Celtics sweep Knicks in regular-season series as Kristaps Porzingis, Jayson Tatum outplay Karl-Anthony Towns, Jalen Brunson

The Knicks' 2024-25 regular season against the Boston Celtics ended in an 0-4 record with Tuesday's 119-117 overtime loss.

Takeaways

  1. Ex-Knick Kristaps Porzingis turned the clock back with a 34-point effort, going 11-of-19 shooting and hitting on an 8-for-13 clip from deep in 39 minutes. Fourteen of his points came in a pivotal third quarter where the Celtics (59-20) outscored New York (50-29) 31-20, turning a 58-52 Knicks halftime lead into an 83-78 Boston edge entering the fourth. Porzingis drilled a 30-foot trey with 40.1 seconds left in overtime that served as the dagger, putting New York down 115-112. He was the difference in a game where each side needed a third option to step up.
  2. While Karl-Anthony Towns tied Porzingis for a game-high 34 points on 14-of-21 shooting and grabbed 14 rebounds in 43 minutes for the double-double, his quiet third quarter with only a bucket came at a time when Porzingis caught fire. Compounding the Knicks' inability to keep pace with the Celtics, Mikal Bridges (14 points on 6-of-15 shooting and a costly turnover late in the overtime period) did not pick up the slack on either end of the floor while OG Anunoby (13 points on 5-of-13 shooting) came back down to earth after Sunday's breakout game against the Phoenix Suns.
  3. Fortunately for New York, Jalen Brunson continues to trend in an upward trajectory as he gets his conditioning back. Brunson's second game back from a month-long injury absence saw him complement Towns with 27 points and nine assists in 38 minutes. Jayson Tatum, to his credit, was simply better.
  4. In a game where the Knicks had a chance to prove that they could hang with the Celtics or at least mount their momentum into the playoffs before a potential postseason rematch, Boston gave New York a possible reality check. Not only does the Knicks' regular season end with four losses to the Celtics, who are the Eastern Conference's second seed, but Tom Thibodeau's team remains winless against contenders like the top-seeded Cleveland Cavaliers at 0-3.

Who's the MVP?

Tatum, who rose above co-star Jaylen Brown's six points in 22 minutes with 32 points on 11-of-22 shooting over 47 minutes. Notably, Tatum's game-tying triple with 3.1 seconds left in the fourth quarter forced overtime and gave Boston the life that it needed to survive.

Highlights

What's next

The Knicks are at the Detroit Pistons for Thursday's 7 p.m. game. Friday's 7:30 p.m. home finale against the Cavs follows before Sunday's 1 p.m. tipoff at the Nets closes the regular season.

Trendon Watford leads Nets to 119-114 win over Pelicans

NEW YORK (AP) — Trendon Watford scored 22 points, Drew Timme had 16 points and nine rebounds off the bench and the Brooklyn Nets beat the New Orleans Pelicans 119-114 on Tuesday night to snap a five-game home losing streak.

Timme completed a three-point play with 4:06 remaining in the third quarter to give the Nets the first double-digit lead of the game at 83-71.

The Pelicans rallied. Antonio Reeves made a reverse layup while being fouled with 1:29 left and added the free throw to pull New Orleans within 116-109. After a Timme miss, Reeves added a 3-pointer at 53.1 to get within four.

But, Tosan Evbuomwan sealed it with a 3-pointer at the other end with 35 seconds left.

Dariq Whitehead scored 12 of his 14 points in the first half for Brooklyn (26-53). Evbuomwan and Nic Claxton each scored 13, Maxwell Lewis had 12 and Tyson Etienne 11. Reece Beekman had a career-high 10 assists with just one turnover.

Reeves and Karlo Matkovic each scored 17 for New Orleans (21-58). Jose Alvarado added 16 points, Jamal Cain had 15 and Keion Brooks Jr. 14. Elfrid Payton finished with 10 assists.

New Orleans lost its fourth straight road game and is 7-33 away from home.

Takeaways

Pelicans: The lottery-bound Pelicans, who have their worst record in 20 years, have shelved seven of their top eight scorers with long-term injuries, including Zion Williamson.

Nets: Brooklyn completed a season sweep of New Orleans for the first time since the 2021-22 campaign.

Key moment

The Nets scored 43 points in the third quarter to pull away. It was their most points in any quarter this season.

Key stat

Brooklyn finished 17 of 40 from 3-point range, with Whitehead making 4 of 6 first-half attempts.

Up next

Both teams play Thursday. New Orleans continues its road trip at Milwaukee, while the Nets host the Atlanta Hawks.

Grizzlies' Jaylen Wells taken off court on stretcher after nasty fall following reckless foul

Memphis Grizzlies v Charlotte Hornets

CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA - APRIL 08: Jaylen Wells #0 of the Memphis Grizzlies lays on the court after an injury during the first half of a basketball game against the Charlotte Hornets at Spectrum Center on April 08, 2025 in Charlotte, North Carolina. 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 David Jensen/Getty Images)

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Let's hope all that came out of this was a broken wrist. It could have been worse—much, much worse.

Grizzlies rookie Jaylen Wells had to be taken off the court Tuesday night after a nasty fall, following a reckless challenge by Charlotte's KJ Simpson on a Wells' breakaway dunk. (If you want to see a video of the foul, follow this link.)

After review, the referees upgraded the foul on Simpson to a Flagrant 2 and he was ejected. At least a fine and maybe a game suspension will follow.

Wells is "awake, alert and moving his extremities... [but] has sustained a broken right wrist," ESPN’s Shams Charania reports. That is all incredibly good news.

Wells is in the conversation for Rookie of the Year, averaging 10.5 points and 3.5 rebounds a game and plays key rotation minutes for one of the West's quality teams. This clearly ends his season a few games early, but hopefully, he will be back without incident at the start of next season.

To no one's surprise, Steph bounces back in Warriors' rout of Suns

To no one's surprise, Steph bounces back in Warriors' rout of Suns originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Unpredictability is one of the beauties of sports. There’s no telling what’s going to happen next, despite what the data suggests. Isn’t that what makes Warriors star Steph Curry so special, too? 

Even though his father, Dell, played 16 years in the NBA, there wasn’t a script written for Steph’s Hollywood story. His father’s alma mater Virginia Tech didn’t want him. Neither did any big college. Or five other teams in the 2009 NBA Draft, including the Minnesota Timberwolves in both their chances. 

An undersized guard who joined the Warriors looking closer to a freshman in high school than an NBA rookie beat what the data said long ago. But his play in the Warriors’ blowout 133-95 win over the Phoenix Suns on Tuesday at PHX Arena was oh so predictable. 

History said so, as did knowing how Curry the creature operates. 

Curry has been held to single digits twice during the 2024-25 NBA season. Rookie Jaylen Wells and the Memphis Grizzlies smothered him on Dec. 19 when Curry only scored two points in a 41-point loss, where he missed all six of his 3-point attempts and seven shots overall. Curry’s response was scorching the Minnesota Timberwolves for 31 points, going 10 of 21 from the field and 7 of 16 on threes. 

In the fourth quarter of that 10-point win, Curry tapped into pure savage mode. Stopping him wasn’t an option on the menu. Curry scored 13 points for the quarter, but 11 in a flurry that lasted one minute and 29 seconds of game time. 

The second time was Sunday when a combination of Amen Thompson, Dillon Brooks, Fred VanVleet and the Houston Rockets’ bully-ball defensive game plan held Curry to three points, making one of his eight 3-point attempts and missing both 2-pointers he tried. 

Within the first five minutes Tuesday, Curry had surpassed the total points he scored the previous game. The bounce-back is real. Curry didn’t take a shot in the first six-plus minutes of the game and then scored 13 points in the next four minutes and 40 seconds. At halftime he was up to 19 points on 7-of-12 shooting. At the 3:30 mark of the third quarter, his night was done with the Warriors up by 32 points. 

Curry in 26 minutes scored 25 points. He was a plus-31 with nine rebounds and six assists, and shot 9 of 17 overall, as well as 3 of 9 on threes.

“I loved how Draymond [Green], Steph [Curry] and Jimmy [Butler] and our vets really established the tone,” coach Steve Kerr said. “Even before the game started at shootaround, they were locked in and it showed right from the onset.”

There wasn’t a Thompson twin or Dillon The Villain or a VanVleet on the floor. Not a Tari Eason, too. 

The Warriors picked on any defender they wanted from Phoenix’s 27th-ranked defensive rating, 23 slots below Houston. All Bradley Beal could do was laugh when Curry hit him with his famed look-away 3-pointer in the first quarter. 

But this is what Curry does. 

When the Warriors got crushed by the Cleveland Cavaliers one game after a big win over the Celtics in Boston, Curry responded with 36 points in a statement win against the Oklahoma City Thunder. After scoring just 10 points on 2-of-13 shooting in a loss to the Indiana Pacers on Dec. 23, he dropped 38 points and made eight threes against the Los Angeles Lakers on Christmas. He closed 2024 with a clunker of 11 points in another loss to the Cavs, and then opened 2025 with 30 points and eight threes to smack the Philadelphia 76ers. 

The game prior to him making 56 points appear in front of the Orlando Magic, Curry only scored 15. One week ago he gave the Grizzlies 52 points, a game after scoring 13 while the Warriors had zero problems playing the San Antonio Spurs. 

Every all-time great has something special the eye can’t see. It lives inside, not only in heart and head but as the central nervous system to the soul. A game that doesn’t live up to Curry’s standards fuels that invisible super power. 

Enjoying the party from the bench, Curry was filled with laughs, cheers and maybe even a yawn or two as he earned the extra rest a 38-point victory rewards him with. The way he moved – slicing, dicing, draining shots and dishing alley-oops – told the real story of Steph before the barrage was on.

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What we learned as Steph Curry scores 25 points to fuel Warriors' win over Suns

What we learned as Steph Curry scores 25 points to fuel Warriors' win over Suns originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

BOX SCORE

Nothing cures a one-game hangover quite like a compliant opponent.

Taking full advantage of the mostly indifferent Phoenix Suns, without star forward Kevin Durant, the Warriors rolled to a 133-95 rout Tuesday night and remain in sixth place in the gridlocked Western Conference playoff race.

Golden State (47-32) still is looking up at the No. 4-seeded Los Angeles Clippers (47-32), who beat the San Antonio Spurs on Tuesday and hold the tiebreaker over the Warriors. The Denver Nuggets, who fired coach Michael Malone on Tuesday, are the No. 5 seed also with a 47-32 record.

The Memphis Grizzlies, also 47-32, are the No. 7 seed, as the Warriors hold the tiebreaker. The Minnesota Timberwolves (46-33) lost on the road against the Milwaukee Bucks and trail Golden State by one game.

Seven Warriors scored in double figures, led by 25 points from Stephen Curry and 22 from Brandin Podziemski. Golden State took the lead three minutes into the game and never were threatened over the final 45 minutes.

So decisive was this one that Jimmy Butler III and Draymond Green played each played only 20 minutes.

The Suns (35-44) lost their seventh consecutive game and look, for all intents and purposes, like a team playing only by request of the schedule.

Here are three takeaways as Golden State follows a frustrating loss to Houston with a demolition of the Suns in the desert:

Steph bounces back

After the results of Curry’s last game, scoring three points on 1-of-10 shooting in a loss to the Rockets, the Suns surely knew a storm was coming.

And they got it. All of it.

Freed from the 7-foot wingspan and grappling defense of Houston’s Amen Thompson, Curry blistered anyone the Suns threw at him. He wasted no time, making his first three shots – two triples and a free throw – in 71 seconds and dropping 13 points in nine first-quarter minutes. Golden State’s 37-24 lead after one quarter set a tone that never wavered.

Curry’s 25 points came on 9-of-17 shooting from the field, including 3-of-9 from distance. He added nine rebounds and six assists, finishing plus-31 over 25 minutes.

Perhaps best of all for Golden State was that Curry took a seat on the bench with 3:30 left in the third quarter and sat for the rest of the game.

He had done enough to put a bounce-back game in the books, to the delight of the Warriors.

Steph’s running mate keeps cooking

No member of the Warriors, decorated vets or surging youths, has delivered a more pleasantly surprising stretch of offense than Podziemski. He brought it again on this night.

The second-year NBA guard was productive and efficient, scoring his 22 points on 7-of-12 shooting from the field, including 4-of-6 beyond the arc. This was his fourth consecutive game with at least four triples.

Podziemski, over his previous five games, averaged 21.6 points, with 55.6-percent shooting from the field, including an astonishing 57.5 percent from distance. He also averaged 6.6 rebounds and 4.4 assists in the five games.

Podziemski is the seventh player to share the backcourt with Curry this season, following Andrew Wiggins, Moses Moody, De’Anthony Melton, Lindy Waters III, Buddy Hield and Dennis Schröeder. Golden State was 0-3 with the Curry-Podziemski backcourt before Butler arrived, but has since won 15 of 16 together.

Crashing the glass

After losing the rebounding battle in each of their last two games, the Warriors recovered to post their most decisive advantage on the glass in three weeks.

Golden State outrebounded Phoenix 57-41, with Gui Santos grabbing nine rebounds in 21 minutes off the bench, joining Curry as a co-leader in that category. Center Trayce Jackson-Davis, getting playing time in the absence of Quinten Post (illness), grabbed eight rebounds in 19 minutes.

The last time the Warriors dominated the glass to such an extent was on March 18 in Milwaukee, where they managed a 52-34 advantage in a 104-93 victory over the Bucks.

And, yes, rebounds tend to come easier when the opponent is reluctant to do the dirty work that comes with going to war in the paint.

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Kings clinch NBA play-in tournament berth after Warriors' win vs. Suns

Kings clinch NBA play-in tournament berth after Warriors' win vs. Suns originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Kings are headed back to the NBA play-in tournament.

For the second consecutive season, Sacramento clinched a play-in berth Tuesday night thanks to the Golden State Warriors’ 133-95 win over the Phoenix Suns at PHX Arena.

The Kings are 39-40 after their 127-117 win over the Detroit Pistons on Monday night at Little Caesars Arena, and currently hold the Western Conference’s No. 9 seed. That likely sets up an NBA play-in game between Sacramento and the current No. 10-seeded Mavericks (38-41), unless Phoenix (35-44) can catch up to Dallas in the final three regular-season games.

The Western Conference play-in game between the No. 9 seed and No. 10 seed is scheduled for Wednesday, April 16, with the higher seed hosting the elimination contest.

The winner of the No. 9 vs. No. 10 game will play the loser of next Tuesday’s contest between the No. 7 seed and No. 8 seed.

Last season, the Kings also made the play-in tournament as the No. 9 seed and defeated the No. 10-seeded Warriors in their first game, 118-94, at Golden 1 Center. They then fell to the No. 7-seeded New Orleans Pelicans, 105-98, to end their hopes of reaching the NBA playoffs for the second time since 2006.

Sacramento certainly hopes this play-in tournament will be different, now led by a Big Three of Domantas Sabonis, DeMar DeRozan and Zach LaVine after acquiring the latter at the Feb. 6 NBA trade deadline and dealing former franchise point guard De’Aaron Fox to the San Antonio Spurs.

The Kings have a different coach now, too, following the December dismissal of Mike Brown, who was replaced by Doug Christie on an interim basis.

It has been a roller-coaster campaign for Sacramento, preparing the new-look Kings for whatever — and whoever — awaits them in the play-in.

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Where does Michael Malone firing rank among most shocking 2025 NBA moments?

Where does Michael Malone firing rank among most shocking 2025 NBA moments? originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

What could possibly happen next?

The 2024-2025 NBA season has had its fair share of shocking moments on and off the court. There have been stunning superstar trades, disappointing All-Star laden teams, oddly timed coach firings, and much more.

The latest bombshell came Tuesday when the Denver Nuggets fired head coach Michael Malone with three games remaining in the regular season. The Nuggets, who in 2023 under Malone won their first championship in franchise history, currently hold the fourth seed in the Western Conference with a 47-32 record.

Malone’s success, and the timing of his dismissal with the playoffs set to begin, was a shocker. But it wasn’t the most shocking moment of the season, trailing only a stunning midseason trade.

Here’s a look back at some other shocking moments from the season.

The Luka Doncic trade

Everyone assumed Shams Charania was hacked. ESPN’s NBA Insider made a social media post saying the Dallas Mavericks traded Luka Doncic to the Los Angeles Lakers for Anthony Davis, Max Christie and a 2029 first-round pick. The deal was executed without any rumors of either Doncic and Davis even being available on the market, creating what was arguably the most shocking trade in NBA history.     

Grizzlies fire Taylor Jenkins

Before Michael Malone was fired, the most stunning termination of the season had been when Taylor Jenkins was let go by the Memphis Grizzlies on March 29 with nine games left in the regular season. The Grizzlies at the time held the No. 5 seed in the West at 44-29 under Jenkins, the franchise’s all-time leader in coaching victories. 

Suns disappoint

Playoff teams are firing coaches, while Mike Budenholzer is still roaming the sidelines in the desert. Budenholzer’s Phoenix Suns — with its All-Star trio of Kevin Durant, Devin Booker and Bradley Beal — are unlikely to make the play-in tournament. The team entered Tuesday at 35-43 under Budenholzer, a two-time Coach of the Year who is in the first year of a five-year deal with the Suns. 

Cavs surprise

The NBA season was more than a month old before the Cleveland Cavaliers lost their first game. The Cavs won their first 15 games, matching the second-best start in league history behind the 2015-2016 Golden State Warriors who started 24-0. The Cavs’ first loss came on Nov. 19 against the Boston Celtics.

Celtics sell for $6 billion

Buying the defending champions isn’t cheap. The Celtics, just months after winning their 18th title, were sold to a group led by William Chisholm, a private equity executive, for $6.1 billion in March. It was the largest total paid for a sports team in the United States.

All-Star Game debacle

The NBA All-Star Game needs fixing, but this was not the solution. The new format included a four-team, single-elimination tournament with a target score of 40 points for each round. It did not go over well with many players and fans. The league quickly announced it will not be keeping the tournament format.

Tracy Morgan gets sick at Knicks game

A courtside cleanup was needed after comedian and New York Knicks superfan Tracy Morgan got ill during the third quarter of the team’s game against the Miami Heat at Madison Square Garden. The game was delayed for more than 10 minutes. Morgan made a social media post the following day saying it was due to food poisoning.

The Jimmy Butler saga

It was a messy ending to the Jimmy Butler era in Miami. Seeking a contract extension, Butler was suspended by the Heat three times during the season, twice for conduct detrimental to the team and one for missing a team flight. The six-time All-Star, who led the Heat to the Finals twice, was traded to the Warriors in February for Andrew Wiggins, Kyle Anderson and a protected 2025 first-round pick.

Games postponed due to California wildfires

The Los Angeles Lakers and Los Angeles Clippers each postponed games in January following the devastation caused by the Southern California wildfires. The Lakers, whose head coach J.J. Redick lost his house in the fires, rescheduled home games against the Charlotte Hornets and San Antonio Spurs. The Clippers’ home game against the Hornets was also postponed.

Atlanta Hawks game postponed due to winter storm

A winter storm postponement might be expected in certain parts of the country, but Atlanta? The Hawks’ game against the Houston Rockets that was scheduled for Jan. 11 was postponed after snow and ice in the area led to dangerous conditions and power outages.

LeBron James vs. Stephen A. Smith

LeBron James confronted ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith courtside during the fourth quarter of the Lakers’ win over the New York Knicks in March. Smith had been critical of James’ son and teammate Bronny James earlier this season, saying in late January that he belonged in the developmental G-League and not the NBA. James, appearing on ESPN’s “The Pat McAfee Show” after the confrontation, criticized Smith for making personal attacks as opposed to discussing on-court play when talking about the NBA.

The rise of the Pistons

The most shocking team of the season? The Detroit Pistons. After finishing the 2023-2024 season with the league’s worst record at 14-68, the Pistons became the first NBA team to triple their win total from their previous 82-game season when they captured their 42nd victory.

Half-court game winner

In what was one of the most shocking finishes to an NBA game, the Chicago Bulls won on a


Just watch


Where does Michael Malone firing rank among most shocking 2025 NBA moments?

Where does Michael Malone firing rank among most shocking 2025 NBA moments? originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

What could possibly happen next?

The 2024-2025 NBA season has had its fair share of shocking moments on and off the court. There have been stunning superstar trades, disappointing All-Star laden teams, oddly timed coach firings, and much more.

The latest bombshell came Tuesday when the Denver Nuggets fired head coach Michael Malone with three games remaining in the regular season. The Nuggets, who in 2023 under Malone won their first championship in franchise history, currently hold the fourth seed in the Western Conference with a 47-32 record.

Malone’s success, and the timing of his dismissal with the playoffs set to begin, was a shocker. But it wasn’t the most shocking moment of the season, trailing only a stunning midseason trade.

Here’s a look back at some other shocking moments from the season.

The Luka Doncic trade

Everyone assumed Shams Charania was hacked. ESPN’s NBA Insider made a social media post saying the Dallas Mavericks traded Luka Doncic to the Los Angeles Lakers for Anthony Davis, Max Christie and a 2029 first-round pick. The deal was executed without any rumors of either Doncic and Davis even being available on the market, creating what was arguably the most shocking trade in NBA history.     

Grizzlies fire Taylor Jenkins

Before Michael Malone was fired, the most stunning termination of the season had been when Taylor Jenkins was let go by the Memphis Grizzlies on March 29 with nine games left in the regular season. The Grizzlies at the time held the No. 5 seed in the West at 44-29 under Jenkins, the franchise’s all-time leader in coaching victories. 

Suns disappoint

Playoff teams are firing coaches, while Mike Budenholzer is still roaming the sidelines in the desert. Budenholzer’s Phoenix Suns — with its All-Star trio of Kevin Durant, Devin Booker and Bradley Beal — are unlikely to make the play-in tournament. The team entered Tuesday at 35-43 under Budenholzer, a two-time Coach of the Year who is in the first year of a five-year deal with the Suns. 

Cavs surprise

The NBA season was more than a month old before the Cleveland Cavaliers lost their first game. The Cavs won their first 15 games, matching the second-best start in league history behind the 2015-2016 Golden State Warriors who started 24-0. The Cavs’ first loss came on Nov. 19 against the Boston Celtics.

Celtics sell for $6 billion

Buying the defending champions isn’t cheap. The Celtics, just months after winning their 18th title, were sold to a group led by William Chisholm, a private equity executive, for $6.1 billion in March. It was the largest total paid for a sports team in the United States.

All-Star Game debacle

The NBA All-Star Game needs fixing, but this was not the solution. The new format included a four-team, single-elimination tournament with a target score of 40 points for each round. It did not go over well with many players and fans. The league quickly announced it will not be keeping the tournament format.

Tracy Morgan gets sick at Knicks game

A courtside cleanup was needed after comedian and New York Knicks superfan Tracy Morgan got ill during the third quarter of the team’s game against the Miami Heat at Madison Square Garden. The game was delayed for more than 10 minutes. Morgan made a social media post the following day saying it was due to food poisoning.

The Jimmy Butler saga

It was a messy ending to the Jimmy Butler era in Miami. Seeking a contract extension, Butler was suspended by the Heat three times during the season, twice for conduct detrimental to the team and one for missing a team flight. The six-time All-Star, who led the Heat to the Finals twice, was traded to the Warriors in February for Andrew Wiggins, Kyle Anderson and a protected 2025 first-round pick.

Games postponed due to California wildfires

The Los Angeles Lakers and Los Angeles Clippers each postponed games in January following the devastation caused by the Southern California wildfires. The Lakers, whose head coach J.J. Redick lost his house in the fires, rescheduled home games against the Charlotte Hornets and San Antonio Spurs. The Clippers’ home game against the Hornets was also postponed.

Atlanta Hawks game postponed due to winter storm

A winter storm postponement might be expected in certain parts of the country, but Atlanta? The Hawks’ game against the Houston Rockets that was scheduled for Jan. 11 was postponed after snow and ice in the area led to dangerous conditions and power outages.

LeBron James vs. Stephen A. Smith

LeBron James confronted ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith courtside during the fourth quarter of the Lakers’ win over the New York Knicks in March. Smith had been critical of James’ son and teammate Bronny James earlier this season, saying in late January that he belonged in the developmental G-League and not the NBA. James, appearing on ESPN’s “The Pat McAfee Show” after the confrontation, criticized Smith for making personal attacks as opposed to discussing on-court play when talking about the NBA.

The rise of the Pistons

The most shocking team of the season? The Detroit Pistons. After finishing the 2023-2024 season with the league’s worst record at 14-68, the Pistons became the first NBA team to triple their win total from their previous 82-game season when they captured their 42nd victory.

Half-court game winner

In what was one of the most shocking finishes to an NBA game, the Chicago Bulls won on a


Just watch


Denver cleans house, shockingly fires coach Michael Malone, GM Calvin Booth just before playoffs

Michael Malone — the man who coached the Denver Nuggets to their only NBA title in 2023, and the only coach Nikola Jokic has ever known in the NBA — has been shockingly fired by the team with less than a week remaining in the regular season and Denver about to enter the playoffs.

Calvin Booth, the Nuggets general manager, will also be let go — technically, his contract will not be renewed — announced Josh Kroenke, the vice chairman of Kroenke Sports and Entertainment, which owns the Nuggets. Kroenke added that he took "no pleasure" in firing Malone.

"This decision was not made lightly and was evaluated very carefully, and we do it only with the intention of giving our group the best chance at competing for the 2025 NBA Championship and delivering another title to Denver and our fans everywhere," Kroenke said in a statement. "While the timing of this decision is unfortunate, as Coach Malone helped build the foundation of our now championship-level program, it is a necessary step to allow us to compete at the highest level right now. Championship-level standards and expectations remain in place for the current season, and as we look to the future, we look forward to building on the foundations laid by Coach Malone over his record-breaking 10-year career in Denver."

There had been speculation that, barring a deep playoff run, Malone would be let go at the end of the season. In that light, the firing itself is not a total shock, but the timing certainly is.

Assistant coach David Adelman takes over a team that is 47-32 but has lost four in a row and finds itself sliding down a logjam of teams fighting for seeds 4-8 in a deep Western Conference. Those four losses were signs of a team struggling since February, particularly on the defensive end — Denver is bottom 10 in the NBA in defensive rating since the All-Star break (they were 16th in the league, right in the middle, before the All-Star Game). There had been rumblings of frustration in the locker room with the team's play, and even the normally calm Jokic has shown signs of frustration on the bench. Jamal Murray being out injured is not helping things. It was also an open secret that Booth and Malone did not like each other and did not see eye-to-eye on roster decisions, adding to the tensions around the club.

Firing the coach with a week to go in the season is an extreme answer to those challenges.

The goal was to give the team a "jolt," reports Ohm Youngmisuk at ESPN, but that doesn't always work as intended. Denver is following in the footsteps of Memphis, which unexpectedly fired coach Taylor Jenkins a couple of weeks ago. That jolt has seen the Grizzlies go 2-3 since, sliding down to eighth in the West.

If Kronke wants to see what has taken this team from the mountain top to the second-tier title contenders — at best — he needs to look in a mirror. The Nuggets won that 2023 title because Jokic and Jamal Murray were surrounded with quality role players such as Bruce Brown, Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, Jeff Green and others. While players such as Christian Braun have stepped up, the erosion of depth on this roster came from the marching orders Booth was given. (Booth took over in 2022 when Tim Connelly, the guy who built a championship roster, went to an ownership group willing to pay more for him in Minnesota. Connelly then built a Timberwolves roster that knocked the Nuggets out of the playoffs last season.)

Denver has now cleaned house. How much, if at all, it helps the Nuggets in these playoffs is now the question on the table. Soon enough, the questions will be about the next coach and GM, and if there is a path to getting this team back to top-tier title contention.