Prior to upcoming NBA draft, Golden State Warriors' general manager Mike Dunleavy addresses the media at Chase Center in San Francisco on Monday, June 23, 2025. (Photo by Scott Strazzante/San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images)
Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NBA. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Golden State fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.
The 2026 NBA Draft is just around the corner, and the Golden State Warriors are back in the lottery, holding the No. 11 pick. It’s a position where elite talent is occasionally available … two-time MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was a fairly recent No. 11 pick, as was Warriors franchise legend Klay Thompson.
While the Dubs are actively scouting potential players — many signs point to Michigan star Yaxel Lendeborg — there’s also the possibility of trading the pick. We all know that the Warriors will be star-hunting this offseason, even if the Giannis Antetokounmpo rumors have calmed down significantly.
So we want to know your opinion: should the Warriors trade the pick and add some young — but unproven — talent? Or should they trade it in pursuit of a more win-now player? Let us know!
According to Tim MacMahon on Utah ESPN 700 Radio, Walker Kessler has received an offer from the Utah Jazz for a 5-year, $ 140 M deal, but apparently it wasn’t enough.
MacMahon was asked if he thinks that Kessler wants to play in Utah, and he responded: “… for more than 5 years, $140M.” It also sounds like there are some real frustrations with how the Jazz have gone about his contract situation. Apparently, the Jazz feel that they can have any hurt feelings improve over time once the contract is signed.
To be honest, it’s a pretty surprising attitude from Kessler, who has shown a lot of potential but not necessarily some concrete production. Utah is right to hold strong in this situation because the worst thing they can do is start handing out max deals to every player on the team. They already have big contracts with Lauri Markkanen and Jaren Jackson Jr., they have Keyonte George coming up, and then who knows what happens with Ace Bailey eventually.
We know from Sam Amick that there are teams interested in Kessler, like the Lakers, the Hawks, and others, so it’s not like the Jazz don’t have options. If Kessler is trying to force his way out, he may get just that, but don’t be surprised if he ends up in places he didn’t expect, like Donovan Mitchell in Cleveland.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani announced an open lottery for ecstatic New York Knicks fans to get free tickets to a Championship Ceremony at City Hall after a celebratory ticker-tape parade.
“The Knicks belong to New York City. And this championship belongs to the people who waited 53 years for it,” Mamdani wrote on X.
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani is seen wearing a New York Knicks jersey at the 69th Annual National Puerto Rican Day Parade Kyle Stevens/Shutterstock
“That’s why we’re giving away 600 free tickets to Thursday’s Championship Ceremony at City Hall following the ticker-tape parade.”
The sweepstakes opened on Tuesday evening and will close on Wednesday at 11 a.m., the Hizzoner said. New Yorkers will know if they were randomly selected for two tickets to the ceremony on Wednesday.
The New York Knicks celebrate with the Larry O’Brien Championship Trophy after defeating the San Antonio Spurs. AP Photo/Darren AbateKarl-Anthony Towns #32 of the New York Knicks poses for a photo with the Larry O’Brien Championship Trophy. NBAE via Getty Images
The Knicks’ Championship Ceremony will take place live on the City Hall Plaza in Lower Manhattan and feature unspecified “speeches and musical performances.” Knicks players will also be awarded keys to the city.
The ceremony will kick off at noon on Thursday, two hours after a ticker-tape parade for the Big Apple to revel in the hometown team’s historic NBA Finals victory over the San Antonio Spurs.
The parade will begin around Battery Park and travel about a mile north on Broadway through the Canyon of Heroes before reaching City Hall.
Revelers can line up across Broadway for the best view of the parade.
More information about security measures, specific street closures, and possible performances is expected later in the week before Thursday’s festivities.
The celebrations were scheduled after the NBA champs sent thousands into the streets across New York City on Saturday night, with everyone from MTA bus drivers to firefighters joining the frenzy.
The historic moment marked the first NBA title for the Knicks since 1973, following near misses in 1994 and 1999.
PHOENIX, ARIZONA - OCTOBER 31: Walker Kessler #24 of the Utah Jazz handles the ball during the first half of the Emirates NBA Cup game against the Phoenix Suns at Mortgage Matchup Center on October 31, 2025 in Phoenix, Arizona. The Suns defeated the Jazz 118-96. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Kelsey Grant/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Jazz big man was once seen as the perfect complement to Anthony Davis and can now be viewed as the lob-catching, defensive anchor in the paint for the Luka Dončić version of the team.
The assumption, however, was that, with Kessler being a restricted free agent this summer, it would take a big offer sheet to lure him away from Utah. However, that may no longer be the case.
In a surprising bit of reporting on Monday night, Sam Amick of The Athletic revealed that Kessler and the Jazz front office are not seeing eye-to-eye and the big man might be making plans for his next team.
Kessler, the 24-year-old who was taken 22nd overall out of Auburn by the Memphis Grizzlies before his rights were traded to the Minnesota Timberwolves and eventually the Jazz in 2022, was already known to be frustrated by Utah’s choice not to offer him an extension last summer. And now, with the Jazz choosing to leverage the realities of restricted free agency against him as a way to minimize his market, sources say he is strongly considering the prospect of a basketball future outside Utah.
It wouldn’t take much to already link the Lakers to Kessler, given their history. On top of that, though, J. Kyle Mann of The Ringer appeared on Zach Lowe’s podcast on Tuesday and connected the two parties yet again.
“I think you could see some teams across the league who are in need of maybe an asset that be ‘distressed’ that they maybe think could perform what they might end up having to pay for him. I’ve heard teams like the Lakers kicking [his name] around.”
When Kessler is healthy, he’s been one of the league’s best young rebounders and defenders. He would be a natural fit with the Lakers in their search for a big man of the future.
However, injuries have been a problem for him in his young career. Last season, he appeared in just five contests before undergoing surgery on his torn labrum. In the 2024-25 season, he played in just 58 games. However, the Jazz have been one of the most egregious tankers in the league in the last few seasons and a lot of those missed games came in the second half of the season, so that could be the reason for him missing games.
As it stands, the Jazz front court is already crowded with Kessler, Jaren Jackson Jr. and Lauri Markkanen. That comes before the potential addition of AJ Dybantsa or Cam Boozer at the top of the 2026 NBA Draft, too.
It’s hard to know what a deal for Kessler would require, particularly if he wants to leave. The Jazz still hold the cards in this situation, but it would be in their best interest to try to acquire an asset in a trade, especially given how many forwards and centers they already have on the roster.
With the draft quickly approaching, it could be something to monitor.
Bring together the long-suffering fans of the biggest media market in the NBA — with a team that was hard not to root for — against a player unlike any other and a rising dominant force, and you had ratings gold.
This year's NBA Finals between Jalen Brunson's New York Knicks and Victor Wembanyama's San Antonio Spurs drew the largest audience to watch the NBA Finals since Michael Jordan was still with the Bulls, 28 years ago. The Finals averaged 20.6 million viewers across ABC and ESPN, but beyond the record viewership, there was also record social media engagement and merchandise sales. Some of the highlights include:
• Game 5, when the Knicks closed out the series, averaged 24.5 million viewers and peaked at 33 million viewers at 11:15 p.m. ET. That makes it the most-watched NBA Finals Game 5 since 1998, and the most-watched NBA game since Game 7 of the 2016 NBA Finals (when LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers completed their comeback from 3-1 down on the Golden State Warriors).
• The NBA Finals delivered the highest share for a Finals on record (38.3).
• It wasn't just the Finals, this most-watched postseason in 28 years across ABC/ESPN, Amazon Prime Video and NBC/Peacock.
• The NBA Finals generated a record 15 billion views and counting on social media, the most ever for an NBA Finals and nearly triple the previous record set in 2025.
• In the first 24 hours following their clinching win in Game 5, the Knicks set an all-time Fanatics merchandise record for any championship team ever across all sports.
• The 2026 NBA Finals set a new league record for merchandise sales across NBAStore.com, Fanatics, team stores and third-party retail.
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - APRIL 01: Devin Booker #1 of the Phoenix Suns drives around Giannis Antetokounmpo #34 of the Milwaukee Bucks during the first half of a game at Fiserv Forum on April 01, 2025 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. (Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images) | Getty Images
In their first power rankings since the New York Knicks won the NBA Finals, ESPN is projecting the Suns to potentially take a step back in the 2026-27 season after a surprising year the season before.
Ranked 15th in their previous rankings, ESPN has the team 21st, with the Milwaukee Bucks being the only other team to experience a six-spot drop from where they sat the previous year, as Milwaukee deals with a future potentially without Giannis Antetokounmpo. The network ranks the Suns 10th in the conference.
Finishing 45-37 on the year, the Suns disappointed in postseason play. After sitting in the seventh spot for most of the regular season, they lost in the 7/8 play-in game to the Portland Trail Blazers and fell to the eighth seed, where they were swept by the Oklahoma City Thunder.
With the new tanking protocols going into effect, many teams are making moves to level up for the 2026-27 campaign, including the Utah Jazz, while teams like the Houston Rockets and Dallas Mavericks are looking to get key players back and benefit from another year of development for their young players. As a result, the Western Conference projects to be tougher next season than it was this year, which doesn’t bode well for a Phoenix team that ended the year 7-15 in its final 22 games, including postseason contests.
OKLAHOMA CITY, OK – APRIL 22: Dillon Brooks #3 of the Phoenix Suns dribbles the ball during the game against the Oklahoma City Thunder during Round 1 Game 2 of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on April 22, 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 Zach Beeker/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
With key contributors Jordan Goodwin, Collin Gillespie, and Mark Williams set to become free agents (Williams is a restricted free agent, meaning the Suns can match any offer he receives from other teams), Phoenix has a lot of decisions to make this offseason regarding whether it wants to run back the same roster it had this past season or make some changes. Additionally, Dillon Brooks is eligible for an extension after having a career year in his first season with the Suns.
On the bright side, rookies Khaman Maluach and Rasheer Fleming now have a year under their belts in the NBA, and Jalen Green projects to be healthier than he was this past season after missing more than half the year with a hamstring injury.
With the draft next week and free agency to follow, the Suns’ (and their opponents’) rosters could look very different from what they did a season ago, and any rankings for next season at this time should be taken lightly.
NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA – FEBRUARY 07: Paul Pierce attends FanDuel’s Super Bowl Party Powered by Spotify on February 07, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Photo by Jeff Schear/Getty Images for...
Paul Pierce cut a plea deal with Los Angeles prosecutors on Tuesday to close out his DUI case, court records obtained by The California Post show.
Pierce pleaded nolo contendere to one misdemeanor count of wet reckless driving upon a highway, per the records, and was sentenced to 12 months of probation.
Paul Pierce attends FanDuel’s Super Bowl Party Powered by Spotify on February 07, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana. Getty Images for FanDuel's Super Bowl Party Powered by Spotify!
The Boston Celtics legend was also ordered to pay a $375 fine and complete multiple courses, including a MADD Victim Impact Program, according to the records.
Prior to striking the agreement with officials, Pierce had been facing one count of driving under the influence of alcohol and one count of driving with .08% blood alcohol content after authorities alleged they found him asleep and intoxicated at the wheel of an SUV on a busy Los Angeles highway on Oct. 7, 2025.
Both charges were dismissed following Pierce’s plea, the records show.
Pierce — an Inglewood native — was accused by the California Highway Patrol of passing out in his ride after officers closed down a portion of the 101 freeway to attend to a multi-car crash.
When lanes reopened, law enforcement officers alleged they found Pierce knocked out in the driver’s seat and “noted signs of alcohol impairment” during an ensuing investigation.
“Imagine being stuck in stand still traffic for 45 mins and falling asleep I took this picture that night because I never been in stand still traffic for this long,” Pierce posted Thursday to Threads. “I’m old, I’m tired, and I fell asleep I’m good y’all thanks for the love.”
Messages seeking comment from Pierce’s attorney as well as the Los Angeles City Attorney’s Office on Tuesday afternoon were not immediately returned.
He just did not want to lose a new phone in the process.
The Knicks forward explained Monday night during an appearance on “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon” what happened during his viral Instagram Live from the locker room celebration after the franchise won the NBA championship on Saturday night.
“But then they were spraying the champagne, and I just got that phone. I didn’t want the phone to get messed up, so I was like, let’s turn this off, and I didn’t know how to do it.”
During the original stream, Anunoby could be heard repeatedly asking how to end the video before the clip cut out after roughly 25 seconds.
The explanation got a laugh from Fallon and his Knicks teammates, who were on the show as part of the team’s post-title media tour.
Anunoby said someone eventually took the phone and helped him turn off the stream.
The moment quickly became one of the funnier scenes from the Knicks’ championship celebration, partly because of how calmly Anunoby appeared to panic while the rest of the locker room was in full party mode.
It also fit the forward’s low-key reputation.
OG Anunoby accidentally went live on Instagram in the Knicks locker room following their NBA Finals title win over the Spurs on Saturday night. X @ballwithze
Anunoby has become a fan favorite in New York not only for his defense and clutch postseason moments, but also for his dry personality and understated postgame interviews.
His defining moment in Game 4, when he tipped in the winning shot at Madison Square Garden to give the Knicks a commanding 3-1 series lead.
But amid all the champagne and chaos after Game 5, Anunoby had a more immediate concern.
He had meant to bring fans inside the celebration.
Anunoby just had no idea how to get out of it before his new phone got soaked.
Karl-Anthony Towns shared his first NBA title with Knicks legend Patrick Ewing.
The two met on the Frost Bank Center court in San Antonio after New York won Game 5 because Towns said he knew how much the Knicks’ first championship in 53 years meant to Ewing, a legend of the team.
“It was so amazing to see how this win healed so many people in New York, fan-wise and even to the alumni, and Patrick,” Towns said on “The Howard Stern Show” on Tuesday.
“When I hugged Patrick, it was like he finally was able to exhale and see a trophy in a Knicks jersey.”
Patrick Ewing and Karl-Anthony Towns of the New York Knicks celebrate after Game 5 of the NBA Finals. NBAE via Getty Images
Ewing spent 15 seasons with the Knicks and made the playoffs 13 times and the Finals twice.
He was one win away from beating the Rockets in 1994, but the Knicks lost Games 6 and 7. In 1999, he was similarly close but tore his Achilles tendon in the Eastern Conference finals and missed the championship series, which the Spurs eventually won.
.@KarlTowns describes the powerful post-game embrace he shared with @nyknicks legend Patrick Ewing after bringing a title back to New York: “When I hugged Patrick it was like he was finally able to exhale.” pic.twitter.com/4TkX2MGHk0
“To finally be able to see that Larry O’Brien in [Ewing’s] hands and not in Michael Jordan’s and all these other people’s hands, I mean, there was just so much healing that I was stunned,” Towns added.
“I didn’t realize how impactful it really is, and I still honestly don’t think I understand the true magnitude of what we’ve done.”
Patrick Ewing and Karl-Anthony Towns of the New York Knicks celebrate after winning the NBA Finals. NBAE via Getty ImagesPatrick Ewing celebrates after the Knicks became the 2026 NBA Finals champions. Jason Szenes for NY Post
Towns was born in Edison, New Jersey, about 30 miles from New York City, and grew up a Knicks fan due to Jeremy Lin.
He said it meant a lot to him to see the impact the win had on the fans and to be a part of a memory the kids in New York will carry with them.
“You never realize a little kid watched the Knicks play, win a championship with his father, and now he’s the one with his son celebrating the same moment that him and his father,” Towns said.
Every game of the 2026 NBA Finals was a nail-biter.
And the television ratings reflected as such.
The Knicks-Spurs series was the most-watched NBA Finals since 1998 — the last gasp of the Michael Jordan Bulls dynasty — by averaging 20.6 million viewers across the five games, ESPN said in a statement on Tuesday.
New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson (11) goes up for a shot pass San Antonio Spurs guard Stephon Castle (5) during the fourth quarter of Game 5 of the 2026 NBA Finals. Jason Szenes for NY Post
The Finals, the highest-rated ABC has had, saw a 100 percent increase in viewership over the 2025 seven-game series between the Thunder and Pacers. This year’s Finals was also the top program on TV each day.
On top of all the macro-level data, Game 5 averaged 24.5 million viewers and peaked at 33 million, becoming the most-watched Game 5 since the 1998 Finals.
The Knicks celebrate after defeating the Spurs to win the NBA championship.
Charles Wenzelberg / NY Post
The peak viewership of Game 5 reached nearly 10 million more people than the Knicks’ epic 29-point comeback in Game 4, which had a viewership high of 23.2 million.
The celebration hasn’t ended, however, as Karl-Anthony Towns is expected to make an appearance on “Late Night with Seth Meyers” on Tuesday before New York City hosts a parade up the Canyon of Heroes on Thursday morning. The parade is expected to use an eye-popping 1.25 tons of confetti.
The Los Angeles Lakers and LeBron James appear to be working on a reunion.
According to ESPN insider Brian Windhorst, the Lakers and James are actively negotiating a new contract that would bring the NBA’s all-time leading scorer back to Los Angeles for a record-setting 24th season.
Speaking Tuesday on ESPN Cleveland, Windhorst said the expectation around the league remains that both sides will ultimately reach an agreement, though the next two weeks could prove critical as free agency approaches.
“I think LeBron’s intention is to play,” Windhorst said. “And I think the focus right now is making a deal with the Lakers. Right now he’s allowed to negotiate with the Lakers and I believe they are negotiating. I believe they are going back and forth.”
LeBron has been vacationing in Europe for the last few weeks.
"I think the focus right now is making a deal with the Lakers. Right now he's allowed to negotiate with the Lakers and I believe they are negotiating, I believe they're going back and forth," – @WindhorstESPN on LeBron's future. pic.twitter.com/7YT5DIlXc3
LeBron has been vacationing in Europe for the last few weeks. Getty Images
Windhorst added that the structure and value of a potential deal could be influenced by what Los Angeles hopes to accomplish in free agency. If negotiations stall, teams such as the Cleveland Cavaliers could become serious contenders for James’ services. Still, the prevailing belief around the NBA is that a reunion in purple and gold remains the most likely outcome.
The partnership has already become one of the most successful eras in franchise history.
Since signing with the Lakers during the summer of 2018, James has transformed the organization from a rebuilding team into a perennial contender. He delivered the franchise’s 17th NBA championship in 2020, earned Finals MVP honors and helped restore relevance to one of the league’s most iconic brands.
If negotiations stall, teams such as the Cleveland Cavaliers could become serious contenders for James’ services. NBAE via Getty ImagesSince signing with the Lakers during the summer of 2018, James has transformed the organization from a rebuilding team into a perennial contender. Getty Images
In eight seasons with Los Angeles, James has appeared in more than 500 games (including playoffs) and is averaging 25.9 points, 7.7 rebounds, and 7.9 assists per game. He became the NBA’s all-time leading scorer in a Lakers uniform and helped lead them to a first-round upset over the Houston Rockets in the 2026 NBA Playoffs without L.A.’s top two leading scorers in Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves.
Now, with Doncic positioned as the franchise’s future, the Lakers are trying to ensure James remains part of its present. The clock is ticking toward free agency, but all signs point toward both sides finding common ground and extending one of the most significant partnerships in modern NBA history.
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In earning their first NBA title in 53 years, the New York Knicks gifted the league and ABC the biggest TV turnout since Michael Jordan celebrated his final championship in 1998.
According to Nielsen Big Data + Panel estimates, the Knicks’ five-game defeat of the favored San Antonio Spurs averaged 20.6 million viewers per night, making this year’s installment of the Finals the most-watched since the Chicago Bulls beat the Utah Jazz in six games. Over the course of what would prove to be Jordan’s sixth and final NBA Finals triumph, NBC 28 years ago averaged a record-high 29 million viewers.
The Knicks’ historic victory doubled the TV turnout from a year ago, when ABC averaged 10.2 million viewers per broadcast.
Game 5, in which the Knicks once again demonstrated that no Spurs lead was ever safe, served up 24.54 million viewers on ABC Saturday night, peaking at 33 million as the clock ran out at Frost Bank Center. That edged ABC and ESPN’s combined deliveries for Game 3, which boasted 23.79 million viewers.
While the NBA Finals enjoyed a bit of a boost by way of Nielsen’s upgrade to its ratings measurement scheme, the Knicks-Spurs series likely would have been the most-watched since at least 2017 without the currency lift. That five-game Warriors-Cavs outing averaged 20.4 million viewers per game and now stands as ABC’s second most-watched title tilt since it resumed airing the best-of-seven series in 2003.
Per Nielsen, Knicks-Spurs now stands as the NBA’s ninth most-watched Finals since the People Meter era began in 1988.
Comparisons to past years are also skewed by Nielsen’s addition of out-of-home estimates to its national TV sample in fall 2020. Since the OOH numbers were officially incorporated into the vanilla TV numbers, live sports have been the primary beneficiary of viewing in bars, restaurants and other public (and not-so-public) venues. Nielsen also tallies impressions served up within the comfort of other people’s homes; since the initial rollout six years ago, the company has since expanded its OOH coverage to 100% of its markets in the lower 48 states.
The impact of OOH deliveries may be obliquely apprehended by way of comparing the household ratings from the final days of NBC’s previous stewardship of the NBA Finals to this month’s numbers. The aforementioned Bulls-Jazz set averaged an 18.7 household rating, with 33% of all TVs in use at the time of the live broadcasts tuned into NBC. The Knicks-Spurs series averaged a 10.0 HH rating.
In other words, while ABC’s average deliveries were off 29% compared to NBC’s 1998 average, its household rating was off by nearly half (-47%). That OOH has had such a demonstrable impact on live-sports impressions is particularly noteworthy, as it was former ESPN ad sales chief Ed Erhardt who brokered the very first OOH deal with a media-buying agency—and in so doing, kicked open the door to a long overlooked subset of fans.
In 2018, Rita Ferro succeeded the retiring Erhardt as the ESPN sales boss under a new title (president, Disney ad sales). Last year, Ferro’s team generated $4.44 billion in ad sales at the sports unit alone, as the ESPN unit raked in $10.8 billion in total revenue.
While Disney’s NBA sales numbers are still being tallied, media buyers expect data to show that this year’s series blew past the $288 million in advertising ABC captured with the seven-game Pacers-Thunder Finals in 2025. Scatter rates for Game 5 were said to have reached up to $1.4 million per 30-second unit, while spots secured in the 2025-26 upfront bazaar came in at around $850,000 a pop over the length of the series.
As a bonus, Disney gets to keep all the ad money it took in during the Finals, as not a single compensatory makegood unit had to be put into service to placate advertisers.
The massive crowds whipped up by the Knicks and Spurs effectively guarantees that three NBA games will land on the list of the 100 most-watched broadcasts of 2026. The last time an NBA broadcast earned a place in that lineup was in 2019, when Games 5 and 6 of the Raptors-Warriors series broke the 18.3 million-viewer mark.
Running back Breece Hall is in New Jersey for the Jets' minicamp this week, but he took some time out of preparing for the 2026 season by taking a trip to San Antonio for Game 5 of the NBA Finals last weekend.
Hall was in the building to watch the Knicks end a 53-year title drought with a 94-90 win that sealed a 4-1 series win over the Spurs. The Jets have an even longer title drought to go along with their current 15-season streak of missing the playoffs, which led Hall to express some envy about what the Knicks were able to experience this season.
“I congratulated them and I was just like, I can’t wait to have that feeling,” Hall said, via Dennis Waszak of the Associated Press. “So, definitely positive jealousy because it’s like, damn, I want my team to be able to do that as well. It was definitely very cool to see.”
The Knicks will be celebrated at a parade in Lower Manhattan on Thursday and Hall will have plenty of company among Jets players and fans fantasizing about finding themselves in the same place at some point in the future.
The scoreboard ahead of an NBA game between the Indiana Pacers and the Los Angeles Lakers, at the Great Western Forum in Inglewood, California, 16th December 1990. Aside from the teams and adverts, the screen reads 'You Game Announcer Lawrence Tanter'; the Lakers won the game 112-115. (Photo by Bongarts/Getty Images) | Getty Images
One of the staples of the Lakers over the last four decades has been legendary PA announcer Lawrence Tanter. However, a new voice will echo through Crypto.com Arena moving forward.
On Tuesday, the Lakers announced that Tanter would be moving to the role of Special Advisor for Game Presentation, stepping down from his PA announcer position.
The team’s statement included a quote from Jeanie Buss:
“Lawrence Tanter has been an integral part of the Lakers gameday experience for more than four decades, setting the tone for countless memorable moments with his professionalism, energy and signature booming voice. Since the 1980s, LT has narrated every chapter of Lakers basketball, connecting generations of fans, players, coaches and staff while becoming a trusted and unforgettable part of the Lakers experience. I am incredibly grateful for everything he has given to this franchise.”
Tanter did not serve as the team’s PA announcer during the playoffs. According to Dave McMenamin of ESPN, that came after he suffered a stroke in March.
Tanter suffered a stroke in March, sources told ESPN, causing him to miss the Lakers’ last six home games of the regular season, plus the playoffs. Tanter continues to rehab from the health setback, sources said. Jason Barquero, the P.A. announcer for the Lakers’ G League affiliate, finished the season in Tanter’s absence.
Tanter began his time as the PA announcer in 1982 and has been the constant, booming voice in The Forum and Staples Center throughout the years. Even in 2020, Tanter recorded introductions to play in the playoffs to provide a needed sense of normalcy for fans.
The team has not announced a successor.
Speaking on behalf of all Lakers fans, here’s to the best for Tanter in life after the Lakers. Home games won’t be the same without him around.
NEW YORK (AP) — Jalen Brunson and the New York Knicks' 94-90 victory over the San Antonio Spurs on Saturday night to capture their first NBA title in 53 years averaged 24.5 million viewers on ABC and ESPN, making it the most watched Game 5 since 1998.
The audience peaked at 33 million, as Brunson was putting the wraps on a 45-point performance as the Knicks rallied from a 10-point deficit in the fourth quarter.
The finals averaged 20.6 million according to Nielsen, the highest since ABC and ESPN started carrying it in 2003. It is only the third time since 1999, the finals have averaged at least 20 million.
Golden State's victory over Cleveland in five games in 2017 averaged 20.47 million while the 2016 finals, where the Cavaliers defeated the Warriors in seven games, averaged 20.2 million.
Last year's finals between Oklahoma City and Indiana averaged 10.31 million across seven games.
The 1998 series between Chicago and Utah, where Michael Jordan won his sixth and final NBA title, averaged 29.04 million in six games.