Giannis Antetokounmpo believes he’ll be out 4-6 weeks with injury in Bucks crusher: ‘It’s concerning’

Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo (34) walks from the court following the game against the Denver Nuggets at Fiserv Forum.
Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo (34) walks from the court following the game against the Denver Nuggets at Fiserv Forum.

The NBA trade deadline potentially got an unexpected twist on Friday night.

Bucks star Giannis Antetokounmpo exited Friday night’s 102-100 loss to the Nuggets and told reporters after the game that he has a right calf or soleus strain.

He said he expects to miss four to six weeks and will undergo an MRI exam, adding that he believes that testing will show he “popped something” in his calf.

A dejected-looking Giannis Antetokounmpo walks off the court after the Bucks’ 102-110 home loss to the Nuggets on Jan. 23, 2026 at Fiserv Forum. Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images

Head coach Doc Rivers said after the game that he thought Antetokounmpo was “favoring” his calf for a good chunk of the second half.

“I didn’t like what my eyes were seeing, personally,” Rivers said, according to CBS Sports. Giannis was defiant about staying in. On that one, play you could see him trying to run down the floor, I had had enough. I didn’t ask, just took him out. He actually wanted to go back in. That was a no for me.

“He knew he should have been out. There was no disagreement or anything like that.”

Antetokounmpo didn’t exit until 34.2 seconds left in the game with the Bucks down five. As for what’s next, Rivers wasn’t sure but he expressed concerned.

“I don’t know yet, honestly. He was in the med room. I don’t think it looks great, personally. This calf keeps coming up and it’s concerning. I’m not a doctor, but I’m smart enough to know that his calf keeps bothering him and there’s something that is there and it keeps happening, and that’s troublesome for all of us.”

Antetokounmpo had 22 points, 13 rebounds and seven assists before exiting.

The nine-time All-Star has been part of all sorts of trade buzz this season, but with an injury that could sideline him into March, this could throw a wrench into any potential deal.

4 Takeaways from Cavs 123-118 win over Kings: Evan Mobley puts together ‘dominant’ game

CLEVELAND — The Cleveland Cavaliers have won nine of their last 13 games, and still aren’t close to playing up to their full potential. That’s both encouraging and frustrating. Friday’s ugly 123-118 win against the Sacramento Kings showed why.

Head coach Kenny Atkinson has made some crazy comparisons during his two seasons in Cleveland. After Evan Mobley’s 29-point, 13-rebound, and seven-assist performance, he compared him to Shaquille O’Neal.

“Man, I don’t know about that,” Mobley said.

Mobley wasn’t Shaq, but he completely controlled the paint on both sides of the floor.

Before the game, Kings head coach Doug Christie said his team needed to push Mobley off of his spots. That didn’t happen.

Mobley went 6-8 on shots in the restricted area and 12-18 on overall shots in the paint. He was able to get to the basket on repeat, and when he was cut off, the hook shot and turnaround jumper were falling. Mobley is at his best when he’s playing aggressively and making quick and strong decisions. That — combined with going against a weaker Sacramento frontcourt — led to his scoring success.

“That’s what we like to see,” Donovan Mitchell said of Mobley’s mindset. “A lot of times, he just has to go up and be aggressive, and that’s what he was for 48 minutes tonight. He was like, ‘I’m going to attack and make good decisions.’ … Not so much necessarily us continuing to get it to him, but him being like, ‘I’m getting downhill. They can’t stop me. I’m getting to the paint.’”

The offensive showcase extended to his playmaking as well. Mobley has become more comfortable finding the open man when extra defenders have come his way. This is the area he’s grown the most since the beginning of the season, when he had a difficult time handling double teams.

Support us and Let ‘Em Know with Homage!

Anything bought from the links helps support Fear the Sword. You can buy the Mark Price shirt HERE. You can also shop all of Homage’s Cavs gear HERE.

Mobley was more impressive defensively.

He registered four blocks and was a large reason why the Kings converted just 62.5% of their shots at the rim (32nd percentile).

Mobley was able to make what was an overall bad performance from his teammates look passable. It’s why the Cavs had a solid 108.7 defensive rating with Mobley on the floor on a night they had a 121.6 defensive rating as a team.

“It was one of the most dominant games we’ve ever seen from him,” Atkinson said.

These types of games are in there. The problem is figuring out how to recreate these performances more consistently.

“Sometimes these things happen when you have guys out,” Atkinson said. “We have Sam [Merrill], Max [Strus], and DG (Darius Garland), our playmakers, guys that create advantages. We got him out there with units, especially when we separate those two (Mobley and Donovan Mitchell). Now, no Don, he’s got to kind of do it. I’m sure we’re doing more things for him, but I think he’s just taking the burden. I think it’s a lot of its circumstances.”

Atkinson has been splitting up Mitchell and Mobley more with bench lineups. That wasn’t what Atkinson did most of the last regular season, when the duo was in the 94th percentile in point differential. It hasn’t had the same success this year, and more importantly, lineups without either haven’t worked with Darius Garland not at 100%.

“I get to be the guy that creates offense for us,” Mobley said. “I feel like I’ve been doing a good job this past few days, and I feel like I just got to keep stacking days and figure out where I can keep getting better.”

The consistency isn’t quite there for the Cavs yet either.

They took meaningful steps forward in this game. Instead of turning it over 21 times, as they did in their previous two outings, they gave it away just six times (97th percentile).

That said, they didn’t improve in all the areas they would’ve liked to. Their defensive integrity at the point of attack remains a concern. It’s part of the reason they allowed the Kings to shoot 39.4% from beyond the arc, which is well above their season-long average of 35.2%.

Still, the Cavs need all the wins they can get at this point of the season, given who’s out of the lineup. They’ve done a better job of taking care of their matchups against opponents that they should beat, even if they aren’t exactly peaking at this time.

“It’s not always going to be pretty,” Mitchell said. “It’s at the point now where I don’t really care how we do it as long as we continue to win games. … I think we’ve done a great job of believing as a collective.

“Last year was last year. It’s a different year, different season. This is who we are. We’re going to continue to build and find ways to win.”

Cody Glass has 2 goals and an assist in Devils' 5-4 win over Canucks

VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) — Cody Glass had two goals and an assist, Lenni Hameenaho scored his first NHL goal and the New Jersey Devils beat the Vancouver Canucks 5-4 on Friday night to extend their Western Canada winning streak to three.

Nico Hischier and Connor Brown also scored for New Jersey. Jacob Markstrom made 21 saves.

Linus Karlsson, Teddy Blueger, Zeev Buium and Brock Boeser scored for Vancouver, and Kevin Lankinen stopped 19 shots.

New Jersey went 2 for 3 on the power play. The Canucks were 0 for 2 and have gone four games without a power-play goal.

Hameenaho scored on a goalmouth tap-in at 1:41 of the first.

In the second, Hischier and Glass made it 3-0 with goals 40 seconds apart. Six minutes later, Karlsson put the Canucks on the board.

Then with Conor Garland serving a double-minor for high-sticking Hischier, Blueger scored short-handed before Brown replied.

With 1:48 left in the second, Buium pulled the puck out of a crowd and found the net to cut it to 4-3.

In the third, Glass added his second of the night. Boeser scored with 1:12 remaining and Lankinen off for an extra attacker.

Up next

Devils: At Seattle on Sunday.

Canucks: Host Pittsburgh on Sunday.

___

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Ducks beat Kraken 4-2 for 6th straight victory following 9-game losing streak

SEATTLE (AP) — Cutter Gauthier had a goal and an assist, Lukas Dostal made 21 saves and the Anaheim Ducks beat the Seattle Kraken 4-2 on Friday night for their sixth straight victory following a nine-game losing streak.

Ryan Poehling scored short-handed, Chris Kreider added a power-play goal and Pavel Mintyukov banked in a long empty-netter. The Ducks have three games left on a five-game trip they opened with a 2-1 shootout victory at NHL-leading Colorado on Wednesday night.

Jared McCann and Jaden Schwartz scored for Seattle in the third game of a six-game homestand. Philipp Grubauer stopped 27 shots, highlighted by a successful poke-check on Jansen Harkins’ penalty shot midway through the second.

Gauthier and Poehling gave Anaheim a 2-0 lead in the first period, with the Ducks outshooting the Kraken 13-2 in the opening 20 minutes.

Gauthier scored at 1:02. He broke down the right side, cut inside and beat Grubauer with a wrist shot.

Poehling connected with the Ducks a man down with 4:36 left. He raced down the left side and avoided Grubauer's poke-check.

McCann got one back for Seattle at 1:55 of the second. Kreider countered on a power play 2:05 later, scoring off a rebound for his 16th of the season.

Schwartz cut it to 3-2 at 1:54 of the third, getting behind the defense to tip in Shane Wright's feed.

Up next

Ducks: Have an Alberta back-to-back, playing at Calgary on Sunday night and Edmonton on Monday night.

Kraken: Host New Jersey on Sunday.

___

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Rapid Recap: Nuggets 102, Bucks 100

The Bucks couldn’t find a way to beat the Nuggets—even without Nikola Jokic, Jamal Murray, Cameron Johnson, and Christian Braun—for the second time this season, losing 102-100. It’s Milwaukee’s second straight loss and sixth in their last eight games. Giannis had 22 points to lead the Bucks again, going 14/16 from the line, while Rollins added 21 points. Julian Strawther led Denver with 20 points.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap

The Bucks’ first-quarter turnover issues hurt them once again tonight. After turning the ball over eight times against OKC, they proceeded to turn it over five times in the first 8:36 of the frame. Those turnovers led to a 6-0 Nuggets run to break a 12-12 tie, forcing a timeout from Doc Rivers. Milwaukee finally stopped turning the ball over and got back into the game. Cole Anthony checked in and sort of looked like he did in the first week of the season, scoring the final seven points for the Bucks to tie the game heading into the second quarter at 21 apiece.

With the Bucks trailing in the early goings of the second quarter, they turned to their veterans, Kyle Kuzma and Bobby Portis, to get them back on track. Kuzma scored a quick three points, and Bobby kept up his hot shooting with a three to put Milwaukee up by two. The Bucks were able to extend their edge to five points, but both teams seemingly had a lid on the basket from there on out. Milwaukee went scoreless for nearly five minutes, allowing the Nuggets to take a five-point lead of their own. Myles Turner and Giannis fought back, helping to tie the game back up for the Bucks, but the offense went cold again after that. Denver went on a 6-0 run to end the quarter, sending Milwaukee to the locker room at the break down 48-42.

The Nuggets have received significant contributions from their bench all season, which they needed because Aaron Gordon would play no further part after the first half. Ergo, it was Julian Strawther who picked up the slack for Denver, scoring 13 of their first 16 points. Milwaukee was able to match Denver’s scoring in the early going, but after they got it within one point, the Nuggets went on a 14-2 run to take the first double-digit lead of the game—Bucks timeout. Things did not improve much for Milwaukee, though, with the Nuggets outscoring them 10-8 to end the quarter. That sent the Bucks into the fourth quarter trailing by double figures for the fourth time in their last five, down 78-63.

Denver kept adding insult to injury to start the fourth, ballooning their lead to 23 points just a minute and a half in. The Bucks did trim it down to 15 points with just over eight minutes to go, but the Nuggets responded with a 7-4 burst to go back up by 18 with just over five minutes left. However, the Bucks showed signs of life from that point, chipping away brick by brick to go on a 20-4 run; they got all the way back within two points with 29 seconds left! Tim Hardaway Jr. broke the drought, though, getting fouled on a mid-range jumper and drilling both free throws with 10.4 seconds on the clock, putting the Nuggets back up by four. Rollins played hero again, drilling a step-back three to bring them back within one. Jalen Pickett went to the line with 4.5 seconds left and hit the first, but then missed the second. With no timeouts, the Bucks had to move; Kuzma got off a half-court heave that narrowly missed.

Stat That Stood Out

21-8. That was the difference in fast-break points between the Nuggets and the Bucks, despite Milwaukee possessing one of the best fast-break players of all time in Giannis. The Bucks don’t run in transition much, and when they did tonight, they either missed shots or turned the ball over.

Toronto makes it three straight with win against Trailblazers

The Toronto Raptors continued their West Coast road trip tonight against the Portland Trailblazers. Leaving the Moda Center with the win, the Raptors have now won three in a row and have successfully swept the Blazers in the season series with a final score of 110-98.

The Trailblazers have been playing well so far in the calendar year, going 9-2 prior to this matchup. They weren’t necessarily an easy target, but a myriad of injuries benching Williams III, Avdija, Reath, Murray, Thybullle, and Henderson have had a cumulative effect. The Blazers were held to a season-low 12 points in the first quarter, and struggled offensively all night as a result. 

Despite the loss, Canadian Shaedon Sharpe continues to have a career season for the Blazers. The combination of his speed, strength, and shiftiness allowed him to get basically anything he wanted on the offensive end. He finished with 21-7-4. Toumani Camara helped along the way, one of the few Blazers who were able to consistently connect from 3-point territory tonight. Clingan helped protect the boards and chipped in with 13 points and 16 rebounds.

The Raptors took a little while to settle in and had their own difficulties offensively tonight, but were able to overcome tight defence and shooting struggles by dictating the pace of the game. They navigated the Blazers’ size easily, getting out in transition and screening cutters to allow them to get shots inside. Despite missing CMB, Walter, and Poeltl, they held their own.

RJ Barrett returned to the lineup, doing a decent job in his first game back with 10 points. Ingram had a slow start but thrived in the second half to finish with 20-7-3. Quickley had another solid game as well with 20-8-7. Mamu shone in his tenth start of the season, leading the Raptors with 22-6-4. This is his second 20-point-performance in a row for the first time in his career. While not as big of a box score contribution, Gradey and Ochai both had solid 10 point performances and did a lot of the little things defensively.

In the first quarter, both teams struggled offensively. Toronto’s ball movement was good, allowing them to get lots of open shots, but the majority of them were left at the rim, starting 6-16. At the same time, they were giving up a lot of second chance opportunities, but Portland wasn’t able to capitalize, shooting 2-20 from the field and committing 4 turnovers early on. 

Quickley didn’t let Clingan’s foreboding 7’2” presence on the inside deter him. He used his speed and shiftiness to create space and cashed in on floaters. He scored 9 of the Raptors’ first 12 points. Mamu was able to cash in a couple of long-range shots in the frame as well. 

The last two minutes of the quarter were broken up by fouls, with neither team able to gain any momentum and ending with the Raptors up 19-12. 

Portland was able to smooth out their offense within a few minutes of the second quarter starting, forcing the Raptors into a timeout and some lineup changes. Scottie wasn’t getting calls and two early fouls found him on the bench. Quickley and Mamu continued to carry the scoring load, looking for someone else to contribute. 

Ingram was finally able to break through the tight Blazer defence and find the bottom of the basket, but couldn’t get much else going. Meanwhile Sharpe, Clingan, and Camara came alive, carrying the offense for Portland and bringing them within a single possession of Toronto.

Toronto answered with an 8 point run. Gradey carved his way into the paint to lay the ball up and then cashed in a long range shot on the next possession. A putback by Barrett to close the frame had them up by 7.

Halftime proved to be beneficial for both teams. The Blazers showed a zone defense and were able to get some two-man action going with Clingan. For Toronto, Ingram started to get going, finding his shots early from all over the floor. 

Unlike the first half, the Raptors and Blazers scored easily. Portland tied things up and scoring went back and forth for most of the third quarter. Ingram made shots and found his way to the line while Love and Camara highlighted. Despite holding a brief lead, the Trailblazers couldn’t maintain it. 

Ochai and Gradey quietly contributed at both ends in the third quarter as well, topped off by a fun lob pass from Gradey to Ochai for the finish, allowing the Raptors to hold a one-possession lead.

Toronto came out with force in the final frame, cleaning up some of the sloppy perimeter defence that had been plaguing them throughout the game and getting the ball moving offensively to get easy shots.

Jrue Holiday was the answer for Portland, making shots from all over the floor to try and keep Portland alive, but each time he made a basket, Toronto was able to keep pushing ahead. An 8-0 run early, followed by a 7-0 around the midway point of the quarter kept them afloat. Scottie’s decision making late in the frame was excellent, finding cutters, the open shooter, or even finding his own shots when he liked his matchup. Defensively he was great as well, with 6 total blocks, including 2 in the final seconds.

Portland fought to the end, but the tandem of Barnes and Ingram down the stretch gave Toronto the win.

Next, Toronto completes their road trip on Sunday against another team led by a Canadian in the Oklahoma City Thunder with MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. Tune into TSN at 7pm ET to catch all the action.

Hendrix Lapierre ends 90-game goal drought in Capitals’ 3-1 win over Flames

CALGARY, Alberta (AP) — Hendrix Lapierre ended a 90-game goal drought, Alex Ovechkin had an empty-netter and the Washington Capitals beat the Calgary Flames 3-1 on Friday night to end a four-game losing streak.

Aliaksei Protas also scored and Logan Thompson made 25 saves against his hometown town.

Morgan Frost scored for Calgary, and Devin Cooley stopped 35 shots. In the third, Cooley denied defenseman Jacob Chychrun's lacrosse-style wraparound attempt on a power play.

Protas broke a tie at 7:35 of the third. When Cooley slid to his left to defend against Tom Wilson, a rebound squirted out to the Belarusian, who fired the puck into an open net.

Lapierre tied it at 1 at 6:33 of the second. John Carlson's shot deflected off the leg of Yan Kuznetsov and onto Lapierre’s stick for the 23-year-old’s first goal since March 18, 2024, which also happened to be against Calgary. He has 10 career goals,

Calgary countered a Washington short-handed, odd-man rush with a power-play goal on the Flames’ next trip down the ice. Frost bear Thompson with a wrist shot below the goalie’s outstretched stick at 6:09 of the first.

Up next

Capitals: At Edmonton on Saturday night.

Flames: Host Anaheim on Sunday night.

___

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Giannis Antetokounmpo injury update: Bucks star forced from game late

Giannis Antetokounmpo's future is the conversation that is dominating the NBA. But his immediate health is now also a concern for the Milwaukee Bucks.

Antetokounmpo could not finish out Friday night's game against the Denver Nuggets as his team was mounting a frantic comeback that ultimately fell just short.

The injury appeared to occur as Antetokounmpo was heading back up the court in the final minute.

He initially headed off to the locker room before returning to watch the finish on the bench. He briefly walked onto the court during a delay in the action but did not play the final 34.2 seconds.

Milwaukee had a chance to win at the buzzer, but Kyle Kuzma's 3-point heave clanked off the rim. The shorthanded Nuggets hung on for a 102-100 win.

Antetokounmpo did not appear to be 100% physically even before he was forced from the game. Earlier in the fourth quarter, Antetokounmpo walked up the court during a possession that ended with a Ryan Rollins 3-pointer. Denver called timeout after the make with 8:06 to go. Antetokounmpo remained in the game, though, when play restarted.

The two-time MVP and 2021 Finals MVP had made an earlier (brief) trip to the locker room during play in the first quarter. And, per Jim Owczarski of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, part of the USA TODAY Network, Antetokounmpo played just 6 minutes in the third quarter.

Giannis Antetokounmpo injury update

Bucks coach Doc Rivers said Antetokounmpo has a calf injury.

"I thought he was favoring it for most of the second half, personally," Rivers said. "I asked our team five different times ... I didn't like what my eyes were seeing, personally. Giannis was defiant about staying in.

"On that one play, you can see him trying to run down the floor, to me, I had had enough. I didn't ask, I just took him out. He actually wanted to go back in, it just ... that was a no from me."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Giannis Antetokounmpo injury update, what we know

Nembhard, Walker lead Pacers past Thunder 117-114

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Andrew Nembhard had 27 points and 11 rebounds, and Jarace Walker added a career-high 26 for the Indiana Pacers, who withstood a late rally to beat the Oklahoma City Thunder 117-114 on Friday night in a rematch of last season’s NBA Finals.

Walker, whose previous high was 21 points, sank four free throws in the final 10 seconds to lift injury-riddled Indiana (11-35), which snapped a three-game skid. Pascal Siakam added 21 points.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 47 points for the NBA-best Thunder, who were also depleted by injuries with Jalen Williams, Isaiah Hartenstein and Alex Caruso among those sidelined. Chet Holmgren added 25 points, 13 rebounds and three blocks.

It was the second and final meeting this season between the Pacers and Thunder, whose fortunes have diverged since Indiana star Tyrese Haliburton tore an Achilles tendon early in Game 7 of last season’s NBA finals. Oklahoma City went on to win its first title and has the league’s best record (37-9), although the Thunder have slowed after a 24-1 start.

Oklahoma City trailed 113-103 with 2:35 remaining but pulled within 115-114 on a pair of free throws by Gilgeous-Alexander with 7.8 seconds left. After two free throws by Walker, the Thunder’s Isaiah Joe missed a 3-pointer with 3 seconds remaining.

Gilgeous-Alexander, the reigning MVP, made 17 of 28 field goals and all 12 free throws, and he scored nine points in the final 2 minutes.

ROCKETS 111, PISTONS 104

DETROIT (AP) — Kevin Durant scored 32 points as Houston ended the Detroit's four-game winning streak with a victory.

Durant averages 30.6 points in 32 career games against the Pistons - his highest average against any other team. He added seven rebounds and three assists in 40 minutes without a turnover.

Alperen Sengun scored 19 points and Reed Shepherd added 18 points for the Rockets, who have won four of five. Amen Thompson had 15 points, nine rebounds and seven assists for Houston, which had lost five straight on the road.

Jalen Duren led Detroit with 18 points and seven rebounds, but Detroit’s other four starters combined for 37 points on 13-of-35 shooting (37.1%).

Houston outscored Detroit 34-20 in the third quarter to turn a tie game into an 86-72 lead. Durant and Sheppard combined for 18 points in the quarter on 7-for-8 shooting.

Detroit got within 87-80 with a four-point possession early in the fourth. Cade Cunningham missed, but Jae’Sean Tate was called for a flagrant foul when he undercut Ron Holland II as he went for the rebound. Holland made both free throws and Duren dunked off a Cunningham lob.

HAWKS 110, PHOENIX 103

ATLANTA (AP) — Jalen Johnson scored 23 points and tied a career high with 18 rebounds for his NBA-leading 30th double-double, and Atlanta rallied to beat Phoenix after the Suns lost Devin Booker to a right ankle injury.

Onyeka Okungwu had 25 points for the Hawks, who trailed 91-84 late in the third quarter but gained momentum after Booker went down. The Suns star scored a team-high 31 points and added four rebounds and three assists before leaving.

CJ McCollum extended his double-digit scoring streak to 34 games, scoring 21 points off the bench and adding four rebounds. McCollum and Corey Kispert were acquired in a trade with Washington in exchange for Trae Young in early January.

The Hawks, who outscored the Suns 26-12 in the fourth quarter, were 43 of 81 from the field overall, including 13 of 26 from 3-point range.

It was the second and final meeting between the teams this season. Atlanta beat Phoenix 124-122 earlier this season in mid-November.

CAVALIERS 123, KINGS 118

CLEVELAND (AP) — Donovan Mitchell scored 33 points, Evan Mobley matched a season high with 29 and Cleveland showed some more encouraging signs in a win over Sacramento.

The Cavs, who have been streaky through much of this season, won for the fourth time in five games. They also improved to 16-5 against teams with losing records.

Cleveland coach Kenny Atkinson has been hoping to get more consistency from his team, which can look like title contenders one night and dismal the next. That trend continued against the Kings, who rallied from an 11-point deficit to take a 114-113 lead with four minutes left.

But Mitchell, who has carried the Cavs through several rough patches, dropped a big 3-pointer with 2:29 remaining to put Cleveland up 118-114.

The Kings had several chances to get closer, but they missed three straight 3-pointers in the last minute and Cavs guard Jaylon Tyson put them away by making a floater with 25.6 seconds to go.

Mobley added 13 rebounds and seven assists in one of the defensive-minded forward’s best all-around games.

PELICANS 133, GRIZZLIES 127

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Saddiq Bey scored 19 of his season-high 36 points in the fourth quarter and New Orleans erased a double-digit second-half deficit to defeat Memphis.

Trey Murphy III scored 32 points for New Orleans, while Zion Williamson finished with 24 points and 11 rebounds as the Pelicans snapped a three-game losing streak.

Jaren Jackson Jr. led Memphis with 26 points and 12 rebounds, while Jock Landale added 24 points and 11 rebounds. Cam Spencer had 21 for Memphis, shooting 7 of 9, including 4 of 6 from outside the arc.

The Pelicans, who had lost six straight to Memphis, trailed 123-122 after Jackson scored inside. But Williams scored on a three-point play and Bey added a 3-pointer to preserve New Orleans’ victory.

The Pelicans are anchoring last place in the Western Conference, while Memphis — which has lost five of seven — sits just outside 10th place.

Memphis built a 13-point lead with accurate shooting in the third quarter, but New Orleans whittled into the advantage as Williamson used his bulk in getting to the rim against a smaller Grizzlies defender in the fourth. Between Williamson and Bey, the Pelicans overtook the Grizzlies.

CELTICS 130, NETS 126, 2OT

NEW YORK (AP) — Payton Pritchard scored 32 points, Jaylen Brown had 27 points, 12 assists and 10 rebounds, and Boston outlasted lottery-bound Brooklyn in double overtime.

Hugo González forced the second OT on a 3-pointer with 0.4 seconds left in the first extra period. Baylor Scheierman found the 19-year-old Spanish rookie with a no-look pass and González buried the wide-open shot from the corner.

The Celtics, who have won four of five, never trailed in the second OT. Anfernee Simmons put Boston ahead for good with a three-point play, and Sam Hauser’s 3-pointer made it 128-124 with 1:51 left.

Michael Porter Jr. scored 30 points and Nolan Traore added a career-high 21 for the Nets, who nearly knocked off the second-place team in the Eastern Conference two days after they were beaten 120-66 by the crosstown New York Knicks.

Nic Claxton forced overtime with a putback dunk with 1.9 seconds left and finished with 19 points for the Nets, who have lost nine of 10.

Brooklyn led 117-112 with 7.9 seconds left in the first OT. Pritchard hit a 3-pointer for Boston, then fouled Traore, who made 1 of 2 free throws to set up González’s tying 3.

Brown had three rebounds in the second overtime to complete his fifth career triple-double.

Yaxel Lendeborg scores 18 points, grabs 9 rebounds and No. 3 Michigan beats Ohio State 74-62

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) — Yaxel Lendeborg had 18 points and nine rebounds, Morez Johnson scored 12 points and No. 3 Michigan beat Ohio State 74-62 on Friday night.

The Wolverines (18-1, 8-1 Big Ten) took control with a 21-6 run in the second half after the Buckeyes (13-6, 5-3) tied it for a ninth time midway through the second half.

Ohio State’s John Mobley Jr. scored 14 of his 22 points in the first half when Michigan led 33-30.

NO. 24 SAINT LOUIS 97, ST. BONAVENTURE 62

OLEAN, N.Y. (AP) —Ishan Sharma scored 29 points and Saint Louis routed St. Bonaventure.

The Billikens (19-1, 7-0 Atlantic 10) tied their best start 20-game start in the program’s 110-year history, joining the 1993-94 team. They took control of the game early, dominating from 3-point range, and had a 58-26 lead to end the first half.

Trey Green had 15 points for Saint Louis and Amari McCottry added 12.

Fighting Nets run out of gas in heartbreaking double overtime loss to Celtics

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Ziaire Williams #1 of the Brooklyn Nets makes a jumping pass as Luka Garza #52 of the Boston Celtics defends during the first quarter, Image 2 shows Michael Porter Jr. #17 of the Brooklyn Nets goes up for a shot during the second quarter

After taking one of the most humiliating beatings in team history, Jordi Fernández challenged his Nets to show more fight.

Fernández saw plenty of fight Friday. And then saw it undone by a couple of endgame gaffes that cost Brooklyn a 130-126 double overtime loss to the Celtics in front of a sellout crowd of 17,727 at Barclays Center.

The Nets earned a five-point lead with just five seconds left in overtime. That’s when their own mental mistakes did them in.

Michael Porter Jr. goes up for a shot during the second quarter of the Nets’ 130-126 double overtime loss to the Celtics on Jan. 23, 2026 at Barclays Center. Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

“We’re up five, they throw a cross-court pass and you have a chance to foul…and then probably make one (and) it’s over. We didn’t do it and they made the 3. Then the other one is we’re around the 3-point line, there’s a miscommunication and they get a wide-open shot,” Fernández said. “We made a couple mistakes, and those mistakes in this league against a very good team makes you pay.”

Boston did just that.

Up 117-112, they didn’t intentionally foul, and let Payton Pritchard (game-high 32 points) drill a 3-pointer with 4.5 seconds left.

Then, after rookie Nolan Traore (21 points) missed one of two at the charity stripe to give the Celtics one last gasp, a defensive miscommunication left Hugo Gonzalez too open for a game-tying corner 3-pointer with :00.4 left.

That forced a second overtime, where the Nets ran out of gas.



“He was just wide open. He was wide open. He hit the shot,” said a dumbfounded Nic Claxton, who had 18 points and nine rebounds. “I’m confused. I got to watch it. I’m confused. I don’t know how it got so open. That’s in the corner. I don’t know. I don’t know. I can’t give you an answer for thatr.”

Michael Porter Jr. — who had a team-high 30 points and eight boards — ended up miscommunicating with Noah Clowney. He passed off Gonzalez to the young forward thinking Clowney was going to cover him.

But with one player thinking man and the other thinking zone, the Nets were in abysmal disarray and got punished.

Nic Claxton looks to make a move on Neemias Queta during the Nets’ double overtime loss to the Celtics. Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

“Obviously, it was poorly executed. I tried to pass the guy through to Noah on that side, and we just weren’t all on the same page,” Porter said. “Coach Jordi was trying to communicate on the sideline, it was just such crunch time, we didn’t know we were still zoning up, or if we were in man…We were just discombobulated. We got to learn from it, hopefully do better in the next situation.

“We just got discombobulated. But yeah, it’s on us, the players, to communicate, and obviously the No. 1 thing is don’t give up a wide open corner uncontested 3. So somebody’s got to get him, whether that’s me following him through to the corner or the guy on the inbound kind of taking that zone of the area away. We’ve just got to make it happen.”

The Nets (12-31) have dropped 12 of their last 14, the worst a 120-66 loss Wednesday to the Knicks. It was the second-largest margin of defeat in franchise history, and their worst output since a 90-65 loss to Miami on March 12, 2005. To a man, they’d acknowledged the need to redeem themselves.

Brooklyn came close, leading by as many as 11 points, but it couldn’t hold it.

Traore had 21 points, playing 36:51 and getting key minutes instead of Egor Dëmin down the stretch because of his ability to touch the paint.

And Ziaire Williams (14 points, eight rebounds) played feisty defense.

Ziaire Williams makes a jumping pass as Luka Garza defends during the the Nets’ double overtime loss to the Celtics. Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

Pritchard (32 points) and Jaylen Brown (27 points, 12 assists, nine rebounds) led Boston.

But in the second overtime, Brooklyn finally ran out of gas.

The Nets (12-31) stayed fifth in the lottery race, 1 ½ games behind fourth-place Sacramento and moved two ahead of sixth-place Utah.

But they’re now only 2 ½ behind Indiana for a spot in the top 3.

Robertson scores 30th goal with a minute left to lift Stars over Blues 3-2

DALLAS (AP) — Jason Robertson scored his 30th goal of the season with one minute to play to lift the Dallas Stars to a 3-2 victory over the St. Louis Blues on Friday night.

Robertson lifted the puck in from the right circle four seconds after Roope Hintz won a faceoff for the Stars, who have won two of their last three games following a three-game losing streak.

Wyatt Johnston and Matt Duchene scored power-play goals for the Stars, and Johnston also had an assist. Jake Oettinger made 20 saves.

Robertson is tied with Edmonton’s Connor McDavid for second in the NHL in goals scored.

Pavel Buchnevich had a goal and an assist and rookie Dalibor Dvorsky also scored for the Blues, who have lost eight consecutive road games, all in regulation, and are a league worst 7-15-3 away from home. Jordan Binnington stopped 16 shots, his record at Dallas dropping to 1-5-3.

Dallas split a back-to-back, shutting out Columbus 1-0 on Thursday night.

The teams traded power-play goals in the first period. Johnston’s rebound score gave the Stars a 1-0 lead 5:41 in. His 17th power-play goal is the most in the NHL this season and one short of Mike Modano’s Dallas record. Dvorsky tied the score at 11:30 on the Blues’ first shot on goal, his team-high fifth power-play goal.

Buchnevich’s one-timer from the slot put St. Louis ahead four minutes into the second period. Duchene answered with Dallas’ second power-play goal 3 1/2 minutes later with Binnington tossing his stick toward the puck.

The Stars finished with five defensemen after Ilya Lyubushkin left during the second period with a lower-body injury.

Up Next

Blues: Will complete a back-to-back at home vs. Los Angeles on Saturday night.

Stars: Will complete a home-and-home at St. Louis on Tuesday night.___

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Nets rally to force overtime, but stumble late in 130-126 double OT loss to Celtics

NEW YORK (AP) — Payton Pritchard scored 32 points, Jaylen Brown had 27 points and 12 assists, and the Boston Celtics outlasted the lottery-bound Brooklyn Nets 130-126 in double overtime on Friday night.

Hugo González forced the second OT on a 3-pointer with 0.4 seconds left in the first extra period. Baylor Scheierman found the 19-year-old Spanish rookie with a no-look pass and González buried the wide-open shot from the corner.

The Celtics, who have won four of five, never trailed in the second OT. Anfernee Simmons put Boston ahead for good with a three-point play, and Sam Hauser’s 3-pointer made it 128-124 with 1:51 left.

Michael Porter Jr. scored 30 points and Nolan Traore added a career-high 21 for the Nets, who nearly knocked off the second-place team in the Eastern Conference two days after they were beaten 120-66 by the crosstown New York Knicks.

Nic Claxton forced overtime with a putback dunk with 1.9 seconds left and finished with 19 points for the Nets, who have lost nine of 10.

Brooklyn led 117-112 with 7.9 seconds left in the first OT. Pritchard hit a 3-pointer for Boston, then fouled Traore, who made 1 of 2 free throws to set up González’s tying 3.

The Celtics led 101-91 with 3:06 left in regulation, but the Nets closed the period on a 13-3 run.

Up next

Celtics: At Chicago on Saturday night.

Nets: At the Los Angeles Clippers on Sunday night.

Payton Pritchard scores 32 and Celtics outlast Nets 130-126 in double overtime

NEW YORK (AP) — Payton Pritchard scored 32 points, Jaylen Brown had 27 points, 12 assists and 10 rebounds, and the Boston Celtics outlasted the lottery-bound Brooklyn Nets 130-126 in double overtime on Friday night.

Hugo González forced the second OT on a 3-pointer with 0.4 seconds left in the first extra period. Baylor Scheierman found the 19-year-old Spanish rookie with a no-look pass and González buried the wide-open shot from the corner.

The Celtics, who have won four of five, never trailed in the second OT. Anfernee Simmons put Boston ahead for good with a three-point play, and Sam Hauser's 3-pointer made it 128-124 with 1:51 left.

Michael Porter Jr. scored 30 points and Nolan Traore added a career-high 21 for the Nets, who nearly knocked off the second-place team in the Eastern Conference two days after they were beaten 120-66 by the crosstown New York Knicks.

Nic Claxton forced overtime with a putback dunk with 1.9 seconds left and finished with 19 points for the Nets, who have lost nine of 10.

Brooklyn led 117-112 with 7.9 seconds left in the first OT. Pritchard hit a 3-pointer for Boston, then fouled Traore, who made 1 of 2 free throws to set up González's tying 3.

Brown had three rebounds in the second overtime to complete his fifth career triple-double.

The Celtics led 101-91 with 3:06 left in regulation, but the Nets closed the period on a 13-3 run.

Up next

Celtics: At Chicago on Saturday night.

Nets: At the Los Angeles Clippers on Sunday night.

___

AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba

Celtics survive a wild game in Brooklyn, beat the Nets 130-126 in 2OT

The Celtics found themselves in a dog fight at the Barclays Center on Friday night, playing their first overtime and their first double overtime of the season. After not playing all of regulation and only 5 seconds in overtime, Amari Williams played the entire 2nd overtime and made a lot of plays as Boston beat Brooklyn 130-126.

Not before after being left for dead, Hugo Gonzalez hit a game tying three to force double overtime.

Derrick White joined Jayson Tatum and Josh Minott on the inactive list, it was a rest night for him (we don’t see the Celtics mark someone as missing a game for rest really ever so I found that mildly interesting). In his place, Baylor Scheierman got his third start of the season with Payton Pritchard, Jaylen Brown, Sam Hauser and Neemias Queta. Haywood Highsmith has yet to play in a game for Brooklyn this season and that did not change on Friday. The Nets started Egor Demin, Drake Powell, Michael Porter Jr., Noah Clowney and Nic Claxton.

The Celtics got off to a fast 8-0 start but that lead vanished quickly as the Nets went on a 14-5 run to take a 14-13 lead in the first quarter. Sam Hauser’s hot streak continued early in the game as he made 2 of his first 3 shots.

We had Ron Harper Jr. first quarter minutes! Entering the game on Friday, Harper, older brother to the number 2 pick Dylan Harper and son to former Bulls guard Ron Harper, had played 28 minutes on the season entering Friday night.

The first quarter ended in a deadlock at 28 points. Jaylen Brown led the team with 7 points, though he went 2/7 in the quarter, while Luka Garza had 5 points off of the bench.

The 2nd quarter was a frustrating one for the Celtics. Boston had too many turnovers, was not sharp enough on defense and were not quick enough getting back in transition, leading to a lot of good Brooklyn looks.

The Celtics closed the quarter well, cutting what was an 11 point lead to 6 as Brooklyn led Boston, 55-49 at the half. Jaylen Brown and Sam Hauser led the team in scoring with 12 points.

The third quarter was back and forth and much like the first half the three point shot kept Boston in it. The Celtics were able to take a lead with 2:32 left in the quarter thanks to Payton Pritchard making shots and a Hugo Gonzalez ‘pick six’ with the steal and layup.

Brooklyn did end up retaking the lead, 81-78 at the end of the third quarter. Pritchard led the team with 19 points to go along with 3 assists. 12 of his 19 points came in the third quarter.

The 4th quarter was much like the rest of the game, back and fourth. However, what the rest of the game didn’t have was a big time Luka Garza rejection.

As the 4th quarter progressed, the Celtics put together an 11-0 run to give them their largest lead of the night at 10 points with 3:05 left in the game capped off by a Payton Pritchard three. Derrick White was a big fan of it.

The Celtics could not put the Nets away as Brooklyn stuck around and had it at a one possession game with under a minute to go after Noah Clowney made a pair of free throws.

Sam Hauser had a chance to put the Nets away with a three but he missed it and a Nic Claxton put back made it a one point game.

Anfernee Simons went to the line with 11 seconds left, he split the pair to make it a 2 point game.

Michael Porter Jr. missed a go ahead three but a Nic Claxton put back tied the game at 104 a side with 1.9 seconds left. Offensive rebounds costed the Celtics again.

The Celtics possession was a mess as we had overtime in Brooklyn.

Luka Garza picked up three fouls in the first 2 minutes of overtime and fouled out of the game. That was less than ideal because the Celtics already could not get a rebound. Brooklyn was also in the bonus 2 minutes into the period.

Then, the Celtics took a 4 point lead and had a chance to take it to 7 but then the Nets got a lob dunk and a three and took the lead.

Payton Pritchard had a look to take the lead and Jaylen Brown had a look to tie the game. They both missed as the Nets took a 5 point lead.

Pritchard then hit a three to make it a 2 point game. Nolan Traore went 1/2 from the line so the Celtics had the ball down 3 and a chance to tie with 2.5 seconds left.

Brooklyn had a lapse in their coverage and left Hugo Gonzalez wide open from three and he drilled it to tie the game at 118 as we headed to double overtime.

Double overtime was all over the place. Everyone was tired and Amari Williams, who did not play until the last minute of overtime, played the entire period. He had an and-1 which was fun.

The Celtics were up 4 with 44.2 to go in the game, when Williams had the game sealing block because of course he did.

Boston survived and won the game 130-126. Pritchard led the team with 32 points while Brown had 27 points, 12 assists and 10 rebounds, his 2nd triple-double of the season.

The Celtics shot 45% from the field and 43% from three, hitting 22 threes. The Nets shot 44% from the field and 29% from three. Boston’s next game is Saturday (yes, tomorrow) in Chicago at 8 EST as the Bulls retire Derrick Rose’s jersey.