Pistons vs Hornets Discussion: Game Time, TV, Odds, and More

DETROIT, MICHIGAN - DECEMBER 20: Cade Cunningham #2 of the Detroit Pistons plays against the Charlotte Hornets at Little Caesars Arena on December 20, 2025 in Detroit, Michigan. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Troy Weaver vindicated? The Detroit Pistons are facing an incredibly dangerous Charlotte Hornets team, and a bunch of that credit must go to head coach Charles Lee. He’s gotten his team to buy in, unlocked its mishmash of high-level offensive talent, and the Hornets have gone from cute story to real danger climbing up the standings in the East. Lee, of course, was the head coach candidate whom Troy Weaver wanted to hire two years ago before he was overruled by Pistons owner Tom Gores and Vice Chairman Arn Tellem, who forced Detroit’s general manager to hire Monty Williams instead. We all know how that worked out.

The Hornets enter tonight looking for the franchise’s first 10-game winning streak since 1998, which is also the last time the team had a 50-win season. The Hornets started too slowly to reach 50 wins this season, but they are a better team than their record suggests, and this performance is no mirage. While they are justifiably known for that potent offense, which has been the best in the NBA during the team’s nine-game win streak, the defense is no pushover. Over that same span, it ranks fifth in the NBA, one spot better than the Pistons. Detroit will likely need to win with its defense, as it has all season, but will need to do so without Ron Holland, who is out tonight for personal reasons.

Detroit loves a statement game this season, and hopefully, they realize this can be one of them.

Game Vitals

When: 7 p.m. ET
Where: Spectrum Center, Charlotte, North Carolina
How: FanDuel Sports Network Detroit
Odds: Pistons -2.5

Projected Lineups

Detroit Pistons (38-13)

Cade Cunningham, Duncan Robinson, Ausar Thompson, Tobias Harris, Jalen Duren

Charlotte Hornets (25-28)

LaMelo Ball, Brandon Miller, Kon Knueppel, Miles Bridges, Moussa Diabaté

Lakers signing Kobe Bufkin makes sense and was a smart move

LOS ANGELES — Before the Lakers’ victory over the Warriors, president of basketball operations/general manager Rob Pelinka told a handful of beat reporters the team would likely fill its 15th and final open roster spot after doing its “due diligence”. 

A few hours later, the Lakers solidified how they wanted to use the roster slot by signing Kobe Bufkin to a two-year contract with a team option for the 2026-27 season in a move that may have gone under the radar since it was first reported late on a Saturday night and became official during Sunday’s Super Bowl.

While the Lakers could’ve gone in different directions for filling out their roster, signing Bufkin was the right move.

The Los Angeles Lakers have signed guard Kobe Bufkin to a two-year contract, solidifying their final roster spot. NBAE via Getty Images

Before even getting into what makes Bufkin worthy of being a full-time NBA player — and how he is likely outside the regular rotation for the remainder of this season — the Lakers’ other opportunities for their final roster spot needs to be addressed. 

Because most times a roster or personnel move is made, there are, naturally, statements that fit into the “would’ve, could’ve, should’ve” narrative. 

Yes, the Lakers could’ve tried to sign someone off the buyout/midseason free agency market. 

Cam Thomas, who’s since signed with the Bucks after being waived by the Nets, and Haywood Highsmith, who like Thomas was also waived by the Nets last week, were popular names tied to the Lakers.

But individually, both players either didn’t fit or came with their own risks. 

Charlotte Hornets guard Sion James, left, shoots as Los Angeles Lakers guard Kobe Bufkin defends during the second half of an NBA basketball game Thursday, Jan. 15. AP

For as talented as Thomas is, and his skillset is evident in the 21.4 points he’s averaged over the last three seasons, did the Lakers need a score-first, smaller guard who’s a liability on the defensive end of the floor? And unlike Bufkin, the team signing Thomas (the Bucks in this case) would either need to have or open up a spot in the rotation so Thomas could receive regular playing time. With Austin Reaves back in the lineup and the trade for Luke Kennard, the Lakers simply don’t have a need for what Thomas brings. 

Highsmith would’ve been a tantalizing option, with the 6-foot-5 forward having a skillset (high-level perimeter defense, 38.8% shooting on 3-pointers the last two seasons) and motor the Lakers lack. But Highsmith has yet to play this season after having surgery in early August to repair a meniscal tear in his right knee — a procedure that was originally supposed to sideline him for eight-to-10 weeks. 

The critiques about the Lakers’ options besides signing Bufkin highlight a bigger point: the buyout/midseason free agency market rarely provides players who’ll have a positive impact on a team’s chances of making noise in the playoffs, let alone contend for the championship.

Kobe Bufkin and LeBron James of the Los Angeles Lakers shake hands before the game against the LA Clippers on January 22. NBAE via Getty Images

The team’s last two signings off the buyout market — Spencer Dinwiddie in 2024 and Alex Len last year —  are usually how those types of midseason additions impact a team compared to Markieff Morris’ run with the 2020 Lakers that won the NBA title. 

In Bufkin, the Lakers are getting a 22-year-old guard who they had interest in drafting in 2023 before he was taken by the Hawks, two spots ahead of the Lakers using the No. 17 pick to select Jalen Hood-Schifino. 

As the No. 15 pick in 2023, Bufkin not only has the pedigree but also the size (6-foot-4 with a 6-foot-8 wingspan) to be successful in the NBA. Success in the G League doesn’t translate to success in the NBA, but the way Bufkin played for the Lakers’ South Bay G League affiliate shouldn’t be overlooked. He’s also shown he’s willing to step up his play defensively. 

The Lakers have seen multiple younger or lesser-experienced players they’ve invested in have positive impacts on their next team after the Lakers decided not to see that investment through — with Jordan Goodwin being the latest example after they waived him over the summer to become salary cap compliant before signing Marcus Smart. 

By signing Bufkin, the Lakers give themselves an opportunity to see what they can get out of their investment on a talented, young and inexpensive player — an especially important factor in the modern NBA with how punitive the salary cap aprons are for team building.

How to watch Warriors vs. Grizzlies

SAN FRANCISCO, CA - OCTOBER 27: Pat Spencer #61 of the Golden State Warriors and Cam Spencer #24 of the Memphis Grizzlies look on during the game on October 27, 2025 at Chase Center in San Francisco, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Noah Graham/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

With just two games left before the NBA All-Star Break, the Golden State Warriors return to the Chase Center to host the Memphis Grizzlies on Monday night. The game will be played at 7:00 PM PT in San Francisco and can be watched on NBC Sports Bay Area.

Previously with the Warriors:

Golden State split its recent two-game road trip following Saturday’s 105–99 loss to the Los Angeles Lakers. The effort was there, and the Warriors competed on both ends throughout the night. However, playing without Stephen Curry for the third straight game, the offense once again had to lean heavily on perimeter shooting — an area where the team struggled mightily, going just 14-of-51 from three (27.5%) on the night.

Moses Moody was one of the few bright spots offensively, leading the Warriors with 25 points, including five made threes.

What to watch for tonight:

It’s expected to be another shorthanded matchup for both sides of tonight’s game. Curry and newly acquired Warriors’ big man Kristaps Porzingis are not expected to return until after the All-Star Break, while Memphis will also be without star point guard Ja Morant.

While playing with a depleted roster following last week’s trade deadline, several Warriors have stepped into larger roles, including Pat Spencer. The former two-way guard was signed to a standard NBA contract prior to Saturday’s game against the Lakers and rewarded the team with 14 points, seven assists, five rebounds, and a steal in his spot start.

Spencer has provided valuable depth throughout the season, and his downhill pressure at the rim should continue to create the paint touches and perimeter opportunities that head coach Steve Kerr has emphasized during this stretch. Not to mention, he’ll get a chance to play against his brother, Cam Spencer, as Golden State looks to bounceback against a Grizzlies team that has a 2-8 record over their last 10 games.

Enjoy the game Dub Nation. GO WARRIORS!!! 

Projected Starters

Warriors: Pat Spencer, De’Anthony Melton, Moses Moody, Gui Santos, Draymond Green

Grizzlies: Ty Jerome, Cedric Coward, Jaylen Wells, GG Jackson, Kyle Anderson

How to watch Regular Season Game 54

Who: Golden State Warriors (28 – 25) vs. Memphis Grizzlies (20 – 31)

When: Monday, February 9th, at 7:00 p.m. PT

Where: Chase Center — San Francisco, California

TV and Streaming: NBC Sports Bay Area (available on fuboTV)

Celtics share major Jayson Tatum injury update

DETROIT, MICHIGAN - JANUARY 19: Jayson Tatum #0 of the Boston Celtics looks on against the Detroit Pistons at Little Caesars Arena on January 19, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Nic Antaya/Getty Images) | Getty Images

BOSTON — Jayson Tatum is practicing with the Maine Celtics on Monday as he continues to recover from an Achilles rupture he suffered last week, the Celtics shared in an official press release.

Tatum will be assigned to participate in portions of the Maine Celtics practice at the Auerbach Center this afternoon. Following this practice, Tatum will be immediately recalled to the Boston Celtics, where he will continue his rehab process. Fellow Celtics players Hugo Gonzalez and Amari Williams are joining Tatum at practice.

It’s been almost 9 months since Tatum first suffered the injury, and the Celtics have never offered a recovery timeline.

It’s not unusual for athletes to be assigned to their G-League affiliate as they near a full recovery; earlier this year, for example, LeBron James practiced with the Los Angeles Lakers’ G-League affiliate, and five days later, he made his season debut as he recovered from an offseason bout of sciatica.

Similarly, Kristaps Porzingis practiced with the G-League last fall as he rehabbed an offseason ankle surgery, and six days later, made his season debut.

That doesn’t mean that Tatum’s return is just a week away — but it does open the door for that possibility.

Last week, Celtics president of basketball operations Brad Stevens said that Tatum still has “a ways to go.”

“When it’s right, then we’ll all sit down and talk about it,” Stevens said. “There’s still no force from us. There’s no pressure from us. But there’s also not gonna be any of us saying, ‘Well, why doesn’t he just take another week?’ When he’s ready, he’s ready.”

Without Tatum, the Celtics are 34-19, owners of the Eastern Conference’s third-best net rating.

Courtney Williams, Saniya Rivers and Azurá Stevens swapped in first-ever Unrivaled in-season trade

Courtney Williams and Saniya Rivers will be wearing new Unrivaled jerseys come next weekend. | Getty Images

Unrivaled, a league full of firsts, has announced the second trade—and first in-season trade—in league history.

On Monday morning, the league announced that Courtney Williams has been traded from Vinyl BC to Breeze BC, Saniya Rivers from Hive BC to Vinyl BC and Azurá Stevens from Rose BC to Hive BC. The trade comes in the wake of Aari McDonald’s season ending right leg injury; McDonald had only played one game for Breeze.

The conditions of the four-club deal are definite yet confusing. Per Unrivaled’s announcement, Breeze doesn’t seem to be forfeiting anything for Williams. The league also didn’t announce anyone going to Rose in return for Stevens. However, it is worth noting that Clare Duwelius serves as the lone general manager of Unrivaled; clubs do not have individual GMs. Transactions, thus, do not abide by the typical protocol or processes of WNBA trades.

The first Unrivaled trade came prior to Season 1, when Courtney Williams, Jackie Young, Tiffany Hayes and Natasha Cloud were swapped in a similar multi-team deal. This Season 2 deal thus makes Williams the first veteran of the 3×3 trade market.

With Breeze, Rose, Vinyl, and Hive respectively occupying spots No. 4 through No. 7 in the league’s current standings, the four-team deal doesn’t project to shake up the top of the league. However, it gives the Breeze a notable boost at the guard spot behind Paige Bueckers. That extra backcourt depth could be enough to make up some ground on the league leaders, especially considering they didn’t give up anything for Williams.

Vinyl is adding a highlight defender in Saniya Rivers, improving an already solid team defense. Vinyl is also one of the league’s tallest teams, a trend that Rivers, a 6-foot-1 guard, will fit. Vinyl, however, will have to put a larger burden of playmaking on Rhyne Howard and Erica Wheeler in the absence of Williams.

Stevens, now en route to the Hive, had a hot start to Unrivaled Season 2, but her production had quickly withered in the past two weeks, in part due to injury issues. Coming off a one-possession win, Hive will hope that she can reprise her scoring as they try to make a push in the waning half of the season. Ezi Magbegor is also dealing with an injury, giving Stevens a chance to inherit big minutes for her new team. Sans Stevens, Rose will have to add a developmental player if any of their players miss a game. Their current roster sits at just five players, and the developmental pool can be triggered when a team drops below five.

Villarreal inflicts heaviest defeat of Espanyol in La Liga this season

VILLARREAL, Spain (AP) — Villarreal scored twice in each half to hammer Espanyol 4-1 in La Liga and hand the Catalan club its heaviest defeat of the season on Monday.

The result ended a poor run which had seen Villarreal take one point from its previous three games. The win lifted it to equal on points with third-placed Atletico Madrid and seven ahead of Real Betis, although Villareal has a game in hand on both.

Georges Mikautadze gave Villarreal the lead 10 minutes before halftime when he met Tajon Buchanan's perfectly cushioned header and fired home a spectacular scissor kick.

Jose Salinas’ own goal six minutes later doubled Villarreal’s lead. Nicolas Pepe added the third five minutes into the second half when he rifled a low shot from outside the box after some skilful footwork.

Alberto Moleiro made it 4-0 five minutes later when he finished off an incisive counterattack.

Leandro Cabrera’s glancing header from a Cyril Ngonge corner with two minutes remaining was Espanyol’s only response.

Barcelona-based Espanyol has not won since before Christmas and has gone six matches without a win in the league. Monday's result marked the first time this season it conceded four goals in a game. It remained in sixth place.

___

AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Utah Jazz vs. Miami Heat: Preview, Start Time, TV Channel

Feb 7, 2026; Orlando, Florida, USA; Utah Jazz center Jaren Jackson Jr. (20) shoots during the second half against the Orlando Magic at Kia Center. Mandatory Credit: Mike Watters-Imagn Images | Mike Watters-Imagn Images

After a wonderful debut to the Jaren Jackson Jr. era of Jazz basketball, Utah continues its east-coast roadtrip against the Miami Heat tonight. Jackson Jr., who impressed with 22 points and three steals, did not play in the fourth quarter after the Jazz led by 15 points in the third quarter against the Orlando Magic.

To say that national pundits were unhappy with Utah’s tanking job on social media would be an understatement. Unlike its tanking peers, Utah has not shut-down its stars Lauri Markkanen, Jaren Jackson Jr., and Keyonte George for the remainder of the season with phantom injuries. Instead, they continue to play them, but have limited their minutes in favor of developing prospects at the end of games.

Arguably, this strategy is more honest and better for the league than shutting down players like Trae Young and Anthony Davis for the rest of the season. Fans get to watch starts like Markkanen and Jackson Jr. actually play, rather than missing the chance to watch them at all. In the name of retaining the pick and improving its future, the Jazz have no other choice.

Tonight, the Jazz will be without Keyonte George and Kevin Love. George has been battling a sprained ankle and re-aggravated it against Orlando.


How to watch

Who: Utah Jazz vs Miami Heat

When: Monday, February 9, 2026 – 5:30 PM MT

Where: Kasaya Center, Miami, FL

How to watch: KJZZ, Jazz+

Pistons sign guard Daniss Jenkins to contract after he played 42 games this season on 2-way deal

DETROIT (AP) — Daniss Jenkins has earned an NBA contract with the Detroit Pistons, who signed the guard on Monday after he played 42 games this season on a two-way deal.

Jenkins is averaging eight points and three assists as a key player for the Eastern Conference -leading Pistons. In seven starts, he has averaged 15.3 points, 6.7 assists and 3.1 rebounds.

The 6-foot-4 Jenkins, who is from Dallas, played in seven games last season as an undrafted free agent after playing for St. John's, Iona and Pacific.

___

AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/NBA

Clippers still waiting on NBA investigation results of Kawhi Leonard's $28M endorsement deal

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Los Angeles Clippers continue to await the results of the NBA's investigation of a business relationship between Kawhi Leonard and a California company he had an endorsement deal with.

Last September, a report by journalist Pablo Torre alleged the team violated the NBA’s salary cap rules involving a $28 million endorsement contract between Leonard and the now-bankrupt California-based sustainability services company called Aspiration Fund Adviser LLC.

Leonard has denied any wrongdoing, saying he didn't receive all of the money he was owed from the company.

The Clippers have strongly denied that any rules were broken and said it welcomed the league’s investigation, which is being run by an outside firm.

“We haven’t learned anything more than we have in September,” Lawrence Frank, president of basketball operations, said Monday. “We know it’s out there, we know at some point there’ll be a decision made. We very much feel the same thing that we told you back in September, that we’re on the right side of this. It really doesn’t impact anything we do on a daily basis.”

The Clippers are hosting this weekend’s NBA All-Star festivities at their year-old arena in Inglewood.

Clippers owner Steve Ballmer made a $50 million investment in Aspiration, and the company and the team announced a $300 million partnership in September 2021. That was about a month after Leonard signed a four-year, $176 million extension with the Clippers.

The team ended its relationship with Aspiration after two years, saying the contract was in default. Aspiration’s co-founder, Joseph Sanberg, agreed to plead guilty in August after facing federal charges of wire fraud. Prosecutors said he defrauded investors and lenders out of $248 million, adding that “Aspiration’s financial statements were inaccurate and reflected much higher revenue than the company in fact received.”

Aspiration owed Leonard about $7 million of the $28 million deal it had with him when the company filed for bankruptcy.

“I got to look back at the books,” Leonard said last September, “but it was more than that, for sure.”

Asked if he received the money he was owed, Leonard replied, “Uh, no, but the company went belly up. It was fraud as everyone knows.”

As for the allegation that he did nothing in exchange for being paid by Aspiration, Leonard said, “I don’t think it’s accurate.”

___

AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/NBA

Malen's priceless double keeps Roma in touch with Serie A pack

ROME (AP) — Donyell Malen scored in each half as Roma beat Cagliari 2-0 and stayed in touch with the chasing pack at the top of Serie A on Monday.

Leader Inter Milan was eight points clear of city rival AC Milan and nine ahead of reigning champion Napoli. Roma was three points further back along with Juventus.

Dutch center forward Malen had scored only once in four appearances since joining on loan from Aston Villa in January and he proved his worth on Monday with two excellent finishes.

He ran on to a clever through ball from Gianluca Mancini and his deft chip over the goalkeeper was equal to the set-up pass.

His second was more of a poacher’s effort as he got on the right side of a packed defense to turn in a low cross 20 minutes after the break.

The result served as a confidence booster ahead of next weekend’s crunch tie at Napoli.

Cagliari, which was seeking a fourth consecutive Serie A win for the first time in more than a decade, remained 12th.

Atalanta beats Cremonese

Atalanta moved to within two points of the European places after beating Cremonese 2-1.

Atalanta was unbeaten in its last seven league matches and in seventh spot, two points behind Como and seven behind Roma and Juventus.

Nikola Krstovic put Atalanta ahead after 13 minutes when he got on the end of a nice cross from Giacomo Raspadori. Davide Zappacosta made it 2-0 minutes later with a neat individual goal.

Atalanta's Lazar Samardžić and Berat Djimsiti also came close as they bossed the first 45 minutes.

Krstovic missed the best chance of the second half and Berat Djimsiti had a goal disallowed in stoppage time as Atalanta continued to dominate.

Morten Thorsby’s last-minute consolation for Cremonese gave the scoreline a more respectable sheen than the action suggested.

Cremonese was without a win in 10 games and sat 16th, just five points above the relegation zone.

___

AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Bucks vs Magic Prediction, Picks & Best Bet for Tonight’s NBA Game

The Milwaukee Bucks will try to extend their winning streak to four games as they visit the Orlando Magic tonight. Coverage begins at 7:30 p.m. ET on Peacock.

Milwaukee has shown it can compete with much better teams even without its biggest star, which is why my Bucks vs. Magic predictions are siding with the underdog.

Read on for my free NBA picks for Monday, February 9.

Bucks vs Magic prediction

Bucks vs Magic best bet: Bucks +11 (-110)

Nobody thinks the Milwaukee Bucks are about to start thriving without Giannis Antetokounmpo, but Milwaukee’s fans have to be happy to see the team getting a few wins even as the superstar is recovering from his calf injury.

After starting 3-14 without Giannis this season, the Bucks have won three in a row, covering as underdogs in all three contests.

With or without Antetokounmpo, the Bucks have shown enough not to be a double-digit underdog to the Orlando Magic, even on the road.

The Magic are dealing with their own injury issues, with leading scorer Franz Wagner sitting out with an ankle injury. They’ve lost six of their last 10 overall.

Milwaukee has a -3.7 point differential, but Orlando is a mediocre -0.4 itself. Both teams are essentially equal in their offensive efficiency, with the Magic being marginally better on the defensive end.

While Orlando has a significantly better record and has more talent to cover them without Wagner — having Paolo Banchero on your roster helps a ton — the gap between these teams simply isn’t that big.

Bucks vs Magic same-game parlay

Along with taking Milwaukee to cover, I’m also throwing in a bet on the Over, as this total looks too low given the high-scoring games both teams have been playing lately.

Each of the last four head-to-heads has gone Over.

I’ll also back Myles Turner to pick up Over 6.5 rebounds, something he’s easily done in his last two games, picking up at least nine boards in each.

Bucks vs Magic SGP

  • Bucks +11
  • Over 220
  • Myles Turner Over 6.5 rebounds

Our "from downtown" SGP: Rollins keeps it rolling

Ryan Rollins has been firing away from deep lately, hitting at least three shots from beyond the arc in each of his last five games.

Bucks vs Magic SGP

  • Bucks +11
  • Over 220
  • Myles Turner Over 6.5 rebounds
  • Ryan Rollins Over 2.5 made threes

Bucks vs Magic odds

  • Spread: Bucks +10.5 | Magic -10.5
  • Moneyline: Bucks +375 | Magic -500
  • Over/Under: Over 220.5 | Under 220.5

Bucks vs Magic betting trend to know

The Bucks are 3-0 ATS in their last three games overall. Find more NBA betting trends for Bucks vs. Magic.

How to watch Bucks vs Magic

LocationKia Center, Orlando, FL
DateMonday, February 9, 2026
Tip-off7:30 p.m. ET
TVPeacock

Bucks vs Magic latest injuries

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Boston Celtics Daily Links 2/9/26

HOUSTON, TX - FEBRUARY 4: The sneakers worn by Kevin Durant #7 of the Houston Rockets during the game against the Boston Celtics on February 4, 2026 at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Logan Riely/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

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NBA power rankings 2025-26: Pistons, Spurs — two teams quiet at deadline — move to top of rankings

Welcome to the post-deadline, pre-All-Star Game NBA Power Rankings here at NBC Sports. Just a heads-up: next week there will be no rankings. We're taking a one-week break, just like the players (plus, there aren't many games this week).

1. Detroit Pistons

(38-13, last week No. 2)
Detroit largely kept a low profile at the trade deadline — just swapping Jaden Ivey for Kevin Huerter — because it wants to see what its young core looks like in the playoffs. That's a smart strategy when you're already the No. 1 seed in the East (with a five-game cushion), especially when the impactful players they could have traded for were either unavailable (Lauri Markkanen) or just too expensive (Michael Porter Jr., Jaren Jackson Jr.). The Pistons move up to No. 1 because we're ignoring what happened Thursday against the Wizards.

2. San Antonio Spurs

(36-16, last week No. 3)
San Antonio kept its powder dry at the trade deadline, choosing not to jump in and chase a star (or anyone else) and instead go into the playoffs with this young core, get a sense of where things stand, and then adjust this offseason as needed (just like Oklahoma City did a couple of years ago). Part of that young core, Stephon Castle, showed why you should keep this group together, dropping a 40-point triple-double on Dallas this week.

3. Oklahoma City Thunder

(40-13, last week No. 1)
Oklahoma City was very clever at the trade deadline, sending one of its many first-round picks to get Jared McCain out of Philadelphia. A league source texted me that it was "the most OKC move ever," landing a quality young player who they can develop and grow for a couple of seasons while he is still on his rookie deal. In the short term, the Thunder are without the injured Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams, and with that have gone 3-5 in their last eight. This team needs the All-Star break and a reset. That doesn't start until after a tough couple of games this week against the Lakers and Suns.

4. New York Knicks

(34-19, last week No. 5)
Picking up Jose Alvarado and bringing the New York native home (he played his High School ball at Christ the King in Queens) is one of the big wins of the trade deadline. (The other win for the Knicks was the Bucks not trading Giannis Antetokounmpo, pushing that into the summer when the Knicks have a chance.) New York's win over Boston over the weekend was impressive, but them getting thumped by the Pistons earlier in the week (even at a rest disadvantage) was concerning. Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns will deservedly be in Los Angeles this weekend for the All-Star Game.

5. Boston Celtics

(34-19, last week No. 6)
Boston got its big man depth at the deadline in a deal for veteran Nikola Vucevic. Watching him in Celtics green (or the gold uniforms on Sunday), he looks like a player still finding his comfort zone, scoring 11 in each game but shooting just 1-of-7 from 3-point range so far. That will change and the veteran will find his groove. Jaylen Brown deserves to be in the All-Star Game this weekend, he deserves to be mentioned as an MVP candidate, he deserves everything coming his way. He has been special this season.

6. Cleveland Cavaliers

(32-21, last week No. 9)
We want teams to be aggressive at the trade deadline, and Cleveland was that. Darius Garland has not been healthy this season (and the Cavs clearly are not sure if and when he's going to be), so they went all-in with James Harden. It'll be interesting to see how the slow, deliberate style of Harden fits with the up-tempo style of Donovan Mitchell in Cleveland. It worked on Saturday. Playing his first game with the Cavaliers since being traded — and without a practice or shootaround — Harden took over in the fourth quarter, scoring 15 points on 4-of-4 shooting (three of those 3-pointers) to spark a comeback win for the Cavaliers against the Kings on the road.

7. Houston Rockets

(32-19, last week No. 4)
Houston stood pat at the deadline, which was mildly surprising given that they are without Fred VanVleet and Steven Adams for the rest of the season and its offense has been struggling for a while now (26th in the NBA over the last 15 games). Houston is going to ride this core into the playoffs and see what they have. Sometimes it's about catching opponents at the right time, like Houston beating OKC last week (without SGA or J-Dub) or now getting the shorthanded Clippers for two games this week.

8. Denver Nuggets

(34-19, last week No. 10)
Denver dodged the luxury tax at the deadline with a small move, but mostly they like this core — if they can just get everyone healthy at once. Forwards Aaron Gordon and Peyton Watson remain out with hamstring issues. While Jamal Murray (hip) and Nikola Jokic (ankle) will head to Los Angeles for the All-Star Game, both could use some downtime to get their bodies right. Good test against James Harden's Cavaliers Monday night.

9. Minnesota Timberwolves

(32-22, last week No. 7)
Very smart pickup at the deadline, adding guard Ayo Dosunmu (and throwing in the towel on Rob Dillingham), he can give this team some of what it's missing without Nickeil Alexander-Walker this season. Dosunmu is a quality defender who averaging 15 points per game and is shooting 45.1% from 3 this season. The Timberwolves remain a streaky team, and their losses last week to the Grizzlies, Clippers, and Pelicans are a concerning sign. Atlanta and Portland are up this week, and Minnesota could use a couple of wins heading into the deadline.

10. Los Angeles Lakers

(32-19, last week No. 11)
The Lakers picked up some shooting at the deadline by adding Luke Kennard (costing them Gabe Vincent), but there was no bold move to turn the Lakers into a contender this season. That's because there was no single move that could turn this team into a threat in the West (outside of landing the Greek Freak, who the Lakers couldn't get at the deadline with what they had to offer). Look for the Lakers to shake up their roster this summer — and to shake up their front office with a lot of additions (scouts, sports science people, more). This offseason is when new owner Mark Walter will put his stamp on the team (and reportedly wants to follow the blueprint he used with the Dodgers).

11. Charlotte Hornets

(25-28, last week No. 16)
Charlotte is the hottest team in the NBA: Winners of nine in a row, they have moved into the play-in if the season ended today. The Hornets have the best offense in the NBA over those nine games. Charlotte also made a great move by trading for Coby White at the deadline. Once healthy (calf issue), White should keep Charlotte's offense from falling off a cliff when LaMelo Ball is off the court. Just how well is Charlotte playing? We will get a good test on Monday night when they face East-leading Detroit.

12. Philadelphia 76ers

(30-22, last week No. 13)
Philadelphia moved on from Jared McCain at the deadline — rookie VJ Edgecombe's play made that possible — and the 76ers get a first-round pick in June out of it (which is good because their pick this year goes to Oklahoma City). Eric Gordon is out, which means Dominick Barlow gets his deserved standard contract (upgraded from a two-way). The 76ers have won 6 of 7 and get a good measuring-stick game on Wednesday against the Knicks.

13. Phoenix Suns

(31-22, last week No. 8)
Phoenix added to its guard depth at the trade deadline, doing so without taking on any long-term salary in a swap that brings Amir Coffey and Cole Anthony to Phoenix in exchange for Nick Richards and Nigel Hayes-Davis. More importantly for their guard depth, the Suns got Devin Booker back Saturday after he missed seven games (the team went 4-3 without him, but lost his return to the 76ers). Collin Gillespie remains one of the great stories of the NBA season, and he got loose against the Trail Blazers for the best night of his NBA career.

14. Toronto Raptors

(32-22, last week No. 14)
Toronto added Trayce Jackson-Davis for a second-round pick. While that is not earth-shattering on its face, the reality is that Toronto has been starting 6'7" rookie Collin Murray-Boyles at the five, and Jackson-Davis is at least a 6'9" player who has played 91% of his career minutes at center. He can help — Jackson-Davis grabbed eight offensive rebounds in 15 minutes against Indiana, helping the Raptors pick up a win. Just one game this week, but not an easy one against Detroit.

15. Golden State Warriors

(28-25, last week No. 12)
The Jonathan Kuminga soap opera is over in the Bay Area. Golden State added Kristaps Porzingis at the trade deadline, which is a great fit on paper, but in reality, he has played just 17 games this season due to illness and injury, and anything the Warriors get on the court is gravy. It's a cold business, and Porzingis is mostly an expiring $30.7 million contract that comes off the books this offseason, allowing the Warriors to look for help to chase one more ring with Stephen Curry, especially with Jimmy Butler out for much of next season.

16. Miami Heat

(28-26, last week No. 15)
Miami stayed in the Giannis Antetokounmpo chase longer than others (Minnesota and Golden State, for example), but that's in part because the Heat didn't have some other big move to make. The Heat made no trades at the deadline, they will wait to take a big swing this offseason. In fact, the only news of note this week is that Terry Rozier gets to collect his checks while being away from the team after a federal gambling indictment (his money had been going into an escrow account, and an arbitrator ruled the Heat and league had to pay him). Winnable games against the Jazz and Pelicans this week.

17. Orlando Magic

(27-24, last week No. 18)
Orlando traded away Tyus Jones and got under the luxury tax, but that was its only trade last week. It was underwhelming, but this entire Orlando season has been underwhelming, as they sit seventh in the East. Injuries keeping Jalen Suggs, Paolo Banchero and Franz Wagner out for extended periods have hampered this team — their preferred starting five of those three plus Desmond Bane and Wendell Carter Jr. has played just 117 minutes together this season across 11 games, but has a +18 net rating. The question being asked in league circles is whether Orlando would consider trading Paolo Banchero this offseason. What could they get for him?

18. Atlanta Hawks

(26-28, last week No. 20)
Atlanta started reshaping its roster with the Trae Young trade, then at the deadline doubled down on that by trading away the oft-injured Kristaps Porziņģis for the athletic Jonathan Kuminga plus Buddy Hield. It's worth taking a chance on Kuminga (who will come off the bench for Atlanta once he gets healthy, sometime after the All-Star break), and if he doesn't work out, the Hawks can choose not to pick up his contract for next season (or do so and trade him again). Tough games this week at Minnesota and Charlotte.

19. Portland Trail Blazers

(25-28, last week No. 21)
Portland was one of the under-the-radar winners at the trade deadline, and not because they picked up guard Vít Krejčí from Atlanta (although he should be a good fit, adding some shooting and ball handling). It's that the Trail Blazers currently sit 10th in the West but with the No. 9 Clippers starting to tear things down at the deadline and the Warriors standing pat, a path to a top-eight spot in the West is opening up (Portland is three games back of Golden State for the No. 8 seed). The best news of the week in Portland was the return of Scoot Henderson, who looked understandably rusty after missing 51 games but also flashed his potential at moments.

20. Los Angeles Clippers

(25-27, last week No. 17)
The Clippers' front office understood their roster and where they stood in the West. Despite a strong recent run of play, they knew this team was not a contender in the West right now, and they were getting older. The Clippers went with the "break it up a year too early rather than a year too late" theory and traded James Harden and Ivica Zubac. If the Clippers can get Darius Garland healthy, and he can return to his All-Star form next season, this was a great move for the Clippers — they get 10 years younger at point guard. Bennedict Mathurin is worth taking a longer look at as well. The real question becomes, is Kawhi Leonard available in a trade next summer?

21. Milwaukee Bucks

(21-29, last week No. 24)
Milwaukee was never really interested in trading Giannis Antetokounmpo, all of that drama was more of a fact-finding mission to see where the market stood, something we reported here at NBC Sports regularly in the run-up to the deadline. Things could be different this offseason when the sides talk. The more interesting question now is how much Antetokounmpo we see the rest of this season — he talked about wanting to get healthy and make a postseason push, but the best long-term move for the franchise would be to tank, then use that higher draft pick to either trade for (or draft) another star to go next to the two-time MVP, or to use it as part of the rebuild that would come after trading him. There will be some tension.

22. Memphis Grizzlies

(20-31, last week No. 23)
In retrospect, it was clear Memphis was ready to tear this iteration of the team down and rebuild when they traded Desmond Bane for four first-round picks over the summer. Now they have done the same with Jaren Jackson Jr., and you can be sure that over the summer they will again try to trade Ja Morant (the problem is there is no good market for the two-time All-Star, other teams wanted the Grizzlies to attach a pick for them to take Morant). It's going to be a rough end of the season for Grizzlies fans, but we get to see what Taylor Hendricks can do.

23. Chicago Bulls

(24-29, last week No. 19)
Does anyone have an idea what the plan is in Chicago? They traded away good guards in Coby White and Ayo Dosunmu, then started collecting other guards teams didn't want like they were Labubus — Anfernee Simons, Jaden Ivey, Collin Sexton, Rob Dillingham, and they already had a primary ball handler in Josh Giddey, plus there is Tre Jones. On top of that, they have another guard, always-entertaining Yuki Kawamura, on a two-way contract, and then they went out and added Mac McClung on another two-way. Make it make sense. The Bulls have lost 7 of 8 and fallen out of the play-in in the East.

24. New Orleans Pelicans

(14-40, last week No. 25)
New Orleans did well in the Jose Alvarado trade with the Knicks, taking a shot on Dalen Terry (23-year-old guard shooting 41.3% on 3s) plus a couple of second-round picks. This team has no incentive to tank (their pick goes to Atlanta, or possibly Milwaukee), they are just bad. None of the team's most coveted players — Zion Williamson, Trey Murphy III and Herbert Jones — were available at the trade deadline. Will that be different this summer?

25. Dallas Mavericks

(19-33, last week No. 22)
Dallas salary dumped Anthony Davis at the deadline, a trade that looks better on paper — "we got All-Star and Olympian Khris Middleton and two first-round picks" — than the reality (Middleton is not near that player anymore, and the first-round picks are a the Thunder's this year, so 29 or 30, and a future Golden State pick that likely converts to a second-rounder). What Dallas did was save money this year and clear the decks to build around Cooper Flagg — and this is why you want to build around Flagg.

26. Indiana Pacers

(13-40, last week No. 26)
Indiana had one of the best trade deadlines, landing center Ivica Zubac from the Clippers — he will be a fantastic fit next to a healthy Tyrese Haliburton next season. Zubac sets a big screen, and while he doesn't space the floor he is strong on the roll, a good passer, and the kind of defense presence in the paint this team needs. We will not see much of Zubac this season as the Pacers tank, but adding the big man and a lottery pick to a team that went to the Finals last season is going to make this team a force in the East next season.

27. Washington Wizards

(14-38, last week No. 27)
I like what the Wizards did picking up Trae Young and Anthony Davis at the deadline for one key reason: They gave up almost nothing to get the stars. It was discount shopping. That said, I have a caveat to my support of adding AD and Young: No contract extensions. (A one-year extension for Young beyond his expiring deal, maybe, but nothing long-term.) Adding Young and Davis to a young core with some interesting players such as Alex Sarr, Kyshawn George and Tre Johnson could help swing the culture in the nation's capital. However, that's all next season. For the rest of this season, the tank is on, and don't expect to see much of Young or Davis.

28. Utah Jazz

(16-37, last week No. 28)
Utah was one of the big winners at the trade deadline — this is how you hit the accelerator on a rebuild. Utah has a promising group of young players led by Keyonte George, Walker Kessler and Ace Bailey, now they added a former Defensive Player of the Year in Jaren Jackson Jr. to go next to Lauri Markkanen. Utah looks like a postseason team next season, but don't expect to see much of Jackson this season, as the tank is on to keep their top-eight-protected pick in Utah and add another good young player. Tanktastic game on Wednesday when the Jazz face the Kings.

29. Brooklyn Nets

(14-37, last week No. 29)
Brooklyn did nothing big at the deadline, Michael Porter Jr. and Nic Claxton are still on the team. Cam Thomas is not, but he was waived (and picked up by the Bucks). The Nets did add some young players worth taking a look at in Ochai Agbaji, Hunter Tyson and Josh Minott.

30. Sacramento Kings

(12-42, last week No. 30)
Nobody knows what's going on in Sacramento, where Domantas Sabonis, Zach LaVine, DeMar DeRozan and Russell Westbrook are all still on the roster after the trade deadline (although it's not like they needed to trade those veterans to tank, the Kings are plenty bad with them). Keon Ellis is gone, a taller De'Andre Hunter takes his place but has to prove he's as good. The Kings have lost 12 in a row and will now play 7 of 8 on the road.

Stephon Castle named Western Conference Player of the Week

CHARLOTTE, NC - JANUARY 31: Stephon Castle #5 of the San Antonio Spurs dribbles the ball during the game against the Charlotte Hornets on January 31, 2026 at Spectrum Center in Charlotte, North Carolina. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Darren Carroll/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Stephon Castle has been named Western Conference Player of the Week for the first time in his career, the league announced.

The reigning Rookie of the Year got the recognition he deserved for a very productive week that concluded with a 40-point triple-double, a feat that only David Robinson had previously accomplished in Spurs’ franchise history. He was the third-youngest player to post such a stat line behind LeBron James and Luka Doncic, per Spurs PR.

His other two games were good, but not as eye-popping, and Castle came off the bench for one of them. In the aggregate, however, Castle averaged 24.0 points, 7.3 rebounds, 7.3 assists, and three steals in 26.7 minutes per game, while shooting 63.0% from the field and 36.4% from three to help lead San Antonio to a 3-0 record on the week.

Castle is the first Spur to get the honor since Victor Wembanyama in the opening week of the season. The only two other players in the roster who have ever been named Player of the Week are Harrison Barnes, once in 2024/25, and De’Aaron Fox, who accomplished it multiple times when he played for the Kings.

The Hawks’ Jalen Johnson was named Eastern Conference Player of the Week.

Castle is averaging 17.1 points, 5.2 rebounds, and seven assists for the season on 30.8 minutes a game.

The curious case of the missing welcome graphic for Cole Anthony

BOSTON, MA - FEBRUARY 1: Cole Anthony #50 of the Milwaukee Bucks dribbles the ball during the game against the Boston Celtics during the 2026 NBA Pioneers Classic on February 1, 2026 at TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

With the trade deadline now in the rearview, the Suns are turning the page. Nick Richards is off to Chicago. Nigel Hayes-Davis landed in Milwaukee. In return, Phoenix brought in Amir Coffey and Cole Anthony.

At least on paper.

As of now, Cole Anthony has still not reported to the team, according to Duane Rankin. There has been no welcome graphic. No photo. No announcement. Nothing. Coffey is here. Anthony, for the moment, exists in theory.

It might not seem like much, but a welcome graphic is usually the tell. If a player is with the team, you see it. Simple as that. We already got one for Amir Coffey, posted Saturday, loud and clear.

So what gives?

This is speculation, but it is educated speculation. Reading the tea leaves, looking at the timing, the silence, and the roster math, it feels like the Suns are preparing to waive Cole Anthony.

Right now, Phoenix is sitting at 14 players with one open roster spot. Waiving Anthony would open flexibility. It creates room to add two players instead of one, which matters with the buyout market coming into view.

One path is obvious. Convert both Jamaree Bouyea and Isaiah Livers to standard contracts. Do that, and the Suns still stay under the luxury tax. That feels like the cleanest route. They do not have to rush it either. Teams have until the end of the season to convert two-way players for playoff eligibility. Still, moving earlier would help, especially with the March 4 deadline to sign waived players. If you want optionality later, getting those conversions done sooner helps. It keeps doors open. Names like CJ Huntley live in that space.

The other path is, following the waiving of Anthony, converting one player (most likely Bouyea) and signing a buyout player. Chris Boucher, anyone?

So why hold onto Cole Anthony at all?

Because insurance matters. Guard depth has been a recurring issue all season. Bodies go down. Rotations stretch thin. Anthony becomes a break-glass option if things get sideways again. And honestly, I do not hate that idea. He was a lottery pick back in 2020, going 15th overall to the Orlando Magic. The production has dipped in the past couple of seasons, but the edge is still there. He plays with some bite. Some stubbornness. That part fits.

The problem is everything else. He is a career 34.3% shooter from deep. He does not generate many steals. He does not tilt possessions. And this team is built on volume, pressure, and connectivity.

So while nothing is official yet, all signs point in the same direction. The welcome graphic never came. The reporting is quiet. The roster math makes sense. Cole Anthony feels like a placeholder, not a plan. And sooner rather than later, the Suns are probably going to move on.