Timberwolves Notes: Where the Wolves Stand After the NBA Draft

BROOKLYN, NY - JUNE 23: Isaiah Evans poses for a photo during the 2026 NBA Draft - Round One on June 23, 2026 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, 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 Catalina Fragoso/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

A lot has happened in the past couple of days for the Minnesota Timberwolves. It started on Monday night when they traded away Julius Randle to the Brooklyn Nets in what was essentially a salary dump.

Shortly thereafter, they re-signed Ayo Dosunmu to a five-year, $112 million contract. The deal will keep him under contract through at least the 2029-30 season before he has a player option on the final year of his new deal in 2030-31.

After the Randle trade, which sent out the Wolves’ 28th overall pick in exchange for the 33rd overall pick, Minnesota was left without a first-round pick. In the second round, the Wolves selected Isaiah Evans from Duke with the 33rd pick and Purdue’s Trey Kaufman-Renn at the 59th.

That is a lot to happen all in the span of three days, so here are some news and notes about where the Timberwolves find themselves with the 2026 NBA Draft now in the books.

Editor’s note- As this was being published, the Timberwolves traded Naz Reid and draft picks to the Charlotte Hornets for LaMelo Ball and Josh Green

Wolves pick Isaiah Evans with the 33rd Pick

After moving back five spots following the Randle trade, the Timberwolves made their first selection of the 2026 NBA Draft, taking Evans with the 33rd overall pick. Evans is a six-foot-six wing from Duke who projects as one of the best shooters in this draft class.

The Wolves had Evans much higher than 33rd on their draft board and were considering taking him in the first round before they traded back. The Timberwolves believe they can develop Evans as a movement shooter and think highly of his confidence and mental makeup.

“I think it was just my ability to stretch the floor,” Evans said to reporters about the aspect of his game that he felt the Wolves were intrigued by. “It was my shooting ability that really got me in the door.”

The Wolves’ new rookie also spoke about who on the Wolves roster he is looking forward to learning from, saying, “Jaden McDaniels is a lot bigger than me, but I’m really interested in learning from him, how to affect the game on the defensive side as much as he does. Obviously, when Donte gets back, I really want to be able to fill in that role behind him and just learn how to come in and be that guy who is impacting the game on the wing alongside the guards.”

The main area of improvement for Evans that will determine the success of his time in Minnesota, and likely his NBA career, is his defensive ability, as is the case with many young prospects. Minnesota will try to develop him into a player who can defend multiple positions and will look for him to add muscle this summer.

Internal Growth

While the Wolves start their search of free agency to add talent to the roster, many in the Timberwolves front office believe that one of the main ways Minnesota will improve heading into next season is from players already on the roster getting better.

“I think we’re going to put a huge emphasis on internal development,” Connelly stated. “I think we have a couple guys that had very limited roles last year that are capable of a lot, lot more.”

The two most notable players that the Wolves expect to see growth from are Naz Reid and Jaden McDaniels. Both are set to see increased roles on next year’s team, with Reid joining the starting lineup and McDaniels likely slated for more on-ball possessions.

“It’s just about creating the opportunities now,” Timberwolves Head Coach Chris Finch said of Reid and McDaneils. “I think we’ve seen what they can do, and it’s their job to make sure it stays at a consistently high level… We’ve talked about it before. When you have a lot of great options, it’s just a usage puzzle, and we just gotta make sure that the usage is appropriate.”

With Randle out of the way,

Finch shared a similar sentiment when speaking about Terrence Shannon Jr. and Joan Beringer, who are both set to have more carved out roles for them in the rotation.

“It’s about creating pathways for those guys to be able to play,” Finch explained. “You might say, ‘Isn’t that the coach’s job?’ But sometimes, you know, there’s a gridlock. When you have the type of roster construction that we’ve had in the last couple of years, which has been a large part of our identity. So we’ve gotta look at how we can either kind of change things around or get to a point where these guys can get a more consistent role.”

Beringer, especially, has caught the eye of the Timberwolves brass as he has steadily improved behind the scenes during his 12 months with the organization.

“Oh boy, here we go,” Timberwolves General Manager Matt Lloyd said excitedly when asked about Beringer. “His progression since he got here, first off, he learned English, so that tends to help a little bit, and secondly, he’s put the work in to elicit a positive outcome because that’s who he is.”

The Wolves are still likely going to add pieces to their roster, with the point guard position lingering as a need. Minnesota is also banking on the improvement from the young core of its roster. From starters like Reid and McDaniels, down to the 20-year-old French kid set to see his first consistent stretch of playing time, the Wolves are expecting the returning portion of their roster to take big strides next season.

Anthony Edwards isn’t Going Anywhere

Almost immediately after Giannis Antetokounmpo was traded from the Milwaukee Bucks to the Miami Heat, the NBA world, mostly on social media, went searching for the next superstar that they wanted to see traded.

Unfortunately for Timberwolves fans, that led them to Anthony Edwards. Even though Edwards still has three years left on his contract, that didn’t stop many from wondering if the 24-year-old, four-time All-Star is currently disappointed with the current state of his team.

While that may be what opposing fans want to see from Edwards, it is certainly not what he or his camp have indicated to local reporters or the Timberwolves themselves.

“I think he’s super super excited,” Connelly said about Edwards. “There’s been countless things we could have done. I think our roster is pretty well though of league wide. When you go to your leaders like Ant, you say it takes this to get that, and the conviction he has in our guys is evident, and we say, No, we’re not trading this guy.”

The discourse about Edwards potentially leaving the Wolves one day are not likely to stop any time soon. Online fans who only follow the sport by hopping from one trade rumor to the next are not likely to give it up until they either get what they want or Edwards signs an extension past his current contract.

The only thing the Timberwolves can do now is put the best team possible around Edwards so that when he is handed that potential extension as soon as next summer, he signs it without hesitation.

The Draft went according to plan for the Mavericks

NEW YORK, NY - JULY 29: ESPN NBA Draft Analyst Mike Schmitz reports during the 2021 NBA Draft on July 29, 2021 at the Barclays Center, 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 2021 NBAE (Photo by Michael J. LeBrecht II/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Dallas Mavericks carried the #9 pick, the #30 pick and the #48 pick into the 2026 NBA Draft. They came out with Morez Johnson, Sergio De Larrea (after moving from #30 to #25) and Tobi Lawal, respectively. For good measure, they bought pick #56 and acquired Vsevolod Ishchenko as well.

Many were surprised Dallas did not seek guard help with #9, especially with Brayden Burries still available when the Mavs made their first selection. In De Larrea, they did ultimately acquire said guard, and a long and tall one at that, but he most likely will need development time before having a measurable impact.

Incongruities between expectation and reality often cause a range of generally negative reactions – disappointment, annoyance, frustration – but just because the front office plan wasn’t guard-centric doesn’t mean it was a poor plan. In fact, GM Mike Schmitz suggests quite the opposite. In a post-Draft press conference after night one, Schmitz extolled the outcome as largely on point with what the front office was after. “We feel this went accordingly to plan,” he stated succinctly.

Here we will break down three individuals he spoke about throughout the presser.

Dusty May

“Incredible confidence.”

Schmitz articulated his history with May, which dates back to the latter’s time as an assistant with Florida Atlantic. The two scouted overseas together early in their respective careers and have known each other for years. Schmitz’s sense that May is the right person to helm the Mavericks is apparent. He was highly complimentary of May’s ability to build relationships with players, lead a team and ultimately succeed as he did en route to winning the National Championship just a few months ago.

Confidence in May is not exactly surprising. Had the front office not believed in him, he wouldn’t have been offered the job. What is at least somewhat newsworthy here is the history the two shared. Up until the hire, May was a pipedream and it was not widely know that Schmitz had an existing relationship with him. This is yet another example of the advantage of having life-long basketball executives who have cut their teeth in a conventional and progressive way. As much as the commentary was about May, it demonstrates what the Mavs have with Schmitz – an executive with a great track record and far-reaching relationships.

Patrick Dumont

“Very supportive.”

Schmitz was asked about Dumont, who was seen in the draft room video when Dallas selected Johnson, and he did not hesitate to heap praise upon the team owner. He described Dumont as a positive influence that was curious about the process without running any type of interference.

Dumont is quietly conducting his apology tour following the Luka Doncic trade, and he is doing so effectively. He cast himself in a very poor light following that fateful trade, making comments unbecoming of his position and appearing easily duped and perhaps even naïve for following the solitary opinion of Nico Harrison. Since that time, Dumont has endeavored to make amends with the fan base, sitting courtside with a fan who days earlier told him exactly what he thought, among other things. Acknowledging a blunder and setting out to make things right is an admirable quality and for all the flack he rightfully received in the past, we may want to consider giving Dumont his flowers (even if not everyone is ready to hand over a full bouquet quite yet). After decades of Mark Cuban making basketball decisions and perhaps even showing a frugalness contrary to his reputation, the Mavericks may finally have an owner with deep pockets, a willingness to spend, and the ability to get out of the way of the basketball lifers he hired in the first place – that could be an amazing advantage for the Mavs.

Morez Johnson

“Toughness. Competitiveness. High Energy.”

Schmitz is clearly high on what Johnson will bring to the team. He spoke enthusiastically about his intensity, particularly on the defensive end, where he feels he can cover positions one through five. He further suggested that Johnson is a “great fit with Cooper [Flagg],” referencing his ability to space, pass and attack the offensive glass. Leaving no doubt that Dallas got the player they wanted, Schmitz stated “we were thrilled that Morez was there when we were choosing nine and we think he fits perfectly what we’re trying to do.”

Closing the loop on expectation vs. reality, each and every fan did not get what they wanted – that, of course, would be impossible. But what each and every fan can take away from the Draft is that this front office has a plan and they are executing that plan flawlessly at this point. It may not be a plan everyone agrees with (again, impossible), but in the wake of the Draft, I find it refreshing to take a breath and recognize the effort and professionalism being displayed. It’s a welcome thought knowing the days of leaving Giannis Antetokounmpo on the board in an effort to save a few hundred thousand dollars for a ‘big fish’ that never arrived, are most likely behind us. Also, whether Johnson was the guy any of us wanted is almost irrelevant. He’s a well regarded winner that will likely win over the fanbase in a hurry and Dallas could have done a lot worse, or something really off the wall foolish.

There is still work to be done, but we can all have confidence there is a plan being executed.

I invite you to follow me @_80MPH on X, and check back often at Mavs Moneyball for all the latest on the Dallas Mavericks.

Hornets shipping star guard LaMelo Ball to Timberwolves, per report

The Charlotte Hornets traded guard LaMelo Ball to the Minnesota Timberwolves, according to ESPN.com.

The Hornets also traded guard Josh Green to Minnesota, who sent center/forward Naz Reid, a former NBA Sixth Man of the Year, a 2033 unprotected first-round pick, three first-round pick swaps (2028, 2029, 2030), and three second-round picks (2029, 2032, 2033) back to Charlotte.

Ball, 24, averaged 20.1 points, 4.8 rebounds, 7.1 assists, 1.2 steals in 72 games last season for the Hornets, who reached the NBA Play-in Tournament this season but have missed the playoffs in each of the past 10 years. He has had an injury-plagued career, with significant ankle and lower leg injuries in his six NBA seasons.

The Hornets selected Ball with the third overall pick in the 2020 NBA Draft, and he won the Rookie of the Year award in 2021.

Ball has three seasons remaining on his five-year, $203.9 million contract signed with the Hornets and will make $40.8 million during the 2026-27 season. He is eligible to sign a two-year, $119.2 million extension once the NBA free agency moratorium ends on July 6.

With the Ball trade, the Hornets are moving forward with building around forward Brandon Miller and forward Kon Knueppel, who led the league in 3-pointers and finished second in the rookie of the year balloting last season.

Reid, 26, averaged 13.6 points, 6.2 rebounds, and 2.2 assists in 77 games for Minnesota and will be entering the second season of a five-year, $125 million deal he signed in 2025.

The Hornets added Hannes Steinbach, who led the NCAA in rebounding in the 2026 NBA Draft, and guard Christian Anderson Jr. with the No. 18 overall pick.

Charlotte had a strong finish to the season, winning 28 of its last 38 games, but lost to the Orlando Magic in the play-in tournament.

The Timberwolves now have two dynamic guards, with Ball paired with star Anthony Edwards, who was the No. 1 overall pick in Ball's draft class, making them instantly one of the more formidable backcourts in the Western Conference.

By shipping Julius Randle to the Brooklyn Nets in a trade earlier in the offseason and re-signing guard Ayo Dosunmu to a five-year, $112 million contract, the Timberwolves continue their aggressive win-now mentality under owners Marc Lore and Alex Rodriguez. Currently, Minnesota is nearly $5 million over the luxury tax after taking on Ball's and Green's contracts.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: LaMelo Ball traded to Timberwolves for Naz Reid, draft picks

Al Horford declines player option to sign new two-year deal with Warriors

Per ESPN’s Shams Charania and Anthony Slater, Al Horford will decline his player option to sign a new two year, $14 million deal to stay with the Golden State Warriors.

With this signing, Horford officially becomes the 13th player in NBA history to reach 20 seasons.

According to Slater and Charania, Horford’s deal is fully guaranteed and includes a trade kicker.

Horford joins the list of 20-season players that includes LeBron James, Vince Carter, Chris Paul, Dirk Nowitzki, Kevin Garnett, Kevin Willis, Robert Parish, Kyle Lowry, Udonis Haslem, Jamal Crawford, Kobe Bryant, and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.

Per Horford in the article that announced the deal:

“I knew a few off the top of my head, but I hadn’t seen the list. It’s hard to believe. It’s something that, for me, I’m very grateful. It’s just so hard to be in this league for that amount of years. There’s a lot of commitment, a lot of sacrifice and time. I still feel like I’m able to contribute and have an impact on a team.”

The Warriors’ plan for Horford this offseason is to stay in the Bay Area to work with Rick Celebrini, carefully following a conditioning program that will allow Horford to stay health and in shape throughout next season. That includes foregoing participation in national team duties for the Dominican Republic this summer.

Horford’s first season with the Warriors saw the 40-year-old veteran averaging 8.3 points, 4.9 rebounds, and 2.6 assists. Though the team’s title aspirations were derailed by a mid-season injury to Jimmy Butler, Horford provided crucial frontcourt depth before their season ended in the Play-In tournament.

Hornets trade LaMelo Ball to Timberwolves in stunning NBA deal

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Charlotte Hornets guard LaMelo Ball celebrating after a three-point basket, Image 2 shows Anthony Edwards of the Minnesota Timberwolves in his number 5 jersey
LaMelo Ball; Anthony Edwards

The Hornets are out of the Lamelo Ball business, trading him to the Timberwolves on Thursday, ESPN.com reported.

Ball was shipped to Minnesota in exchange for Naz Reid, a 2033 unprotected first-round pick, three first-round pick swaps (2028, 2029, and 2030) and three second-round picks.

Reserve guard Josh Green heads to Minnesota as well in the trade.

The move comes after reports that Timberwolves star Anthony Edwards would force a trade from Minnesota in the near future if the team doesn’t improve his supporting cast.

Lamelo Ball looks like he will be on the move. Robert Sabo for NY Post

The pairing of Ball and Edwards should be interesting, as the now-former Hornets guard is one of the most divisive stars in the NBA.

Ball is not known as a player who takes defensive effort particularly seriously, although he did play better during the Hornets’ second-half playoff push, where they went 18-9, among the best in basketball.

Shot selection is another key sticking point that has frustrated Ball fans, as he sometimes shoots off-balance jump shots from several feet beyond the arc.

It’ll be up to Timberwolves coach Chris Finch to reign in Ball’s questionable shot quality and inconsistent defensive prowess.

The poor defensive metrics will likely be masked somewhat by the presence of perennial Defensive Player of the Year candidate Rudy Gobert backing him up down low.

Ball has also seldom been available during his NBA career.

Anthony Edwards is looking for a running mate in Minnesota. Getty Images

He played in 72 games last season, the second-most of his career, but suited up for just 105 of a possible 246 games in his prior three seasons in the league.

Ball averaged his fewest points per game since his rookie year (20.1), but he still helped the Hornets qualify for the Play-In Tournament, and last season was the most wins he has contributed to since he entered the NBA.

For Minnesota, the loss of Reid certainly hurts their big man depth, as they also just traded their other forward, Julius Randle, to the Nets in a salary dump earlier this week.

The Hornets will now go forward with guards that consist of Brandon Miller and Kon Knueppel, while welcoming in Reid to their backcourt.

2026 NBA Draft: Fantasy basketball winners and losers

The 2026 NBA Draft is now in the rear view, and though it wrapped up without a ton of surprises, there are plenty of takeaways for fantasy managers.

AJ Dybantsa and Darryn Peterson went No. 1 and No. 2 to the Wizards and Jazz, respectively, while Cameron Boozer went to the Grizzlies at No. 3. Golden State got a much-needed addition at forward in Yaxel Lendeborg, and the rich got richer as Oklahoma City snagged Aday Mara at No. 12.

Michigan represented well in the lottery, with three players from the championship team selected in the first 12 picks, including the Mavericks' first selection in the Dusty May era, Morez Johnson. All three of Johnson, Lendeborg and Mara are in favorable positions to excel in Year 1, with Lendeborg sporting the biggest upside of the trio.

Here are the top winners and losers from the 2026 NBA Draft.

Winners

Yaxel Lendeborg (F - Golden State Warriors)

The 6’9, 230 pound forward bring age, experience, national championship pedigree and most importantly, size, to the Golden State Warriors. Selected No. 11 in the draft, Lendeborg could be an immediate starter or Sixth Man given the team’s lack of frontcourt depth and injuries to Jimmy Butler and Moses Moody that will likely cost them time to open the season.

Lendeborg averaged 9.5 rebounds across three collegiate seasons with UAB and Michigan, and Golden State needs all the help it can get on the glass. Last season, the Warriors ranked 21st in team rebounds, 24th in team rebound percentage and 23rd in second chance points surrendered.

Trae Young (PG - Washington Wizards)

Trae Young inked a new, four-year deal to return to the Wizards, and he’s got a golden opportunity to thrive in the traditional PG role he’s played so well throughout his career. With AJ Dybantsa added at No. 1, Washington is chock full of capable scorers and shooters, and Young could lead the NBA in assists once again.

Aday Mara (C - Oklahoma City Thunder)

Aday Mara finds himself in a perfect position to see meaningful minutes immediately for the Oklahoma City Thunder. The Thunder are looking to clear cap space, and Isaiah Hartenstein could be on the way out. That means Mara could offer appeal in double-big lineups alongside Chet Holmgren or fill in as the lone big in the backcourt when gamescript or injuries demand it.

Brayden Burries (G - Milwaukee Bucks), Nate Ament (F - Milwaukee Bucks)

The Milwaukee Bucks traded Giannis Antetokounmpo on the eve of the NBA draft, and they drafted two players in the lottery who could be building blocks for the future. Brayden Burries and Nate Ament should see meaningful rotation minutes right off the bat, despite the Bucks’ additions of Tyler Herro and Jaime Jaquez Jr.

Morez Johnson (F/C - Dallas Mavericks)

No team has dealt with more frontcourt injuries over the last two seasons than the Dallas Mavericks. Daniel Gafford has an extensive injury history, and Dereck Lively II has appeared in just 98 games across three seasons.

New head coach Dusty May had his fingerprints all over this selection, as Dallas nabbed Johnson at No. 9, reuniting him with his Michigan head coach. The Mavs may choose to move on from Gafford and/or Lively II to clear a logjam in the frontcourt, but even if one or both return, Johnson has a realistic path to playing time in Year 1.

Losers

Bilal Coulibaly (F - Washington Wizards), Will Riley (F - Washington Wizards)

AJ Dybantsa’s arrival in the nation’s capital is bad news for the fantasy stock of Bilal Coulibaly and Will Riley. Dybantsa should be the team’s starting SF from Day 1, and he’ll see big minutes, limiting the upside of two players who showed plenty of promise for the injury-riddled Wizards last season.

Coulibaly’s ability to rack up steals and blocks while hitting three-pointers made him a useful option in standard leagues. Riley was a streamable option for most of the final four weeks of the season, as he started 14 of the team’s last 20 games and offered reliable counting stats.

Ace Bailey (G - Utah Jazz)

The No. 5 pick in the 2025 Draft appeared in 72 games and averaged 27.6 minutes as a rookie. Over the final 12 games of his inaugural campaign, Bailey averaged 20.3 points, 5.5 rebounds, 2.5 assists, 2.3 “stocks” and 2.8 triples across 32 minutes. In that span, he was a Top 70 fantasy option.

Utah drafted Darryn Peterson at No. 2, and there was a real argument that Peterson should have been taken No. 1 overall ahead of AJ Dybantsa. Keyonte George will be Utah’s starting PG

Santi Aldama (F/C - Memphis Grizzlies)

Cameron Boozer’s selection at No. 3 surely means a decreased role for Aldama, who averaged 14 points, 6.7 rebounds and 2.9 assists across 27.6 minutes - all career highs. Aldama ranked just inside the Top 120 in per-game fantasy value, and he was a viable option in standard leagues.

Boozer put up 22.5 points, 10.5 rebounds, 4.1 assists, 2.0 “stocks” and 1.4 triples in his lone season at Duke. He offers strong playmaking and floor spacing at the PF spot, and he can play some small-ball center. Memphis struggled to stay healthy in the frontcourt a season ago, and Boozer should see as much run as he can handle as rookie.

Russell Westbrook (G - Sacramento Kings), Malik Monk (G - Sacramento Kings)

Westbrook enjoyed a bounce-back campaign while averaging 15/5/6, and Monk played sparingly while offering elite floor spacing with a 39.5% mark from beyond the arc. Sacramento’s selection of Darius Acuff Jr. at No. 7 signals an end to the Kings’ veteran backcourt and the beginning of the youth movement.

Acuff Jr. averaged 23.4 points, 6.4 dimes and 3.1 rebounds in his one-and-done season at Arkansas, and he’s Sacramento’s PG of the future. That means far less run for Westbrook and Monk, assuming they’re both on the roster when the season opens.

Isaiah Hartenstein (C - Oklahoma City Thunder), Thomas Sorber (C - Oklahoma City Thunder)

The Thunder are starting to experience what all star-laden teams go through in the current NBA - cap space hell. Max contracts for Chet Holmgren and Jalen Williams kick in this season, and OKC has already shipped off Aaron Wiggins to Atlanta for peanuts. Isaiah Joe and Luguentz Dort are also on the block as the team looks to shed salary.

The Thunder were fortunate to land Michigan big man Aday Mara at No. 12, and the 7’3 national champ could be the replacement the team needs to justify moving off of Hartenstein’s contract. Though he hasn’t yet made his NBA debut, Thomas Sorber is unfortunately an odd man out in a Thunder frontcourt that includes Holmgren, Mara and Jaylin Williams.

Cavs final report card: Evan Mobley

DETROIT, MI - MAY 13: Evan Mobley #4 of the Cleveland Cavaliers running down court in the game against the Detroit Pistons during Round Two Game Five of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on May 13, 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 Chris Schwegler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Evan Mobley didn’t take the massive leap that many fans hoped for this season. But the fifth-year player did show meaningful improvements throughout the Cleveland Cavaliers’ run to the Eastern Conference Finals. How much is that worth?

All grades are based on our usual expectations for each player.

Regular Season Stats

  • 18.2 points
  • 9.0 rebounds
  • 3.6 assists
  • 54.6% FG
  • 29.7% 3PT FG
  • 60.6% FT

Pathways towards being an MVP candidate are looking slim for Mobley. He was momentarily handed the keys to Cleveland’s offense at the start of the season and immediately got pulled over. Kenny Atkinson had no choice but to put Donovan Mitchell back in charge as Mobley nearly drove the team off the road with plummeting efficiency.

Mobley’s sluggish start to the season was disappointing. It became clear that he doesn’t have a go-to move on offense and was flailing around for most of the ‘ber months. This led to the Cavs cutting that experiment short and eventually going all-in on salvaging the season by trading for James Harden. The Cavs had no interest in punting away any more wins while waiting for Darius Garland to get healthy or Mobley to figure it out.

The Cavs put Mobley back into a box. That is to say, they turned him back into being a play-finisher rather than a play-creator. That caused his efficiency to skyrocket back to where you’d expect as he led the NBA in dunks by the end of the season. But these are short-term wins at the cost of long-term answers, if you ask me.

Cleveland still doesn’t know who Mobley can be at his peak. That’s because they haven’t really tried to take him outside of his comfort zone for more than two weeks. There’s value in putting someone in a sink-or-swim position. The Cavs shouldn’t have bailed him out.

Thankfully, the playoffs gave us some valuable insight into Mobley’s ceiling.

The Cavs made it all the way to the Eastern Conference Finals. No one man is responsible for that. But, for the first time in his career, Mobley was arguably the best playoff performer in a Cavalier uniform.

Mobley was a defensive force in the first two rounds, averaging 4.3 stocks per game against the Detroit Pistons and providing elite resistance at the rim versus Toronto. Meanwhile, he turned in some clutch offensive performances, putting up 21 points, 12 rebounds, and 6 assists in Game 7 in Detroit.

Watching Mobley confidently bury clutch shots in the playoffs was an eye-opener. Maybe there is something left in his game to uncover after all. That’s a stark contrast from the start of his season, but I’ll take a playoff sample over a few games in October.

For this reason, it can be hard to grade Mobley’s season. He didn’t meet expectations for most of the year. And, even his exciting postseason was met with a bitter ending as the New York Knicks ran him out of the gym. This is really a mixed bag that can offer drastically different conclusions depending on which stretch of the season you want to focus on. I’ll do my best to capture the full picture.

The good? Mobley showed out in the playoffs and gave us hope that he can still take his game to another level. Some of his shot creation and playmaking, particularly when operating in five-out lineups, make me think Mobley isn’t done developing.

The bad? His jumper totally abandoned him for most of the season. He shot below 30% from deep and even struggled to knock down free throws. He can’t afford for that to happen again.

The worst? Mobley fumbled a prime opportunity. The Cavs wanted him to take a step forward, and he couldn’t do it. There’s no guarantee that he’ll be given that chance again. Mobley will have to step up and demand a larger role in the offense. That’s something he can only do by proving it on the court. Next season will be pivotal in determining what kind of player Mobley wants to be.

Grade: B+

So, where do the Bucks go from here?

MILWAUKEE, WI -MAY 06: Jon Horst, Jimmy Haslam and Taylor Jenkins poses for a photo after being announced as the new head coach on May 06, 2026 at the Milwaukee Art Museum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. 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 Gary Dineen/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

There will be plenty of content from the Brew Hoop team memorialising Giannis and his impact in Milwaukee over the coming weeks, but for this article, I wanted to delve deep into the minutiae of how the Bucks move forward from here, now that the draft is over. Are the obstacles in front of them really as debilitating as outsiders make them seem? Clearly, the goal will not be to win a title in the immediate future, so what should they aim to do? When might fans truly get to see the “light at the end of the tunnel”? My take on it all:

Rebuilding without your own picks

With Giannis now shipped off to South Beach, the Bucks have entered a phase they haven’t been in for a very long time: the rebuilding phase. The model rebuilding teams have generally followed in the past is to tank for 2-4 years, acquire picks at the top of the draft, and hope they can emerge with the requisite talent to compete once again. Now, the NBA has (foolishly, in my view) all but outlawed tanking anyway, but even if they hadn’t, that wouldn’t have been an option for Milwaukee because they don’t own their picks outright until 2031.

So, how do the Bucks rebuild without going to the draft (or having access to the top of it)? Well, the way I’ve been looking at it is they did go to the draft… they just packed what would have been a multiyear process into one offseason. Think about it: as opposed to building their young core over the course of 2-4 years, the Giannis trade gave them a unique opportunity to, in a way, do it in one fell swoop.

They acquired young, promising pieces in Kel’el Ware, Jaime Jaquez Jr., and Kasparas Jakucionis (we’ll see what they do with Tyler Herro)… to pair with their multiple 2026 lottery picks in Brayden Burries and Nate Ament… to pair with their own proven/promising/interesting young guys in Ryan Rollins, AJ Green, Jericho Sims, Ousmane Dieng, and Bogoljub Markovic. The average age of this entire group is 22.81 years old. If you remove Herro (as they appear to prefer trading him before the season), along with Sims and Green (who might be “on the outer” to varying degrees), the average age reduces to just 21.50.

Of course, we wait to see what happens with some of the remaining veterans on this team—such as Myles Turner and Kyle Kuzma—but it’s very plausible that they, too, could be flipped for draft picks and/or young players. I mean, credit where credit’s due: I really think Jon Horst and his team cooked here. That doesn’t mean it will all be sunshine and rainbows in the years to come, but from a process standpoint, you really can’t fault their approach to this “flash rebuild.”

How the Bucks can still generate future draft picks

I want to add that although the Bucks will not have their own picks during this time, they can acquire other teams’ picks by 1. trading their veterans, as I just mentioned, and 2. taking on bad contracts in exchange for draft capital. There is some well-founded debate about the extent to which the front office should be trying to win and make this group as formidable as possible, since they don’t own their picks (within reason; I am absolutely not implying that they should make another all-in trade).

More specifically, I am referring to the debate over the extent to which they should absorb other teams’ bad contracts for picks, even though doing so might make them marginally worse in the short term, possibly improving their pick for the team that owns it. For what it’s worth, I would dismiss this notion out of hand. Milwaukee owns a grand total of two picks over the next four years; Horst should be uber-opportunistic in acquiring as much draft capital as possible, and live with the results.

Additionally, as I outline in the next segment, the next two drafts (at least) are projected to be… below average, shall we say. The players that the Bucks give up via their own picks may not even be that good. Moreover, Milwaukee will generate a $25.5m trade exception in the Giannis trade. For those who don’t know, a trade exception allows Team A to absorb a contract (or contracts) without having to send out matching salary to Team B, which helps Team B save money and makes Team A an attractive trade partner. The Bucks should try to put that trade exception to good use.

Of course, another element of the push-and-pull between winning now and fortifying the future is which players the org wants to prioritise. I don’t feel like it’s a controversial take to say that I don’t want Nate Ament’s minutes being taken all season by Taurean Prince, for example. Sure, make the kids earn it, but they are the future—play ’em.

The hardest part of any rebuild

Ultimately, I think the most pressing task the Bucks will have over the coming years is simple: finding The Guy. I do believe this roster now has the bones to develop into a deep, entertaining squad that is a fringe playoff chance down the road, but I’m not sure their ceiling is much higher than that. It’s all well and good to have a team of solid players, but history tells us that you need stars to compete. Whether said star (or stars) is/are already on the roster is another question, but that’s the next step for this franchise.

It should be mentioned that nobody thought Shai Gilgeous-Alexander would become this when he was included in that blockbuster transaction with LA. Nobody thought Jalen Brunson would become the player he became when he arrived in New York. These success stories happen—the Bucks will need to find their own.

Will not having picks actually hurt Milwaukee?

People often denigrate Milwaukee’s outlook by referring to the org having traded their picks away, but if you look under the hood, the situation is not as dire as you might think. There are two reasons for this: 1. not having access to a draft only hurts if that draft itself is strong, and 2. the team that owns the Bucks’ picks and swaps plays a factor as well.

Analysing the upcoming draft classes

Let’s start with the 2027 draft. Look, if you had to choose a draft to not have a pick, this would undoubtedly be it. Jonathan Givony, founder of the well-known Draft Express, reported in July last year that league executives “are already ringing alarm bells in their front offices for the 2027 NBA draft, which appears to be an especially weak group of rising high school seniors and international players.”

The 2028 draft—when the Bucks will have the lesser swap rights between like three different teams (it’s really confusing)—appears to be slightly stronger than 2027, but it still looks to be much closer to the ‘27 draft than this year’s. So, let’s just stop here for a second: we’ve now accounted for two of the next four drafts in which not having your pick (or unfettered rights to it) might not actually be that significant.

Moving to the 2029 draft, it becomes increasingly hard to project right at this moment because you’re betting on kids three years away, but I have heard that this draft is a step above the previous two—the Bucks do not own any pick for this one, so that’s certainly not ideal. Maybe they can target getting that pick back down the line.

As for the 2030 crop, well, ESPN doesn’t even have rankings for this class yet, so your guess is as good as mine regarding its strength. But as far as the Bucks are concerned, they will receive the second-most favourable pick between their own, the Blazers’, and the Heat’s; this was another shrewd move by Horst, extracting a 2030 pick swap in the Giannis trade.

From there, the Bucks finally own unfettered access to their own firsts moving forward. Additionally, they now own Miami’s firsts in 2031 and 2033, when Giannis will be 36 and 38 years old. We shall see how that plays out down the line…

Why Portland owning Milwaukee’s picks matters

I’ve already written about why the changes to draft odds—in place until 2029, when they will be reevaluated—benefit the Bucks, but there’s another underdiscussed factor regarding Portland owning Milwaukee’s draft from 2028-2030: the strength of the Blazers themselves during this period.

Think about this: the only reason the Bucks were able to quasi-tank their way to the 10th pick this year is because the team that could have swapped picks with them (the Pelicans) was worse than them. Thus, Milwaukee was able to sink lower and lower while still being likely to retain their own pick (or, at the very least, a swap would have yielded a good pick for Milwaukee anyway).

Now, I’m not necessarily saying that the Bucks will be better than Portland during this period, but you tell me: what are the odds that Portland will be a playoff team in the west from 2028-2030? Most of those West playoff teams aren’t going anywhere, and teams like the Utah Jazz will be trying to win and look quite promising.

Look, I think there’s a good chance Portland is right there with Milwaukee in the lottery during those years; therefore, even if the Blazers swap picks with the Bucks and move up, Milwaukee would still get a lottery pick as a consolation prize. And with the flattened odds, who knows if the Blazers will even end up swapping picks in the first place, even if the Bucks have a worse record. Touch wood, but I doubt this will be like the infamous Thunder-Clippers deal, where LA often got their pick swapped to the end of the first round because OKC was so good.


All in all, watching the Bucks will now be a different type of experience than the one we are all used to, but honestly, I’m excited for it. Sure, watching your team try to compete year after year brings a certain exhilaration that probably won’t be replicated in the Cream City for a while. At the same time, that era, to me, had reached a dead end and was only going to get more toxic (and don’t take my word for it, take the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel’s: How the Giannis Antetokounmpo era in Milwaukee came to a bitter end). Frankly, watching a group of hungry young fellas come together to build something from the ground up sounds like a nice switch-up.

Let’s do this.

Did Henri Veesaar make the right decision to stay in the NBA draft?

CHICAGO, IL - MAY 11: Henri Veesaar shoots the ball during the 2026 NBA Draft Combine on May 11, 2026 at Wintrust Arena in Chicago, Illinois. 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 Melissa Tamez/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Only Henri knows the answer to that for sure. When a kid from Estonia grows up dreaming of being in the NBA, that decision goes well beyond simple salary math. Veesaar recently married, and after three years of college life, a desire for a change in lifestyle would be completely understandable. The NBA draft values potential more than anything else, and a player’s age plays a role in those calculations. Henri turned 22 in March, and a 23 year old Veesaar is slightly less valuable than a 22 year old Veesaar, all other things being equal. Veesaar had these and other reasons to go, all totally valid. Godspeed, Henri. Knock ’em dead.

UNC has three players on next season’s roster in the conversation for next year’s first round: Nikolas Avdalas, Seyon Keita, and Matt Able. Given that, Henri’s decision seems worthy of discussion. UNC fans will likely be crossing this bridge with one or more players at the end of every season, who will be faced with the same sorts of risks, opportunities, and options. What did Henri leave behind?

Start with this: the decision in the short term likely cost Veesaar a significant amount of money. If it seems odd to contemplate a player taking a pay cut to move to the NBA, welcome to college basketball in 2026. UNC was reported to have offered Veesaar something around $5 million to return to UNC for one more season. With the change in eligibility rules announced this week, Veesaar actually had two more years of college eligibility remaining. Let’s pretend Veesaar opts for two more years of college ball rather than the NBA, and let’s assume he remains healthy. Those two years would net Veesaar — or someone like him — at least $10 million.

Compare that to the players selected at the top of the second round in 2025.

  • Rasheer Fleming, pick #31 in 2025: $8.7m for four years ($5.9m guaranteed)
  • Noah Fleming, pick #32 in 2025: $8.6m for four years ($2.4m guaranteed)
  • Sion James, pick #33 in 2025: $10m for four years ($4.7m guaranteed)

2026 NBA Draft: Second Round Review

San Antonio went smaller for its two second round picks - with one of them being Ja’Kobi Gillespie from Tennessee

San Antonio continued its recent trend of selecting talent from established teams in powerhouse conferences – nabbing getting Ja’Kobi Gillespie from Tennessee and Maliq Brown from Duke. Meanwhile, there were eyeball-popping amounts of trade activity again around the Spurs’ draft picks.

  • 42nd selection: Ja’Kobi Gillespie (Tennessee) – 6’0″ 182 lb.
  • 44th selection: Maliq Brown (Duke) – 6’8″ 217 lb.

Below is a review of the entire second round, but first, a few quick observations:

  • The pre-drafting show segment tonight went longer than last night’s lead-up into the first pick. This could have been for the longer explanations about the importance of these second round picks (featuring 2-way contracts) in the new ‘3-2-1’ drafting world.
  • It was really pleasant to hear the applause across the board for Mark Tatum as he walked up to announce each pick.
  • The names repeated as second round found gold ranged from Jalen Brunson to Nikola Jokic to our own Manu Ginobili (forever knighted as “E-man-yoo-el Gee-noh-bee-lee“) (other luminaries: Dennis Rodman and Draymond Green)
  • Way more cooler names in the second round, including: Baba Miller, Trevon Brazile (who went from San Antonio to Denver), Otega Oweh, Vsevolod Ishchenko, and Narcisse Ngoy.
  • Denver scuttled Isaiah Stewart to memphis for only three future second round picks. He would have been an upgrade for the Spurs’ bench.

And now onto the picks!

31. Houston Rockets (via New York)

PLAYER: Bruce Thornton (Ohio State)

OBSERVATION: When I first heard his voice from the other browser tab, I immediately thought ‘Dennis Rodman!

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Chauncey Billups / Spurs: Thicc DeMar DeRozan


32. Memphis Grizzlies

PLAYER: Richie Saunders (BYU)
OBSERVATION:
An heir to the tater tot kingdom is a winner in my eyes.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: what Warriors fans want Brandin Podziemski to be / Spurs: 2002-2003 Stephen Jackson


33. Minnesota Timberwolves (via Brooklyn)

PLAYER: Isaiah Evans (Duke)

OBSERVATION:  The nickname “Showtime Slim” is quite exemplary.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Aaron Wiggins / Spurs: early 90s Dale Ellis


34. Cleveland Cavaliers (via Sacramento)

PLAYER: Meleek Thomas (Arkansas)

OBSERVATION: He looks deceptively quick.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: poor man’s Bradley Beal / Spurs: Gary Neal in a pinch


35. Denver Nuggets (from San Antonio)

PLAYER: Trevon Brazile (Arkansas)

OBSERVATION: He looks like a no-nonsense big that has a nice motor.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Willey Cauley-Stein / Spurs: 2007 Francisco Elson


36. Los Angeles Clippers

PLAYER: Baba Miller (Cincinnati)

OBSERVATION: He had a very blingy ‘B’ necklace to complete his draft day fit. Loved it.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Amare Stoudemire (squinting heavily) / Spurs: would’ve chewed up and spit out Zach Collins in practice


37. Miami Heat (from Oklahoma City)

PLAYER: Ryan Conwell (Louisville)

OBSERVATION: This pick immediately went to Miami – who just need to fill out their roster at this point.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Devin Booker / Spurs: a more compact Danny Green


38. Indiana Pacers (from Chicago)

PLAYER: Braden Smith (Purdue)

OBSERVATION: Heady point guard going to Indiana? Of course.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP:  Non-Spurs: TJ McConnell with pizzazz / Spurs: Speedy Claxton if we could have kept him beyond 2003


39.  New York Knicks (from Houston)

PLAYER: Jack Kayil (Germany)

OBSERVATION:  Maybe an understudy for Jalen Brunson. This seems like the type of draft-and-stash San Antonio used to make.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Deron Williams / Spurs: A fully-formed Blake Wesley


40. Boston Celtics

PLAYER: Dillon Mitchell (St. John’s)

OBSERVATION: Didn’t hear too much about him with most of the analysts’ attention on Zuby Ejiofor.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Aaron Nesmith / Spurs: (way back machine) Monty Williams


41. Oklahoma City Thunder (from Miami)

PLAYER: Otega Oweh (Kentucky)

OBSERVATION: Looks like a defensive lineman masquerading as a basketball wingman.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: less-dirty Lu Dort / Spurs: 2nd year Carter Bryant


42. San Antonio Spurs

PLAYER: Ja’Kobi Gillespie (Tennessee)

OBSERVATION: The highlight plays seemed to come easy for him.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Jose Alvarado / Spurs: Gary Neal with handles


43. Brooklyn Nets

PLAYER: Tyler Bilodeau (UCLA)

OBSERVATION: The shooting stroke looks smooth, but he’ll need to contribute on the defensive end.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Adam Morrison / Spurs: 2002 Steve Smith


44. San Antonio Spurs

PLAYER: Maliq Brown (Duke)

OBSERVATION: He looks like a potential upgrade for Julian Champagnie or a platoon partner – particularly while leading his teams with deflections and steals.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Jalen Williams / Spurs: Champagnie


45. Sacramento Kings (from New York)

PLAYER:  Emanuel Sharp (Houston)

OBSERVATION: Their salary cap seems harder to manager than a grad school economics course.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Jae’Sean Tate / Spurs: Lonnie Walker IV


46. Orlando Magic

PLAYER: Felix Okpara (Tennessee)

OBSERVATION: This pick was soon after traded to Washington. If he had stayed with Orlando, that would’ve been a crowded frontcourt.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Grant Williams / Spurs: A taller more filled out Sidy Cissoko


47. Phoenix Suns

PLAYER:  Tyler Nickel (Vanderbilt)

OBSERVATION: This pick was sent to New York. He would be a broadcaster’s dream if he learned to pass well – “What a dime by Nickel!

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Alex Caruso / Spurs: Jeremy Sochan before the confidence was sucked out of him


48. Dallas Mavericks

PLAYER:  Tobi Lawal (Virginia Tech)

OBSERVATION:  He looks like he’ll be a rotation big for a decade-plus.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Jonathan Isaac / Spurs: Chimezi Metu – with more playing time


49. Denver Nuggets

PLAYER:  Bryce Hopkins (St. John’s)

OBSERVATION: Denver’s picks seems like eventual Aaron Gordon buddy material or his replacements.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Aaron Gordon / Spurs: 2021 LaMarcus Aldridge (sad face)


50. Toronto Raptors

PLAYER: Jaden Bradley (Arizona)

OBSERVATION: His college heroics would seem to portend to success in the league.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Marcus Smart / Spurs: Malaki Branham in a non-Wemby universe


51. Orlando Magic (from Washington)

PLAYER:  Izaiyah Nelson (USF)

OBSERVATION: He looks like the type of tweener who will excel on his second team.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Miles Bridges / Spurs: what Jaron Blossomgame could have been


52.  Atlanta Hawks (from Los Angeles Clippers)

PLAYER:  Henri Veesaar (North Carolina)

OBSERVATION: Just as I was about to type “Ivica Zubac’s replacement,’ the trade was announced.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Brook Lopez / Spurs: however, this feels like a Luka Samanic situation


53. Houston Rockets

PLAYER:  Ugonna Oyenso (Virginia)

OBSERVATION: Surprise! This was traded to Detroit. But he had one of the top five inspirational reactions upon getting drafted.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Theo Ratliff / Spurs: Mason Plumlee


54. Golden State Warriors

PLAYER:  Lajae Jones (Florida State)

OBSERVATION: He moved pretty smoothly in all of his highlights.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: more athletic Gui Santos / Spurs: moves somewhat like Quinndary Weatherspoon


55.  New York Knicks

PLAYER:  Nick Martinelli (Northwestern)

OBSERVATION: He should have been a Warriors pick given that the Martinelli’s beverage company is heardquartered here in the Bay Area.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: 2010s Gordon Hayward / Spurs: fully actualized Boris Diaw


56. Chicago Bulls

PLAYER:  Vsevelod Ishchenko (Russia)

OBSERVATION: Yet another trade after the fact – this one went to the Mavericks.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Andrei Kiriklenko (in high school) / Spurs: the way Nikola Milutinov made so many of our mouths salivate in 2015 and the years after


57. Atlanta Hawks

PLAYER:  Narcisse Ngoy (France)

OBSERVATION: This one was also traded to the Clippers. #GINOBILI!

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Guerschon Yabusele is envious of Narcisse’s dimensions / Spurs: I could see Nazr Mohammed


58.  New Orleans Pelicans

PLAYER:  Jaron Pierre, Jr. (SMU)

OBSERVATION:  Is this their first pick of this draft? This particular pick has traveled more than I have on the basketball court.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Ryan Dunn (at least the way he’s played against San Antonio) / Spurs: David Garcia-Jones


59.  Minnesota Timberwolves

PLAYER:  Trey Kaufman-Renn (Purdue)

OBSERVATION:  This looks like a depth move should Naz Reid move into the starting lineup.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Sacramento version of Trey Lyles / Spurs: Trey Lyles alert!


60. Washington Wizards

PLAYER:  Malique Lewis (Trinidad and Tobago)

OBSERVATION:  It’s really cool that the Wizards got the first and last picks of the 2026 draft! However, this pick was sadly traded to Milwaukee.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: oddly enough, 2013 Giannis Antetokounmpo (before the growth spurt and the muscles) / Spurs: If any of you remember him, James Anderson!

Good news, Pounders! It’s only about 1.5 weeks til the California Classic in Northern California and 2 weeks until the NBA Summer League! Hallelujah for basketball!

REPORT: Knicks free agent Mitchell Robinson linked to Kings for one reason

SAN ANTONIO, TX - JUNE 13: Mitchell Robinson #23 of the New York Knicks boxes out Luke Kornet #7 of the San Antonio Spurs during the game during Game Five of the 2026 NBA Finals on June 13, 2026 at 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(Photo by Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The New York Knicks exited the 2026 NBA Draft with two new players on their roster, both of them second-rounders, after being clearly focused on preserving financial flexibility throughout the two-day neophyte-filled event.

After a series of first-round trades helped New York move the hell out of signing prospects to any sort of guaranteed contract, the front office created additional breathing room under the league’s second apron and ended up with a plethora of future second-round picks as well as two nice kids: Vanderbilt forward and no-nonsense three-point flamer Tyler Nickel, and German guard and no-way-I’m-going-back Jack Kayil.

Even with the added flexibility, keeping the championship core—outside of the starters—intact remains a difficult equation.

The challenge is related to the upcoming unrestricted free agencies of center Mitchell Robinson and guards Landry Shamet and Jordan Clarkson.

SNY’s Ian Begley reported on Tuesday that Robinson is expected to generate significant interest across the NBA, including from teams that could offer him a larger role on top of just more money.

“I heard earlier in the postseason that there were numerous suitors, and there was at least one team back then that was prepared to offer Mitchell Robinson a starting spot. To me, that’s significant because he knows he’s not starting in New York as long as Karl-Anthony Towns is here. So if that’s a factor for him, that’s something that I’m keeping an eye on.”

Shortly after making those comments, Begley pointed to the Sacramento Kings as a logical landing spot.

“I don’t have specific info, I mean, I have heard the same whispers about the Lakers, but just based on their need at center and their situation financially. Sacramento, if they didn’t have a player at the position that they loved, I think they’d be all over Mitchell Robinson. They’re always a team that I link to Robinson.”

The connection goes beyond roster fit, with that perhaps being the least appealing thing for Mitch as things stand. The Kings have Domantas Sabonis starting at center and drafted Maxime Raynaud last year. Sabonis could slide down to the power forward position to make room for Robinson at center, but it feels like a lateral move and a similar situation to the one Mitch faced in New York with KAT and his playing at the five and not the four.

However, Sacramento’s No. 1 asset in convincing Robinson to bolt out of Manhattan might be their general manager, Scott Perry, who drafted Robinson in 2018 while still with the Knicks and is a strong supporter of the country boy.

Back in mid-May, the New York Post’s Stefan Bondy already reported the possibility of the Kings entering the Robinson sweepstakes, noting that league sources view Sacramento as a legitimate threat to sign Robinson away from New York in free agency.

“Sources around the league have pegged the Sacramento Kings as a threat to pry away Robinson in free agency. Scott Perry, the GM of the Kings, has long been a fan of Robinson after drafting him the 2018 second round as a member of New York’s front office. It was probably Perry’s best move in a tenure of blunders before (Leon) Rose arrived. Perry’s Kings have no cap space but could maneuver the roster to open a competitive offer for Robinson, who has mostly been underpaid throughout his career ($67 million in career earnings over eight seasons).”

Regarding the cap space issues, the Kings are already trying to solve those by trading (not happening) or waiving and stretching veteran DeMar DeRozan’s $25.74 salary. Not to mention, Sabonis is always on the rumor mill, and there are already whispers about a possible trade.

A week ago, ESPN’s Brian Windhorst reported that the Knicks had already begun “some level of cursory negotiations” with Robinson’s camp.

That said, New York will have it tough, if not outright impossible, to navigate free agency while remaining under the second apron if they want to retain every single piece of their title-winning team. The math simply doesn’t work, and it’s looking like the Knicks will need to choose between re-signing Robinson alone or bringing back a combination of Shamet/Clarkson and Jose Alvarado, whose $4.5 player option is due to be activated or rejected on Friday.

Robinson, who remained healthy through the regular season playing under a heavy load-managed plan, was key in the team’s championship run, albeit his postseason impact was diminished because of multiple factors. Even then, he will easily command a raise from the roughly $13 million he earned last season, particularly if another team offers a starting role, which would already be incentivizing enough for Mitch to open a new career chapter.

Shamet, meanwhile, has rebuilt his value massively in New York, and there is no way he doesn’t get a deal twice or thrice as expensive as his $3 million current contract. The same goes for Clarkson, who might get another vet min or perhaps finds someone out there willing to raise that bar a bit to convince him to leave NYC.

As free agency approaches July 1, the Knicks appear increasingly unlikely to retain everybody, and perhaps that’s why they started the draft by sending picks packing in a hurry… but ultimately ended up grabbing a couple of warm bodies to fill the end of the bench, even if they don’t sniff the court any time soon.

The biggest lessons from the Giannis Antetokounmpo trade saga

Giannis Antetokounmpo during Formula 1 Monaco Grand Prix at the Circuit de Monaco in Monte Carlo on June 7th, 2026. (Photo by Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto via Getty Images) | NurPhoto via Getty Images

588 days ago, right at the beginning of the 2024 NBA season, I called for the Bucks to trade Giannis Antetokounmpo to avert disaster. I was admittedly early to the party, and was thus called many names: “mad man,” “idiot,” “Celtics writer”; I was even refuted in a point-by-point counterargument by a Bucks blogger the same day. To quote from the initial piece:

“When struggling through the doldrums of being alive, we may naively believe that, because things are so bad right now, they can only get better. We may think we have hit ‘rock bottom,’ and that our situation must improve because there is no lower point imaginable. But we are wrong.” 

And as much as I’d like to say I saw “the jagged gravel that is waiting for them at the end of this impossibly deep hole they are free-falling down,” I did not expect it to get this bad. The sentiment that the Bucks needed to trade Giannis to save their franchise metastasized into a two-year circus of confusion and stupidity that saw Milwaukee repeatedly take out new mortgages on a house that was built on a fault line. From a Khris Middleton extension to Doc Rivers’ hiring-and-firing to a lunatic Myles Turner contract, the Bucks repeatedly refused to accept reality. Antetokounmpo, meanwhile, repeatedly refused to force their hand.

Giannis and the Bucks held the NBA world hostage for almost two years, and by the end I was ready for them to just flip a coin and get it over with. But a saga that had nothing but questions at least finally deserves some answers, and so we’re going to spend the next bajillion words answering as many questions as we can. Hopefully, through self-reflection, we can avoid something like this ever happening again.

So who got the best deal?

To call the eventual trade the result of the “Giannis Sweepstakes” adopts an overly laudatory tone for what was essentially two teams, the Boston Celtics and the Miami Heat, presenting the Bucks with two options: attempt to compete with Jaylen Brown and receive minimal draft compensation, or accept far more draft picks, Tyler Herro and several younger pieces from the Heat. In the end, they chose the latter.

The fact that the Giannis Antetokounmpo market turned into a staring contest that may have come down to the Celtics’ refusal to include Hugo Gonzalez is an absurd and fitting end to sad saga from which there are essentially no winners. The Heat now have an utterly gutted roster with Bam Adebayo and Giannis, no future draft assets and no remaining young players. They improved their short term outlook, sure, but “Giannis plus random guys” just repeatedly failed in Milwaukee.

The Celtics, meanwhile, will now enter the offseason with an unclear relationship with Jaylen Brown, who they just openly tried to trade. They could look to trade him elsewhere or try to repair the relationship, but whatever the solution it probably won’t be as simple as a pure Giannis upgrade.

The Bucks probably got the best deal they could, and I was surprised by how many draft picks they managed to squeeze out of the Heat. Still, they essentially took back speculative players in the deal, with none of Kel’el Ware, Jaime Jaquez Jr. or Kasparas Jakucionis anything close to a sure-thing. Herro is allegedly the centerpiece of the deal, but he’s really just a moderately sized expiring contract that the Bucks may-or-may-not extend. Essentially, they got cryptocurrency back for Giannis — could it be valuable? Sure. Is it? Nobody knows!

Beyond losing their best player since Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, the real price the Bucks paid was the massive opportunity cost of waiting so long. If you had told me two years ago, after the publication of my initial Giannis trade piece, that the Heat would eventually trade for him but would nothave to include Bam Adebayo? I would have laughed in your face. The fact that the Celtics did not offer more first-round picks or Hugo Gonzalez is laughable, nor is the concept that more teams didn’t want to be in the Giannis business. 

Had the Bucks simply traded Antetokounmpo at any point in the last two years rather than vainly try to mend a relationship that had already become untenable, they could have received the largest haul of assets in the history of the league by far. Instead, they got Bitcoin. 

Why did the Bucks take the Heat offer over Jaylen Brown?

This is among the more interesting deals to unpack, given that we actually know precisely what the two offers were and can compare them directly. The Heat offer was Herro, Ware, Jaquez Jr. and Jakucionis plus three first-round picks, a swap and a second round pick. Those first round picks are the 13th pick tonight, Miami’s 2031 and 2033 picks and a 2030 swap. The Celtics offer was, apparently, just Jaylen Brown and two first-round picks. It’s less draft compensation, but Brown is a wildly superior player to anyone the Bucks got back from the Heat. So why did the Bucks take the Miami deal over Boston?

The debate was conveniently sorted as a question: do the Bucks want to contend this year or rebuild for the far future? Brown could help them win games immediately while the Heat package is, again, highly speculative. I find that framing somewhat misleading; yes, Milwaukee could have won some games with Brown next year, but which games? In December? Does that team make it to May? Can Jaylen Brown and … some other random dudes win the Eastern Conference? Absolutely not. From that perspective, I found the Miami offer far more realistic. 

Kevin O’Connor reported Tuesday morning that Bucks owner Jimmy Haslam was the main force behind taking the Heat deal over the Celtics package because of fears that Brown would not sign an extension and himself demand a trade. Perhaps that was the main reason, but it also may be that it simply did not make sense to pay Brown major money when the team is half a decade or more from getting back to relevancy. If you accept the thesis that Giannis was the better player in the trade with Brown (both sides did), it does not make any sense to swap the two and expect to contend with the same supporting pieces. That is just grass-is-always-greener team building.

The one icky thing about the deal that Bucks took is how far down the road those picks are. Save for the 13th pick this year, they received no picks in 2027, 2028 or 2029. That means it will be four entire years until the Bucks begin cashing in on the assets of this trade, and their immediate future is no more secure with the Damian Lillard waive-and-stretch on the books, Myles Turner eating up space and nothing else to really hang your hat on. It reminds me (I’m not kidding) of how my history professors in college described the finances of Bourbon France right before the French Revolution. Because of how far they are from getting their head above water, there is a real chance the Bucks become an all-time irrelevant franchise for an entire decade. 

Could this trade cause any ripple effects?

It surely will, but I don’t believe this is enough of a disruptor immediately deter teams in the East from loading up. The Heat aren’t just beatable, they’re arguably still more beatable than Boston or New York. But beyond the immediate question of Jaylen Brown’s future, I wonder exactly how much this saga will shape NBA teams’ behavior with superstars on declining teams. The Bucks, a small market generally unable to attract high-level free agents, were so frightened of losing Giannis that they repeatedly made irresponsible decisions to try to appease him. But what did we learn about appeasement in school, kids? That’s right: don’t do it.

The next player to hold their team hostage like this may be treated differently, and the “all-in” thesis of having a star player and needing to maximize their window may be greeted by a chilling effect from the Giannis situation. As I pointed out above, the Bucks are scheduled for about a decade of total irrelevance, a period in which their team revenue will decrease as their fans focus more on the Green Bay Packers offensive line questions. 

However, one clear mathematical truth emerged from the Giannis saga, which is that we finally derived the formula for total franchise collapse: trading all your own draft picks plus unhappy superstar divided by a small market to the square root of paying for past performance equals disaster. The Bucks have written the book on how to collapse.

So was this all worth the 2021 NBA Championship?

Brian Windhorst famously said that if you win the championship, you don’t have to apologize for anything; trades, free agents, draft picks. None of it matters if you win the title. I’d like to officially file a complaint about that maxim.

This whole situation stems from the Bucks trading the farm for Jrue Holiday, which propelled them to the 2021 NBA Championship and everyone could live happily ever after. While that move is totally defensible, the Bucks took so many additional bites at the apple after their title that they reset the clock on having to apologize. The Damian Lillard trade was desperate and arguably gifted Boston the 2024 title by diverting Holiday to them, and the Lillard/Turner waive-and-stretch is the single most insane NBA transaction in my lifetime. They certainly have to say sorry for all that.

Most fans, myself included, see an NBA team’s responsibility as getting a championship with their best player before they retire or move on. There is nothing so painful as having a great player and never achieving anything with them. Had the Celtics failed to win with Tatum and Brown before they were split up (as seems likely right now), I would have been devastated. Had the Red Sox not won the 2018 World Series with Mookie Betts before making the worst trade in sports history (still mad, will always be mad), I would cry myself to sleep nightly.

The sad reality is that the Bucks went so all-in that they became basically incapable of improving their roster after the Lillard trade. They had the 2021 run and then an incredible title defense in 2022 that saw an absurdly competitive second-round loss to Boston. But the Bucks did not properly account for how ambitious Giannis would be beyond their single championship, and panicked repeatedly to ensure he would stay in Milwaukee. That, to me, will be the legacy of this entire post-championship era.

Quadir Copeland agrees to two-way deal with Rockets

CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA - MARCH 12: Quadir Copeland #11 of the NC State Wolfpack drives to the basket while guarded by Jacari White #6 of the Virginia Cavaliers in the second half during the quarterfinals of the 2026 Men's ACC Tournament at Spectrum Center on March 12, 2026 in Charlotte, North Carolina. (Photo by Jacob Kupferman/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Quadir Copeland didn’t hear his name called during the second round of the NBA Draft on Wednesday night, but he’ll still have a chance to play in the NBA this upcoming season. Copeland quickly agreed to sign a two-way contract with the Houston Rockets once the draft concluded.

The Rockets have a need at point guard, which they addressed in taking Ohio State’s Bruce Thornton in the first round, but that was their only draft pick this year (they traded a couple of second rounders away). So this looks like a pretty spot for Quadir to begin his pro career.

He’ll likely spend the bulk of the season with Houston’s G-League affiliate, the Rio Grande Valley Vipers, but the two-way deal means the Rockets can bring him up and let him play in up to 50 NBA games. NBA teams have a couple extra roster spots specifically for two-way players, which gives those guys an opportunity to develop without having to worry about losing their jobs to a roster squeeze on the big club.

Best of luck to Quadir this season.

How Did The Brotherhood Do In The 2026 NBA Draft?

BROOKLYN, NY - JUNE 23: An overall photo of 2026 NBA Draft stage before the 2026 NBA Draft - Round One on June 23, 2026 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, 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 Hannah Ally/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

So the draft is over, and what does it mean for the many tentacles of the Brotherhood? Let’s look at it. Well, some of them, anyway. There’s a lot of sifting and sorting to be done yet.

First, this year’s draftees: Cameron Boozer is a Grizzlie with the #3 pick, Isaiah Evans is a Timberwolf with the #33 pick, and Maliq Brown went to the Spurs with the #44 pick.

The Grizzlies traded for Detroit’s Isaiah Stewart, which means they suddenly have a very rugged frontcourt. They have Boozer, Stewart, and man mountain Zach Edey. Those guys are going to leave some bruises, and Stewart can help get Boozer up to speed on the league. And they also picked up Karim Lopez, who is apparently a bit of a bruiser himself.

All of it should also allow them to move away from Ja Morant, and if he decides to be foolish again, guns or otherwise, assuming they can’t trade him, they can afford to glue him to the bench. Cedric Coward and Ty Jerome could manage and be much steadier.

Incidentally, like Darryn Peterson, taken with the #2 pick by Utah, Boozer felt he should have been the #1 pick. Actually, he probably got a break. Washington has been a black hole in the NBA galaxy for decades, a place where careers go to die. He’s better off with Memphis.

Evans was taken by Brooklyn and sent to the T-Wolves, where he can build a solid niche, especially with Donte DiVincenzo getting over a serious injury. He can take pressure off of Anthony Edwards and help open the interior for an aging Rudy Gobert. Everybody can use a flamethrower.

The San Antonio Spurs went hard for defensive help after getting beaten up inside by the New York Knicks in the NBA Finals. Brown can guard multiple positions, and he, along with Jayden Quaintance (6-9/253) and Tarris Reed (6-10/260), should offer reed-thin Victor Wembanyama some protection from rough defenders.

However, adding three young big men probably means Brotherhood member Mason Plumlee, now 36, won’t be back.

In Dallas, the Mavericks picked up Morez Johnson and Tobi Lawal. Both should help Cooper Flagg in the frontcourt. Johnson can help in a lot of ways, and while he hasn’t fully mastered the game, Lawal is a spectacular athlete. It’ll be interesting to see what new coach Dusty May does with him, not to mention how Kyrie Irving will work with them.

The Mavs also traded for Sergio De Larrea, a 6-6 Spaniard who could help if he is on the roster this year. There is some speculation that he could be a draft-and-stash.

In Charlotte, Kon Knueppel will greet new teammates Hannes Steinbach and Christian Anderson (there’s a bad joke there somewhere with Hannes Christian Anderson).

Steinbach is a promising big man who rebounds well, and Anderson will add more perimeter sniping. The Hornets rise should continue. However, they still need some muscle. They’d probably take San Antonio’s haul without asking twice.

Still, look at the young core: Knueppel, LaMelo Ball, Brandon Miller, Miles Bridges, Moussa Diabate, Sion James, Ryan Kalkbrenner, and now Steinbach and Anderson. They’ll probably lose Coby White to free agency, but Anderson may cover that.

It’s a solid core and if they can pick up a couple of pieces, they might go far, but perhaps without Ball, who Charlotte is shopping around, which might persuade them to hang on to White, if possible, as a stop-gap point guard. Maybe they can find one in free agency. Or maybe it’s a chance to pick up the muscle they think they need.

Update: muscle acquired. According to ESPN’s Shams Chamaria, “The Charlotte Hornets are trading star guard LaMelo Ball and Josh Green to the Minnesota Timberwolves for Naz Reid, a 2033 unprotected first-round pick, three first-round pick swaps (2028, 2029, 2030) and three second-round picks (2029, 2032, 2033)…” They still have to figure out point guard, but muscle? They got the muscle.

Out in San Francisco, GM Mike Dunleavy has the unenviable task of moving from the Steph Curry era to whatever will replace it.

The Warriors picked up Michigan’s Yaxel Lendeborg, and he’s a pretty solid prospect. We were surprised by Florida State’s Lajae Jones, who impressed us last year. Golden State got him with the 54th pick.

In Los Angeles, coach JJ Redick will add Baylor’s Cameron Carr. A 6-5 guard, he’s lavishly athletic. They still need a quality center, though.

In Detroit, meanwhile, Trajan Langdon made some interesting moves. The Pistons got Stanford’s Ebuka Okorie with the 17th pick. It’s a bit of a gamble, only because he’s a smallish guard, and we saw him struggle with bigger defenders, notably Blue Devil Dame Sarr. He’ll see a lot of guys like that, especially if he continue to score a lot.

Detroit also got Virginia’s Ugonna Onyenso with the 53rd pick. Onyenso has the potential to be a devastating shot blocker. Langdon, as noted, shipped Isaiah Stewart to the Grizzlies, so he may not be done wheeling and dealing yet.

In Hotlanta, Quin Snyder and the Hawks got Kingston Fleming from Illinois with the #8 pick, St. John’s Zuby Ejiofor with the #23 pick, and UNC’s Henri Veesaar at #52 after a trade with the L.A. Clippers.

Toronto GM Bobby Webster seems to have a type. Over the years, he has selected 6-8 Scottie Barnes, and traded for former Blue Devils RJ Barrett and Brandon Ingram. This year, he picked Alan Graves with the 19th pick. A 6-9 forward who was a guard before he grew, Graves has a similar package of skills as the others we just mentioned. They may not all be on the roster next season, but the guy has a pretty clear preference for mid-sized, versatile talents.

Out in Phoenix, Khaman Maluach and Mark Williams may have gotten an enforcer as Arizona’s Koa Peat was taken with the 30th pick.

Other ACC players who were taken include Caleb Wilson, who went to the Chicago Bulls with the #4 pick. He somewhat foolishly called himself a GOAT, which is a bad move since Chicago’s real GOAT, Michael Jordan, also came from UNC. Wilson should be good, but he would have been smarter to be a bit more modest. He’s never going to be the GOAT in Chicago.

Louisville’s Mikel Brown went to Brooklyn with the #6 pick, and Cardinal teammate Ryan Conwell ended up with Miami after being taken with the 37th pick by Oklahoma City. Finally, SMU’s Jaron Pierre was taken with the 58th pick by the New Orleans Pelicans.

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A Post-Draft Links Run

BROOKLYN, NY - JUNE 23: An overall photo of 2026 NBA Draft stage before the 2026 NBA Draft - Round One on June 23, 2026 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, 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 Hannah Ally/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

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