What NBA games are on Christmas Day 2025: Schedule, how to watch, preview, tipoff times

In what's become a familiar holiday tradition like unwrapping presents from under the tree, the NBA will deliver its annual gift Thursday — a full slate of Christmas Day games for the 78th edition.

Starting with a noon tipoff and running until after midnight, there are five games on Christmas Day 2025 over more than 13 consecutive hours of coverage on ABC and ESPN.

Four of the past six NBA champions will be in action: the Lakers (2020), Warriors (2022), Nuggets (2023) and Thunder (2025).

Here's the rundown of the NBA on Christmas Day, past and present (and a look at the future on NBC and Peacock):

NBA Christmas Day 2025 full schedule and how to watch

*All times listed are ET

  • Cleveland Cavaliers at New York Knicks
    Time: Noon. TV: ABC, ESPN
  • San Antonio Spurs at Oklahoma City Thunder
    Time: 2:30 p.m. TV: ABC, ESPN
  • Dallas Mavericks at Golden State Warriors
    Time: 5 p.m. TV: ABC, ESPN
  • Houston Rockets at Los Angeles Lakers
    Time: 8 p.m. TV: ABC, ESPN
  • Minnesota Timberwolves at Denver Nuggets
    Time: 10:30 p.m. TV: ABC, ESPN

How long has the NBA played on Christmas Day?

The tradition dates to the league's second season in 1947.

Which NBA team has played the most times on Christmas Day?

The New York Knicks have played a record 57 games on Christmas Day. The Knicks and Los Angeles Lakers are tied for most Christmas Day victories with 25 apiece.

There are seven players in NBA history with at least 11 Christmas Day starts: LeBron James, Kobe Bryant, Shaquille O’Neal, Dwyane Wade, Russell Westbrook, Kevin Durant and Steph Curry.

Who holds the record for most points scored on Christmas Day?

Bernard King scored 60 points for the New York Knicks in a 120-114 defeat to the New Jersey Nets on Dec. 25, 1984.

Three other players have scored more than 50: Wilt Chamberlain (59 for the Philadelphia Warriors in a 136-135 double-overtime loss to the New York Knicks on Dec. 25, 1961), Luka Doncic (50 for the Dallas Mavericks in a 128-114 victory over the Phoenix Suns on Dec. 25, 2023) and Rick Barry (50 points for the San Francisco Warriors in a 124-112 victory over the Cincinnati Royals on Dec. 25, 1966).

LeBron James on Christmas Day history:

LeBron James holds multiple NBA records for points (507) and games played (19) on Christmas Day. James surpassed former teammate Dwyane Wade with his record 11th victory on Christmas Day last year (his teams are 11-8 on Dec. 25).

NBA on NBC 2025-26 Schedule

Click here to see the full list of NBA games that will air on NBC and Peacock this season.

How to watch NBA on NBC and Peacock

Peacock NBA Monday will stream up to three Monday night games each week throughout the regular season. Coast 2 Coast Tuesday presents doubleheaders on Tuesday nights throughout the regular season on NBC and Peacock. On most Tuesdays, an 8 p.m. ET game will be on NBC stations in the Eastern and Central time zones, and an 8 p.m. PT game on NBC stations in the Pacific and often Mountain time zones.

Check local listings each week. Both games will stream live nationwide on Peacock. NBC Sports will launch Sunday Night Basketball across NBC and Peacock on Feb. 1, 2026. For a full schedule of the NBA on NBC and Peacock, click here.

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Warriors' Steve Kerr hilariously recalls emails from fan before 2025 NBA Draft

Warriors' Steve Kerr hilariously recalls emails from fan before 2025 NBA Draft originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Joe Lacob isn’t the only one in the Warriors organization getting emails from fans. 

Steve Kerr, during an interview on “The Tom Tolbert Show,” recalled a particularly ridiculous email he received from a fan before the 2025 NBA Draft. 

“I occasionally do [respond] but often do not. If something warrants a response, I will respond. I’m not gonna put anything out there, you know, that would be controversial,” Kerr said. “I remember last year, before the draft, I had a guy, he kept emailing me and saying, ‘just offer Dallas three firsts for Cooper Flagg.’” 

Imagine if trades were as simple as that. 

Nico Harrison, general manager of the Dallas Mavericks at that time, already had made a controversial trade sending Luka Dončić to the Los Angeles Lakers in February. If Harrison approved the fan-proposed deal, he might have been fired much sooner than his Nov. 11 departure. 

But the fan in Kerr’s inbox was adamant. 

“The guy sent me like three of them, but he kept calling him Cooper Kupp,” Kerr recalled. 

The 32-year-old wide receiver for the Seattle Seahawks would be an interesting fit for Golden State to say the least. 

Kupp does have some basketball experience playing for Davis High School in Yakima, Washington. In 2012, the now-Seahawks receiver held Sacramento Kings star Zach LaVine to four points in the first half of a state quarterfinal game. 

Nevertheless, it is unclear how sending three first-round draft picks to Dallas would help Golden State acquire Kupp. 

Aside from crazy trade proposals from fans, the Warriors could use a bit of a boost from a trade, just like the boost the acquisition of Jimmy Butler gave the team last season. Kerr applauded Warriors general manager Mike Dunleavy for having the team primed to make such a move. 

“Mike has done an amazing job as GM. He’s signed guys who have helped us on the court. He’s signed guys to good contracts that are tradeable. He’s given us the flexibility to go out and do something,” Kerr explained. “There’s no doubt at 13-and-15; we’d be foolish to sit here and say we can’t get better. So, I’m for anything that helps us get better for sure.” 

The Warriors have added one more win since the time of the interview, but Kerr surely still would welcome any big improvements added via trade. 

But, for all parties involved, some realistic expectations are necessary to draw up a trade that actually works. 

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Back in Knicks' starting lineup, Josh Hart is making All-Star case: 'He does everything well'

If you’re looking at the Knicks box score from Sunday, Jalen Brunson’s line (47 points, 8 assists, 0 turnovers) probably catches your eye. Maybe Mikal Bridges’ three-point shooting (6-for-7) gets your attention.

What about Josh Hart

Hart’s numbers (13 points, 10 rebounds and five assists against Miami) are solid. But they aren’t spectacular.

Judging Hart’s impact by a box score, though, is a mistake.

“His impact, you can't really tell from the stat sheet,” Brunson says. “But by the eye test, everyone knows that he's a competitor. He brings a winning style of basketball to this team."

The Knicks have done a lot of winning since they traded for Hart in 2023. 

In fact, they are 137-89 in the regular season with Hart in the lineup -- that includes a 10-2 record this season when Hart is in there alongside Brunson, Bridges, and Karl-Anthony Towns.

“I think he does a great job pushing the pace, and he presents a different... obstacle for the opponents to have to deal with,” Towns said after the Knicks’ win over Miami. “I think that he's done a great job of utilizing his game, what he does best, and maximizing our team’s chance to win.”

Entering Sunday's game against the Heat, New York had the No. 2 net rating in the NBA since Nov. 24, when Hart moved into the starting lineup. And they have a net rating of +16.1 with Hart on the floor since the lineup change.

They rank fourth in the NBA in rebounding percentage during that span.

“He’s a guy that just does everything well. If you’re not careful, you may look at it and say, ‘Well, he can’t really do (this).’ Nah, nah, he does everything well,” Mike Brown said. “He does a couple things at an elite level, and when you have a guy like that who’s pretty selfless, it can bode well to connecting the group, no matter who he’s on the floor with.”

Brown moved Hart into the starting group in late November after listening to feedback from his staff.

Credit Brown for keeping an open mind. Hart’s ability to push the ball in transition has changed the Knicks.

“Josh gets in (and) he's probably one of the fastest with the ball; he's going to the rim, or he's driving in the paint, trying to find guys,” Bridges says. “I think his ability to get in transition and push and create opens up a lot.”

Hart’s individual numbers as a starter are strong. He’s averaging 15 points, 9.3 rebounds and 5.7 assists while shooting 52.6 percent from the floor and 40.7 on threes. And the Knicks have done a lot of winning with Hart in the starting lineup.

“He’s our Draymond Green,” one Knick staffer said recently.

The comparison is not far off.

In 2015-16, Green averaged 14.2 points, 9.5 rebounds and 7.2 assists per game prior to the All-Star break. The Warriors were 48-3 with Green in the lineup at the time. Opposing coaches recognized Green’s value by voting him to the Western Conference All-Star team. He joined teammates Steph Curry and Klay Thompson in the game.

If you looked at Green’s individual numbers that season, you wouldn’t think he’d make an All-Star team.  

Green’s All-Star bid was based on team success, not individual stats.

Just like Green in 2015-16, Hart is having a huge impact on his team’s success. Opposing coaches recognize his value.

“Right now, he’d definitely get consideration,” one opposing coach said of Hart and an All-Star bid. The coach cited Hart’s 'impact on' New York’s record and said he’s 'playing like’ an All-Star

It sounds like Hart will have a strong case for an All-Star spot if he continues to produce and the Knicks continue to win.

Perfect night

Brunson had an MSG career-high 47 points against Miami. But he was pleased with another stat from Sunday’s win: zero. Brunson had eight assists and no turnovers against the Heat. Brunson had nine assists and zero turnovers in a loss to Philadelphia on Friday. No turnovers in his past 75 minutes on the floor.

“That means a lot,” Brunson said late Sunday. “…. Obviously, no turnovers is what I strive for. Obviously, sometimes when you're aggressive, you make aggressive mistakes. I can live with (the aggressive mistakes), the passive mistakes, I can't live with. But yeah, just trying to hold the ball as much as I can and not give it to the other team.”

Watch Jalen Brunson drop 47 on Heat, most he's ever scored at Madison Square Garden

The MVP of the NBA Cup is not slowing down.

Jalen Brunson dropped a season-high 47 — also his Madison Square Garden career high — on the Miami Heat Sunday, lifting the Knicks to a key East win.

Knicks coach Mike Brown continued his public campaign for Brunson as MVP after the game, and he needed a night like that from Brunson because Karl-Anthony Towns had just two points on 1-of-5 shooting.

Brunson had plenty of help from Mikal Bridges, who scored 24 points (hitting 6-of-7 from 3-point range, OG Anunoby scored all 18 of his points in the second half, and Josh Hart added 13 points and 10 rebounds. Brunson and Bridges carried the Knicks early, scoring 45 of New York's 66 first-half points.

Kel'el Ware had a monster night for Miami, scoring 28 points with 19 rebounds.

Jalen Brunson does ‘what MVPs are supposed to do’ in Knicks' win over Heat

In the first half on Sunday night at Madison Square Garden, three of the Knicks' starters had five points between them. But New York entered the interval up by four. How did they do it? 

Jalen Brunson poured in 27 points on an efficient 10-for-15 shooting en route to a 47-point outburst in the Knicks' 132-125 win over the Heat.

“Our guys, just, found a way,” head coach Mike Brown said after the win.

And while Mikal Bridges chipped in 18 of his 24 in the first half before OG Anunoby turned a scoreless first half into 18 points in the second, it all came down to Brunson.

“You’re struggling a little bit offensively, you want to have an MVP of the league on your side,” Brown said of Brunson. “For him to score 47, especially on 15-for-26, 6-for-13 from the three-point line, 11-for-11 from the free-throw line, while dishing out eight assists, again, I have to mention it, but that’s what he’s capable of, and that’s what MVPs are supposed to do on nights like tonight.”

And he did it all without turning the ball over once.

“No turnovers is what I strive for,” Brunson said. “Obviously, sometimes when you’re aggressive, you make aggressive mistakes. The passive mistakes, I can’t live with. But, just trying to hold the ball as much as I can and not give it to the other team.”

It was Brunson’s 20th 40-point game since he joined the Knicks and the most points he’s scored with the team at MSG.

“He’s a special player, I think we all know that,” Karl-Anthony Towns said. “It doesn’t surprise me when he has nights like that.” 

Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra called Brunson an “incredible competitor.”

“If you want to beat a great competitor, you have to do above and beyond,” Spoelstra said. “It is possible, but you can’t just play well, you can’t just compete well, you can’t just be there. You gotta put him away. You gotta put possessions away. And he’s gonna put his imprint on it. That’s what great players do. 

“He has a great knack for it. He’s relentless.”

Brunson did this while playing 38 minutes, which may seem low from his numbers last year, not something Brown is hoping to do regularly.

“You try to sit ’em as long as you can,” Brown said. “But if you feel the game slipping, it’s my job to help us win in the best way possible.

“... It’s just a matter of I know we’re in a little bit of that we got to keep fighting to get out of, get our feet back underneath us. And it’s me just throwing him out there, knowing we've got to get this game. I tried to sit him as long as I can. [But] ‘Let’s go get this game.’

Michael Porter Jr. and Noah Clowney lead Nets to a 96-81 win over Raptors

NEW YORK (AP) — Michael Porter Jr. scored 24 points, Noah Clowney added 19 and Brooklyn Nets beat the Toronto Raptors 96-81 on Sunday night.

Rookie Egor Demin had 16 points and Nic Claxton finished with 12 for the Nets, who led by 15 points in the third quarter, fell behind early in the fourth and then surged ahead again.

Brandon Ingram finished with 19 points and Immanuel Quickley added 17 points and 10 assists for the Raptors, who have lost six of their last nine games after starting the season 15-7.

Brooklyn outscored Toronto 29-16 in the fourth quarter. The Nets allowed their lowest point total of the season.

Brooklyn led 60-45 midway through the third quarter before the Raptors went on a 20-7 run to close the period. The Nets were 0 for 7 from the field and turned the ball over five times during that stretch.

Toronto opened the fourth quarter with consecutive baskets from Jamison Battle and Collin Murray-Boyles to take a 69-67 lead before the Nets called a timeout with 10:55 to play.

After Battle's dunk made it 73-72, Brooklyn responded and blitzed the Raptors with a 10-0 run, capped by Clowney's 3-pointer with 7:22 left.

Ingram hit a pair of free throws on the ensuing possession before Claxton scored three consecutive baskets to extend the lead to 88-75 and put the game out of reach with 4:42 remaining.

Toronto center Jakob Poeltl was removed from the game during the first quarter due to a back injury.

Up next

Raptors: Continue their three-game road trip in Miami on Tuesday.

Nets: Visit Philadelphia on Tuesday.

Jalen Brunson scores 47 points to power Knicks past Heat 132-125

Jalen Brunson scored a season-high 47 points to power the Knicks to a 132-125 win over the Miami Heat on Sunday night at Madison Square Garden.

It was Brunson's 20th 40-point game with New York and the most points he's scored at MSG. Mikal Bridges added 24 points (6-for-7 from beyond the arc), including 18 in the first half, on a night when the Knicks turned around some first-quarter woes into a big bounce-back win to improve to 20-8 on the season (14-2 at home) and sent the Heat to a seventh loss in their last eight games to fall to 15-14 on the year.

The opening quarter on Sunday began like a Sunday drive: A bit aimless, a bit stop-and-go, featured a few wrong turns, and some back-seat driving as Karl-Anthony Towns was issued a technical foul all within the opening five minutes. Mike Brown called for a timeout after the Heat converted an easy layup as they beat the Knicks down the floor in transition. The pause didn't help: Towns committed the Knicks' third turnover with an offensive foul, and Miami scored five straight for an 18-9 advantage.

Down 10 late in the period, the Knicks finally got a bit of rhythm going with seven straight points. The Heat, with quick ball movement and pushing the pace, converted on 7-for-11 from behind the arc in the first for a seven-point edge after 12 minutes, despite the Knicks’ 12-for-22 (54.5 percent) start from the floor. 

Entering midway through the second with the Knicks down nine, Brunson went back to work with five points. Bridges, who started hot, didn't want to miss out, connecting on back-to-back threes to force Erik Spoelstra to call for time in a one-point game with 3:42 to play in the half. Five straight from Brunson gave the Knicks a lead, 61-57, for the first time since it was 9-8 early in the first. The guard rattled in his fifth three of the half just before the buzzer to give him 27 and the Knicks a 66-62 lead.

In the third, after Miami cut the lead to two, seven straight from New York, which turned offense to defense with a pair of blocks, forced a timeout up nine, their largest lead of the night. Norman Powell woke up with 19 points in the quarter and Kel'el Ware, the Heat's second-year big man, found his stroke, pouring in four of six from deep for 22 points. But OG Anunoby, who was scoreless in the first half, answered with 12 points and Brunson added 12 of his own to keep the Knicks up by six.

As the two sides looked to end the shooting barage of the first three quarters, the game became bogged down by free throws and missed shots (Knicks 6-for-16 from the floor, Heat 4-for-14 in the early goings), but the New York kept its edge with a couple of big threes, including a desperation heave from Josh Hart late in the shot clock and a corner three from Brunson after Mitchell Robinson kept the ball in-play on an offensive rebound.

But Miami wouldn't go down easily, as Ware connected again from deep to give him 28 points, and two free throws from Jamie Jaquez Jr. to give him 19 off the bench made it a three-point game with 3:12 to play. But a 5-0 run, with Bridges making a second three in the quarter to give him 24, and a flagrant foul on Powell while Brunson attempted a three, allowed the Knicks to make it a 10-point game with 94 seconds left to play and that just about did it. 

Here are the takeaways...

- Brunson was the offense early, connecting on five of eight attempts from the floor for 14 points with three assists to his name. After time on the bench to start the second, Brunson came in with two quick buckets, the second a layup off a nice give-and-go with Hart. The Knicks' MVP poured in 27 in his first 18 minutes on 10-for-15 shooting (5-for-8 from deep). He went 5-for-11 in the second half and had several clutch free throws down the stretch. Where would the Knicks be without him?

- Bridges started well, hitting five of his first six buckets, including both his three-point attempts for 12 points, with two rebounds and two assists. The guard continued to find good looks and hit back-to-back threes from a spot on the right elbow extended to give him 18 in the first half on 7-for-10 shooting. After not attempting a shot in the third, Bridges converted 2 of 4 in the fourth to finish with 24 points on 9-for-14 shooting with four assists, two rebounds, but was a minus-2 in 40 minutes.

- Towns had a rough start, picking up his second offensive foul of the game just over three minutes into the second quarter. He started point-less (0-for-4 from the floor) in his first 13 minutes with two rebounds, one assist, two turnovers (both fouls), and was a minus-8 in the first half. 

Towns put in his first shot of the third quarter for his first points. But his rough night continued with a third offensive foul to open the fourth. He finished with just two points on 1-for-5 shooting with six rebounds, two assists, two steals, three turnovers, four fouls, and was a minus-1 in 29 minutes.

- Anunoby, coming off his worst game of the season Friday in Philadelphia, had a very quiet opening five minutes, with just a turnover, and he was the first one to the bench. He didn't attempt a shot in the first and missed his first two in the second (both threes), the second of which looked very flat. He had two turnovers and was a minus-2 in 15 first-half minutes.

Anunoby finally got cooking in the third, scoring 12 points (5-for-7 shooting) with three blocks, an assist, and a steal in the quarter. Four free throws to start the fourth meant the bad start was a distant memory, finishing with 18 points on 6-for-12 shooting  (2-for-6 from deep) with three assists, two rebounds, two blocks, one steal, four turnovers, and was a plus-3 in 34 minutes.

- Hart had five in the first half, but added all of the things that make him good: six rebounds, three assists, two steals, and was a plus-5 in 16 minutes. He finished with 13 points (5-for-10 shooting, 3-for-5 from deep) with 10 rebounds, five assists, two steals, and was a plus-4 in 33 minutes.

- Off the bench, Robinson got one of the biggest cheers of the night when he knocked down his first two free-throw attempts late in the second quarter. He extended his streak to 10 consecutive free throws made after starting the year 6-for-27 (22.2 percent) to the year. He finished with nine points (3-for-4) with seven rebounds, two steals, two assists, one block, and was a plus-6 in 22 minutes.

Jordan Clarkson added five points in the first half and dished out an assist in the first half, finishing with 10 points (4-for-5) with two rebounds, an assist, two turnovers, and was a minus-2 in 18 minutes. 

Tyler Kolek added four points with two rebounds, three assists, and two fouls, and was a plus-10 in 12 first-half minutes, really giving them a second-quarter spark to grab the lead. He finished with six points (3-for-6) with four rebounds and three assists and was a plus-16 (a Knicks high) in 22 minutes.

- For Miami, Ware finished with 28 points (11-for-15) and 20 rebounds (six offensive) as the Heat outrebounded the home side 56-42. Jaquez had 23 points and Powell addded 22.  

Game MVP: Jalen Brunson

He heard MVP chants from the MSG faithful and for good reason, as he finished with 47 points on 15-for-26 shooting (6-for-13 from deep) with eight assists, three rebounds, zero turnovers, and was a plus-10 in 38 minutes.

Highlights

What's next

The Knicks are back in action on Tuesday night when they travel to Minnesota to take on the Timberwolves. Tip-off is scheduled for 8 p.m.

Momcilovic hits 7 3s, scores 27 points in No. 4 Iowa State’s 91-60 win over Long Beach State

Milan Momcilovic made seven 3-pointers and scored 27 points and No. 4 Iowa State routed Long Beach State 91-60 on Sunday night to improve to 12-0. Momcilovic, who entered the game leading the Big 12 in 3-point shooting accuracy at 52.6%, made his first six shots from beyond the arc for his best start since he was 7 of 7 against Fairleigh Dickinson on Nov. 3. Iowa State held Long Beach State (3-10) to six points in the opening 10 minutes and led 45-9 with 5 1/2 minutes left in the first half.