How to watch New York Knicks vs. Detroit Pistons: TV/live stream info for tonight's game

Head to Peacock and NBCSN tonight for an exciting NBA tripleheader. The action begins at 7:00 PM ET when the top two teams in the Eastern Conference — New York Knicks and Detroit Pistons — meet for the first time this season.

At 8:30 PM, the Denver Nuggets go head-to-head with the Philadelphia 76ers. At 10:00 PM, the action heats up on the West Coast with a Golden State Warriors vs LA Clippers showdown.

See below for additional information on how to watch each game and follow all of the NBA action on NBCSN and Peacock. Peacock will feature 100 regular-season games throughout the course of the 2025-2026 season.

Click here to sign up for Peacock!

New York Knicks:

The Knicks fell 130-119 on Saturday, in the team's third straight loss. Jalen Brunson scored 31 points. With 29.3 points per game this season, Brunson is on pace for career highs in scoring and field goal attempts per game (21.8)

Karl-Anthony Towns finished with 23 points and 14 rebounds in his first game back since sitting out with an illness (Jan. 2). Miles McBride scored 20 off the bench.

New York has allowed over 125 points per game over its recent three-game losing streak, but looks to bounce back tonight.

“We’ve hit a little bit of adversity, said Knicks head coach Mike Brown after Saturday's loss. "I’ve never been part of a team that has not gone through adversity throughout the course of the year ... now for us it’s about how do we respond?”

Detroit Pistons:

The Pistons defeated the Cleveland Cavaliers 114-110 yesterday afternoon, improving to a 26-9 record. Last season, the Pistons didn't earn their 26th win until February 7.

Cade Cunningham scored 27 points, 7 assists, and finished with 6 rebounds. Daniss Jenkins added 25 off the bench, and Duncan Robinson finished with 12.

The Pistons have been first in the Eastern Conference since November 7 and own the second-best record in the league behind the Oklahoma City Thunder (30-6).

RELATED:Pistons’ starters Jalen Duren, Tobias Harris to miss several games with injuries

How to watch New York Knicks vs Detroit Pistons:

  • When: Tonight, Monday, January 5
  • Where: Little Caesars Arena, Detroit, MI
  • Time: 7:00 PM ET
  • Live Stream:Peacock and NBCSN
NBA: Philadelphia 76ers at New York Knicks
Fantasy managers expected big things from Maxey, and he has delivered thus far.

What other NBA games are on tonight?

  • Denver Nuggets vs Philadelphia 76ers - 8:30 PM ET on Peacock and NBCSN
  • Golden State Warriors vs Los Angeles Clippers - 10:00 PM ET on Peacock and NBCSN
NBA: New York Knicks at San Antonio Spurs
With the holidays in the rearview mirror, the Week 12 NBA schedule is more evenly spread out.

How to watch the NBA on NBC and Peacock:

Peacock NBA Monday will stream up to three Monday night games each week throughout the regular season. Coast 2 Coast Tuesday presents doubleheaders on Tuesday nights throughout the regular season on NBC and Peacock. On most Tuesdays, an 8 p.m. ET game will be on NBC stations in the Eastern and Central time zones, and an 8 p.m. PT game on NBC stations in the Pacific and often Mountain time zones.

Check local listings each week. Both games will stream live nationwide on Peacock. NBC Sports will launch Sunday Night Basketball across NBC and Peacock on Feb. 1, 2026. For a full schedule of the NBA on NBC and Peacock, click here.

How to sign up for Peacock:

Sign up here to watch all of our LIVE sports, sports shows, documentaries, classic matches, and more. You'll also get tons of hit movies and TV shows, Originals, news, 24/7 channels, and current NBC & Bravo hits—Peacock is here for whatever you’re in the mood for.

NBA on NBC 2025-26 Schedule

Click here to see the full list of NBA games that will air on NBC and Peacock this season.

What devices does Peacock support?

You can enjoy Peacock on a variety of devices. View the full list of supported devices here.

DeMarcus Cousins blasts Steve Kerr for comments about Warriors' title chances

DeMarcus Cousins blasts Steve Kerr for comments about Warriors' title chances originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

DeMarcus Cousins didn’t mince words when discussing his former coach, Steve Kerr.

On Monday’s episode of “Run It Back” on FanDuel TV, Cousins criticized the message Kerr sent to the Warriors and their fans about the franchise’s championship outlook.

“I don’t like it one bit,” Cousins noted. “If this was a player saying this, how it would be viewed? This doesn’t instill confidence in your locker room. To me it actually shows who is the real problem in this situation.”

Kerr’s comments came during a recent appearance on the “Tom Tolbert Show,” where he pushed back on the idea that Golden State should expect to compete for championships every season.

“I just don’t want anybody to think that we’re all disillusioned and we’re thinking like, ‘Hey, we should be competing for titles year in and year out with San Antonio and Oklahoma City the next year,'” Kerr added. “That’s not realistic.”

Cousins took issue with that framing, arguing that publicly lowering expectations undermines belief within the team and reflects broader leadership concerns.

“You’re speaking down on your team,” Cousins emphasized. “You’re not really instilling confidence in this group … It’s obvious why you’re in this position that you’re in now with this group. But this type of message, this type of energy, this type of lack of confidence in your group, it’s only going to spread with the rest of the guys.”

Cousins, who spent the 2018-19 NBA season with Golden State, also questioned whether Kerr would be judged differently than a player making similar remarks.

“If the roles were reversed and this was a player speaking in this way, his name would be tarnished,” Cousins explained. “So I think the same thing applies to this coach. I disagree with everything he says.”

While Kerr emphasized perspective and process as the Warriors navigate the later stages of their dynasty, Cousins made it clear he sees the situation differently — believing that confidence, especially when spoken publicly, must start at the top.

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Four-time All-Star Trae Young working with Hawks on a trade, report says

Four-time All-Star Trae Young working with Hawks on a trade, report says originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

A new NBA star is about to be on the move.

The Atlanta Hawks are working with star guard Trae Young on a trade away from the franchise, ESPN’s Shams Charania reported Monday.

Longtime NBA insider Marc Stein added that the Washington Wizards have emerged as a potential landing spot, with a deal possibly centered around CJ McCollum‘s expiring contract.

Young, 27 and the No. 5 overall pick in 2018, has seemed to plateau with Atlanta ever since leading the team to the Eastern Conference Finals in 2018.

With the Hawks at 17-20 at the time of the report, Young has featured in just 10 games and has seen a drop in per-game averages.

He’s posting 19.3 points, 8.9 assists, 1.5 rebounds and 1.0 steals in 28.0 minutes on a 41.5/30.5/86.3 shooting split. Just last season, he averaged 24.2 points, 11.6 assists and 3.1 rebounds on a 41.1/34/87.5 split in 36.0 minutes, but Atlanta hasn’t developed into a serious contender for multiple seasons.

Despite a small sample size, Atlanta has fared better without him thus far.

A four-time All-Star, Young can still provide a team with a focal point at the 1-spot thanks to his elite playmaking, but his dip in long-range shooting numbers and playoff defense will be notable concerns.

Jalen Johnson has led Atlanta with 24 points per game, while Nickeil Alexander-Walker, 27, is averaging a career-high 20.7 points on a healthy 45/38/85 split at the guard spot.

The 2026 trade deadline is set for Thursday, Feb. 5 at 3 p.m. ET/12 p.m. PT.

Lakers lock back in on Deandre Ayton to earn comeback win against Grizzlies

Los Angeles Lakers center Deandre Ayton (5) drives the ball against Memphis Grizzlies center Christian Koloko (35) and Memphis Grizzlies guard Javon Small (10) during the second half of an NBA basketball game Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Ethan Swope)
Lakers center Deandre Ayton drives against Memphis Grizzlies center Christian Koloko, left, and guard Javon Small, right. (Ethan Swope / Associated Press)

Call it deja vu.

For the second time in three days, the Lakers played the Memphis Grizzlies at Crypto.com Arena, took a close game into the fourth quarter and pulled away late behind the scoring punch of the same three players.

Again fueled by LeBron James (26 points, 10 assists), Luka Doncic (36 points, nine rebounds, eight assists) and Jake LaRavia (26 points), the Lakers overcame a 16-point first-half deficit to win 120-114 on Sunday against the Grizzlies.

After James and Doncic each scored 30 in Friday's win that also featured a 20-point performance from LaRavia, the Lakers (22-11) won consecutive games for just the second time in five weeks.

Read more:Luka Doncic and LeBron James lead Lakers comeback to beat the Grizzlies again

Here are three takeaways from the win:

Lakers lock in on Deandre Ayton 

It wasn’t an accident that the Lakers’ first play went to Deandre Ayton. Or that the star big man got the first shot of the third. Or that teammates fed him for back-to-back dunks to help spark a run of five consecutive scoring possessions early in the second half.

After Ayton finished last Friday’s win on the bench, the 7-foot center bounced back with 15 points and eight rebounds against the Grizzlies on Sunday as the Lakers made a point to involve the big man early.

Ayton scored just four points with six rebounds during Friday’s win and watched a tight fourth quarter from the bench because, as coach JJ Redick said, backup Jaxson Hayes “was playing better.” Redick said Saturday that Ayton was “frustrated” he wasn’t getting the ball more in recent games, and his disillusionment showed up on the court.

“It's a tale as old as time for a big guy,” Redick said after Sunday’s game. “That's the reality of being a big: someone has to pass you the ball. You're not initiating the offense.”

Redick said the team identified moments where teammates could have been better at finding the former No. 1 overall pick. There were also other times when Ayton could have been more active on his own. Redick said he mostly wanted to see Ayton being active, engaged and assertive in the game.

Ayton responded by converting six of his eight shots Sunday and helping the team lock down on defense in the fourth. The Lakers clawed back from an 11-point deficit late in the third and held the Grizzlies (15-19) to just 16 points in the first 10 minutes of the fourth quarter. Ayton had two blocks in the fourth quarter.

“We're winning the right way,” Ayton said. “Bigs can't feed themselves and I just try my best to do what I can to bring effort. And I trust my playmakers out there to find me."

The Lakers had 30 assists on 38 made shots, their highest percentage of assisted field goals of the season.

Lakers clean up ‘unacceptable' execution after timeouts

Redick said Saturday the Lakers flubbed eight of their 12 after timeout plays against Memphis on Friday. They repeated two of the plays to only mess them up again. They tried one a third time and it still didn’t take.

Baffled, Redick said at practice that he chalked up the mistakes to “the holidays.”

“It's unacceptable,” James said Sunday when asked of the execution errors. “... If you mess up a play out of a timeout, that'd be another one to get you running sprints. That's just how I was brought up. It's great that we can have that type of conversation. Guys hear it, take it and take full responsibility and then come in here and be able to make that change like that, that 180 change, right away.”

The Lakers had just one mistake after a timeout Sunday, Redick noted. He said he challenged players before Sunday’s game on their execution overall, but especially their after timeout execution. It was especially strong down the stretch as the Lakers held on to improve to 12-0 in clutch-time games.

“The intent overall,” Redick said of the team’s ability to handle the simple things, “was at the very least a B-minus.”

Luka Doncic shakes off shooting slump late

Doncic watched with desperation as the shot soared through the air. When his clutch three that put the Lakers up by nine with 2:08 remaining splashed through the net, Doncic slumped his shoulders and leaned his head back in relief.

This shooting slump had been weighing on him.

Read more:Luka Doncic and LeBron James help fuel late Lakers surge in win over Grizzlies

Before hitting four of 10 three-point shots Sunday, including two in the fourth quarter to fuel the Lakers’ comeback, Doncic was 20-for-89 (22.5%) from three-point range since he returned from a two-game absence for the birth of his second daughter. His shooting Sunday was his most efficient performance from beyond the arc since Nov. 28 against Dallas when he made four of nine from three and finished with 35 points.

“It's hard with him, because he kind of gets into attack mode, and he's so good that he believes that he can make every shot,” Redick said before the game. “And in the same vein, he believes he can make every pass. And some of those decisions lead to very difficult shots, and they lead to very difficult passes that oftentimes lead to turnovers. … Coach K [Mike Krzyzewski] used to talk about Bobby Hurley all the time. His player trait was 'daring.' And when you have a daring player, you have to be willing to live with some stuff.”

Despite shooting almost a career-worst 31.7% from three this season, Doncic is still leading the league in scoring with 33.7 points per game. He is getting to the free throw line more than ever in his career, averaging 12.1 attempts per game. He was 12 for 13 on Sunday.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Knicks feeling Josh Hart's absence during current losing skid

The Knicks looked like they were marching towards the East’s first seed a week ago, but have since dropped three games in uncharacteristic fashion. It’s only their second losing streak of the young season, but it’s putting them in danger of slipping to the third seed or beyond with a tough opponent and travel sled ahead. 

There’s plenty of causes for the slide -- injuries and fatigue chief among them -- but perhaps none more glaring than Josh Hart’s absence due to a sprained right ankle. He turned it on Christmas Day, and despite pulling out the win, his team hasn’t looked the same without him since. 

It’s a testament to and necessary reminder of his value after fans were ready to call his number in the trade machine during a slow start to the year. He’s been a pivotal piece of this core’s success and this isn’t a championship team without him.

As a reminder, New York traded for Hart near the 2022-23 deadline, and he was an immediate impact addition on the court and to the locker room. The Knicks immediately rattled off nine straight wins after acquiring him, and his monster play in the first round was crucial in helping them advance over the Cleveland Cavaliers. 

In his first full season with the franchise, Hart had to step up as a starter after Julius Randle went down with a season-ending shoulder injury, and he responded with averages of 12 points, 10.6 rebounds and 5.8 assists. He was once again key in the postseason, averaging 14.5 points and 11.5 rebounds, while hitting some of the biggest shots of his team’s run. 

Hart delivered more of the same last season, shouldering a ridiculous 37.6 minutes per game and adjusting to a new frontcourt mate without losing a step. He had another strong playoffs, including two 20-point games and a triple-double in the Knicks’ upset series over the Celtics.

Coming into this year, Hart re-aggravated a finger injury, forcing him to play with a splint and through some discomfort. It took four games of struggle and some angry tweets, but since then Hart’s put up 13.8 points, 8.4 rebounds and 5.4 assists on 60 percent shooting from two and 41.7 percent from three, which would be a career high. 

Box score numbers don’t quite do his game justice of course. When Hart gets going he breathes a new life into the Knicks, and he can do it from any position, and whether starting or coming off the bench. 

His standout skill is rebounding, and he’s a large reason the Knicks are top 10 in offensive and defensive rebound rates. Hart’s ability to push off defensive boards opens up the Knicks to many transition opportunities not otherwise afforded, ones they’ve missed in recent contests. 

Even in the halfcourt, his connectivity and creativity can turn nothing possessions into something. This Knicks offense has looked much more jagged without Hart there as an added facilitator.

The hole is extending to the defense, where the Knicks have been borderline lifeless. It may be a coincidence this has happened as they lost their number one energy guy, but it’s doubtful.

Hart may not be their best defender, but he’s able to credibly guard up to four positions and is reliable when it comes to following scheme and bringing the right approach. Not having those momentum-turning hustle and backbreaking plays makes it tougher to fight through a deficit. 

His shooting has been the most impressive part of his game, a complete departure in accuracy and volume despite the injury on his shooting hand. Hart being willing and able to shoot catch-and-shoot threes has changed the way defenses treat him and supercharged this Knicks offense when he’s on the court. 

The good news for Knicks fans is Hart has begun light court work and will be re-evaluated in a week’s time, the team said late last week. This makes his return somewhat imminent, and this time around should make the New York faithful eternally grateful.

Does Jaylen Brown have a real case for best two-way player in the NBA?

Does Jaylen Brown have a real case for best two-way player in the NBA? originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Fresh off matching his career high in scoring with a 50-point outburst against the Los Angeles Clippers on Saturday night, Jaylen Brown boldly declared his belief that he is the best two-way player in the world.

Brown is now averaging 30.1 points per game for the Boston Celtics this season, ranking fourth in the NBA in scoring. Few would quibble with any suggestion that he’s among the very elite at scoring the basketball. 

And with all due respect to the 500 NBA players lingering down the list of the league’s leading scorers (and to all the recreational hoopers worldwide still waiting for their call-ups), it seems fair to suggest that Brown simply needs to be the best defender among the NBA’s other top bucket-getters to lay claim to the “best two-way player in the world” championship belt.

For the purposes of this exercise, we’re narrowing our field to Brown’s chief competition for another lofty NBA honor: Most Valuable Player. We’re crunching his defensive metrics compared to Oklahoma City’s Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the Los Angeles Lakers’ Luka Doncic, Detroit’s Cade Cunningham, New York’s Jalen Brunson, and Philadelphia’s Tyrese Maxey. 

Squeezed out here are Giannis Antetokounmpo, Nikola Jokic, and Victor Wembanyama, who are all uncertain to reach the NBA’s 65-game threshold for award voting due to injuries. All three could make strong cases as the best two-way players in the world based on their overall impacts, but the top two-way player has to hit 65 games for this debate.

The case for Brown centers on the caliber of opponent he frequently defends. His declaration came Saturday night after he logged a game-high in matchup time against a previously white-hot Kawhi Leonard, and limited him to nine points on 3-of-7 shooting over seven minutes of matchup time. 

Over at the stat-crunching site BBall Index, they group players into six tiers based on usage to monitor how much time players spend defending various tiers of talent. A high usage rate doesn’t immediately confirm superstar talent, but if you look at this year’s usage leaders, there are very few outliers among the stars who dominate the top of the list. 

Brown not only logs the highest percentage of Tier 1 matchups compared to our field, but nearly 57 percent of his total defensive time is spent against players in Tiers 1-3. By comparison, that number sits just south of 36 percent for someone like Brunson (the worst among our candidates).

The closest player to Brown in terms of defending Tiers 1-3 is Cunningham, with 44.7 percent of his assignments there.

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The folks at BBall Index also have a metric tracking the percentage of defensive possessions that players specifically match up against the opponent’s star player.

Yet again, Brown is decidedly ahead of the field: 

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Simply logging a bunch of time against elite players doesn’t necessarily confirm defensive ability. But it does show some level of trust. In attempt to gauge how our MVP candidates are faring as defenders, we decided to examine how these players are faring with their defensive assignments compared to expected output.

Here’s a look at how the MVP candidates are impacting shot efficiency this season, with defensive field goal percentage (DFG%), expected output by the defended player (xFG%), and the resulting differential. Also listed is where the player ranks in differential among the 127 qualified players who have defended an average of 10+ shots per game with 25+ games played this season.

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Defensive data is noisy, and how the NBA assigns “closest defender” can often be maddening. ESPN’s Bobby Marks noted in a social media post Sunday that, based on GeniusIQ tracking, Brown is holding opponents to 39.37 percent shooting as the closest defender, ranking second among the 111 players who have defended at least 300 field goal attempts this year. Brown ranked behind only Oklahoma City’s Cason Wallace, but one spot ahead of Wembanyama.

Given his willingness to defend top opposing talent and the individual success he’s enjoyed this season, it doesn’t seem far-fetched for Brown to declare himself the best two-way player in the world. Given the difficulty in quantifying defensive impact, it’s a very subjective claim.

The bigger question to us is whether Brown’s impact on both ends of the court this season might vault him further into the MVP conversation. For most of the year, he’s lived on the periphery. But the injury woes for Jokic and Wembanyama have opened the door a bit for Brown’s contention.

The Celtics are outkicking most preseason expectations, and Brown is spearheading their play at both ends of the floor. Saturday’s outburst put him on the MVP radar for anyone who was sleeping on his impact this season.

The challenge for him is to keep it up for another 50 games and see if voters will consider him for the season’s loftiest award, because he is in fact one of the best two-way players in the game. 

Booker scores in final second as Suns beat Thunder

Devin Booker of the Phoenix Suns drives the ball past Cason Wallace
The Suns had lost their previous eight games against the Thunder [Getty Images]

Devin Booker scored with 0.7 seconds remaining as the Phoenix Suns beat defending NBA champions the Oklahoma City Thunder 108-105.

The Thunder led 100-94 with four minutes left, but Booker, who finished with 24 points, nine assists and six rebounds, ended their four-game unbeaten run with his only three-pointer.

Jordan Goodwin recorded career highs of 26 points and eight three-pointers, while Suns team-mate Dillon Brooks scored 14 of his 22 points in the fourth quarter at Mortgage Matchup Center in Phoenix.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 25 points, Jalen Williams contributed 23 and Chet Holmgren recorded 18 and nine rebounds for the Thunder, who still have the best record in the Western Conference with 30 wins and six defeats.

The Suns, who are seventh in the West, were thumped 138-89 by the Thunder in the quarter-finals of the NBA Cup in December.

Fantasy Basketball Week 12 Schedule Guide: Smart Starts & Streams

Smart roster management can be the difference between winning and losing in fantasy basketball, and it all starts with understanding the weekly schedule. In this article, we break down the upcoming Week 12 slate to help you fly up the fantasy basketball rankings by identifying ideal streaming days and prioritizing the teams worth targeting. We'll highlight light-schedule dates to exploit, squads with heavy workloads to lean into and the best matchups to attack based on defensive trends. Whether you're chasing counting stats, planning short-term adds or setting weekly lineups, this guide will help you squeeze every possible edge out of the week ahead.

Days with fewer than six games

These are dates to target players for streaming options from the following teams: 

Thursday, January 8 - IND at CHA, CLE at MIN, MIA at CHI, DAL at UTA

Teams with more than three games this week

Make sure to activate players and target weekly pickups from the following teams:

Hawks, Celtics, Hornets, Bulls, Nuggets, Warriors, Rockets, Clippers, Grizzlies, Heat, Timberwolves, Pelicans, Knicks, Thunder, Magic, 76ers, Suns, Trail Blazers, Spurs, Raptors, Jazz, Wizards

Teams with fewer than three games this week

Consider looking for streaming options if your roster includes players from these teams:

N/A

Top teams to target based on favorable matchups

Rockets vs. Suns, at Trail Blazers, at Trail Blazers, at Kings 

The Rockets are 5-5 in their last 10 games but have a good chance to build momentum in Week 11. They begin with a matchup against the Suns, a team they defeated by almost 20 points in early-December. The Suns give up the league's seventh-most offensive rebounds and sixth-most turnovers per game, which likely means that guys like Tari Eason, Amen Thompson and Jabari Smith will pad their stats on both ends of the floor. Up next, the Rockets clash with the Trail Blazers, who give up the league's eighth-most points and fourth-most free throws per game. They also give up the league's most turnovers per game, leaving plenty of opportunity for score-first players like Kevin Durant and Reed Sheppard to help take control. Finally, the Rockets close their week against the struggling Kings, who are giving up the league's fourth-most points and sixth-most free throws per game, providing an opportunity for Josh Okogie and Dorian Finney-Smith to possibly benefit from some extra playing time. 

Pelicans vs. Lakers, at Hawks, at Wizards, at Magic

The Pelicans sit last place in the West and have dropped seven straight games. However, this week provides a good opportunity to make up ground, as they are lined up against a few of the league's most troubled defenses. They start the week against the Lakers, whogive up the league's third-highest field-goal percentage, including the second-highest three-point shooting percentage, along with the league's fifth-most turnovers per game. Trey Murphy, who thrives as a long-range shooter and is averaging 1.6 steals per game, is the ideal candidate to take control. Up next, the Pelicans encounter the Hawks, who give up the league's sixth-most points per game, including the eighth-most points in the paint, which should allow room for Derik Queen and Zion Williamson to pick up steam. They then look ahead to a meeting with the Wizards, who are giving up the league's second-most points and fifth-most three-pointers per game, while their last game of the week features the Magic, an opponent that is giving up the league's eighth-highest field-goal percentage, along with the league's fourth-most points per game to opposing point guards. Both of the final two matchups provide an environment where Jeremiah Fears can shine, as the rookie has already hit the 20-point mark eight times this season. 

Thunder vs. Hornets, vs. Jazz, at Grizzlies, vs. Heat, 

The Thunder sit first in the West and are likely to build on their position in Week 11. They open against the Hornets, who give up the league's third-highest shooting percentage, followed by a meeting with the Jazz, who give up the league's most points, most made threes and third-most turnovers per game. These should be relatively easy for the squad that is averaging 121.9 points per game, led by 32.1 points, including 2.1 made three-pointers and 1.5 steals per game from Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. Up next, they clash with the Grizzlies, who give up the league's sixth-most three-pointers per game, which should allow Ajay Mitchell, who averages 1.1 made threes per game, and Aaron Wiggins, who averages 1.8 made threes per game, to keep it up from deep. The Thunder finish the week against the Heat, who give up the league's fourth-most rebounds, including the fourth-most offensive rebounds per game, a matchup where Chet Holmgren and Jalen Williams will have to take charge. 

Magic at Wizards, at Nets, vs. 76ers, vs. Pelicans

The Magic begin the week against the Wizards, who give up the league's most rebounds and offensive rebounds, along with the fourth-most turnovers per game. Paolo Banchero, who averages 21.0 points, 8.6 rebounds and 4.7 assists per game, should be the one to lead the charge and get the week off to a good start. Up next, the Magic meet the Nets, who are giving up the league's ninth-most points in the paint, along with the fourth-most turnovers per game, making Wendell Carter and Goga Bitadze likely candidates to derive the most out of the matchup. Moving ahead, an encounter with the 76ers, who are playing well lately but are giving up the league's ninth-most rebounds per game, along with the league's eighth-most points to opposing centers, which means the three aforementioned Magic bigs will have to work hard to help build an advantage. The Magic close the week against the Pelicans, an opponent that gives up the league's third-most points, including the second-most made three-pointers per game, giving Desmond Bane and Anthony Black a prime chance to get hot. The Pelicans also give up the third-most points in the paint and third-most offensive rebounds per game. 

Warriors at Clippers, vs. Bucks, vs. Kings, vs. Hawks 

The Warriors have won six of their last 10 games and should be looking to make the most of a few winnable matchups in Week 11. They begin against the Clippers, who give up the league's fourth-highest three-point shooting percentage, which certainly favors Stephen Curry, but might also allow guys like Brandin Podziemski, Will Richard or Moses Moody to step up as an X-factor. Next, the Warriors clash with the Bucks, who give up the league's fifth-most free throws per game, an ideal chance for Jimmy Butler, who averages the league's eighth-most free throws per game, to prosper. Moving on, a meeting with the Kings, who give up the league's second-most points in the paint, along with the highest field-goal percentage and sixth-most rebounds per game. Then lastly, a tilt with the Hawks, who give up the league's fifth-most rebounds per game, including the sixth-most offensive rebounds. The final two matchups provide the opportunity for Warriors bigs, Draymond Green, Quinten Post and Trayce Jackson-Davis, to pad their stats and help lead the way.

Luka Doncic and LeBron James lead Lakers comeback to beat the Grizzlies again

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - JANUARY 04: LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers takes a shot against Jock Landale #31 of the Memphis Grizzlies in the first half at Crypto.com Arena on January 04, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. 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 Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)
LeBron James contributed 26 points and 10 assists as the Lakers overcame a 16-point, second-quarter deficit to secure the win. (Ronald Martinez / Getty Images)

They met two days prior to Sunday night’s encounter at Crypto.com Arena, a two-game set between the Lakers and Memphis Grizzlies reminiscent of a playoff series.

The Lakers won the first game Friday night here and knew the Grizzlies were going to bring more intensity and a stronger effort even with star guard Ja Morant (right calf contusion) not playing.

And that was the case, the Lakers falling behind by 16 points in the second quarter, the Grizzlies ramping it up in a big way. But with Luka Doncic, LeBron James and Jake LaRavia leading the way, the Lakers pulled out a 120-114 win and improved to 12-0 in clutch games.

“They played exceptional basketball in the first half when we knew we were going to get their best shot, especially after the playoff-type of format,” said LeBron James, who had 26 points, 10 assists to go along with seven rebounds. “The team always make the adjustments coming to the next game, better prepared. So, I think it's just in the second half, we started to crack the code a little bit. Was able to get the lead down in the third. They kind of broke away a little bit again, but we just kept at it out there and was able to have a great fourth quarter.”

Doncic almost had a triple-double with 36 points, nine rebounds and eight assists. LaRavia, starting in the absence of Rui Hachimura, had 26 points, five rebounds and four assists. It was the second straight time LaRavia, who came in averaging 9.1 points, scored 20-plus. HIs defense also was on point again, another sign of LaRavia’s development and a role he has been able to fill for the Lakers.

“I just feel like I’m a player where when you tell me the things that you want me to do I’m going to just go out there and do them,” said LaRavia, who was nine-for-16 from the field and four-for-10 from three-point range. “I’ve had plenty of conversations with (Lakers coach) JJ (Redick), with (Lakers assistant) coach Beau (Levesque) and they tell me what they want me to do out there and I kind of just go out there and I try my best to do that every game. Shots aren’t going to fall every game, but I can control the effort that I bring to a game, crashing every time. I know they talk about offensive crash-rate. I’m just trying to do that every night and just bringing energy to this team.”

Back-and-forth the game went in the fourth quarter,, with the Lakers and Grizzlies taking turns delivering in tense moments. The Lakers finally took the lead for good at 100-99 on a basket by Doncic.

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Then James scored on a three-point play and made one of two free throws for a 104-99 lead with 3 minutes 49 seconds left.

The Lakers (22-11) had an answer for every Grizzlies counter, the final stamp on the game being Doncic’s back-to-back three-pointers for a nine-point lead with 2:01 left.

So, the Lakers passed the test the NBA put in front of them by scheduling a game against the Grizzlies here Friday night and then at home again on Sunday night.

“I like it,” Redick said. “I do think it does replicate [the playoffs] in some ways. A playoff series, particularly when it's not a home-and-away situation, but more of you're playing a two-game series on somebody's home court for the day in between. Had a few of these last year. So, I like this for our team and it's a good growth opportunity. Coming off a win, knowing that there's a lot of stuff that we can be better at and where can we make improvements. That's the big challenge to me.”

For Redick, that meant what it always does for the Lakers — improving on defense.

They held the Grizzlies to 42% shooting and 24.4% from three-point range.

LeBron James shoots against Christian Koloko of the Grizzlies in the first quarter Sunday.
LeBron James shoots against Christian Koloko of the Grizzlies in the first quarter Sunday. (Katelyn Mulcahy / Getty Images)

The Lakers also wanted to jump-start center Deandre Ayton from a five-game slumber.

Ayton had just four points on two-for-four shooting against the Grizzlies on Friday night and hadn’t scored more than 12 points in that span.

So, the Lakers went to Ayton at the outset, trying to ignite his game. It worked to a degree, Ayton scoring 15 points, grabbing eight rebounds and blocking three shots.

“I trust my teammates so well and they are generational players so I really try not to clog their brain up with just me or try to focus on me,” said Ayton, who was six-for-eight from the field. “It’s more like me wanting to crash the boards early and get going. But I just appreciate them finding me in spots where I got the advantage and that’s all I can really worry about. It’s really me not getting frustrated. It’s more like this where I dominate. I don’t really care about a play for me or touches. It's the rhythm of the basketball game that keeps me in the flow and keeps me going.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Ike scores 16 as No. 7 Gonzaga rolls past Loyola Marymount for ninth straight win

Graham Ike scored 16 points as No. 7 Gonzaga overcame early shooting trouble to beat Loyola Marymount 82-47 on Sunday night for its ninth consecutive victory. Mario Saint-Supery added 13 points and Jalen Warley 12 points for Gonzaga (16-1, 4-0 West Coast Conference), which was coming off an 80-72 overtime win over Seattle on Friday night, and had a slow start against the Lions. Rodney Brown scored 11 points to lead Loyola Marymount (10-7, 1-3), which defeated Gonzaga in Spokane during the 2022-23 season.

Graham Ike scores 16 points as No. 7 Gonzaga routs Loyola Marymount 82-47

Graham Ike scored 16 points as No. 7 Gonzaga overcame early shooting trouble to beat Loyola Marymount 82-47 on Sunday night for its ninth consecutive victory. Mario Saint-Supery added 13 points and Jalen Warley 12 points for Gonzaga (16-1, 4-0 West Coast Conference), which was coming off an 80-72 overtime win over Seattle on Friday night, and had a slow start against the Lions. Rodney Brown scored 11 points to lead Loyola Marymount (10-7, 1-3), which defeated Gonzaga in Spokane during the 2022-23 season.

Clippers' wing Derrick Jones Jr. suffers Grade 2 MCL sprain, to be re-evaluated in six weeks

In November, the Celtics' Jaylen Brown collided with Derrick Jones Jr. and left the Clippers wing with a Grade 2 sprain of his right MCL, which ended up costing him 17 games.

Saturday night, four games after Jones' return, the Celtics' Payton Pritchard collided with Jones' same right knee going for a loose ball, causing an injury that forced Jones to leave the game. Jones has been diagnosed with a Grade 2 MCL sprain on the same knee and will be re-evaluated in six weeks, the Clippers announced. He likely returns just after the All-Star Game.

While that's not good news, it's also not the worst-case scenario.

Jones has been part of why things have been working for the Clippers of late. He is averaging a career-best 10.4 points a game while shooting 40% from 3-point range.

Jones joins other Clippers wings Bradley Beal and Bogdan Bogdanovic as out when the Clippers host the Warriors as part of Peacock NBA Monday this week.

Michael Porter Jr. leads Nets to impressive 127-115 win over Nuggets

NEW YORK (AP) — Michael Porter Jr. had 27 points, 11 rebounds and five assists in his first game against his former team, and the Brooklyn Nets beat the Denver Nuggets 127-115 on Sunday to snap a three-game losing streak.

The Nuggets got Aaron Gordon and Christian Braun back from lengthy injury absences and a huge game from Jamal Murray, but fell to 1-2 since Nikola Jokic was lost for perhaps a month with a hyperextended left knee.

Murray finished with 27 points, a career-high 16 assists and six rebounds. Gordon had 20 points off the bench after missing 19 games with a strained right hamstring, while Braun started and scored four points after he sat out 23 games with a sprained left ankle.

Noah Clowney added 22 points for the Nets, while Cam Thomas and Day’Ron Sharpe each had 17. Sharpe started at center with Nic Claxton out for personal reasons.

Porter played six seasons for the Nuggets after being taken with the No. 14 pick in the 2018 draft and was a starter on their 2023 NBA championship team. He was traded to Brooklyn in the offseason for Cam Johnson and came in averaging a career-high 25.8 points.

He scored nine points in the second quarter and Brooklyn led 59-52 at halftime after Murray’s jumper with 0.2 seconds to play.

The Nets quickly opened it up again in the third quarter. Brooklyn was 7 for 9 from three-point range in the period, scoring 41 points and taking a 100-84 advantage to the fourth.

Tim Hardaway Jr. had two three-pointers to open the fourth and cut it to 10, but Thomas had the last seven points of a 12-0 spurt that blew it open at 112-90.

Hardaway scored 26 but Denver fell to 1-4 on its seven-game East Coast trip. Johnson sat out with a knee injury.

Up next

Nuggets: Visit Philadelphia on Monday.

Nets: Host Orlando on Tuesday.