Injuries to NBA star players are up this season. Steve Kerr says pace, spacing of modern game to blame.

Giannis Antetokounmpo is out for at least a couple of weeks with a groin strain. Anthony Davis remains sidelined in Dallas with a calf strain. Victor Wembanyama is out with a strained calf. Wemby's star teammates Stephon Castle (hip) and No. 2 pick Dylan Harper (calf) are out. Ja Morant is out with a calf strain.

If it feels like injuries to the NBA's biggest names — especially soft tissue injuries — are on the rise, it's because they are. The numbers are shocking, as Tom Haberstroh laid out at Yahoo Sports. (Note: He defines a star by using the NBA's definition in its Player Participation Policy, an All-Star or All-NBA player within the past three years. There are 45 such players in the league.)

"All told, NBA stars have already missed over 200 games this season due to injury or illness, doubling the total we saw at this point two years ago ... For a league fighting the image that star players aren't playing enough, this season's power outage is especially alarming. In 2023-24, with the first year of the midseason tournament seeming to motivate its biggest names to suit up, star players played 87.2% of its games by this juncture of the season (12 games in). Last season, it dipped to 82.6%. This season, the bottom has fallen out, with star participation falling to 67.6%."

It's worth noting that while star players are missing more games, overall injuries are not up, including soft tissue injuries.

What is different this year is that teams are being more cautious with their injured stars. Fresh in the minds of fans, team medical staffs, owners, and everyone else is the image of Tyrese Haliburton pounding the court during Game 7 of the NBA Finals, after trying to play through a sore calf and tearing his Achilles. Same with Jayson Tatum tearing his Achilles after playing through a sore calf. Same with Damian Lillard, who is out this season after tearing his Achilles while playing through a sore calf.

The volume of injuries to stars is real and concerning.

Steve Kerr concerned

The rise in injuries has drawn the attention of a lot of people, including Golden State coach Steve Kerr. He blamed a combination of the increased pace of play around the league, the increased spacing in today's game, and the relentlessness of the NBA's 82-game schedule for the rise.

"I'm very concerned. It's dramatic — the pace difference is dramatic…" Kerr said Tuesday, via NBC Sports Bay Area. "I think across the league, everybody understands now that it's just easier to score if you can beat the opponent down the floor, get out in transition. But when everybody's doing that, the games are much higher-paced, faster-paced, and then everyone has to cover out to 25 feet, because everybody can shoot 3s.

"So we have all the data players are running faster and further than ever before, and so we're trying to do the best we can to protect them, but basically, have a game every other night and not an easy thing to do."

Kerr isn't the only coach thinking that way.

"I would agree with Steve," Utah Jazz coach Will Hardy said. "The tempo of the game is quick, and I think you're seeing, even this year, I think there's 25 teams in the NBA that are averaging 100 possessions a game [Note: it is 24], and last year there were 12 [13]. So you're seeing an uptick in the pace of the game, it seems like over the last couple of years."

The median pace of an NBA game is 101.5 possessions per team, per game this season. That is up from 99.6 last season, and 96.6 10 years ago (when only two teams had a pace over 100 for the season). That increased pace doesn't just impact offense.

"I think if you ask any coach in the NBA what's the first key to any game, it's literally getting back on defense, and the numbers back that up," Lakers coach J.J. Redick said.

Increased spacing an issue

Shooting and spacing are everything in today's NBA, but that means more ground for defenders — and tired leg and calf muscles — to cover. Defenders are now asked to collapse down in a help situation to protect the paint, then race back out and contest a shot at the arc (or, they are zoning off the weak side as the rest of the defense collapses, and they have to be able to move to challenge multiple players). That kind of explosive movement can be hard on muscles and put pressure on tendons and ligaments. Not to mention a game where Euro-steps, deceleration moves and more put more strain on a player's body.

All that has changed over the years.

"When I was in Orlando (2006-13), I could play through injuries all the time because it was just, it was easy to do based on the way the game was played," said Redick, who played 15 years in the league before retiring. "And then by year 14-15, you're going to have to guard crazy stuff on every possession, and it's just too much movement, and if you're second-guessing your body, you're not an effective player."

What was different about the game?

"[When I] first got in the league, there were two bigs, and you go against Memphis, and you're playing against Zach Randolph and Marc Gasol," Redick said. "And then the stretch four — God bless, RIP, doesn't exist anymore — that was a short-lived thing. And then I think over the last eight to 10 years it's really evolved as teams have spread you out more and gotten to more movement, more multiple actions, and more pace."

That's not changing. If anything, the pace of the game is going to increase and shooters will have to be covered further out. Another trend this season — popularized by the Pacers a season ago on their run to the Finals — is pressuring the ball handler for 94 feet up the court, adding more wear and tear to bodies.

There are no easy answers here. Kerr is among those who would like to see 10 fewer (or more) games on the NBA schedule each year, but he also understands the reality.

"The tricky part is everyone, all the constituents, would have to agree to take less revenue," Kerr said. "And 2025 in America, good luck getting any industry to agree [to that]."

The best teams can do right now is focus on recovery between games, monitor the situation, get players rest when needed, and take care of injured players, not push them to get back on the court.

But all of that is going to mean years like this one, where a month into the season, a lot of stars are sidelined.

NBA Minutes Report: How Ja Morant's injury and LeBron James' return shake up minutes

Welcome to the Fantasy Basketball Minutes Report. Every week, I will be going through each team's updated minutes per game to see which players are seeing the court more or less than in previous weeks. With this information in hand, I'll try to discuss any relevant fantasy risers or fallers; players who we should be adding off waivers or removing from our teams.

The charts below are also great for exploring on your own. You can track the minutes over the last three games, five games, ten games, and for the entire season to see what trends stand out to you.

All of this data was made accessible by Kyle Bland, who is incredibly talented and also incredibly generous, so make sure to give him a follow to check out all of his baseball data as well.

NBA: Atlanta Hawks at Utah Jazz
The Hawks forward has exceeded the expectations of many fantasy managers this season, especially after Trae Young went down.

Atlanta Hawks

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Jalen Johnson39.735.634.6
Onyeka Okongwu35.430.628.9
Nickeil Alexander-Walker33.930.831.4
Dyson Daniels33.633.334.7
Vít Krejčí30.128.223.4
Zaccharie Risacher22.624.625.3
Luke Kennard16.31821.1
Kristaps Porziņģis24.826.1
Trae Young

We know that Trae Young will be sidelined for at least the month of November, but now Kristaps Porzingis also missed the last three games with a knee injury, and Zaccharie Risacher missed Tuesday's game with a hip injury. All of that has led to higher usage for all of Jalen Johnson, Onyeka Okongwu, and Nickeil Alexander-Walker, with Johnson averaging an absurd 27 points, 12 rebounds, and 10 assists over his last three games. He's been elite. We've also seen a minutes boost for Vit Krejci, who is averaging 13.1 points, 2.9 rebounds, and 2.3 assists over his last seven games and has some fringe fantasy value because of his three-point shooting.

Boston Celtics

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Payton Pritchard32.932.631.3
Derrick White32.633.932.2
Jaylen Brown3232.931.8
Neemias Queta25.426.124.6
Jordan Walsh20.823.422.3
Anfernee Simons2021.722.8
Josh Minott17.615.419.2

Things have settled a bit for the Celtics in their main rotation, but Joe Mazzulla keeps experimenting around the fringes with guys like Jordan Walsh and Josh Minott. Those guys will spike some fantasy value on a given night, but it's hard to rely on them regularly, given their inconsistent minutes and lower usage rates on offense. You don't really need to consider anybody in fantasy here other than Jaylen Brown, Derrick White, and Payton Pritchard.

Brooklyn Nets

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Michael Porter Jr.34.63333
Nic Claxton31.430.330.8
Ziaire Williams31.227.824.8
Terance Mann28.126.928.3
Noah Clowney26.627.426.9
Tyrese Martin22.721.322.3
Drake Powell21.921.920.2
Egor Dëmin20.422.820.4
Jalen Wilson6.912.414.7
Cam Thomas27.5

We know that Cam Thomas is likely out until the middle of December, which has led to a bump in usage and minutes for Michael Porter Jr., who has been really good of late, averaging 26.2 points, 6.8 rebounds, 3.5 assists, and 1.0 steals per game over his last six. Ziaire Williams has also seen his minutes increase, but there has been less fantasy goodness there, averaging 10.2 points and 2.7 rebounds over his last six games/ On the other side, Ben Saraf has been battling an ankle injury and was also sent to the G-League, and Jalen Wilson seems to have all but fallen out of the rotation.

Charlotte Hornets

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Kon Knueppel3536.135.7
Miles Bridges34.735.836.7
Collin Sexton27.52626.1
LaMelo Ball27.427.428.9
Ryan Kalkbrenner26.326.325.9
Sion James24.829.229.1
Moussa Diabaté22.526.824.3
Brandon Miller

It seems like Brandon Miller could return to the lineup as early as next week, and LaMelo Ball and Collin Sexton have already made it back, so things are getting back to normal little by little for the Hornets. We have seen Moussa Diabaté infringe on Ryan Kalkbrenner's minutes a little bit more of late, thanks to his rebounding value. Diabaté is averaging 9.9 points, 9.7 rebounds, and 1.9 assists over his last six games, while Kalkbrenner is putting up 11 points, 7.3 rebounds, and 1.7 blocks in the same stretch. It doesn't seem like either one of them will truly pull away, but I might prefer Diabaté if the minutes remain consistently similar.

Chicago Bulls

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Nikola Vučević34.731.631.3
Josh Giddey34.534.535.6
Coby White28.928.928.9
Isaac Okoro28.727.725.9
Matas Buzelis2727.928.4
Kevin Huerter26.42826.4
Ayo Dosunmu252625.3
Dalen Terry17.411.99.7
Jalen Smith15.516.316.7
Tre Jones31.829.7

Coby White returned to the Bulls lineup and played 30 minutes in a double-overtime game, which means he sat out the next game. We should see his minutes tick up consistently over the next couple of weeks, but he may hover around 25-28 minutes per game initially. That could cut into minutes and offensive production for Kevin Huerter and Ayo Dosunmu, but we're going to need to see a few more games before we can tell that for sure. Tre Jones was also playing about 30 minutes per game before White came back, but Jones has also missed the last three games with an ankle injury. He doesn't need to be rostered in fantasy leagues though.

Cleveland Cavaliers

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Evan Mobley35.735.534.5
Donovan Mitchell34.334.634.6
De'Andre Hunter29.428.829
Sam Merrill27.525.726
Jarrett Allen26.525.525.4
Dean Wade26.225.221.4
Lonzo Ball23.422.622.7
Craig Porter Jr.19.623.118
Jaylon Tyson31.128.6
Darius Garland1924.5

Darius Garland has been dealing with a toe injury, which has kept him out longer than we initially anticipated, and Jaylon Tyson has missed the last few games with a concussion, which has led to some minor shakeups in the rotation, but nothing much to react to. Nobody's fantasy value has changed because of it; although, De'Andre Hunter has spiked a few solid games with higher usage and is averaging 15.3 points, 3.5 rebounds, and 3.0 assists over his last four games.

Dallas Mavericks

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
P.J. Washington32.225.528.9
Cooper Flagg3236.334.4
Max Christie28.131.130.4
Naji Marshall2831.428.6
Daniel Gafford27.927.523.7
Brandon Williams25.125.423.5
Klay Thompson23.125.522.3
D'Angelo Russell23.124.522.2
Dwight Powell16.69.28
Dereck Lively II14.815.615.6
Anthony Davis

Welcome to everybody's favorite disaster. It feels like Anthony Davis may never play another game for the Mavericks, but Derek Lively (knee) did make his return this week, even though he seems to be on a bit of a minutes restriction right now. We've also seen Brandon Williams get a slight uptick in minutes at the expense of D'Angelo Russell, only to have Russell come back and take some of those minutes, so that point guard rotation remains confusing. Daniel Gafford may see his minutes change with Lively back, but we need to see how the front-court rotation shakes out with players like Naji Marshall and P.J. Washington as well. Washington has had some value with Davis sidelined, averaging 12.9 points, 6.6 rebounds, 2.1 assists, and 1.3 steals over his last seven games. Cooper Flagg was sick on Wednesday and missed the game, which is why his minutes dipped.

Denver Nuggets

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Jamal Murray37.536.534.8
Nikola Jokić36.735.334.6
Cameron Johnson34.724.926.2
Peyton Watson34.228.625.1
Aaron Gordon34.132.330.7
Bruce Brown26.52724.7
Tim Hardaway Jr.22.922.722.6
Christian Braun22.928.7

Christian Braun got hurt last week, so we've seen some minor tweaks to the rotation this week, the biggest of which has been a boost in minutes and usage for Peyton Watson. The 23-year-old is averaging 16.3 points, 6.0 rebounds, 1.3 assists, and 1.3 steals over his last three games and could have some fantasy value.

Detroit Pistons

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Cade Cunningham33.839.237.8
Daniss Jenkins32.734.529.6
Duncan Robinson32.232.532.7
Javonte Green30.832.526.9
Jalen Duren28.732.432.9
Ronald Holland II24.525.125
Ausar Thompson23.723.729.5
Isaiah Stewart23.223.224.1
Caris LeVert20.220.820.1
Tobias Harris35.5

Injuries to Tobias Harris and Cade Cunningham shook up the Pistons' rotation a bit, but Cunningham came back to play 34 minutes earlier this week. What's interesting is that Daniss Jenkins still played 30 minutes in that game. Over his last six games, Jenkins is averaging 17.3 points, 3.5 rebounds, 6.3 assists, and 1.8 steals, and could maintain fantasy value, at least until Harris is back. However, Jenkins' emergence has led to fewer minutes and production for Ausar Thompson, who then injured his ankle and missed all of last week. He returned on Tuesday, so we'll see how this situation plays out.

Golden State Warriors

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Jimmy Butler III34.734.529.4
Moses Moody32.830.828.9
Stephen Curry31.23330.9
Brandin Podziemski28.929.127.8
Draymond Green28.12927.6
Al Horford23.723.323
Buddy Hield2219.118
Will Richard18.518.620.9
Jonathan Kuminga12.123.9

An injury to Jonathan Kuminga has shaken up the minutes allotment a bit, but it hasn't really done anything for fantasy value. Moses Moody is playing more minutes, but he's averaging just 12.8 points, 4.3 rebounds, 1.8 assists, and 1.5 steals, which doesn't help you too much in fantasy.

Houston Rockets

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Alperen Sengun39.737.336.3
Kevin Durant39.137.136.1
Amen Thompson37.236.837.3
Jabari Smith Jr.33.632.432
Reed Sheppard25.826.322.6
Steven Adams24.222.421
Josh Okogie16.918.721.1
Aaron Holiday1612.810.1
Tari Eason10.616.822.4

The Rockets have seen some minutes shifting of late thanks to an injury to Tari Eason, which will keep him out until the middle of December. We've also yet to see Dorian Finney-Smith play this season after ankle surgery, which means players in the rotation have all just gotten a slight bump in minutes with nobody of note really entering a meaningful role. Jabari Smith Jr. is playing a bit better since Eason has been out but it's nothing to get overly excited about right now.

Indiana Pacers

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Pascal Siakam35.334.435.2
Andrew Nembhard32.330.831
Bennedict Mathurin29.629.629.6
Jarace Walker27.826.428.6
Ben Sheppard26.823.823.7
Jeremiah Robinson-Earl22.423.320.3
Isaiah Jackson20.520.121.1
T.J. McConnell15.314.514.5
Aaron Nesmith2629.9

The Pacers were starting to get a little healthier with Andrew Nembhard and Bennedict Mathurin back, but then Aaron Nesmith got hurt and is expected to be out until the middle of December with a knee injury. We did finally see T.J. McConnell debut on November 11th, but his minutes have remained pretty restricted right now, so that's something we need to watch in the coming weeks.

NBA: Minnesota Timberwolves at Los Angeles Lakers
The Pacers, Lakers and Thunder are among the teams with lengthy injury reports at the halfway point of Week 2.

Los Angeles Clippers

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
James Harden41.938.838.1
Ivica Zubac37.935.133
Bogdan Bogdanović32.829.629.4
Kris Dunn27.927.126.9
John Collins2726.625.3
Derrick Jones Jr.25.62626.4
Kobe Sanders22.222.822.8
Nicolas Batum2221.519.3
Kawhi Leonard36.7
Bradley Beal20.2

A season-ending injury to Bradley Beal and the continued absence of Kawhi Leonard have changed some things around for the Clippers, but not as much as we anticipated. Tyronn Lue said that he was going to play the younger guys more minutes, but Jordan Miller got hurt, so it's just been Kobe Sanders entering the rotation. He could continue to see more minutes with Derrick Jones Jr. now out until, potentially, the new year. Sanders played 30 minutes in his last game, but Kawhi's return would push those minutes back down.

Los Angeles Lakers

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Luka Dončić37.636.836.6
Austin Reaves36.233.634.6
Deandre Ayton31.330.528.1
Rui Hachimura30.432.332.7
LeBron James29.629.629.6
Jake LaRavia27.926.128.6
Marcus Smart25.82929.3
Gabe Vincent161616
Jarred Vanderbilt9.513.516

LeBron James made his season debut on Tuesday night, and I talked all about that in a video I made for the NBC Sports website.

Memphis Grizzlies

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Jaren Jackson Jr.29.729.530.1
Vince Williams Jr.272420.3
Olivier-Maxence Prosper26.113.58.2
Cedric Coward25.226.927.7
Jaylen Wells2525.424.6
Zach Edey24.924.924.9
Santi Aldama24.826.826.6
Cam Spencer24.322.420.9
Jock Landale20.52324.3
Kentavious Caldwell-Pope20.319.922.4
Ja Morant624.429.3

Ja Morant is now out for the next two weeks, which continues a tough season for the All-Star guard and the Grizzlies as a whole. Vince WilliamsJr. has stepped into a starting role in his place and produced well, but I covered that whole situation in detail here.

Miami Heat

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Andrew Wiggins34.334.734.4
Jaime Jaquez Jr.33.732.831.3
Norman Powell3132.831.1
Davion Mitchell3032.431.8
Bam Adebayo28.828.825.9
Kel'el Ware28.329.225.6
Pelle Larsson26.226.526
Nikola Jović16.821.620.2

Bam Adebayo returned to the lineup for Miami on Wednesday, and it sounds like we may get Tyler Herro back on Monday against the Mavericks, which means this Heat rotation could look really different in next week's column. For now, we should probably see a major dip in production for Kel'el Ware, and Jamie Jaquez Jr. would likely see his minutes and usage decrease with Herro back.

Milwaukee Bucks

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Myles Turner33.631.530.1
AJ Green30.42928.2
Ryan Rollins30.13130.9
Giannis Antetokounmpo28.330.631.4
Kyle Kuzma27.428.726.6
Gary Trent Jr.25.626.627.2
Bobby Portis21.322.921.7
Cole Anthony19.217.919
Gary Harris18.112.411.6

An injury to Giannis Antetokounmpo on Monday night has led to some changes in Milwaukee for the next week or two, which I covered in my video for NBC Sports.

Minnesota Timberwolves

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Anthony Edwards34.635.532.8
Julius Randle32.632.832.1
Donte DiVincenzo32.232.931.1
Rudy Gobert29.431.331.6
Jaden McDaniels2830.529.8
Naz Reid2726.825
Mike Conley22.720.720.9
Jaylen Clark18.61817.7

Things have been pretty status quo for the Timberwolves of late, except that Jaden McDaniels is dealing with a bit of a wrist injury that will keep him out until this weekend. There doesn't appear to be much to be concerned about though.

New Orleans Pelicans

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Trey Murphy III33.535.835.7
Zion Williamson29.129.128.6
Herbert Jones2830.531.4
Derik Queen27.129.724.9
Jeremiah Fears25.326.226.1
Saddiq Bey23.829.928.2
Jose Alvarado22.32222.1
Karlo Matković20.917.214.1
Yves Missi19.714.315.6
Jordan Poole25.5

Zion Williamson returned for the Pelicans on Wednesday and played 29 minutes in his first game back. Notably, Derik Queen also started that game and played 30 minutes, scoring 30 points, with nine rebounds, four assists, two steals, and two blocks. Yes, a lot of that came in the fourth quarter when the Pelicans were down 15+ points, but that's likely going to be the norm for them this season. Saddiq Bey saw his minutes dip a lot with Zion back, but Jeremiah Fears should continue to maintain fantasy value until Jordan Poole returns.

New York Knicks

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Mikal Bridges38.936.534.5
Karl-Anthony Towns35.234.333
Jalen Brunson34.835.933.7
Landry Shamet33.329.623.8
Josh Hart32.629.226.2
Miles McBride30.125.423.1
Jordan Clarkson26.521.419.3
Mitchell Robinson18.117.817.1
OG Anunoby5.124.929.6

Jalen Brunson returned on Wednesday against the Mavericks, but the Knicks could be without OG Anunoby for another two weeks. Miles McBride shifted to the bench with Brunson back, and Landry Shamet stayed in the starting lineup, which should continue. Shamet has averaged 18.3 points, 2.7 rebounds, and 2.7 assists over his last three games, but a lot of that is skewed by a career day against the Heat. There probably isn't anybody worth playing in fantasy apart from Brunson, Karl-Anthony Towns, Mikal Bridges, and Josh Hart.

Oklahoma City Thunder

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Chet Holmgren32.128.227.8
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander31.330.431.3
Ajay Mitchell28.528.628.8
Cason Wallace28.325.927.8
Isaiah Hartenstein27.924.726.5
Luguentz Dort27.627.624.4
Isaiah Joe22.626.325.5
Jaylin Williams14.119.419.2
Aaron Wiggins26.6

The Thunder remain a bit of a marvel, doing all of this without Jalen Williams and now Aaron Wiggins as well. They just keep playing consistent and beautiful. basketball

Orlando Magic

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Desmond Bane41.138.133.2
Franz Wagner38.837.936.3
Wendell Carter Jr.34.833.131.3
Tristan da Silva33.928.225.1
Jalen Suggs30.128.825.1
Anthony Black28.428.127.4
Goga Bitadze15.215.915.6
Jett Howard14.713.39.6
Tyus Jones14.512.411.6
Paolo Banchero23.430.5

Paolo Banchero has been out for a week after leaving last Wednesday night's game against the Knicks with a groin injury. The Magic expect him to return at some point this weekend, but Franz Wagner has taken on a much bigger role in the meantime, averaging 24 points, 6.3 rebounds, 4.0 assists, and 1.0 steals over his last three. Desmond Bane has also moved into a higher usage role, while Tristan Da Silva has averaged 16.7 points, 6.3 rebounds, 1.7 assists, and 1.3 steals in his increased minutes. That production should stop when Banchero is back.

Philadelphia 76ers

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Tyrese Maxey39.738.239.2
VJ Edgecombe37.335.636.1
Andre Drummond35.935.128.3
Quentin Grimes33.331.531.2
Dominick Barlow22.522.522.5
Paul George21.121.121.1
Justin Edwards19.321.116.3
Trendon Watford18.220.221.6
Kelly Oubre Jr.14.927.432.9
Joel Embiid25.5
Kyle Lowry3.2

Paul George made his season debut on Monday night, but then sat out Wednesday's game against the Raptors. That should be how things go for George for the next few weeks, so the fantasy value for guards like Tyrese Maxey, VJ Edgecombe, and Quentin Grimes isn't changed much. Andre Drummond has been playing plenty of minutes with Joel Embiid out and can be counted on in fantasy as long as that lasts because Drummond has tremendous rebounding and defensive value.

Phoenix Suns

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Devin Booker3232.234.9
Dillon Brooks29.729.228.9
Collin Gillespie27.823.223.8
Royce O'Neale26.425.927.8
Mark Williams24.72425.6
Ryan Dunn23.123.325.1
Jordan Goodwin22.121.919.5
Isaiah Livers16.415.111.7
Grayson Allen12.224.230.2
Jalen Green14.9

Jalen Green remains out with a hamstring injury, and Grayson Allen missed some time this week with a quad injury. Dillon Brooks has stepped into a much bigger offensive role, but Collin Gillespie is also averaging 14.7 points, 5.0 rebounds, 4.7 assists, and 1.0 steals in his last three games and is putting up solid fantasy value for deeper formats.

Portland Trail Blazers

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Jerami Grant38.22829.1
Toumani Camara36.736.435.7
Deni Avdija35.334.234.8
Shaedon Sharpe34.132.329
Kris Murray30.827.424.7
Donovan Clingan28.327.325.3
Caleb Love21.617.315.2
Sidy Cissoko20.617.815.3
Jrue Holiday3334.2

Bumps and bruises are starting to pile up for the Blazers. Jrue Holiday has been out a week with a calf injury, and Shaedon Sharpe also missed Wednesday's game with a calf injury. That led to more minutes for Kris Murray, Caleb Love, and Sidy Cissoko, but nobody is really doing much with those minutes. Sharpe had seen the biggest bump in value with Holliday out, but they both may return this weekend.

Sacramento Kings

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Domantas Sabonis37.831.933
DeMar DeRozan3631.732.9
Dennis Schröder31.828.430
Russell Westbrook31.829.830.6
Zach LaVine30.331.432.5
Malik Monk23.624.824
Maxime Raynaud18.616.713.5
Precious Achiuwa16.817.718
Keon Ellis15.918.517.5

The Kings could be getting Keegan Murray back on Thursday, and that could shake up this rotation a bit, as I discussed in my video for NBC Sports.

San Antonio Spurs

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Victor Wembanyama38.236.835.9
De'Aaron Fox33.734.734
Devin Vassell33.531.332.9
Harrison Barnes30.228.729.6
Stephon Castle2628.732.6
Julian Champagnie24.423.126.5
Keldon Johnson2423.223.4
Luke Kornet23.322.522.5
Jeremy Sochan19.114.816.5
Dylan Harper17.9

A week after the Spurs lost Dylan Harper for a few weeks, they're now going to be without both Stephon Castle and Victor Wembanyama for the next two weeks, with Castle set to return around November 30th and Wemby not coming back until December. That should lead to a big playing time and usage boost for Devin Vassell and also Keldon Johnson, who played 30 minutes in the team's first game without Castle/Wemby and had 18 points, seven rebounds, two assists, and two steals. Luke Kornet was also brutal in that game, so don't be surprised to see more Kelly Olynyk minutes over the next few games.

Toronto Raptors

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Scottie Barnes33.733.332.7
Immanuel Quickley3332.531.8
Brandon Ingram32.833.333.8
RJ Barrett31.630.132
Jakob Poeltl30.129.927.8
Jamal Shead1919.719.1
Gradey Dick17.718.816.6
Sandro Mamukelashvili17.417.317.7
Collin Murray-Boyles16.217.419.7

Everything is status quo for the Raptors so far.

Utah Jazz

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Keyonte George38.835.934.4
Lauri Markkanen38.136.734.9
Jusuf Nurkić31.730.227.3
Isaiah Collier27.625.125.3
Svi Mykhailiuk26.226.827
Ace Bailey21.923.822.2
Kyle Anderson202017.2
Kyle Filipowski19.321.319.2
Brice Sensabaugh1916.813.5
Walter Clayton Jr.1514.3
Taylor Hendricks15.8

Ace Bailey in the starting lineup hasn't really been great, and his minutes have started to plateau. Isaiah Collier has played his way into a decent bench role after making his season debut on November 7th and is averaging 10.7 points, 3.3 rebounds, and 7.2 assists in six games. Jusuf Nurkić remains interesting for fantasy because of his large role, which has led him to average 7.5 points, 9.8 rebounds, 5.0 assists, and 2.0 steals over his last six games.

Washington Wizards

NameLast 3Last 5Last 10
Kyshawn George34.932.630.7
CJ McCollum30.833.728.2
Bilal Coulibaly28.528.525.4
Alex Sarr27.530.829.6
Khris Middleton25.82623.7
Tre Johnson20.622.223.7
Marvin Bagley III19.918.516.2
Cam Whitmore19.323.317.1
Bub Carrington18.723.824.7

Alex Sarr missed Wednesday's game, which is why his minutes totals are down a little bit. He should be back this weekend. Bilal Coulibaly also returned to the lineup, so Tre Johnson and Bub Carrington have seen their minutes decrease. Coulibaly should be added in more leagues now that he's back.

Kings star Domantas Sabonis reportedly out 3 to 4 weeks with torn meniscus

Kings star Domantas Sabonis reportedly out 3 to 4 weeks with torn meniscus originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Kings can’t catch a break.

The same day Keegan Murray was set to make his 2025-26 NBA season debut after recovering from a thumb injury, it was announced that star center Domantas Sabonis suffered a partially torn meniscus in his left knee, ESPN’s Shams Charania reported Thursday, citing sources.

Sabonis will be re-evaluated in 3 to 4 weeks.

Sabonis missed Sacramento’s season opener against the Phoenix Suns with a hamstring issue.

He returned the following game but missed two more games two weeks later with a rib contusion, an injury he never fully recovered from and wore a pad to play through with.

The three-time NBA All-Star also missed Sacramento’s most recent game against the Oklahoma City Thunder on Wednesday with left knee soreness, which, upon further evaluation, appears to be the meniscus tear.

Sacramento is 1-3 without Sabonis this season.

In 11 games, Sabonis is averaging 17.2 points on 51 percent shooting from the field, with 12.3 rebounds and 3.7 assists in 33.2 minutes.

The Kings are 3-12 on the season — just one spot above the last-place New Orleans Pelicans. They have lost seven games in a row.

Now they face an even taller task of trying to flip the script without their star center in the mix.

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Kings star center Domantas Sabonis out at least 3 to 4 weeks with torn meniscus

Kings star center Domantas Sabonis out at least 3 to 4 weeks with torn meniscus originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Kings can’t catch a break.

The same day Keegan Murray was set to make his 2025-26 NBA season debut after recovering from a thumb injury, it was announced by the team Thursday afternoon that star center Domantas Sabonis suffered a partially torn meniscus in his left knee.

ESPN’s Shams Charania was first to report the news.

Sabonis will be re-evaluated in 3 to 4 weeks.

Sabonis missed Sacramento’s season opener against the Phoenix Suns with a hamstring issue.

He returned the following game but missed two more games two weeks later with a rib contusion, an injury he never fully recovered from and wore a pad to play through with.

The three-time NBA All-Star also missed Sacramento’s most recent game against the Oklahoma City Thunder on Wednesday with left knee soreness, which, upon further evaluation, appears to be the meniscus tear.

Sacramento is 1-3 without Sabonis this season.

In 11 games, Sabonis is averaging 17.2 points on 51 percent shooting from the field, with 12.3 rebounds and 3.7 assists in 33.2 minutes.

The Kings are 3-12 on the season — just one spot above the last-place New Orleans Pelicans. They have lost seven games in a row.

Now they face an even taller task of trying to flip the script without their star center in the mix.

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Draymond Green recalls ‘deep' Jordan Poole conversation he had with Al Horford

Draymond Green recalls ‘deep' Jordan Poole conversation he had with Al Horford originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Draymond Green has processed and moved on from the incident with Jordan Poole that disrupted the Warriors’ 2022-23 NBA season, but it resurfaced again with one of his new teammates.

The Warriors forward was asked by Cincinnati Bengals running back Chase Brown on the latest episode of his NFL show, “Why Is Draymond Green Talking About Football? with Jordan Schultz” about he and Steph Curry’s longevity with Golden State and how new players might be intimidated when joining a locker room with such established voices.

Green recalled an honest conversation he had with one of the Warriors’ newest players, who also happens to be the oldest on the roster.

“We had a conversation, we had a minicamp in San Diego this past September and Jimmy Butler hosted it and it was incredible,” Green said. “And we had a dinner outside in Jimmy’s backyard. Myself, Al [Horford], I think Moses [Moody] maybe, Will Richard … And so we were sitting there talking, and Al asked me a question … He said: ‘Man, so the elephant in the room, I have to ask you, we’ve got to know, what happened with you and Jordan Poole? Like why?’

“So we start going through the whole thing and it was a very deep conversation, and from that one question, the conversation among us probably went on for an hour. It was one of the best conversations I’ve ever had with teammates, because in that moment, it made me realize ‘Ah man, these new guys are coming to this team, and they don’t really know what to expect from me. They don’t know, like, ‘Is this guy just going to hit one of his teammates?’ They didn’t know what to expect.”

Green realized at that moment that even though he already has explained and moved on from the Poole incident, there are some outside the organization that still might have some trepidation — or at least questions — about his leadership in the locker room.

“And so when we had that conversation, I was like “Ah damn, OK. I really gotta lock in.’ And we had an incredible conversation, and you could just kind of feel the tension right there among that group just [disappear,]” Green added. “It was such a learning lesson for me … because if he never asked that question, I don’t really know they feel that way.”

Green has discussed the incident countless times over the years, and it’s clear that he has moved on, but after the conversation with Horford, now he has fully processed his emotions and understands the perception some might have of him before getting to know him.

And if anyone has any questions about it moving forward, he won’t shy away from answering them.

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How Warriors plan to reintegrate Jonathan Kuminga upon return from injury

How Warriors plan to reintegrate Jonathan Kuminga upon return from injury originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Jonathan Kuminga has missed the last four games with a knee injury and will need to be reintegrated in the Warriors’ rotation upon his return. 

The Warriors struggled to integrate Kuminga in his last return from injury in March of last season, as coach Steve Kerr questioned his fit with new arrival Jimmy Butler

However, veterans Butler and Draymond Green shared with ESPN’s Anthony Slater their ideas on how to effectively bring Kuminga back into the fold this time around.

It mostly depends on whether Steph Curry is on or off the floor. 

“The second that Steph is in the game is completely different than when Steph is out and I’m in the game,” Butler told Slater. “And if you’re still trying to run the Steph stuff, it’s not going to work. Nobody’s overreacting to anybody. I’m not saying ‘No, we should never do that.’ All I’m saying is Steph is the ultimate cheat code. 

As the Warriors return home from a six-game road trip, there should be ample time for team practices. Green notes that this will help Kuminga get back into the mix. 

“Guess what we can do when he’s coming off the bench?” Green said. “Feature him. That’s what he needs. But it takes some time. There’s been no practice. He’s got his knee. So let’s get healthy and we’ll put this together. It’s a long season. He’s going to help us win a f–king ton of games.” 

Butler acknowledged that Kuminga’s impact does not necessarily have to revolve around scoring. 

“I think with that though, he has to understand it doesn’t mean just score,” Butler said. “Because I don’t mind taking the back seat to him and letting him do his thing. And I’m down there in the dunker spot, I’m setting screens. I don’t mind. But you know what we better do?…” 

“…We better f–king win. That’s it. Whatever we want to do, I’m fine with it. It better be towards winning. Cause that’s all that I care about. I don’t care about nothing else.” 

Kuminga was taken out of the starting lineup after starting the first 12 games of the season. He came off the bench against the San Antonio Spurs after a blowout loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder. He exited the game against the Spurs with knee soreness, which has kept him out since. 

The lineup change came as Kerr tried to find a way to maximize Curry, Butler and Green. 

“We’ve got to put Steph, Jimmy and Draymond in a position to succeed,” Kerr said. “That’s what wins in this league. Everyone has their best two or three players. How well can you support them and enhance them?” 

Kuminga was able to provide that support and enhancement at the beginning of the season, and the Warriors hope to rediscover that upon his return. 

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Why Jonathan Kuminga leans on Jimmy Butler as shaky Warriors career continues

Why Jonathan Kuminga leans on Jimmy Butler as shaky Warriors career continues originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Jimmy Butler’s arrival to the Warriors in February brought questions about Jonathan Kuminga’s fit on the team

Those questions were put to rest momentarily at the start of the 2025-26 NBA season, as Kuminga played in the starting lineup alongside Butler, and the Warriors started hot out of the gate with a 4-1 record. 

A recent decline in production and a demotion back to the bench reignited those speculations for Kuminga. Through it all, the 23-year-old forward continues to lean on Butler’s mentorship, per ESPN’s Anthony Slater

“I feel like, in this league, he’s one of the people that actually [has] been in my shoes throughout their career,” Kuminga said. “And knows what I’ve been going through.” 

Amid Kuminga’s recent struggles on the court, Butler hosted his mentee at his home for dinner after Golden State’s win over the Indiana Pacers last week

“I realize that he listens to me,” Butler told ESPN. “He respects me. And I don’t ever take that for granted. But I’m always going to tell him the truth, too. And when JK doing some bulls–t, I’m going to tell him we can’t have that, man.” 
 
“I think everybody comes to that stepping-stone moment in their career where you know that you can get over that hump,” Butler said. “Some people are like, ‘Nah, you’re not ready for that yet.’ But you know better. I think that’s where he is. I was at that point.” 

During contentious offseason contract negotiations between Kuminga and the Warriors, Butler told ESPN that Kuminga reached out to the veteran. Kuminga told Butler that he would not be attending a minicamp at Butler’s home in San Diego

“Bro, that’s fine,” Butler told Kuminga. “You got to do what’s best for you. I understand the situation you’re in. I don’t think anybody on the squad got bad blood. I rock with you. I see a lot of myself in you.” 

Once Kuminga’s contract was resolved, his relationship with Butler continued throughout training camp. Butler worked with Kuminga on the side to help their on-court fit, as well as spending time with him off the court, according to Slater. 

“[Kuminga] was determined to do it and Jimmy was determined to help him with it,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. “For me as a coach, winning solves everything.” 

With some newfound turbulence, Butler’s mentorship can help steer the narrative back to the positivity that was present at the beginning. 

“I realize that he listens to me,” Butler said. “He respects me. And I don’t ever take that for granted. But I’m always going to tell him the truth, too. And when JK doing some bulls—, I’m going to tell him we can’t have that, man.” 

Even in the absence of the cure-all that is winning, Kuminga has someone to lean on to stay afloat as questions and rumors about him make the rounds. 

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Warriors' Jonathan Kuminga reportedly told Steve Kerr to coach him harder

Warriors' Jonathan Kuminga reportedly told Steve Kerr to coach him harder originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

It is no secret that Jonathan Kuminga and Steve Kerr’s relationship has been rocky over the years.

But after Kuminga signed a two-year contract with the Warriors this offseason, the two appeared to be on the same page moving forward. It even reached a point where Kuminga actually encouraged Kerr to coach him harder, per ESPN’s Anthony Slater.

“Kuminga, team sources said, had voiced to Kerr a desire to be coached harder,” Slater wrote. “There was even a meeting about it in their Sacramento hotel prior to the ninth game of the season and Kerr appeared to make it a point during the Kings game to call Kuminga over and get on him constructively several times.”

Kuminga, at that point, was playing the best basketball of the season. He was doing the things Kerr and the Warriors had been asking of him for years.

The young wing was averaging 17.2 points on 51.4-percent shooting from the field and 41.4 percent from 3-point range through the first nine games, with 7.1 rebounds, 3.1 assists in 30.9 minutes.

But then Golden State suffered ugly consecutive road losses to the Giannis Antetokounmpo-less Milwaukee Bucks and short-handed Indiana Pacers.

Then the Warriors’ skid reached three straight losses with a deflating defeat to the reigning NBA champion Oklahoma City Thunder. After that loss, Kerr changed things up and pulled Kuminga from the starting unit.

“We’ve got to put Steph, Jimmy and Draymond in a position to succeed,” Kerr said. “That’s what wins in this league. Everyone has their best two or three players. How well can you support them and enhance them?”

Kuminga has missed the last four games with bilateral knee tendonitis.

But the Warriors still are focused on getting him back into the mix once he returns.

And whenever that might be, he can expect the hard coaching that he once encouraged to continue.

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How Draymond changed Steve Kerr's mind about Jonathan Kuminga lineup decision

How Draymond changed Steve Kerr's mind about Jonathan Kuminga lineup decision originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Steve Kerr turned heads with his starting lineup against the Los Angeles Lakers on opening night of the 2025-26 NBA season.

Jonathan Kuminga, after four up-and-down seasons with the team and a frustrating restricted agency that lasted the entire summer, was in the starting lineup for Game 1.

The Warriors ended up beating the Lakers 119-109, as Kuminga scored 17 points with 9 rebounds and 6 assists in 32 minutes. He looked like the player Golden State has challenged him to be ever since he was selected with the No. 7 pick in the 2021 NBA Draft, and through one game, it appeared as if his offseason work had paid off.

Then came another huge test two nights later against the Denver Nuggets at Chase Center, which presented Kerr a difficult lineup decision.

ESPN’s Anthony Slater reported in a story published Thursday that Kerr, when deciding in between games who to start against Denver, called veteran forward Draymond Green, who started as the small-ball center against Los Angeles on opening night, and told him his gut feeling was to start second-year big Quinten Post against the Nuggets.

“Dray, this is the big center thing that we’ve talked about,” Kerr recalled to Slater about his conversation with Green.

“Well, who does that take out?” Green asked, according to Kerr.

“Probably Kuminga,” Kerr said.

“Let me start at center,” Green said. “I want JK to keep the momentum.”

Kuminga indeed kept the momentum, scoring 14 points with 5 rebounds and 3 assists while posting a plus-8 plus/minus in 36 minutes in a thrilling overtime win vs. Denver.

There was nothing eye-popping about his performance on the stat sheet that night, but Kuminga’s hustle, aggression and improved decision-making were on display for a second consecutive game, which earned him the opportunity to close out the game with Green, Steph Curry, Jimmy Butler and Al Horford.

“He’d done everything that we asked him to do,” Green told Slater about Kuminga’s performance up to that point. “And when someone’s doing everything you ask them to do, the reward can’t be [pulling them from the starting lineup].”

Kuminga then started 10 more games before he was removed from the starting lineup on Nov. 12 against the San Antonio Spurs, where he only played 12 minutes before being pulled mid-game with bilateral knee tendonitis, which has sidelined him for Golden State’s last four matchups.

In 13 games (12 starts) this season, Kuminga is averaging 13.8 points, a career-high 6.6 rebounds and 2.8 assists per game on 47.8-percent shooting from the field and 32.4 percent from 3-point range.

Kerr and the Warriors had hoped the 23-year-old would return for Wednesday’s 110-96 loss to the Miami Heat before he, and four of Golden State’s veterans, were inactive, but it appears that he and the rest of his star teammates now all have a chance to play in Friday’s game against the Portland Trail Blazers at Chase Center.

However, whenever Kuminga does return to the floor, what role will he have moving forward?

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Jonathan Kuminga reportedly ‘feels like the scapegoat again' with Warriors

Jonathan Kuminga reportedly ‘feels like the scapegoat again' with Warriors originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Even after agreeing to a contract with the Warriors that ended a months-long stalemate, Jonathan Kuminga‘s fit with the team continues to be sorted.

Issues about his fit alongside Steph Curry, Jimmy Butler and Draymond Green were put to rest to begin the 2025-26 NBA season. So much so that Warriors coach Steve Kerr, one of the toughest critics of the four on the court together, was confident enough to plug Kuminga into the starting lineup for the first 12 games of the season.

Golden State began the season 4-1. The vibes were vibing.

Until they weren’t.

The Warriors then went 2-5 over their next seven games. The last one of the seven, a blowout loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder, prompted Kerr to make a change to his starting unit. Among those changes was pulling Kuminga out and having him come off the bench.

One team source told ESPN’s Anthony Slater that Kuminga “feels like the scapegoat again.”

With the lineup change, the Warriors won a close one against the San Antonio Spurs. Kuminga was ruled out for the following game and has been sidelined ever since as he continues to deal with bilateral knee tendonitis.

This sparked speculation and conspiracies about Kuminga’s fit and future with the team. Again.

But Warriors players feel differently about the situation.

“Him not being in the lineup ain’t the reason that we’re winning,” Butler told Slater. “We’re just playing better basketball. Roles are clearer. We’re making shots. We’re guarding. That ain’t got nothing to do with him. If he was in the lineup, I still believe that we win these games.”

Slater also stated that if the Warriors want to reach their goal this season, there’s an “internal belief” that Kuminga must “shake off some of his built-up resentment” and focus on making an impact, even if, as Slater writes, the “long-term benefit for both sides is more about a bump in trade value than a partnership.”

Kuminga, who signed a two-year, $48.5 million contract extension that includes a team option for the second year, doesn’t become trade eligible until Jan. 15.

There still is time to figure things out internally, but in the meantime, speculation likely will continue externally.

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Why Warriors splitting six-game road trip was about more than wins, losses

Why Warriors splitting six-game road trip was about more than wins, losses originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

There was a feeling to the Warriors’ six-game road trip that was about more than wins and losses. 

Better than a 3-3 record. Not by a ton, but better. Certainly not worse.

“There’s plenty of data, there’s plenty of film. I was just most pleased with after that OKC game,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. “Just felt like our level of fight and competition was where it needed to be. We were able to obviously split the six-game trip coming off that beatdown in OKC. 

“I like where we are now better as a team, but we have a lot of work to do.”

The Warriors started their longest road trip of the season with a 24-point loss against the Oklahoma City Thunder and ended it with a 14-point loss to the Miami Heat. But those two were as different as can be. 

Embarrassed, humiliated and humbled. That was the feeling of a subdued locker room when the defending champions waxed the floor with the Warriors in Oklahoma City. The Thunder were ahead by 25 points when Steph Curry, Jimmy Butler and Draymond Green went to the bench for good halfway through the third quarter, and the lead was as big as 36 points. A fully healthy Warriors team was beaten before the game even began. 

You can say the game was over before it started in Miami, too; however, that’s because none of Curry, Butler or Green played. The Warriors also were without Al Horford and Jonathan Kuminga. Though team-wide issues turning the ball over continued, the Warriors’ role players and backups competed until the very end, looking like they might even pull off a stunner in South Beach. 

The story of the trip, as Kerr mentioned, was how the Warriors responded to that thrashing by OKC. How the veterans of Curry, Butler and Green in particular responded after using words like “sacrifice” and “commitment to win” in a message to the team. 

Curry with his 46 points on the second night of a back-to-back, and then 49 two nights later. Butler, giving body blows to Curry’s haymakers as his running mate, scoring 28 and 21 points while attacking the glass and keeping the offense going. Green climbing Mount Wembanyama and showing us once again how he’ll never back down. 

Outside of them, Moses Moody, Brandin Podziemski and Gary Payton II had big contributions in those two wins – either the first or the second. The fact of the matter is, the Warriors also needed all 95 of Curry’s combined points to beat the Spurs. They didn’t need anything from him to beat the Pelicans. 

The sorriest team in the league was taken to school by Moody for 32 points and eight 3-pointers. Moody then only scored 15 points over the next two games, both being losses. Which also is part of the story from this six-game road trip. 

When the Warriors get 67 points between Curry and Butler on 56.4 percent shooting, as well as 12 points from Draymond and all the other things those three provided, they should win the game. Yet they couldn’t against the Magic on a night where Moody and Richard, their two other starters, scored six points each. Podziemski (five points) and Buddy Hield (two points) scored just seven points off the bench in the loss. 

With the six-game trip and the start of the season in general for the Warriors, there’s context to judging them. The Warriors played 17 games before any other team played more than 15. The road trip featured two back-to-backs, and the Warriors played five of them when no other team had more than three. The Rockets haven’t even had one back-to-back, and the Warriors played their 12th road game on the same day Houston had its 13th game in total. 

“We’ve been bickering about it a little internally. We’re a little bit older. I think we’ll be grateful at the end of the year that this isn’t the stretch that we have at the end of the season,” Pat Spencer said. “We like where we’re at. I think, obviously, we have liked to grab these last couple on the road. But to be where we’re at with the number of games that we played, to knock on wood, have a really healthy team at this point in the season, I think we’ll be grateful we’re not doing this on the back end of the year.”

A 5-1 or 4-2 trip was in hand. It also wasn’t the main point. 

Golden State’s three-man show of Curry, Butler and Green proved they still can bring it when challenged. The Thunder are far and away better than everyone. Consistency continued to be a problem for others, as well as some trends that need cleaning up. 

The feeling of the Warriors’ 3-3 road trip is that of unsatisfied success. Next up is taking advantage of being home for five consecutive games at a place the Warriors haven’t lost once this season.

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Knicks will take ‘ugly win’ to end road losing streak: ‘We can build on it’

It was hardly an artistic masterpiece of a game for the Knicks, but when the buzzer sounded, it was recorded as a 113-111 win over the Dallas Mavericks on Wednesday, their first road victory of the season. 

“Finally. Finally,” Jalen Brunson, who scored a team-high 28 points, said about snapping the four-game losing skid. “We’re happy, but we got a lot of work to do.”

In the beginning, it was anything but beautiful: 9-for-25 from the floor, including 3-for-11 from behind the arc in the opening quarter. Down the stretch, it looked like New York was going to squander the hard work put in on the defensive end – holding Dallas to 16-for-42 (38.1 percent) from the floor in the first half to stay in the game – and a three-point edge Landry Shamet provided when he knocked down back-to-back threes with 31 seconds remaining. Why? Because of free-throw line ineptitude: 19-for-35 (54.3 percent) for the game and 3-for-10 in the fourth quarter.

After Brunson made 1-of-2 at the line with 3.8 seconds remaining to put the Knicks up a pair, Dallas' inbound to mid-court quickly found the speedy Brandon Williams driving on Shamet. After a little contact, his off-hand hooked the Knicks defender as he went up for the lay-up. The ball went in, but the referee whistled for an offensive foul with 0.7 seconds left.

“Tough call,” Mavs head coach Jason Kidd said. “He had a good look, but they called a foul.”

Mike Brown said Shamet was the team’s defensive player of the game for doing a “fantastic job on the ball” all night.

“I give [referee JT Orr] credit, it was a hook,” the Knicks coach said of the call. “And a lot of people would not have called it down the stretch, but it was the right call. And Landry busted his behind to get down there to create that.”

“I mean, chaos,” Brunson said of the game's final moments.

Shamet acknowledged it was a tough way for a game to end. 

“That was a good call by the officials,” he said. “Tough way to see the game end on a call like that, but I think they made the right call. I want that one, as a defender, I want that one.”

But even in victory, Shamet focused on how he escaped culpability for mistakes down the stretch.

“We don’t want it to come down to that, though,” he continued. “We gotta do a better job of playing 48 minutes and find a way to create some more separation earlier in the game.”

And it wasn’t all bad for the visitors. New York shot 21-for-43 (48.8 percent) from the field in the second half, including 9-for-20 from behind the arc after going 3-for-22 from deep in the first half. And Shamet, who was 1-for-4 in the game’s first 46:58, knocked down the big shots when late, when his team was down two and then 30 seconds later with the score tied.

“The ball found me, I didn’t find any open looks early," he said. "Stayed composed, and knew, had a feeling some would come in the fourth and they did. Just step in, ready to shoot, good plays by my teammates, and I’ll take them.”

Even though Shamet made the clutch shot to put the Knicks ahead for good before what can only be described as a game-winning defensive stop, the two he missed at the line up by three with 22 seconds left remained a thorn in his side.

“I gotta make two free throws,” he said. “A wild finish down the stretch. It’s a road win, they’re not always gonna be pretty. That was not 48 minutes of basketball that we would like to play.

“But you’ll take the road win, and we can build on it.”

Brunson echoed the sentiment.

“Found a way to win,” he said. “It was ugly, but when you win ugly, it’s the signs of a team learning, getting better.

“So no matter what the situation is, we gotta find a way to win.”

In the end, the Knicks made just enough plays to get the job done. Proving, once again, it is better to be ugly in victory than pretty in defeat.

Knicks earn first road win of season, sneak by Mavericks, 113-111

The Knicks held on to beat the Dallas Mavericks, 113-111, on Wednesday night for the first road victory of the season after dropping their previous four.

Jalen Brunsonscored 28 points after missing the past two games with a right ankle sprain and earned his first victory in Dallas against his former team.

Here are the key takeaways...

-- The Knicks took a quick 5-0 lead, but soon found themselves down 11-6 after Brunson turned it over and Klay Thompson hit a pull-up three-pointer, forcing Mike Brown to call timeout. Brunson made a floater out of the timeout for his first make in three attempts, as that jump-started a 7-0 run. 

Dallas soon got hot from beyond the arc to take a five-point lead with about two minutes remaining in the quarter. Brunson then found a rhythm and hit two straight three-pointers after the team had started 1-for-9 from deep. Naji Marshall countered with his third three, and Dallas' seventh, with the clock winding down to take a 25-24 lead after the first quarter.

-- The poor shooting continued into the second quarter for the Knicks, especially for Miles McBride (0-for-6 from three in the first half), while the Mavs stayed hot and made their eighth three-pointer to stay in the lead. Mikal Bridges sank back-to-back mid-range shots to keep it close, but Daniel Gafford continued to find ways to score inside and gave the Mavs a 44-37 lead with about four minutes left in the first half.

Brunson connected with Karl-Anthony Towns for a one-handed slam to tie the game, giving the Knicks a spark. Dallas turned it over for a tenth time as Bridges took it in for an easy dunk and the lead. Marshall's big first half continued for the Mavs with an and-one floater, but then Brunson came right back with his own version to put the Knicks up 52-50 at halftime.

-- Despite leading, the Knicks shot a rough 3-for-21 (14 percent) from three in the first half and missed six free throws. However, the Mavs made just two three-pointers in the second quarter, going 9-for-23 (39 percent) overall in the half. Brunson led the way with 15 points and Bridges had 11 on 5-for-7 shooting. Marshall scored 19 points for Dallas in 17 minutes off the bench.

-- Josh Hart provided energy for the Knicks in the third quarter, blocking Brandon Williams' layup, leading to a Brunson bucket. He then grabbed a defensive rebound and found Towns for his first three of the night to go up two. Brunson went on to make his next three jumpers, giving the Knicks their biggest lead of the night at the time, 69-64, with 5:13 left in the third quarter.

After a D'Angelo Russell floater cut the Knicks' lead to six, Towns was called for an offensive foul against Gafford, leading to a Russell three-pointer to keep it a close game. Russell's hot quarter continued as he and McBride traded makes before Max Christie scored on a wild layup just before the buzzer. The two teams both scored 35 points in the third quarter with the Knicks still leading, 87-85.

-- The back-and-forth affair continued in the fourth with both teams making three-pointers after early struggles. Christie gave the Mavs a lead with two straight threes and Thompson hit a jumper before McBride countered with his third three-pointer, as the Knicks still trailed, 98-96. Robinson scored on a tip-in to make it a one-point game, but then Bridges threw a poor pass that led to a fastbreak dunk for Marshall, extending the Dallas lead.

Bridges made up for the mistake with a corner three-pointer two possessions later to tie the game at 106-106. After Dallas made two free throws, Hart stole the ball from Marshall and Brunson found Landry Shamet in the corner for three, giving the Knicks a 109-108 lead with about a minute remaining. Shamet came through with another three with 31.4 seconds left, putting NY up three points. An offensive foul call againstWilliams with the clock winding down caused some drama, but was upheld as he hooked around Shamet, ending the game.

-- Brunson scored 28 points, including 12 in the third quarter, to go along with five assists, three rebounds, a steal, and a block. Towns flirted with a triple-double, putting up 18/14/6 with two steals. Bridges scored 16 points with three steals and two blocks. Marshall and Russell both scored 23 points off the bench for the Mavs.

The Knicks were able to hold on for the win despite shooting 19-for-35 (53 percent) from the foul line and 12-for-42 (29 percent) from three-point land.

Game MVP: Josh Hart

Hart's energy off the bench was the difference and was especially noticeable in the second half. He finished with 16 points, going 3-for-4 from three, with 10 rebounds, five assists, a steal, and a block in 30 minutes.

Highlights

What's next

The Knicks continue on their road trip, heading to Orlando to face the Magic on Saturday at 5:00 p.m.