’t close to what the NBA was 10 years ago. Not even five. 

What it looked like when he won all those championships as a player in the 1990s, and his final season in 2003, was closer to silent films than the product seen in the Warriors’ two straight losses to short-handed teams. 

The Milwaukee Bucks announced an hour ahead of tipoff that Giannis Antetokounmpo was ruled out Thursday night after being probable on the injury report all day. On top of Tyrese Haliburton being out for the season from his torn Achilles in Game 7 of the NBA Finals, the Indiana Pacers didn’t have a win and they didn’t have Andrew Nembhard, Obi Toppin, Bennedict Mathurin and T.J. McConnell on Saturday. But both teams raced right by the Warriors.

Ryan Rollins, their own former second-round draft pick, did for a career-high 32 points, eight assists and one turnover. Quenton Jackson, a 27-year-old former undrafted point guard on a two-way contract, did for 25 points and 10 assists – both career highs – without turning the ball over once. 

“The pace of the game is off the charts these days. It’s been getting faster and faster, year after year,” Kerr said Monday at Chase Center after Warriors practice. “But I even think it’s taken a leap this year, just in terms of style of play. And this is how it works in basketball and technology and everything else, right? The game is constantly changing. So to me, what I’m seeing is teams are spreading it out, playing as fast as possible, making it difficult to get to your coverages defensively. 

“The faster the actions, the more difficult it is for the defense to respond, and I thought the pace of the Milwaukee and Indiana games exposed some things that we were doing defensively, and we’ve got to improve those things to get better.” 

Principles of the game haven’t changed. The goal defensively still is to keep your man in front of you and avoid penetration. If a defender can stay between his man and the ball, it’s the same game that it’s always been. But the game is being played so differently with the pace and the space and the 3-point shot, that staying true to those principles has become a much more difficult proposition.

How speedy players like Rollins and Jackson scored their points is case in point. Rollins in his 32-point outing finished six layups, made five threes and two jumpers. Outside of two free throws, Jackson’s other 23 points came from five layups and one dunk, three catch-and-shoot threes and a two-pointer from seven feet out after beating Draymond Green to the spot. 

The Warriors rank 12th in defensive rating (112.7) through seven games entering Tuesday night’s game against the Phoenix Suns, and 12th in opponents points per game (115.7). Opponents also are getting what they want and shooting 48.2 percent against the Warriors’ defense. Only six teams are letting teams shoot better from the field. 

Kerr’s assessment of his team’s defense as it currently stands is a bit of a mixed bag. 

“A little bit betwixt in between,” Kerr said. “I think because of all this pace and the way teams are playing, you have to adapt and you can’t expect to do the exact same things you did even the year before. And every game is a little bit different. 

“Clippers, Lakers, Denver, those felt more like traditional games where you’re in your coverage. You have time to talk through stuff. Portland, Milwaukee, Indiana, Memphis, it’s a much faster game, more random and you’ve got to be very disciplined in a lot of different aspects, otherwise you get exposed.” 

Portland, Milwaukee and Indiana were all Golden State losses. Memphis, which ranks seventh in pace, was a win, but the Grizzlies had eight more fastbreak points than the Warriors, and just as many points in the paint (48). The Blazers rank third in pace, and the Bucks and Pacers are less than a point outside of the top 10. Right behind the both of them are the Suns, the next team on the Warriors’ schedule. 

“Another team that plays fast and aggressive,” Moses Moody said of the Suns. “They got talent in different areas on the floor. Just another young and fast team.” 

The center position in particular has seen major changes offensively and defensively in a game that emphasizes speed and threes. Quinten Post started at center for the Warriors in their loss against the Bucks and only played 10 minutes, yet Gary Trent Jr. attempted three 3-pointers on him in 36 seconds and missed all three. Centers Donovan Clingan and Jock Landale have each taken two threes on Post earlier this season and made three of four. 

Post this season has seen small forward Kawhi Leonard take five shots on him in 56 seconds, making one, and point guard Jrue Holiday go 1 of 4 when guarded by the 7-footer over 39 seconds. The responsibilities for big men, too, aren’t what they used to be. 

“Now on the defensive end it’s more than just rim protection, guarding the pick and roll. If teams play this fast and this chaotic in a way, you kind of have to adapt too on the defensive end,” Post says. “For me, on a personal level, it means guarding inside and on the outside. As a team, it’s just a lot more chaos out there, and I think the biggest thing for us is whatever we do defensively, we just got to do it with 100 percent effort.”

But the Warriors still have the ultimate executioner of offenses. Even at 35 years old and with his beard being overtaken by gray hairs, Green is the difference in how the Warriors’ defense operates. The Warriors’ defense shuts down offenses to 105.7 points per 100 possessions when he’s on the court. 

That number skyrockets to 124.3 points per 100 possessions when Green, who has played in all seven games, is not on the court. 

“Draymond is the best in the world at covering for his teammates, creating deception for the offensive player, which just makes him hesitate for a second,” Kerr said. “He’s amazing with that stuff. So when he’s not out there, we better be rock solid with our discipline and principles that we have to follow in order to make teams have to work.” 

At the root of it, the problems begin with better communication. So much is happening on the fly that one false step can be all the difference. 

“Some of it is we’ve just got to get on the same page,” Moody says. “We have different terminology, different principles that are changing with the change of the game. Everybody just has to be on the same page and communicate. … If we’re switching one through five, it might not have the same principles that if you’re switching a guard-to-guard screen in a regular situation. If we’re switching all game, it’s small details like that to where we just got to get on the same page.”

Disregarding small details is how losses to lesser, undermanned teams happen. The Warriors haven’t lost three straight regular season games since Dec. 27, 2024, six weeks before acquiring Jimmy Butler. Getting back on the same page defensively while constantly adapting to the game’s changes is how the Warriors can keep that streak alive and put an end to their first losing streak of the season.

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Antetokounmpo beats buzzer as Bucks edge out Pacers

Giannis Antetokounmpo in action for the Milwaukee Bucks against the
Indiana Pacers
Giannis Antetokounmpo was the NBA's MVP in 2019 and 2020 [Getty Images]

Giannis Antetokounmpo beat the buzzer to give the Milwaukee Bucks a dramatic 117-115 victory over Indiana Pacers in the NBA.

With the scores level heading into the final few seconds of the Central Division game, the 30-year-old pivoted to avoid a double block before he floated in a jumper.

It was the fifth occasion the Greek-Nigerian has produced a game-winning shot in the last five seconds of a game, and the second buzzer-beater of his career.

"You can live if you miss. You cannot live if you don't shoot it," said Antetokounmpo, who scored a game-high 33 points.

"People don't remember the time you miss, they remember all the times you make, so I'm happy about that."

Meanwhile, Jusuf Nurkic scored with 0.6 seconds of play left to give Utah Jazz a late win over of their own as they clinched a 105-103 victory over the Boston Celtics in the Northwest Division.

Knicks, Mike Brown still learning, but showing bits of evidence that new process is working

Jalen Brunson almost never uses excuses.

Let’s say the Knicks lose on the second night of a home-road back-to-back. Some players in this scenario may talk about the challenge of a quick turnaround or a late flight. Not Brunson.

Maybe the Knicks are down one or two rotation players and lose to a quality opponent. It would be completely understandable if a player told the media that injuries to key players impacted the game. Not Brunson.

He’d probably say the Knicks should have played better and could have won the game.

So it was noteworthy last week in Milwaukee when Brunson said the Knicks need some time to get used to one another.

"We're still learning; everything is brand new for us. We’re not gonna use that excuse for a long time. But these first couple weeks, it’s still fresh for us," the Knick captain said last week. "But no matter what, we know what we gotta go out there and do and we gotta do that to the best of our abilities."

If Brunson says the Knicks need some time to get accustomed to a new head coach and new system, you probably should give him the benefit of the doubt.

It’s fair – and logical – to hold the 2025-26 Knicks to high standards. They are coming off of their first conference finals appearance in 25 seasons. They have a unique window this season to make a run to the NBA Finals. Two stars on rival teams (Jayson Tatum and Tyrese Haliburton) are out for a significant portion of the season.

So this team should be heavily scrutinized. That’s what happens when you have championship expectations. That’s what happens when you make a coaching change after one of the most successful seasons in the past 30 years.

But in the opening weeks of this season, things are going to look disjointed. Players are getting used to each other and their head coach. The head coach is getting used to his players.

But you can see bits of evidence that the process is working.

Mike Brown himself said he didn’t help the Knicks’ reserves earlier in the season because his substitutions were "all over the map."

In the past two games, Brown feels like he’s found consistency with substitutions and lineups.

Maybe it’s no coincidence that Josh Hart and Jordan Clarkson have had the best games of their seasons in the past two nights.

Brown has talked openly about his own coaching performance. He’s held his players accountable and held himself accountable.

"We just have to keep learning on the fly, starting with me. I’ve got to keep trying to get better quicker," Brown said late last week.

It seems like the players appreciate Brown’s sentiment. Hart was asked after Monday’s game about Brown getting more settled with his substitutions/rotations in the past two games.

"Mike's new. We’re all getting accustomed and acclimated to everybody so you definitely feel that a little bit," he said. "And the great thing about Mike, he’s an amazing person, first and foremost. He always has an open door. If you don't understand something that’s going on, you can always go talk to him. So obviously this is a process. Everybody wants it built now but it won’t be. And we’re all learning, including him."

Brown hasn’t been shy about holding players – including the top players on the roster – accountable when he feels they don’t play well. He’s been vocal about that in the locker room during and after games, challenging players to improve their performance, per people familiar with the matter.

But he's also been upfront about the challenges he and the Knicks face early this season.

“We all have to be better. Start with me. And we will be better,” Brown was saying before Sunday’s game.

The Knicks have looked much better since Brown made that statement. The offense has been strong the last two games. Maybe that continues on Wednesday against Minnesota. Maybe it doesn’t. Either way, this Knicks team – and its new head coach – will take some time to get fully in synch.

"This is a process. We’ve had a lot of guys that have been out, hadn’t practiced and it starts with me," Brown said late Monday. "I said this last game, I gotta help put these guys in a better position. Whether it’s on the floor or whatever, rotation-wise, but I didn’t quite have as good a feel (earlier in the season) because guys had been out. Trying to play this guy, that guy. It starts with me; I have gotten better and they've just gotten more comfortable."

Knicks' Karl-Anthony Towns steps up with 'monster' performance in win over Wizards

Karl-Anthony Towns had his strongest performance of the season in Monday's 119-102 win over the Washington Wizards, dropping 33 points with 13 rebounds and five assists over 30 minutes of action.

It's the first time Towns has scored 30-plus points in a game this year and under new head coach Mike Brown, who called the big man a "monster" that's only going to improve as the season continues.

"KAT was a monster," Brown said after the win. "He was a monster on the glass, he was really good defensively. He was a monster inside, outside. He's starting to feel and find his rhythm in what we're trying to do.

"But I'm telling you, there's still a lot of room there to grow. Not just for him, but for us to learn him, starting with me, and us to continue to learning the different parts of we're trying to do offensively. He was a monster."

Matched up against 2024 No. 2 overall pick Alex Sarr, Towns went right to work in the first quarter. He scored or assisted on the Knicks' first 13 points of the game (eight points, two assists) and grabbed six rebounds (four offensive), finishing the first half with 15 points, 11 rebounds, and five assists.

After the game, Towns was asked about his mindset heading into the matchup and what contributed to the noticeable aggressiveness.

"Just win the game," Towns said. "Got us chances tonight to get some good shots up so I just went and capitalized on it."

He had a number of one-on-one matchups with Sarr while the Washington defense focused on guarding Jalen Brunson and knew it was a chance to help lead the team. Towns took eight more shots against the Wizards than he had in any game this season, despite playing the least amount of minutes so far.

"I saw opportunities to get some shots up and be aggressive and I just wanted to take advantage of the opportunity," Towns said. "JB requires a lot of attention obviously, so take what the defense gives us and thought tonight I saw that I had an opportunity to do something."

Towns previous season-high in scoring came in New York's second game of the season against the Boston Celtics when he had 26 points. He followed that performance up with two tough outings in losses to the Miami Heat and Milwaukee Bucks, scoring only 15 and eight points, respectively.

The Knicks have now won back-to-back games after dropping three straight. Towns, like Brown, acknowledged the team is still a work in progress and believes they will continue to improve in a new system.

"We are all figuring it out," Towns said. "Getting better every day, understanding what our roles are and what we got to do. It's good, we got two wins in a row but we're obviously still a work in progress."

Knicks overcome sluggish start, ride Karl Anthony Towns to emphatic 119-102 win over Wizards

The Knicks came off the NYC Marathon weekend looking a little sluggish on Monday night at Madison Square Garden. The veteran team was slow to react on defense and stagnant on offense, while the youthful Wizards pushed the pace and had the Knicks on their heels, taking a 30-22 lead at the end of the first quarter.

However, much like the NYC Marathon, an NBA game is a grind, and even though the Wizards gave the Knicks everything they could handle for half of the contest, the Knicks adjusted to the younger team’s length and athleticism. The Knicks came out of halftime and clamped down on the Wizards’ transition offense while swinging the ball beautifully to get repeated open looks from beyond the arc. The adjustments led to a 41-24 third-quarter advantage that helped fuel a 119-102 win.

On the night, five Knicks hit multiple three-point shots, led by Karl Anthony Towns, who went 3-of-8 from beyond the arc and led all scorers with 33 points to go along with 13 rebounds, five assists, and two steals. Six other Knicks finished in double figures, with OG Anunoby having 16 points, six rebounds, and five steals and Josh Hart chipping in 12 points, 10 rebounds, and five assists off the bench.

On the other side, Alex Sarr and Kyshawn George continued their breakout seasons for the Wizards in a losing effort. Sarr finished with 19 points, eight rebounds, seven assists, and two steals, while George had 15 points, five rebounds, three steals, and two assists. It wasn’t enough tonight, but it’s enough to give Wizards’ fans plenty of hope for the future.

This was a Karl-Anthony Towns statement game

The Knicks clearly wanted to attack through Towns tonight. The center hit a three off a pick-and-pop for the first points in the game, and the Knicks used him as the hub of the offense in the perimeter pick-and-roll game right from the start. He finished the quarter with eight points and three assists while shooting 2-of-3 from deep, and it seemed like Towns would flourish on the perimeter for much of the game.

However, the team also felt comfortable having Towns try and bully second-year center Alex Sarr in the post. At one point in the second quarter, Towns aggressively backed Sarr down until he was under the basket and then emphatically dunked on the young Wizards center. That’s not a small feat since Sarr is 2nd in the NBA with 2.2 blocks per game and is 4th in contested shots.

Perhaps the added emphasis on Towns creating offense was a response to the big man's slow start to the season in Mike Brown’s offense. Towns came into the game averaging 18.3 points and 2.8 assists, while shooting 35.7% from three and 38% overall. All of those numbers would be essentially the worst marks he’s posted in any season of his career. A 2-for-12 performance three games ago against the Bucks seemed to be the nadir for Towns, and the big man has been slowly crawling back to his previous levels before having arguably his best game of the season tonight.

Getting Towns comfortable in the offense is crucial for the Knicks if they want to ultimately hoist a trophy at the end of the season. They don’t want to be as reliant on Jalen Brunson dominating the offense with the ball in his hands. They want to run a faster scheme that relies on hitting the extra pass and making the defense work. They have to get comfortable doing that while Towns also feels confident that he can get his looks in that type of scheme without having to force isolation post possessions, like he did against Kyle Kuzma in that Bucks game.

On Monday, Towns showed that he’s capable of taking his man off the dribble and capitalizing on a mismatch while also cutting off the ball, hitting spot-up threes, and working within the flow of the larger offense. Now, the Knicks just need to see him do it regularly.

Washington plays fast and loose, and it’s both fun and dangerous

The Wizards are the second youngest team in the NBA, with an average age of 23.78. Only the Brooklyn Nets have a younger roster. Given that, it’s no surprise that this team wants to play fast.

The Wizards came into Monday ranking 2nd in the NBA in pace. The Knicks, who have talked about wanting to play faster, ranked 28th. Early on, the Wizards’ pace and athleticism were a major problem for the Knicks. Washington was too quick and physical defensively when the Knicks tried to use the pick-and-roll to create offensive opportunities. The Wizards were also too athletic and long when the Knicks tried to thread the needle on passes through minuscule passing lanes.

When the Knicks would miss a shot or give the ball away, the Wizards were down the court on the other end in a hurry. In the first quarter, the Wizards had nine assists and were shooting nearly 75% from the field while taking a surprising eight-point lead. Of course, they also had seven turnovers and would ultimately finish the game with 20.

That’s a little bit of the gift and the curse of playing at the speed that the Wizards do, with the lack of experience that they have. There will be stretches of games where their young, physical defenders like George and Bilal Coulibaly frustrate their opponents and allow the offense to get plenty of easy buckets. There will also be stretches where the Wizards play a bit too out of control, throwing wild passes or losing control of the handle in traffic.

It makes for entertaining basketball, and the Wizards may very well iron out the kinks and become a really tough matchup in the second half of the season, but right now they're going through the growing pains.

The Knicks are finally leaning into the NBA’s three-point landscape

When the Knicks made a coaching change and moved on from Tom Thibodeau after making the Eastern Conference Finals last season, it was a clear message that his style of play was not one that the front office believed could win them a title. The change to new head coach Mike Brown has not only brought an increased focus on pace and ball movement but a vast uptick in three-point frequency.

Coming into Monday’s game, the Knicks were 3rd in the NBA with 44.3 three-point attempts per game and led the league in corner three-point attempts per game. That’s a stark change from last year, when the Knicks were 27th in the NBA at 34 attempts per game. Last year, they shot 36.9%, which was 9th-best in the league, and this year they are shooting 36.5%, which is 13th in the league.

However, the looks they are getting are better.

Entering Monday, the Knicks were getting the 4th most open threes per game at 18.8 per game. Open, according to NBA.com, is when there is not a defender within four to six feet. Last year, the Knicks had 15.3 open threes a game and just 14.5 wide-open threes per game, no defender within six feet, second-to-last in the league. This year’s Knicks team came into tonight getting 18.7 wide-open three-point shots per game. However, they were shooting just 36.6% on them, which was 21st in the league.

Things weren’t much different on Monday. In the first quarter, the Knicks took 26 shots, and 13 of them were from beyond the arc. They were just 3-for-13 in the first quarter and trailed 30-22. Midway through the third quarter, they were 9-for-26 from beyond the arc, and it seemed like it would be another rough shooting night from beyond the arc before the shots started to fall, and they wound up hitting 6-of-10 from deep in the quarter.

That quarter alone should be proof that this approach is an exciting one for the Knicks. The quality of shots the team is generating is significantly improved, and they're running a scheme that will allow them to score points in bunches without taxing their best players with slow-developing, dribble-heavy possessions. If those open looks start to fall consistently, as they did in the third quarter, the Knicks are going to be tough for anybody to beat.

Nets lose to Anthony Edwards-less Timberwolves, drop to 0-7

NEW YORK (AP) — Julius Randle had 19 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists in his 15th career triple-double, and the Minnesota Timberwolves beat the winless Brooklyn Nets 125-109 on Monday night.

Donte DiVincenzo scored 25 points, Jaden McDaniels finished with 22 and Rudy Gobert added 15 points and 12 rebounds for the Timberwolves, who won their two straight.

Randle had his first triple-double with the Wolves.

Cam Thomas had 25 points and Nic Claxton chipped in 19 for the Nets, who fell to 0-7. The Nets opened the 2009-10 campaign with 18 straight losses while playing in New Jersey, two seasons before their move to Brooklyn.

Playing once again without All-Star guard Anthony Edwards (hamstring), Minnesota led by 12 points with 9:09 to play in the third quarter before the Nets answered with a 24-13 run.

Ziaire Williams hit a 3-pointer from the left wing and was fouled by Randle before his free throw put Brooklyn ahead 88-87 with 1:57 remaining.

The Timberwolves took advantage of four straight missed shots and two turnovers as Randle scored four points for a 91-88 advantage at the end of the period.

Minnesota then opened the fourth quarter with a 6-0 run while the Nets misfired on three consecutive shots to increase the lead to 97-88, and eventually put the game out of reach.

The Timberwolves shot 56 percent from the field and 41 percent from 3-point range while outrebounding Brooklyn 53-40.

Michael Porter Jr. didn’t play for the Nets because of personal reasons.

Up next

Timberwolves: Remain in New York and will play the Knicks on Wednesday.

Nets: Visit the Indiana Pacers on Wednesday.

Knicks use 41-point third quarter to run away from Wizards in 119-102 win

The Knicks beat the Washington Wizards 119-102 on Monday night at Madison Square Garden. 

Here are some takeaways...

- Mitchell Robinson sat this one out on the second night of a back-to-back for load management. Mike Brown revealed pregame that the team is watching the big man’s minutes as he ramps up in the early going of the season -- Robinson hasn't played 20+ minutes in either of his appearances thus far. 

With Robinson sidelined, Landry Shamet jumped back into the lineup making his second start of the season. 

- Karl-Anthony Towns picked up where he left off last year when he dominated the matchup with Washington's Alex Sarr. Towns scored or assisted on each of New York's first 13 points of the game (eight points, two assists) and he reeled in a whopping six rebounds (four offensive) halfway through the opening frame. 

- Outside of Towns, though, New York struggled offensively in the first quarter. They shot just 32 percent from the field and turned the ball over five different times, while Washington got out to a terrific start to help them hold a seven-point advantage after the first 12 minutes. 

- The Knicks' second unit was able to get them going early in the second with Towns continuing to lead the way on both ends of the court. The big man picked up two more quick buckets, one of which surpassed 15,000 points in his career and the other a monstrous posterization of Sarr to even things at 40.

Towns left with trainers midway through the second with his hand bleeding, but he quickly returned.

- New York used a 10-2 run late in the half to open their largest lead of the game at the time (nine), but Washington refused to go away and answered back with 13 straight points of their own. Towns would drill a buzzer-beater three and a free throw to help the Knicks carry a three-point lead into the break (57-54). 

Towns finished an outstanding half with 15 points, 11 rebounds, and five assists. 

- The third quarter started much like the first. Both teams put forward some sloppy play on both ends of the court, but this time around the Knicks were able to quickly right the ship, and they used a 17-0 run to open a commanding advantage over the young Wizards that they never looked back from. New York finished a tremendous quarter with 41 points on 15-of-22 shooting. 

- Their scoring was much more balanced as well, as Jalen Brunson got going in the frame to finish with 16 points and nine assists, Shamet knocked down some big buckets for eight points, Josh Hart had a double-double (12 points, 10 rebounds), and Jordan Clarkson provided another big spark with 15 points off the bench. 

Towns finished his dominant night with his sixth double-double through seven games. The big man led all scorers with 33 points, reeled in 13 rebounds, and dished out five assists. Anunoby chipped in 16 points as well, pulled down six rebounds, and swiped five steals as he put together another strong effort on both ends. 

- New York is now a perfect 4-0 at Madison Square Garden so far this season.

Game MVP: Karl-Anthony Towns

The big man dominated his matchup all night long, and made a little history in the process. 

Highlights

What's next

The Knicks host old friend Julius Randle and the Minnesota Timberwolves on Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. 

Pace, unconventional up-tempo halfcourt offense have made Miami must watch

LOS ANGELES — It has been shocking — and wildly entertaining — to watch the Miami Heat this season.

For as long as anyone can remember, the Heat have been methodical. Last season, Miami ranked 27th in the league in pace, with just 16.5% of its possessions starting in transition (25th in the NBA). The season before that (2023-24), the Heat were 29th in pace with just 16.2% of their possessions starting in transition. It's been that way throughout Erik Spoelstra's first 17 seasons in Miami — slow, grind it out, old-school Eastern Conference basketball. In each of the last six seasons, Miami has been in the bottom four in the league in pace, and Spoelstra's teams have never finished in the top half of the league in pace — including the explosive LeBron James championship teams.

Which is why this season has been a shock.

Miami leads the league in pace — and it's not close. The Heat are pushing the ball in transition every chance they get — 23.9% of their possessions start in transition — but that is just the tip of the iceberg. Their halfcourt offense is just as relentless with its ball and player movement. There are no stars pounding the ball and getting picks set for them — Miami has run pick-and-roll on 7.8% of its offensive possessions this season, less than half of the next-lowest team. It's a blur of motion, drives, kicks, and everyone getting a touch and a shot.

It's working — and with essentially the same roster Miami had last season.

"We're just trying to build something that makes sense for this roster…" Spoelstra said. "Where our pace ultimately lands, we'll find out."

Pace in half court

When we think of a team playing fast, we think of transition basketball. We think Showtime or the "seven seconds or less" Suns. The Heat certainly do run — as noted above, they lead the league in transition opportunities. Third-year forward Jaime Jaquez Jr. is thriving in transition, averaging 18.7 points a game off the bench.

"I think that's part of my role in this team, coming off as that sixth man," Jaquez said. "It's to infuse life and energy, give the team a spark, whatever they need, or be the gas that we throw in the fire. I take that role very seriously."

However, where things are really diffrerent for the Heat is in the half court.

Pace is not just about running, it's about making quick decisions and pressuring the defense, and that's exactly what the Heat are doing with their halfcourt offense— and doing it in a system like nobody else runs. This summer, the Heat brought in Noah LaRoche as a consultant, the guy who introduced the "wheel" style offense that Memphis ran for parts of last season (the one Ja Morant did not like). It's a system widespread in European leagues. Put simply, there are rarely picks (again, 7.8% of possessions), instead, players attack one-on-one, try to get by their man into the paint, and the other players rotate behind him to keep the spacing and open up passing lanes. It's drive-and-kick, drive-and-kick until there is a good shot.

"They play super fast," Lakers coach J.J. Redick said of facing Miami's offense. "And then that sort of swing, swing, drive over and over again until they get the advantage. Still can't allow the ball to go middle, but Memphis last year felt really reliant on the middle drive. This team doesn't. They do a great job of just attacking and that low man, whoever just cut sits there, and he kind of just reads where he's supposed to go."

It's working, the Heat are 10th in the league in offensive rating. It's not for everybody — for example, the Lakers, with Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves, should stick with the pick-and-roll where their stars thrive. And we're likely we see more pick-and-rolls in Miami once Tyler Herro returns from injury, but the Heat aren't going all the way back to the old days either.

Defending at pace is the challenge

Against the Lakers on Sunday, the Heat had an offensive rating of 114.3, which is a couple of points below their average but not bad. However, they had a defensive rating of 121.5 (for comparison, that would be the third worst in the NBA this season).

After the loss, that's what frustrated Spoelstra and the team.

"That's our identity. That's what this franchise has really hung their hat on, defense," Bam Adebayo said. "So even though our offense has changed and we're scoring in the 120s, we still got to defend."

That game was also a one-off — Miami has the third-best defensive rating in the league this season. They are pressuring full court, trying to speed teams up, and it's working. It just didn't work Sunday night.

However, that defense and that pace have made the Heat the most interesting team in the NBA this season.