Around the NBA: storylines to monitor for the closing stretch and a discussion on tanking

CLEVELAND, OHIO - FEBRUARY 19: Donovan Mitchell #45 and James Harden #1 of the Cleveland Cavaliers celebrate a dunk by Mitchell during the first half against the Brooklyn Nets at Rocket Arena on February 19, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. 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 Nick Cammett/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The NBA season has reached its home stretch, with important storylines left to follow. 

Many teams will use their remaining games to get healthy, as injuries remain a defining factor around the league. Others need time to gel, especially those who made moves at the deadline. 

The most obvious example is Cleveland adding Harden, which has already paid dividends. But just how real is his recent stretch, and where do they stand in the East?

Let’s find out. 

How real are the Cavs?

After a slow start to the season, Cleveland has gone 5-1 following the Harden trade with a +9.0 net rating (5th league-wide) and the second-best offensive rating at 124.3. However, the turnaround actually happened before the Beard’s arrival, as the Cavs are 14-2 over the past month with a +11 net rating and have been good on both ends: during that span, they have a 121.1 ORTG (2nd) and 110.2 DRTG (8th). Their offensive improvement is very real, given that Harden is both a better player and more available than Darius Garland, and his playstyle naturally raises the floors for bigs like Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen.

On the other hand, Cleveland’s recent defense has been propped up by shooting luck. During their hot streak, opponents are making just 33.5% of their triples, which is the 3rd lowest mark in the league. Conversely, they hit 38.9% of threes (the highest percentage) prior to this stretch, so the Cavs were due for some shooting luck anyway. A positive is that Cleveland’s rim protection has been elite all season, so they could still be a very good defense even if the opponent shooting normalizes. I’d currently put Cleveland under Detroit in the East’s hierarchy, but they could definitely rise into that top tier if their dominant play continues.

Tatum’s potential return

Boston’s inspiring season could get even better if Tatum returns, as they’re already close to locking in a top-4 seed in the East. Assuming he does come back, Detroit might be the only team I’d be more confident in making the finals, and that’s accounting for him being at 75% too. Even a lesser version of Tatum is enough to be a good starter/elite role player, and having him focus just on rebounding, shooting, and defending will be a huge boost. Boston will be especially lethal if Tatum can work his way back to guarding centres, as this would mitigate some of Vucevic’s defensive issues and let him play more. The Celtics could always have one guard (White/Pritchard), one wing (Brown/Tatum), and one big (Queta/Vucevic) on the court, allowing Joe Mazzulla to play any style given the polar opposite skillsets of their bigs.

The Nuggets’ injuries

I picked Denver to win the title coming into the season, and nothing has swayed me since — assuming they’re healthy, of course. Unfortunately, that’s a big if given how banged up they’ve been. You know it’s bad when Joker misses a month!

Amazingly, their presumptive starting lineup of Murray-Braun-Johnson-Gordon-Jokic has played just 324 possessions together (less than 6% of the team’s total number of possessions on the season), and their most used lineup isn’t much better, logging just 357 possessions as a unit. However, Denver’s ludicrous +23.7 net rating (130.2 offensive, 106.5 defensive) with Jokic, Murray, and Gordon suggests that they’re a juggernaut waiting to be unleashed. A lot of that is due to defensive shooting luck, but given that the Nuggets are only reliable in their own end when Gordon plays, it’s not hyperbolic to say that his health could be the biggest X-factor in the title race. Whether or not that’s a good bet to make is up to you — his longest streak of games played the past two seasons is last year’s playoff run at 14, which ended in injury — but I have no doubt that Denver should be co-favorites with OKC if he’s able to make it through a long postseason run.

Wemby’s minutes

San Antonio has proven to be legit title threats this season, but they won’t be able to make a long run if Wemby can’t ramp up his minutes. The Alien started the year averaging over 34 minutes a game in October and November, which dropped down to 23 in December when he returned from a calf strain. January saw his playing time increase to 27 minutes per game, which is now over 29 in February. The Spurs won’t suddenly increase Wemby’s minutes to the mid to high thirties come playoff time, so he’ll have to make that adjustment in the last two months of the season. Moreover, Wemby can only miss four of the Spurs’ remaining 25 games in order to qualify for end of season awards, which could be both a blessing and a curse. On one hand, that could help his body acclimate to heavier loads, but it might also wear him out and increase the odds of injury. Either way, both the Spurs and Wemby are incentivized to increase his minutes, which should terrify the rest of the league. 

Tanking is out of control!!

The discourse surrounding tanking has gone into overdrive, and rightfully so: there are more teams than ever purposefully losing and countless stars have ended their seasons because of it too.

However, the amount of tanking changes yearly, depending on the strength of the draft. The current tankathon race is out of control since the 2026 class has three players who could all go #1, but the 2027 and 2028 drafts all lack franchise players at the top. Thus, we don’t want to overcorrect due to this season and end up creating unforeseen consequences for years to come.

With that said, something has to change since this has been an ongoing issue for decades, but there is no magic bullet that’ll fix everything. Adam Silver is already looking at potential solutions, but the ideas proposed will only lessen tanking, and not get rid of it completely. That’s because the NBA still wants to keep its socialistic design in place — having the worst teams draft highest to even out the playing field — while incentivizing every team to compete. It’s impossible to square those things when losing gives teams the best path at drafting highest, so the league will need to sacrifice some of its ideals if they want to eliminate tanking.

The best solution I’ve heard is the Gold Plan, where teams earn draft ranking points for wins after they’re eliminated from playoff contention. Unfortunately, teams would just start tanking earlier so that they can get eliminated as soon as possible and have more runway to rack up draft wins, and it could lead to stars getting traded to bottom feeders and result in less intriguing postseasons.

If we truly want to abolish tanking, the Gold Plan can be tweaked by only counting wins, including the ones before teams are out of playoff contention. In other words, teams that just miss the play-in would be catapulted straight to the top of the draft standings since they have the most wins, and they’ll continue accumulating points by winning even after missing the playoffs.

The glaring issue with this idea is that some teams might intentionally miss/lose the play-in because they want better odds of picking high in the draft than getting shellacked in the playoffs by a high seed, and that’s where certain incentives could come into play: perhaps every team that misses the postseason would be ineligible to use their mid-level, or will start the following season operating like a second apron team no matter where they stand in the tax. Regardless of what the punishment is, it has to be so damaging that teams are all motivated to make the playoffs, even if they can’t legitimately compete for a title.

Does that sound like a good plan? It might abolish tanking, but the actual worst teams will have the lowest lottery odds and make it harder for them to become relevant. This is precisely why it’s impossible to get rid of tanking while also keeping the NBA’s current socialistic system in place: the concepts are mutually exclusive, and it’ll take something so radical that fans might start clamouring to go back to the way things are now. So if you truly want changes, be prepared for the league to get flipped on its head, and don’t pull a Mark Jackson.

Be careful what you wish for.


This week, please check out Eric’s article on postseason runs following playoff droughts! He does a great job of laying out the historical context, and you’d be surprised how many teams made deep runs even after breaking a long drought.

Thanks for reading!

All stats courtesy of Cleaning the Glass and NBA Stats.


Celtics game vs Phoenix Suns will lack several stars

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - APRIL 04: Jaylen Brown #7 of the Boston Celtics dribbles the ball to the basket against Devin Booker #1 of the Phoenix Suns during the second quarter at the TD Garden on April 04, 2025 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. (Photo by Brian Fluharty/Getty Images) | Getty Images

PHOENIX — Jaylen Brown will miss Tuesday’s game against the Phoenix Suns. The Celtics star is dealing with a right knee contusion and will sit on the first night of the Celtics’ back-to-back (Boston will face the Denver Nuggets on Wednesday night in Denver).

Outside of Brown, the only other Celtic to be sidelined is Jayson Tatum, who has yet to make his season debut as he continues recovering from a ruptured Achilles tendon.

The Phoenix Suns will also be without several key players

The Suns will be without their two leading scorers — Devin Booker (right hip strain) and Dillon Brooks (left hand strain). They’ll also be without Jordan Goodwin (left calf strain) and Haywood Highsmith (right knee injury management).

The Suns will be led by Allen (17.3 points, 3.9 assists), Gillespie (13.4 points, 4.7 assists), and Green (13.3 points, 2.4 assists), all of whom are key contributors.

How the Celtics and Suns stack up entering the match-up

The Celtics have won 8 of their last 9 games and currently have the Eastern Conference’s second-best record at 37-19. They have the NBA’s fourth-best record, fourth-best net rating, and third-best offense.

The Suns, meanwhile, have dropped 6 of their last 10 games as they deal with a myriad of injuries. At 33-25, they currently have the 7th-best record in the Western Conference.

The Suns have had the NBA’s 9th-best defensive rating at 112.5 (the Celtics have the 8th-best defensive rating at 112.2). Another notable aspect is the Suns’ ability to crash the offensive glass; they have the 6th-best offensive rebound percentage at 33.2%.

Celtics-Suns tips off at 9pm ET.

Kevin Durant on 2028 Los Angeles Olympics: 'Hell yeah, I want to play'

Could we see Kevin Durant draped in the United States flag, winning a fifth gold medal as part of the Los Angeles Olympics in two years? He absolutely wants to — but only if he earns the spot, he told Vincent Goodwill of ESPN.

"Hell yeah, I want to play," Durant said. "I would love to, but I've got to stay on top of my game. I'm not expecting, I want to produce on the floor and make Grant and whoever is making the decisions, want to put me on the team. I don't want — not just for seniority. I want to still prove I can help the team win."

"Today, yeah I feel like I'll put my name in that hat."

Durant was at the heart of the USA team that won a fifth-straight men's basketball gold medal in 2024 in Paris. LeBron James, who will be 43 at the time of the Los Angeles Games, has suggested he will not play, while Stephen Curry (who will be 39 at the time) has largely said it's too early to say.

The USA roster in Los Angeles should be stacked — but it also will face the toughest road to a gold the team has ever seen. Players likely invited to the 2028 USA squad include Anthony Edwards, Jayson Tatum, Cade Cunningham, Chet Holmgren, Donovan Mitchell and Tyrese Maxey.

The USA beat France in the gold medal game in Paris, but repeating that will be difficult with France having peak Victor Wembanyama in the paint and real depth around him — there are currently 16 other French players in the NBA, including Washington's Alex Sarr and Bilal Coulibaly. This will be a stacked team as well. And that's not including potentially Nikola Jokic leading a good Serbian squad, Giannis Antetokounmpo leading Greece, and Luka Doncic leading Slovenia.

There is no easy route to gold in men's Olympic basketball anymore, but the USA would look better with Kevin Durant.

Hornets vs Bulls Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight’s NBA Game

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The Charlotte Hornets will look to continue their climb into the playoff picture as they visit the floundering Chicago Bulls on Tuesday night.

Chicago is reeling from a nine-game losing streak, and I’m taking Charlotte to cover tonight in my Hornets vs. Bulls predictions.

Let’s take a closer look at this matchup as I share my free NBA picks for Tuesday, February 24.

Hornets vs Bulls prediction

Hornets vs Bulls best betHornets -8.5 (-110)

The Chicago Bulls have now lost nine straight games, and there’s no sign that their fortunes will improve anytime soon.

Josh Giddey and Tre Jones are on minutes restrictions, Anfernee Simons is out with a wrist injury, and Jalen Smith might be out after suffering a calf issue on Sunday.

Chicago is 1-8 against the spread in its last nine games. At the same time, the young, streaking Charlotte Hornets are 8-1 ATS in their last nine and show no signs of slowing down as they fight for a spot in the play-in tournament.

I’m taking Charlotte to cover tonight.

Hornets vs Bulls same-game parlay

LaMelo Ball is coming off a huge performance on Sunday, and I’m targeting him again in my SGP tonight.

Ball went for 52 PRA and hit an incredible 10 three-pointers against the Washington Wizards in his last game, and he won’t have to come anywhere near those numbers to make a massive impact and hit our parlay in this contest.

Hornets vs Bulls SGP

  • Hornets -8.5
  • LaMelo Ball Over 32.5 points + rebounds + assists
  • LaMelo Ball Over 3.5 made threes

Our "from downtown" SGP: Hornets on the rise

Ball isn’t the only player making big contributions for this improving Hornets team.

Moussa Diabate has four double-doubles in his last nine games, and we can get generous odds on him to hit that target again in a favorable matchup.

Meanwhile, rookie Kon Knueppel has proven to be a sniper at the NBA level, hitting at least four shots from deep in five of his last six games.

Hornets vs Bulls SGP

  • Hornets -8.5
  • Moussa Diabate double-double
  • Kon Knueppel Over 3.5 threes

Hornets vs Bulls odds

  • Spread: Charlotte -8.5 (-110) | Chicago +8.5 (-110)
  • Moneyline: Charlotte -330 | Chicago +265
  • Over/Under: Over 232.5 (-110) | Under 232.5 (-110)

Hornets vs Bulls betting trend to know

The Bulls are 1-8 ATS in their current nine-game losing streak. Find more NBA betting trends for Hornets vs. Bulls.

How to watch Hornets vs Bulls

LocationUnited Center, Chicago, IL
DateTuesday, February 24, 2026
Tip-off8:00 p.m. ET
TVFDSN SE-Charlotte, CHSN

Hornets vs Bulls latest injuries

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Warriors vs Pelicans Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight’s NBA Game

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This Golden State Warriors vs. New Orleans Pelicans game may seem low on the radar tonight, but a spread within a bucket should stress Golden State as it tries to stay in postseason position.

My Warriors vs. Pelicans predictions and NBA picks back Golden State, as the motivational gap is too significant on Tuesday, February 24.

Warriors vs Pelicans prediction

Warriors vs Pelicans best bet: Warriors moneyline (-125)

Are the current Golden State Warriors better than the New Orleans Pelicans?

That is very much debatable, but the Pelicans are actively trying to tank, while the Warriors are desperate to stay in the top half of the Play-In Tournament. Those differing incentives provide enough value in this short moneyline favorite.

Golden State is not at a scheduling disadvantage, and how much credence should be given to Smoothie King Center amid this tank?

Warriors vs Pelicans same-game parlay

Even when Golden State needs his best, Draymond Green continues to fall short of these modest props.

Green turns 36 in a week, and he very much looks like it. Most notably, Green has failed to grab six rebounds in seven of his last 10 games.

Warriors vs Pelicans SGP

  • Warriors moneyline
  • Draymond Green Under 5.5 rebounds
  • Draymond Green Under 9.5 points

Our "from downtown" SGP: Queen on the Card

Green’s struggles should play right into Derik Queen’s hands. He’s fallen just one or two rebounds short of a double-double in five of his last nine games.

Warriors vs Pelicans SGP

  • Warriors moneyline
  • Draymond Green Under 5.5 rebounds
  • Draymond Green Under 9.5 points
  • Derik Queen to record a double-double

Warriors vs Pelicans odds

  • Spread: Warriors -1.5 (-110) | Pelicans +1.5 (-110)
  • Moneyline: Warriors -125 | Pelicans +105
  • Over/Under: Over 227.5 (-110) | Under 227.5 (-110)

Warriors vs Pelicans betting trend to know

The last four Golden State games have gone Over their totals, clearing them by an average of 15.75 points per game. Find more NBA betting trends for Warriors vs. Pelicans.

How to watch Warriors vs Pelicans

LocationSmoothie King Center, New Orleans, LA
DateTuesday, February 24, 2026
Tip-off8:00 p.m. ET
TVNBC Sports Bay Area, GCSEN

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Baylor Scheierman made 2 dreams come true on Sunday

Feb 22, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Boston Celtics guard Baylor Scheierman (55) controls the ball against the Los Angeles Lakers during the first half at Crypto.com Arena. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images

PHOENIXBaylor Scheierman has been living out one childhood dream after another.

The 25-year-old Celtics guards played 29 minutes in Sunday’s game between the Boston Celtics and the Los Angeles Lakers, and reflected on the experience at shootaround on Tuesday morning in Phoenix.

“It was unreal,” Scheierman said. “It was a dream come true. Being from a small town in Nebraska, I had a lot of hometown friends and family who were taking pictures of the TV screen, sending it to me, ‘You’re on the court with Lebron James. LeBron James is guarding you.’”

Scheierman has started four straight games for the Celtics — and 10 in total this season — carving out the role of someone who can defend opposing teams’ best players, rebound the ball, and space the floor.

He’s shooting 38.1% from three on the season, and averaging 5.6 defensive rebounds per 36 minutes, third-best on the team among non-bigs (trailing Jaylen Brown and Hugo Gonzalez).

He’s also beginning to master the art of the no-dip three-point attempt, a shot form that saves him a little bit of time on the release and thus allows him to get up more attempts.

“It definitely helps me get two or three more shots that I probably wouldn’t get if I had to dip it down,” Scheierman said. “Even in the last game against the Lakers, LeBron is closing out. If I dip it, I’m definitely not getting it off. I think it definitely has helped me get more shots. And when I’m out there, obviously that’s what I want.”

In Sunday’s game, Scheierman was largely tasked with guarding Luka Doncic, and he helped hold the star to a 5-13 shooting performance, per NBC Sports Boston’s Chris Forbserg.

The day before, Jaylen Brown pulled aside Scheierman and the Celtics’ other wing defenders — Hugo Gonzalez, Jordan Walsh, and Sam Hauser — to go over some of the tendencies of the Lakers’ stars.

“Obviously, Jaylen is one of the best two-way players in the game,” he said. “He’s guarded Luka before. So giving us advice definitely helped.”

Celtics-Lakers was a dream come true in more ways than one

After the game, Scheierman also completed a jersey swap with James Lafferty, an actor from the television show One Tree Hill.

“It’s my favorite show of all time,” Scheierman said, grinning. His agency had reached out to Lafferty’s ahead of the Celtics-Lakers game, and it turned out that Lafferty was a fan of Scheierman’s as well.

“That was crazy,” Scheierman said. “It’s kind of cool to be able to call him my friend and whatnot. It was an unreal feeling.”

In many ways, Scheierman is having the breakthrough NBA moment he’s long hoped for

He’s not putting up crazy numbers — he’s averaging 3.9 points and 2.8 rebounds per game — but anyone closely watching this team can attest to the fact that Scheierman has been a crucial part of its recent success.

And the Celtics have seen a lot of success as of late. They’re winners of 8 of their last 9 games, and currently have the second-best record in the Eastern Conference (and fifth-best in the entire NBA).

Scheierman is still pinching himself — not when the game is going on, of course — but afterwards, as he reflects on the fact that he’s sharing the floor with some of basketball’s all-time greats.

“It’s a surreal feeling, something that, in the moment, I don’t really like pay too much attention to,” he said. “But after the game, being able to sit there and reflect and think about it, it’s an unreal experience. And, it’s a dream come true.”

Portuguese soccer federation monitoring situation in Mexico ahead of friendly in March

LISBON (AP) — The Portuguese soccer federation said Tuesday it was monitoring the situation in Mexico amid a surge in violence ahead of its friendly against the Mexican national team in March.

The federation said it was "closely monitoring the delicate situation currently unfolding in Mexico” following the killing of the country’s most powerful drug lord by the Mexican army on Sunday. The killing sparked a surge in violence and put the country on edge.

The World Cup warmup match is scheduled for March 28 at the renovated Azteca Stadium, which is scheduled to host the opening match of the World Cup between Mexico and South Africa on June 11.

Mexico is set to play Iceland in a friendly Wednesday in Queretaro, with the Icelandic soccer federation saying Tuesday that it expects the game to go ahead as planned.

The Portuguese federation said it was honored by the invitation to participate in the reopening of the renovated venue, but noted that “the recent evolution of events requires continuous evaluation of the conditions” that the national team and its delegation will find.

It said it will follow the recommendations of the Portuguese government and will be in close contact with the Mexican soccer federation.

“Any decision will be made as a result of ongoing monitoring, in close coordination with the government and in line with the Mexican Football Federation, an entity with which the Portuguese Football Federation maintains excellent institutional relations and regular contact,” the Portuguese federation said in a statement.

“The Portuguese Football Federation emphasizes that the safety of players, coaching staff and fans is an absolute priority, and this is the main criteria for all assessments and decisions regarding the holding of the match,” the federation said.

Mexico President Claudia Sheinbaum said Tuesday at her daily news briefing that there was “no risk” for fans coming to the World Cup.

___

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

Milwaukee Bucks Poll: Should Pete Nance be converted?

NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA - FEBRUARY 20: Pete Nance #35 of the Milwaukee Bucks takes a shot over Jordan Poole #3 and Karlo Matkovic #17 of the New Orleans Pelicans during the first half of a game at Smoothie King Center on February 20, 2026 in New Orleans, Louisiana. 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 Tyler Kaufman/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Two-way forward Pete Nance is in the second season of his two-way deal with Milwaukee and has impressed since joining the rotation last month. He’s shooting a bonkers 51% from three on 49 attempts, good for 58.8% from the floor, to go along with solid defense. That’s just five points per game over 25 contests this season, but most Bucks fans have seen enough and want him to be converted to a standard deal. Nance is also approaching his two-way limit of 50 active games: he has nine DNP-CDs, which count as being active, so he can only be active for 16 more, with 27 left on Milwaukee’s schedule. Two-way players also cannot participate in the postseason, including play-in games.

Unfortunately, converting him is not so simple. The Bucks’ standard roster is full with 15 guaranteed contracts, and while they could waive some of their cheaper players and keep the dead money on their books without much issue, some of the best release candidates also have guaranteed money due to them next season. Gary Trent Jr., Gary Harris, and Taurean Prince each have player options for 2026–27 for around $3.9m, so if the Bucks were to waive any of them, that option value would be stretched over three further seasons. Meaning another $1.3m on top of the $20–21m in stretched salary Milwaukee already owes to Damian Lillard and Vasilije Micic through summer 2029.

The options that don’t involve stretching are the Bucks’ upcoming free agents: Ousmane Dieng, Thanasis Antetokounmpo, Cam Thomas, and Andre Jackson Jr. (who has a $2.4m team option this summer—non-guaranteed salary that wouldn’t require stretching). Ajax is the obvious candidate, given his lack of playing time and lack of familial relations with Milwaukee’s star. But Thomas is actually the cheapest player on the roster now at $845k. If any of these four were waived, they’d be off the books come July 1.

In this week’s Tuesday Tracker, make a decision on Nance. Leave him on the two-way and manage his games, thus making him ineligible for any playoff action, or convert him now? We also have questions on the Bucks’ projected finish in the East and the Bucks’ first-round pick this summer.


As always, this poll will be open until midnight Central on Friday, and we’ll post the results later that day. Thanks for voting!

76ers vs Pacers Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight’s NBA Game

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The Philadelphia 76ers will look to build on their last road win as they visit the Indiana Pacers on Tuesday night.

These teams have already played two tight, low-scoring games this season, and I’m taking the Under again in my 76ers vs. Pacers predictions below.

Keep reading to get a full breakdown of tonight’s matchup and see my free NBA picks for Tuesday, February 24.

76ers vs Pacers prediction

76ers vs Pacers best betUnder 233.5 (-110)

The Indiana Pacers have been one of the worst offensive teams in the NBA this year. Indiana is averaging just 111.5 ppg on the season, and ranks second-to-last in offensive efficiency.

Even with the Pacers also playing mediocre defense, that’s been enough for the team to trend to the Under, which has gone 33-25 in Indiana’s games.

The Philadelphia 76ers have been only slightly above average offensively themselves this season, averaging 116.2 ppg, but play enough defense to make that work.

We’ve seen these teams play twice this year, easily hitting the Under both times, and I’m expecting the same tonight.

76ers vs Pacers same-game parlay

The Pacers have lost six of their last eight, and are just 2-6 against the spread in that span as well.

I like Philadelphia to cover behind a big night from Joel Embiid, who should impact both sides of the ball.

Embiid has scored 29+ points in nine of his last 10 games, and has recorded a block in four of his last five outings.

76ers vs Pacers SGP

  • 76ers -9.5
  • Joel Embiid Over 27.5 points
  • Joel Embiid Over 0.5 blocks

Our "from downtown" SGP: All in on the Sixers

For my lottery SGP, I’m banking on a big all-around game for Embiid, who has hit this PRA total in nine of his last 10 outings.

Let’s pair that with another strong game from Quentin Grimes, who dished out seven assists and hit five threes on Sunday against the Minnesota Timberwolves.

76ers vs Pacers SGP

  • 76ers -9.5
  • Joel Embiid Over 38.5 points + rebounds + assists
  • Quentin Grimes Over 1.5 threes made
  • Quentin Grimes Over 3.5 assists

76ers vs Pacers odds

  • Spread: Philadelphia -10 (-110) | Indiana -10 (-110)
  • Moneyline: Philadelphia -450 | Indiana +350
  • Over/Under: Over 233.5 (-110) | Under 233.5 (-110)

76ers vs Pacers betting trend to know

The Under is 4-0 in the last four meetings between the 76ers and Pacers. Find more NBA betting trends for 76ers vs. Pacers.

How to watch 76ers vs Pacers

LocationGainbridge Fieldhouse, Indianapolis, IN
DateTuesday, February 24, 2026
Tip-off7:00 p.m. ET
TVNBC Sports Philadelphia, FDSN Indiana

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NBA power rankings 2025-26: San Antonio takes over top spot in rankings after beating Detroit

After a week off for the All-Star break, NBC's NBA Power Rankings are back, and they have a new No. 1: Victor Wembanyama and the San Antonio Spurs, fresh off beating the now-second Detroit Pistons.

1. San Antonio Spurs

(41-16, last week No. 2)
For three quarters, the Detroit Pistons used their physicality to disrupt and wear down Victor Wembanyama on Monday night. Didn't work. In the fourth quarter, Wembanyama had 11 points, six rebounds, three assists and four blocks to make sure the Spurs pulled away from the Pistons for a 114-103 victory. It was one of those games where Wemby's counting stats — 21 points, 17 rebounds (eight offensive), four assists and six blocks — don't do justice to his impact. Devin Vassell added 28 in the game because someone is always stepping up for the Spurs, who have now won nine straight and are unquestionably contenders despite their young age. People often talk about the Pistons' fast turnaround after winning just 14 games a couple of seasons ago, but people gloss over the fact that the Spurs have that same kind of story: This team was 22-60 in both the 2022-2023 and 2023-24 seasons. San Antonio entered this season with people expecting them to take a step forward into the play-in, not make a leap to title contender, but here we are.

2. Detroit Pistons

(42-14, last week No. 1)
Last week showed us why this team has to be considered a genuine threat to make the NBA Finals out of the East, and also why some around the league have doubts about them in the postseason. The week started with a statement over the Knicks, one of the preseason favorites in the East, and the Pistons did it without suspended big men Jalen Duren (he's back) and Isaiah Stewart (still serving time). Detroit looked dominant in that win. Then it ran into the Spurs, with their quality perimeter defenders backed by Wembanyama, and they lost a game in which Cade Cunningham had 16 points on 5-of-26 shooting, and the lack of a second perimeter shot creator caught up with Detroit. The Pistons are 18-6 against teams over .500 this season, but are "just" 8-5 at home in those games.

3. Oklahoma City Thunder

(44-14, last week No. 3)
Oklahoma City has gone 4-3 without MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (and five of those games were also without Jalen Williams), holding onto its spot atop the Western Conference (although San Antonio is closing fast). It's been the role players stepping up, as they always seem to for OKC. For example, since the trade deadline, the Jared McCain and Isaiah Joe bench combo has instant chemistry and is destroying teams. Another guy who helped on Sunday against Cleveland was Cason Wallace, who had his first 20-10 game ever. One of the challenges of being an elite team is that the league backloads the schedule for television reasons — OKC has the second toughest schedule in the league the rest of the way.

4. Boston Celtics

(37-19, last week No. 5)
Joe Mazzulla and the Celtics are still figuring out exactly how to fit Nikola Vucevic in with their roster after picking up the stretch five at the trade deadline. Through five games, Vucevic is averaging 11.8 points and 8.4 rebounds a game, shooting 42.9% from 3-point range. "The gift Vuc has is versatility," Mazzulla said before facing the Lakers. "So it's not about what he's best at, he's good at a lot of things. And so it's an understanding of how can we take advantage of that within a game. And so it is going to change from game to game, how is he being defended? How he's being defended has a direct impact on how we're being defended as a team." On another note, Payton Pritchard's move to the bench is already paying off.

5. Cleveland Cavaliers

(36-22, last week No. 6)
The Cavaliers started 5-0 in the James Harden era with a top-three offense in the league through that stretch, although the loss to a shorthanded Thunder team on Sunday was a reminder of the concerns about this team (particularly the defense). That loss makes us wonder if a starting five with Sam Merrill instead of Dean Wade may be coming soon. Either way, Cleveland has the sixth-easiest remaining schedule in the league, one with a lot of games against tanking teams, and it's easier than any of the teams they are in the mix with at the top of the East. Cleveland sits just two games back of Boston for the No. 2 seed in the East and passing them is a reasonable goal over the final stretch of the season.

6. New York Knicks

(37-21, last week No. 4)
Every concern fans have about the New York Knicks was exposed by Cade Cunningham and the Pistons in the first game back from the All-Star break. Part of that is the ongoing issue that Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns can be exploited in a pick-and-roll, but the other, maybe larger, issue may be shooting and floor spacing. Towns does not always seem comfortable and has stretches where he is not scoring like he needs to in Mike Brown's system, at least against good defenses, although he has looked better of late (he scored 28 and looked great against tanking Chicago). Key game for East seeding on Tuesday when New York travels to Cleveland, a game you can catch on Peacock.

7. Minnesota Timberwolves

(35-23, last week No. 9)
Anthony Edwards is your All-Star Game MVP and he didn't miss a beat in his return, dropping 40 on the Mavericks. That said, Sunday's loss to Philadelphia was a reminder of just how much this team needs Rudy Gobert in the paint to be a serious threat — the Timberwolves defense is top three in the league when he is on the court and bottom five when he sits. Sit him for a game and Tyrese Maxey is dunking on everyone. Big test on Sunday, when it's Gobert against Nikola Jokic and the Nuggets in a key Western Conference game for West playoff seeding.

8. Denver Nuggets

(36-22, last week No. 8)
It's time to be genuinely concerned about Denver's defense, which is 22nd in the league, although it has improved slightly over the last 15 games. Injuries are certainly part of this — not having Aaron Gordon is a critical loss — but watch them against the Clippers in the first game back from the break, when they should be rested, and they could not get stops when it mattered. Another reason for Nuggets fans to be concerned: This team is 6-13 in clutch games when Jokic plays. A third reason for Denver fans to be concerned: The Nuggets have the toughest remaining schedule in the league, and it starts this week with games against the Celtics, Thunder and Timberwolves. On the plus side for the Nuggets, they still have Nikola Jokic breaking basketball.

9. Houston Rockets

(35-21, last week No. 4)
Houston's loss Sunday at New York — blowing an 18-point fourth-quarter lead thanks to nine turnovers in the frame — was the latest reason to be concerned about this team in the clutch. The Rockets are 14-16 in clutch games (within five points in the final five minutes) with a -8.8 net rating and a 29th in the league turnover rate (16.3% of possessions). What Houston has done well this season is beat up the teams they should beat and those teams fill the schedule this week: Utah, Sacramento, Orlando and Miami.

10. Toronto Raptors

(34-23, last week No. 14)
While James Harden in Cleveland is drawing the headlines, Toronto is just 1.5 games back of the Cavs and has a legit chance to land a top-four seed in the West and host a playoff round. Center Jakob Poeltl is back in the rotation, and that is a big help (his return to the starting five really helps the bench rotation up front with Collin Murray-Boyles). The Raptors won their first two games out of the break, but have the Thunder and Spurs on a back-to-back this week, good luck with that.

11. Los Angeles Lakers

(34-22, last week No. 10)
A couple of weeks ago, after a loss to the Thunder, LeBron James summed up the Lakers this way: "We can't sustain energy and effort for 48 minutes and they can. That's why they won a championship." If you think anything has changed, you didn't watch the Lakers against the Celtics on Sunday (on NBC). That game featured all the concerns about the Lakers against the league's top teams — the defense, the lack of shooting, the inconsistent effort and the lack of quality depth. The Lakers are 4-3 on their eight-game home stand, which concludes on Tuesday night against Orlando, before heading out on the road to face the Suns and Warriors this week.

12. Golden State Warriors

(30-27, last week No. 15)
Stephen Curry has now missed too many games to qualify for postseason awards. The concern now becomes that he misses so many games the No. 8 seed Warriors fall to the No. 9 seed, with its tougher road through the play-in — Portland is just 2.5 games back and finding a groove of late. Which is why the Warriors raining 3s on the Nuggets on Sunday was a critical win. One Warriors subplot to watch the rest of this season and into the summer: Brandin Podziemski is extension eligible this summer. Will the sides reach a deal (the Warriors did with Moses Moody, for example), or wait until he's a restricted free agent in the summer of 2027 and make a decision then?

13. Phoenix Suns

(33-25, last week No. 13)
Dillon Brooks is out at least a month due to a fractured left hand, and Devin Booker will miss this week (or most of it, at least) with a hip injury. Will that keep the Suns from climbing out of the play-in? They sit as the No. 7 seed now and are two games back of the Lakers to climb into the top six (Minnesota is in that mix as the No. 6 seed, but barring injury, it's hard to see them falling back, even with their inconsistency). The Suns host the Lakers Thursday night and could use that win to keep their top-six dreams alive.

14. Miami Heat

(28-26, last week No. 16)
Tyler Herro is back, returning after the All-Star break and reprising his role as Sixth Man of the Year in a couple of comfortable Heat wins. Bringing Herro off the bench and letting All-Star Norman Powell cook makes a lot of sense, but Herro wants to start, so we'll see how long this lasts. Interesting tests for the No. 8 seed Heat at Milwaukee and Philadelphia this week, then home to host Houston.

15. Orlando Magic

(30-26, last week No. 17)
While we haven't seen much out of Orlando's core three of Paolo Banchero, Franz Wagner and Jalen Suggs (148 minutes across 13 games this season), but lately we have seen Desmond Bane find his groove and start to break out. In February, Bane is averaging 24.4 points per game on an insane 75.4 true shooting percentage (fueled by shooting 50.9% from 3-point range). Orlando is 2-1 since the All-Star break (with the loss being in 2OT to Phoenix), but it needs to keep racking up wins as it, Philadelphia and Miami are all in the mix for the six seed and avoiding the play-in.

16. Philadelphia 76ers

(31-27, last week No. 12)
Philly is 1-4 playing in this stretch without Joel Embiid (knee) and Paul George (10 games into his 25-game suspension), and they are barely holding on to the No. 6 seed in the East. The 76ers did pick up an unexpected win on Sunday against the Timberwolves, which makes Philadelphia an impressive 8-3 on the second night of a back-to-back this season. While Sunday against the Celtics may feel like the big game to fans, Thursday against the Heat — one of the teams they are fighting for the No. 6 seed in the East — is the critical game.

17. Charlotte Hornets

(27-31, last week No. 11)
Charlotte has come back down to earth after their nine-game winning streak, having gone 2-3 in the five games since. Charlotte can get rolling again starting this week with a string of games against struggling teams (Chicago and Indiana, for example), especially if LaMelo Ball is knocking down 10 3-pointers as he did against the Wizards.

18. Los Angeles Clippers

(27-30, last week No. 20)
Bennedict Mathurin is thriving off the bench for LA since coming over in the Ivica Zubac deal at the deadline. Through five games, Mathurin is averaging 22 points and 4.2 rebounds a game, and the usually reliable 3-point shooter has yet to find his groove from deep in Los Angeles. This hot streak includes a 38-point performance in a win against Denver. Only a couple of games this week for the Clippers and one interesting one, against up-and-down Minnesota on Thursday.

19. Portland Trail Blazers

(28-30, last week No. 19)
Aș a Curry-less Warriors team struggles above them, the No. 9 seed Trail Blazers have won 5-of-7 and suddenly making the top eight (with a much easier path through the play-in to the playoff proper) seems realistic — Golden State is just 2.5 games ahead of them. Can Portland keep up the strong play with Shaedon Sharpe (calf) and Deni Avdija (back) missing time?

20. Milwaukee Bucks

(24-31, last week No. 21)
There is no tanking in Milwaukee — the Bucks went 6-1 around the All-Star break and are now 6-5 without Giannis Antetokounmpo in this stretch, and he appears ready to return this week. The key has been the offense, which usually falls off a cliff when Antetokounmpo is not on the court, but was top five in the league during that hot stretch, with Cam Thomas and Ryan Rollins having some big games. The Bucks have done more than keep their heads above water without their former MVP and are just 1.5 games out of the play-in, which has to be the short-term goal (one step at a time).

21. Atlanta Hawks

(28-31, last week No. 18)
CJ McCollum started on Sunday in place of Zaccharie Risacher. McCollum has been closing games (with Risacher on the bench) for a while, but the fact that Quin Snyder is now starting this way is not a good sign for Risacher's future with the Hawks. Atlanta is the only team in the NBA with a losing record at home (11-16) and a winning record on the road (17-15). The Hawks should be able to improve that this week with two home games against the Wizards (plus a tougher one against the Trail Blazers).

22. New Orleans Pelicans

(16-42, last week No. 24)
After missing a little more than a year, Dejounte Murray is set to make his return to the court from a torn Achilles on Tuesday. He could provide some needed glue to the Pelicans' offense for the stretch run of the season. It's good news because the Pelicans are not tanking (they don't control their own pick, so there's no motivation), something evidenced last week in their come-from-behind win against the 76ers. Coach Willie Green is experimenting with some big lineups (6'6" Zion Williamson is the smallest guy on the court), and it's interesting.

23. Memphis Grizzlies

(21-35, last week No. 22)
I'm not saying the Grizzlies are tanking; I'm just saying that in recent weeks they have started Olivier-Maxence Prosper, Jahmai Mashack, and Lance Lovering, and then they lost to a Sacramento team that came in having lost 16 in a row. With Ja Morant injured and Jaren Jackson Jr. injured and in Utah, the only expected starter in Memphis getting run is Jaylen Wells, who is having some good games (25 points against Miami last week).

24. Utah Jazz

(18-40, last week No. 28)
Adam Silver unfairly singled out Utah for tanking and slapped them with a $500,000 fine. To be clear, the Jazz were tanking — sitting Lauri Markkanen and Jaren Jackson Jr. in the fourth quarter of games — but is that any more blatant and ugly than what is happening in other markets? No. But because Utah got press and gave the league a little PR trouble, Silver came down on them. Utah learned its lesson and now Jackson (knee) and Jusuf Nurkic (nose) will be out for the season due to surgeries (ones that maybe could have waited, but we're not doctors here). It's not going to be a pretty last couple of months of the season in Utah, but this is now a fan base with legitimate reasons for hope going forward when they envision what the Jazz will look like next season.

25. Dallas Mavericks

(20-36, last week No. 25)
It is a wise decision not to have Kyrie Irving return to the court this season, and Cooper Flagg has missed the last three games with a foot injury and likely will be out longer, as well. That said, Dallas snapped a 10-game losing streak by beating Indiana over the weekend thanks to a throwback Khris Middleton game. Expect to see a lot of Middleton and Max Christie the rest of the season for Dallas.

26. Washington Wizards

(16-40, last week No. 27)
Here's the thing about tanking: It's a front-office/management call, the players who get put out on the court still try hard to win. That's what happened last week when the Wizards swept two games from the Pacers, in part because Sharife Cooper (on a two-way contract) and Alondes Williams (10-day contract) played like guys fighting for bigger, better deals. They got the wins despite Alex Sarr (hamstring strain) missing the last four games. Washington has two games in Atlanta this week.

27. Chicago Bulls

(24-34, last week No. 23)
The Chicago Bulls have not won a game in February. That includes an ugly loss to Sacramento on Monday, a team that had lost 16 in a row before they met the Bulls. In classic Bulls style, this pivot to tanking has come so late that they have just the ninth-worst record in the NBA and, if that holds, a 50.7% chance of drafting ninth (currently they would have a 20.2% chance of jumping up to the top four.

28. Indiana Pacers

(15-43, last week No. 26)
Kobe Brown was considered a throw-in by the Clippers as part of the Ivica Zubac trade at the deadline, but Brown is getting an opportunity and thriving with the Pacers. Through five games (one a start), Brown is averaging 10.2 points and 6.8 rebounds per game. "I like the things he's doing," Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said (via Dustin Dopirak of the Indianapolis Star). "When you get an opportunity like this, this is where you can really show what you can do."

29. Brooklyn Nets

(15-41, last week No. 29)
Brooklyn isn't tanking by sitting Michael Porter Jr.; he has played all three games since the All-Star break, but he is ice cold, shooting 3-of-23 in those games. Tough week ahead for the Nets, who start with fellow tanker Dallas but then get San Antonio, Boston and Cleveland.

30. Sacramento Kings

(13-46, last week No. 30)
The Kings won! The Kings won! Sacramento snapped its franchise record 16-game losing streak on Monday by beating the also-tanking Grizzlies. Don't worry Kings fans, your team still has the worst record in the league. What should worry you is that for three years running, the team with the worst record in the league fell to fifth in the NBA Draft lottery.

Raiders GM tamps down trade talk around Crosby, says he expects star edge rusher to stay with team

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The Las Vegas Raiders are planning to keep star edge rusher Maxx Crosby despite the trade talk around the five-time Pro Bowl pick, general manager John Spytek said Tuesday.

“Maxx is an elite player. I've been very upfront from the start since I got here, that we’re in the business of having really good players on the team, and we need a lot more of them,” Spytek said at the NFL scouting combine in Indianapolis.

Crosby has been rehabilitating from left knee surgery he underwent three days after the regular season ended, as speculation about his status has persisted following an NFL-worst 3-14 record for the Raiders and the firing of coach Pete Carroll after just one year on the job.

Crosby said earlier this month he doesn't want out and that the unsubstantiated reports suggesting he does make him laugh. His future with the club that drafted him in the fourth round out of Eastern Michigan in 2019 became a subject when he was placed on injured reserve with two games left against his wish, preferring to play out the season. Crosby, who has 69½ sacks in seven years, had a career-high 28 tackles for loss in 2025.

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

The case for the Rockets not doing anything drastic

HOUSTON, TX - FEBRUARY 23: Alperen Sengun #28 and Kevin Durant #7 of the Houston Rockets looks on during the game against the Utah Jazz on February 23, 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

There are 30 teams in the National Basketball Association.

(How’s that for insight?)

Some have it easier than others. That’s always been the case. The NBA practically has a caste system. Moving up a rung requires more maneuvering than Viola disguising himself as Cesario in Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night.

Take the Washington Wizards. They are cosmically stinky. The best player in the franchise’s history is Wes Unseld, who, with all due respect, played in an era when an NBA head coach quite literally lit stogies during games.

That was Red Auerbach, the head coach of a Celtics team that always gets to be good for no apparent reason. At least the Lakers play in Los Angeles. There’s at least a causal explanation for their never-yielding goodness.

Then, there’s the Houston Rockets.

Middle-upper class. Seldom among the best teams in the league. Rarely in the duldrums. This iteration of the team is no exception.

There are teams you’d readily trade places with. Please do not deny it. If the Spurs offered to trade rosters and assets, you would trade rosters and assets. Lest we even name The Team Who Shall Not Be Named.

Yet, as a Rockets fan, complaints will find deaf ears with over half of the league’s fanbases. They are objectively in a good spot.

Maybe they shouldn’t do anything about it.

Rockets don’t need to rush decisions

This may seem like a 180. Consider it a publicly available internal dialogue of a confused fan.

Antetokounmpo is tempting. The logic is simple. This is the best player that is likely to be available while the Rockets have assets. Get him.

If they do, you won’t find complaints from me. More broadly, the Rockets’ roster is flawed, perhaps irredeemably. We should all be cozying up to the reality that Alperen Sengun and Amen Thompson are not a natural fit. Neither is a natural fit with Antetokounmpo, for the same reasons, but the logic in acquiring him would be that the Rockets are already this good with a roster flaw, so imagine how much better they’d be with an upgrade.

Yet…you’re still trading the farm without alleviating your two non-shooter problem. You’re solving your no franchise player problem, but creating a new no more assets problem. From a utility perspective, the math does not, as the kids say, math.

Questions emerge. Are we 100% sure you need a franchise player in what’s been dubbed in some circles as “the weakest link era”? No, but I land around 90%. Depth matters more than before, but it hasn’t usurped top-end talent as a priority. The best teams in the league have the best players in the league, and depth. You still need an elite player; it’s just that now, it seems more optimal to have 5 good players behind them rather than 2 elite ones.

(Unless you’re The Team Who Shall Not Be Named. Then, you’ve got Michael Jordan’s successor flanked by Jalen Williams and Chet Holmgren, and tremendous depth).

Are we 100% sure the Rockets don’t have a franchise player? No. I land around 85%.

It’s such a high bar. If it’s going to be Sengun, he needs to shoot about 10% better between zero-and-three feet if he’s not going to consistently shoot threes. If it’s going to be Thompson, he needs to shoot 10-15% better from deep if he’s going to functionally be a guard (and if he’s not going to be a guard, he’s not going to be a franchise player).

Reed Sheppard is an unknown variable in that sense. He can’t grow, so his three-point gravity has to be so immense as to offset his height. He’ll need to improve his handle. There’s no discernible statistical reason why he can’t be the guy, but his flaw may prove the most debilitating of the group.

Are we 100% sure the franchise player has to be currently on the roster, or Giannis Antetokounmpo?

…Now, we’ve arrived at the question.

If the Rockets think they’ll have to trade for “their guy”, they may want to consider haste. These players are not getting any younger. They’re approaching their mid-20s, and the “young player” luster will wear off quickly. That doesn’t mean they must move for Antetokounmpo, but it does mean they’ll basically have to pull the trigger on the next guy (Ant? Can Tyrese Maxey sustain his current offensive production in a winning environment, and would that make him a top-10ish player?) to hit the market.

Could they still draft that guy? The Rockets have some premium picks coming up. Between the Suns and the Nets, they’re likely to pick in the 2027 lottery. The class is seen as weak: But so was the class that yielded Antetokounmpo.

(And Nikola Jokic, by the way).

So many considerations. So much uncertainty. Here’s where it pays to be an optimist. The Rockets are still young. They still have a lot of picks. The glass is half full.

Why rush to alter a good situation? Within the next couple of years, this organization must clarify its direction. That doesn’t mean it’s pressing enough to rush into anything now. If the Rockets do decide to get Antetokounmpo, it will be a defensible decision, but perhaps the best thing to do is sit back, see what they yield with their next crop of draft picks, and make a decision from there.

The right choice could improve their class standing.

Nets vs. Mavs preview: Snow Day!

MINNEAPOLIS, MN - FEBRUARY 20: P.J Washington #25 of the Dallas Mavericks grabs the rebound during the game against the Minnesota Timberwolves on February 20, 2026 at Target Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota. 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 David Sherman/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
MINNEAPOLIS, MN – FEBRUARY 20: P.J Washington #25 of the Dallas Mavericks grabs the rebound during the game against the Minnesota Timberwolves on February 20, 2026 at Target Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota. 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 David Sherman/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Back home to a snowstorm! The Brooklyn Nets wrapped up their three game road trip with an afternoon affair against the Atlanta Hawks. Brooklyn had a lead for much of the game, but the Hawks closed the game on a 24-2 run to hand the Nets their fourth consecutive loss. Brooklyn leaves the road and comes home to a whole bunch of snow. Winter is no joke!

The opponent tonight is transitioning into another era. The Dallas Mavericks look pretty different these days and are likely looking ahead to the Draft. The team snapped a ten game losing streak with a road win against the Indiana Pacers on Sunday afternoon.

Where to follow the game

YES Network on TV. WFAN on radio. Gotham Sports on streaming. Tip after 7:30 p.m. ET.

🤕 Injuries

Nothing doing for Brooklyn. Another clean slate, their second in the last nine games. Extraordinary in the tanking era. The three two-ways remain with Long Island.

The following players are out:

  • Kyrie Irving
  • Cooper Flagg
  • Dereck Lively II

Ryan Nembhard and Moussa Cisse are doubtful. Daniel Gafford is questionable.

🏀 The game

Dallas won games one and two. Thanks to the Commissioner’s Cup, we get the ultra rare third cross-conference regular season matchup!

Everyone across the city is trying to dig themselves out of the snow, and the Nets are scheduled to make it back in to town early this afternoon. The Mavs were stranded in Indianapolis and as of noon hadn’t left yet. Best of luck to everyone in this one.

The Mavs have made a mess of things over the past few years, but there is light at the end of the tunnel. With Flagg playing like a franchise star, things are looking bright despite the antics of Patrick Dumont and Miriam Adelson. Dallas has one franchise player on board, and pairing Flagg with another one in the Draft could get the Mavs back in the playoffs as soon as next season. From Tyler Edsel of Mavs Moneyball:

Dallas, as an organization, needs to ask itself tough questions to figure out where we’re going here. Keep the team as is, win 32 games, and in all likelihood miss out on the best guards in the draft? Or sell off some veterans for some draft assets, set yourself up to have a step back this season and enhance your chance at acquiring Cooper Flagg’s point guard of the future.

The choice is clear and obvious. It’s time for the Mavericks to get serious about the build around Cooper Flagg, something I’ve been calling for since the Lottery in May. For the future of the organization, the Mavericks have to get this right, right now. That can only mean one thing for Dallas: It’s time to sell and race to the bottom.

A temporary setback for a major comeback, if they play their cards right. Interestingly, two former Nets — Jason Kidd, the Mavs head coach, and Matt Riccardi, the Mavs co-interim GM — will play big roles in whatever the team does going forward.

It’s taken a while, but maybe Marvin Bagley has put it all together? Bagley III came over from the Washington Wizards in the Anthony Davis trade and has done well in his new city. In five games, he’s averaging close to a double-double on 53.5 percent shooting from the field. If he can keep this up, he’ll earn a permanent spot on this team and be someone Jason Kidd can count on in the future.

The Nets are going to need to be a lot better on the boards if they want to compete tonight. Atlanta beat them by 18 in the rebounding battle on Sunday, and any team is gonna make you pay if you give them extra opportunities. Nic Claxton and Day’ron Sharpe will be tasked with fixing that area and controlling Bagley III on the other side.

👀 Player to watch: PJ Washington

The Mavs are looking to find their building blocks of the future. Washington should be one of the people Mavs ownership has in mind. Washington has had to do a little bit more on offense this season and his numbers are in the ballpark of where they were last season. At 27 years old and in the first year of an extension, he’ll be someone Dallas should be able to count on in the years to come.

What should the Nets do with Michael Porter Jr? MPJ’s been in a shooting slump, but Steve Lichtenstein thinks it could be something deeper:

“Porter suffered an MCL sprain during a January 7 game versus Orlando and sat out a few games before the All-Star break with tendonitis in that knee, though reports noted that the two injuries were unrelated. Porter’s misfires during this period, including the 7-of-8 three-point attempts in Atlanta, haven’t just been of the in-and-out variety; they’ve often been wildly off, an indication that what’s gone awry could very well be due to something physical in nature.

Considering the Nets are already 11 games out of play-in contention, the prudent course of action would be to shut Porter down, as many other teams in tanking mode have been doing when their best players suffer injuries.“

To the last point, if the league wants to knock on your door because you’re sitting a possibly injured player, let them.

Porter Jr isn’t on the injured list, so he’ll be out there. All but one of MPJ’s makes came at the rim, so the Nets are going to need to find easier shot attempts for him. He’s shown throughout this season that he can heat up at a moment’s notice. One good game could get him back on track and looking more like the player that was an All-Star candidate.

📺 From the Vault

The USA and Canada played a game for the ages for the gold medal in the last event of the Olympics on Sunday. The US captured their first gold medal in hockey since 1980 and Jack Hughes’ golden goal in overtime sealed the upset victory. For US hockey, this win was extra meaningful and as we venture back to the 2010 Winter Games in Vancouver, you see why…

More reading: Mavs Moneyball, SB Nation NBANew York PostNew York Daily NewsClutch PointsNets WireSteve’s Newsletter

Falcons GM confirms the team has told QB Kirk Cousins he'll be released when free agency opens

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The Atlanta Falcons have informed quarterback Kirk Cousins they plan to release the 14-year veteran when NFL free agency opens next month, new general manager Ian Cunningham said Tuesday.

“What he’s done in his career, we owe that to him just to allow him some clarity going into free agency,” Cunningham said at the NFL scouting combine in Indianapolis.

Cousins played two seasons with the Falcons with mixed-at-best results, signing a $180 million contract about six weeks before they drafted Michael Penix Jr. with the eighth overall pick in 2024. Penix won the job in 2025, before a season-ending knee injury made Cousins the starter again down the stretch.

Cousins still started 22 of 34 games over the past two seasons, but he was just 12-10 as a starter. He threw a league-most 16 interceptions in just 14 games in 2024. The 37-year-old is 88-77-2 as a starter with Washington, Minnesota and Atlanta.

With his recently reworked deal, Cousins would have his 2027 salary ($67.9 million) fully guaranteed if he were to remain on the roster by the third day of the new league year.

The Falcons also plan to place their franchise tag on tight end Kyle Pitts and keep him from becoming a free agent, Cunningham confirmed.

Pitts, the fourth overall pick in the 2021 draft, had a career-high 88 receptions and five touchdowns last season. His 928 receiving yards were the second most among all NFL tight ends. The franchise tag value for tight ends this year is expected to be about $16 million.

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

What We Learned from the Spurs win over the Pistons

DETROIT, MI - FEBRUARY 23: Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs celebrates during the game against the Detroit Pistons on February 23, 2026 at Little Caesars Arena 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. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Brian Sevald/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Regular season basketball is a funny thing because there was a moment near the end of the first quarter when Tobias Harris threw down a hellacious dunk in traffic and I thought to myself, dramatically, “This is it. This is how the dream dies.”

The Pistons had not only erased a massive early deficit, but had now moved out in front by six. They were suffocating the Spurs, holding them to 4-17 shooting during that stretch, and everything felt like it was unraveling. The moment was too big. The opponent was too tough. The boys were too young. We were going to lose this game and we were going to lose it badly.

Or not!

In a massive twist that I’m sure no one could have seen coming, your guy over here was overreacting just a smidge to a moment that felt bad. Shock! The cool thing though is that I’m allowed to do that. You are too! All of us are allowed to roll around on the floor and wring our hands and shout to the heavens. We can scream about biased officials and annoying announcers and the cruel villains like Tobias Harris throwing down rude dunks that hurt our feelings. Not only is it allowed, it’s encouraged! Get in the mix, my friends. Feel something! Live a little! Viva la vida!

The important thing is that this Spurs team doesn’t do that. They get fired up and they express themselves, but they never seem to let the moment get the best of them. It’s a real “next play” mentality that I aspire to and consistently fall short of.

The Pistons very clearly wanted to rattle the Spurs in this one. It’s a playbook we’ve seen a lot this year and will likely see even more as the stakes get higher. Teams are increasingly realizing that the best way to beat the Spurs is to throw them off their game with, let’s call it, “physicality.” They don’t want to let the Spurs run. They don’t want the ball whipping around. They don’t want them comfortable, getting easy looks. They want the Spurs looking at the officials after every play and thinking about everything happening on the court except what actually matters.

I get it! It would absolutely work on me. Hand up, the Pistons would very likely beat me in a basketball game.

Lucky for us, the Spurs are built of sterner stuff than I am. They surfed the wave instead of getting swallowed by it. They matched the rougher play where they could and didn’t get distracted from their own game plan. Once it became clear they could absorb that physicality, it never really felt like the Pistons had a Plan B. They basically fell back on “we’re going to dare you to shoot,” and the Spurs were like, “deal.” That was that. It was a pretty even game in a lot of ways, but San Antonio kept knocking down shots and Detroit couldn’t match that kind of firepower. Fun game! Nice to see you! On to the next!

It was a mature performance from the team. They all count the same, but this one felt like it carried a little extra weight. National TV. Best team in the East. A group we don’t get to see very often. I don’t know. It just felt like more than “another road game.”

If there’s one thing that’s becoming a consistent trademark of the Wembanyama era of Spurs basketball, it’s that this team likes a test. They get up for it. They seem eager to prove themselves when the lights are on. They hear people saying, “The Spurs are close,” and you can almost feel them wanting to shout back, “We’re not close, we’re HERE.” I don’t even know if that’s fully true yet, but the fact that they believe it says a lot.

And that belief speaks directly to the character of their talisman. This urge to prove something feels baked into the team because it’s baked into Victor Wembanyama. He’s wired to show people. To show he’s the best. To show he cares. I was absolutely one of the people rolling my eyes at his whole, “I’m going to try hard at the All-Star game” thing, and now I’m one of the people sitting here with egg on my face. Victor’s career is going to be defined by the way he relentlessly turns doubt into belief. It’s what he lives for. It’s what he spends every day chasing.

Honestly, it’s breathtaking to watch.

I’m as prone to histrionics as I am to hyperbole, so the one thing you should absolutely not do is get too wrapped up in whatever nonsense I start spitting out once things escalate into playoff mode. But what I do want to say right now, in this brief moment of clarity and calm, is this: I don’t think this team is going to lose in the playoffs because the moment gets too big. Maybe their opponent will have a little more talent. Maybe a little more experience. Maybe a few of the breaks you need to win a championship won’t go their way. Impossible to say, obviously.

But the thing we can say with absolute certainty is that these guys are going to get tested, and they are chomping at the bit to take it. I’m just excited to be along for the ride.


Takeaways
  • Really fun game from Stephon Castle. Nothing in the box score super jumps off the page, but it felt like he met the moment in his matchup with Cade Cunningham and basically played Detroit’s star to a draw. He was picking him up near half court, fighting through absurd screens, and staying attached possession after possession. Wembanyama obviously played a huge role in making life uncomfortable for Cade, but the fact that he had to deal with Steph in his ear all night mattered a lot.
  • And if that’s all he was doing it would be enough, but he also quietly orchestrated a really steady offensive night. The Spurs shot well, sure, but Steph was the one pushing tempo, finding open guys, and acting like a metronome in the middle of what Detroit was trying very hard to turn into chaos.
  • Last Steph note here, but, he has this habit of catching it on the wing and loading up for a Manu-style skip pass across the court. I clock it every time because it’s one of my favorite plays in basketball, but last night, after like the second one, I had this thought of like, “Man, if I’m noticing this, probably safe to say the other team definitely is too.” Sure enough, at one point in the third quarter he got the ball out there and started pushing into the paint and winding up like he was going to sling it to Keldon in the corner. A Pistons defender was ready to jump it, and as I was having a full meltdown about it, Steph just calmly dumped it over the top to Kornet for an easy alley-oop instead. Fun times all around!
  • Always cool to watch Devin Vassell go off like he did tonight. He’s so smooth with the ball, and you can see how frustrating it is for opposing teams when they realize that the Spurs, like, fourth option is suddenly torching them and forcing an adjustment. Imagine spending all day figuring out how to slow down the giant French guy, kind of pulling it off, and then everything falling apart because you forgot about Young Dev. Tragic.
  • I’m not smart enough to expound upon the exact impact that assistant coach Sean Sweeney has had on the Spurs defense this year other than to say something like, “Hey! We hired this defensive wizard and we seem to be really good at defense this year! Cool!” However, I will say that I do consistently notice him getting super fired up on the bench when the Spurs do something good defensively and every time I do I think about “Oh yeah, that wizard we hired!” and it makes me feel all warm and fuzzy.

WWL Post Game Press Conference

– Did you realize the Spurs were on their Rodeo Road Trip right now?

– You know what, I’m glad you asked that because I just really didn’t. Completely slipped my mind.

– Feels like it snuck up on us this year, right?

– Little bit! RRT, in the past, felt like one of those big looming milestones in the season that was always a big deal and caused lots of chatter. It was sort of legendarily when the team would bond and come together as a group and it all felt very romanticized and cool. Maybe I’m just seeing it through my rose tinted nostalgia glasses, but it just doesn’t seem like a big deal anymore.

– Well, they a little bit cheating by having two of the games before the All-Star break and then two “home” Austin games as a part of avoiding the rodeo.

– True. Maybe I don’t hear about it as much because I’m not in San Antonio and the Rodeo isn’t actually, like, consuming any of my day-to-day attention like it did growing up.

– Yea, maybe.

– Mmm hmm.

– Pretty civil conversation today, everything ok?

– Yea I mean, I can pick a fight if you want, just felt like after watching the Pistons fall on their faces all night doing that it just seems a little silly.

– For sure, would hate for us to embarrass ourselves like that.

– Can you imagine?