Atlanta evened the score at Madison Square Garden with New York behind a Game 2, 107-106 Hawks win. The Hawks are back at home in Atlanta for a chance to go up 2-1 in the series.
CJ McCollum scored a game-high 32 points for Atlanta after putting up 26 in Game 1. The Hawks shot 49% from the field in Game 2, won the free throw battle, and had fewer turnovers than the Knicks.
New York had a chance to win at the buzzer, but Mikal Bridges' shot came up short. The Knicks' Jalen Brunson scored a team-high 29 points and all five starters recorded at least 10 points. The Knicks went 6-3 in road playoff games last year and won the first five away from New York.
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.
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Game Details and How to Watch Live: Hawks vs. Knicks
Date: Thursday, April 23, 2026
Time: 7 PM EST
Site: State Farm Arena
City: Atlanta, GA
Network/Streaming: Amazon Prime Video
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Game Odds: Hawks vs. Knicks
The latest odds as of Wednesday courtesy of DraftKings:
Moneyline: Atlanta Hawks (-110), New York Knicks (-110)
Spread: Hawks -1.5
Total: 216.5 points
This game opened Knicks -1.5 with the Total set at 216.5.
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 45-39 ATS this season and 21-20 ATS as the home team
Atlanta is 42-42 to the Over
New York is an NBA-worst 17-26 ATS as the road team
New York is 45-40 ATS this season
New York is 46-39 to the Under and 24-17 to the Under as the road team
The Under is 2-0 in the series
The Knicks and Hawks are both 1-1 ATS in the series
Rotoworld Best Bet
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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 Hawks’ Moneyline
Spread: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Hawks -1.5 ATS
Total: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Game Total OVER 216.5
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If even the Portland Trail Blazers are going to upset the San Antonio Spurs early this week, then why can’t the Phoenix Suns shock the Oklahoma City Thunder?
Perhaps that is a bold thought, but there is still value to be found in these player props and NBA picks on Wednesday, April 22.
Where was this Orlando Magic defense all season? Well, to put it simply, it was injured.
But in the final two weeks of the regular season, Orlando had the best defensive rating in the NBA. There is very much a sample size worry to that compliment, but it was the best indicator we had of what could be coming from the Magic in the postseason.
And that has certainly delivered in Orlando’s last two games, eviscerations of the Charlotte Hornets and the Detroit Pistons. I mean, really, how often do you get to use the plural form of “evisceration”?
Only Cade Cunningham produced for Detroit in Game 1, scoring 39 points in 40 minutes, shooting 13-of-27 from the field. His conditioning while coming back from a collapsed lung was astounding.
When Cunningham was sidelined, Daniss Jenkins proved a shockingly steady piece for the Pistons, but with Cunningham now back, Jenkins’ playing time should plummet further than Sunday’s 22 minutes. Even with that elevated playing time, he scored just six points.
Cunningham is all Detroit has. He might need to play 44 minutes against this defense. Every Cunningham minute lessens the chances of Jenkins seeing added time or added responsibilities.
Time: 7:00 p.m. ET
Where to watch: ESPN
Prop #2: Dillon Brooks 20+ points
+140 at bet365
Dillon Brooks scored 18 points in Game 1 against the Oklahoma City Thunder. But the more pertinent stat is that the Phoenix Suns’ agitator took 22 shots, most on the team by five attempts.
The Thunder know to focus on Devin Booker. With the ball forced out of his hands, who is never going to shy from a shot? The one and only Dillon Brooks.
Phoenix is not going to discourage Brooks, not that it would have any effect. The Suns need some combination of Booker, Brooks and Jalen Green to get hot to have any hope of keeping up with the Thunder.
It will be inefficient. It might be a net-negative. But expect Brooks to chuck plenty again tonight, and that likelihood creates clear value in this milestone prop.
Time: 9:30 p.m. ET
Where to watch: ESPN
Prop #3: Devin Booker Over 5.5 assists
+120 at bet365
If Oklahoma City is going to force the ball out of Devin Booker’s hands, then that thought immediately creates value in his assists prop, particularly at this plus-money.
Booker had only two assists in Game 1, but that was more a reflection of his teammates’ shooting than anything else. Outside of Booker (8-of-17, 47.1% from the field), Phoenix shot just 31.8% from the field.
By no means are the Suns about to find offensive rhythm. The Thunder are too good defensively. But 31.8% from the field was particularly wretched.
Expect that to climb past 40% tonight, some of that improvement coming from Booker’s passes simply because Oklahoma City will refuse to risk the Phoenix superstar getting hot.
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Cleveland is up 2-0 in the series over the Raptors but head to Toronto for a Game 3 all or nothing after a 115-105 Cavaliers Game 2 win.
Donovan Mitchell (30) and James Harden (28) combined for 58 points in Game 2's, 115-105 win. Both the Raptors and Cavaliers shot over 50% from the field, but below 35% from deep. Cleveland is the only team in the East that has yet to lost a game in the playoffs.
Toronto and everyone knows the chances of coming back from a 0-3 hole, so this is the last chance for the Raptors to make this a series. The Raptors got 48 combined points from Scottie Barnes (26) and Brandon Ingram (22), but the three other starters totaled 12 points.
Let's 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.
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Game Details and How to Watch Live: Raptors vs. Cavaliers
Date: Thursday, April 23, 2026
Time: 8:10 PM EST
Site: Scotiabank Arena
City: Toronto, ON
Network/Streaming: NBC / Peacock
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Game Odds: Cavaliers vs. Raptors
The latest odds as of Wednesday courtesy of DraftKings:
Moneyline: Cleveland Cavaliers (-155), Toronto Raptors (+130)
Spread: Cavaliers -3.5
Total: 219.5 points
This game sits right where it opened with Cleveland favored by 5.5 and the Game Total set at 221.5.
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: Cavaliers vs. Raptors
Toronto Raptors
PG Immanuel Quickley (questionable)
SG Brandon Ingram
SF RJ Barrett
PF Scottie Barnes
SF Jakob Poeltl
Cleveland Cavaliers
PG James Harden
SG Donovan Mitchell
SF Dean Wade
PF Evan Mobley
C Jarrett Allen
Injury Report: Raptors vs. Cavaliers
Toronto Raptors
Immanuel Quickley (hamstring) has been declared QUESTIONABLE of tonight’s game
Cleveland Cavaliers
None
Important stats, trends and insights: Raptors vs. Cavaliers
Cleveland is an NBA worst 35-49 ATS
Cleveland is 43-41 to the Under
Cleveland is 17-24 ATS on the road
Toronto is 51-33 to the Under, ranking tied for third-best
Toronto is 42-42 ATS
Toronto is 21-20 ATS as the home team
Toronto is 23-18 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 Thursday’s Raptors and Cavaliers’ game:
Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is leaning toward a play on the Raptors Moneyline
Spread: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Raptors +3.5 ATS
Total: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Game Total UNDER 219.5
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An unexpected first round in the NBA playoffs has forced oddsmakers to adjust on the fly, with the Los Angeles Lakers being named new series favorites, albeit narrowly, and the San Antonio Spurs’ title dreams dwindling in light of Victor Wembanyama’s head injury.
Key Takeaways
The Lakers were the most-bet team to win their first-round series.
Oddsmakers moved L.A. up from +10,000 to +3,500 to win the NBA Finals.
Top books dropped the Spurs from +550 to +700 to win the championship after Wembanyama’s concussion.
The Lakers were supposed to be an afterthought for the Houston Rockets, who opened as -750 favorites (88.2% implied chance) to win the series. The Rockets have fallen a considerable distance to their current line of +115, although that still gives them a 46.5% implied chance to win four of the next five games.
Conversely, the Lakers are up to to -135 after opening at +550. LeBron James has never lost a series after taking a 2-0 lead, going 32-0.
That’s positive news for the betting public, as Los Angeles was the most-bet team to win a first-round series in the entire playoff bracket.
The purple and gold finished the season 53-29, one game ahead of the Rockets and in fourth in the Western Conference. They also won two of their three regular-season matchups, including both meetings in 2026.
However, the injury absences of leading scorers Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves prompted the oddsmakers to mark the 5-seed Rockets as the team to beat.
The Lakers have also made up substantial ground in the NBA championship odds picture. DraftKings has them eighth at +3,500 after they began the playoffs at +10,000 and were as long as +12,000.
DraftKings still has the Rockets as -9.5 favorites in Game 3. Reaves has a chance to return from an oblique injury before the end of the series, while Doncic is presumed to be unavailable until the second round.
Spurs' odds slide
Heads turned away from screens and hands covered eyes Tuesday night when Wembanyama went clattering to the hardwood while trying to grab a loose ball.
The 7-foot-4 Frenchman, who set franchise records for points scored and threes made in a playoff debut the game before, appeared to lose consciousness on the court and was later confirmed to have suffered a concussion. He did not return to the game, finishing with five points, four rebounds, one assist, and one block in 12 minutes.
SCARY SIGHT IN SAN ANTONIO 😳
Victor Wembanyama fell and slammed his face off the court while driving to the basket and had to be taken to the locker room 🤕pic.twitter.com/JIpub8b56z
The Portland Trail Blazers took advantage of Wembanyama’s absence, finishing the game on a 16-4 run to win 106-103 and knot the series at one game apiece. The teams will take the floor for Game 3 in Portland on Friday night.
The Spurs went from +500 to +550 in odds to win the NBA Finals at major online sportsbooks prior to Wemby’s fall and resultant injury. BetMGM has them at the shortest odds of all leading operators at +550, while FanDuel now lists them at +700.
The NBA has a 48-hour minimum before players can return from concussions. Wembanyama could still be back in time for Game 3 if he doesn’t need any extended recovery time.
The earliest that a player has ever returned from a concussion in the playoffs was four days, which would be the rest day between Games 3 and 4. Following a typical recovery timeline would put the Spurs’ star back sometime between Games 5 and 7.
DraftKings still has the Spurs as -550 favorites to win their series matchup with the +400 Blazers.
NBA title odds picture
The Oklahoma City Thunder still lead DraftKings' NBA title odds at -120. The Spurs and Boston Celtics (+650) are the only other teams below +1,000.
The Denver Nuggets (+1,100) and Cleveland Cavaliers (+1,400) lead the second tier of contenders before the odds lengthen to +2,200 for the sixth-place New York Knicks.
SAN ANTONIO, TX - APRIL 21: De'Aaron Fox #4 of the San Antonio Spurs handles the ball during the game against the Portland Trail Blazers during Round One Game Two of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on April 21, 2026 at the Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photos by Michael Gonzales/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
The horn sounded about 30 seconds ago and I’m just typing. Just trying to get it out of my system. Vent the air. The poison. The fury. Whatever it is that’s coursing through my veins at the moment, I want it out and I want it out now.
That was horrible. Man, that was horrible. I’m just so mad about every single turn of the screw that brought game 2 crashing down around us tonight.
I hate that it happened. You know, that thing we were all worried about? The axe swinging so delicately over our heads all season dropped in maybe the least dramatic way possible. Jrue Holiday simply stepping aside and Victor crashing to the floor unceremoniously. I don’t know what the prognosis is. I don’t know when he’ll be back. I just know that he was there and then he was gone and it felt like all the air was sucked out of my lungs.
I hate the refs, who were obviously biased and conspiring against us. I hate every non-Tiago Splitter member of the Blazers organization, who are all obviously bad actors with ill intentions. I hate fouling up three. I hate injuries. I hate the Oklahoma City Thunder, who are probably sitting up there laughing at this cute little crash out we’re all having during our first foray back into the playoffs. They’re probably smugly thinking that after a whole season of people talking up the Spurs, it’s the highest of comedy to see us fall on our faces now that we’re here.
I hate that they’re probably right.
I hate that the crowd never got their payoff. Victor went down and every single person in that building took a deep breath and just kept rocking. They stayed loud. They kept chanting. They refused to fold. I saw them rise as one in the fourth, right after Portland retook the lead, putting every ounce of their power into willing the Spurs back out in front. I stood up too. I freaked out my dogs. I was ready to believe.
I hate that we turned it over on that possession.
I hate that the boys didn’t pull this off. Unlike me, they never got scared. They never shrank from the moment. They didn’t sit on their couch after Wemby went down, nurse a warm Miller Lite, and hyperventilate. No, they continued to grind out there. They traded punches. They battled. They put in the work to distract us from that gaping 7’4″ wound in our side and they damn near pulled it off. It was amazing to watch. My heart bleeds for them. I want to sing songs about this performance. I want to burn the Frost Bank Center in effigy. I want to rename both of my daughters after Luke Kornet.
I hate that it simply wasn’t enough. They fought and they scrapped and they clawed and it wasn’t enough. It just wasn’t enough. It was right there.
I hate it.
I’m sitting here at 9:53 P.M. on Tuesday night, my hands are shaking. My head is buzzing. I feel this one deep in my chest.
I just hate it.
So, I’m fine. You’re fine. We’re all fine.
In the cold light of the morning, we’re all….fine.
The opening game of this series felt less like a playoff game and more like a homecoming. The basketball was real, but it almost played second fiddle to everything surrounding it. The color, the noise, the pure relief of being back. We came, we saw, we partied. I felt like I was glowing for two straight days in the aftermath.
Game 2 was a different animal from the very beginning. The crowd wore black. The Spurs were back in their plain white jerseys. Whatever spell the Fiesta colors had cast two nights earlier had worn off and now we were all clocking back in for our Tuesday night shift at the Playoff factory. Stripped of that pomp and circumstance, all that was left was the basketball. Cold, serious, necessary basketball.
To make matters worse, the basketball was bad. Everyone came out flat and disjointed. The Blazers were physical and up for the fight and the Spurs just seemed distracted. Almost annoyed their opponents were even putting up a fight in the first place. Even as they wrestled the lead back by the end of the quarter, something just felt off.
Now, I’m not going to say that Victor getting hurt was a good thing because, you know, even thinking about the ramifications of his injury right now makes me a little queasy. That said, it did serve as a fascinating pivot point for everyone in the building. Basically, it was a bucket of cold water to the face.
All of a sudden, every single one of us was awake. We were no longer tapdancing through some fairytale. Things had gotten very real and you could feel the crowd lock back in. We were invincible, but now we were bleeding. This was a real fight and, more than that, it was a fight we might actually lose.
There was every reason for this team to fall apart and try to pick up the pieces later. I was waiting for it. Looking for signs that this tight-knit group, this lovable band of young guys facing their first real test, might finally blink at a challenge. I came up empty.
Before Game 1, they showed a video of Keldon Johnson bouncing through the halls of the arena with a boombox over his shoulder, loudly proclaiming “It’s ok to be nervous, but it ain’t ok to be scared.” Watching this team play the final three quarters without their best player, I kept coming back to that. Nobody got scared. Not once. They came up short last night, but they never stopped fighting.
I’m sure we all had some version of the story written in our head about how this team would sweep into the playoffs on the heels of Victor’s otherworldly powers and effortlessly ascend to the top of the mountain. This team was blessed with divine purpose and, surely, nothing would stand in our way.
So, yea. That’s out the window now, isn’t it?
Before anything bad happened on Tuesday night, Wembanyama was asked if he felt the weight of the moment the Spurs find themselves in. He mused, “I wouldn’t say weight. I would say it feels safe. It feels like if you trip, there’s a lot of hands that are ready to catch you. From Day 1, it’s felt that way.”
I love this quote. It’s an all timer.It somehow tugs at every little thing that feels special about being a Spurs fan. We’re all lucky enough to be a part of this legacy, this community, this culture. This is our home. This is por vida.
If there’s one thing we’ve learned from our decade out in the wilderness, it’s that por vida doesn’t mean you just show up for the party. You show up when it’s hard. You go until you can’t go, and then you go some more.
Our boys have been well and truly knocked off the easy path. They’ve tripped.
Are you ready to catch them?
Takeaways
I think the Spurs will be better prepared to play without Wembanyama on Friday than they were Tuesday night. Watch that 13-0 run to open the fourth quarter and tell me this team can’t function without him. They clearly can. The, ahem, little detail where they blew the 14 point lead never really felt like a talent problem, it felt like an energy problem. A giant hole got blown in the boat and everyone had spent the rest of the night frantically bailing water while simultaneously insisting everything was fine. It was valiant and necessary, but unsustainable. Castle’s 7-of-20 shooting night and Fox going 1-of-6 in the fourth weren’t indictments of their ability, they were symptoms of an offense that had lost its anchor and never quite found its footing again. A few days to collect their thoughts, draw up some sets, and actually prepare for a game without Wemby should go a long way.
A thing I totally forgot about playoff basketball is that weird feeling where you never give the Portland Trail Blazers more than two seconds of thought during the regular season, and then, all of a sudden, after about two quarters of playoff basketball, these guys are your mortal enemies. I hate them. They’re bad guys and they should feel bad for being so bad. Deni Avdija? Bad guy. Jrue Holiday? Villain. Donovan Clingan? If you lay hands on my sweet boy Luke Kornet one more time, the next thing you’ll be seeing is me in the octagon.
Scoot Henderson going off like that was, truly, something you hate to see. Not on a personal level. I’m sure Scoot’s fine. But you hate to see an opponent who has spent his first few years not quite living up to his potential suddenly start living up to it while you’re fighting for your life. He punished every drop coverage the Spurs threw at him, drained step-back threes like he’d been doing it all season, and finished with 31 points on 11-of-17 shooting. Hey bud? Go do that somewhere else.
If I could somehow manage to ethereally float outside my body and think about this game objectively, which I can’t, I’d be sitting here raving about Dylan Harper going toe to toe with Scoot all night. Two extraordinarily physically gifted guards battling it out, draining shots, mean mugging each other. That was electric. What a blessing that would be to watch if I wasn’t having a panic attack at the same time.
WWL Post Game Press Conference
Well, it was your first time writing about a Spurs playoff game. How’d it go? Was it everything you dreamed of?
That was a nightmare. How are you supposed to eloquently channel your emotions about a game into the written word while your house is on fire?
Yeah, that’s kind of the challenge there, isn’t it?
I’m exhausted. I’m drained. I feel like my head got caved in and now I’m supposed to just go about my day like nothing’s wrong? People at my day job are already asking me stuff like “how are you?” and “what’s up, man?” How am I? How AM I? What’s UP? The nerve of these people.
HOUSTON, TX - JANUARY 5: Devin Booker #1 of the Phoenix Suns handles the ball while defended by Kevin Durant #7 of the Houston Rockets during the game on January 5, 2026 at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Logan Riely/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
I love April basketball. It simply hits different. It is better when the Phoenix Suns are part of it (and more stressful), sure, but this stretch of the season always delivers. Every night for a fortnight, you get multiple First Round games, numerous options to choose from, and countless narratives to observe. Something is always on to entertain, analyze, and enjoy. It makes it easy to turn on, tune in, zone out.
Last night, after watching Philly and Portland win, I had the Houston Rockets and the Los Angeles Lakers on. It’s one of those series you kind of hate watch. It’s impossible for both to fail, but that’s where I default. I don’t want the Lakers’ success. Why would I? They’re a franchise built upon a foundation of luck, more so than the Spurs, and their fanbase still thinks Kobe is a top 3 player of all-time. He’s not a top 3 Laker of all time. But that’s a conversation for a different day (Kareem, Magic, Shaq). It’s hard to talk to people who lack logic. And the Rockets? Let’s just say that the Suns’ fan in me wants to believe we won the KD trade, so having them lose fortifies that narrative, despite it being a non-productive and pointless one.
It was a competitive game. Despite no Luka and no Austin Reaves, a 41-year-old LeBron James delivered. Along with new sidekick Luke Kennard, he handled business and pushed the series to 2-0.
Kevin Durant (you have heard of the guy) did not have a clean night. The Lakers swarmed him. Marcus Smart was in his jersey from the opening tip, and KD coughed it regularly. By the fourth, the pressure only increased. He finished close to a double-double, but not the one you want. 23 points. 9 turnovers.
I could not help but flash back to those moments when Kevin Durant wore a Phoenix Suns jersey. Not the playoffs — they never got there last season — but those tight regular season games where things would slow down and suddenly the ball would bounce off his foot. It happened more than you want to remember. For all the brilliance, for all the shot making, there were possessions that ended before they ever had a chance because of a turnover that felt avoidable.
Seeing it once again sent my mind wandering a bit. Where Phoenix was a year ago. Where the Houston Rockets are now. Where both franchises sit, and where they might be headed. They are forever tied together now. Houston pushed in chips to win now, bringing in Durant, following a path the Suns had already walked. Phoenix did it in 2022, moving assets, reshaping the roster, and betting on a player to tilt the ceiling of the franchise. Houston followed that blueprint. They gave up less than Phoenix did, but the idea was the same: change the trajectory, chase a title, see if it all comes together.
And now you look up, and there is a chance both teams are staring at the same kind of outcome, sitting in the same room, asking the same questions about what comes next.
Because think about it. The Houston Rockets were the two seed in the Western Conference last season. They lost a hard-fought seven-game series to the Golden State Warriors, and you could point to youth as the reason. That pushed them to chase something more. Meanwhile, the Phoenix Suns did not make the playoffs. Now both teams could be staring at a similar outcome. Houston dropped from the two seed to the five after acquiring Kevin Durant. Phoenix climbed from the 11th to the seventh, then earned the eighth through the Play-In. The Suns head into Oklahoma City with a chance to even the series tonight, and if they do not, they become the only Western Conference team down 0-2 in the first round. Well, almost. Houston is right there, too.
Of course, this is reactionary. The postseason always is. You lose, it feels like you will never win again. You win, it feels like you will never lose again. That is the swing. I still expect Houston to push back in their series. They may not mirror what is happening to Phoenix in Games 1 and 2, but a first round exit is very much in play. And that brings the thought back to where we are now versus where we were then.
At the end of last season, it felt hopeless. The highest payroll in NBA history produced zero postseason wins. Zero postseason games. Bradley Beal had that silly no-trade clause, the draft cupboard was bare, and it felt like the only path forward ran through a complete and total reset. We talked about it all summer, how to fix it, and how to move on. And the Suns did. They moved on from Durant, moved on from Beal, wiped the board clean, and leaned into a cultural reset.
This season, they overachieved. It is not a perfect roster. Far from it. That is what makes the upcoming offseason so important. Step one was the culture rest. It was about identifying players who fit their desired style and identity. That box was checked. Now comes the harder part. Continue building with limited flexibility and rising competition in the West, while managing expectations.
That word matters. Expectation. It weighed down the previous era with Durant, Beal, and Devin Booker. Now it returns. The expectation is growth. Improvement. Tough decisions made with incomplete information. That is what made this season fun. It came without expectation. That is also what separates Phoenix from Houston right now. If the Suns lose in the first round, even in a sweep, the reaction stays measured. If that happens in Houston, the noise gets loud. Coaching questions. Roster moves. Big swings.
Next season will not come with that same cushion. The expectations are coming back, and this summer matters. You cannot keep cycling through experiments during Booker’s prime. If that is the path, then you have to ask bigger questions about direction. There are real decisions ahead. Jalen Green and his value. Mark Williams is entering restricted free agency, and what number makes sense? Royce O’Neale and how to maximize that asset. Grayson Allen and the balance between shooting and overall impact.
Those conversations are coming. They have to. Until then, we watch. We study. We see what works for others, what breaks down, and where there might be opportunity. And when you hear Houston fans vent about late-game turnovers from Durant, you cannot help but nod a little. You have seen that story before.
And maybe that is what April basketball really does best. It blurs the lines between present and past, between what feels new and what you know you have already seen. One game turns into a mirror, one possession into a reminder that team-building in the NBA is rarely linear and never guaranteed. The Suns and Rockets sit on different timelines but share the same lesson: bold swings can raise your ceiling, but they also sharpen your margin for error.
So as the games keep stacking up and the stakes keep rising, you watch not just for the outcome, but for the patterns. For the hints of what lasts and what doesn’t. Because in the end, that is the pull of this stretch of the season. It is not just about who wins or loses tonight. It is about understanding what it all means for tomorrow.
Los Angeles, CA - April 21:Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James (23) glares at Houston Rockets center Alperen Sengun (28) in game 2 of the NBA playoff round 1 at Crypto.Com Arena in Los Angeles, CA on Tuesday, April 21, 2026.(Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
LOS ANGELES — As news broke on Tuesday night that Kevin Durant’s status had been upgraded to available, the collective tension in Crypto.com Arena rose. The tone of seriousness, implications, and magnitude of the game completely changed.
Durant was an inferno in the first quarter, hitting every pull-up jump shot, but the purple and gold quickly countered. A back-and-forth rock fight ensued, both teams throwing haymakers in front of an electric crowd in the Crypto Arena.
Rockets head coach Ime Udoka, understanding the severity of the situation, shortened Reed Sheppard’s minutes from 36 in Game 1 to just 11 in Game 2, leaving All-Star big man Alperen Şengün as the main mismatch left to exploit.
LA blew a 15-point lead in the second quarter to close the half, with Houston going in front early in the third quarter. The Rockets’ physical ball pressure defense started to sink its teeth in, forcing turnovers, late-clock shots and stagnant offense.
What followed in the second half was a surgical breakdown courtesy of vintage LeBron and ruthless mismatch hunting. LA scrapped every other action and put him at the top of the key with Deandre Ayton to repeatedly attack Şengün’s.
Houston under no circumstances wants to switch and leave Şengün stranded on an island with LeBron. They had him either “shock” the ball screen — meet at the level and attempt to return to the rolling big — or sit in traditional drop coverage.
Understanding this, head coach JJ Redick put sharpshooters Rui Hachimura and Luke Kennard in the corners and dared the Rockets to send help off one of them.
Watch below as LeBron runs the action with Ayton in the middle of the floor. Şengün meets him at the level of the second screen, no one tags Ayton as he rolls to the rim and he gets an easy finish off the pocket pass.
A few possessions later, they ran it again. Watch below as Şengün is in a traditional drop coverage defense, allowing LeBron to get downhill and easily find Ayton over the top with the lob.
He continued to dissect the defense, even getting a monstrous reverse dunk in the half-court on an easy blow-by and miscommunication.
Houston eventually surrendered to put two on the ball and blitz the screen to get the ball out of LeBron’s hand before he created an advantage. The instant LeBron sees the double coming towards him, he rifles a pass to the opposite corner to Hachimura for the 3-pointer.
The Lakers never trailed again after the brief third-quarter deficit, keeping Houston at bay the rest of the game. LeBron had five of his seven assists in the second half, constantly picking at the Şengün matchup.
The 41-year-old finished the game with 28 points and seven assists, masterfully controlling every possession whenever the Rockets threatened.
He’s not the only one to get loose and benefit from going at Şengün. Luke Kennard had back-to-back 20-point games, getting to his spots off of screens to finish an efficient 8-13 from the field. Marcus Smart joined in with an 8-13 night himself along with seven assists after tallying eight in Game 1.
The Lakers have a chance to go up 3-0 on Friday in Houston, a series lead that has never been lost. They’ve played a deliberate, mismatch-hunting offense in both wins, continuing to dare Houston to solve it. So far, they haven’t, and the Lakers will send them home embarrassingly early if they can’t.
It started as an innocent enough play: Victor Wembanyama had guard Jrue Holiday on him and Wemby tried a spin move to get around (or through) his defender to get to the rim. Holiday pulled the chair on him, and in doing so tripped Wembanyama, who went to the ground — but Wemby tried to pass the ball so his hands could not protect his head, and he fell face-first onto the court. Wembanyama left the game not to return and is now in the league's concussion protocol, San Antonio announced before Game 2 ended.
The big question for Spurs fans: When will he return?
NBA Concussion Protocol
The NBA concussion protocol calls for 24 hours of no activity by the player after the injury. Following that, if he is symptom-free, for the next 24 hours, he can slowly, gradually start to do some basketball activity, but the player cannot begin full participation in the return to play protocol until at least 48 hours from the time of the injury.
From the NBA's protocol:
• The return to participation process involves several steps of increasing exertion — from a stationary bike, to jogging, to agility work, to non-contact team drills. • Each exertion stage must be directly monitored by a member of the team's medical staff. With each step, a focused neurological examination is performed, and a player must be symptom free to move to the next step. If a player is not symptom free after a step, he stops until he is symptom free and beings again at the previous step of the process (i.e., the last step he passed without any symptoms).
Once those steps are completed, the team physician must discuss the return-to-participation process and decision with the Director of the NBA Concussion Program, a doctor who specializes in these injuries.
When might Wembanyama return
Game 3 is in Portland on Friday night, and while in theory Wembanyama could be cleared by then, that seems unlikely at best. Especially considering San Antonio as an organization tends to be conservative in bringing players back from any injury.
Game 4 is Sunday, also in Portland, but don't be surprised if Wembanyama is out for that game as well. As noted by Jeff Stotts of In Street Clothes, the median time missed for a concussion in the NBA is seven days, although because of the nature of the injury and its healing, some players are out longer (the average time missed is 9.3 days).
Victor Wembanyama Injury Update: There is no mandatory timeframe to complete the league's mandated protocol, primarily due to the variability associated with concussions. This season the average time lost for a concussion was 9.3 days (median = 7.0 days).
Game 5 is back in San Antonio on Tuesday, April 28, one week after the concussion happened.
Spurs without Wembanyama
San Antonio is used to playing without Wembanyama, and it went an impressive 12-6 in the games he missed this season. The Spurs overall had a neutral +.04 net rating when Wembanyama was off the court this season.
At center, Luke Kornet — who has been rock solid this season — moves into the starting lineup, and behind him one of Mason Plumlee, Kelly Olynyk or Bismack Biyombo needs to step up.
However, what San Antonio needs is much better guard play than it saw late against Portland in Game 2 — the Spurs started the fourth quarter on a 13-0 run to go up by 14 with fewer than 10 minutes remaining, then they let Scoot Henderson and the Trail Blazers close the game on a 27-10 run to steal the win. Former Clutch Player of the Year De'Aaron Fox was 1-of-6 in the fourth quarter on Tuesday. Portland's Holiday outworked Devin Vassell for a rebound of an airballed 3 to get an easy bucket inside. The athletic, physical perimeter defenders for the Trail Blazers threw the Spurs' guards off their game.
For San Antonio to win on the road, the team's star guards — Fox, Stephon Castle and Dylan Harper — need to step up, get by their defenders and downhill to touch the paint, then either kick out for the open 3-pointer or score themselves. Each of them has an impressive midrange game and can finish at the rim, but all of that disappeared at the end of Game 2 when the Spurs needed it. That can't happen again. The Spurs need that trio to take over, not just tread water until Wembanyama returns.
The New York Knicks and Atlanta Hawks are locked at 1-1 as their opening round NBA Playoffs series heads south for Game 3 on Thursday.
My same-game parlay for this pivotal matchup is in a “New York state of mind”, banking on the Knicks to overcome a crushing loss in Game 2 and get solid work from two of its grittiest postseason performers in Game 3.
The New York Knicks had a 2-0 series lead in their hands, but poor foul shooting and careless turnovers opened the door for an advantageous Atlanta Hawks squad. New York has looked strong for seven of the first eight quarters in this series and feels the pressure not to let the Hawks get a whiff of hope as they head home.
OG Anunoby’s points total should be higher in Game 3. But the Knicks forward left points on the table with a 4-for-8 night from the charity stripe in Game 2. He dropped 18 in the series opener, doesn’t shrink on the road, and is projected for as many as 17+ points in Game 3.
Josh Hart finds another gear in the postseason and has been extremely active on the glass, averaging 19.0 rebounding chances in the opening two games. That nose for the ball has resulted in 13 and 14 boards in those outings. His Game 3 forecast once again sits around double figures on the glass from Hart.
Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change. Not intended for use in MA. Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.
ORLANDO, FLORIDA - JANUARY 09: Tyrese Maxey #0 and Vj Edgecombe #77 of the Philadelphia 76ers look on against the Orlando Magic during the third quarter at Kia Center on January 09, 2026 in Orlando, Florida. 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 Rich Storry/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Sixers beat the Celtics at TD Garden on opening night — a game which took place in October, though it feels like a lifetime ago.
On that night, Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe were magnificent. The veteran guard dropped 40 while the rookie poured in 34. With Joel Embiid struggling mightily and Paul George shelved, the backcourt of the future made its presence felt in the present. The Sixers’ season was a roller coaster the rest of the way.
So after they were blown out by Boston in Game 1 Sunday, it was only fitting for the VJ-Maxx backcourt to lead them to a stunning upset in Game 2. Like they’ve done all season, Maxey and Edgecombe flushed what happened and willed their team to a win.
That win in the opener was part of a 4-0 start. Then the Sixers struggled as Embiid and George weren’t consistently in the lineup and had not returned to form when available. As the veterans began looking like themselves, the team was showing real signs of life — until George was slapped with a 25-game suspension. Then Embiid battled a stress reaction in his right leg, followed by a right oblique strain. Then Maxey hurt his pinky.
That felt like the end. Even if everyone could get back, there’s no way they could make it work. A win over the then-surging Charlotte Hornets with a full squad had folks giddy. One appendectomy later, it felt like all hope was lost. Salvaging a home play-in game — a win over the Orlando Magic — provided a brief moment of joy, followed quickly by the grim reality of facing the hated Celtics.
And Game 1 felt like an inevitability.
Embiid isn’t coming back. Sweep incoming. Fire Daryl Morey. Fire Nick Nurse. Salary dump PG.
OK, there are likely many of you who still agree with a couple of those, but there will be no sweep.
And maybe, just maybe, Embiid can make a heroic return. That would sure make things interesting.
But we’re not even having this conversation if not for the dynamic play of Maxey and Edgecombe.
Edgecombe looked a bit like a rookie in Game 1. It’s understandable. The Sixers have asked so much of the 20-year-old, it’s only fair to allow him a few growing pains. He got over those — and some physical pains after a nasty fall in the first quarter — rather quickly.
In Game 2, Edgecombe was arguably the best player on the court. Think about how remarkable that is for a second when the court featured Maxey, George, Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown (who was also quite brilliant for Boston Tuesday). He dropped 30 points, the first Sixers rookie to do so since Andrew Toney (against the Celtics, of course) back in 1981. He also had 10 rebounds, making him the youngest player in NBA postseason history to go for 30 points and 10 rebounds and the first rookie to do it since Tim Duncan in 1998.
Much like opening night, Edgecombe’s historical performance overshadowed Maxey’s work. It wasn’t the most efficient evening for the All-Star guard, but he came alive when it mattered most, scoring 12 of his 29 points in the fourth. Boston was able to whittle the Sixers’ lead down to two with under six minutes to go. Maxey, sensing the game slipping away from his team, pulled up and knocked down a three. After a stop on the other end, he buried another.
That quickly, the Celtics went from being down a bucket to trailing by three possessions. After another big three from Edgecombe to push the lead to 13, Maxey got downhill and finished off a beautiful up-and-under layup. Tatum fouled him for an and-one. The TD Garden crowd was silenced, but you could hear Maxey giving the Celtics’ bench and crowd the business.
The Sixers tied the series up 1-1 heading back to South Philly for Game 3 Friday night. It’s what Maxey and Edgecombe have done all season long. Even if Boston rips off the next three games, this was just another example of the grit this team has shown all season, led by its electric backcourt.
And though it seems like they’ve been playing together forever, their partnership is only just beginning.
The New York Knicks should have taken a 2-0 series south to face the Atlanta Hawks in Game 3 tonight, but it’s the Knicks we’re talking about here.
Blowing a double-digit lead in the fourth quarter of Game 2 wasn’t the only bad beat for New York fans. Anyone who had OG Anunoby to top his point prop had salt thrown in the wound.
My Knicks vs. Hawks predictions and NBA picks for Thursday, April 23 will bank on a bounce-back performance for Anunoby in Game 3, with tip-off set for 7:00 on Amazon Prime.
UPDATE: Added a prediction for who will win tonight.
Knicks vs Hawks prediction
Who will win Knicks vs Hawks Game 3?
Knicks: After watching the Knicks piss away a would-be win in Game 2, it’s tough to trust this team as the series swings south. Using the term “must win” in the playoffs is dumb, but if there ever was a game New York must win, it’s this one. You can’t afford to give this plucky Hawks team momentum.
Knicks vs Hawks best bet: OG Anunoby Over 15.5 points (-112)
Peace and love to anyone who bet on OG Anunoby to top his scoring prop of 16.5 points in Game 2.
The New York Knicks’ forward finished 4-for-8 from the free-throw line Monday and scored only 14 points in the loss to the Atlanta Hawks. Rough stuff.
Anunoby did enter Game 2 with a bum wheel after injuring his ankle in the series opener. He shot 4-for-9 from the floor after connecting on 6-of-9 FGAs along with all four of his free throws for 18 points in Game 1. However, he was still aggressively going after the Hawks defense in Game 2 and made two triples for the second straight outing.
Anunoby is putting in work, with 38 minutes in each of the first two games, but his usage has dropped to open this series. He’s normally shooting around 12 shots per outing but is taking a step back with defensive assignments a priority.
Considering how poorly Jalen Brunson and Mikal Bridges shot in Game 2 (a collective 13 for 36), OG needs to pull double duty as the series swings to Atlanta Thursday night. And while some of his teammates struggle outside of MSG, Anunoby actually averages almost two points more in the role of visitor.
He’s put up more than 16 points in three of five meetings with Atlanta overall, including 22 points in his most recent trip to State Farm Arena. Player projections sit between 16.4 and 17.1 points in Game 3.
Knicks vs Hawks same-game parlay
New York let Game 2 get away with turnovers and missed free throws sparking Atlanta’s rally from 12 points down entering the fourth quarter. The Knicks can’t give the Hawks hope. They’ve done a good job checking Atlanta’s top scorers and clean up their mess in Game 3.
Josh Hart is built for postseason play. He’s averaged 19.0 rebounding chances through the first two games of this series, hauling in 13 and 14 boards in those outings. His projections call for another double-digit night on the glass in Game 3.
Knicks vs Hawks SGP
Knicks moneyline
OG Anunoby Over 15.5 points
Josh Hart Over 7.5 rebounds
Our "from downtown" SGP: Original Gangster
Anunoby’s two-way play is vital to the Knicks stealing a win in Atlanta. His projections sit as high as 17+ points and he’s snatched eight boards in each of the first two games. As for defense, the athletic forward swatted a shot in Game 2 and averages around a block per outing on the season.
Knicks vs Hawks SGP
Knicks moneyline
OG Anunoby Over 15.5 points
OG Anunoby Over 5.5 rebounds
OG Anunoby Over 0.5 blocks
Knicks vs Hawks odds for Game 3
Spread: New York -1.5 (-105) | Atlanta +1.5 (-115)
Moneyline: New York -120 | Atlanta +100
Over/Under: Over 214.5 (-110) | Under 214.5 (-110)
Knicks vs Hawks betting trend to know
The Knicks have stayed Under the total in 30 of their last 45 games (+13.50 Units / 27% ROI). Find more NBA betting trends for Knicks vs. Hawks.
How to watch Knicks vs Hawks Game 3
Location
State Farm Arena, Atlanta, GA
Date
Thursday, April 23, 2026
Tip-off
7:00 p.m. ET
TV
Prime Video
Knicks vs Hawks latest injuries
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Golden's name was linked to the Warriors on Monday, April 20 by Yahoo Sports’ Kevin O’Connor, who reported that if Steve Kerr decides to leave the NBA franchise after 13 seasons, the Warriors would pursue Golden. However, based on Golden's response in a media availability on Wednesday, it appears that he has his eyes set on the sidelines in Gainesville and the SEC for the 2026-27 season.
"I’m definitely planning on coaching the Gators," Golden said on Wednesday during a media availability.
Kerr spoke at length about his future with the Warriors following the team's loss in the NBA play-in tournament, including an embrace with Draymond Green and Steph Curry on the court, where he acknowledged it could be his final game as the Warriors' coach.
O’Connor also mentioned that Golden's relationship with the Lacob family — who are the majority owners of the Warriors — was a reason he was being linked to Golden State.
"If Steve Kerr leaves, the Warriors will pursue Florida Gators head coach Todd Golden, according to my league sources," said O’Connor on his podcast on Monday. "Golden is the coach that they’re targeting, that’s in part because the Lacob family has a relationship with him.
"Golden was the head coach of the San Francisco Dons for three years before he went to Florida and won a national title there. They’ve been together, they’ve had lunches together, those guys know each other and Golden is a very, very talented young head coach. And so I think for the Warriors, Golden would be near the top of their list, if not at the top of the list."
Should Golden change his stance and consider a job in the NBA this cycle, his buyout for an NBA job would be $2 million, according to his contract with Florida, which was obtained by the USA TODAY Sports network.
Golden, 40, has quickly risen to being one of the top college basketball coaches in the country after just four seasons at Florida. He's returned the program to its national prominence, highlighted by its national championship run in 2025 that featured the No. 2 adjusted offensive efficiency and No. 6 adjusted defensive efficiency on KenPom.
Florida is 103-41 combined under Golden, who spent the first three years of his head coaching career in the West Coast Conference at San Francisco.
The Gators, who saw a first-weekend exit from the Men's NCAA Tournament this year after earning a No. 1 seed, are expected to have one of the top rosters in the country next season. Thomas Haugh announced his return to the Gators on Tuesday and picked up Denzel Aberdeen in the transfer portal to go along with returnees Alex Condon and Boogie Fland.
Who would have thought we would be at must-win game territory in the 1 vs 8 matchup for the Pistons, but we have pretty much reached that point. The series obviously isn’t over if the Pistons go down 0-2, but losing both home games and still having the home playoff losing streak hanging over your head will make it very difficult to pull out a win in this series, even if the Magic are the 8 seed.
Everything went wrong for the Pistons in Game 1, which if you are looking for any positives, means that things probably can’t go much worse in game 2. The Pistons looked like a team that had a week off from playing while the Orlando Magic looked like a well-oiled machine that has already played two playoff-level games.
Obviously, the number one seed has the advantage being a better team, but I can’t help but think a long layoff while the team you are facing plays a couple of games is all that helpful for hitting the ground running. But, the Thunder, Spurs, and Celtics all had easy wins in game 1, so that is probably just an excuse.
Whatever the case is, the Pistons have no excuse but to win this game and head to Orlando tied 1-1.
Game Vitals
Where: Little Caesars Arena in Detroit, MI When: Wednesday, April 22 at 7 pm EST Watch: ESPN Odds: Pistons (-9.5)
Analysis
Many fans are ready to hit the panic button after game 1. The national media has had all of their concerns about the Pistons confirmed. There is absolutely no way they win this series.
We have heard it all at this point and after the Pistons’ performance in Game 1 it is hard to say it isn’t justified. But, I will attempt to not be all doom-and-gloom about that performance.
For starters, I think the Pistons probably played one of their worst games of the season. They have games where shots aren’t falling or the other team has a hot hand, but Sunday’s game was the perfect storm of bad play all-around. The Orlando Magic were ready for the challenge and punched the Pistons in the mouth.
They dominated the glass, won the turnover battle, shut down their fast break game, outscored the Pistons inside, and shot 9% better from the field. When they needed to hit big shots in the 4th quarter, the Magic made every single one. Many of the things the Magic beat the Pistons in during Game 1 are things that the Pistons have dominated during the regular season.
The Orlando Magic are uniquely built to be able to compete with the Pistons in those categories, but to win every single one is something I cannot foresee happening again. The Magic won the game by only 11 points despite dominating in every aspect that matters to the Pistons. They didn’t outshoot the Pistons from beyond the arc, they just outhustled the Pistons.
If the Pistons get back to their bread-and-butter, they can still take control of this series.
If there is something to be concerned about, it is the play of Jalen Duren. So much of the Pistons ability to dominate inside is because Jalen Duren is a physical presence that can outmuscle even the strongest centers. He only took 4 shots in game 1 as the Magic packed the paint and forced the Pistons to beat them outside. The Magic basically let Cade Cunningham get whatever he wanted to shutdown Duren and leave the unreliable outside shooters open. It worked in Game 1, but I think it could be playing with fire if that is their gameplan for the whole series.
Duren also looked lost on defense and was put in bad spots trying to cover for blow-bys allowed by the Point of Attack defense.
If the Pistons POA defense improves, Jalen Duren is able to stay at the basket more and that hopefully helps with some of the easy baskets Orlando got from the Pistons’ being out-of-place on defense. The Pistons defense looked nothing like it has all season. It has been a well-oiled machine that is elite at generating turnovers that lead to offense and both of those elements were not there on Sunday. Whether it be due to the layoff or just a bad game, the Pistons will need to get back to both in Game 2.
No more zone, no more players being out-of-place, and do a better job on the fast break whenever you do generate turnovers. That was a pretty glaring weakness in Game 1. Normally, the Pistons are unselfish on the fast break and score a lot of points because of it, but too many players tried to do it all themselves on the few fast breaks they got.
This series could very well come down to who can make more outside shots given how evenly matched these two teams are at scoring and physicality. But, if the Pistons can get back to their usual fast break offense off of turnovers, that can give them enough of an advantage to win the series.
As I said, so much went wrong on Sunday that I am not even sure you can properly analyze whether Orlando is just a better team built to match every advantage the Pistons have or if it was just an absolutely poor showing by a team ill-prepared for Game 1.
Whatever the case is, Game 2 needs to be much better by everybody on the team outside of Cade Cunningham. He did his job by scoring 39 points and keeping the offense afloat in the 4th quarter, but he also missed some reads he normally doesn’t miss and had assists taken off the board by the failure to hit outside shots.
If the Pistons fail to adjust to the physicality of the Magic and continue to miss the open shots they are allowing, Game 2 could go the same way as Game 1. If the Pistons head back to Orlando down 0-2, the 1st round upset of the Pistons that everybody was predicted would be done by the Charlotte Hornets, may actually be done by the Orlando Magic.
The Oklahoma City Thunder are looking to go up 2-0 in their first-round playoff series against the Phoenix Suns. The Thunder routed the Suns 119-94 in Game 1. Oklahoma City is heavily favored at -17.5 with an over/under of 215.5.
How to watch Phoenix Suns vs. Oklahoma City Thunder
Game 1:Thunder 119, Suns 94 Game 2: Wed., April 22 at Oklahoma City (9:30 p.m., ESPN) Game 3: Sat., April 25 at Phoenix (3:30 p.m., NBC) Game 4: Mon., April 27 at Phoenix (TBD) *Game 5: Wed., April 29 at Oklahoma City (TBD) *Game 6: Fri., May 1 at Phoenix (TBD) *Game 7: Sun., May 3 at Oklahoma City (TBD)
Since Michigan basketball cut down the nets inside Lucas Oil Stadium on April 6, the top priority for men's college basketball programs over the last two weeks has been finding solutions to holes in their roster from last season with the transfer portal.
Programs like Louisville, Indiana, Texas and Tennessee have proven to be big winners with their activity in the transfer portal, which has included additions of Flory Bidunga and Jackson Shelstad to the Cardinals and Isaiah Johnson and David Punch to the Longhorns.
But with the transfer portal entry window officially closed, there's another key entry deadline looming for college basketball players: to declare for the NBA draft, either by forgoing their college eligibility or retaining it by "testing the waters."
There have already been some players who enter the portal, committed to a new program and remain in the NBA draft process, like Bidunga and John Blackwell, who announced his transfer from Wisconsin to Duke on Tuesday. There have been players, like UConn's Braylon Mullins, who were projected to go into the draft but elected to return to college next season instead. But other household names have yet to officially announce their plans for next season with the deadline looming not too far in the distance.
So, with April 24's deadline looming, who has already declared for the 2026 NBA Draft, and more importantly, who hasn't, as teams continue to fill out their rosters for the 2026-2027 college basketball season?
Here's a closer look at the NBA draft prospect pool and key deadlines and dates for the 2026 NBA Draft:
Who hasn't declared for NBA draft yet?
Each of the top three projected picks for the 2026 NBA Draft — Duke's Cameron Boozer, BYU's AJ Dybantsa and Kansas' Darryn Peterson — have yet to announce their decision to declare at the time of this writing. All three players are expected to declare for the NBA draft before Friday's 11:59 p.m. ET deadline.
In USA TODAY Sports' latest NBA mock draft, Dybantsa is projected to go No. 1 overall to the Washington Wizards, while Boozer is projected to go to the Indiana Pacers and Peterson is projected to land with the Brooklyn Nets with the No. 2 and No. 3 overall picks, respectively.
Here's a list of some notable college basketball players who haven't declared for the NBA draft yet:
* Denotes players who have also entered the transfer portal and/or testing NBA waters
When is the NBA draft entry deadline?
The entry deadline for players for the 2026 NBA Draft is 11:59 p.m. ET on Friday, April 24.
Friday's deadline is one of several key deadlines for players who apply for NBA draft entry, however. Should a player enter the draft but decide to "test the waters" and keep their college eligibility, they have until 11:59 p.m ET on May 27 to withdraw and return to their respective college program. The NBA-specific deadline for an early entry player to withdraw from the pool of prospects is 5 p.m. ET on June 13.
When is the 2026 NBA Draft?
The 2026 NBA Draft starts on June 23 at 8 p.m. ET with the first round at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. The second round will start at 8 p.m. ET on June 24 at the Barclays Center.