Game Recap: Khaman Maluach’s brilliance not enough as Suns fall to Pelicans

LAS VEGAS, NV - JULY 12: Khaman Maluach #10 of the Phoenix Suns goes up for the rebound during the game against the New Orleans Pelicans during the 2026 NBA Summer League on July 12, 2026 at the Cox Pavilion in Las Vegas, Nevada. 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 Mike Kirschbaum/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Phoenix Suns lost their second Summer League game to the New Orleans Pelicans 81-75 despite an impressive performance from their second-year big man Khaman Maluach.

Darius Brown II led Phoenix with 18 points while Malik Dia scored 18 points and Jaron Pierre Jr. scored 16 points to lead New Orleans to the win. But the story of this game was Khaman Maluach.

Maluach scored 15 points, grabbed 15 rebounds, blocked two shots, and recorded one steal on 5-for-9 shooting and 2-of-4 from the three-point line. Maluach was the most talented player on the floor from start to finish and did not get enough help from his running mates to pull out a win.

After committing seven turnovers in his previous outing against Portland on Friday night, Maluach was much more poised with the ball and did not produce a single turnover. Through two Summer League games, Maluach has been dominant, showcasing a stronger body, better hands, and improved rebounding. What has been most surprising is that he has also been the Suns’ best three-point shooter on the Summer League roster through two games, shooting 5-for-11 from long distance.

The other young players from the Suns trio have not been nearly as impressive. Koa Peat and Rasheer Fleming only grabbed four rebounds each in the losing effort, while each showed flashes but were not consistently impacting the game like Maluach.

Peat’s performance on Sunday did not match his debut performance against the Blazers. He scored 12 points on 4-of-10 from the field and was 1-for-3 from the free throw line. He committed seven fouls and turned the ball over four times, but was one of the Suns’ main initiators on offense and continued to show an impressive fluidity as a ball handler for a young player his size. What was most disappointing about watching Peat against the Pelicans was that he did not play with the same motor as he did in his debut. There were many times he lacked urgency getting back on defense, leading to Pelicans mismatches and easy baskets.

As for Fleming, he was impactful defensively, recording two blocks and a steal and being a disruptive force creating deflections as usual. However, he continued to be a net negative on the offensive end outside of his offensive rebounding and has yet to provide much optimism about him becoming a good NBA three-point shooter.

To be fair to this Summer League roster, it does not have an efficient score-first player and offensive creator, which is why it has been difficult to watch this team on offense at times. And also why Peat and Fleming have looked underqualified for what this team needs from them. The lack of spacing from Peat and Fleming really bottles up the lane, and it makes it hard for the Suns’ guards driving to the basket when Peat and Fleming both crash in from the corners because they do not want to shoot an open corner three. But this may be the same story in January for the NBA squad, where not a single forward on the roster has proven to be a respectable three-point shooter.

Game Flow

First Half

The Pelicans started fast; Pierre Jr. hit his first two three-point hoists of the game to give the Pelicans an early 6-2 lead. The Suns struggled to find any sort of spacing or rhythm on offense for the second game in a row. Fleming tried to get going early, but after two missed pull-up jump shots in a row and a wide-open missed three from Fleming, he stopped being aggressive in the half-court offense for the rest of the game. The Suns did tie it up at 6-6 after Maluach grabbed the missed Fleming three and powered up for a two-handed slam.

The Pelicans closed the quarter strong after Maluach subbed out, and the Pelicans led 16-12 after the first quarter.

The beginning of the second quarter was a continuation of the first quarter in that both offenses did not perform well, but they did get going eventually. Maluach started the scoring with a two-hand dunk off of a pick-and-roll dime from Javonte Cook. Then Peat started driving downhill, hitting two difficult layups to tie the game up at 18-18. The Pelicans immediately hit back-to-back three-point jumpers, and two layups pushed New Orleans out to a 28-20 lead. The Suns countered with another Maluach dunk, a Fleming corner three, and a Brown corner three to get back within three, down 32-29.

The two biggest highlight-worthy plays from this game came on a back-to-back sequence of defensive plays where Maluach broke up an alley-oop dunk attempt, and Fleming deflected a pass on a lob pass the next play. It’s in these small moments of brilliance that show just how athletic and gifted the Suns starting front court could be one day if they continue to develop.

But that moment was brief, because the Pelicans went on a three-point shooting tear to finish out the quarter, knocking down three three-pointers to go up 41-31 at halftime. The Suns were 2-for-15 from three while the Pelicans finished the first half 9-of-20 to give them the lead.

Second Half

The start of the second half was the most impressive stretch from the Suns’ young core during the entire game. Maluach, Fleming, and Peat all found a synergy playing together as they turned up the defense pressure, opening the half on a 15-6 run.

The half started with multiple Maluach blocks and deflections to create transition opportunities for Peat in transition where he created contact and was fouled multiple times. Then Fleming took over; he grabbed an offensive rebound and finished, then on defense picked the pocket of Pierre and was fouled on a breakaway dunk on the other end, leading to a kerfuffle from Maluach and some Pelicans players that resulted in double technical fouls. Fleming knocked down the free throw, and then Brown hit back-to-back baskets, and then Peat finished off the run with a beautiful old-school-style midrange jumper to cut the deficit to one, down 47-46 halfway through the third quarter.

Unfortunately for the Suns, once Maluach checked out, neither Fleming nor Peat could stop the Pelicans, especially Malik Dia, who attacked the Suns in the paint and knocked down a flat-footed three to give the Pelicans a 62-50 lead. The Suns bench scored a quick four points to close the quarter down 62-54.

The beginning of the fourth quarter was back and forth, with the Pelicans holding onto a high single-digit lead for most of the quarter. The Suns guards Brown and Jameer Nelson Jr. both started to get downhill and attack the basket early in the quarter to keep Phoenix within shouting distance. Dia continued to carry the Pelicans in the second half and kept the Suns from taking the lead.

Down 75-67, with 2:06 seconds left, the Suns went on one final run to try and steal the game in the end. Peat hit another midrange jump shot, followed by a Maluach pick-and-pop three in transition to cut the deficit to three. The Suns got a stop on defense, and Koby Brea decided to pull up from the parking lot to tie the game and missed his sixth three of the day to finish 0-for-6 from three and score just 2 points. The Suns got the offensive rebound, and Maluach rushed another three that airballed out of bounds.

Kobe Bufkin sealed the game for the Pelicans with a driving layup to put the Pelicans up five points, 77-72, and they made enough free throws to seal the game and win 81-75.

Up Next

The Suns’ next Summer League matchup is Monday night, 7:00 pm Arizona time against the Milwaukee Bucks, where the two Arizona Wildcats’ freshman phenoms Koa Peat and Brayden Burries will match up against each other in the NBA.

DBR Podcast # 834 – NBA Dukies Showing Out In Summer League

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - JULY 10: Caleb Wilson #8 of the Chicago Bulls is guarded by Cameron Boozer #27 of the Memphis Grizzlies in the second half of a 2026 NBA Summer League game at the Thomas & Mack Center on July 10, 2026 in Las Vegas, Nevada. 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 Ethan Miller/Getty Images) | Getty Images

They may have moved on to the next level, but they remain beloved Dukies. The latest edition of the DBR podcast takes a look at how Cam Boozer and others are faring in NBA Summer League action. There are plenty of interesting stories about Isaiah Evans, Maliq Brown, and guys still hoping for a big NBA shot like Trevor Keels and DJ Steward. 

After the break, Jason and Donald dive into a new trend in recruiting, the kids showing up on campus a year earlier than expected. From Jojo Boumtje-Boumtje at Duke to new recruits at UCLa and Texas, this is becoming a trend. Are they making Two-and-done into a new thing?

Make sure you’re following us! Head to our Linktree to get all our available social media and links to follow and subscribe to the show. That includes our affiliate partnerships, from Homefield Apparel (use the code DBRPODCAST to save 15% off your first order) and Fanatics to the NBA StoreNFL Shop, and even Fubo TV. And…we have some more coming! Save some cash on the latest gear or follow the Blue Devils on the go by hitting those affiliate links and it helps support the show as well. We are now on YouTube! Subscribe there, rate, and review our episodes on there and everywhere you get your podcasts. Also, follow us on Bluesky ⁠@DukeRoundup⁠!


Go to the DBR Boards to find Blue Healer Auctions || Drop us a lined

Meleek Thomas impresses in Cavs’ 103-94 loss to Pistons

LAS VEGAS, NV - JULY 10: Meleek Thomas #15 of the Cleveland Cavaliers high fives teammate during the game against the Indiana Pacers on July 10, 2026 at the Cox Pavilion in Las Vegas, Nevada. 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 David Becker/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers have dropped their first two games in Las Vegas. They fall to 0-2 in Summer League, this time suffering a 103-94 loss to the Detroit Pistons.

Cleveland trailed by double digits early. Detroit’s Chaz Lanier scored 17 points in the opening seven minutes to cause that. The Cavs would eventually get things under control and rally back in the second half. That comeback fell short, just like it did on Friday when the Cavs had a similar loss to the Milwaukee Bucks.

The loss wasn’t the only thing that carried forward, however. Meleek Thomas’s strong showing also translated to Sunday.

Thomas, the 34th pick in the most recent draft, looked impressive as the lead ball-handler today. Cleveland has put him in a position to orchestrate the offense in a way he never could with Arkansas. This increased opportunity is leading to instant results, with Thomas’s playmaking being the biggest takeaway from this game.

Thomas dished 7 assists in the first three quarters. He kept his head up, manipulating the floor and creating advantages at every turn. This one-handed skip pass to the opposite corner was straight up ridiculous. It takes serious creativity to think of this in real-time.

The Cavs are confident they found a first-round talent with the 34th pick. Thomas is proving them right by showing he can do more than catch-and-shoot away from the ball. His patience and composure at point guard were extremely encouraging.

Thomas finished with 30 points, 7 assists, 4 rebounds, 4 steals and only 2 turnovers. Impressive stuff from the rookie.

Nae’Qwan Tomlin was Cleveland’s second-leading scorer with 17 points. Tomlin shot 7-for-10 from the floor and had 4 blocks.

Tomlin and Thomas have been the two standouts for the Cavs. So far, they’re waiting for someone else to step up and provide support. It was a relatively lackluster game from everyone else, with Malakai Branham being the only other Cav to score in double figures.

Detroit was led by Lanier, who scored 25 points on 7-for-12 three-point shooting. Brice Williams joined in on the splash party by nailing 6-of-9 three-point attempts for 21 points. Those two finished with more three-pointers than the entire Cavalier roster.

NBA Polls! Rockets polls! Get Your SBN NBA Results Here!

Polls! America is obsessed with polls. Not Polish people, or metal or wooden tubes that sometimes people writhe upon, but surveys, votes, the heart of the Sports Blog Nation’s Electoral Process. If SBN had one. After a pretty boring, and chalk draft, where few indefensible decisions were made, thus generated little drama, NBA trades and to some extent, free agent signings have come through for us. The ongoing soap opera* that is the NBA has lots of emotive signings, and plots that would seem utterly contrived, if they didn’t, in fact, actually happen.

Let’s start with this one, that asks the SBN reader “Do You Want Your Team To Sign LeBron James”. As you know, LeBron is still the NBA’s leading soap opera* star. LeBron has created little scandal in his 24 year NBA career, and we all know he doesn’t want any drama. LeBron instead demands, requires and utterly insists upon drama. Usually about what he’ll do next. Even at 41 LeBron can keep the soapy audience of the NBA entertained. But what are the results?

Wow. So fans like the drama, but have a clear mandate for NOT signing LeBron James. Where will he go? Maybe Philadelphia? I have no idea, but rumors have been that the Rockets are not interested in bringing James to the Bayou City.

What’s next? How about “Which of the most prominent traded or signed players will have the biggest impact on their team?”. As far as contrived plots go, the Jaylen Brown trade is right up there. As far as something predictable happening goes, Bam Adebayo punching, slapping or “striking” Tyler Herro is the least surprising.

I personally disagree with the results here. I think Giannis will have a bigger impact in Miami. Even if he doesn’t play a lot. It’s difficult to overstate how much better Giannis is than the players in Miami he’s replacing.

I’m sure the 76ers will have far better forward play than they had from Paul George (minus the last few weeks of the season) but there’s a kind car wreck of usage coming for the 76ers. too. Brown, whether he’s a good or bad player analytically speaking, is a high usage player. So to a lesser extent, is Tyrese Maxey, so is Joel Embiid if he plays. The 76ers will also want to feature VJ Edgecombe more as well, I would think. It’s not that there’s “only one ball” so much as “there are only so many shot attempts”. So while I think the 76ers will improve, I’m just not sure how big the delta on offense between Paul George playing well and Brown will be, given likely lower usage. That said, Brown typically always plays, unlike PGOut13Weeks. That’s subject to the usual caveats, but 76 games of Brown WILL improve the 76ers, especially on defense. How much is the question.

Next up? Who wins the Finals? Can you guess what people said? Probably.

I’m not a New Yorker, or a Knicks fan, but that’s downright disrespectful. Seven percent picked the Knicks? Seven? The Knicks will return pretty much everyone except their one key player they actually drafted, Mitchell Robinson. Robinson played great minutes for them, but doesn’t strike me as someone who couldn’t be replaced. The Knicks came within a whisker of sweeping the last three rounds of the NBA playoffs, including the Finals against the favorite (by 4x over the Knicks) Spurs. That seems like it should garner more than 7% of votes.

Guess what? You can put your money where your mouth is, on this proposition, with Fanduel, if you live in a place that allows such things. By “putting your money where your mouth is” I mean, maybe don’t spend more than a fancy sandwich and drink, perhaps? Show that you, too, heart NYC or something, if that is something you choose to do, with Fanduel following this here link.

Finally we reach the Rockets.

I think The Great People Of Rocketsas are being too generous here. That’s us all over, though, generous.

Smart has never been a great player, questionable DPOY aside, but he IS an Ime guy, so hooray for that. If there’s one thing this team needs, it’s an avatar of Ime on the court.

Bogdan Son of Bogdan, or as I like to call him BogBog, looked, ah, washed, last season, and also didn’t shoot well. If a shooter who moves only slightly faster than continental drift can’t shoot, it’s hard to see what he’s good for, no matter how tall he is.

I’d give this signing a “Pandering To Ime For Inexplicable Reasons – C- ”. It’s not an “F”, but you just know that Smart is going to play over better players, often. He wasn’t good last year, a couple of playoff games notwithstanding. I don’t think he’s a misunderstood rebel like Dillon Brooks, I think he’s a 32 year old fake point guard who hasn’t been good in years, and was overrated when he was good, roughly four years ago. Silver lining? Smart spends a lot of time being hurt.

So that’s your check in with the 250 year old project that is SBN NBA internet democracy. Stay cool, Shakers.

*What IS a “soap opera” anyway? Settle down, you, younger readers may not know. How would they? Anyhow, back when people rode dinosaurs to work and women were all “trad” (they weren’t), and there were only three channels of television, there were daily dramas that aired every weekday afternoon. These usually involved the turgid, overblown, schemes, machinations and especially loves and passions of several families. People got married, had torrid affairs, got divorced, and remarried all the time. Since the shows aired in the afternoon, the primary audience at the time was “housewives” (plus the elderly, incarcerated, insane and children) they were sponsored, and often produced, by soap companies, for example Proctor and Gamble (the Cincinnati Soap Monster). These corporations wanted to sell things to women, in large part, soap. Soap was something pretty much everyone watching bought, to clean the dishes, themselves, their kitchen, etc. If the same sort of thing is shown at night, but features truly awful men, expensive settings, and few jokes, it’s not a soap opera, it’s “Prestige TV”.

Yaxel Lendeborg voted as the Michigan player who will have the best NBA rookie season

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - JULY 05: Yaxel Lendeborg #1 of the Golden State Warriors looks on against the San Antonio Spurs during the second half of their 2026 California Classic Summer League game at Chase Center on July 05, 2026 in San Francisco, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Thien-An Truong/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Earlier this week, we asked fans to vote on which Michigan player selected in the 2026 NBA Draft will have the best rookie season.

  • Forward Morez Johnson Jr. was selected No. 9 overall by the Dallas Mavericks.
  • Forward Yaxel Lendeborg was selected No. 11 overall by the Golden State Warriors.
  • Center Aday Mara was selected No. 12 overall by the Oklahoma City Thunder.

The results are now in, and there’s a clear favorite.

Lendeborg received 76% of the votes, while Johnson received 18% and Mara just 6%.

Lendeborg’s in quite the interesting situation and is set to play a key role on a team with future hall of famers in Stephen Curry, Draymond Green, and Jimmy Butler.

Lendeborg, the Big Ten Player of the Year, has already looked impressive during the NBA Summer League.

Per FanDuel Sportsbook, the Warriors currently have the 13th highest odds of winning the NBA Finals next season at +4500. With those long odds, Lendeborg likely has a better chance of winning NBA Rookie of the Year.

How did you vote this week? Let us know in the comments and come back next week for another edition of SB Nation Reacts.

Austin Reaves played a round of golf while on the phone with agents in NBA free agency frenzy

Fresh off re-signing with the Los Angeles Lakers, Austin Reaves finally found some refuge on the golf course this weekend in the American Century Championship.

Even the links had been stressful recently for Reaves, an avid golfer who was consumed by the frenzy of NBA free agency.

As among the most coveted available stars, Reaves said he was “on the phone with my agents probably five, six, seven hours a day” for a week when free agency reached a fever pitch.

“It was kind of annoying because it was interrupting my golf,” Reaves said during an NBC Sports interview in Sunday’s final round. “But I did play one full round with them on the phone, and I just put them on speaker. I’d throw (the phone) on the ground and hit and pick it up and keep talking.”

NBA: Chicago Bulls at Los Angeles Lakers
Reaves returns to the Lakers on the richest contract ever signed by an undrafted player.

The 28-year-old from Arkansas is a golf content creator when he’s off the court. Reaves founded the "Hillbilly Bogey" brand with his friend Trent Swaim.

There’s a YouTube channel devoted to “Hillbilly Bogey,” which is a reference to Reaves’ nickname (“Hillbilly Kobe”) as a high school basketball star.

“We just try to have fun with it,” Reaves said of his social media. “We play so much golf that we just wanted to document it.”

Reaves joked that he made so many bogeys the first day of the American Century Championship that he was ready to shed the “Hillbilly Bogey” hat he was sporting.

But he was at least happier with his game now that the madness surrounding his NBA future had quieted down.

“It's been good,” Reaves said. “I haven't hit it the way I wanted to all week, but it's good to be out here. My brother's on the bag. It's good to see all the fans and just have fun.”

NBA: Los Angeles Lakers at Memphis Grizzlies
Austin Reaves joined The Dan Patrick Show from Lake Tahoe, Nevada at the American Century Championship.

NBA Free Agency Rumors, News: Latest on LeBron James, Russell Westbrook to Miami?

LAS VEGAS — NBA Summer League grinds on in Sin City, moving past the star-studded first weekend into where the star rookies and players get shut down. In their place, guys trying to get noticed often try to do too much. With that background, here are the latest rumors and notes flying around Vegas about free agency.

LeBron James latest

There has been a lot of talk but very little actual new info on the LeBron James front: His agent, Rich Paul, is talking to teams and relaying news — and voice texts — to LeBron as teams make their pitch. Then there are the public pitches, like Stephen Curry at the American Century Championships.

"Up until probably two, three years ago, that was like a pipe-dream question or even a thought," Curry said. "But that's part of the allure. Him going into his 24th season, me going into my 18th, the battles we've had, that would be such a unique story in NBA history, in sports history. But a little premature right now to talk about it."

Minnesota coach Chris Finch made his pitch during an appearance on a Bleacher Report live stream with Jake Fischer and Marc Stein of The Stein Line.

That said, the consensus remains that Cleveland and Miami are the frontrunners, some people (including Stein and ESPN's Shams Charania) believe Philadelphia is in that tier, with the other three teams (Minnesota, Golden State and Denver) well back. LeBron has seen the West and wants to play in the East next season.

Russell Westbrook to Miami?

Russell Westbrook is an unrestricted free agent, coming off a season where he averaged 15.2 points and 6.7 assists per game while shooting 33.8% from 3-point range. At age 37, he was not on top of the board for most teams, but as we get deeper into the offseason and teams are rounding out their guard rotations, Westbrook is getting looks.

Westbrook could land in Miami if they miss out on the LeBron sweepstakes, reports Stefan Bondy of The New York Post. LeBron and Westbrook together on the Lakers did not work — to put it kindly — and Miami isn't going to recreate that experiment.

Westbrook also is not a shooter. With Bam Adebayo and Giannis Antetokounmpo on the roster, Miami needs shooters, which makes the addition of Westbrook odd, but stranger things have happened.

Other free agency notes

• Keep an eye on the Gary Trent Jr. contract — four years, $64 million is what was agreed to — if/when it becomes official. That out-of-the-blue contract has raised eyebrows around the league, after Trent played the last two seasons on a minimum. Would the league look into the signing as something agreed to before he took those minimum deals?

• Isaiah Evans is headed back to Minnesota.

• Alpha Diallo grew up in Denver, played his high school ball, and now the former Providence Friar is headed back to Denver on a minimum deal.

• Just a note talking to people around the league, everyone expects the Kawhi Leonard to Toronto trade to get approved. Eventually. Once the Aspiration investigation ends. Again, eventually.

NBA Summer League is for sickos — good thing it’s in Las Vegas, where sickos of all sorts gather

LAS VEGAS, NV - JULY 9: Morez Johnson #14 of the Dallas Mavericks dribbles the ball during the game against the Golden State Warriors during the 2026 NBA Summer League game on July 9, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas, Nevada. 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 Ryan Stetz/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

LAS VEGAS, NV — Morez was on everyone’s mind who made the trek from the DFW area to the desert for the first weekend of NBA Summer League play.

It was our first chance to see Morez Johnson Jr., the Dallas Mavericks’ first-round draft pick, play against some NBA-level talent, while surrounded by some far-fringe NBA talent.

Some of us were convinced on draft night that the Mavericks had reached for Johnson at the No. 9 overall pick. Others, notably including my MMB colleague David Sanchez, who went on the Vegas trip with us, were immediately sold on Johnson’s fit and worth at No. 9, especially in light of the fact that none of the top guards fell that far.

Should the Mavericks have stayed with the more popular logic of “best guard available” with Arizona’s Brayden Burries widely projected as Dallas’ pick and still on the board at No. 9? Or will Johnson, the exact prototype of a Masai Ujiri draft pick, prove out as the better selection? Time will tell, and the irrationality of fandom means it’s never too early to start drawing conclusions.

Six of us, including Mavs Moneyball’s fearless leader Kirk Henderson, participated in our own Basketball Dessert Storm this season. As I write on Sunday afternoon, Kirk and our resident gambling aficionado Tyler Edsel are all that is left of us on The Strip. Truly the sickest of sickos.

Here are some general thoughts on the weekend, with the disclaimer that although we had tickets to Day 3, when the Mavericks played their second game against theLos Angeles Lakers, most of us sat that day out. There was just too much to gamble on, with a pair of World Cup quarterfinals, what ended up being a mere popcorn fart of a fight night at UFC 329, where both the main event and co-main event ended in 1:09 or less, and the ponies. Oh, those most majestic of hooved professional athletes running at tracks all across this great land, delivered live to stream to any interested in placing an honest wager on not just who’s the fastest, but who can get going fast the fastest.

Most of us were posted up at the Westgate Sportsbook all day Saturday, while our resident Mavericks optimist, Michael Harris, flew solo as MMB correspondent at UNLV’s Thomas & Mack Arena that day. Fun fact — his daughter Fynnleagh got her NBA Summer League program signed by Kyrie Irving after Saturday’s 91-70 loss to the Lakers.

Fynnleagh Harris with her NBA Summer League program signed by Mavericks’ star guard Kyrie Irving | COURTESY PHOTO

There were many such brushes with greatness throughout the weekend. We saw Alabama basketball coach Nate Oates at Eataly in the Park MGM. Kirk saw Arkansas coach John Calipari at the gym at the Aria. We brushed past former Maverick and current Los Angeles Clipper forward Derrick Jones Jr. on the way to the two-story Whataburger attached to the Waldorf Astoria, giving us one more opportunity to reminisce about the incredible smothered fadeaway he hit over Chet Holmgren in Game Six of the 2024 Western Conference semifinals against the Oklahoma City Thunder to put the Mavs ahead 115-110 with less than two minutes remaining.

There is no event or time of year when NBA sickos get to rub shoulders with basketball royalty like they do at Summer League. It really is something to behold. If you’re reading about basketball in the summer months, you qualify. You need to make it a point to get to Summer League in the next couple of years. Not even the food poisoning David and I both got from that trip to Whataburger on The Strip could turn the weekend sour. It was a great time.

Here are some general (mostly) basketball-related highlights and thoughts from the weekend:

  • Saturday’s game against the Lakers was a big nothing burger. Johnson’s minutes declined slightly and his production did as well. We’ll get to his spectacular night in Thursday’s 91-80 loss to the Golden State Warriors separately below. This kind of erratic chaos is to be expected in Summer League play, and we’re not taking much of anything away about this.
  • Sergio de Larrea is proving to be quite raw. Michael said he liked what he saw from de Larrea in Saturday’s game, but the numbers don’t give you much to be optimistic about. He did shoot the ball better on Saturday, going 2-of-4 from the field, but dished four assists and turned the ball over four times, after going 3-for-14 from the field while dishing five dimes on Thursday. This is a guy who needs to get a hell of a lot stronger with the basketball in his hands if he’s going to realize anything close to being the “steal of the first round”.
  • Vsevolod “Seva” Ishchenko has achieved Mavs Moneyball Vibes Darling status after two games. On Thursday, he just had the look of a guy who might be able to survive the transition from ball in the Russian VTB United League. Here’s what our MMB correspondent back home, Bryan Porter, had to say about Ishchenko’s game after Thursday’s loss to the Warriors: “Seva is not yet physically ready for NBA games, but that kid attacks the basket with zero fear, has some craftiness and pace to his drives, and is unafraid to whip risky kick-outs to shooters. Seva’s game and physique both clearly need some fine-tuning, but the bones (and I do mean bones) of a truly intriguing Swiss Army knife role player are there for those with the eyes to see.”
  • Johnson looked like the real deal for much of the team’s first Summer League game, even getting the better of his Michigan teammate Yaxel Lendeborg on several occasions along the way. He’s a beast. He did the things you wanted to see him do. He dominated the fringe talent in front of him. He made a living going to the basket and cleaning up the glass. He kept shooting 3-pointers until he made one, as if just to prove to everyone watching that he’s going to put in the work to become at least a league-average shooter after showing some development on that front in his second and final year in the college game. He finished with 27 points on a sizzling 12-of-17 shooting from the field, to go along with eight boards, in 32 minutes on the floor. We’ve seen all we need to see. The hype train’s engines are rumbling.
  • Lendeborg on the other end of that game was nearly equally as impressive, though. It’s going to be interesting to see which one of those two former Michigan big men has the better NBA career. Lendeborg finished with 21 points, 10 rebounds and six assists on 8-0f-13 shooting, including 2-of-4 from 3-point range.
  • On Friday, we got there in the third quarter of the New York Knicks vs. Brooklyn Nets game to snag good seats for the game between the Memphis Grizzlies and Chicago Bulls, which immediately followed. Mikel Brown Jr. had four points when we got there, but he erupted midway through the third to finish with 20, including three 3-pointers in the game’s final 16 minutes, each more difficult than the last. As good as Johnson was the night before, lamenting that Brown Jr. didn’t fall to the ninth overall pick, as some thought he might before the draft, was a definite talking point in the Uber ride back to The Strip.
  • Friday’s main event was Caleb Wilson and the Summer Bulls vs. Cameron Boozer and the Summer Grizz. Both were incredible. Wilson made himself into an immediate Summer League Legend, going unconscious from 3-point range for 21 of his 35 points. He was fading away. He had hands in his face. He recorded five stocks, exactly as many as the much bigger Johnson had the night before for the Mavericks. He looked like a killer. Boozer, though he finished with 23 points and six boards, looked ready to compete for Rookie of the Year in a crowded field as well. He was strong and polished, shooting 7-of-12 from the field and 5-for-5 from the free throw line in the Grizzlies’ 97-96 win.

The value of a $72 day crammed full of basketball may have been offset by heavy losses at the games of chance, but we still netted a great time. The realization dawned on us as we were cashing betting slips at Westgate for England-Norway UNDER 2.5 goals scored, paired with Max Holloway to win the UFC Main Event, that the real wins, perhaps, were the friends we made along the way. NBA Summer League should be on the basketball bucket list of every NBA fan. Make plans for next year. You may even catch a glimpse of a Mavs MoneyBrunch in the wild at Hash House A-Go-Go.

Cyclones in the NBA Summer League

An overall view of the Thomas & Mack Center before the game between the San Antonio Spurs against the Atlanta Hawks on July 9, 2026 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas, Nevada. | NBAE via Getty Images

LAS VEGAS — A quintet of former Cyclones are taking part in the NBA Summer League, Joshua Jefferson (Nets), Tamin Lipsey (Pacers), Keshon Gilbert (Hawks), Curtis Jones (Celtics) and Tristan Enaruna (Cleveland).

The schedule for each of the former cagers is the following:

Atlanta Hawks

July 9 – vs. Spurs – 3:30 p.m. (CDT) – ESPN2
July 11 – vs. Nets – 7 p.m. – ESPN
July 13 – vs. Celtics – 5 p.m. – Amazon Prime
July 16 – vs. Grizzlies – 7 p.m. – Amazon Prime

In a 99-63 win against the Spurs on July 9, Gilbert played 20 minutes off the bench. He scored 10 points, pulled down five rebounds, dished out five assists and recorded two steals. He did not play in the Hawks’ 83-76 win against Joshua Jefferson and the Brooklyn Nets.

Brooklyn Nets

July 10 – vs. Knicks – 5 p.m. (CDT) – Amazon Prime
July 11 – vs. Hawks – 7 p.m. – ESPN
July 14 – vs. Kings- 5 p.m. – Amazon Prime
July 16 – vs. Rockets- 3:30 p.m. – ESPNU

Jefferson did not play in the Nets’ 91-65 win against the New York Knicks. He made his Summer League debut as a starter in the Nets’ 83-76 loss to Atlanta, scoring nine points, recording a rebound, an assist and two steals.

Boston Celtics

July 10 – vs. Raptors – 8 p.m. (CDT) – ESPN
July 12 – vs. Hornets – 4 p.m. – ESPN2
July 13 – vs. Hawks – 5 p.m. – Amazon Prime
July 15 – vs. Kings – 7 p.m. – ESPN2

In the 83-80 overtime victory against Toronto, Jones tallied two rebounds, one assist and one steal in 10 minutes of play. His second game is Sunday (today) at 4 p.m against the Hornets.

Cleveland Cavaliers

July 10 – vs. Indiana – 3:30 p.m. (CDT) – ESPN2
July 12 – vs. Detroit – 3 p.m. – Prime
July 13 – vs. Miami – 7 p.m. – Prime
July 15 – vs. New Orleans – 3:30 p.m. – Prime

A member of T.J. Otzelberger’s first team in Ames, the Almere, Netherlands, native scored two points, had three rebounds and one steal to his name in a 99-93 loss to Indiana on July 10.

Indiana Pacers

July 10 – vs. Cavaliers – 3:30 p.m. (CDT) – ESPN2
July 11 – vs. 76ers – 4:30 p.m. – Amazon Prime
July 13 – vs. Raptors – 3:30 p.m. – ESPN2
July 15 – vs. Timberwolves – 2:30 p.m. – Amazon Prime

As a starter in the Pacers 99-93 victory over Cleveland, the Ames native recorded four points, four rebounds and one steal. In a 100-93 overtime loss to Philadelphia, Lipsey again started, and scored three points, dished out two assists and pulled down two rebounds.

Jaylen Brown, rim pressure, and world peace (mailbag answers)

LAS VEGAS, NV - AUGUST 8: President of Basketball Operations Brad Stevens of the Boston Celtics talks to Jaylen Brown #7 of the Boston Celtics during Day 1 of the 2021 Las Vegas Summer League on August 8, 2021 at the Cox Pavilion in Las Vegas, Nevada. 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 2021 NBAE (Photo by David Dow/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Thanks again for the awesome questions everyone. I’m pushing these out pretty quickly for a couple of reasons. A. I have time this afternoon and B. I wanted to clear the deck for summer league content. So let’s just jump right into it.

johnnymost

Can you help me compare the Isaiah and brown trades? The emotional reactions were similar, but other than Thomas’s injury, were the analytics similar? Brad certainly can be cold, but ultimately, he gambled. He got that from Danny. I yield the floor

Good topic. I would say that they are a little bit the opposite in that JB is more of the Kyrie in this scenario (not making a 1 for 1 comparison, remember that “comparison is the thief of joy!). The Cavs felt like they had to move on from Kyrie and the Celtics sent Isaiah and picks for him. It made basketball sense but not emotional sense. Ultimately both sides lost on that one. Time will tell with this one.

I do worry about the cumulative effect of sending out franchise icons (Pierce, Garnett, Isaiah, Jaylen) in cold hearted moves. As much as we all want to believe that Jayson Tatum will retire a Celtic, there’s at least a little bit of doubt now, and that’s sad.

CGREEN34

Should Scheierman start this season at the 3? He looked very solid in a lot of games last year both on offense and defense. He also has a creative streak that I hope we get to see more of this season.

I have never known what to make of Baylor. I set my expectations low early on and in year two he exceeded them, so already he’s a pleasant surprise to me. I’m circling him as a guy that could see an additional leap as a 3rd year guy. On one hand, there are minutes to be had on the wing (George won’t play a full 82 games). On the other hand, there’s a glut of wings that are all competing for minutes. This will be one of the big storylines in training camp to watch. I might actually expand this topic into a “who should start?” discussion post.

New England Guy

Jeff, if we could have world peace, but the trade-off is that the Celtics vs Sixers games this year would not be televised or recorded in anyway, and fans would not be allowed to attend them, would it be worth it?

Wait, you mean we don’t have to watch Jaylen in a Sixers uniform AND there’s peace on Earth? What’s the catch?

PontiacDream

What would have to happen this season for the Jaylen trade to not loom over everything the whole time?

“Just win baby.“ – Al Davis

(Note: While wins in the regular season will help a bit, I think the general consensus will be that this team (and The Trade) will be judged by the playoffs. So yeah, the trade will loom over everything unless they somehow flip George and picks for a few more impactful long term solutions.

Maye The Force Be With You

I’ve read that around the league, the Volume 3 era is being viewed more critically—that rim pressure and shot creation are proving more valuable than simply taking more threes. We may have just seen that when the Knicks closed out the Finals shooting 35% overall and 32% from three. Brad has echoed wanting to attack the rim more, yet The Trade seems to push Boston even further in the opposite direction. Beyond Tatum, who on this roster replaces Jaylen’s shot creation?

Part of me wonders how much Brad was focused on Giannis with those “rim pressure” comments. Like he was setting the stage for that to be the big move. There aren’t a lot of Giannis level rim pressure guys out there, so I guess the answer was to double down on offensive rebounding type bigs (Robinson, Cenac, etc.)

The thing with the analytics era is that there’s no one all-encompassing stat or overarching rule. It is reductive to define it as “shoot lots of 3’s” because sometimes you need to attack the paint. Sometimes, especially in the playoffs, teams take away your best options and you just need a guy that can take and make tough, midrange shots. Jaylen Brown is one of those guys. Maybe Pritchard can fill that role sometimes. Paul George (to an extent) as well. Maybe one of the young wings can develop that as well.

BostonForEva

Regarding Jaylen Brown and not the Celtics. Sixers seem to me to have to many mouths to feed. Embiid, Brown, Maxey, and maybe Edgecombe if he gets better. This seems to me like a disaster in the making.

Knicks had Brunson as the engine and KAT as the supporting cast on offense. Then a LOT of good defensive pieces that were above average on offense.

Sixers have Maxey, Embiid as engines and Brown as the supporting cast on offense. Maxey is above average on defense. Barlow is above average on defense. And that’s it based on analytics. This seems like too many mouths to feed and not enough defense. I think Brown’s game is a horrible fit for the Sixers and I’m not sure why they did it other than wanting more Stars.

Thoughts on the new Sixers team and specifically on the impact to Brown? Also, how happy are the Sixers media and Sixers fans about the trade?

I think they’ll be fine, but you are right that they’ll have to figure things out. Maxey is too good to be the 1B so I hope Philly fans are ready for several seasons of debates over who the 1A guy is (despite it being pretty clear).

I do worry a bit for Edgecomb’s development, but he’s still young and can be fungible for a while. And yeah, you have to factor in Embiid missing at least a third of any season, which makes for some interesting lineup decisions.

Jaylen increases their ceiling, but there’s still a floor to consider as well.

ZeroGame

If you could give Brad truth serum what do you think the answer to the following question would be? “If you knew at the start of the offseason that this would be the outcome if you tried to trade Jaylon Brown, would you still do it?”

I have a feeling that the option to trade Jaylen Brown has been in the back of their minds for years. They would have done it for Durant. It sounds like they at least listened to offers last year. I think the finance math has been staring at them since the CBA was signed and they finally decided that the time was right.

357Dust

Is this the opening day roster?

Could Murphy still be in play?

Will Hauser still be here?

It might very well be. We’re below the tax with 14 players and they have the “optionality” to make more moves at the deadline and next offseason. This might be it.

I think Murphy is a long shot at this point. I also can’t begin to understand what New Orleans is trying to do.

Hauser seems like the most likely to be moved at some point. But he’s also valuable to us and it might make more sense to see how the season plays out and use him as a chip in February at the deadline.

scue

How many years of elite play do you expect from Tatum? He is currently 28, we are trying to clean cap, reset tax penalties, to load up for a future run which could put him on the wrong side of 30.

What do you see as the desired team structure in the future in support of 30 year old Tatum?

Good question. He has a very adaptable playing style. He can do a little bit of everything, but he seems to go up another level when he’s attacking downhill and not shying away from contact. I think he’ll still be in his prime for 3 to 4 more years before he has to start transitioning his game to more of a perimeter style. Ironically enough, one comp would be the current verison of Paul George.

cpelham

The narrative has been that JB didn’t want to return to being 1B in Boston, but he’s acting like he’s really unhappy he was traded. Which is it? Was it his fervent wish to remain in Boston with JT being demoted to 1B or traded? Was his unhappiness invented by the media? Is Brown just defending his pride, folllowing the perception that there was little demand for him? Can you make sense of it?

I don’t want to pretend to know what is or was going on inside of Jaylen Brown’s mind or what his motivations and private thoughts are.

I will, however, use this space to offer up some dot-connecting thoughts I had recently.

We heard Jaylen himself say that there was open communication with the front office at first but then it went sideways (paraphrasing).

We also got reporting recently that Jaylen got a chance to tell a couple of teams that he wasn’t interested in playing there.

I wonder if at first they were keeping him in the loop, but with him reaching out to teams and scaring them off they decided to start excluding him from talks. Might also be why there was so much noise around this (was Jaylen’s camp one of the leaks to the media?). At some point the Celtics might have been like ‘we’re shutting down communication and we will just going to trade him and the team will have 3 years to convince him to be ok with it.‘ And the Sixers were willing. Just a guess.

Thanks again for the questions!

Los Angeles Lakers officially announce Collin Sexton signing

Another Los Angeles Lakers offseason move just became official.

The Lakers announced the signing of free agent guard Collin Sexton on Sunday, July 12 after originally agreeing to terms on a two-year, $19 million contract on July 1. The news comes days after the Lakers officially announced the Walker Kessler trade and their other notable free agent acquisitions of Quentin Grimes and Sandro Mamukelashvili.

Sexton, originally drafted with the eighth overall pick by the Cleveland Cavaliers in the 2018 NBA Draft, split time between the Charlotte Hornets and the Chicago Bulls last season. He averaged 15.4 points, 3.3 assists, 2.3 rebounds and 1.1 steals per game. In his eight seasons in the league, Sexton has averaged 18.3 points, 3.6 assists and 2.7 rebounds per game.

Projected to be the lead guard off the bench, Sexton should provide plenty of athleticism and efficient scoring as a career 47% shooter for the Lakers, especially at the rim. Those are areas that LA has lacked for in the last few years. He's not a great defender or playmaker, but Sexton does have three years of experience playing alongside Kessler in Utah, which may have factored into Rob Pelinka's thinking amid the Lakers' roster overhaul this summer as they begin the post-LeBron James era.

Sexton posted a hype video on July 1 shortly after agreeing to sign with the Lakers set to "No Child Left Behind" by Kanye West with just two words in the caption: "It's ON."

Pistons vs. Cavaliers: Ebuka Okorie looks to build off strong Summer League start

LAS VEGAS, NV - JULY 9: Ebuka Okorie #23 of the Detroit Pistons looks on during the game against the Philadelphia 76ers during the 2026 NBA Las Vegas Summer League on July 9, 2026 at Cox Pavilion in Las Vegas, Nevada. 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 David Becker/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Detroit Pistons rookie Ebuka Okorie showed you just about everything you’d hope to see from him during his first Summer League game. Now, he looks to keep the momentum going in game two against the Cleveland Cavaliers.

Okorie scored 20 points and had four assists in his first game as a member of the Pistons. He was able to showcase a reliable 3-point jumper (2-of-4) and his special mix of speed, body control, and spatial awareness to get by his defender and find lanes at the rim. While he still obviously has a long way to go, you could tell that even at the NBA level that burst, coordination, and intelligence is going to be a difference-maker. It needs to be, too, because it’s tough being an impactful guard when you’re only 6-foot-1 without shoes on.

Game Vitals

When: 4 p.m.
Where: Thomas & Mack Center, Las Vegas, Nevada
Watch: Prime Video

Analysis

It’s a good thing Okorie showed up like he did because otherwise the Pistons lineup was pretty dreadful. Bigs were having trouble catching the ball, rebounding, defending, and finishing. The perimeter talent was mostly non-descript.

Isaac Jones, a Pistons two-way player, led the team with 22 points, and did at least do plenty of good things, but he also really struggled on defense. Second-year player Chaz Lanier, Detroit’s second-round pick last season, didn’t really show out like he needed to in a league where he should be far more advanced than the competition. As a catch-and-shoot guy, maybe his game isn’t conducive to taking over in Summer League, but at this stage, you can’t afford to be invisible. Lanier was largely invisible.

Roddy Gayle Jr., an undrafted rookie out of Michigan, mostly acquitted himself quite well, and Drake Allen, undrafted out of Utah State, showed himself to be an NBA (or at least G League)-level defender, if not NBA-level in other areas of the game. Otherwise, it was a bunch of forgettable guys delivering forgettable performances.

The Cavs were in their first Summer League game (a loss to the Pacers), with third-year player Nae-Quan Tomlin and rookie Meleek Thomas with 20 points apiece.

All I want to see tonight is an Okorie that is more aggressive in looking for his own shot and in creating his own offtense. It seemed clear he was looking to be more of a willing passer in Game 1, and it is important to show he can run an offense if he’s fighting to be a primary backup guard for the Pistons. But a lot of those passes went to bigs who could do nothing with them. It also meant the explosive Okorie, who averaged more than seven free throws per game in college, only got to the free-throw line one time. I want more of everything from Okorie, and a little less of everything else from Not Okorie.

Boston Celtics Daily Links 7/12/26

BOSTON, MA - APRIL 7: The sneakers worn by Jayson Tatum #0 of the Boston Celtics drives to the basket during the game against the Charlotte Hornets on April 7, 2026 at TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. 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 Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Globe ‘There’s no loyalty’: Jaylen Brown casually discussed trade while at the World Cup

NBA insider: Teams received ‘intel’ that steered them away from bidding on Jaylen Brown

‘Nine amazing years’: Jayson Tatum on his relationship with Jaylen Brown

NBPA executive director David Kelly says second apron hurts players, teams, and fans

CelticsBlogInside Joe Mazzulla’s unorthodox offseason: an exclusive conversation with the Celtics head coach

The Celtics filled the hole in their defense

The night my dad saw Larry Bird play—The History in Green

Chaos agents

CLNS MediaBig Pressure on Hugo Gonzalez After Giannis Trade

Celtics Most Underrated Pick Just Put the League on Notice

Where is Hugo Gonzalez on the Celtics Depth Chart?

NESN How to Watch Celtics vs. Hornets: Channel, Live Stream & Start Time for NBA Summer League Game

Mass Live Derrick White talks new Celtics big man who’s been a ‘pain’ to play against

NBPA rips NBA salary cap system after shocking Jaylen Brown trade

76ers coach reacts to unexpected Jaylen Brown trade with Celtics

Celtics Wire Celtics history: Garnett, Pierce trade; Silas, Wallace born; Butler passes

Dillon Mitchell on adjusting to Boston Celtics, NBA

What are the long-term risks of the Boston Celtics trading Jaylen Brown to the 76ers?

Derrick White on conflicted emotions about Celtics Jaylen Brown trade

Summer Celtics coach Amile Jefferson on Hugo Gonzalez growth

The AthleticJaylen Brown joining new-look 76ers excites Nick Nurse: ‘It’s amazing that he’s a Sixer’

Celtics’ Joe Mazzulla on life after Jaylen Brown: ‘There needs to be a grieving process’

Boston Sports JournalNBA Notebook: Celtics showing potential, rookies taking over Vegas, and the Adebayo-Herro beef

BSJ Live Q&A: Simone on Celtics/NBA, 6:30 p.m. Sunday 07.12.2026

Hardwood Houdini Mike Conley Jr. might be why Celtics won’t add Jayson Tatum’s best friend

Don’t sleep on Luka Garza’s role with Celtics after adding Mitchell Robinson

Celtics’ Amile Jefferson shares Coach K’s advice & why his ultimate goal can wait

Chris Cenac Jr. & Dillon Mitchell reflect on hilarious Summer League moment

The Celtics are clearly pressing the right buttons with Hugo Gonzalez

Chowder and ChampionsCeltics may have quietly landed the steal of the 2026 NBA Draft

CLNS Media/YouTubeBIG PRESSURE on Hugo Gonzalez After Giannis Trade? | Celtics Daily

Hoops RumorsCeltics Notes: Mazzulla, Brown, Robinson, Gonzalez, Cenac

Bleacher Report Jaylen Brown Poses with 76ers Jersey in 1st Photo Since Trade at NBA Summer League

Mazzulla Addresses Jaylen Brown’s Viral Comments and ‘Tension’ in Celtics amid Jayson Tatum Rumors

Joe Mazzulla Says Jaylen Brown Trade Requires ‘A Grieving Process’ After Celtics-76ers Deal

Jaylen Brown-Paul George Comparison Addressed by Mazzulla After Shocking Celtics-76ers Trade

5 Teams That Definitely Got Worse During 2026 NBA Offseason

The Sporting NewsCeltics officially sign $295 million ex-Grizzlies All-Star guard to help Jayson Tatum

YardbarkerThe red flag nobody is talking about in the Jaylen Brown trade: Jayson Tatum’s Achilles

Five losers of the NBA offseason so far

The Sixer Sense 76ers may have just broken their biggest strength for Jaylen Brown

BasketNewsJoe Mazzulla gets brutally honest about Jaylen Brown trade

Celtics legend suggests that the franchise will regret Jaylen Brown trade

Fadeaway WorldProjecting The Boston Celtics’ Starting Lineup And Depth Chart For The 2026-27 Season

NikNBA/YouTube Chris Cenac Jr Showed MAJOR Potential : Film Session

How Amari Williams DOMINATED the Raptors : Film Session

Heavy Celtics Coach Gives Notable Jayson Tatum Update Ahead of New Season

SI .comAmile Jefferson Joins His Celtics Players Chasing an NBA Dream at Summer League

Top Rookie Performances from Second Day of 2026 Las Vegas Summer League

Jaylen Brown’s Revenge Tour Starts Now

Duke Basketball ReportAmile Jefferson Update!

Fan RecapCeltics Just Sent A Clear Message About Tatums Inner Circle

AudacyHow a trip to Vegas was a full-circle moment for Neemias Queta

Basketball News “They Tried to Put Us Against Each Other”: Jayson Tatum Gets Honest About Jaylen Brown Relationship

Yahoo Sports Three Storylines For Boston Celtics Fans in Summer League Game 2

Clutch Points Celtics’ Joe Mazzulla still in ‘grieving process’ over Jaylen Brown trade

Celtics’ Derrick White reveals how he learned about the Jaylen Brown trade

NBC Sports Boston/YouTubeNeemi ‘couldn’t be happier’ to stay with Boston after signing contract extension

At the HiveCharlotte Hornets vs Boston Celtics Summer League Preview

Sixers WireNick Nurse discusses Sixers acquiring Jaylen Brown from Celtics

Steph Curry on his PGA Tour career prospects and LeBron possibly joining the Warriors

Steph Curry appreciates the assist from longtime Golden State Warriors teammate Draymond Green, but the basketball superstar won’t be trading sports anytime soon. But he will surely take Green’s help in lobbying superstar free agent LeBron James to join their team.

Curry, the two-time NBA MVP, won the American Century Championship in 2023 and was in fourth place entering Sunday’s final round of the celebrity golf tournament in South Lake Tahoe, Nevada. The three-round event features an elite field of golfers from the sports and entertainment industries.

On a recent episode of his podcast, Green suggested that Curry could make the PGA Tour in three years with proper preparation.

Curry laughed off the idea in an NBC Sports interview during Saturday’s second round.

“I love Draymond; that's why he's such a great teammate,” Curry said. “He's hyping me up. I do have so much respect for how hard this game is and what you all do on the Tour week in, week out. There's no even realistic shot that I'm going after a Tour card. But to see how good I can get when basketball is done, I kind of want to slowly and maybe without that shot say that I had a chance.

"Draymond, I appreciate you, and I love you, and I know you think I'm a great golfer, but there are levels to this! There are levels.”

Curry is playing in the tournament with his father, Dell, and his brother, Seth. All three played in the NBA, and Dell passed on the passion for golf to his sons. The trio have their own competition (with a handicap system) during five years of playing in the ACC tourney, and each has won family bragging rights at least once.

“I love seeing Pops play well,” Steph Curry said. “He's 62 years old, still doing it. We call him 'The Originator,' and he's showing it right now.”

GOLF: JUL 10 American Century Championship
Matt Boldy is putting his Olympic gold medal to good use at the American Century Championship this week.

Curry spent millions on helping revive the men’s and women’s golf programs at Howard University, working with his sponsors to supply equipment and uniforms. He also founded the Underrated Golf Tour with an objective of raising the profile of overlooked junior golfers.

“I was blessed to pick up the game,” he said. ”My dad got me into it, my brother into it, when I was 10 years old. And just what golf brings, this camaraderie, allows you to travel the world. But there's not a lot of access for everybody to get into the game. And so that's what I've been trying to attack through golf at Howard University and our Underrated Tour that we do for kids 13 to 18.

"I'm just trying to create more opportunity, equity, and access in the game. Meanwhile, still competing and having fun myself because I think it puts golf on a cool platform for somebody from another sport coming in and having fun.”

While he’s enjoying the links during the NBA offseason, there’s some serious business afoot as the NBA awaits James to choose his next landing spot after leaving the Los Angeles Lakers. Green and James are on vacation and golfing together in Puerto Rico, and Green reportedly has admitted to making the hard sell to James on the Warriors.

Though Curry downplayed speculation on where James might play (a return to the Cleveland Cavaliers also is an option), he said it would be intriguing to play against his longtime rival. The Cavs and Warriors met in four consecutive NBA Finals from 2015-18 with Curry triumphing three times over James.

"Up until probably two, three years ago, that was like a pipe-dream question or even a thought," Curry said during an ACC media availability Thursday about the possibility playing with James, according to ESPN.com. "But that's part of the allure. Him going into his 24th season, me going into my 18th, the battles we've had, that would be such a unique story in NBA history, in sports history. But a little premature right now to talk about it."

Though he said the decision ultimately would be up to James, Curry also noted “there’s good golf in the Bay. We're an organization that's been there. He knows that. That's really self-explanatory. It's a matter of where he sees himself fitting. At the end of the day, that's up to him."

Curry, who was paired with former MLB stars John Smoltz and Derek Lowe for Sunday’s final round, seemed hopeful after surviving “a very adventurous, eventful round” Saturday. The top three are Mardy Fish, Joe Pavelski and Annika Sorenstam.

“They always say golf is pure when it's fairways and greens,” Curry said. “I've done everything other than that, but still trying to stay within earshot of Joe and Marty, and I know Anika's playing well, so still having fun.”

American Century Championship 2026 - Round Two
Mardy Fish rode a late charge to the top of the leaderboard on Saturday in Lake Tahoe.

Steph Curry on his PGA Tour career prospects and LeBron possibly joining the Warriors

Steph Curry appreciates the assist from longtime Golden State Warriors teammate Draymond Green, but the basketball superstar won’t be trading sports anytime soon. But he will surely take Green’s help in lobbying superstar free agent LeBron James to join their team.

Curry, the two-time NBA MVP, won the American Century Championship in 2023 and was in fourth place entering Sunday’s final round of the celebrity golf tournament in South Lake Tahoe, Nevada. The three-round event features an elite field of golfers from the sports and entertainment industries.

On a recent episode of his podcast, Green suggested that Curry could make the PGA Tour in three years with proper preparation.

Curry laughed off the idea in an NBC Sports interview during Saturday’s second round.

“I love Draymond; that's why he's such a great teammate,” Curry said. “He's hyping me up. I do have so much respect for how hard this game is and what you all do on the Tour week in, week out. There's no even realistic shot that I'm going after a Tour card. But to see how good I can get when basketball is done, I kind of want to slowly and maybe without that shot say that I had a chance.

"Draymond, I appreciate you, and I love you, and I know you think I'm a great golfer, but there are levels to this! There are levels.”

Curry is playing in the tournament with his father, Dell, and his brother, Seth. All three played in the NBA, and Dell passed on the passion for golf to his sons. The trio have their own competition (with a handicap system) during five years of playing in the ACC tourney, and each has won family bragging rights at least once.

“I love seeing Pops play well,” Steph Curry said. “He's 62 years old, still doing it. We call him 'The Originator,' and he's showing it right now.”

GOLF: JUL 10 American Century Championship
Matt Boldy is putting his Olympic gold medal to good use at the American Century Championship this week.

Curry, 38, spent millions on helping revive the men’s and women’s golf programs at Howard University, working with his sponsors to supply equipment and uniforms. He also founded the Underrated Golf Tour with an objective of raising the profile of overlooked junior golfers.

“I was blessed to pick up the game,” he said. ”My dad got me into it, my brother into it, when I was 10 years old. And just what golf brings, this camaraderie, allows you to travel the world. But there's not a lot of access for everybody to get into the game. And so that's what I've been trying to attack through golf at Howard University and our Underrated Tour that we do for kids 13 to 18.

"I'm just trying to create more opportunity, equity, and access in the game. Meanwhile, still competing and having fun myself because I think it puts golf on a cool platform for somebody from another sport coming in and having fun.”

While he’s enjoying the links during the NBA offseason, there’s some serious business afoot as the NBA awaits James to choose his next landing spot after leaving the Los Angeles Lakers. Green and James are on vacation and golfing together in Puerto Rico, and Green reportedly has admitted to making the hard sell to James on the Warriors.

Though Curry downplayed speculation on where James might play (a return to the Cleveland Cavaliers also is an option), he said it would be intriguing to play against his longtime rival. The Cavs and Warriors met in four consecutive NBA Finals from 2015-18 with Curry triumphing three times over James.

"Up until probably two, three years ago, that was like a pipe-dream question or even a thought," Curry said during an ACC media availability Thursday about the possibility playing with James, according to ESPN.com. "But that's part of the allure. Him going into his 24th season, me going into my 18th, the battles we've had, that would be such a unique story in NBA history, in sports history. But a little premature right now to talk about it."

Though he said the decision ultimately would be up to James, Curry also noted “there’s good golf in the Bay. We're an organization that's been there. He knows that. That's really self-explanatory. It's a matter of where he sees himself fitting. At the end of the day, that's up to him."

Curry, who was paired with former MLB stars John Smoltz and Derek Lowe for Sunday’s final round, seemed hopeful after surviving “a very adventurous, eventful round” Saturday. The top three are Mardy Fish, Joe Pavelski and Annika Sorenstam.

“They always say golf is pure when it's fairways and greens,” Curry said. “I've done everything other than that, but still trying to stay within earshot of Joe and Marty, and I know Anika's playing well, so still having fun.”

American Century Championship 2026 - Round Two
Mardy Fish rode a late charge to the top of the leaderboard on Saturday in Lake Tahoe.