NEW YORK (AP) — Ex-NBA player Damon Jones becomes first defendant to plead guilty in a gambling sweep that netted more than 30 arrests.
Hawks vs Knicks NBA Playoffs Game 5 Predictions: Odds, recent stats, trends and best bets for April 28
The series is tied 2-2 after the Knicks won Game 4, 114-98, and the series, like the momentum, shifts back to New York.
The Knicks have the chance to go up 3-2 with a win on its home court. New York held Atlanta to 24% from three (10/41) and shot 45% from deep themselves (14/31). The Knicks had three different players score at least 19 points and for a second straight game, OG Anunoby led the team in scoring.
Atlanta is coming off its worst shooting performance of the series. If you take away Nickeil Alexander-Walker and Gabe Vincent's three-pointers, then Atlanta was an abysmal 3-of-27 (11.1%) from deep. The Hawks also had their highest amount of turnovers in the series during the Game 4 loss (18).
Lets take a closer look at tonight’s matchup and take into consideration lineups, injuries, and other factors affecting the line and total.
We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on how to catch tipoff, odds courtesy of DraftKings recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.
After 24 years, the NBA is back on NBC and Peacock, combining the nostalgia of an iconic era with the innovative future of basketball coverage. The NBA on NBC YouTube channel delivers fans must-see highlights, analysis, and exclusive and unique content.
Game Details and How to Watch Live: Hawks vs. Knicks
- Date: Tuesday, April 28, 2026
- Time: 8:10 PM EST
- Site: Madison Square Garden
- City: New York City, NY
- Network/Streaming: NBC / Peacock
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Game Odds: Hawks vs. Knicks
The latest odds as of Tuesday courtesy of DraftKings:
- Moneyline: Atlanta Hawks (+205), New York Knicks (-250)
- Spread: Knicks -6.5
- Total: 214.5 points
This game opened Knicks -5.5 with the Total set at 214.5.
Be sure to check out DraftKings for all the latest game odds & player props for every matchup this week on the NBA schedule!
Expected Starting Lineups: Hawks vs. Knicks
Atlanta Hawks
- PG CJ McCollum
- SG Nickeil Walker-Alexander
- SF Dyson Daniels
- PF Jalen Johnson
- C Onyeka Okoungwu
New York Knicks
- PG Jalen Brunson
- SG Josh Hart
- SF Mikal Bridges
- PF OG Anunoby
- C Karl-Anthony Towns
Injury Report: Hawks vs. Knicks
New York Knicks
- None
Atlanta Hawks
- None
Important stats, trends and insights: Hawks vs. Knicks
- Atlanta is 46-40 ATS this season
- Atlanta is 43-42 to the Over and 24-19 to Over as the road team
- Atlanta is 24-19 ATS as road team
- New York is 46-41 ATS this season
- New York is an NBA-best 28-14 ATS at home
- New York is 48-39 to the Under and 23-19 to the Under as the home team
Rotoworld Best Bet
Please bet responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, call the National Gambling Helpline at 1-800-522-4700.
Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the NBA calendar based on data points like recent performance, head-to-head player matchups, trends information and projected game totals.
Once the model is finished running, we put its projections next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.
Here are the best bets our model is projecting for tonight’s Hawks and Knicks’ game:
- Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Knicks’ Moneyline
- Spread: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Knicks -6.5 ATS
- Total: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Game Total UNDER 214.5
Want even more NBA best bets and predictions from our expert staff & tools? Check out the Expert NBA Predictions page from NBC Sports for money line, spread and over/under picks for every game on today’s calendar!
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Celtics vs 76ers NBA Playoff Game 5 Prediction: Odds, recent stats, trends and best bets for April 28
Joel Embiid made his return to the 76ers fewer than three weeks after an emergency surgery, but it wasn't enough as Philadelphia fell 128-96 at home. Boston is up 3-1 in the series and has the chance to close out Philadelphia at home in five games tonight.
Game 4's loss for the 76ers was the third time in the series that they failed to score more than 100 points. Philadelphia 41% from the field in Game 4 and shot an underwhelming 9-of-30 from three (30%). Embiid (26) and Tyrese Maxey (22) combined for half of the 76ers' team points (48/96).
Jayson Tatum led Game 4 in scoring with 30 points on 8-of-16 from the field. Boston as a team shot 24-of-53 from three (45%), which was a series best for the Celtics. Boston also had its best rebounding margin in Game 4 at 51-30.
Lets take a closer look at tonight’s matchup and take into consideration lineups, injuries, and other factors affecting the line and total.
We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on how to catch tipoff, odds courtesy of DraftKings recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.
After 24 years, the NBA is back on NBC and Peacock, combining the nostalgia of an iconic era with the innovative future of basketball coverage. The NBA on NBC YouTube channel delivers fans must-see highlights, analysis, and exclusive and unique content.
Game Details and How to Watch Live: 76ers vs. Celtics
- Date: Tuesday, April 28, 2026
- Time: 7:10 PM EST
- Site: TD Garden
- City: Boston, MA
- Network/Streaming: ESPN
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Game Odds: 76ers vs. Celtics
The latest odds as of Tuesday courtesy of DraftKings:
- Moneyline: Boston Celtics (-550), Philadelphia 76ers (+410)
- Spread: Celtics -11.5
- Total: 213.5 points
This game opened Celtics -10.5 with the Total set at 215.5.
Be sure to check out DraftKings for all the latest game odds & player props for every matchup this week on the NBA schedule!
Expected Starting Lineups: Celtics vs. 76ers
Philadelphia 76ers
- PG Tyrese Maxey
- SG VJ Edgecombe
- SF Kelly Oubre Jr
- PF Paul George
- C Joel Embiid (probable)
Boston Celtics
- PG Derrick White
- SG Jaylen Brown
- SF Sam Hauser
- PF Jayson Tatum
- C Neemias Queta
Injury Report: Celtics vs. 76ers
Boston Celtics
- None
Philadelphia 76ers
- Joel Embiid (abdomen) is PROBABLE for Game 5
Important stats, trends and insights: 76ers vs. Celtics
- Boston ranks second best in the NBA with a 51-35 ATS mark
- Boston is an NBA-best 51-35 to the Under
- Boston is 24-19 to the Over at home
- Boston is second best in the NBA with a 28-15 record to the Under at home
- Philadelphia is 46-41 ATS
- Philadelphia is third best in the NBA with a 25-18 ATS record on the road
- Philadelphia is 46-41 to the Under and 23-20 to the Under on the road
Rotoworld Best Bet
Please bet responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, call the National Gambling Helpline at 1-800-522-4700.
Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the NBA calendar based on data points like recent performance, head-to-head player matchups, trends information and projected game totals.
Once the model is finished running, we put its projections next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.
Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Tuesday’s Celtics and 76ers’ game:
- Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Celtics’ Moneyline
- Spread: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Celtics -11.5 ATS
- Total: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Game Total OVER 213.5
Want even more NBA best bets and predictions from our expert staff & tools? Check out the Expert NBA Predictions page from NBC Sports for money line, spread and over/under picks for every game on today’s calendar!
If you’re looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our NBA Top Trends tool on NBC Sports!
Follow our experts on socials to keep up with all the latest content from the staff:
- Jay Croucher (@croucherJD)
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- Vaughn Dalzell (@VmoneySports)
- Trysta Krick (@Trysta_Krick)
Raptors vs Cavaliers Prediction, Picks & Best Bets for Today's NBA Playoffs Game 5
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The Cleveland Cavaliers were laying more bricks than a construction site in Game 4, but that will change tonight.
Our Raptors vs. Cavaliers predictions expect more shots to fall tonight, especially for RJ Barrett.
Find out why in my NBA picks for April 29.
Raptors vs Cavaliers prediction
Who will win Raptors vs Cavaliers Game 5?
Cavaliers: The Cavaliers held an 8-point edge late in Game 4 and somehow let that lead slip away with careless play. The Raptors walked away a winner despite an historically bad shooting game. The point spread for Game 5 gives Cleveland the nod at home and there’s nowhere to go but up for the Cavs. This one could be tighter than bookies projected but Cleveland comes out on top.
Raptors vs Cavaliers best bet: RJ Barrett Over 19.5 points (-105)
Before the depressing display of shooting from both sides in Game 4, RJ Barrett was the Toronto Raptors’ most efficient scorer.
Barrett was shooting a collective 64.4% through the first three games while posting outputs of 22, 24, and 33 points — all playing Over his respective points prop totals. Then came Sunday.
The Canadian guard finished with 18 points on 8-for-22 shooting, but it was ultimately a 1-for-4 finish at the foul line that doomed anyone taking Barrett Over 20.5 points.
With the Cleveland Cavaliers mixing up their defensive matchups and throwing more attention at Scottie Barnes (drawing Dean Wade and Evan Mobley), Barrett’s 22 field goal attempts marked his second-largest shot total of the entire season.
Barnes' usage dropped from 29.4 in the open three games to 23.0, while Barrett’s usage spiked from 25.6 to start the series to 28.0 in Game 4.
Needless to say, a chilly shooting day left plenty of points on the table for Barrett, who draws a shorter scoring O/U for Game 5 despite that increase in offensive activity.
The shooting of both teams will come back toward the norm on Wednesday (god help us if it doesn’t), and with the Cavs putting the crunch on Barnes and Brandon Ingram still encased in ice (34% for the playoffs), Barrett will keep the reins offensively.
Game projections for RJ range from 20.9 to more than 22 points in Game 5. Prior to Game 4’s black hole of basketball sorrow, Barrett had scored at least 20 points in nine of his last 11 games overall.
Raptors vs Cavaliers same-game parlay
The Cavs are on their heels heading into Game 5, having let a chance to close out this series at home slip away in Game 4. Cleveland can still win, but Toronto’s toughness and defensive adjustments will keep things closer than oddsmakers expect on Wednesday. I'm taking the points with the Raptors.
With Immanuel Quickley sidelined, Scottie Barnes becomes the Raptors’ primary ball handler. His assists spiked when the PG was out at the end of the year, and Toronto’s poor shooting wasted 16.0 potential assists in Game 4, with Barnes registering only six dimes.
Cleveland is clamping down on him as a scorer, so Barnes finds other ways to influence the offense.
Raptors vs Cavaliers SGP
- Raptors +8.5
- R.J. Barrett Over 19.5 points
- Scottie Barnes Over 7.5 assists
Our "from downtown" SGP: Nowhere to go but up
After both teams shot a collective 14-for-70 from beyond the arc in Game 4, the lid comes off the rim in Game 5. Barrett has made more than two triples in two of the first three games, while Donovan Mitchell still knocked down four 3-pointers Sunday — the third time he’s hit four threes in the first four games of this Round 1 set.
Raptors vs Cavaliers SGP
- Raptors +8.5
- Over 216
- RJ Barrett Over 1.5 threes
- Donovan Mitchell Over 2.5 threes
Raptors vs Cavaliers odds for Game 5
- Spread: Raptors +8.5 | Cavaliers -8.5
- Moneyline: Raptors +320 | Cavaliers -400
- Over/Under: Over 216 | Under 216
Raptors vs Cavaliers betting trend to know
The Cleveland Cavaliers have cashed in on the second-half moneyline in 30 of their last 40 games at home (+16.75 Units/19% ROI). Find more NBA betting trends for Raptors vs. Cavaliers.
How to watch Raptors vs Cavaliers Game 5
| Location | Rocket Arena, Cleveland, OH |
| Date | Wednesday, April 29, 2026 |
| Tip-off | 7:30 p.m. ET |
| TV | ESPN |
Raptors vs Cavaliers latest injuries
Not intended for use in MA.
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Sixers must show some fight in Game 5
Celtics in five was probably the most commonly predicted outcome of this first-round series between Boston and Philadelphia. As the series returns to Beantown for the fifth game on Tuesday night, it’s certainly looking like that outcome will come to fruition after the Sixers laid another egg, this time on their home floor, in the fourth game.
But if you’re a Sixers fan, don’t you care about how it goes down? You should. Despite being a heavy underdog in this series, the opportunity to play the Celtics provided the Sixers with a good measuring stick for where they are. For as much as Philly got clowned for repeatedly losing in the second round under Brett Brown and Doc Rivers, it’s looking like we’re about to go three straight seasons without the Sixers even winning one round in the postseason. Most fans view this as an expected sign for a franchise whose title contention window has already closed.
However, there is something to be said for the effort Philadelphia played with in Games 2 and 3. The Sixers won Game 2 convincingly on the road and fought tooth and nail with the Celtics in Game 3 and ultimately Boston just made too many shots down the stretch and proved to be the deeper and more talented team — which we all knew. If the Sixers can give a similar effort on Tuesday night, they can at least walk away with a sliver of optimism heading into the offseason, or perhaps back to Philly for a Game 6.
Now, you might be saying, what’s the point of a sliver of optimism here? Surely they’re not going to do the unthinkable and win three straight games and stun the Celtics, right? No, they’re not. The season is going to end for the Sixers sometime this week. But when you think about next season, you have to understand that the top-end talent on Philadelphia’s roster likely isn’t going anywhere. Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe will certainly be back for 2026-27 and it’s probably too early to get off of either Joel Embiid or Paul George’s contracts. Perhaps there’s an ounce of hope that George could be moved since he has one less year remaining of a hefty salary than Embiid does, but don’t hold your breath.
The two-timeline theory has been floated around in discussions about the Sixers in recent years as a result. One timeline urges Daryl Morey to do everything he can to assemble a contender for one last ride with Embiid on the roster. The other timeline suggests Morey focuses on what kind of team can be built around Maxey and Edgecombe with Embiid and George simply being expensive distractions from that goal. Even if you’re a firm subscriber in following the second timeline, Embiid and George are likely still around for next season as we said. So, wouldn’t you feel at least mildly encouraged if the Sixers at least competed with the best the East had to offer for three games out of five if it does end on Tuesday night?
While there is a whole offseason to play out across the NBA this summer, when you look at the current state of the rest of the Eastern Conference, does anyone appear to be on Boston’s level from a talent perspective? Top-seed Detroit is down 3-1 in its first-round series against Orlando. New York is in a battle with Atlanta that’s now been reduced to a best-of-three. Ditto for Cleveland against a Toronto team that was also in the lottery with the Sixers in 2025. It’s very possible — if not probable — that if the Sixers had drawn literally any other opponent other than the Celtics, we’re not already eulogizing the season heading into Game 5.
Think about where the Sixers were one year ago. They won 24 games in 2024-25, everyone was injured at various points of the season, and things certainly looked even more bleak than they do right now regarding the future of the franchise. Not that this season has been anything remarkable, but the 45 wins is still a shrewd improvement and it wouldn’t take a ton to feel like 50+ wins is on the table next season.
However, the only way that vibe even becomes somewhat mainstream amongst its fanbase is if Philly can at least prove it belongs on the same court as Boston for a third time in this series. Why are we trying so hard to extract a moral victory here? Well, there’s really no other choice. Surely, some of the role players will be different next season. But instead of comparing and contrasting two different timelines, could the timelines simply be merged into a decent 2026-27? It’s not impossible.
Tuesday night also poses a good test for how much belief the team still has in its head coach. Not that Nick Nurse was dealt the best hand, but as the saying goes, you dance with the girl you brought. I think most fans would feel that in the only other playoff series Nurse coached the Sixers in, their effort was adequate. Philly lost a hard-fought six-game series to New York in which the Knicks closed the series out with a one-point win in Game Six. The Sixers were very close to forcing a deciding seventh game at Madison Square Garden.
Remember what happened after that series ended? Morey went out and signed George to the four-year max contract that he’s still playing on now. Not that we’re rationalizing the George contract, but the Sixers weren’t waving the white flag after a competitive series against one of the East’s other top teams two years ago, so why would they now? But, of course, the question is just how competitive has this series been? After all, in the first and fourth games of this series, the Sixers didn’t even belong on the same floor as the Celtics. Tuesday night can offer a little bit more clarity on just how much talent is currently on this Philadelphia roster.
Federal Prosecutors to Add Bribery Charges Against Terry Rozier in Gambling Case
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Federal prosecutors plan to bring a new bribery charge against NBA player Terry Rozier in the wide-reaching gambling scheme case.
Key Takeaways
- Rozier is alleged to have solicited and accepted a bribe.
- The former Miami Heat guard pleaded not guilty to his original fraud charges.
- Prosecutors plan to file the new charges in the coming weeks.
Rozier is already facing fraud charges from last October’s federal indictment. In court on Monday, a lawyer for the U.S. Eastern District of New York said there is new evidence that alleges Rozier solicited and accepted a bribe, according to a report from The New York Times.
The former Miami Heat guard is accused of depriving “the NBA and the Charlotte Hornets of Mr. Rozier’s honest services,” a prosecutor said.
The announcement to seek bribery charges came after Rozier’s attorney asked a federal judge to dismiss the case. The new charges will be filed in mid-May and brought to a grand jury.
Rozier is scheduled to appear in court on June 10 for an update on his case.
Original charges
Rozier was arrested just after the NBA season started for wire fraud and money laundering. He was released on a $3-million bond and pleaded not guilty in December.
According to the initial federal indictment, Rozier tipped off a friend, Deniro Laster, that he would exit a game early in March 2023, claiming an injury, when Rozier played for the Charlotte Hornets.
Laster informed a group of bettors who are linked to the Jontay Porter and NCAA basketball gambling scandals. Using that information, the group placed more than $200,000 in wagers on the unders for Rozier’s player props.
Rozier and Laster received a portion of the winnings and allegedly counted the cash at Rozier’s home. Rozier was placed on unpaid leave by the NBA following his arrest, and the Heat released the guard earlier this month.
Another case
Damon Jones, a former player and assistant coach in the NBA, was also named and charged in the October 2025 indictment. He’s expected to plead guilty on Tuesday to charges of providing bettors with injury information for profit.
Jones initially pleaded not guilty, but requested a change-of-plea hearing earlier this month. He’s also charged, along with suspended Portland Trail Blazers coach Chauncey Billups, with rigging a poker game with the mob. Jones has pleaded not guilty to that charge.
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Playoff Game Preview: Knicks vs Hawks, Game 5, April 28, 2026
The New York Knicks host the Atlanta Hawks tonight at Madison Square Garden in Game Five of their first-round playoff series, tied 2–2. The winner takes command, while the loser will return to Atlanta pondering an elimination game.
Need it be said? The Knicks are the better team. They have led for 92% of the series, not counting their stumbling in Game Three. And even in that troubled tilt, they still rallied to take a lead in the final minute and lose by a single point. If not for two one-point losses, the series would have been yesterday’s news by now.
The book on Atlanta says they play fast, distribute the ball well, generate a lot of turnovers, and make a healthy percentage of three-pointers. Our heroes handled Atlanta easily in Game Four by disrupting their perimeter shooting, limiting it to 24% (10-of-41), while making 45% of their own longballs. The Knicks kept their giveaways to 15 while forcing 19, plus outrebounded (43-38) and out-dimed (23-20 assists). Big surprise, New York had their greatest success yet when they incorporated Karl-Anthony Towns most completely. The big fella chewed up the paint, made the most of his physical advantage over Atlanta’s diminished frontcourt, and finished with a 20-10-10 triple-double (a postseason first for him). More of that, please, Coach Brown.
The longer the series goes on, the more Atlanta’s deficiencies are exposed.
CJ McCollum has averaged 24.5 points in the series while shooting 51% from the field and 33% from deep. He also has made 58% of his free throws (and we give Mitch a hard time about it? This guy’s a guard). The 34-year-old vet is a fine player and delivered some great highlights in the series. His talent is insufficient to carry his team to the promised land—and the league knows it. Remember, he was traded to the Washington Wizards (yes, throwing some shade here) last off-season.
Meanwhile, “Mr. Triple-Double” (13 this season) Jalen Johnson has averaged 19.5 points, seven boards, and 4.8 dimes this series while shooting 29% from deep. He’s totaled a -34 plus-minus. New York’s wings, especially Josh Hart and OG Anunoby, have done an excellent job guarding him. Nickeil Alexander-Walker has averaged 13.8 points across the four games, making just 18 of his 52 field goal attempts.
Atlanta’s 6’10” center Onyeka Okongwu has averaged 13.8 points and 7.3 rebounds through the series, totaling a -27 plus-minus. Off the bench, Jonathan Kuminga has averaged 14.5 points, 3.5 rebounds, and almost 29 minutes. Continuing a narrative of inconsistency, the former Warrior helped his squad in Games Two and Three, but fizzled in One and Four. When he’s focused and playing well, he can be impactful. You just never know which version you’ll get. Can you imagine what it must have been like to have both this guy and Jordan Poole on the same team? Yikes.
There’s a fair amount of hand-wringing going on about Jalen Brunson’s performance in the series. To a degree, it’s warranted. Captain Clutch has markedly looked less clutch at times against the handsy Hawks defense. Nonetheless, he’s averaged 25.5 points and 5.3 assists in the four contests and has had a positive plus-minus in each game. He’s shooting 39% from deep this postseason, which is actually two ticks higher than his season average. So, maybe a little slack is warranted? Whattayasay?
And I’d be remiss not to highlight Anunoby, averaging 20.8 points, 8.8 rebounds, and 1.3 steals this postseason. He’s been a cold-blooded beast against the Birds. Meanwhile, Mikal Bridges—who’s deserved much of the ire he’s received for a poor series (7.3 points, 1.5 assists)—might have turned a corner in Game Four with better shooting and more focus in his 32 minutes. We hope he’s on the upswing. New York will need solid contributions from all its starters to make it to the Finals.
But first, they have to get past the Hawks. ESPN gives the Knicks a 73% win probability tonight. That tracks. Prediction: New York enjoys a bellyful of home cooking, slaps the Peaches silly in Game Five, and wins by eight.
Game Details
Who: New York Knicks (2-2) vs Atlanta Hawks (2-2)
Date: Tuesday, April 28, 2026
Time: 8:00 PM ET
Place: Madison Square Garden, Manhattan, NY
TV: Peacock / NBC
Follow: @ptknicksblog and bsky
Monday’s Brotherhood Playoff News & Links
In Monday’s Brotherhood Playoff Action, Orlando took a 3-1 lead over Detroit with a 94-88 win, Oklahoma City knocked Phoenix out, 131-122, and Denver whipped Minnesota, 125-113.
Paolo Banchero racked up 18 points, 8 boards, and 4 assists for the Magic, while Wendell Carter had 12 points, 11 rebounds, and 4 assists.
Jared McCain got off the bench for the Thunder, but barely. He played just one minute and took one shot, which he missed.
Tyus Jones got 14 minutes for Denver, and scored 3 points and dished out 2 assists.
Denver came into this one down 3-1, and Minnesota is really vulnerable: starting guards Anthony Edwards and Donte DiVincenzo are both out with injuries, and Naz Reid hurt an ankle in this game.
Comebacks when teams are down 3-1 are rare, but Denver has a reasonable shot at it.
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Marvin Bagley III reinvented himself with the Mavericks — but what’s his future in Dallas?
When Marvin Bagley III came to Dallas from in the trade that sent Anthony Davis to the Washington Wizards as the 2025-26 NBA Trade Deadline approached, he represented pure salary cap relief.
He was a letdown second overall draft pick who came off the books when the season was over. He was a key part of the Mavericks’ ticket to getting off Davis’ albatross of a contract for its remaining two years. He was an underachiever who had been done no favors with the talent surrounding him in his seven-plus NBA seasons.
The reaction to Bagley’s arrival in Dallas was a resounding “meh,” and rightly so.
But what if there’s something there? Bagley showed a budding talent for stretching the floor and the ability to finish on the break and execute at the dunker position in his 22 games with the Mavericks. He also showed off a budding 3-point stroke, shooting 48.5% from beyond the arc on his final 33 attempts. The Mavericks’ broadcast crew repeated the talking point that the coaching staff was encouraging Bagley to shoot more from the outside after he arrived. All the while, Daniel Gafford, his mate in the Mavericks’ frontcourt, was a man in the throes of full-on decline throughout Dallas’ season in the wilderness.
It all adds up to Bagley being an interesting name as the NBA offseason approaches.
Season in review
After averaging 10.1 points and 3.1 rebounds per game with the Wizards for 38 games to start the year, Bagley increased his production to 11.0 points and 4.4 rebounds after being traded to the Mavericks. Modest gains, to be sure, but he turned some heads in his first few games with the team and throughout the rest of the season with his knack for knocking down timely 3-pointers.
Bagley has been good from the outside for stretches at a time during his eight years in the league. When he got to Washington for the last part of the 2023-34 season, he shot 8-of-17 from deep in his first 24 games with the lowly Wizards. He was shooting just over 42% from 3-point land in the first 38 games of 2025-26, albeit on fewer attempts per game than he saw once he arrived in Dallas.
It’s at least plausible to view his stunted development as a byproduct of being on bad teams for the entirety of his career. Dallas, as currently constructed, is no world beater, mind you, but what if this situation is a better fit for Bagley, and what if he could take the next step with Dallas on what should be an affordable next contract?
Bagley played 24 minutes, scoring 16 points and grabbing 12 rebounds in his first game in a Mavericks uniform, in a 138-125 loss at the San Antonio Spurs on Feb. 7. Three games later, it was 15 and 13 in 24 minutes during a 122-111 loss at the Minnesota Timberwolves. Two games after that, Bagley scored 22 on 10-of-13 shooting in a 123-114 win at the Brooklyn Nets.
It’s hard to know what to make of these kinds of performances during the NBA Silly Season of February-April. But Bagley was a spark off the bench, where Gafford, hampered by various injuries including nagging ankle issues throughout the year, was largely a bump on a log.
Bagley wrapped up the season by scoring 20 or more points in three of four games as his minutes increased when March turned to April. He didn’t turn the ball over when it came to him, and on a team that finished the year 18th in the NBA in turnovers per game (14.5), that’s a point in his favor, too. He recorded more than two turnovers only once in his 22 games with the Mavericks to finish the year.
Best game
Bagley’s best performance for the Mavericks came as part of that four-game stretch late in the season against another Western Conference playoff contender. He poured in 26 points on 11-of-14 shooting from the field, including 3-for-5 from 3-point range and pulled down nine boards in 27 minutes in a 100-93 win at the Portland Trail Blazers on March 27. The opponent matters here because Portland still had hopes of securing the seven-seed in the west at the time with the dreaded play-in games looming. This was not a bottom-feeder with nothing to play for. As he showed earlier in the year in games at San Antonio and Minnesota, Bagley is up to the task against better than average competition.
He made three 3-pointers again three games later in a 112-107 loss at the Phoenix Suns. Bagley shot a collective 31-of-43 from the field in that four-game span. If he can be an efficient scorer playing with an effectively empty guard room running with him, is there even another step up he can make with better guards on the roster?
Contract status
Bagley is an unrestricted free agent at season’s end. Retaining him after a few raised eyebrows to close out the 2025-26 season is by no means guaranteed. He made just over $3 million last year on his previous one-year deal. Even after showing improvement, he’s a guy you could get for under $10 million per year on another one- or two-year deal this offseason.
Looking ahead
Bagley’s potential return to the Mavericks may seem like a no-brainer, but with Dereck Lively II coming back after missing most of the year with swelling in his foot and with Gafford’s 3-year, $54-million contract extension kicking in next year, the Mavs may find it easier to chalk up Bagley’s improvement to Silly Season shenanigans and let him walk in free agency.
You want versatile bigs on your roster, though, and with the injury-prone Lively and a guy Luka Dončić made look a lot better than he may actually be in Gafford as the only two big ahead of Bagley in the Dallas pecking order, it may pay dividends to kick the tires on a guy like Bagley.
If a 15-point-per-game guy is hiding somewhere under all Bagley’s unmet expectations, why not try to be the team that solves the riddle of his first eight years in the league?
NBA mock draft 2026: Update after college basketball entry deadline with final lottery odds
The 2026 NBA Draft class has been hyped for years. The big pay off is finally coming on May 10 with the drawing of the draft lottery, and now the odds for the ping-pong balls have been finalized.
The Washington Wizards, Indiana Pacers, and Brooklyn Nets earned the top odds with a 14 percent chance at the No. 1 overall pick. The Utah Jazz and Sacramento Kings each have an 11.5 percent chance at No. 1, while the Memphis Grizzlies have the next-best odds at nine percent. The Atlanta Hawks have a 6.8 percent chance at winning the top-pick thanks to their brilliant trade with the New Orleans Pelicans, and then Atlanta also has another three percent chance at the top pick thanks to swap rights with the Milwaukee Bucks.
The Dallas Mavericks have a 6.7 percent chance at No. 1, the Chicago Bulls have a 4.5 percent chance at winning the lottery, and the Golden State Warriors have a two percent chance at the first pick. The Thunder (1.5 percent thanks to a swap with the Clippers), Heat (1 percent), and Hornets (0.5 percent) round out the lottery.
This draft class has already lost some talent to NIL money. UConn’s Braylon Mullins, Duke’s Patrick Ngongba, Florida’s Thomas Haugh, Arizona’s Motiejus Krivas, and Baylor’s Tounde Yessoufou were all projected first-round picks in our previous mock draft before deciding to return to school. Only Yessoufou left himself the option to still enter this draft.
The best thing about this draft class is you don’t need the No. 1 pick to find a future franchise player. Just landing in the top-4 should get the job done. Here’s our latest 2026 NBA mock draft using the lottery standings as the order.
| Pick | Team | Player | Position | School | Age |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Washington Wizards | AJ Dybantsa | Wing | BYU | Freshman |
| 2 | Indiana Pacers | Darryn Peterson | Guard | Kansas | Freshman |
| 3 | Brooklyn Nets | Cameron Boozer | Forward | Duke | Freshman |
| 4 | Utah Jazz | Caleb Wilson | Forward | North Carolina | Freshman |
| 5 | Sacramento Kings | Darius Acuff | Guard | Arkansas | Freshman |
| 6 | Memphis Grizzlies | Keaton Wagler | Guard | Illinois | Freshman |
| 7 | Atlanta Hawks (via Pelicans) | Kingston Flemings | Guard | Houston | Freshman |
| 8 | Dallas Mavericks | Mikel Brown Jr. | Guard | Louisville | Freshman |
| 9 | Chicago Bulls | Aday Mara | Center | Michigan | Junior |
| 10 | Milwaukee Bucks | Brayden Burries | Guard | Arizona | Freshman |
| 11 | Golden State Warriors | Yaxel Lendeborg | Forward | Michigan | Senior |
| 12 | Oklahoma City Thunder (via Clippers) | Nate Ament | Wing | Tennessee | Freshman |
| 13 | Miami Heat | Karim Lopez | Forward | NZ Breakers | Born 2007 |
| 14 | Charlotte Hornets | Jayden Quaintance | Center/Forward | Kentucky | Sophomore |
| 15 | Chicago Bulls | Morez Johnson | Center/Forward | Michigan | Sophomore |
| 16 | Memphis Grizzlies | Dailyn Swain | Wing | Texas | Junior |
| 17 | Oklahoma City Thunder (via 76ers | Hannes Steinbach | Forward/Center | Washington | Freshman |
| 18 | Charlotte Hornets (via Magic) | Cameron Carr | Wing | Baylor | Junior |
| 19 | Toronto Raptors | Labaron Philon | Guard | Alabama | Sophomore |
| 20 | San Antonio Spurs (via Hawks) | Chris Cenac | Center | Houston | Freshman |
| 21 | Detroit Pistons (via Wolves) | Bennett Stirtz | Guard | Iowa | Senior |
| 22 | Philadelphia 76ers (via Rockets) | Allen Graves | Forward | Santa Clara | Freshman |
| 23 | Atlanta Hawks (via Cavs) | Joshua Jefferson | Forward | Iowa State | Senior |
| 24 | New York Knicks | Isaiah Evans | Guard | Duke | Sophomore |
| 25 | Los Angeles Lakers | Henri Veesaar | Center | North Carolina | Junior |
| 26 | Denver Nuggets | Koa Peat | Forward | Arizona | Freshman |
| 27 | Boston Celtics | Tyler Tanner | Guard | Vanderbilt | Sophomore |
| 28 | Minnesota Timberwolves (via Pistons) | Meleek Thomas | Guard | Arkansas | Freshman |
| 29 | Cleveland Cavaliers (via Spurs) | Christian Anderson | Guard | Texas Tech | Sophomore |
| 30 | Dallas Mavericks (via Thunder) | Trevon Brazile | Forward | Arkansas | Senior |
Let’s dive into one of the biggest themes to watch on lottery night.
NBA Draft 2026 lottery odds to land a top-4 pick
It feels like every team in the lottery would be thrilled just to land in the top-4. Here are the odds each lottery team has to land in the top-4, via Tankathon:
Caleb Wilson might be rising into the top-3 — or higher
Caleb Wilson didn’t play in the 2026 NCAA tournament for North Carolina after suffering a broken bone in his left hand in February and then a broken thumb in his right hand in March. Those injuries shouldn’t and reportedly haven’t dulled NBA interest. In the last few weeks, there have been reports that some teams value Wilson more than Duke forward Cameron Boozer, and that he could even be the second player taken on draft night.
Wilson has the single best highlight reel in the class for my money. Sit back and enjoy:
There’s a compelling sales pitch for the UNC forward. He’s a freak athlete at 6’10 who dunks everything (67 dunks in 24 games), he’s a high-motor defender who guards all over the floor, he’s a good passer, and he has an ability to create scoring opportunities for himself away from the rim with excellent mid-range shooting touch. The two big knocks on him are his outside shooting and ball handling. Wilson is not a good three-point shooter right now after making 25.9 percent of his 27 attempts from deep in college. He also isn’t really a viable on-ball creator because his lack of handle refinement limits where he can get on the floor. For now, he’s an electric play-finisher on offense and a buzzsaw on defense who should be an absolute terror in transition from day one.
I’ve been consistent that Boozer is my top player in the class. Boozer and Wilson were teammates on the Nike EYBL circuit for Nightrydas, and there was never any question who the best player on the team was (it was Boozer). Wilson did arguably out-play him in the first Duke vs. North Carolina game this season, which was one of the best prospect matchups we got all year in college hoops.
I have liked Wilson for a while, even putting him on my 2023 list of the best NBA prospects in high school hoops. I’m considering sliding him up to No. 2 on my board, and I would not be shocked if he’s eventually picked in the top-3. Just moving up to No. 4 in the lottery — likely in position to draft Boozer or Wilson — would be an incredible boon for teams like the Bulls, Warriors, and Bucks, who all have long-shots odds entering the drawing. Wilson is so much better than the No. 4 overall prospect in a typical draft, and that’s a big reason why this class is so highly-touted.
Who moves up after the college basketball early entry deadline?
I thought Braylon Mullins and Patrick Ngongba were lottery-caliber talents. Instead, both are going back to UConn and Duke respectively. Thomas Haugh was considered a lottery pick on ESPN’s big board, but he’s going back to Florida for arguably the biggest NIL bag in college basketball history. Flory Bidunga’s decision to transfer to Louisville rather than enter the draft (though he is on the early entry list) is another hit to the depth of the class. It’s possible players like Tyler Tanner, Allen Graves, Juke Harris, Alijah Arenas, and Ebuka Okorie — who could all be drafted in the first round — eventually decide returning to school is their best decision. I named Graves as the best available player in the transfer portal, and there are some whispers that he could end up at Duke if he doesn’t enter the draft.
Here’s full early entry list, via Jeremy Woo:
The list of returners undeniably impacts the second half of the first round and the entirety of the second round. Expect plenty of seniors to hear their names once we get into the 20s, and new prospects are already emerging in pre-draft camps like the Portsmouth Invitational Tournament. I enjoyed this YouTube breakdown from Ben Pfeifer on the biggest winners of the PIT.
I have Henri Veesaar moving up into the first-round in this mock draft thanks to all the players slated to return to school. The North Carolina center was one of the my favorite potential second-rounders in this class for his interior scoring efficiency and three-point shooting improvement, but now he might move up by default. It feels like Christian Anderson is likely staying the draft too, but there’s only so many potential landing spots for smaller guards. I’ve also projected Spanish guard Sergio de Larrea as a first-round pick at times during the year, and I wouldn’t be surprised if he starts to generate buzz again in the lead up to the draft. Arkansas big man Trevon Brazile — an athletic play-finisher with floor spacing ability — was my pick for the senior who sneaks into the end of round one due to so many players being lured back to college by NIL money.
The withdrawal deadline is only 10 days before the draft on June 13 at 5 p.m. ET. The draft board will continue to evolve until then.
Michigan’s 3 stars all end up in the lottery
The Wolverines were a wagon on their way to a college basketball national championship. While I would expect Elliott Cadeau to return to school, I think Morez Johnson will be joining Aday Mara and Yaxel Lendeborg in the draft.
- I spent March Madness following Michigan and reporting out a feature on how Yaxel Lendeborg grew up into a potential lottery pick. He told me about the NBA’s feedback at the combine last year, how he views his pro translation, and what this year at Michigan meant to him. I think you’ll like what he had to say:
- I also spent a lot of time chatting with Aday Mara throughout Michigan’s March Madness run. Read my feature on how Mara developed into a lottery pick after two years on the bench at UCLA.
- Morez Johnson is a Chicagoland kid who didn’t leave the area for a prep school like so many of his highly touted peers. In this mock, Mara and Johnson are reunited with the Chicago Bulls, who earned a second top-15 pick via the Portland Trail Blazers thanks to their 2021 Lauri Markkanen trade.
NBA Draft 2026 lottery date, TV time, and streaming
Here’s what you need to know about this year’s draft lottery drawing:
Date: May 10
Time: 3 p.m. ET
TV: ABC/ESPN
Streaming: Watch ESPN
Sixers’ season on the brink Tuesday as Celtics host Game 5
The Philadelphia 76ers’ 2025-26 season could be approaching its swan song, with the Boston Celtics just one win away from closing out the first-round playoff series and eliminating the Sixers.
Though, to be fair, I think “swan songs” are supposed to be beautiful or brilliant. This feels quite far from that.
The Sixers trail the Celtics 3-1 in the first-round playoff series that has been a rollercoaster of emotions. Game 1, an embarrassing defeat. Game 2, a triumphant and somewhat unexpected level of turnaround, stealing a win in Boston. Game 3, putting up a fight but back making old mistakes in a close loss. Game 4, the excitement of Joel Embiid’s return quickly marred by yet another crushing defeat.
Like I said, a rollercoaster for sure. One that could come to an end with a loss in Tuesday’s Game 5.
The Celtics’ injury report remains clean as of Monday night. For the Sixers, only Embiid appears, currently listed as probable (post appendectomy surgery recovery). One can imagine that, based on history, it would take a hell of a lot to keep Embiid off the floor for a game like this. On Sunday, he had been listed as doubtful before being upgraded to questionable in the afternoon and then ultimately played 34 minutes (for a 26-point, 10-rebound double-double) in that contest — just 17 days after having his emergency appendectomy.
We’re at Game 5 of this now, there’s not a whole lot new to say in terms of the matchup. We have all seen what the Celtics are capable of. Not just their starters, but their bench too. On any given night, there’s someone to carry the weight for Boston. Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown were nearly inconsequential through the first two and a half quarters of Game 4, and yet the Celtics were still already carrying a comfortable lead when those two got going thanks to Payton Pritchard repeatedly punishing the Sixers for giving him space behind the arc.
The Sixers had just one game of ever looking like they were one step ahead of the Celtics, utilizing a high screen pick-and-roll on repeat. It earned Philly their lone win in the series, but Boston adjusted effectively between games and the Sixers were out of luck again. It’s not just one thing that seems to be the Sixers’ particular weakness in this series — it’s everything. Poor shooting, non-existent rebounding, being completely lost on defense, puzzling rotation decisions and not adjusting to or learning from mistakes. All of those errors facing a stacked, effective Celtics lineup is simply not going to cut it.
The reality is that, even if the Sixers steal away a game (or maybe even two) from the Celtics, Philadelphia as an organization is so far behind Boston at this point. The Celtics have big name stars performing in the big moments, an incredible supporting cast down the depth chart filling in the gaps as well as proactive coaching. The Celtics are everything the Sixers organization has tried to claim they are. But they’re the real deal, while the Sixers continue to kick the can on the same issues season after season. This is where that strategy has taken us.
This is truly not me just indulging in baseless negativity. We at Liberty Ballers would all love to be writing about games of scrappy fight and fire like Game 2 and even parts of Game 3. I personally would love to be proven wrong and have them come out tonight looking like a different team than they did on Sunday. But these issues have been the same, evident and obvious, season after season.
Don’t get me wrong, I think we all knew coming into this series that the Sixers didn’t realistically stand a chance against this Celtics squad. Like I said, these are simply two organizations in two very different places. I just think maybe my expectations were at least a little higher than what we saw in Games 1 and 4. It’s one thing to lose a game to a much better team, it’s another to — for example — not grab a single offensive board (on a night you’re not making any shots) until well into the third quarter. It’s one thing to get beat, it’s another to basically not even step in the ring.
An upset win on Tuesday night would keep the Sixers alive another day, forcing a Game 6 in Philadelphia that would be played on Thursday, but it’s going to take a major, complete 180-degree turnaround from that last contest. I’d love to see it, but it’s going to take a hell of a lot.
You’ll need Embiid moving and dominating even with lingering affects of the appendectomy. You’ll need Tyrese Maxey to find a way to produce even with Embiid on the floor, while also clearly still dealing with the pinky issue. You’ll need rookie VJ Edgecombe to sink some buckets and especially some threes. You’ll need a bench unit that isn’t going to only put up 10 points total. You’ll need to actually rebound the ball and not give the Celtics six shot attempts in the same possession. And that’s not even all the stars likely required to align, I’m just stopping myself before it gets too redundant.
But, hey, it would be very Sixers to extend this series another game just to drag things out a bit, right? Can we at least get one more fun Edgecombe performance to get excited about?
Game 5 tips off at 7:00 p.m. ET.
Game Details
When: Tuesday, April 28, 7:00 p.m. ET
Where: TD Garden, Boston, MA
Watch: ESPN
Radio: 97.5 The Fanatic
Follow: @LibertyBallers
Despite 3-1 series lead, Game 5 vs. Houston is a must-win for Lakers
In this crazy season, Game 5 is a must-win for the Lakers.
Why, you might be asking.
They have a 3-1 series lead over the Rockets in the first round of the playoffs. They’re going to have multiple chances to clinch. They’re firmly in control.
Think again.
Nothing has gone as expected for the Lakers this season. Nothing has made sense. Nothing is predictable.
For a long time, the Lakers looked like they were a play-in team. Then they somehow figured things out and went on a stunning 16-2 run this spring. Suddenly they were title contenders.
Shocker.
Just when we digested that wild turn of events, they lost Luka Doncic (hamstring) and Austin Reaves (oblique) to injuries with five games remaining in the regular season.
Another shocker.
That left our heads reeling. They had no chance in the postseason without their top-two scorers. Scribes were writing the Lakers’ obituaries before they even played Game 1.
But wait, ready for another plot twist?
About an hour before the series opener, we found out that Kevin Durant — who only missed four regular-season games — would miss Game 1 because of a knee injury he sustained in practice. He’d go on to also miss Games 3 and 4 due to a left ankle sprain.
Yet another shocker.
All of a sudden, the hapless Lakers featuring a 41-year-old LeBron James and a bunch of role players had a 3-0 series lead over the Rockets before losing Game 4 on Sunday, 115-96.
Shocker.
So, here’s the deal right now. No team has ever recovered from a 3-0 series deficit in NBA history. Teams with that advantage are 159-0.
But in this topsy-turvy, unpredictable season, wouldn’t it be the icing on the cake if the Lakers once again made our jaws drop and lost the series?
It would be the twist no one saw coming at the end of the movie. It would be the team’s worst nightmare.
It would be the ultimate shocker.
So, the Lakers need to slam the door on this series before the impossible can happen again.
The Lakers fell apart in Game 4. They had 24 turnovers which led to 30 points for the Rockets. They shot 22.7% from beyond the arc.
James, who has played superstar-caliber basketball this series, had one of his worst playoff performances in his 23-season career, finishing with just 10 points on 2-for-9 shooting and eight turnovers.
Marcus Smart went from being a Rottweiler in Games 2 and 3 to devolving into a Maltese in Game 4, finishing with the worst plus-minus (-20) of anyone on the court.
Luke Kennard went from having a coming-out party this postseason as a playmaking, sharpshooting star to having a complete disappearing act on Sunday, finishing with just seven points and two assists.
The Rockets smell blood.
The Lakers are tired. They’re weakened. There’s a dent in their armor.
And if the series is extended beyond Wednesday’s contest, games would be played every other day.
That’s a dangerous prospect for the Lakers’ exhausted legs, especially considering James has already carried this depleted roster on his arthritic-prone body more successfully than anyone anticipated. There are rumblings that Reaves could return for Game 5, but the Lakers can’t count on that.
Now is the time for them to be laser-focused.
They can’t let this young Rockets team believe they have a chance in this series. They can’t let the team’s shooters find their stroke. They can’t let Durant return and take over.
They can’t crack the door open for what could potentially be the biggest upset in NBA playoff history.
In this wild season where the rug seems to constantly be ripped from under them, the Lakers need to treat Game 5 as though it were an elimination game.
Or else they could set themselves up for their greatest shock yet.
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Open Thread: An Evening of Coyote Tales & Court Stories with Sean Elliott, Bill Schoening & Rob Wicall
There’s a great event coming up that you’ll want to put on your calendar.
An Evening with the Spurs: Coyote Tales & Court Stories with Sean Elliott, Bill Schoening & Rob Wicall.
Spurs fans know Sean Elliott as the “Memorial Day Miracle” and as the longtime color commentator for Spurs broadcasts. Elliot was drafted third overall in 1989. Paired with the David Robinson, the Silver & Black began an upswing that continued through the drafting of Tim Duncan and culminating in the 1999 NBA championship.
Soon after the championship, Elliott announced that he had a kidney disease known as focal segmental glomerulosclerosis. He received a kidney from his brother, underwent a transplant, and became the first player in history to return after the surgery just eight months later.
Bill Schoening served as the voice of the Spurs for twenty-four seasons, retiring last summer. In August 2022, he was announced as an inductee into the Texas Radio Hall of Fame. Schoening is a four-time winner of the Associated Press “Top Texas Play-by-Play Award,” and also won the 2014 Texas Sportscaster of the Year Award from the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association.
Rob Wicall spent 20 years as the Spurs Coyote. He served as the Spurs’ backup Coyote before assuming the role full time in 2004. In 2005, Gameops.com named him Best Mascot of the Year. In 2014, the Coyote was named NBA Mascot of the Year. In 2016, he retired due to an arthritic condition, ankylosing spondylitis (AS).
The combined legacy of this trio will be on full display at the Brauntex Theater in New Braunfels on Thursday, May 28th as they share their personal Spurs stories.
“Come to the Brauntex Theatre for an unforgettable night of behind-the-scenes stories, laughter, and legacy. Coyote Tales & Court Stories brings together former Spurs player Sean Elliott, Bill Schoening, the voice who called the action, and the man inside the iconic Coyote mascot, Rob Wicall. These three will be sharing the stage in an intimate setting, answering your burning questions LIVE!”
Tickets and VIP Meet and Greet packages are available HERE.
I spoke with Bill at a recent Spurs home game and I’ve got to say, he has so many wonderful stories in his near quarter-century with the Spurs. He’s called over 2000 games and has been there for every twist and turn. If the few minutes we spent are a precursor to what the evening has in store, it will be a night you won’t want to miss.
Welcome to the Thread. Join in the conversation, start your own discussion, and share your thoughts. This is the Spurs community, your Spurs community. Thanks for being here.
Our community guidelines apply which should remind everyone to be cool, avoid personal attacks, not to troll and to watch the language.
The Celtics made Joel Embiid the target and Philly couldn’t avoid it
Attention to detail is one of Boston’s most overlooked strengths.
There are plenty to choose from — volume three-point shooting, defensive connectivity, late-game composure. But it’s the precision and thoroughness of the minutiae that often sets them apart.
Their preparation allows them to identify pressure points quickly, and then push on them until something breaks.
Their latest win over the Sixers was a clear example.
The Boston Celtics are no stranger to Joel Embiid. He’s been a recurring playoff antagonist for roughly a decade. Despite his individual dominance, Embiid has been open about how lopsided this non-rivalry has been.
Historically, Boston has found ways to exploit the cracks in his Sixers teams. In Game 4 with Embiid returning to the floor, they made him the focal point of their offensive attack.
On the very first possession, Boston brings Embiid directly into the action.
With Queta setting a high screen for Tatum, they force Embiid out beyond the three-point line, immediately testing his agility. Tatum causes confusion with his handle, and with both defenders drawn to him, he feeds Queta for a tone-setting slam.
Boston wants to make Embiid defend in space as much as possible. It pulls a dominant rim protector out of the paint and eliminates any chance for him to rest while trying to find an offensive rhythm.
A few possessions later, they put the pressure on him again.
Two minutes into his return from appendicitis, Embiid is responsible for defending both the ball and the roll man as Derrick White gets downhill off a pair of screens. To his credit, Embiid contains the ball fairly well, but Maxey gets lost in the play and White has too much room to find Queta again for the dunk.
Embiid had early success offensively, but it came with a growing workload on the defensive end.
Here, Vucevic screens and then re-screens for Tatum. Embiid is dragged all the way out to the logo before having to recover back to the corner. This isn’t sustainable, and it may have been the moment Philly started to rethink its coverages.
From that point forward, the Sixers became more deliberate about keeping Embiid out of switches, or removing him from the action entirely.
Later in the game, a string of possessions defined this cat-and-mouse dynamic.
On this first play, the floor is cleared for a Pritchard-Queta pick-and-roll. To avoid getting stuck on Pritchard, Embiid hedges the screen, extending it long enough for Grimes to recover before returning to Queta.
In most cases, this is a win for Philly. The advantage is gone, matchups are intact, and the clock is winding down. The process (pun intended) is good.
Unfortunately, so is Scheierman.
On the following possession, Queta comes up to screen for Tatum.
The Celtics once again look to involve Embiid, but this time he works to avoid it. Instead of following Queta, he removes himself from the play by calling for a switch with Grimes.
This keeps Embiid protected, but now he’s guarding Pritchard. To fix that, he calls for Maxey to switch, allowing him to stay closer to the rim. Tatum may have missed a brief window to hit Queta, but Embiid’s presence likely plays a role in that hesitation. The possession ends with Oubre drawing an offensive foul.
Boston doesn’t miss what’s happening here. They see the Sixers finding opportunities to give Embiid a breather and keep him out of the hunt.
The killer whale offense isn’t going to let that slide.
Boston begins the action the same way, with Pritchard screening for Queta, who then flows into a screen for Tatum. Embiid handles it similarly, having Grimes take Queta before swapping again with Edgecombe.
The biggest key to understand here is the movement path of Pritchard.
On the previous possession, he spaces to the wing, staying close enough for Philly to manipulate the matchups. This time, he cuts across the floor. That leaves Embiid on White, with no switch available. Tatum calls White into the action, and they’re surgical with a behind-the-back pass into a step-back three.
This wasn’t an accident. Boston is essentially a living, breathing flow chart. They see the game in stages of “if this, then that.” Embiid is avoiding the pick-and-roll? Take away his ability to do that.
To Philly’s credit, they weren’t passive. They identified the problem early on, and made adjustments to protect Embiid the best they could. For stretches, it worked or at least stalled the attack briefly. But Boston noticed the change, and found the next weakness to exploit.
Winning in the playoffs requires knowing your opponent, understanding their tendencies, and having a counter for their counters. Knowing yourself is part of the challenge, too. Boston’s self-awareness allows them to put players in positions to succeed, and those players know where they’re supposed to be at all times. They can coordinate their attacks with ease, and have the shared intuition to cycle through options until they find the right answer.
It’s going to be very difficult to win four games against this team.
YouTube Gold: A Cool Cooper Flagg ROY Tribute Video
Like Cooper Flagg, Kyrie Irving is a one-and-done Blue Devil and, like Flagg, a Dallas Maverick.
Irving sat out this season while recovering from an ACL injury, but he has sort of taken Flagg under his wing because he recognizes his massive talent and wants to help him reach his potential.
Irving told SI.com this: “Cooper is just an amazing player, and that’s not even just gassing it. At 19 years old, doing the things that he’s doing within our league is very special… He’s doing things that some of the greats, even before him, didn’t do. He’s chasing history.”
He also said this: “Listen, I understand. I’ve kind of been through this before. I don’t think there’s a lot of people around you right now that can tell you they’ve been through somewhat of a similar thing.”
Next year, for the first time, we’ll get to see them both on the court at the same time. After Flagg won the NBA’s Rookie of the Year award on Monday, the Mavericks put out this video.
Narrated by Irving, the video features him talking about Flagg’s spectacular season and how he silenced doubters, which Flagg has done comprehensively.
And in a nice touch (or dig), Jamal Mashburn and Gilbert Arenas both went on the record early to express doubts about Flagg.
Those comments are included, and, in retrospect, they look like idiots.
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