Game Preview #75 – Timberwolves at Mavericks

MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - FEBRUARY 20: Rudy Gobert #27 of the Minnesota Timberwolves handles the ball against Marvin Bagley III #35 of the Dallas Mavericks in the third quarter at Target Center on February 20, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The Timberwolves defeated the Mavericks 122-111. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by David Berding/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Minnesota Timberwolves at Dallas Mavericks
Date: March 30th, 2026
Time: 7:30 PM CDT
Location: American Airlines Center
Television Coverage: FanDuel Sports Network – North
Radio Coverage: KFAN FM, Wolves App, iHeart Radio

There are games in the NBA where you squint at the injury report, notice the early tip, and quietly tell yourself that it might just not be your day. Saturday’s contest against Detroit had all the makings of one of those games, and for the Minnesota Timberwolves, it pretty much played out exactly that way.

For the Wolves, it was no Anthony Edwards, no Ayo Dosunmu, and to round things out, no Jaden McDaniels after the injury he picked up late in that chaos-fueled Houston game. Three core pieces. Gone.

On the other side, the Detroit Pistons, the Eastern Conference’s top team, were missing their own engine in Cade Cunningham. So in theory, this game could’ve been a competitive “who has more left in the tank?” grind-it-out afternoon game. Instead, it turned into something much simpler.

Minnesota just didn’t have enough.


The Moment the Game Slipped—and Never Came Back

The Wolves actually started this one the right way. The defensive energy was there early. Rotations were sharp enough. They hung around, traded punches, and for a brief stretch, it looked like they might be able to piece together one of those undermanned, “everyone chips in” performances that they’d been stringing together over the past week.

And then Rudy Gobert subbed out.

That was it. That was the hinge point.

Because the second he hit the bench, the defensive resistance, everything that had been holding this thing together, just evaporated. Driving lanes opened up. The rim stopped feeling protected. Detroit got comfortable, and once they got comfortable, they started building a lead that never really felt in danger again.


The Offense: When the Shots Don’t Fall, There’s No Plan B

Let’s be honest about what this game really came down to: the Wolves couldn’t hit anything.

They finished shooting 32% from the field, went 9-for-43 from three (21%), and scored 87 total points.

In the third quarter, they managed just four made field goals. Four. That’s not an offensive slump. That’s an offensive blackout.

It wasn’t like they weren’t getting looks. This wasn’t Detroit suffocating them into submission on every possession. Minnesota had decent opportunities. Open threes. Clean catch-and-shoot chances. Looks that, on most nights, at least some of these guys knock down.

Instead?

  • Naz Reid: 0-for-7
  • Bones Highland: 2-for-9
  • Mike Conley Jr.: 1-for-5
  • Julius Randle: 0-for-3 from deep

That’s the game right there.

This is a team that, for better or worse, lives and dies by the three. When it’s falling, the offense opens up, the pace quickens, everything feels connected. When it’s not? You get what we saw on Saturday with stagnation, frustration, and a slow bleed that turns into a double-digit deficit before you even realize it.

At 21%, they weren’t just cold. They were DOA.


And Then the Little Things Started Adding Up

If the shooting was the headline, everything else was the supporting evidence.

They missed nine free throws, continuing a trend that’s quietly becoming a real problem. They got outrebounded 52–38, including getting pushed around on second chances. They turned it over enough to matter, but, here’s the twist, Detroit turned it over 19 times… and Minnesota still couldn’t capitalize.

That’s the part that sticks with you.

The Pistons gave them chances. Real ones. Sloppy passes, careless possessions, the kind of miscues that usually open the door for a comeback. And every time the door cracked open, Minnesota just… didn’t walk through it.

That’s what happens when your offense is that out of rhythm. You can’t string together stops and scores. You can’t build momentum. You just kind of tread water… until you realize you’re drowning.


Perspective Check: This One Wasn’t the End of the World

If you zoom out for a second, this loss isn’t the disaster it feels like in the moment. If you told anyone before this stretch that included Boston, Houston, Detroit, all without Edwards, that Minnesota would go 2–1, people would’ve signed up for that immediately. Especially given how things looked after that California road trip when the defense disappeared and the identity went with it.

They beat Boston. They survived Houston in one of the wildest games of the season. Those wins matter.

Saturday? That was the tax you pay for being short-handed, for playing your third high-intensity game in a row, for asking too much from a roster that’s already stretched thin.

It was still frustrating, still ugly, but not season-defining.


Dallas and the Games You Can’t Afford to Blow

Now comes the part of the schedule that’s less forgiving. Next up: the Dallas Mavericks, then a quick rematch in Detroit, followed by the second night of a back-to-back in Philly against the 76ers. Suddenly, the margin for error is right back where it always is in the West… basically nonexistent.

Minnesota is sitting just a game and a half behind Denver for the four seed. They don’t own the tiebreaker. They’re still jockeying with Houston. And if they want home court, these are the games you have to bank.

Not the Boston game. Not the Houston game.

The Dallas game.

The “bottom of the standings” game that looks easy on paper and turns into a problem if you don’t take it seriously.


Keys to the Game

1. Maintain the Defensive Identity

The blueprint is already there. They beat Boston and Houston by leaning into defense withconnected rotations, physical perimeter play, and Gobert anchoring everything. That doesn’t change just because Dallas isn’t a top-tier opponent.

If anything, it becomes more important. Because the Wolves’ worst habit this season has been that “flip the switch later” mentality. Against Dallas, there can’t be a later. They need to set the tone early, lock in defensively, and never let the game drift into that danger zone where effort becomes optional.


2. Hit Your Threes

This one feels obvious, but after Detroit, it has to be said.

You cannot shoot 21% from three and expect to beat anyone in this league. The looks were there. They just didn’t fall. That has to normalize.

Getting Edwards, McDaniels, or Dosunmu would go a long way. Those are three of your most reliable shooters. Their presence alone changes spacing, changes confidence, changes everything. But regardless of who plays, this team has to rediscover its shooting rhythm. Because when the threes fall, the entire offense opens up.


3. Win the Glass

Against Detroit, the Wolves got outworked, out-hustled, and paid for it. Against Dallas, that can’t happen again. Gobert, Randle, Reid need to clean the glass, eliminate second chances and turn rebounds into putbacks. If you’re bigger, you have to play like it.


4. Julius Randle Has to Be the Guy

Let’s not dance around it. Eleven points on 2-for-13 shooting isn’t going to cut it.

Randle has to be the offensive engine. That means attacking, getting downhill, living in the paint, and, just as importantly, facilitating. When he draws attention and kicks out, this offense becomes dangerous.

Saturday was a dud.

Monday can’t be.


5. Stay Focused, No Matter Who’s Available

Maybe Edwards plays. Maybe he doesn’t. Same with Dosunmu. Same with McDaniels.

It doesn’t matter.

The Wolves have the talent advantage in this matchup. But we’ve seen this story before. Minnesota has games where they assume that’s enough, where the urgency dips, and where the opponent hangs around just long enough to make things uncomfortable.

This has to be a professional win.

Jump on them early. Stay disciplined. Don’t let it become a fourth-quarter coin flip. Because in the West, those are the games that come back to haunt you.


The Bottom Line: This Is About Banking Wins, Not Making Statements

The Wolves aren’t chasing style points right now. They’re chasing positioning.

Denver’s remainig schedule isn’t easy with two games against San Antonio and a battle with OKC. There’s an opportunity to gain ground, but only if Minnesota does its part.

That means beating Dallas.
That means not letting a bad shooting night turn into a bad week.
That means stacking the wins you’re supposed to stack.

Because home court in the first round, something this franchise has only had three times in its history, is right there.

Not guaranteed. Not gifted.

But there.

And after everything this team has been through over the past two weeks, the question isn’t whether they’re capable of climbing back up the ladder.

It’s whether they’re disciplined enough to stay on it.

Jaylen Carey gets Elite 8 technical foul for shoulder hit vs Michigan

The physicality extended beyond the whistle as No. 1 seed Michigan pulled away from No. 6 seed Tennessee in the second half of Sunday, March 29's Midwest region final at United Center.

Tennessee forward Jaylen Carey was given a dead-ball contact technical foul with fewer than 15 minutes remaining after he intentionally slammed his shoulder into the shoulder of Michigan's Morez Johnson Jr. after a jump ball.

Johnson had been jawing with Volunteers guard Amari Evans after both went after a rebound, but the two had already appeared to have been separated by teammates when Carey entered the fray.

Carey was given a technical foul after an official review. It was his fourth foul for the game. Michigan had already built a commanding 30-point lead at the time of the incident.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Tennessee vs. Michigan March Madness: Jaylen Carey gets technical foul

Rockets vs. Pelicans as season winds down

Mar 27, 2026; Memphis, Tennessee, USA; Houston Rockets forward Kevin Durant (7) during the third quarter against the Memphis Grizzlies at FedExForum. Mandatory Credit: Petre Thomas-Imagn Images | Petre Thomas-Imagn Images

Houston Rockets vs New Orleans Pelicans

March 29, 2026

Location: Smoothie King Center — New Orleans, Louisiana

TV: Space City Home Network

Radio: KBME Sports Talk 790

Online: Rockets App, SCHN+

Time: 6:00pm

Probable Starting Lineups

Rockets: Amen Thompson, Reed Sheppard, Jabari Smith Jr., Kevin Durant, Alperen Sengun

Pelicans: Dejounte Murray, Jeremiah Fears, Saddiq Bey, Zion Williamson, Herb Jones

Cavs announce multiple players will miss upcoming roadtrip with injuries

Feb 25, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Cleveland Cavaliers forward Jaylon Tyson (20) during the game against the Milwaukee Bucks at Fiserv Forum. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images | Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images

It appears the Cleveland Cavaliers will deal with injuries from start to finish this season. The team announced that both Jaylon Tyson and Dean Wade will remain in Cleveland while the Cavs leave for their final West Coast road trip.

Tyson suffered a bone bruise in his left great toe on March 19 against the Chicago Bulls. He hasn’t played in a game since.

“He’s still not there,” said Kenny Atkinson on Tyson’s game availability before the Cavaliers played the Miami Heat on Friday. “But he did play a small set of games this morning, three-on-three and stuff, so that’s good news.”

Meanwhile, Wade went down with an ankle injury during his pre-game warm-up on Wednesday. Wade injured himself landing on a ball boy. There is no clear timeline for when Wade will return to action.

Cleveland will play three teams in the West next week. They play the Utah Jazz at 9 PM tomorrow before heading to Hollywood for their final regular-season game against LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers. On Thursday, they conclude their trip with a 10 PM game versus the Golden State Warriors.

The Cavs will return home on Sunday as they host the Indiana Pacers. From there, we only have four games before the end of the regular season.

If you’re paying attention to the standings, Cleveland is sitting fairly comfortably in fourth place of the Eastern Conference. They are two games behind the New York Knicks for third, and 4.5 games ahead of the Toronto Raptors and Atlanta Hawks for fifth.

Boston Celtics (49-24) at Charlotte Hornets (39-34) Game #74 3/29/26

BOSTON, MA - MARCH 4: Derrick White #9 of the Boston Celtics shoots a three point basket during the game against the Charlotte Hornets on March 4, 2026 at TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Boston Celtics (49-24) at Charlotte Hornets (39-34)
Sunday, March 29, 2026
6:00 PM ET
Regular Season Game #74 Road Game #37
TV: NBCSB, FDSN, NBA-LP
Radio: Sirius XM, 98.5 Sports Hub, WFNZ 92.7
Spectrum Center

The Celtics visit the Charlotte Hornets for the 2nd of 3 meetings this season. The Hornets won the first game 118-89 in Boston on March 4. They will meet for the final time in Boston on April 7. The Celtics are 81-47 overall all time against Charlotte and they are 38-26 in games played on the road. The Hornets are playing on the second night of back to back games after hosting Philadelphia on Saturday night. They are 10-4 in the second of back to back games. The Celtics are playing in the first of back to back games and will play at Atlanta on Monday.

The Hornets are one of the hottest teams in the league right now. Since January 1, Charlotte has a 28-12 record and they own the #1 net rating in the NBA at 11.5. Over that span, Charlotte’s offense ranks #1 in the NBA with an offensive rating of 121.1 and their defense ranks #6 with a defensive rating of 109.5. The Hornets also rank #1 in rebounding percentage (55.2%) and in second-chance points (18.9) per game since Jan. 1. Charlotte’s starting lineup has the highest point differential (+30.4) of any five-man lineup in the NBA.

The Celtics are 2nd in the East, 4.5 games behind 1st place Detroit. They are 1.5 games ahead of 3rd place New York, 3.5 games ahead of 4th place Cleveland, 8 games ahead of 5th place Toronto, 8.5 games ahead of 6th place Atlanta, and 7th place Philadelphia. The Celtics are 30-14 against Eastern Conference opponents. They are 23-13 on the road and 7-3 in their last 10 games. They have won their last 2 games.

The Hornets are 10th in the East, 15 games behind 1st place Detroit, 2 games behind 6th place Atlanta and 7th place Philadelphia, and they are half a game behind 8th place Orlando and 9th place Miami. They are 9.5 games ahead of 11th place Milwaukee. They are 23-22 against Eastern Conference opponents. They are 19-17 at home and 7-3 in their last 10 games. After winning 5 straight games, they lost their last game to the 76ers.

After completing a 3 game home stand, The Celtics are on the road for a 4 game trip that begins with this game in Charlotte and will go through Atlanta, Miami and Milwaukee. They will then play two games at home against Toronto and Charlotte before one game on the road at New York. They will finish the season with 2 games at home against New Orleans and Orlando.

This game is the 7th and final game of a 7 game home stand for Charlotte. After this game they will hit the road for one game at Brooklyn before returning home to host Phoenix and Indiana. Then they are on the road once again to play at Minnesota and the final game against the Celtics at Boston. Next they have one game at home against Detroit and will finish the season at New York.

For the Celtics, Nicola Vucevic remains out after surgery to stabilize a fracture in his right ring finger. After starting on Friday’s injury report but playing in the game, Derrick White (knee) is out and Neemias Queta (thumb) is probable for this game. Jayson Tatum is available after originally being listed as questionable for injury management. Jaylen Brown is out once again after missing Friday’s game due to tendinitis in his left Achilles.

I am guessing that Baylor Scheierman will start in place of Jaylen Brown once again. Since Tatum is playing in this game he will likely sit out Monday’s game. With Derrick White listed as out, I’m guessing that Payton Pritchard will start in his place. For Charlotte, Tidjaane Salaun listed as out with a calf injury and Grant Williams is listed as out due to an illness.

Probable Starting Matchups
PG: Payton Pritchard vs LaMelo Ball

Payton Pritchard | Getty Images
LaMelo Ball | Getty Images

SG: Baylor Scheierman vs Brandon Miller

Baylor Scheierman | NBAE via Getty Images
Brandon Miller | Getty Images

SF: Sam Hauser vs Kon Knueppel

Sam Hauser | NBAE via Getty Images
Kon Knueppel | NBAE via Getty Images

PF: Jayson Tatum vs Miles Bridges

Jayson Tatum | Boston Globe via Getty Images
Miles Bridges | NBAE via Getty Images

C: Neemias Queta vs Moussa Diabate

Neemias Queta | Getty Images
Moussa Diabate | Getty Images

Celtics Reserves
Hugo Gonzalez
Luka Garza
Amare Williams
Jordan Walsh
Max Shulga
Charles Bassey (10-Day)

2-Way Players

Ron Harper, Jr

Injuries/Out

Nikola Vucevic (finger) out
Neemias Queta (thumb) probable
Derrick White (knee) out
Jaylen Brown (Achilles) out
Jayson Tatum (Achilles) available

Head Coach
Joe Mazzulla

Hornets Reserves
Sion James
Josh Green
Ryan Kalkbrenner
Pat Connaughton
Tre Mann
Liam McNeeley
Coby White

2-Way Players
Tosan Evbuomwan
Antonio Reeves
PJ Hall

Injuries/Out 

Tidjane Salaun  (calf) out
Grant Williams (illness) out

Head Coach
Charles Lee

Key Matchups
Jaylen Brown vs Brandon Miller
Miller is averaging 20.3 points, 5.0 rebounds, 3.5 assists, and 1.1 steals per game. He’s shooting 43.3% from the field and 38.8% from beyond the arc. In the first game against the Celtics, he finished with 18 points, 5 rebounds, 2 assists, and 3 steals while shooting 61.5% from the field and 40% from beyond the arc. He is a good 3 point shooter and so the Celtics have to stay with him on the perimeter.

Derrick White vs LaMelo Ball
Ball is averaging 19.7 points, 4.8 rebounds, 7.1 assists, and 1.2 steals per game.  He is shooting 40.7% from the field and 37.0% from beyond the arc.  In the first game against the Celtics, he finished with 18 points, 7 rebounds, and 4 assists while shooting 41.2% from the field and 40.0% from beyond the arc.  He is quick and always a threat to steal the ball.

Honorable Mention
Sam Hauser vs Kon Knueppel
Knueppel is averaging 19.1 points, 5.3 rebounds, and 3.5 assists per game.  He is shooting 48.9% from the field and 43.8% from beyond the arc.  In the first game against the Celtics, he finished with 20 points, 4 rebounds, and 1 block while shooting 50% from the field and 50% from beyond the arc.  He leads the league in 3 pointers made with 253. 

Keys to the Game
Defense – Defense is always the key to winning.  The Celtics are 4th the league with a defensive rating of 111.5. The Hornets are 12th in the league with a defensive rating of 113.5.  The Hornets are 5th with an offensive rating of 118.3 while the Celtics are 2nd with an offensive rating of 119.3.   The Celtics are capable of playing lock down defense but there are times when they lose focus and allow their opponents to score way too easily.  They need to continue to make defense a priority and play lock down defense in this game against a very good offensive team. 

Rebound – Rebounding is important to give the Celtics extra possessions and to limit possessions for their opponents.  Rebounding takes effort and the Celtics need to give extra effort to beat the Hornets to rebounds.  The Celtics are 4th with 46.5 rebounds per game and the Hornets are 5th with 46.2 rebounds per game. The Hornets are 2nd with 17.6 second chance points per game and the Celtics need to limit those for the Hornets by putting more effort into grabbing rebounds. 

3 Point Shooting – The Celtics are 3rd in the league, averaging 42.2 three pointers per game. The Hornets are 2nd, shooting 42.8 threes per game.  The Celtics are shooting 36.1% as a team from beyond the arc (11th) while the Hornets are shooting 38.2% from beyond the arc (3rd).  The Celtics make 15.2 threes a game (3rd) while the Hornets make 16.3 thees a game (1st). The Celtics need to work to get open and move the ball to find the best shots. If the 3’s aren’t falling, they need to take the ball inside. And they need to defend the perimeter or the Hornets will bury them in threes.   In the Celtics March 4 loss to the Hornets, the Celtics shot just 27.8% on 3’s while allowing the Hornets to shoot 38.8% from beyond the arc.  They have to do better both on offense and defense in this game if they hope to win. 

Move the Ball –  The Celtics are tough to beat when they keep the ball moving and find the open man but when one player over dribbles and lapses into hero ball,  they falter.   The Celtics are 30-0 when they have more assists than their opponent but just 17-22 when they have fewer assists than their opponent.   Keep the ball moving and don’t lapse into hero ball, whether in the first quarter or the 4th quarter.  They have to make careful passes and not turn the ball over because in the first game between these two teams, the Celtics turned the ball over 15 times and they have to do better this time. 


X-Factors

On The Road and Fatigue –  The Celtics are facing the distractions of travel and a hostile crowd and they can’t allow those distractions to take away from their focus on the game.  The Hornets are finishing up a 7 game home stand so no travel for them for quite a while.  However, they are playing on the second night of back to back games.  They are very good in back to back games, going 10-4 this season, but fatigue could affect them down the stretch,. 

Injuries – The Celtics have 4 of their 5 starters listed on the injury report.  It goes without saying that with even one of them out, it would make this game tougher.   With the Celtics playing in another game on Monday, it is likely that one, or more, will sit out this game.  With one and a half game lead on the Knicks, who are playing in OKC,  the Celtics can afford to be cautious with their stars and rest them for one of the back to back games. 

Officiating – Officiating is always an x-factor.  Every crew calls  the game differently.  Some call it tight and call every bit of contact while others allow more physical play.  Some favor the home team while others call both sides evenly.  The Celtics have to adjust to the way the refs are calling the game and not allow no calls and bad calls to affect their focus on playing the game. 

Knicks Standings Watch: Who to root for and against, March 29-April 4

CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA - MARCH 26: Jalen Brunson #11 of the New York Knicks fouls Kon Knueppel #7 of the Charlotte Hornets in the second half during their game at Spectrum Center on March 26, 2026 in Charlotte, North Carolina. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Jacob Kupferman/Getty Images) | Getty Images

With the regular season winding down and fewer than 10 games in most teams’ schedules, here’s the latest and second-to-last entry of the Standing Watch series.

All playoff teams are already locked in, mind you, but there’s still some seed-shuffling left to play out during the final games of play, starting with Sunday’s matchup between the Knicks and the Thunder, with both teams—one more realistically than the other, is fair to say—still having a shot at locking home-court advantage on their side of the bracket.

March 29th

To kick things off today, root for the Heat to beat the Pacers. Miami is currently the ninth seed, and finding a way to kick Philadelphia down to the No. 9 or No. 10 seed so the Knicks can avoid playing them in the first round would likely be ideal.

An hour after that game tips off, the Raptors host the Magic. And as I stated last week, regardless of where the Knicks end up placing, their best matchup is against the Raptors. Going forward, until further notice, fans should root for whatever outcome most likely results in that. For today’s matchup, go with the Magic.

The third game, outside of the Knicks’ own game, that has standings implications in the Eastern Conference today is the one between the Hornets and Celtics. This could end up being a potential first-round matchup. If you want the Knicks to come away with the second seed, root for the Hornets. If you want the Knicks to remain the third seed, which is starting to look more and more like the smarter decision, root for the Celtics.

March 30th

The Heat and 76ers matchup in a big game to start off the night. Pull for the Heat for the reason mentioned above. The Celtics vs. Hawks game is a bit complicated, as a Celtics win makes it less likely for the Raptors to fall to the sixth seed, but a Hawks win would also put the Knicks one game closer to moving up to the second seed. Decide at your own risk, but truthfully, there is no clear option here.

A bit later on, the Cavaliers take on the Jazz. Hope that the Jazz can somehow come away with a win to keep the Cavaliers at bay. And finish off the night by cheering against the Pistons, although the ship of the Knicks ever getting to the first-seed looks like it’s already starting to sail away.

March 31st

The Suns vs. Magic game is the first one of the night. Like some other games this week, I don’t think there’s a clear way to go on who to go with in this one. Orlando is likely one of the few teams I don’t really feel strongly about either way. If you think their experience and physicality match up better against the Knicks than the Raptors, Hawks, 76ers, Heat, or Hornets, root for the Suns. If you think their lack of shooting would make them an easier playoff opponent, root for them.

In the Hornets vs. Nets game, root for, and I know this sounds crazy, the Nets. Not only could it impact their lottery odds, keeping the very hot Hornets in the 9th vs. 10th matchup likely behooves the Knicks. And in the Raptors vs. Pistons game, I hope for the Pistons to win to improve the odds of a Knicks vs. Raptors first-round matchup.

April 1st

The night begins with what should be a close, fun Hawks vs. Magic game. Root for whoever you think would be an easier matchup for the Knicks, and root against whoever you think is a tougher matchup for the Pistons and Celtics.

In the 76ers vs. Wizards game, take on the tough task of rooting for the Wizards to pull off the upset, as that would help in the “push the 76ers to lower play-in bracket” movement. Then, while you’re doing that, root for the Heat against the Celtics. Again, I don’t think the Knicks moving up to the third seed actually does them much good, and a Heat win would also help them push the 76ers down. And cap off the night with another unenjoyable task of rooting for the Kings against the Raptors.

April 2nd

With Detroit and the first-seed realistically out of reach, short and simple night here. Phoenix continues its East Coast road trip with a game against Charlotte. Hope for a Suns victory to help prevent the Hornets from catching up to the seventh or eighth seed.

April 3rd

Begin the night by cheering for a Timberwolves win over the 76ers in what should be a good game. While that’s taking place, the Pacers will take on the Hornets, so root for the Pacers to pull off the upset in that one. And while the Knicks are hosting the Bulls, there are a few more games of interest.

When the Bucks take on the Celtics, root for Boston so they keep the second seed. In the Raptors vs. Grizzlies game, I hope for a surprise Grizzlies win, and finish off the week by going with a Magic win over the Mavericks.

Celtics Top-5 Highest IQ Plays of the Week

BOSTON, MA - FEBRUARY 1: Jaylen Brown #7 and Baylor Scheierman #55 of the Boston Celtics high five during the game against the Milwaukee Bucks during the 2026 NBA Pioneers Classic on February 1, 2026 at TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

We’re back! Welcome to the Celtics’ Top-5 Highest IQ Plays of the Week! 

Sure, we love the high-flying dunks and the deep, off-the-dribble step-back threes, but this is a place for the under-the-radar plays that might not get the credit they deserve. The plays that get the basketball sickos and nerds out of their chairs. The plays that even YOU could make in your weekly rec league game. 

Each week, the plays will be ranked from five to one—one being the smartest—and will only be taken from games that occurred within the past week. For this week, games from March 21st to March 28th are considered. The Celtics went 2-1 this week, with wins over the Thunder and Hawks but a loss to the Timberwolves.

5. Stampede catch

I’m such a big fan of the stampede catch and think Jaylen Brown is at his best when he employs it as much as possible—and this specific possession presents an awesome illustration of the play’s effectiveness. Because McDaniels has his eyes on Pritchard, he’s unprepared for Brown catching the ball and immediately driving through his chest. The stampede catch is effective for anyone, but especially a guy with Jaylen’s physicality and straight-line drive ability. McDaniels’ momentum going away from the hoop plus Brown’s momentum going downhill towards the rim  equals great offense for Boston.

4. Brown’s growth

This has been a year of massive growth for Jaylen Brown, and his calmness and balance in the paint has been his most significant improvement in my opinion. This move—in which Brown uses a low, controlled pickup cadence on his right hand and subsequently shifts his weight to the left side—is a super difficult move to defend and is a good way of Jaylen leaning into his strength and size. The move allows him to square up his body and forces the defense to make a decision about swiping at the ball (and potentially fouling) or not swiping and allowing Brown an easy layup attempt. Jaylen must be watching some Donovan Mitchell highlights.

3. Trusting Baylor’s defense

I have really enjoyed Joe Mazzulla’s willingness to lean into Scheierman’s defensive instincts this year. Though his 2014 draft profile from NBA.com posited that Baylor “hasn’t been able to develop too much on the defensive end of the court, and since he’s not an elite athlete, he could have problems defending quick guards and bigger players,” the Celtics have used an open mind with him and have realized that he actually provides lots of value on that end. They’ve put him on opposing stars (in this case, SGA) and allowed him to be pesky with his length and hands. Here, Scheierman does an amazing job poking at the ball but then pulls his arms back when Shai tries to foul-bait. Beautiful stuff.

2. Box-out 101

The textbook box-out is one where you have your opponent in such an advantageous position that even if the ball touches the ground, you still get it—and that’s exactly what happens on this play. Not only does Pritchard beautifully track the ball off the rim, but he continues to push his defender back while the ball is still in the air, which awards him perfect position to eventually get the board. Want to learn how to get rebounds while being small? Watch Payton Pritchard.

1. The Celtics—peel switch gods

This exact peel switch has become a staple of the NBA’s 4th best defense, and it has left opposing ball-handlers looking like JV high school players all season. On spread pick-and-rolls in which a guard dribbles to the middle of the floor, the Celtics will often (but, importantly, not always) have the weak-side wing’s defender take the ball-handler and thus have the on-ball defender (in this case, Derrick White) close out to the perimeter shooter. This seemingly simple peel switch—which actually requires exquisite communication, timing, and IQ—has completely thrown off opposing offenses all year and is at the forefront of innovative defensive concepts around the NBA. Unbelievable implementation from Mazzulla and the rest of the staff.

Sharma and Rickelton lead Mumbai to 6-wicket win over Kolkata in IPL

MUMBAI, India (AP) — Openers Ryan Rickelton and Rohit Sharma hit aggressive half-centuries to lead Mumbai Indians to a six-wicket win over Kolkata Knight Riders in the IPL on Sunday with five balls remaining.

Rickelton scored 81 off 43 balls with eight sixes while Sharma hit 78 off 38, including six sixes, as Mumbai went on to win with 224-4 in 19.1 overs. It was the highest run-chase at the iconic Wankhede Stadium in an Indian Premier League game.

Earlier, after losing the toss, Kolkata skipper Ajinkya Rahane scored 67 off 40 balls, with five sixes, providing the base for his side’s challenging 220-4 in 20 overs. Angkrish Raghuvanshi hit 51 off 29 deliveries and Shardul Thakur picked up 3-39 for Mumbai.

Chasing 221, Mumbai set a hectic pace – Rickelton and Sharma put on 148 runs off 71 balls for the first wicket, including 80-0 in the powerplay.

Sharma sped to 50 off 23 balls. Rickelton reached his half century off 24 balls as Kolkata’s bowling didn’t have any answers.

Vaibhav Arora got the breakthrough in the 12th over when Sharma was out after Anukul Roy took a wonderful catch running back to midwicket.

India’s T20 World Cup-winning captain Suryakumar Yadav walked in at No. 3 as the impact player and scored 16 off eight balls before holing out to the square leg boundary.

Rickelton was run out in the 16th over, with Mumbai suffering a minor hiccup at 184-3, down from 148-0.

Tilak Varma (20) and Hardik Pandya (18 not out) made sure that the five-time champions won their opening game of the season – a first since the 2012 IPL season.

Good start for Kolkata

Kolkata openers Finn Allen and Rahane put on 69 off 32 balls.

Allen scored 37 off 17, including six fours and two sixes, while Rahane reached his 50 off 27 balls. Kolkata scored 78-1 in the powerplay, with Allen caught in the sixth over off Thakur.

Returning to the Mumbai camp this season, Thakur also accounted for Cameron Green (18) and later Rahane in the 14th over.

At 145-3, Kolkata’s innings was nearly derailed before Raghuvanshi played a rescuing hand. He hit six fours and two sixes, racing to 50 off 28 balls. Vice-captain Rinku Singh was 33 not out off 21.

The duo put on 60 off 30 balls for the fourth wicket to help Kolkata cross 200. But the team's bowling didn’t match its batting efforts on Sunday evening.

On Monday, it's Rajasthan Royals vs. Chennai Super Kings in Guwahati.

___

AP cricket: https://apnews.com/hub/cricket

Highlights: Castle’s triple-double and Wemby’s double-double lead Spurs in rout of Bucks

Mar 28, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; San Antonio Spurs guard Stephon Castle (5) shoots in front of Milwaukee Bucks guard Ryan Rollins (13) during the first quarter at Fiserv Forum. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images | Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images

Coming off a blowout win against the Memphis Grizzlies, the Spurs traveled to Milwaukee to take on the Bucks for the final time this season. Just like the Grizzlies game, the Spurs completely outmatched the depleted Bucks on both ends. After outscoring them 37-24 in the first, they never looked back. They led by as much as 38 points, thanks to dominant performances from Stephon Castle and Victor Wembanyama, alongside the team shooting 40% from three. The Spurs ultimately won wire-to-wire. 127-95.

Stephon Castle dropped his fourth career triple-double: 22 points (9-13 FG), 10 rebounds, and 10 assists. Steph dropped one of the quieter triple-doubles. While the rest of the team was on fire from three, Steph took his time and attacked the paint. He also drained two threes alongside dishing out multiple lobs and diming up open shooters and cutters. He reached nine rebounds early in the fourth, but Mitch Johnson took him out with over seven minutes left. Thankfully, Mitch subbed him back in minutes later, and he grabbed his 10th board. Nonetheless of how he achieved the feat, Steph is a young star who could very well be an all-star next season.

Spin cycle! Steph isos Ryan Rollins and spins off of him, driving into the paint. He then uses his decel move for the layup!

AREA 51 PART 1: Steph beats the Bucks’ zone defense by catching the ball at the free-throw line and immediately lobbing it up to a cutting Wemby for the easy slam!

WEIGHT ROOM! Steph sprints down the court in transition and muscles through Taurean Prince for the finish!

AREA 51 PART 2: Deja vu on the Steph to Wemby lob connection!

Several of Steph’s teammates were asked about his performance after the game. Safe to say, they were impressed!

Victor Wembanyama dropped a double-double: 23 points (9-10 FT) and 15 rebounds to go along with six assists, two steals, and a block. Wemby dominated the boards and was dishing out several dimes. As far as his points go, his midrange and three-pointer were not effective, but every time he got into the paint, he was either fouled or he was slamming down lob passes and breakaway dunks. He only recorded one block, but throughout the game, there were several Bucks’ players who did not want to shoot over him at the midrange and in the paint. Those are called ‘neverminds’, and Wemby forces every player to think twice about attempting a shot with him lurking.

BEHIND THE BACK! Wemby pulls off a move that usually guards pull off: a behind-the-back pass to a wide-open Steph for the powerful slam!

Lob City Dimer! Wemby leads the fastbreak and finds a cutting Carter Bryant for the alley-oop!

AREA 51 PART 3: Another Steph to Wemby lob, and this time Wemby posterizes Myles Turner with one hand!

FLIGHT 1 IS CLEARED FOR TAKEOFF! Wemby fakes out Turner and drives in with a double-clutch slam!

Devin Vassell dropped 16 points (6-11 FG, 4-7 3PT), four rebounds, three steals, a dime, and a block. Dev was efficient from the field and provided an extra boost on defense. He snuck into the passing lanes and even pickpocketed Rollins. Dev is now shooting 39% from three this season, but the most underrated part of his game is coming up with good defensive rotations on the perimeter. With him and Julian Champagnie as key floor spacers, it makes it that much harder for teams to shut down this offense.

PINPOINT! Dev nails the wide-open three from the wing late in the first!

D3V AGAIN! Keldon Johnson finds Dev again for the wide-open three!

Keldon Johnson dropped 16 points (6-8 FG, 2-2 3PT, 2-2 FT), five assists, and a steal. KJ was uber-efficient and a playmaker for both the starters and the bench. He made great cuts to the basket and drained two threes. His ability to get a bucket by any means necessary has been a great spark plug when the offense goes cold, and he showed off his post moves, resulting in multiple tough buckets. Another great game for his 6MOTY candidacy.

Don’t fall asleep! KJ cuts to the basket, and Dylan Harper feeds him a nice bounce pass for the open jam!

GET BIG! KJ drives in on Turner and finishes over him with the right hand!

Dylan Harper dropped 14 points (6-8 FG, 2-3 3PT), two assists, one rebound, and one steal. In just 21 minutes, Dyl put on a show in the open court. Anytime Dyl had the ball one-on-one, his craftiness allowed him to finish at the rim no matter who was in front of him. He also drained two threes. In March, he is shooting 59% from the field and 54% from three-point range. Dyl is heating up at the right time with the playoffs now two weeks away.

Smooth operator! Dyl puts multiple moves on Ousmane Dieng. He does a crossover into a half spin and switches hands on the reverse layup!

De’Aaron Fox dropped 12 points (6-9 FG), six assists, two rebounds, and a steal. D-Fox got his buckets strictly from the midrange and the paint. Just like Wemby, he also finished with six assists. His lightning-quick speed mixed with his dribble moves results in easier buckets due to the created space. The two-time all-star continues to pick his spots and lets others shine as long as the team is winning.

Fox dime! D-Fox finds an open Champagnie, who pops the champagne for three! Julian finished with 11 points (4-8 FG, 3-7 3PT), four rebounds, and two steals.

Too crafty and too fast! On the fastbreak, D-Fox stops at the three-point line, gives a quick look to the backcourt, and splits two defenders for the open layup!

AND-ONE MIDDY! D-Fox puts a move on Turner, and Turner fouls him on the jumper for the and-one!

All in all, this was one of several games this season that was wrapped up nice and early. The poise and maturity this team has shown since the first half of the season is leaps and bounds ahead of schedule. This was also a game where the silver and black were at full strength. As the regular season draws to a close, this team will have a key matchup against the Denver Nuggets on April 2nd and on April 12th. Those matchups will help prepare this team for what is to come this postseason.

Finally, here are the full game highlights.

The Spurs return home to take on the Chicago Bulls this Monday at 7:00 P.M. (CST) on Peacock/NBCSN EXTRA/FDSN-SW.

Boston Celtics Daily Links 3/29/26

MEMPHIS, TN - MARCH 20: The sneakers worn by Jayson Tatum #0 of the Boston Celtics before the game against the Memphis Grizzlies on March 20, 2026 at FedExForum in Memphis, Tennessee. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Grant Burke/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

HeraldCeltics could sit four starters for matchup vs. Hornets

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Warriors vs Nuggets Computer Picks: Our Best Player Prop Projections for March 29

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The Denver Nuggets are on a five-game win streak and welcome the injury-riddled Golden State Warriors to town on Sunday, March 29. 

Our NBA player prop projections have you covered with high-value NBA picks for this matchup.

If you want deeper analysis, look no further than our Warriors vs. Nuggets predictions.

Warriors vs Nuggets computer picks for March 29

Warriors WarriorsNuggets Nuggets
Green o8.5 points
-105
Watson u11.5 points
-110
Santos o4.5 rebounds 
-150
Jokic o1.5 threes 
+115
Porzingis o19.5 points
-115
Murray o23.5 points
-112

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Warriors computer picks

Draymond Green Over 8.5 points (-105)

Projection: 11.2 points

This is a five-star play according to our projections, with the numbers expecting Draymond Green to reach double digits. Both the Golden State Warriors and Denver Nuggets rank in the Top 10 in pace over the last five games, meaning plenty of extra possessions.

With no Steph in the lineup, Draymond hasn't shied away from taking a few extra shots to help his team win.

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Gui Santos Over 4.5 rebounds (-150)

Projection: 6.7 rebounds

This is another five-star play for tonight's matchup, with Gui Santos looking to crash the glass for the Dubs. Missing bodies have opened up minutes for Santos, and he's put those minutes to good use.

He's started back-to-back games and has seen 30+ minutes of action in three straight outings. With so much floor time, he can corral five boards.

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Kristaps Porzingis Over 19.5 points (-115)

Projection: 21.4 points

Kristaps Porzingis has been balling for the Dubs in recent outings and is coming off a 28-point performance over Washington. The stretch big is finally starting to find his rhythm with Golden State, and 20 points is a very attainable number.

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Nuggets computer picks

Peyton Watson Under 11.5 points (-110)

Projection: 9.9 points

Peyton Watson is coming off a miserable shooting performance, and our projections expect that to continue. The 23-year-old only went for 10 points in his last meeting against the Dubs, and they'll do enough to contain him again tonight.

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Nikola Jokic Over 1.5 threes (+115)

Projection: 1.9 threes

Nikola Jokic has hit two or more threes in five of his last 10 games, and the Nuggets are the most efficient 3-point shooting team this season. Jokic will have no problem firing away against this mediocre Golden State defense.

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Jamal Murray Over 23.5 points (-112)

Projection: 24.8 points

Not many players are hotter than Jamal Murray, who is scoring 31.6 points per game over his last five outings. Murray is in the midst of a career year, and the injury-riddled Warriors don't have anyone to slow down the Denver PG.

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How to watch Warriors vs Nuggets tonight

LocationBall Arena, Denver, CO
DateSunday, March 29, 2026
Tip-off10:00 p.m. ET
TVNBC

Not intended for use in MA.
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Rumors: Warriors will re-sign Kristaps Porzingis, try to make bold move this offseason

Stephen Curry may return to the court this season and help the Warriors to make a push to get out of the play-in and into a seven-game series, but for some Warriors fans, their eyes are already on next season.

Golden State is going to make a push to re-sign big man Kristaps Porzingis — to a more team friendly contract — and take a big swing on a star player to put next to Curry and Draymond Green to make one more all-in run with that core, at least according to Marcus Thompson of The Athletic and Tim Kawakami of the San Francisco Standard on the Warriors Plus Minus podcast (hat tip HoopsHype).

Porzingis seems the one thing most likely to happen even with all the questions about Porzingis' health, Thompson said.

"Can he stay healthy? And I absolutely, as we're sitting here right now, believe that Porzingis and the Warriors will work something out where we will see him again next season in a Warriors jersey."

Since being traded to Golden State from Atlanta at the deadline (part of the Jonathan Kuminga deal), Porzingis has played in 10 games and averaged 17.1 points, plus 4.7 rebounds and 1.4 blocked shots per game. On paper, he is a great fit with Curry and Draymond Green, but we have not yet seen that trio on the court.

The Warriors also would need more than those three to make a run in a West with the young Thunder and Spurs teams, not to mention a host of other strong teams like the Lakers and Nuggets. Thompson said people around the league expect the Warriors to make a bold move.

"The league, I think, isn't concerned that they're going to go win another title, but they are concerned that they are going to load up like crazy going into next season."

Kawakami was more specific, mentioning potential targets for the Warriors.

"I'm saying Kawhi Leonard, LeBron James. There's complications with both. But you've heard it, I've heard it. I've been aggregated for just speculating it. There is conversation. I'm not saying from the league. I'm just saying, Kawhi's contract gonna get voided, theoretically. We don't know. That seems to be the number one thing you hear with some other obviously punishment for the Clippers. He could be a free agent. Can you do a sign and trade with a voided contract? I don't. He might not be able to get a max salary is what I'm saying."

The investigation into the Clippers’ allegedly funneling money to Kawhi Leonard through former team sponsor Aspiration is ongoing, but the expectation in league circles is that the Clippers and Leonard will face some kind of punishment. Voiding Leonard's contract would be one of the harsher penalties, and it's fair to ask how serious a punishment that is if he can just resign with another team (even if it is for less money) and the Clippers get him off their books, but it is one option rumored to be out there.

LeBron James is a free agent after this season and his future is up in the air. While the expectation around the league is that the 41-year-old will play one more season, LeBron himself has said he will not decide his future until after this season. Also, the Warriors were in the mix at the deadline to try and land Giannis Antetokounmpo, with Golden State reportedly offering four first-round picks, but at the time the Bucks appeared to be guaging the market more than seriously engaging in trade discussions, according to league sources. The Warriors could re-enter the Antetokounmpo sweepstakes this summer.

One way or another, expect a wild summer in the Bay Area.

Verstappen again questions his F1 future and says this season could be his last

SUZUKA, Japan (AP) — Four-time world champion Max Verstappen has not ruled out retiring at the end of the Formula 1 season, saying he is trying “very hard” to enjoy racing under the new changes.

The Red Bull driver again openly expressed his dissatisfaction on Sunday after an eighth-place finish at the Japanese Grand Prix, which was won by 19-year-old Kimi Antonelli of Mercedes.

“Privately I’m very happy," Verstappen told the BBC after the race. "You also wait for 24 races. This time it’s 22. But normally 24. And then you just think about is it worth it? Or do I enjoy being more at home with my family? Seeing my friends more when you’re not enjoying your sport?"

The 28-year-old Verstappen said “That's what I'm saying” when asked by the BBC if this could be his last season.

“I want to be here to have fun and have a great time and enjoy myself. At the moment that’s not really the case,” he said. "Of course I do enjoy certain aspects. I enjoy working with my team. It’s like a second family. But once I sit in the car it’s not the most enjoyable unfortunately. I’m trying. I keep telling myself every day to try and enjoy it. It’s just very hard.”

Verstappen is among the drivers struggling after one of the most significant regulation changes in F1 took place this season.

“I can easily accept to be in P7 or P8 where I am,” he said. “Because I also know that you can’t be dominating or be first or second or whatever, fighting for a podium every time. I’m very realistic in that and I’ve been there before. I’ve not only been winning in F1.

“But at the same time when you are in P7 or P8 and you are not enjoying the whole formula behind it, it doesn’t feel natural to a racing driver," he said.

“Of course I try to adapt to it, but it’s not nice the way you have to race. It’s really anti-driving. Then at one point, yeah, it’s just not what I want to do."

Formula 1 now takes a five-week break with races scheduled for April in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia called off because of the war in Iran.

The next race is on May 3 in Miami.

___

AP auto racing: https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing

3 reasons the Suns won’t win a playoff series

SAN ANTONIO, TX - MARCH 19: Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs blocks the shot of Oso Ighodaro #11 of the Phoenix Suns during the game on March 19, 2026 at the Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photos by Michael Gonzales/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Phoenix Suns are limping into the final parts of the season. Looking to finish as the seventh seed in the West, the team appears to have a hard first-round matchup if they stay in seventh heading into the playoffs.

Here are three reasons why Phoenix will be a first-round exit this year:


Lack of Playoff Experience and Star Power

It’s possible the Suns’ first-round opponent will be the San Antonio Spurs, who, like the Suns, have little playoff experience outside of Luke Kornet and Harrison Barnes.

The Spurs would be likely to take the cake in a series against Phoenix because, one: they employ an alien, Victor Wembanyama, who is likely to finish top-five in MVP voting and be an All-NBA First Team selection; but two: they boast more top-end talent. Both Wembanyama and De’Aaron Fox made the All-Star team, Stephon Castle looks to be an All-NBA selection, and Keldon Johnson is the odds-on favorite to win Sixth Man of the Year.

Dillon Brooks, Mark Williams, and Jalen Green surrounding Devin Booker do not provide the same upside that the Spurs’ players do around Wembanyama, and the team has no experience playing in playoff situations as a group.

While both teams have had surprising seasons based on collective team efforts, when rotations shrink in April, the Spurs will have more players to rely on. If the Suns play the Thunder in the first round, the lack of experience and star power problems remain prevalent, but Oklahoma City has experience as a group.

Continuity Struggles

The Suns have been banged up. Williams and Brooks remain out due to foot and hand injuries, respectively. Grayson Allen and Jordan Goodwin have both recently dealt with lower-body injuries, and Jalen Green already missed more than half the season with his hamstring problems.

In order to pull off an upset, Phoenix will need to be possessing some of their best “vibes” as a team all year, and unfortunately, because of injuries, that’s not likely to happen. Brooks and Williams should return by the end of the season, but with fewer than 10 games left in the year, it’s not enough time for a team that’s had a lot of players go in and out of the lineup to build enough continuity to pull off a major upset.

We still don’t fully know what the Suns’ starting lineup is when everyone on the team is healthy. Does Royce O’Neale or Collin Gillespie move to the bench when Brooks returns?

Historical Precedent

For the sake of this article, let’s assume the Suns stay in seventh like they have nearly all year and beat their first-round opponent in the play-in.

Since the playoff field expanded in 1984, only seven 7th seeds have made it past the first round. While it’s happened twice in the last three seasons, both were under extenuating circumstances. When the Lakers beat the Grizzlies in 2023, Los Angeles had the two best players in the series, and Memphis and their best player was out of rhythm after being suspended.

Last season, when the Warriors beat the Rockets, Golden State made a blockbuster trade for Jimmy Butler midway through the year, and was playing nothing like a 7th seed. With Steph Curry playing at an All-NBA level, Golden State was always going to have the best player in the series against a young Houston team.

If recent history shows how to pull off the upset, you need to have at least the best player in the series. Devin Booker is having a strong year—he made his fifth All-Star appearance—but whether the Suns play the Thunder or the Spurs, the odds will be stacked against them.

If they do end up in 8th, their historical odds of winning in the first round are even lower.


Do you agree? Why or why not?

Barcelona inspired by the Lakers: site reveals details of new kit 📸

Barcelona inspired by the Lakers: site reveals details of new kit ��
Barcelona inspired by the Lakers: site reveals details of new kit 📸

Barcelona’s kit for the 2026/27 season has LEAKED, and FootyHeadlines has revealed details of the (possible) shirts.

The big new feature is the purple away shirt, inspired by the iconic uniforms of the Los Angeles Lakers basketball team.

📸 Ronald Martinez - 2024 Getty Images

The home shirt features the club’s colors, but in different shades.

The third shirt goes back to a "pool green," just like it was in 2023/24.

Check out the photos below and leave your comment!

Home shirt (via FootyHeadlines)

Shirt 2 - away (via FootyHeadlines)

Third shirt (via FootyHeadlines)

So, do you like the designs? Leave your comment!

This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇧🇷 here.