Fantasy Basketball Week 10 Schedule Primer: Navigating the holiday chaos

With the NBA Cup in the rearview mirror, the next scheduling quirk for fantasy managers to navigate is Christmas Day. Not only are there the five games on Thursday for managers to worry about, but there's also how the lack of games on Christmas Eve affects the week. Twenty-eight of the league's 30 teams will be in action on Tuesday, and nine-game slates on Friday and Saturday follow Christmas Day.

The good news is that there aren't any matinee tip times on Boxing Day, so fantasy managers won't have to worry about missing the random afternoon tip time. Let's look at the Week 10 schedule breakdown and some key storylines.

Week 10 Games Played

4 Games: CLE, DAL, DEN, DET, IND, MEM, NOR, OKC, ORL, POR, UTA

3 Games: ATL, BOS, CHA, CHI, GSW, HOU, LAC, LAL, MIA, MIL, MIN, NYK, PHI, PHX, SAC, SAS, TOR, WAS

2 Games: BKN

Week 10 Back-to-backs

Sunday (Week 9)-Monday: None

Monday-Tuesday: CHA, CLE, DAL, DEN, DET, IND, MEM, OKC, ORL, POR, UTA

Tuesday-Wednesday: None

Wednesday-Thursday: None

Thursday-Friday: None

Friday-Saturday: ATL, CHI, IND, MIA, MIL, NOR, ORL, PHO

Saturday-Sunday: SAC

Sunday-Monday (Week 11): GSW, OKC, POR, TOR, WAS

Week 10 Storylines of Note

- Avoid the Nets at all costs during Week 10.

The Nets are the lone team scheduled to play twice in Week 10, and they'll be active on the busiest days of the week. Michael Porter Jr. will remain valuable given his production, and an argument can also be made for Nic Claxton. However, Noah Clowney may be a player fantasy managers can afford to move on from if they find a more active option on the waiver wire. Also, the Nets' matchups won't be easy, as they visit the 76ers on Tuesday and the Timberwolves on Saturday.

- Indiana, Oklahoma City, Orlando and Utah are among the teams with two back-to-backs to navigate.

The back-to-backs may not be a significant issue for the fantasy-relevant Pacers or Thunder, except for Isaiah Hartenstein. He sat out Thursday's win over the Clippers, which was the first game of a back-to-back. However, Jalen Williams played both games, a positive development for fantasy managers who waited patiently for him to make his season debut last month. While both of Indiana's back-to-backs will be played entirely during Week 10, Oklahoma City's second is of the Sunday/Monday variety.

Orlando and Utah are more concerning for fantasy managers. Jalen Suggs has been out with a hip injury, and he was not playing both games of back-to-backs before that issue came to light. His recent absences have raised Anthony Black's fantasy ceiling, especially with Franz Wagner sidelined by a high ankle sprain. As for Utah, they've already begun to sit players, with Jusuf Nurkić and Lauri Markkanen missing a game this week. Instead of waiting until closer to the start of the "silly season," now may be the time to hop onto the Kyle Filipowski bandwagon.

- Wednesday and Thursday are the light game days.

As is usually the case, there are no games on Christmas Eve after 28 of the league's 30 teams play on Tuesday. The Christmas Day slate consists of five games, starting with Cavaliers/Knicks and concluding with Timberwolves/Nuggets. Thursday is the day to target potential streamers, with Golden State and Oklahoma City being the teams playing on Christmas Day that will also be active on the final day of Week 10. Even with the Thunder edging closer to full strength, that could make low-rostered players like Cason Wallace and Ajay Wallace more valuable to managers needing a scoring boost to end Week 10. As for Golden State, their rotation has been challenging to figure out beyond the Warriors' proven options.

- Which Lakers stars will (or won't) be available to begin Week 10?

Austin Reaves, Deandre Ayton and Rui Hachimura all sat out Saturday's loss to the Clippers, and Luka Dončić did not return for the second half after suffering a leg contusion during the second quarter. The Lakers play three games in Week 10, starting with a return trip to Phoenix on Tuesday. There's hope that Dončić, Reaves and Ayton will be available, while the Christmas Day matchup with Houston may be a more realistic target for Hachimura. The good news, schedule-wise, is that the Lakers won't have to navigate a back-to-back during Week 10, and they'll have two days between the Christmas Day game and their matchup with the Kings to end the week. If Dončić, Reaves and Ayton are available on Tuesday, fantasy managers may be able to get a full week out of each.

- The Hornets have the worst schedule to end Week 10.

Only one team has no game scheduled for either Saturday or Sunday in Week 10, and that's Charlotte. After opening the week with an away/home back-to-back against the Cavaliers and Wizards, the Hornets play their third and final game on Friday in Orlando. Given the injury woes of LaMelo Ball and Brandon Miller, it would not be shocking if Week 10 were a two-game week for either of them. Ball has not played both games of a back-to-back since Charlotte's second and third games of the season, while Miller played both games of a November 28-29 back-to-back against the Bulls and Raptors. Players like Kon Knueppel and Miles Bridges are more valuable due to Ball and Miller's injury histories. Still, the front-loaded Week 10 schedule doesn't do them or fantasy managers any favors.

- How many games will fantasy managers get out of Zion Williamson?

The Pelicans will play two back-to-backs during Week 10. First, there's the home/away back-to-back against the Mavericks and Cavaliers on Monday and Tuesday. Then, there are home games against the Suns on Friday and Saturday. It's conceivable that Williamson, who has yet to play both games of a back-to-back this season, is only available for two games at the most. Saddiq Bey has remained in the starting lineup due to Williamson coming off the bench, and he'll be worth holding onto, at least through the end of Week 10. Atlanta's Trae Young could also be looking at a two-game week, as the Hawks conclude their three-game week with a Friday/Saturday back-to-back.

Awaka grabs 15 rebounds as No. 1 Arizona shuts down San Diego State for 68-45 win in Phoenix

Koa Peat scored 11 points, Tobe Awaka grabbed 15 rebounds and top-ranked Arizona smothered San Diego State for a 68-45 win Saturday night in the Naismith Hall of Fame Series. Arizona held San Diego State to 26% shooting from the floor and 1 of 14 from 3-point distance, turning a tight game into a runaway after halftime at the home of the NBA's Phoenix Suns. Reese Dixon-Waters led San Diego State with eight points.

Lakers lose Luka Doncic to injury, then fall to Clippers despite LeBron James' 36 points

Lakers star Luka Doncic shoots in front of Clippers guard Kris Dunn in the first half Saturday at the Intuit Dome.
Lakers star Luka Doncic shoots in front of Clippers guard Kris Dunn in the first half of the Clippers' 103-88 win Saturday night at Intuit Dome. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

When Luka Doncic sustained a left leg contusion and sat out the entire second half of a 103-88 loss to the Clippers at Intuit Dome on Saturday night, he became the latest in a growing list of ailing Lakers.

Doncic played 19 minutes in the first half but didn’t return for the third quarter. He had 12 points, five rebounds and two assists at the break. But Doncic struggled with his shooting, going four for 13 from the field and one for six from three-point range.

Doncic entered as the leading scorer in the NBA, averaging 35.2 points per game, and was third in assists, averaging 9.1. He had torched the Clippers for 43 points in a win last month.

“He told me at halftime he couldn’t go," Lakers coach JJ Redick said. "I don’t have any other information.”

Read more:Lakers' Marcus Smart fined $35,000 for making obscene gesture at official

Rui Hachimura missed his first start of the season because of a sore groin that is expected to keep him out three to five days. Austin Reaves (left calf), Deandre Ayton (left elbow) and Gabe Vincent (lower back tightness) also are out.

The Clippers also lost a key player Saturday when center Ivica Zubac sustained a left ankle injury in the first quarter. Zubac, who has played every game this season and leads the team in rebounds and blocks, logged just 11 minutes.

The Clippers (7-21) entered the game tied for the worst record in the Western Conference. They had lost five games in a row, eight straight at home and 10 of their last 11 overall.

They got off to a good start Saturday, building a 22-point lead over the Lakers (19-8), who cut their deficit to seven points in the fourth quarter before fading. It was the Lakers' season low in points.

Lakers star Lebron James puts up a shot over multiple Clippers defenders during the Clippers' 103-88 win.
Lakers star Lebron James puts up a shot over multiple Clippers defenders during the Clippers' 103-88 win Saturday at the Intuit Dome. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

“No matter what the circumstance is, it’s still next man up,” said LeBron James, who led the Lakers with 36 points. “We’re all professionals. We all got to stay ready. So, obviously very challenging circumstances for our ballclub tonight. But I think we played extremely hard. We followed our keys. We just came up short.”

Kawhi Leonard had 32 points and 12 rebounds for the Clippers and James Harden had 21 points and 10 assists.

Before the game, Redick wanted the Lakers to "just manage the game and play with the right spirit."

But the Lakers fell into a 17-point deficit in the first quarter and couldn't recover.

Redick said Hachimura sat out after he felt hip pain against Utah on Thursday night. Reaves was “continuing to push himself” to return soon, Redick said, and Ayton had “swelling” in his elbow but had a “brisk, intense individual workout.”

Clippers owner Steve Ballmer, sitting next to Bill Gates, celebrates after the Clippers take a commanding lead.
Clippers owner Steve Ballmer, sitting next to Bill Gates, celebrates after the Clippers take a commanding lead over the Lakers on Saturday. (Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times)

Redick said it’s possible Reaves and Ayton could return Tuesday at Phoenix.

After the game, Redick lauded how the Lakers put up a good fight despite their rash of injuries.

Jake LaRavia, who had 12 points and 11 rebounds and Nick Smith Jr, who had nine points off the bench, helped the Lakers stay within striking distance.

But the Lakers struggled to make shots. They shot 39% (34 for 88) from the field, 16% (six for 38) from three-point range and 61% (14 for 23) at the line.

“I thought all the guys, about 90% of them, they brought it,” Redick said. “And we defended at a high level. Made it tough on their stars. ... Yes, just highly, highly competitive group today and really proud of them.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

No. 19 Texas Tech rallies from 17 down in 2nd half to stun No. 3 Duke 82-81 at MSG

Christian Anderson scored 23 of his 27 points in the second half, including the tiebreaking free throw with 3.4 seconds left, and No. 19 Texas Tech rallied from 17 down to beat third-ranked Duke 82-81 on Saturday night at Madison Square Garden. Isaiah Evans grabbed the rebound with 1.6 seconds remaining, and Duke called a timeout to set up a play. Foster inbounded near the Texas Tech bench, but Cameron Boozer’s 3-point try bounced off the rim — and the shot might have come just after the final horn, anyway.

Kaufman-Renn scores 18 points and Smith has 14 assists as No. 6 Purdue routs No. 21 Auburn, 88-60

Trey Kaufman-Renn had 18 points and six rebounds, and Braden Smith added 11 points and a season-high 14 assists to help No. 6 Purdue blow out No. 21 Auburn 88-60 on Saturday. C.J. Cox scored 14 points, making four 3-pointers, as the Boilermakers (11-1) won their third straight game since getting routed at home by then-No. 10 Iowa State two weeks ago. Purdue improved to 3-1 in the annual Indy Classic by shooting 55.9% from the field.

Dallin Hall, Jacari White lead No. 23 Virginia to 80-72 win over former ACC rival Maryland

Dallin Hall scored a season-high 20 points, Jacari White had a spectacular dunk and scored 15, and No. 23 Virginia beat Maryland 80-72 on Saturday night in the first meeting since 2018 between the former Atlantic Coast Conference rivals. Hall went 8 of 8 from the field for the Cavaliers (10-1). Devin Tillis added 10 points on 4-of-4 shooting on a night when Virginia's leading scorer, Thijs De Ridder, went 1 of 8 from the field and scored five points.

Sharp scores 22 points to lead No. 8 Houston over No. 14 Arkansas, 94-85

Emanuel Sharp scored 22 points, Kingston Flemings added 21 and No. 8 Houston used some excellent long-range shooting to beat No. 14 Arkansas 94-85 on Saturday. The Cougars (11-1) shot 44% from 3-point distance (11 for 25) and 52% from the field overall in winning their fifth straight game. Freshman guard Darius Acuff Jr. led Arkansas (9-3) with 27 points and seven assists.

Why Draymond Green's second-quarter ejection woke up Warriors in win over Suns

Why Draymond Green's second-quarter ejection woke up Warriors in win over Suns originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO – It’s dubious, perhaps even silly, to conclude that the Warriors are a better team without Draymond Green.

But they surely were Saturday night – because Green’s absence left them no choice.

Trailing by 11 when Green was ejected early in the second quarter, the Warriors shook off their atrocious start, reacquainted themselves with defense in the middle quarters and then hung on for a 119-116 win over the Phoenix Suns before a sellout crowd (18,064) at Chase Center.

The victory was a tonic for the Warriors, snapping their three-game losing streak and alleviating some of the internal frustration, allowing the twitchiest activists within Dub Nation to get at least one night of peaceful sleep.

All because of their response to Green’s ejection with 10:39 left in the first half.

“Sometimes we take advantage of Draymond, what he does for us, and we count on him to clean up everything,” Gary Payton II said. “But once he’s out of there, we know we all got to come together and do it collectively. I think everybody felt that. And when we’re doing that as a unit, we can be pretty damn good.”

Green was assessed his first technical foul for shoving Suns guard Collin Gillespie in transition, and the second came moments later, when Draymond taunted lead official Pat Fraher and received the automatic ejection.

The Warriors were trailing 48-37 when Green was tossed. They had given up 44 points in the first quarter, with the Suns torching the nets, shooting 70.8 percent from the field, including 60 percent from beyond the arc.

“We were giving up straight line drives, straight bullet passes to the weak side, and they’re just teeing off on 3s, or they were just walking from the 3-point line to the basket getting a layup,” Stephen Curry said.

Phoenix forward Dillon Brooks scored 12 points, shooting 5-of-5 from the field in the first quarter, and All-Star guard Devin Booker put in another 11. The Warriors gave up five dunks in the first 12 minutes. Their Golden defense was asleep.

The sight of Draymond stalking off the floor for the rest of the evening got the Warriors’ attention.

“I think it woke us up,” Curry said. “Because we knew without him, we’re going to have to play even tougher, dig deeper down the rotation. I think everybody was kind of on alert and trying to have his back.”

The Warriors turned ferocious, limiting the Suns to 31.8-percent shooting from the field, including 17.6 percent from deep in the second and third quarters. Golden State took a six-point (93-87) lead into the fourth quarter and pushed to 11 before Phoenix staged a comeback, cutting the margin to one in the final seconds before Curry dropped in a reverse layup with 5.7 seconds remaining to secure the win.

“The game settled down for us after the first quarter,” coach Steve Kerr said. “(The Suns) came out lights out, shooting. We made a few mistakes, and then we buckled down defensively. The middle quarters were fantastic defense. They broke free a little bit at the end.”

The result was the Warriors crashing through a barrier that seemed to be getting sturdier each game. After three consecutive clutch-game losses, they found success. They have played 16 clutch games and now are 6-10.

But watching the Suns go on an 11-5 run inside the final two minutes frayed a few nerves inside Chase and did not go unnoticed by Kerr.

“We know we have to execute better down the stretch,” the coach said. “We didn’t execute well, especially defensively. We gave up some open looks, and the 3-point play by (Booker) with about a minute to go . . . we can’t have had the full-court press on and let him move freely and go right to the rim. So, we have a lot to look at and learn from.”

Draymond did a lot of looking on Saturday. And he learned something, too. That his teammates did a splendid job covering for him. They applied defense because he could not, and it won the game.

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