Warriors mock draft roundup: Golden State eying Mexican prospect

Basketball experts are pinning down their mock selections over a month away from the 2026 NBA Draft on June 23-24.

This draft class anticipates having among the best crop of talent to enter the league with players such as AJ Dybantsa, Cameron Boozer, Caleb Wilson and Darryn Peterson.

The Golden State Warriors have to decide whether to will draft a prospect or trade their No. 11 pick.

Despite being heavy buyers in the trade market, the consensus is that Golden State will retain their pick and lean into scouting for the right piece. Head coach Steve Kerr looks forward to that selection and believes developing that pick will be a "huge factor" in their 2026-27 season.

"I think we're in a different place now. Right, there's no question. And I've talked to Mike (Dunleavy, the Warriors GM), I mean, I don't know the draft, but he feels really strongly that we're going to get a good player. It could be a 19 year old, it could be someone older," Kerr told reporters.

The Warriors have been linked to a number of players, such as Michigan forward Yaxel Lendeborg, Arizona guard Brayden Burries and Michigan center Aday Mara.

USA TODAY Sports' Bryan Kalbrosky predicts Karim López going to the Warriors as the first-ever Mexican-born NBA draft selection. Kalbrosky described Lopez as "physically gifted, athletic, and universally seen as the top prospect from this class currently playing overseas."

"He exploded for 32 points (11-of-13 FG) with eight rebounds, two blocks and one steal against Melbourne on Jan. 30. Despite his age, he played a huge role for his team defensively for a team that won the NBL Ignite Cup. López measured well, weighing just shy of 222 pounds and 38-inch max vertical," Kalbrosky wrote.

Whoever is brought in, Kerr emphasized the Warriors' commitment to that players' development.

"It's obvious where we are with the injuries to Moses (Moody) and Jimmy (Butler), you look at our depth on the wings, that guy has to play, and he's got to earn it, you know, but we're committed to absolutely, you know, the development of our young players," Kerr said. "(We're) trying to do this thing in a way that allows for success down the road. Down the road meaning the end of next season and beyond, and we're excited about that."

Here are mock draft predictions from sports experts, specifically for the Golden State Warriors:

Experts' share Golden State Warriors mock draft selection

USA TODAY Sports: Karim López, New Zealand Breakers, forward

CBS Sports: Aday Mara, Michigan, center

ESPN: Karim López, New Zealand Breakers, forward

Bleacher Report: Brayden Burries, Arizona, shooting guard

NBAdraft.net: Brayden Burries, Arizona, shooting guard

Yahoo Sports: Karim López, New Zealand Breakers, forward

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Golden State Warriors mock draft 2026 first-round predictions

Spurs vs Thunder Prediction, Picks & Best Bets for Tonight's NBA Playoffs Game 2

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We knew the Western Conference Finals was going to be good, but hot damn.

With Oklahoma City on high alert for Game 2 after losing home court via a double-overtime thriller in the series opener, my Spurs vs. Thunder predictions call on Shai Gilgeous-Alexander to bounce back from an off-night to top his scoring prop on Wednesday, May 20.

For more free NBA picks, read Douglas Farmer's Spurs vs. Thunder props.

  • UPDATE: Added a prediction for who will win tonight.

Spurs vs Thunder Game 2 prediction

Who will win Spurs vs Thunder Game 2?

Thunder: The Thunder may have been a little rusty after waiting around for the Spurs to advance to the conference finals. Oklahoma City, which hadn’t played since May 11 after sweeping the Lakers, was on its heels in the first half before a late rally forced OT. The Thunder shot just 36% in the opening 24 minutes and was still able to hang around. Expect a full 48-minute effort and a home win in Game 2. 

Spurs vs Thunder best bet: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander Over 28.5 points (-110)

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander deferred to his Oklahoma City Thunder teammates when L.A. sold out to stop him in Round 2.

He doesn’t have that luxury versus the San Antonio Spurs.

Gilgeous-Alexander was 1-for-5 with four points in the first half of Game 1 and quickly realized backup wasn’t coming. 

After just one shot inside of 15 feet in the opening half, SGA was more aggressive attacking the rim. 

All nine of his 2-point FGAs in the 2H came within 15 feet — seven in the paint — and he scored 18 points in the half before OT.

NBA player props projections sit closer to 30 points for a more aggressive SGA.

Covers COVERS INTEL: SGA's Game 1 usage was down to 28.2%, including an uncharacteristically low 19.5% in the first half of Monday’s series opener.

Spurs vs Thunder Game 2 same-game parlay

A long layoff between series left the Thunder a little stiff in the opening 24 minutes of Game 1, and yet OKC stuck around. This time, Oklahoma City is playing with pressure after letting Game 1 slip away. The Thunder are 13-5 SU off a loss this season and 8-0 off a loss in the playoffs over the past two postseason runs.

Victor Wembanyama turned away three shots in Game 1, but OKC played passively in the opening 24 minutes and didn’t attack the inside at its normal rate. Business picked up in the second half, and the Thunder got aggressive, with all three of Wemby’s swats coming in the second half and OT periods.

Spurs vs Thunder SGP

  • Thunder moneyline
  • Shai Gilgeous-Alexander Over 28.5 points
  • Victor Wembanyama Over 3.5 blocks

Our "from downtown" SGP: Mega powers explode

The Thunder clap back in a big way in Game 2.

Oklahoma City is 8-0 SU and 6-2 ATS off a playoff loss the past two seasons and gets 30+ from a more aggressive Gilgeous-Alexander.

Wembanyama sees more swats with OKC attacking the interior and Holmgren tries stretch the Spurs defense with his outside shooting, having hit at least two triples in six of his nine postseason games so far.

Spurs vs Thunder SGP

  • Thunder -6.5
  • Shai Gilgeous-Alexander Over 28.5 points
  • Victor Wembanyama Over 3.5 blocks
  • Chet Holmgren Over 1.5 threes

Spurs vs Thunder odds for Game 2

  • Spread: Spurs +7.5 | Thunder -7.5
  • Moneyline: Spurs +205 | Thunder -250
  • Over/Under: Over 216.5 | Under 216.5

Spurs vs Thunder betting trend to know

Oklahoma City is 33-7 SU and 22-17-1 ATS off a loss the past two season, including 8-0 SU and 6-2 ATS off a playoff loss in that span. Find more NBA betting trends for Spurs vs. Thunder.

How to watch Spurs vs Thunder Game 2

LocationPaycom Center, Oklahoma City, OK
DateWednesday, May 20, 2026
Tip-off8:30 p.m. ET
TVNBC

Spurs vs Thunder latest injuries

Not intended for use in MA.
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Open Thread: Spurs prepare for the Thunder’s reply

May 18, 2026; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA; San Antonio Spurs center Victor Wembanyama (1) attempts to drive past Oklahoma City Thunder guard Cason Wallace (22) and guard Ajay Mitchell (25) in double overtime during game one of the western conference finals for the 2026 NBA playoffs at Paycom Center. Mandatory Credit: Brett Rojo-Imagn Images | Brett Rojo-Imagn Images

After Monday night’s double-overtime extravaganza, the Spurs were taking Tuesday to themselves to rest and reset for Wednesday night’s Game 2.

Spurs head coach Mitch Johnson, Devin Vassell, and Julian Champagnie gave some time to the media to answer some questions regarding the events of the last twenty or so hours.

After the press conference I rewatched an edited version of Game 1. It contained all of the plays of the game, not just the highlights and shots made. But instead of 3 hours, the entire game was trimmed down to 50 minutes. Imagine every play cut to the highest level of frenetic energy.

This game could have gone either way. There was never a safe lead for either team. Wherever SGA was stymied, Alex Caruso lurked in the corner to keep the Thunder roaring. The Spurs extend their lead to 10, the Thunder tighten back up.

The last minutes were a dogfight with both teams claiming and losing nail-biting leads. The pendulum of emotions washing over the crowd of over 19,000 over those last few shots dominated the atmosphere.

One made shot, one missed shot. A call that was made that shouldn’t have been. An incorrectly called out of bounds play. A legendary three-pointer an inch in the wrong direction. The MVP gets that one to bounce in.

Every Spurs starter played more minutes than average in Western Conference down to the wire double-overtime minutes.

After the game Wemby was aksed about his feelings, he responded that he was tired. Vassell shared that he was resting and watching film. Champagnie had just woken up and came in wearing slippers and said they weren’t coming off today.

Game 2 will be louder. It will be more physical, and the Thunder will play with increased urgency as they do not want to go to San Antonio down 0-2.

Coach Mitch Johnson stated that their game plan worked stating there were necessary improvements to tighten what has been put into play.

On the other sideline, Mark Daigneault tinkered with line-ups. His starting five did not return at half time, and for each of the overtime tip offs, the coach continued to adjust.

Expect more adjustments as the Thunder attempt to handle the Spurs double teams and control the pace of the game.


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Kentucky Wildcat News: Malachi Moreno Watch Heats Up

Feb 7, 2026; Lexington, Kentucky, USA; Kentucky Wildcats center Malachi Moreno (24), guard Jasper Johnson (2) and forward Braydon Hawthorne (right) celebrate from the bench during the second half against the Tennessee Volunteers at Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center. Mandatory Credit: Jordan Prather-Imagn Images | Jordan Prather-Imagn Images

Good morning, BBN!

Mark Pope and his staff are out on the recruiting trail as they look to make some noise in the high school ranks in the class of 2027. However, their biggest recruiting win might come from an NBA Draft decision by Malachi Morneo.

It is safe to say this decision will likely impact the excitement for next season and could either help get Coach Pope back into the good graces of the BBN or put one nail in the coffin many have already built for him. That is why the tweet from Moreno yesterday afternoon got the fanbase talking.

WHAT COULD IT MEAN?! That is exactly what we all were shouting as we saw it. Moreno has retweeted a few accounts in recent months, but this is actually the first tweet he’s personally sent out since March 19.

Moreno participated in the in the GSL Sports Group Pro Day in Los Angeles on Tuesday in front of all 30 NBA teams. After working out for the New York Knicks and meetings with the Los Angeles Lakers and Boston Celtics, it is expected that Moreno will have a few more workouts to end the week.

With his stock still sitting firmly around the late first round mark, you can find mock drafts that place him as the 23rd pick to Atlanta (Yahoo Sports) or find him slipping into the early second round, as ESPN has him.

One thing is for certain: If he does decide to stay in the draft, the Kentucky native will hear his name called this year. Now it just depends on which option he prefers.

Either way, we should be getting an answer very soon.

Tweet of the Day

Goodman with some strong words. LSU could have an awesome roster or a bunch of guys who are ineligible. It’ll be fascinating to watch it all unfold.

Headlines

Jacob Lang Has Historic Round Two at Bermuda Run Regional – UK

 Lang etched his name into the Kentucky men’s golf record books!

Wave of sixth-inning paper cuts bleeds Kentucky out of SEC Tournament- KSR

The Cats are now right on the bubble.

The BBN helped La Familia lock up home court advantage against Louisville’s TBT team- KSR

Will be a fun summer in the TBT.

Composite 4-star CB commits to Kentucky- Cats Pause

LETS GO!

Ansley Almonor is a champion in Finland (but can’t sing along with his teammates)- KSR

Congrats to the former Cat!

Jason Kidd out as Mavericks coach after five seasons- ESPN

There will be a new head coach in Dallas.

Arsenal win 1st Premier League title in 22 years after Man City draw- ESPN

A big day for Arsenal fans!

Who will be the next American to win NBA MVP?- CBS

Who is your bet?

SEC post-spring power rankings: Texas leads pack while Texas A&M, Alabama headline fluid middle tier- CBS

Where do you think the Cats rank?

CelticsBlog exit interview: Payton Pritchard, Boston’s best bargain, is about to force a big decision

Apr 26, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Boston Celtics guard Payton Pritchard (11) reacts after making a three point basket against the Philadelphia 76ers during the second half at Xfinity Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images | Eric Hartline-Imagn Images

For most of the last two years, Payton Pritchard’s contract has been one of the easiest things on the Celtics’ books to celebrate.

A four-year, $30 million deal signed in October 2023 for a guard who can shoot, handle the ball, push pace, scrap in the paint, bomb away from the logo and swing games by himself? Yes, please and thank you. No further questions. Please put that receipt in a frame and hang it next to the 2024 banner.

That version of the conversation was fun while it lasted. Sadly for us, though certainly not for PP himself, it’s about to change.

Pritchard is no longer a plucky underdog value story. He isn’t the scrappy bench guard who outperformed expectations and turned into one of Brad Stevens’ better pieces of business. Well, in a way he’s still all of that, sure, but as we’re about to find out, he’s become so much more. After his last couple of seasons, Pritchard has become one of Boston’s more interesting offseason variables.

That’s what happens when a bargain starts playing like something much closer to a pillar.

The contract is still absurd. The role is anything but.

The Celtics are set to pay Pritchard $7.8 million next season. In the NBA’s current financial climate, that number feels like it was discovered in a couch cushion. Boston will owe Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown and Derrick White roughly $145 million combined next season, while no other player on the roster is currently set to make more than $11 million. Pritchard living in that range while producing the way he did is laughably amazing for Boston. It’s one of the reasons the Celtics stayed afloat, and then some, during a season that could have gone sideways fast.

But that’s also where this gets complicated.

Pritchard feels like he’s become more than a “nice to have” player. The Celtics leaned on him too much, and he delivered too often, for him to be treated like a budget-friendly depth piece.

He gave Boston real creation when the offense needed it. He played with pace when the game started to bog down. He punished defenses that lost him. He became more than just a catch-and-shoot threat. There were nights when he wasn’t simply supplementing the stars. He was the star, organizing possessions, creating advantages and forcing Joe Mazzulla’s hand to trust him with more responsibility.

Pritchard plays with the exact kind of irrational confidence that makes sense only after the shot goes in. When it doesn’t, you’re halfway through saying, “Payton, what are we doing?” When it does, you’re nodding like you saw the whole thing coming.

Jaylen Brown said during the season that Pritchard was playing at an All-Star level and that Boston trusted him to run things. That wasn’t a throwaway compliment. It reflected what the games looked like. Pritchard earned more trust because he kept giving the Celtics reasons to offer it.

Now the team has to decide what that trust is worth.

A bargain with leverage

Pritchard is extension eligible this offseason, and that’s where the current bargain starts becoming a bigger question.

Under normal circumstances, this would be easy enough. Pay the guy. Keep the guy. Celebrate the guy. Maybe build a statue of him launching that infamous halfcourt heave in Game 5 of the 2024 NBA Finals.

But Pritchard’s current contract is such a bargain that it limits how much Boston can offer him on an extension. The rules come into play here, and Keith Smith recently laid out the key point: because Pritchard’s salary is below the Estimated Average Player Salary, Boston may be able to offer more than a simple 140% raise off his current number.

That is real money, but it’s also not the same as open-market money.

Pritchard is making $7.8 million next season, which is among the league’s best value deals. But if he believes this past season was a new baseline rather than a peak, waiting could make sense. The cap is going up. The tax line is going up. Teams always need shooting, ball handling and competitive guards who don’t shrink from big moments.

Taking the extension would give Pritchard security now. Waiting could give him leverage in the future.

For once, Boston might not be the only side with it.

And that’s before getting into the roster-building piece of all this. Pritchard’s contract is valuable because he outplays it. That also makes him one of the few movable contracts on the roster that could actually interest other teams. Boston doesn’t have many mid-sized salaries. So, if the Celtics want to chase a center, add more size or reshape the roster in a meaningful way, rival teams are not going to start the conversation by asking for the guys Boston is already mentally Photoshopping out of next year’s team picture.

Pritchard’s value cuts both ways.

The Celtics have to decide what Pritchard means to them

If you extend Pritchard, you’re keeping a player who has become part of the team’s identity. He plays with the exact kind of edge Celtics fans love. He’s annoying in the best way. He rebounds like he has personally been offended by taller people his whole life.

If you move him, you better be doing it for something that clearly raises Boston’s ceiling.

Trading Pritchard because his contract helps make the math work is one thing. Trading him because the Celtics are hunting for a real upgrade is another. There’s a tightrope there, and it’s a narrow one to traverse.

The Celtics don’t have to decide whether Pritchard belongs anymore. He answered that.

The harder question is what kind of player they believe he will be going forward.

Is he the long-term sixth man who stabilizes the offense and closes certain matchups? Is he a possible starter if Boston’s backcourt thins out? Is he the kind of player you extend now because you know the price will only get scarier later? Or is he one of the few non-star pieces valuable enough to help the Celtics make a bigger move?

None of those questions are meant to be insulting. They’re the cost of becoming important.

Pritchard’s contract is still one of Boston’s best bargains. But because of how out-in-the-open good he’s become, the conversation around him can’t stay cheap forever.

15 Takeaways from Cavs forth-quarter meltdown in Game 1 loss to Knicks: ‘It’s one game’

NEW YORK, NY - MAY 19: James Harden #1 and Head Coach Kenny Atkinson of the Cleveland Cavaliers high five during the game against the New York Knicks during Game One of the NBA Eastern Conference Finals on May 19, 2026 at Madison Square Garden in New York City, New York. 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 Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Being able to bounce back from terrible losses has allowed the Cleveland Cavaliers to advance to the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time in eight years. They’ll need to do so again after they inexplicably blew a 22-point fourth-quarter lead and lost in overtime to the New York Knicks, 115-104, in Game 1.

“We lost, we f****** blew it,” Donovan Mitchell said afterward.

This terrible loss showed two things. Number one, the advantages that you thought the Cavs would have coming into this series proved true. And number two, this team struggles to counter in-game adjustments.

We’ll start with the positives, since those are easy to miss in a game defined by the final quarter.

The Cavs’ defense was up to the challenge.

Defense is the first thing that usually gets blamed when you blow a lead as large as the Cavs did. However, even in the Knicks’ fourth-quarter comeback, it was their inability to create offense that ultimately did them in far more than their defense.

Cleveland’s defense on Karl-Anthony Towns was excellent, especially when the Cavs had two bigs on the floor.

One of Towns’s best skills on offense is being able to pull the center out of the paint and then playmake from there. Having Evan Mobley providing on-ball pressure with Jarrett Allen off-ball at the rim short-circuited that process. This contributed to a few of his seven giveaways on the night.

Having Allen as the primary defender on Josh Hart paid off. The defense dared Hart to beat them off the dribble or with the three-ball. He wasn’t able to do so as he went 1-5 from three and finished with the worst plus/minus of anyone in Game 1 at -23.

Cheating off Hart can be risky because of what he can provide as an offensive rebounder. The Cavs did a good job of not losing track of him in these situations. Having two rim protectors, one to cheat off Hart and clog the paint, and one to guard Towns, worked perfectly

The Knicks weren’t able to generate many outside looks. The best way to defend the three-point line is to keep your opponent from getting those shots. The Cavs limited the Knicks to just 32 outside looks, which translated to a third of their shot attempts (24th percentile). That’s a win for a team that has been on fire from three throughout the postseason.

The Cavs were able to do so while still defending the rim. New York converted just 62.5% of their looks in the restricted area.

These are the signs of a good defensive process. It was their work on this end that led to their 22-point lead.

Offensively, Donovan Mitchell had much more space to operate compared to the previous two seasons. This allowed him to get to the paint more easily, especially during the second and third quarters when the Cavs were playing their best.

Cleveland’s bigs showed that they could be impactful in the paint. The guards didn’t feed them the ball as they should’ve, but when they did, good things happened.

Allen was impactful as an offensive rebounder. He grabbed six second-chance opportunities in a game that felt like it was going to be a reversal of the 2023 series.

The Cavs also generated clean three-point looks. The Knicks sell out more than nearly any other team to protect the basket. This is why they gave up the second-most threes in the league throughout the regular season.

Cleveland took nearly half of their shots from behind the arc. And while you don’t necessarily want to see Mobley attempt eight triples, most of the ones the Cavs did get were clean. The shot quality was good. The issue was that they only converted 32% of their looks. If they keep getting good shots, you’d expect that to turn around at some point.

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Blowing a 22-point lead doesn’t come down to one thing. So many factors worked against the Cavs in the final eight minutes for them to give this away. But if you were forced to blame one thing, the offense’s inability to score down the stretch is what ultimately did them in.

The Cavs scored just 11 points in the final 13 minutes of regulation and overtime. The process went away, as they opted to bleed the clock instead of attacking whenever they saw an opening.

Basketball is a rhythm-based sport. If you halt your pace to waste time, you also take yourself out of the natural flow that allows you to perform your best. And then when you need to get back to it, as the Cavs did in overtime, it’s hard to find that again.

Mitchell and James Harden deserve the most blame for the offense falling apart in the fourth. They both failed to get the bigs involved, weren’t able to get downhill, and needlessly dribbled the air out of the ball.

The lack of aggressiveness from Mitchell was the most puzzling. He attempted just four shots in the fourth quarter, and mostly wasn’t a factor late.

Kenny Atkinson deserves blame for the collapse, most of all with how the team defended Jalen Brunson down the stretch.

New York hunted Harden defensively. They put him in 21 on-ball screens in the fourth quarter and overtime. This resulted in nine isolations, with the Knicks scoring 1.9 points per those possessions.

There’s no excuse for seeing that happen and not adjusting.

We know who Harden is as a defender. There are things that he can do well, given his size and strength. Hanging with a quicker guard like Brunson in isolation isn’t one of them.

If Harden is going to be targeted like that, he probably shouldn’t be on the court. But if you’re insistent on playing him for what he provides offensively, the game plan around him needs to be better.

It’s clear that the Cavs were willing to just give up the switch. Defenders weren’t fighting to stay with their assignment when the screen came. This strategy worked with Hart in the game; it didn’t when New York opted for shooting.

The Cavs weren’t prepared for a small-ball version of the Knicks.

Harden was able to be targeted because Landry Shamet (a shooter) was in place of Hart (not a shooter). If one of the bigs was able to roam off Hart, the paint still would’ve been clogged, and Brunson wouldn’t have been able to get going.

Not being prepared for this caused the Cavs to try to double these actions late, but it’s clear this wasn’t something they could execute. The double was more passive than anything, and the backside rotations weren’t where they needed to be for this to work.

This collapse was more a failure of preparation — which is understandable given the turnaround from Game 7 in Detroit — than anything else. The Cavs have the personnel to defend this better and have done so in the past.

You’d expect the Knicks to go with more five-out lineups in Game 2.

This game stings. You can’t afford to give away opportunities like this against an opponent as good as the Knicks and get away with it. At least not if you do so repeatedly.

That said, Game 1 doesn’t decide a series. And if it does, it wasn’t one that you were going to win anyway. The sky isn’t falling, at least not yet.

The Cavs have experience in these situations due to blowing multiple games already this postseason. They’ve responded well in each of those situations. They’ll need to do so again if they’re going to come back from a hole they dug completely on their own.

“It’s one game,” Mitchell said. “We could’ve lost by 40. It still would’ve been 1-0.”

Game 2 preview: San Antonio Spurs vs. Oklahoma City Thunder

OKLAHOMA CITY, OK - MAY 18: Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander #2 of the Oklahoma City Thunder look on during the game during Game One of the NBA Western Conference Finals on May 18, 2026 at Paycom Center in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. 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

The Spurs took homecourt advantage from the Thunder in Game 1, which became an instant classic. While missing De’Aaron Fox, who might still be out a while longer, they went to Oklahoma City and handed the home team its first loss of the entire playoffs in double overtime. Now they’ll look to take a commanding lead back to San Antonio by winning Game 2.

Dylan Harper did phenomenally in Fox’s stead, showing once again a maturity beyond his years, but the game belonged to Victor Wembanyama. The big man finished with 41 points on 25 shots, along with 24 rebounds, three assists, and three blocks, yet somehow the stat line doesn’t do his performance justice. The Thunder couldn’t do anything about him on offense as he punished the smaller defenders they used on him. His long three-pointer to send it to a second overtime feels like one of those highlights that will be remembered if the Spurs advance.

If there’s such a thing as a must-win game this early in a series, Game 2 is it for the Thunder. Heading on the road tied at one would be a reasonably good result. They could regain homecourt advantage quickly with a split in San Antonio. Another loss, however, puts them in a position to have to win four of the next five, with three of those away from Oklahoma City. After a not stellar performance for his standards, reigning MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander will surely look to exert his will on the game like Wembanyama did in the previous matchup.

San Antonio Spurs (1-0) vs. Oklahoma City Thunder (0-1)

May 20th, 2026 | 7:30 PM CT

Watch: NBC / Peacock | Listen: WOAI (1200 AM)

Spurs Injuries: De’Aaron Fox – Questionable (ankle)

Thunder Injuries: Thomas Sorber – Out (knee)

What to watch for:

Who guards Wemby?

The Thunder went with a common approach to defending Wembanyama: use a smaller player on him to push him out of position and take away his dribble. It’s been a tactic that has had success in the past, but not this time, as Wembanyama scored nine points in just five shots when guarded by Alex Caruso. Whenever he could catch close to the rim, either on cuts or after switches, it was a bucket. He also punished OKC in the offensive boards a couple of times. Wemby was too big, and the mismatch was a problem.

At the same time, can the Thunder really adjust? Wembanyama has gotten the best of Chet Holmgren for most of their pro career. Hartenstein could be a better option to guard him, but Wemby can just either draw him out to the perimeter or try to force a switch. There are just not a lot of bigs who can hang with The Alien, which is why the strategy of having strong perimeter guys guard him exists in the first place. It’s unlikely Mark Daigneault will completely switch his defensive game plan after one game, but he might mix things up more in Game 2.

The two young guards might need to step up again

De’Aaron Fox is listed as questionable and expected to be a game-time decision. There’s a chance he’ll suit up, but it’s also completely possible, and even likely, he’ll miss another matchup. If he does, Dylan Harper and Stephon Castle will need to once again answer the call and deliver like veterans on the biggest stage they’ve been on.

Their performances in Game 1 weren’t perfect, as they struggled with their outside shot and Castle was turnover-prone, but their defense was terrific, and they combined for 41 points, 17 boards, and 17 assists. Harper also pitched in seven steals. Lack of experience has been considered one of the Spurs’ weaknesses, but the two young guards looked comfortable despite the high stakes. If Fox is out again, hopefully they can have another consagratory performance, because the Spurs will probably need it.

Fatigue could be a major factor for both teams

The double overtime finish made Game 1 epic, but it also led to heavy minutes of intense play for most of the protagonists. All five Spurs starters were on the floor for more than 44 minutes, and Devin Vassell crossed the 50-minute mark. For the Thunder, Holmgren played 40+ minutes, SGA played 50+ minutes, and Jalen Williams, who is probably battling conditioning issues after injuries, got almost 40 minutes himself. There is only one day off between games, so the somewhat shallow San Antonio and the not-used-to-big-minutes OKC could struggle with exhaustion.

Fatigue could hurt the Spurs more, especially if Fox is not ready to go. While they are young, they had to play their main guys more in the first matchup. For San Antonio, a blowout, going either way, would provide an obvious signal they need to rest their guys, since there is no long break before the series continues. The hope is they can get production from their bench to avoid overloading their top players. But the potential of a 2-0 lead could be too enticing to resist, even if it means playing their starters heavy minutes to give themselves a chance. The Spurs are typically careful with load management, so it will be interesting to see how they handle playing time and rotations.

Amazon Prime’s NBA playoff coverage was an alienating, strangely visionary experiment in anti-TV

Cade Cunningham and Donovan Mitchell compete for the ball during the Eastern Conference semi-finals. Photograph: Sue Ogrocki/AP

Game 7 in the NBA playoffs: a chance to kick back, enjoy the drama of a winner-takes-all shootout between basketball’s big beasts, and … switch over from your regular TV provider to Amazon Prime? The excitement drains from the occasion at the first touch of the remote. Amazon no doubt imagined it had landed a real coup when the Eastern Conference semi-final series between Detroit and Cleveland extended to its maximum length, thereby handing the retail giant’s streaming arm, Prime Video, the right to air a Game 7 in the first season of its partnership with the NBA. In the event, Sunday’s game was a dud: a blowout win for the Cavs, playing on the road, that had all the electricity and charm of a stint in the doctor’s waiting room. Fortunately for viewers, Prime Video did its best to match the moment by producing a broadcast that was every bit as dull and juiceless as events on the court.

The pre-tipoff highlight was an interview with Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, on the occasion of his coronation as this season’s MVP, in which the Oklahoma City star appeared to be speaking from a movie theater for some reason. Blake Griffin, the house beefcake on Prime Video’s studio set, chided ESPN insider Shams Charania for leaking this year’s MVP announcement hours earlier: “It’s Sunday, Shams – go to brunch, you nerd.” If Hillary had won and Shams had kept his trap shut, we’d all be at brunch! The game got under way, and things did not improve. During the half-time show, Dirk Nowitzki rambled Germanly about various topics, while fellow former MVP Steve Nash delivered lines like “That decisiveness in isolation is so important” with all the conviction of a hostage recording a ransom video. Host Taylor Rooks tried valiantly to compensate for the lack of chemistry on set by laughing at even the slightest hint of a joke from any of her panellists. Awkward laughter delivered over dead air on a platform it feels like a punishment to access: that’s the Prime Video NBA playoffs guarantee.

Related: Wembanyama’s 41-24 double-double silences Thunder in West finals: ‘The best player in the world’

These have been a difficult debut playoffs for Prime as it muscles in on the broadcast territory once ruled by what the media analysts call “linear TV”. The feed dropped out for several minutes during overtime in the play-in game between the Hornets and the Heat; buffering, the nightmare we all thought we outlived in 2006, has plagued the stream in several games; and video has frequently been mistimed with audio, producing delays and mismatches. There’s primetime, which is when the bulk of these playoffs are taking place, and then there’s Prime Video time, which comes in around three seconds later. The audio itself in many games has often, in my experience at least, been strangely soft, requiring a trip all the way to the top of the volume scale to hear what the analysts and announcers are saying.

Compounding these technical difficulties has been the absence of any sense of occasion or big game feel on the Prime Video set. Inside the NBA, the program that anchored basketball coverage on TNT for many years before this season moving to ESPN, has become the pre-eminent talkshow in sports thanks to the alchemy of its stars, and the special qualities that each brings to the screen. The righteous fury of Charles Barkley, the bowtied jollity of Ernie Johnson, Kenny Smith’s calm assurance, Shaq’s dad mumble and roomy suits: each is critical to the show’s virtuosity and success. Shaq and Barkley, in particular, spar and talk over the top of each other so frequently they have developed a kind of harmonic verbal jazz that is now the show’s stylistic signature. And though the migration to ESPN has not been an entirely happy experience, the quad’s chemistry has thankfully survived the move.

Over on Amazon the contrast could not be more stark: the Prime Video playoffs have felt more like an extended quarterly corporate budget meeting than the pinnacle event in professional basketball. Nash and Nowitzki are Prime’s two heavy hitters, but even though they played together they often interact as if they’re vague acquaintances who’ve just bumped into each other at dinner; it’s all a bit too polite, a bit too safe, to make for compelling TV. Prime Video has exited the playoffs, the remainder of which will be shown on ABC/ESPN and NBC/Peacock. But the effect of Amazon’s shuddering experiment in anti-TV lingers.

For fans there is, of course, a real fragmentation to the viewing experience now that playoff basketball is parceled out across a number of platforms and viewing portals. Under the terms of the NBA’s new 11-year, $77bn media deal, live basketball is spread across NBC, Peacock, ESPN/ABC and Prime Video – a patchwork that includes broadcast TV, cable and streamers. This inevitably causes some disruption to the experience of watching live sport as we’ve become accustomed to it in the eras of channel surfing and multi-view, as an event in conversation with many others. For those of us with Prime Video and functioning fingers, that’s not exactly the end of the world – we all have the ability to handle the remote and press the right buttons to find what we’re looking for – but siloing premium live sports on streaming services does tend to make the viewing experience more static, more clunky, less zappy and less fun.

There’s also the question of access to consider. Instead of liberating us from the cable bundle, TV’s streaming era has ended up delivering us into a world where we all need to sign up for a retail goods delivery service to enjoy postseason basketball. To view the cream of the NBA in battle on the big screen from the comfort of your own home, you must first ensure you have a subscription for next-day delivery of toilet paper. On its own, $14.99 a month (the price of an Amazon Prime subscription) may not seem like much to pay for access to premium live sport – but that’s only one platform, and the costs of maintaining connection across all the different TV and streaming services that sports now live on are only multiplying (Amazon allows users to subscribe to streaming alone but structures it so that it’s most cost effective to pay for an entire Prime shipping subscription). Though precise figures are hard to come by, the most reliable estimates suggest that Amazon Prime has about 200 million customers in the US. On that basis it’s fair to assume that most basketball fans have Prime Video. But not all of them do – and not all neighborhood bars are prepared to pay the higher fees required to stream Prime in a commercial venue. At a time when the league is confronting a tanking epidemic and plagued by anxieties over its own product’s watchability, ripping a sizeable chunk of the postseason off normie TV and parking it on a streaming platform does not seem like the wisest strategy to allay those concerns and guarantee the sport’s long-term growth.

The NBA claims viewership is up across the board for the regular season and the playoffs – but data in the streaming era is notoriously chaotic and unreliable, so it’s anyone’s guess what the figures actually reveal. Ultimately the objective truth is probably less important than the semblance of growth, which is what the NBA and other big leagues need to keep attracting money. Appearance matters more than reality, the narrative more than the substance; the real audience for the NBA’s hosannas about market growth is not the fan on the couch but the underwriter in the corporate box. Viewership, popularity, even the public itself now seem increasingly incidental to professional sports, whose mega media deals are cooked up on the back of opaque datasets for the ultimate benefit of a tiny class of owners and investors. With each passing year televised sport becomes more and more like the unreal economy of venture capital, in which inscrutable claims about market size mix with a general contempt for the target public, and investment capital takes on a speculative character, unmoored from any objective metric of performance or even the need to show a profit.

The shackling of this year’s NBA playoffs to Prime Video has coincided with the emergence of a number of exotic new insults to the broader sports-loving public, most notoriously the extortionate pricing of tickets for the approaching World Cup. This weekend 40 dishonorables from the worlds of swimming, athletics and weightlifting will convene in Las Vegas for the inaugural drug-assisted Enhanced Games. The event will take place before “2,500 invite-only spectators” in a custom-built competition complex, according to organizers. The idea of a public sporting event restricting spectator entry to invitees in the way that a private club may seems shocking at first, but on closer inspection it’s no more than a signal confirming professional sport’s general direction of travel.

Once a gathering ground for the poor and disadvantaged, live sport – whether experienced in person or on screen – increasingly feels like an exclusive privilege for the global elite. Eventually it won’t even be enough to pay to gain access to it. In a sense, there’s something truly forward-looking about Prime Video’s janky first attempt at covering the NBA playoffs: Amazon has given us a broadcast so powerfully alienating it effectively anticipates sport’s viewerless future. Let’s appreciate it, then, while we still can – before professional sport slips behind the curtain of wealth and celebrity for good.

Three possible paths for Brad Stevens and the Celtics this offseason

Boston, MA - May 6: Boston Celtics president of basketball operations Brad Stevens speaks at the team's end-of-season press conference on May 6, 2026. (Photo by David L. Ryan/The Boston Globe via Getty Images) | Boston Globe via Getty Images

Math is hard. NBA math can be absolutely mind-dumbing even for “smart” people who write about the team. So when the cap experts talk, I like to listen.

I was watching old friend Keith Smith discuss the Celtics options on the Celtics Beat podcast and keyed in on some of the things he mentioned about the Celtics financial options (starting at about the 38:25 mark). He ran the numbers on the returning Celtics guaranteed contracts, the draft picks, and reasonable assumptions around the end of the roster guys and the two key figures he came up with are as follows.

The Celtics are about $15M under the luxury tax threshold and about $36M under the 2nd apron.

Here’s what that means to some potential paths forward for the team.

Duck the tax again, use the MLE

The math: The Celtics have roughly $15M under the tax threshold. The MLE is right around $15M.

So they’ll be close enough to under the tax that they will be able to once again find a way to stay under and still upgrade the roster with a quality free agent. That could mean bringing back Anfernee Simons. It could mean getting a guy like Mitchell Robinson (though that might be a long shot). Keith mentioned guys like Brook Lopez or even bringing back Nic Vucevic on short term (tradable) deals if all else fails. Perhaps there’s someone I’m not even tracking that makes sense at that number. The point is, it is a valuable tool for the team to use.

Another thing to note is that you could forget the MLE and use the space you have to make an unbalanced trade. One that comes to mind is dealing Hauser to the Pistons for Isaiah (Beef Stew) Stewart. That would save the Pistons about 4M and give them a floor spacing wing to add to their offense.

Theoretically, if the team is able to duck the tax one more time, they’ll be more willing to spend into the tax for the next several years (as it becomes harder and harder to fill out the roster around the Jays).

Pay the tax, use both the MLE and TPE

The math: The Celtics are about $36M under the 2nd apron. They could use the MLE and as much of the $27.7M trade exception as you can fit under the 1st apron.

An important note: Using either the MLE or the TPE would (by rule) hard cap the team at the 1st Apron ($195.9M) which is above the tax threshold ($187.7M) but obviously below the 2nd Apron ($207.8M).

This would only be worth it if they can really make a go-for-it title chasing move. We’re talking the equivalent of adding Jrue Holiday and Kristaps Porzingis back in 2023-24.

I have no idea who the names would be that fit that bill. Perhaps the Cavs end up winning the Giannis sweepstakes and decide that they need to offload a center and the Celtics happily oblige by taking Jarrett Allen (in exchange for picks) off their hands. Not sure how realistic that is, but the point is that you can do a lot with a $27.7M trade exception if you have an owner that is willing to pay the tax bill. But again, it has to be for the exact right guys that could put this team over the top.

Keith wisely points out that the one number the Celtics won’t go over is the 2nd Apron (if that’s even possible), because of all the roster restrictions that come with that (including the frozen future draft pick). Brad moved a lot of salaries to get out of that particular jail cell, and he’s not going to jump right back into it any time soon.

Blockbuster trade (involving Jaylen Brown or Derrick White)

We’ve already put a great deal of time and virtual ink dedicated to the blockbuster options. You know the names and potential impacts by now. I don’t think Brad is in any particular hurry to move either Jaylen or Derrick. On the other hand, I don’t think he would hesitate to sell high if the right return came back either.

What would you prefer to see the Celtics do? What are some names of players that you would want them to pursue this offseason?

What I’ve earned so far from the 2026 NBA Playoffs

Boston, MA - January 28 - Atlanta Hawks forward Onyeka Okongwu (17) lets the ball get loose as Boston Celtics guards Jordan Walsh (27), Hugo Gonzalez (28) and Baylor Scheierman (55) surround during the second half of a NBA game at the Garden. (Photo By Matt Stone/MediaNews Group/Boston Herald via Getty Images). | MediaNews Group via Getty Images
Don’t waste youth with the young.

There’s a natural reaction in the playoffs to shorten your rotation — you want to play your best players the most when it matters most. Mazzulla started trimming his lineups towards the end of the regular season from 10ish to 8ish in anticipation of the postseason.

But not until late into the Celtics’ collapse did the team realize that was a mistake or maybe better put, that wasn’t their identity.

Through eight straight wins to start their back-to-back bid, the Thunder went nearly 10-11 deep in their undefeated run before the Western Conference Finals. That may partly be because they’re beating the brakes off of the Suns and Lakers, but more likely, it’s because they’ve fostered a Stay Ready mentality from top to bottom.

Out of necessity, Mazzulla employed a similar strategy during the 82-game marathon of a regular season, but at least to start their series against the Sixers, shortened his rotation. However, by Game 7, he was starting the backend of the bench in Game 7 — a move many fans thought he should have made from the beginning.

With the off-season in mind, Stevens should embrace that mindset in building out the roster again. There will be an instinct to turn nickels, dimes, and quarters into dollars. However, if this CBA era has taught us anything, it’s that youth and depth is a premium not just for the regular season, but for the rigors of every 48-minute battle of the NBA Playoffs war. Whether they’re still on their rookie deals or have team options for next season, the Celtics have nine players that could be making under $3 million next season. Some might not return, some might be included in a trade, but Brad needs to beware of an empty cupboard come training camp next September.

BOSTON, MA – JUNE 21: Derrick White #9, Al Horford #42, Jayson Tatum #0, Jaylen Brown #7, Kristaps Porzingis #8, and Jrue Holiday #4 of the Boston Celtics pose for a photograph with the Larry O'Brien Trophy and the Bill Russell Finals MVP Trophy before the 2024 Boston Celtics championship parade on June 21, 2024 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 2024 NBAE (Photo by Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
But don’t forget the old dogs.

Tobias Harris was on one. The 14-year veteran was Detroit’s second-leading scorer for a Pistons core of 24-year-old Cade Cunningham, 22-year-old Jalen Duren, and 23-year-old Amen Thompson. In Game 1 against the Spurs, Alex Caruso (age 32) scored 31 points and defended Wemby well in stretches. Landry Shamet was a +25 in the Knicks’ 22-point comeback last night.

The 2024 championship season certainly belonged to the Jays and Brown and Tatum are still the foundation of the franchise at age 30 and 28 respectively. However, it was the collective experience of Al Horford, Jrue Holiday, and Kristaps Porzingis that helped raise Banner 18. You have to think that if one of those guys was still on the team against Philly, Game 7 swings our way.

Despite the early exit, one of the silver linings of the regular season was the breakout years of Luka Garza (28), Baylor Scheierman (26), Ron Harper, Jr. (26), Jordan Walsh (22), and Hugo Gonzalez (20). Mazzulla will need to lean on that young depth again, but entering free agency armed with a hefty TPE and the non-taxpayer MLE, Stevens will have an opportunity to add a player or two this summer and he shouldn’t be concerned leaning on some old dogs. They may not be able to learn new tricks, but if they can consistently add a different element to the young mix, there’s 15-20 minutes a night for a seasoned pro.

SAN ANTONIO, TX – MARCH 10: Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs and Jayson Tatum #0 of the Boston Celtics look on during the game on March 10, 2026 at the Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, 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 (Photos by Michael Gonzales/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
We might need a center.

Victor Wembanyama. Isaiah Hartenstein. Chet Holmgren. Karl-Anthony Towns. Jarrett Allen. Evan Mobley. Jalen Duren.

We should expect to meet any and all of those big men in next year’s march through the playoffs. And let’s not forget how Joel Embiid revealed just how much the Celtics lacked a consistent big man against him in their first round elimination.

Both Neemias Queta and Luka Garza were revelations during the regular season and Nikola Vucevic had his ups and downs in his injury-plaqued time in Boston and even he, the steady vet that has averaged 22 and 11 over 12 seasons, couldn’t add consistency to the center position. With how dominant seven-footers have been so far in the postseason, it’s a chilling reminder just how much Boston misses Kristaps Porzingis, Al Horford, and Luke Kornet.

The knee jerk reaction has been to ramp up the Giannis Antetokounmpo trade debate and maybe that’s the play. Maybe there’s a trade for a big that doesn’t include Jaylen Brown. What’s certain is that the 5-spot might be Boston’s #1 priority this summer.

Mitchell Robinson’s free throw woes aren’t going away for Knicks

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Mitchell Robinson went 2-for-8 from the free throw line during the Knicks' 115-104 comeback overtime win over the Cavaliers in Game 1 on May 19, 2026 at the Garden

It got lost in the historic comeback, but it’s something that will certainly play a factor going forward.

Mitchel Robinson was effective early in the Knicks’ epic 115-104 overtime win over the Cavaliers in Game 1 on Tuesday night at Madison Square Garden.

But Cavaliers coach Kenny Atkinson went to Hack-a-Mitch, and he was played off the floor.

Mitchell Robinson went 2-for-8 from the free throw line during the Knicks’ 115-104 comeback overtime win over the Cavaliers in Game 1 on May 19, 2026 at the Garden. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

The Cavaliers went to the strategy in the third quarter. Knicks coach Mike Brown left Robinson on the floor for a prolonged stretch despite it stifling their offense.

Robinson went 2-for-8 from the free throw line before Brown finally yanked him.

The Knicks deficit went from 14 to 15 points during that stretch.

“I wanted to give him a chance,” Brown said. “Mitch has been great for us the last few games in that situation. We’re gonna continue to give him a chance. We’ll move him around and do some different things with him. Mitch can impact the game in different ways, so we need him on the floor.”

But when the Knicks mounted their historic comeback, Robinson was glued to the bench. He played just one minute in the fourth quarter and overtime.




As the Knicks erased a 22-point fourth quarter deficit, Atkinson largely watched it unfold without calling a timeout.

It wasn’t until the Knicks had cut it to five points with 3:30 left in the fourth quarter that Atkinson finally called timeout.

“I like to hold my timeouts,” Atkinson said. “I didn’t want to have one timeout at the end of the game, one- or two-point game. I try to hold them.”


Avery Wilson, who plays the scarecrow in the 2024 revival of “The Wizard of Oz,” once again sang the national anthem before the game.

He has performed the anthem multiple times at MSG this postseason. The Knicks are undefeated in those games.

OG Anunoby finishes in style after struggling early in Knicks’ Game 1 return

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows OG Anunoby drives on James Harden during the Knicks' 115-104 comeback overtime win in Game 1 on May 19, 2026 at the Garden

OG Anunoby’s injured hamstring prevented him from returning for Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals — until he was needed most.

The Knicks’ best all-around performer through the bulk of the first two rounds was largely out of rhythm in his first game in 13 days, struggling to move with his customary speed and ferocity in Tuesday night’s series-opener.

But Anunoby — who reentered the game with the Knicks trailing 93-71 and 7:52 left in the fourth quarter — gutted his way to the finish line, contributing nine points, three rebounds and a steal in overtime of the Knicks’ 115-104 win over the Cavaliers at Madison Square Garden.

OG Anunoby drives on James Harden during the Knicks’ 115-104 comeback overtime win in Game 1 on May 19, 2026 at the Garden. Brad Penner-Imagn Images

“We had to keep fighting,” Anunoby said. “We’re just mentally tough. We knew we had a run in us. Just play to the end.”

The Knicks’ second-round sweep of the 76ers — combined with Cleveland’s seven-game series against the Pistons — gave Anunoby much-needed time to recover, but the rest came with plenty of rust.

The sellout crowd welcomed back Anunoby with a deafening roar during the team’s introductions, understanding the importance of the team’s top defender to their title hopes — just two years removed from an Anunoby hamstring injury essentially flipping the outcome of their second-round loss to the Pacers — but the excitement quickly evaporated.

Anunoby missed the game’s first shot. His next attempt was off, as was his next 3-pointer, which went long for an airball.

He appeared shaky, his steps somewhat measured, just two weeks removed from a stretch in which he dominated both ends of the floor with explosiveness and decisiveness.

One drive ended with an awkward Euro step and a traveling call. Another possession ended with him fumbling a pass in the lane, as the Cavs turned an 11-point deficit into a 50-48 halftime lead.

Anunoby went to the break with two points, one rebound, one turnover and a team-worst minus-12 rating.Entering Tuesday, Anunoby was averaging 21.4 points, 7.5 rebounds, 1.1 blocks and a team-best 1.9 steals in the playoffs, while shooting 61.9 percent from the field (a team-high 53.8 percent on 3-pointers).



“[There was] a little rust, but that was expected,” Anunoby said. “I knew that. As the game went on, the rust wore off.”

Anunoby remained largely invisible in the third quarter, but the game changed when Mike Brown asked him to return with less than eight minutes left and the outcome seemingly decided.

Anunoby missed an open 3-pointer with the Knicks trailing by six with 1:41 left in regulation, but the 6-foot-7 forward then delivered the game’s biggest assist. He took a pass from Jalen Brunson at the top of the key, then swung it to Landry Shamet in the corner for the game-tying 3-pointer with 44.3 seconds remaining.

Anunoby, who finished with 13 points (shooting 2-for-9 from the field, including 1-for-6 from 3), five rebounds, two assists, one steal and a plus-15 rating in 34 minutes, hit seven free throws in overtime, plus a drive to put the Knicks up six with 2:56 remaining, sparking chants of “O-G” from the thousands who knew what his return could mean.

“I felt good,” Anunoby said. “Just continue to play hard, shoot shots and be aggressive. … I don’t think it was hesitancy [early]. Just as the game went on I felt more and more like myself.”

Knicks stun Cavaliers with 22-point comeback

The New York Knicks' Josh Hart and Karl-Anthony Towns
The New York Knicks have not won the NBA Championship since 1973 [Getty Images]

The New York Knicks mounted their biggest play-off comeback by overcoming a 22-point fourth-quarter deficit to stun the Cleveland Cavaliers 115-104 in game one of the NBA Eastern Conference finals.

The Knicks trailed 93-71 with less than eight minutes remaining at Madison Square Garden, but outscored the Cavaliers 30-8 to tie the game at 101-101 before surging to victory in overtime.

It is the second biggest fourth quarter comeback in an NBA play-off game and the biggest since April 2012, when the Los Angeles Clippers beat the Memphis Grizzlies from 24 points down.

"I don't know if I've ever seen that in a play-off game," Knicks head coach Mike Brown said.

"To be down 18, 19, 20 - whatever we were down - and to find a way to come back and win, I take my hat off to my group."

Knicks guard Jalen Brunson scored 17 of his 38 points in the final eight minutes of regulation time and overtime, while Mikal Bridges finished with 18 points and Karl-Anthony Towns 13 points and 13 rebounds.

"The team's relentless. You never know whose night it's going to be, but we're going to figure it out," guard Miles McBride said.

Donovan Mitchell led the scoring for the Cavaliers with 29 points, although only three came in the fourth quarter.

It was their 11th game in 21 days, while the Knicks had not played for nine days.

"We should have won the game," Mitchell said.

"We're up 22 with God knows how much time - got to win the game."

Game two of the best-of-seven series will take place at the same venue on Thursday (01:00 BST, Friday).

The series winners will meet the Oklahoma City Thunder or the San Antonio Spurs in the NBA Finals. The Spurs lead 1-0.

They meet at Paycom Center in Oklahoma City on Wednesday (01:30 BST, Thursday).

Knicks’ Karl-Anthony Towns point center plan hits Game 1 roadblock

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Cleveland Cavaliers guard James Harden #1 and Cleveland Cavaliers center Jarrett Allen #31 double team New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns #32 during the second quarter, Image 2 shows New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) drives to the basket as Cleveland Cavaliers guard Donovan Mitchell (45) defends during the third quarter
Kat Knicks

The first seven games of Karl-Anthony Towns, point center, had worked better than anyone could’ve anticipated. 

The Knicks offense exploded. Towns was a pivotal part of an attack with a 130.5 offensive rating in that span, averaging eight assists. 

But that was against the Hawks and 76ers, teams who didn’t really have an answer for Towns. 

James Harden and Jarrett Allen double team Karl-Anthony Towns during the second quarter of the Knicks’ 115-104 comeback overtime victory in Game 1 on May 19, 2026 at the Garden. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

The Cavaliers are a different animal, and it showed in the opener of the Eastern Conference finals. 

Towns was a non-factor offensively in the Knicks’ dramatic 115-104 come-from-behind overtime victory. He had trouble creating against Cleveland’s versatile and rangy big men defenders Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen, limited to 13 points on 6-for-14 shooting along with seven turnovers. 



“We do feel like we have the personnel to bother him. We’ve got multiple guys who can put pressure on him,” Cavaliers coach Kenny Atkinson said. “We’ve gotta be really good with our off-ball defense. They’ve definitely shifted schematically like everybody knows. It’s been … it’s high level so it’s going to be a big part of the series.” 

Overall, it has been a strong postseason for Towns. He entered the night averaging 17.4 points, 10 rebounds, 6.6 assists and 1.5 blocks. He has been taking far fewer shots than a year ago in the playoffs — 9.2 compared to 15.8 — but making more of an impact at both ends of the floor.

Karl-Anthony Towns drives on Donovan Mitchell during the third quarter of the Knick’s Game 1 win over the Cavaliers. Jason Szenes for the New York Post

With Towns on the floor, the Knicks were outscoring the opposition by 24.8 points per 100 possessions. 

On Tuesday, he struggled. He wasn’t dealing with the immobile Joel Embiid anymore. In the end, though, the Knicks persevered as Jalen Brunson took over in crunch time, and Towns didn’t mind that it wasn’t his best offensive game. 

“I think the Knicks found a way to win tonight, and that’s all that matters,” said Towns, who did have 13 rebounds and five assists.. “It’s not about the individual performances, it’s about this team finding a way to put up a win on the board. I think that’s what’s special.”

New York takes 1-0 lead into game 2 against Cleveland

Cleveland Cavaliers (52-30, fourth in the Eastern Conference) vs. New York Knicks (53-29, third in the Eastern Conference)

New York; Thursday, 8 p.m. EDT

LINE: Knicks -6.5; over/under is 214.5

EASTERN CONFERENCE FINALS: Knicks lead series 1-0

BOTTOM LINE: The New York Knicks host the Cleveland Cavaliers in the Eastern Conference finals with a 1-0 lead in the series. The Knicks won the last matchup 115-104 in overtime on Wednesday, led by 38 points from Jalen Brunson. Donovan Mitchell led the Cavaliers with 29.

The Knicks are 35-17 against Eastern Conference opponents. New York is 9-4 in games decided by 3 points or fewer.

The Cavaliers are 33-19 in conference games. Cleveland ranks seventh in the Eastern Conference shooting 36.0% from 3-point range.

The Knicks' 14.2 made 3-pointers per game this season are the same per game average that the Cavaliers give up. The Cavaliers average 14.3 made 3-pointers per game this season, 0.4 more makes per game than the Knicks give up.

TOP PERFORMERS: Karl-Anthony Towns is averaging 20.1 points and 11.9 rebounds for the Knicks. Brunson is averaging 28.4 points over the last 10 games.

Mitchell is scoring 27.9 points per game and averaging 4.5 rebounds for the Cavaliers. Max Strus is averaging 2.2 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Knicks: 8-2, averaging 120.6 points, 44.9 rebounds, 26.0 assists, 8.8 steals and 4.2 blocks per game while shooting 51.7% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 101.2 points per game.

Cavaliers: 5-5, averaging 109.0 points, 42.7 rebounds, 22.8 assists, 8.0 steals and 5.7 blocks per game while shooting 45.0% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 108.1 points.

INJURIES: Knicks: None listed.

Cavaliers: None listed.

___

The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.