Dennis Schroder reacts to Kings contract agreement on Twitch live stream

Dennis Schroder reacts to Kings contract agreement on Twitch live stream originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Dennis Schröder is looking forward to new beginnings in Sacramento.

The veteran NBA point guard, whom the Kings reportedly signed to a three-year, $45 million contract in free agency, shared a live reaction to the signing on a recent Twitch stream.

“I heard the city of Sacramento is pretty nice,” Schröder said. “Warm weather, so we’re going to be straight. Heard there’s a family affair over there. Three years. Three big years. Shout out to the Sacramento Kings, man. I appreciate it. That’s big time.”

Schröder, who turns 32 in September, has averaged 13.9 points on 43.2-percent shooting from the field and 34.2 percent from 3-point range, with 2.9 rebounds and 4.9 assists in 27.3 minutes.

He bounced around three different teams last season, beginning with the Brooklyn Nets before being traded to the Golden State Warriors and then finishing the season strong with a playoff run with the Detroit Pistons.

During Detroit’s first-round playoff series against the New York Knicks, Schröder was a strong contributor for a fairly young and inexperienced Pistons squad. In 27.3 minutes through six games, he averaged 12.5 points on 49.1-percent shooting from the field and 47.6 percent from long range, with 2.3 rebounds, 3.7 assists and 1.2 steals.

“To Detroit, appreciate them for having me, embracing me,” Schröder said. “It was great.”

But now, he’s ready to apply his services to where they’re needed with the Kings.

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Dennis Schroder reacts to Kings contract agreement on Twitch live stream

Dennis Schroder reacts to Kings contract agreement on Twitch live stream originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Dennis Schröder is looking forward to new beginnings in Sacramento.

The veteran NBA point guard, whom the Kings reportedly agreed to sign to a three-year, $45 million contract in free agency, shared a live reaction to the agreement on a recent Twitch stream.

“I heard the city of Sacramento is pretty nice,” Schröder said. “Warm weather, so we’re going to be straight. Heard there’s a family affair over there. Three years. Three big years. Shout out to the Sacramento Kings, man. I appreciate it. That’s big time.”

Schröder, who turns 32 in September, has averaged 13.9 points on 43.2-percent shooting from the field and 34.2 percent from 3-point range, with 2.9 rebounds and 4.9 assists in 27.3 minutes.

He bounced around three different teams last season, beginning with the Brooklyn Nets before being traded to the Golden State Warriors, and then finishing the season strong with a playoff run with the Detroit Pistons.

During Detroit’s first-round playoff series against the New York Knicks, Schröder was a strong contributor for a fairly young and inexperienced Pistons squad. In 27.3 minutes through six games, he averaged 12.5 points on 49.1-percent shooting from the field and 47.6 percent from long range, with 2.3 rebounds, 3.7 assists and 1.2 steals.

“To Detroit, appreciate them for having me, embracing me,” Schröder said. “It was great.”

But now, he’s ready to apply his services to where they’re needed with the Kings.

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Report: Kings ‘unlikely' to sign Russell Westbrook after not trading Malik Monk

Report: Kings ‘unlikely' to sign Russell Westbrook after not trading Malik Monk originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

It appears the Kings are unlikely to sign free agent point guard Russell Westbrook.

Sacramento’s interest in Westbrook decreased after not being able to find a trade partner for Malik Monk, per NBA insider Chris Haynes, which would have freed up the necessary cap space.

“Russell Westbrook, I thought he would end up in Sacramento,” Chris Haynes said. “But the Kings were unable to unload Malik Monk, and so Westbrook, I’m told, is unlikely to wind up in Sacramento.”

However, sources told NBC Sports California’s Tristi Rodriguez that Monk’s future in Sacramento remains murky.

The nine-time NBA All-Star is coming off a solid season with the Denver Nuggets and will be one of the most intriguing players in the free-agent market. The 36-year-old had plenty of brilliant offensive moments last year in Denver and would be a significant asset for any team that signs him.

The Kings are looking to retool their roster this offseason after trading De’Aaron Fox to the San Antonio Spurs in February. Adding another legitimate scoring threat alongside Domantas Sabonis and DeMar DeRozan is a big priority for Sacramento this offseason, so the franchise will look elsewhere in the market now. The team accomplished part of that goal in signing Dennis Schröder, but appears to still be on the lookout for another player or two.

There still is the potential for the Kings to make a trade for Golden State Warriors forward Jonathan Kuminga, as NBA contributor Jake Fischer reported that the Kings would be interested in including Monk in any outgoing trade package but nothing has materialized yet with the Warriors.

Given the remaining options left after two days of NBA free agency, general manager Scott Perry will have to reassess what’s feasible.

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NBA rumors: Knicks expected to hire Mike Brown as Tom Thibodeau replacement

NBA rumors: Knicks expected to hire Mike Brown as Tom Thibodeau replacement originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Mike Brown is set for a fresh start. 

The New York Knicks are expected to hire the former Kings head coach to replace Tom Thibodeau, ESPN’s Shams Charania reported on Wednesday, citing sources.

The move comes two days after it was reported that Brown had emerged as a “strong candidate” for the head coaching vacancy in New York, who fired Thibodeau on June 3 after the Knicks were eliminated from the Eastern Conference Finals against the Indiana Pacers.

Brown, the unanimous NBA Coach of the Year in 2022-23 after helping Sacramento end the longest playoff drought in league history, was fired in late December after suffering a winless five-game homestand at Golden 1 Center.

Brown was replaced by then-intern Doug Christie, who guided Sacramento to a 27-24 record and the Western Conference’s No. 9 seed. In late April, the Kings announced Christie as the franchise’s head coach.

Brown, who signed a multiyear contract extension with Sacramento five months before getting fired, is 454-304 in 11 seasons as an NBA head coach. 

The 55-year-old now is tasked with leading a highly talented Knicks squad on another deep NBA playoffs run. 

An exciting coaching chapter awaits Brown in the Big Apple.

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Would Damian Lillard make sense for Celtics amid reported interest?

Would Damian Lillard make sense for Celtics amid reported interest? originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

We have another potential plot twist in the Boston Celtics’ franchise-altering offseason.

The Milwaukee Bucks made the stunning decision Tuesday to waive All-Star guard Damian Lillard, stretching the $112.6 million remaining on his contract over the next five years to free up cap space to sign former Indiana Pacers big man Myles Turner in free agency.

While Lillard tore his Achilles tendon in the first round of the 2025 playoffs and is expected to miss most or all of the 2025-26 season, several teams are interested in signing the nine-time All-Star now that he’s a free agent — one of which, it appears, is the Celtics.

The Celtics, Golden State Warriors and Los Angeles Lakers are “known to be among the many teams that would have interest in doing a deal (with Lillard) sooner rather than later,” The Athletic’s Eric Nehm, Sam Amick, and Joe Vardon reported Wednesday.

Boston has been busy shedding salary and getting younger this summer, parting with Jrue Holiday (trade), Kristaps Porzingis (trade) and Luke Kornet (free agency) while acquiring 26-year-old Luka Garza and 22-year-old Josh Minott in free agency.

So, why are the Celtics interested in a 34-year-old veteran who just suffered a devastating injury?

For starters, the C’s actually could make the financials work, since Lillard will be earning $22.5 million per year from the Bucks and likely won’t demand a hefty contract while he works back from his injury.

Assuming they get under the second apron of the luxury tax — they’re currently over that threshold by less than $1 million after adding Garza and Minott — the Celtics could give Lillard the veteran minimum in 2025-26 (roughly $3.6 million), then re-sign him under the nontaxpayer midlevel exception (roughly $5.9 million) in 2026-27.

Under that scenario, the 2025-26 season likely would be a wash with Celtics star Jayson Tatum also sidelined due to a ruptured Achilles. But in 2026-27, Boston could roll out a lineup featuring a tantalizing “Core Four” of Lillard, Derrick White, Jaylen Brown and Tatum, with the flexibility to add supporting pieces and make another serious championship run. (If the C’s part ways with Sam Hauser, they wouldn’t have any player making more than $10 million in 2026-27 outside Tatum, Brown and White.)

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That’s the case for signing Lillard — but there’s a strong case against as well.

While Lillard put up impressive stats for the Bucks last season — 24.9 points and 7.1 assists per game; 37.6 percent 3-point rate — he’ll be 36 years old entering the 2026-27 season and won’t have played in 18 months assuming he misses all of next season. Lillard has missed at least 24 games in three of the last four seasons, so the Celtics would be taking a big risk in hoping he’s healthy and productive in 2026-27.

Acquiring Lillard also would give Boston essentially a one-year title window with the Lillard-White-Brown-Tatum quartet, as Lillard likely would demand a much richer contract if he produces in 2026-27. Do the Celtics want to put all of their eggs in that basket, or maintain their flexibility and continue to get younger around Tatum, Brown and White?

The former path is high-reward but high-risk, which is why the latter path seems more likely for president of basketball operations Brad Stevens and the Celtics.

NBA rumors: Warriors interested in signing Damian Lillard sooner than later

NBA rumors: Warriors interested in signing Damian Lillard sooner than later originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Could another longtime NBA superstar soon join the Warriors?

Golden State, which, at the time of this writing, has yet to make a move in NBA free agency, could add a future Naismith Basketball Hall of Famer to the mix, but there’s a catch.

Superstar point guard Damian Lillard, who shockingly was waived by the Milwaukee Bucks in a short-term cost-cutting move Tuesday, is receiving interest from a handful of NBA teams, including the Warriors.

Lillard received calls from Golden State, the Boston Celtics and the Los Angeles Lakers, who are among the many teams that would be interested in signing Lillard sooner rather than later, The Athletic’s Sam Amick, Eric Nehm and Joe Vardon reported in a story Wednesday, citing league sources.

The catch is that the 34-year-old Lillard suffered a devastating torn left Achilles in Game 4 of the Bucks’ first-round playoff series on April 28 and likely will be sidelined most, if not all, of the 2025-26 NBA season.

After waiving Lillard, the Bucks now will take the two years and $113 million he had left on his contract and stretch it out over the next five in order to create immediate cap space, which they since have used to reportedly come to an agreement with free-agent center Myles Turner.

That means, with the Bucks set to pay the remainder of Lillard’s contract, approximately $22.5 million in each of the next five seasons, the veteran guard can sign with a team for a minimum-salary contract ($3.6 million) as he continues to rehab before eventually returning to the court, either at the end of next season or in the following season.

“The question is whether [Lillard] wants to sign with a team now and rehabilitate while under their care or wait until next summer to reassess the situation,” Amick, Nehm and Vardon wrote. “The Bucks, who will have to operate with Lillard’s money clogging their books for the next five seasons, are banking on this latest roll of the dice paying off.”

Lillard was limited to 58 games during the 2024-25 regular season, but averaged 24.9 points, 4.7 rebounds and 7.1 assists per game on 44.8-percent shooting from the field and 37.6 percent from 3-point range as the second scoring option to superstar forward Giannis Antetokounmpo.

The nine-time NBA All-Star grew up in Oakland, and after competing against the Warriors for years while a member of the Portland Trail Blazers, might it be time for the Bay Area native to return home?

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After slow start to free agency, where do Lakers, LeBron James go from here?

Two things have made the first 48 hours of free agency unusual for LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers.

First, the Lakers have started slowly. It's no secret Los Angeles entered free agency looking for a center, but players it was linked to have already found new homes with more aggressive teams — Brook Lopez is just across town with the Clippers. Nobody was as aggressive as the Bucks in finding a way to get Myles Turner out of Indiana. Clint Capela is back in Houston.

The Lakers are talking to agents. The names we hear now, maybe they get Al Horford, or maybe Deandre Ayton. You can feel Luka Doncic's eyes rolling.

LeBron not Lakers’ focus

Second, for the first time in his career, LeBron James and his wishes are not the most important thing to his team during the offseason. The Lakers' focus is on transitioning to a team built to optimize Doncic's skills — LeBron is a part of that, but not the primary focus.

In years past, LeBron opted out of the player option at the end of his contract and used that as leverage to persuade the team to add talent. Passive-aggressive statements from him or those around him are the norm.

This year, LeBron opted in to the $52.6 million he is owed — he's a Laker. The franchise doesn't have to do anything to appease him. When opting in, his longtime friend and agent, Rich Paul released this statement to ESPN:

"LeBron wants to compete for a championship. He knows the Lakers are building for the future. He understands that, but he values a realistic chance of winning it all. We are very appreciative of the partnership that we've had for eight years with Jeanie [Buss] and Rob [Pelinka] and consider the Lakers as a critical part of his career.

"We understand the difficulty in winning now while preparing for the future. We do want to evaluate what's best for LeBron at this stage in his life and career. He wants to make every season he has left count, and the Lakers understand that, are supportive and want what's best for him."
That's a little more than passive-aggressive.

Where do Lakers, LeBron go from here?

Combine Paul's statement with the slow start to free agency and…

Probably nothing. LeBron can be frustrated with the Lakers, with the team's transition to a Doncic focus (even if he gets why), and especially with the slow start to free agency, but there isn't some utopia out there, nor is there a simple trade that would get him to a contender at full price.

LeBron wants to be on a contender, he wants to play meaningful games — and meaningful playoff games — and be in the heart of the conversation. Additionally, LeBron has consistently sought to maximize his revenue. LeBron opted and will get paid. That means if he asks for a trade, his new team would have to match LeBron's salary. For example, a lot of fans tried to link him to a return to Cleveland (league sources told NBC Sports the Cavaliers are not that interested, but let's use them as a hypothetical): With a third team, a deal can be made if it's LeBron for Darius Garland and Max Strus Why would the Cavs do that, giving up young players and getting 15 years older (and arguably worse) in the short term to rent LeBron for a year or two. And trading LeBron to Cleveland is a lot less complicated than most other destinations.

LeBron, Paul, and the rest of LeBron's camp reportedly are monitoring the situation. They have every right to be frustrated with how the Lakers have moved through the first 48 hours of free agency.

But where is there a better option?

Which is why, come media day in the fall, expect LeBron in purple and gold, talking championship.

Eric Gordon inks new 1-year deal with Sixers

Eric Gordon inks new 1-year deal with Sixers  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Eric Gordon is officially still a Sixer.

The 36-year-old guard has signed a new contract, the team announced Tuesday night. Before the moratorium ends (July 6 at 12:01 p.m. ET), teams are allowed to formalize one-year, minimum-salary deals.

Gordon declined his player option but always appeared likely to remain in Philadelphia. As PHLY’s Derek Bodner detailed, hitting free agency and then re-signing will slightly raise Gordon’s 2025-26 salary while also decreasing his cap hit. 

In a career-low 19.7 minutes per game last year, Gordon averaged 6.8 points, 1.7 assists and 1.2 rebounds. He shot 40.9 percent from three-point range on 3.5 attempts per contest.

Though Gordon is clearly past his prime, the Sixers still see his outside shooting as useful. 

“Eric is a prolific shot maker whose ability to space the floor will serve our rotation well,” Sixers president of basketball operations Daryl Morey said in a team press release. “He’s been a great fit on and off the court with this organization and we’re fortunate to have him back.”

The Sixers should have several much younger guards in the mix next season, including Tyrese Maxey, Jared McCain and Gordon’s Bahamian teammate VJ Edgecombe.

Earlier Tuesday, the Sixers signed Edgecombe and Johni Broome to their rookie contracts and inked Hunter Sallis to his two-way deal. All three practiced at the Sixers’ summer league minicamp, which is set to run through Wednesday ahead of the team’s trip to the Salt Lake City summer league.

Eric Gordon inks new 1-year deal with Sixers

Eric Gordon inks new 1-year deal with Sixers  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Eric Gordon is officially still a Sixer.

The 36-year-old guard has signed a new contract, the team announced Tuesday night. Before the moratorium ends (July 6 at 12:01 p.m. ET), teams are allowed to formalize one-year, minimum-salary deals.

Gordon declined his player option but always appeared likely to remain in Philadelphia. As PHLY’s Derek Bodner detailed, hitting free agency and then re-signing will slightly raise Gordon’s 2025-26 salary while also decreasing his cap hit. 

In a career-low 19.7 minutes per game last year, Gordon averaged 6.8 points, 1.7 assists and 1.2 rebounds. He shot 40.9 percent from three-point range on 3.5 attempts per contest.

Though Gordon is clearly past his prime, the Sixers still see his outside shooting as useful. 

“Eric is a prolific shot maker whose ability to space the floor will serve our rotation well,” Sixers president of basketball operations Daryl Morey said in a team press release. “He’s been a great fit on and off the court with this organization and we’re fortunate to have him back.”

The Sixers should have several much younger guards in the mix next season, including Tyrese Maxey, Jared McCain and Gordon’s Bahamian teammate VJ Edgecombe.

Earlier Tuesday, the Sixers signed Edgecombe and Johni Broome to their rookie contracts and inked Hunter Sallis to his two-way deal. All three practiced at the Sixers’ summer league minicamp, which is set to run through Wednesday ahead of the team’s trip to the Salt Lake City summer league.

Winners, Losers from Bucks shocking waiving of Damian Lillard, signing Myles Turner

Myles Turner had a lot of teams coveting him heading into free agency — athletic stretch fives who can get you a couple of blocks a game protecting the rim are hard to come by. However, none of those teams had the means to sign Turner, and everyone assumed the Pacers would finally pony up and go into the tax to keep Turner alongside Tyrese Haliburton.

Indiana was not willing to pay. Then, in a cold and bold move, the Milwaukee Bucks stepped up and waived-and-stretched the $112.6 million still owed Damian Lillard — out most or all of next season with a torn Achilles — and used that money to sign Turner to a four-year, $104 million contract.

It's one of the wildest, most unexpected moves we've seen in the NBA since… Paul George and Kawhi Leonard to the Clippers (and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander to the Thunder)?

Who are the winners and losers from Tuesday's wild action? Let's break it down.

WINNER: Milwaukee Bucks (short term)

Every time over the years that Giannis Antetokounmpo has subtly tried to pressure the Bucks to upgrade their roster, hinting he might leave, they have responded. That's how the Bucks ended with Damian Lillard. However, nobody thought they could pull that off again this summer, the Bucks had already traded away most of their future draft picks, and the roster was not deep with trade assets (there isn't a big Kyle Kuzma market).

Tuesday, Milwaukee shocked the league by waiving Lillard to create space to sign Turner. Combine that with them bringing back many of their core players, and this is a team that can be a threat in the East. How does Antetokounmpo feel about that?

Here is Milwaukee's rotation:

• Kevin Porter and Gary Trent Jr. are the likely starting guards, with AJ Green behind them. The Bucks could use one more ball-handling, shot-creating guard if they are going to beat the Cavaliers and Knicks in the playoffs (they have a first-round pick and Kuzma to trade), but this is a good start.

• Kyle Kuzma starts at the three with Taurean Prince behind him.

• Giannis Antetokounmpo — Milwaukee needs MVP-level Antetokounmpo. There are good role players around him, but this is a roster he is going to have to carry in the clutch.

• Myles Turner — an absolute upgrade over Brook Lopez at this point in their respective careers — and Bobby Portis at center. Turner is basically a younger Lopez in terms of style of play. Some fans have questioned how much of an upgrade Turner is over Lopez, but recall when the Pacers and Bucks faced off in the first round of the playoffs, and Turner outplayed Lopez — to the point that Doc Rivers had to pivot and start Bobby Portis. This is an upgrade for Milwaukee.

Any team with Antetokounmpo has to be considered a playoff threat in the East, but there may be enough around him now to get back to the Finals, if things break their way. This is a good set of role players, whether they are good enough to get where the Bucks want to go is a fair question, but this is a team in the mix.

LOSER: Milwaukee Bucks (long term)

The largest waived-and-stretched contract in NBA history before Tuesday was $31 million — waving Lillard is more than triple that number. Every year for the next five seasons, the Bucks will have $22.5 million in dead money on the books — an anchor on their plans.

The Milwaukee Bucks do not control their own first-round draft pick until 2031.

Eventually, the wheels are going to fall off this bus in Milwaukee, and when they do — when Antetokounmpo eventually leaves the franchise (via retirement or to another team) — things are going to get ugly. Milwaukee is like someone just racking up loads and loads of credit card debt. That bill is going to come due, and it will take a long time to pay off. But if Antetokounmpo stays and the team gets back to the Finals, was it worth it?

WINNER: Myles Turner

Turner is a bittersweet winner. He spent 10 years in Indiana — it's the only NBA team he ever played for — and was just part of the greatest run in the franchise's NBA history, all the way to Game 7 of the NBA Finals.

Turner wanted to get paid comparable to other bigs in his range. Pacers' ownership did not want to go into the luxury tax to do it. That's when Turner's representatives got creative and found a team that did — Turner will average more than $25 million a year over the course of the next four years. That's about the going rate for a center of his caliber. It's a good deal.

And Turner jumps to another team with Finals aspirations next season — he will be competing for something.

WINNER: Damian Lillard

Damian Lillard was unhappy in Milwaukee, especially during his first year, when he was away from his family and not winning as much as he had hoped. Now? He couldn't be happier with this outcome. Check out this paragraph from The Athletic:

League sources say Lillard is elated with this decision, as it puts him in the kind of basketball-first position that few All-Star-level players, if any, have experienced in league history. In short, he'll be able to join the contending team of his choosing, either sometime soon or perhaps next summer, without the financial aspect of the decision playing a significant part.

Expect Lillard to take his time making a decision. The two teams that come up first in conversations with people around the league are Miami and Portland, but many other teams could be in play. He's not going to rush this process.

LOSER: Indiana Pacers fans

I feel for Pacers fans. I wish I could buy them all a beer.

What stings is that Turner wanted to stay, but the Pacers' ownership hesitated to go into the luxury tax. That hesitation opened the door to Turner's suitors — including Milwaukee — who were able to get their foot in the door. And here we are, with Turner gone and Tyrese Haliburton likely out all of next season with a torn Achilles.

The positives? One, Haliburton will be back, and while this season now looks like someone will hit the pause button, in two years this team can (and should) be right back in the mix in the East.

Second — this was a brilliant playoff run. Savor it. There are not enough magical moments like this for fans where — championship or not — everything comes together on the court, the team reflects and inspires the community (and the state of Indiana) around it. It's just pure, fun basketball. These Pacers were a combination of high-level basketball and entertaining in a way we all too rarely see. Don't let how it ended spoil that.

WNBA Preview: All-Star starters and snubs; Liberty look to get back on track

There is a running joke on the internet that Mondays during the WNBA season often yield the most drama and news coming out of the league and its players. There's a reason for this: often there aren’t games on Mondays, although there are some weeks this season where there are. But for the most part, Monday is typically a day when the league is dark.

Well, yesterday was an example of that trend in practice. Not only did the league announce that it will be adding three more expansion teams in addition to the two more expansion teams in Toronto and Portland that will debut next season, but there was a trade, a surprise cut from the Golden State Valkyries, and the All-Star starters for the July 19 All-Star Game in Indianapolis were announced.

The league announced that Cleveland would be awarded the WNBA’s 16th team which will begin play in 2028, Detroit would earn the 17th, officially joining in 2029 and then Philadelphia would become the 18th franchise and would begin play in 2030. All ownership groups of these three new franchises paid a $250 million expansion fee, close to five times what Joe Lacob and Peter Guber paid for the Valkyries back in 2023.

Moments after all of that pomp and circumstance at the league office, the Las Vegas Aces traded for NaLyssa Smith which sent a Las Vegas 2027 first round draft pick back to the Wings. And as a result, the Aces had to waive rookie Elizabeth Kitley and veteran Tiffany Mitchell in order to make roster and salary room for Smith.

And then the Valkyries waivedJulie Vanloo, who was away from the team competing in EuroBasket. Vanloo missed her Belgian National team’s gold medal celebration after winning EuroBasket to make sure she was back in the Bay Area as soon as possible. She got news of being released merely moments after landing back in California. While Vanloo struggled at times during her minutes on court with Golden State, there are questions about the timing of the franchise letting her know of their decision before hopping on a long 14-15 hour flight back to San Francisco.

This all happened on a Monday and that’s in addition to the day before where Angel Reese put on another career performance scoring while shooting over 52 percent from the field in addition to 16 rebounds and seven assists, nearly her second triple double. She did all of this while her former childhood idolCandace Parker was in attendance and got her jersey retired by the Sparks prior to tipoff.

Who are the 2025 WNBA All-Star starters?

Before I preview the week ahead, let’s discuss the All-Star starters which were announced on Monday evening. The two highest fan vote getters, Caitlin Clark and Napheesa Collier, were named captains and automatic starters on Sunday. And then a day later, the final eight starters were announced by two different ESPN sponsored shows.

The final eight starters were determined by the weighted combination of fan votes, media votes and player votes. Fan votes were weighed at 50 percent with the media and peer votes counting for 25 percent each.

What jumped out immediately in the league’s weighted voting results was how Clark was ranked by her peers. The players ranked Atlanta’s Allisha Gray first, New York’s Sabrina Ionescu second and then Clark ninth.

This shouldn’t be a huge surprise especially considering that Clark has only played in nine of the Fever’s total 16 games so far this season, and she’s shot the ball very inefficiently (39% overall and 29.5% from three) in addition to averaging 5.9 turnovers. But this also isn’t the first time a very popular player was ranked lower by her peers as Ionescu got similar treatment two years ago and was ranked 19th by the players.

It’s incredibly hard to argue with the eight other starters that were selected. A’ja Wilson is still putting up All-WNBA numbers even if they aren’t as impressive as they were during her otherworldly 2024 MVP season. Gray has put together close to if not the best statistical season she’s had since entering the league in 2017. Nneka Ogwumike earned her 10th All-Star selection on another incredibly efficient start to the season shooting 53.1% on 13.4 attempts per game. She’s been even more efficient than MVP front-runner Collier.

Prior to Ionescu’s recent shooting slump, she and Liberty teammate Breanna Stewart were both putting up over 20 points a game and led their team in the Liberty to a 9-0 start prior to losing Jonquel Jones to an ankle sprain and Leonie Fiebich to EuroBasket.

The Mercury’s Satou Sabally has also put up a career season so far and took the brunt of the scoring load when Alyssa Thomas was out for two weeks with a calf injury. Aliyah Boston has the highest field goal percentage (59.7) among players who play over 25 minutes a game.

And last and certainly not least, Paige Bueckers leads all rookies in points and assists per game and is third amongst rookies in field goal percentage for first-year players who play over 25 minutes a game. She is scoring the eleventh-most in the league and seventh most among guards sitting right below Ionescu and right above Clark.

Who Are The WNBA All-Star Starter Snubs?

The point is, it’s incredibly hard to make an argument against any of these players starting in the All-Star game. The one that maybe there’s an argument against might actually be Clark. Who could have replaced her just based on statistical output alone?

Skylar Diggins comes to mind immediately just based on the fact that she’s the 7th best in scoring and third in scoring among guards. Also, she’s averaging the fourth most assists and is fifth in win shares (2.5) via Her Hoop Stats. She’s fourth in field goal percentage among guards that average over 30 minutes a game (46.3).

Another guard that could have been an All-Star starter is Kelsey Plum who has put up an impressive statistical season so far even as her Los Angeles Sparks continue to struggle in their journey to make the playoffs for the first time since 2020. Plum leads all guards scoring 20.6 points a game and is sixth among guards in average assists with 5.6.

In a league dominated by versatile forwards, it’s not a surprise that there wasn’t enough room for maybe one of the most versatile in Alyssa Thomas. Thomas has put up some of the best numbers of her career, leading the league in assists (9.3) and averaging more points than she did during her 2023 season, the one where Stewart beat her out in the MVP voting. The reason Thomas missed the boat is probably because of the two weeks she missed.

The final player who I think there’s an argument for to be an All-Star starter is Brionna Jones who while she doesn’t score in the 20s like her peers, she’s accumulated 2.3 win shares, the same amount that A’ja Wilson has and a bit more than Thomas and Sabally. She and Diggins are the only players within the top seven in win shares who didn’t become All-Star starters.

It would be shocking if any of these players who weren’t named starters don’t make the final All-Star team. Right now reserves are being voted on by the WNBA’s head coaches and those results will be revealed this Sunday July 6 at 12 pm et. Just a disclaimer, head coaches cannot vote for their own players.

The Week Ahead

Since this week features the Commissioner's Cup Championship game on Tuesday night, there are fewer games to choose from. The league goes on a mini hiatus on Wednesday before picking up again on Thursday. After the Commissioner’s Cup Final takes place in Minneapolis, the majority of the games to watch out for are rematches of recent matchups. Can the Fever get revenge on the Aces and can the Liberty redeem themselves against the Storm with Fiebich back from EuroBasket?

Commissioner’s Cup Final: Indiana Fever @ Minnesota Lynx

(Tuesday July 1 at 8 p.m. ET on Prime Video)

Now that Clark has been ruled out officially, do the Fever have a shot at winning? It’s going to be a tough hill to climb for a team that almost fell to the Dallas Wings on Friday without Clark. This is the right move for Indiana looking at Clark’s long term health, but what makes this matchup worth watching is the very fact that these two teams haven’t played each other yet. The Lynx’s two losses this season came in games where they were outworked by their opponent and allowed at least 20 opponent points off their own turnovers. If the Fever play hard, they have a shot. But if the Lynx value their possessions, this should be a very winnable game and Minnesota would become the first back-to-back Commissioner’s Cup Champions in league history.

Las Vegas Aces @ Indiana Fever

(Thursday July 3 at 7 p.m. ET on Prime Video)

Even if Clark misses this game as well, it will be fascinating to see how much run newly acquired Aces forward NaLyssa Smith gets. The Aces won this matchup the first time around on June 22 with Clark on the floor for the Fever. But this will be the first test the Aces have to see if by adding Smith defenses actually guard her, which could open up more space on the floor. Las Vegas has often struggled when opposing defenses don’t even guard Kiah Stokes and load up on their other players.

Washington Mystics @ Minnesota Lynx

(Thursday July 3 at 8:00 p.m. ET on League Pass )

The Mystics will be looking for a win after dropping their latest 79-71 against the incredibly shorthanded Dallas Wings. But also the Lynx’s second loss of the season came to the Mystics on June 24. While both teams were without their best players in Napheesa Collier and Brittney Sykes, the Mystics still defended aggressively and earned that win by forcing 19 turnovers and scoring 26 points off those turnovers. Can the two-way play of versatile center Shakira Austin stifle Collier at all? If Collier struggles and the Mystics’ defense stays aggressive, I’d say this has the potential to be a really competitive game to pay attention to.

Golden State Valkyries @ Minnesota Lynx

(Saturday July 5 at 8 p.m. ET on League Pass)

The Lynx have a ton of fascinating matchups this week including one against the Valkyries. While Minnesota beat Golden State convincingly around a month ago, the Valkyries have somehow gotten better since they lost players to EuroBasket. (Presumably another reason why they waived guard Vanloo.) Following some New York Liberty struggles, the Valkyries now have the second best defense in the league which has powered them to a 2.7 net rating. Compare that to the -10.7 net rating that Golden State had when the Lynx last played the Valkyries.

Seattle Storm @ New York Liberty

(Sunday July 6 at 1:00 p.m. ET on CBS)

The New York Liberty have been going through it lately, losing four of their last five games as they continued to adjust to playing without 2024 WNBA Finals MVP Jonquel Jones and German wing Fiebich. One of those losses came to the Storm on June 22 when they only lost by 10 points 89-79. While Fiebich will most likely be available for this game and should provide more shooting and defense, it will be interesting to see how the Liberty continue to wade through their schedule before Jones returns presumably after the All-Star break. Can defeating a streaky Storm team get the defending champions back on track?

Warriors have contacted soon-to-be free agent Damian Lillard, per Marc Spears

Warriors have contacted soon-to-be free agent Damian Lillard, per Marc Spears originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Damian Lillard has been tied to the Bay his entire life, and he now could have a real shot at playing for the Warriors.

The Oakland native reportedly is being waived by the Milwaukee Bucks for the purposes of having his contract stretched, ESPN’s Shams Charania first reported on Tuesday, and that could open the door for the Warriors to add the nine-time NBA All-Star.

The Warriors are one of many teams that already have reached out to Lillard, who soon will be a free agent, Andscape’s Marc J. Spears reported Tuesday on ESPN’s “NBA Today.”

“Of the many teams that reached out to Damian Lillard, the Warriors were one of those teams,” Spears reported Tuesday.

Lillard, who just completed his 13th NBA campaign, averaged 24.9 PPG last season in 58 games played. The veteran point guard, who tore his Achilles during the Bucks’ playoff run, would be an exciting new addition for Dub Nation, assuming he can recover from his injury quickly.

“There’s some speculation that he (Lillard) could be back by the All-Star break,” Spears also reported Tuesday.

The former Trail Blazer spent 11 seasons in Portland, so he’s well acquainted with the Warriors.

Golden State has Steph Curry as its starting point guard for the next two seasons, but Lillard’s homecoming could bring them one step closer to another championship.

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Forsberg: Minott brings ‘relentless' energy, ‘elite nickname' to Celtics

Forsberg: Minott brings ‘relentless' energy, ‘elite nickname' to Celtics originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Celtics made another minor addition on Tuesday, but one that could prove to be another shrewd move by president of basketball operations Brad Stevens.

Josh Minott reportedly will sign a two-year, $5 million contract with the Celtics in free agency. The 22-year-old forward played sparingly over three seasons on the Minnesota Timberwolves bench, averaging 2.3 points, 1.0 rebounds, and 5.0 minutes over 93 career games. But according to NBC Sports Boston’s Celtics insider Chris Forsberg, those numbers don’t tell the full story about the Memphis product.

Forsberg shared his take on the Minott signing during Tuesday’s Early Edition.

“First off, dude has an elite nickname. He’s the ‘lawn mower,’ because he is relentless with his energy, and I think we’re seeing a theme here with the guys that the Celtics are bringing in, whether it’s draft or through free agency. Cutters, energy, younger guys that just bring some tenacity to the floor. They also have some versatility. Minott’s got a great leap, he’s got a decent 3-point shot.

“Look, I’m not telling you that he’s going to step in and all of a sudden blossom, but these are the chances you have to take as you’re starting to develop. You only have so many draft picks you were willing to bring in. At least there’s a little bit of established-ness with this guy in terms of what he’s been able to show at the pro level. So let’s just start rolling some dice and figuring it out.”

Minott’s “lawn mower” nickname comes from his energetic playing style and appears to stem from an interview he gave during the NBA Summer League in 2022.

Minott and big man Luka Garza have been Boston’s only reported free-agent signings so far this summer. The Celtics selected Spanish wing Hugo Gonzalez, Kentucky big man Amari Williams, and VCU guard Max Shulga during the 2025 NBA Draft. They’ve traded Jrue Holiday and Kristaps Porzingis as part of their efforts to get under the second apron of the luxury tax and lost center Luke Kornet in free agency to the San Antonio Spurs.

More moves are coming for the C’s, as the Minott signing will put them back over the second apron. Boston will continue to navigate its complicated financial situation while looking for frontcourt help, with Garza and Neemias Queta currently the only centers on the roster.

Veteran big man Al Horford remains on the free-agent market.

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How Real Madrid experience will help Hugo Gonzalez make transition to Celtics

How Real Madrid experience will help Hugo Gonzalez make transition to Celtics originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Playing on a team facing high expectations is nothing new for Boston Celtics first-round draft pick Hugo Gonzalez.

The 19-year-old forward played for Spanish powerhouse Real Madrid over the last three seasons. Whether it’s basketball or soccer, Real Madrid is always expected to be a top team and contend for titles. Seasons that end without any trophies are considered a real disappointment.

Playing in Boston is similar. Expectations, especially for the Celtics, are always pretty high. It’s an environment that not every player handles well.

But for Gonzalez, he’s confident his experience in a pressure-packed situation at Real Madrid will help him make a smooth transition to the NBA.

“The most winning franchise in the whole NBA and that’s a privilege to be part of — a franchise like this,” Gonzalez told reporters Tuesday after his introductory press conference.

“It’s more or less like what I was used to at Real Madrid. They were the most winning club in Europe, too, so having that type of transition and similarities and everything is something that is gonna be easier.”

Gonzalez also added: “For me, playing for the Madrid Academy since I was 10 (years old), I was almost like playing for a team where winning was a must every year, winning every title.

“So (I’m) pretty used to the team success. It’s the first and the main thing for the whole season. It’s nothing that I need to learn. It’s something that I already got in my DNA.”

Gonzalez averaged 5.2 points, 2.5 rebounds and 0.9 assists per game for Real Madrid last season. He’s also a good defensive player and plays with plenty of athleticism. It remains to be seen what kind of role Gonzalez will have as a rookie, but there’s a lot to like about his skill set.

And perhaps most importantly, he’s unlikely to be fazed by the bright lights of playing in Boston for the 18-time world champions.

Milwaukee Bucks waive and stretch Damian Lillard's contract, use money to sign Myles Turner

Despite expectations he would, Giannis Antetokounmpo did not request a trade out of Milwaukee this offseason, waiting for his team to make a bold move to get them back in the mix for the top of the East. Now, Milwaukee has made about as daring a move as we have seen in the NBA — and Antetokounmpo is not happy about it.

In a stunning move, the Bucks waived Damian Lillard, stretching the nearly $113 million remaining on his contract over five years to free up cap space. Lillard is expected to miss most, if not all, of next season as he rehabs from a torn Achilles suffered in the playoffs. This is a cold bit of business that will make Lillard a free agent and will result in $22.5 million of dead money on Milwaukee's salary cap for each of the next five years (this is the largest salary cap stretch in league history). Lillard was set to make $51.4 million this coming season (he still gets all that money).

Milwaukee then used the freed-up cap space from that move to sign Myles Turner away from the Pacers with a four-year, $107 million contract, all of this broken by Shams Charania of ESPN.

Turner had been central to Indiana's run to the NBA Finals, and, as a free agent, he had stated that he wanted to return to the Pacers, the only team he had ever played for in his 10-year NBA career. However, Pacers' owner Herb Simon's fear of the luxury tax (especially after the Tyrese Haliburton injury) cost them a key player.

This is a punch to the gut of Pacers fans, who just came off the high of their team's impressive and unifying run to the NBA Finals, only to have Tyrese Haliburton go down with a torn Achilles, and now to have Turner leave because ownership would not spend like a contender, even when they have a Finals team.

If you think adding Turner and pushing the Bucks closer to contention in a down Eastern Conference was going to make Antetokounmpo happy, guess again. He is a man who values relationships.

All of this leaves a lot more questions, starting with "Is Antetokounmpo unhappy enough to ask for a trade?"

Then there is "How do the Pacers rebuild this roster now by Haliburton's return?" and "Which team is willing to snap up a 34-year-old Damian Lillard coming off a torn Achilles?"