The $10bn LA Lakers sale proves sports have outgrown billionaires

Jeanie Buss, center, is the daughter of Jerry Buss, who bought the LA Lakers in 1979; they have since operated like one of the world’s largest family businesses. Photograph: Allen J Schaben/Los Angeles Times/Getty Images

The sale of the Los Angeles Lakers is many things.

First of all, it is a record. The glitziest team in basketball is changing hands at a valuation of $10bn, the biggest ever for a sports franchise. Second, it is probably an excellent deal for the buyer, even at that astonishing valuation. And third, the shift in majority ownership from the Buss family to an investment group led by Los Angeles Dodgers owner Mark Walter, is something else: inevitable.

Sports teams are an eye-watering asset class. Not only does owning one confer countless perks and the kind of societal status that most money can’t even buy, but team valuations in the major North American sports have been on a steep upslope for decades. The sale of the Lakers represents a new peak and is also the latest data point that illustrates a new fact about sports ownership. The best properties have become too valuable an asset class for people like Jeanie Buss to control them.

Related: Lakers to be sold to Dodgers owner at $10bn valuation, per reports

Buss’ father, Jerry, bought the team in 1979, and the Lakers have since then operated like one of the world’s largest family businesses. The Lakers are by far the biggest source of the Buss family’s wealth, and as ESPN reported on Thursday, the team has traditionally used its own revenues to pay its expenses. Its golden goose is an enormous local television deal with the LA cable provider Spectrum.

The cable bundle is dying, however, and these days the biggest sports teams are increasingly owned not by wealthy individuals and families but by consortiums of deep-pocketed investors and institutions. The Lakers had already moved in this direction; the Buss family sold a quarter stake in the team to a group led by Walter in 2021. That same group – with Walter as the frontman, but by no means doing it alone – took control of the Dodgers in 2012 and later bought control of the WNBA’s Los Angeles Sparks.

Blue-chip sports properties like the Lakers are now too big for even most billionaires to just reach into their pocket and by all alone. For that reason, leagues have gradually made it much easier for institutional investors to buy stakes in teams. (The NFL, with limits, has swung open the door to private equity.) The corollary to that trend is that when a longtime owner like Jeanie Buss has buyers lined up with enough liquidity to secure her family fortune in cash, rather than ownership of a team, she’s likely to jump at it.

The Lakers’ new owners are likely to do very well on their investment. The decline of cable is a major threat to professional sports teams, and some smaller-market clubs in the NBA, NHL and Major League Baseball have taken substantial cash flow hits as regional carriers have faded. But the Lakers are so entwined with one of the world’s largest cities that to bet against their continued growth is to bet against the future popularity of basketball, the city of Los Angeles and live entertainment altogether. Angelenos will not stop buying Lakers tickets and, even more critically, will not stop happily paying to watch 82 games per year, whether they’re doing that on a streamer or traditional TV. The Lakers are too big to fail, and some time down the line, someone will value them at well more than $10bn.

The sale will probably be good for Lakers fans, though they are not the priority in any transaction of this type. Walter’s group has done wonders with the Dodgers, seizing on the franchise’s natural advantages – a rabid fanbase and a location players want to play in – and turned the team into the most consistent winner in baseball. It is harder to flex a financial advantage in the NBA than in salary cap-less MLB, but Walter’s Dodgers have become the team with the best reputation among ballplayers. Not that the Lakers have a hard time attracting stars, but one could imagine them attracting even more of the players they covet. At the end of the day, isn’t that kind of product what fans want to see?

While this will all likely go fine for the Lakers, the shift in ownership models does raise questions about what will become of sports teams that don’t defy gravity by their very existence. Plenty of individual club owners have been massive flops who have earned the endless scorn of their clubs’ fans. But the fact of having one highly visible, specific owner has at least rendered a version of accountability. After all, it’s easier for Manchester United fans to chant “Glazers out!” than it would be to chant “shadowy consortium of institutional investors out!” A move toward large groups of investors controlling iconic teams will make it easier for individual actors to milk them for cash without facing the kind of public shaming that has long been possible for teams with more identifiable villains in the owner’s suite. The Lakers are big enough and successful enough that this dynamic might never come to a head. Most teams can’t say the same.

Warriors must de-emphasize small ball, prioritize adding center this offseason

Warriors must de-emphasize small ball, prioritize adding center this offseason originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Among the lessons the Warriors learned during the 2025 NBA playoffs, which was amplified after their ouster, is that they no longer can compete among the league’s elite with their relatively miniature paint presence.

Translated, impactful size in the NBA matters more than it did 10 years ago when the Warriors would go small and torture opponents. That strategy was effective for a variety of reasons, paramount being 6-foot-6 Draymond Green’s unique ability to slide over to center and play marvelous defense while running opposing big men off the floor.

Now that it is evident Green’s body, at age 35, has lost some of that ability, the Warriors must adjust. The encouraging factor, if you’re a fan, is that they concede it.

“I’d prefer not to have to play Draymond at center for 82 games,” general manager Mike Dunleavy said two days after Golden State was eliminated by the Minnesota Timberwolves in the Western Conference semifinals.

“I don’t want to start next season with Draymond as our starting 5,” coach Steve Kerr said. “It’s doable for the last 30 games, like we did this year. But you see the toll it takes on him. He’s talked about it too.”

It’s not that Kerr should completely abandon his pet lineups; there will be instances when they’re useful. But those instances are rapidly diminishing.

The Western Conference is overrun with imposing big men: Isaiah Hartenstein and Chet Holmgren in Oklahoma City, Alperen Şengün in Houston, Rudy Gobert and Julius Randle in Minnesota. There are Anthony Davis, Daniel Gafford and Dereck Lively II in Dallas, Victor Wembanyama in San Antonio, Jaren Jackson Jr. and Zach Edey in Memphis and Ivica Zubac with the Clippers. And, at the top of this mountain range is three-time MVP Nikola Jokić in Denver.

Those 12 players – eight of whom are under age 30 – compose a smorgasbord of skill, length and athleticism. They all bring something to the paint. Jokić is transcendent, and Wembanyama is pointed toward that direction.

The Warriors’ counters, in addition to Green, are 6-foot-9 Trayce Jackson-Davis and 7-foot Quinten Post. Jackson-Davis provides some rim protection on one end but struggles to finish in traffic on the other. Post’s best attribute is perimeter shooting. They are valuable role players. They are not, at this stage of their careers, difference-makers on a contender.

(If there were a way to combine the best of Jackson-Davis with the best of Post, the Warriors wouldn’t be in this fix.)

“It’s important if those guys of positional size are good basketball players,” Kerr said. “You can’t just add size for size’s sake, and the pieces need to fit together.”

Given the ages of Stephen Curry (37), Jimmy Butler (turns 36 before training camp) and Green, logic dictates next season as Golden State’s last, best chance to chase a championship. It’s a longshot – they would represent the oldest core trio to win the NBA Finals – but Curry’s longevity makes it worth a shot.

The Warriors own a second-round pick (41st overall) in next week’s NBA draft, but league sources tell NBC Sports Bay Area they’re showing interest in veterans that might be available – and that future draft picks are in play. Golden State owns each of its first-round picks from 2026 through 2029.

In doubt that Curry, Butler or Green would be willing to sacrifice some of that in a deal that delivered a plug-and-play big man?

“The biggest things are you’ve got to look at both sides of the ball,” Dunleavy said. “How does a player of that position complement the guys we have? That’s specifically in the frontcourt (with) Jimmy and Draymond.”

Another option on the table is the future of Jonathan Kuminga. The Warriors will tender him an $7.98 million qualifying offer sometime by June 29, making him a restricted free agent. The 6-foot-7 forward still is an attractive trade asset, and it has become apparent the Warriors are willing to listen.

Myriad possibilities are centered around Kuminga, with a sign-and-trade option being complex but doable. Dunleavy, in his brief history as GM, has shown no fear of complexity.

What’s clear is that the Warriors must make strides to join the new NBA. They need shooting, always have.

They need 3-and-D wings, always have. They need productive size, someone who can bang and bump with the best of the West. That’s a new priority. We’ll submit five candidates in our next post.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Pacers beat Thunder to force NBA game seven decider

Myles Turner (left) and Tyrese Haliburton (right)
The Indiana Pacers have never won an NBA Championship [Getty Images]

The NBA Finals will be decided by a winner-takes-all game seven for the first time in nine years after the Indiana Pacers defeated the Oklahoma City Thunder 108-91 in game six to level the series.

A fine attacking display from the Pacers, which included 20 points for Obi Toppin off the bench, stopped the Thunder from claiming the Championship in Indianapolis.

Star player Tyrese Haliburton, who missed game five with a calf injury, passed a late fitness test before tip-off and managed 14 points, five assists and two steals in 22 minutes of play.

"We just wanted to protect our court," Haliburton said.

"We didn't want to see those guys celebrate a championship on our home floor. Backs against the wall, we just responded.

"So many different guys chipped in. It was a whole team effort. I'm really proud of this group."

The victory means the NBA finals will go to game seven for the first time since 2016, when the Cleveland Cavaliers won their first Championship with a 4-3 series win against the Golden State Warriors.

The Thunder will host game seven on Monday (01:00 BST) but will need a much improved performance to win their first Championship since 1979.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the newly-crowned Most Valuable Player, top scored for the Thunder with 21 points but his side paid the price for missing their first eight shots of the game, which gave the Pacers an early eight-point lead.

"Credit Indiana," Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. "They earned the win. They outplayed us for most of the 48 minutes. They went out there and attacked the game."

Monday's game will mark the 20th time the NBA Finals have gone to game seven, with the home side in the decider triumphing 15 times.

Results

Game one: Thunder 110-111 Pacers (Indiana lead 1-0)

Game two: Thunder 123-107 Pacers (Series tied 1-1)

Game three: Pacers 116-103 Thunder (Indiana lead 2-1)

Game four: Pacers 104-111 Thunder (Series tied 2-2)

Game five: Thunder 120-109 Pacers (Oklahoma Cit lead 3-2)

Game six: Pacers 108-91 Thunder (Series tied 3-3)

Game seven: Thunder v Pacers (Monday, 23 June 01:00 BST)

Resiliant Pacers will not go away, force Game 7 Sunday after dominant 108-91 Game 6 win vs. Thunder

INDIANAPOLIS — Hanging in the rafters of the Gainbridge Fieldhouse are three Pacers ABA championship banners — every one of them was won on the road.

The Pacers are now just one more road win away from their first NBA championship.

With its season on the line, the Pacers demonstrated the resilience that had brought them to this point, led by their All-NBA point guard, Tyrese Haliburton, who played through a strained calf, still scored 14 points, and was +25 on the night.

“I felt like he did amazing today, he led us to win. He’s a soldier, he’s never going to let a little injury keep him from playing in the Finals, from leading us to a win,” Obi Toppin said of Haliburton.

In Game 6 the Pacers played their best game of the postseason — they just kept making plays.

That’s who these Pacers have been all playoffs and it’s why there will be a Game 7 of the NBA Finals on Sunday after a 108-91 win in Game 6.

The Pacers played with the desperation of a team trying to save its season. Their ball movement was as crisp as it has been these playoffs. More importantly, they cranked up the pressure defense and forced 21 Thunder turnovers — MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander had 7 made buckets and 8 turnovers on the night — which led to transition buckets going the other way.

This game was decided in the second quarter.

That’s when Indiana’s defensive intensity overwhelmed the Thunder reserves, and things started to spiral. OKC shot 6-of-18 for the quarter and turned the ball over seven times, which sparked a 30-9 run by Indiana to close the second. The turnovers and misses allowed the Pacers to get out in transition, and they thrived in their element with a raucous crowd soaking up every minute of it. By halftime it was 64-42 Indiana and it was in total control.

T.J. McConnell got going in the second quarter. It started doing something he has done all series — attacking whenever Aaron Wiggins (or Isaiah Joe) is the defender. But once McConnell got a couple of buckets that way, the basket looked huge and he was hitting midrangers over everyone. He finished with a dozen points on the night.

Any dreams of a Thunder comeback were snuffed out when they failed to score on their first eight possessions of the second half. While there was a flicker of life late in the third, the Thunder cut the lead to 19, the game was never really in doubt.

Indiana did it with balance, led by Toppin scoring 20 off the bench. Andrew Nembhard scored 17, Pascal Siakam added 16, and there was Haliburton’s inspirational 14.

“Everybody was tied together, and that’s how it has to be,” Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said. “We did better rebounding, we did better on the turnover count, and on Sunday we’re going to have to be better.”

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 21 on 7-of-15 shooting but had eight turnovers. Jalen Williams had 16 points, and as a team the Thunder were 8-of-30 on 3-pointers.

Pacers roll past Thunder 108-91 to send the NBA Finals to a deciding Game 7

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Season on the line, the Indiana Pacers did what they’ve done time and time again. They bucked the odds.

And the NBA Finals are going to an ultimate game.

Obi Toppin scored 20 points, Andrew Nembhard added 17 and the Pacers forced a winner-take-all Game 7 by rolling past the Oklahoma City Thunder 108-91 on Thursday night.

The first Game 7 in the NBA Finals since 2016 is Sunday night in Oklahoma City.

“The ultimate game,” Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said.

Pascal Siakam had 16 points and 13 rebounds for Indiana, while Tyrese Haliburton - playing through a strained calf - scored 14 points. The Pacers started slowly and then turned things into a blowout.

Game 6 was a microcosm of Indiana’s season in a way. The Pacers started the regular season with 15 losses in 25 games, have had five comebacks from 15 or more down to win games in these playoffs, and they’re one win from a title.

“We just wanted to protect home court,” Haliburton said. “We didn’t want to see these guys celebrate a championship on our home floor. Backs against the wall and we just responded. ... Total team effort.”

TJ McConnell, the spark off the bench again, finished with 12 points, nine rebounds and six assists for Indiana.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 21 points for the Thunder, who pulled their starters after getting down by 30 going into the fourth. Jalen Williams added 16.

“Credit Indiana,” Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. “They earned the win. They outplayed us for most of the 48 minutes. They went out there and attacked the game.”

Good news for the Thunder: home teams are 15-4 in finals Game 7s. Bad news for the Thunder: Cleveland won at Golden State in the most recent of those and one of the three other home-team losses was in 1978 - by Seattle, the franchise that would move to Oklahoma City three decades later.

Indiana missed its first eight shots and got down 10-2. The arena, roaring just a few minutes before at the start, quieted quickly. Hall of Famer Reggie Miller, sitting courtside in a Jalen Rose Pacers jersey, was pacing, kneeling, generally acting more nervous than he ever seemed as a player.

No need.

After the slow start, the Pacers outscored the Thunder 68-32 over the next 24 minutes. An Indiana team that hadn’t led by more than 10 points at any time in the first five games - and that double-digit lead was brief - led by 28 early in the third quarter. The margin eventually got to 31, which was Oklahoma City’s second-biggest deficit of the season.

The worst also came in these playoffs: a 45-point hole against Minnesota in the Western Conference finals. The Thunder came back to win that series, obviously, and now will need that bounce-back ability one more time.

“Obviously, it was a very poor performance by us,” Daigneault said.

The Thunder, desperate for a spark, put Alex Caruso in the starting lineup in place of Isaiah Hartenstein to open the second half. There was no spark. In fact, there was nothing whatsoever - neither team scored in the first 3:53 after halftime, the sides combining to miss their first 13 shots of the third quarter.

And the outcome was never in doubt.

Ruthless Pacers throttle Thunder to push NBA finals to decisive Game 7

Indiana’s Tyrese Haliburton, right, celebrates a basket during the second quarter of Thursday’s win over the Oklahoma City Thunder in Game 6 of the NBA finals. Photograph: Maddie Meyer/Getty Images

The Indiana Pacers saved their best for last at home. Obi Toppin scored 20 points, Andrew Nembhard added 17 and the Pacers blew past the Oklahoma City Thunder 108-91 in Game 6 of the NBA finals on Thursday night, leveling the series at 3-3 and setting up a dramatic Game 7 in Oklahoma City.

Pascal Siakam added 16 points and 13 rebounds for Indiana, while Tyrese Haliburton, playing through a strained calf, delivered 14 points to steady the team after a rocky start. TJ McConnell chipped in 12 points, nine boards and six assists off the bench in another energetic showing.

Schedule

Best-of-seven-games series. All times US eastern time (EDT). 

Thu 5 Jun Game 1: Pacers 111, Thunder 110

Sun 8 Jun Game 2: Thunder 123, Pacers 107

Wed 11 Jun Game 3: Pacers 116, Thunder 107

Fri 13 Jun Game 4: Thunder 111, Pacers 104

Mon 16 Jun Game 5: Thunder 120, Pacers 109

Thu 19 Jun Game 6: Pacers 108, Thunder 91

Sun 22 Jun Game 7: Pacers at Thunder, 8pm

How to watch

In the US, all games will air on ABC. Streaming options include ABC.com or the ABC app (with a participating TV provider login), as well as Hulu + Live TV, YouTube TV, fuboTV, DIRECTV STREAM, and Sling TV (via ESPN3 for ABC games). NBA League Pass offers replays, but live finals games are subject to blackout restrictions in the US.

In the UK, the games will be available on TNT Sports and Discovery+. As for streaming, NBA League Pass will provide live and on-demand access to all Finals games without blackout restrictions.

In Australia, the games will broadcast live on ESPN Australia. Kayo Sports and Foxtel Now will stream the games live, while NBA League Pass will offer live and on-demand access without blackout restrictions.

Indiana missed their first eight shots and fell behind 10-2, but then went on a 68-32 run across the second and third quarters. The lead ballooned to 31 late in the third – the Thunder’s second-worst deficit of the season – and the Pacers cruised to their first double-digit win of the series.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander led Oklahoma City with 21 points and Jalen Williams had 16, but the Thunder pulled their starters before the fourth quarter. A half-time lineup switch inserting Alex Caruso failed to spark a comeback, as both teams opened the third quarter with nearly four scoreless minutes and 13 straight missed shots.

Game 7 will mark the first time the NBA finals has gone the distance since 2016. The Thunder have already come back from a 45-point hole in these playoffs and will need one more rally at home.

For Indiana, the moment was about resilience. With Hall of Famer Reggie Miller watching courtside in a Jalen Rose jersey, the Pacers played their most complete game of the series. They controlled the glass, pushed the pace and held Oklahoma City to 37% shooting. Now both teams head to a one-night showdown for the NBA title.

More to follow.

Pacers Tyrese Haliburton will play in Game 6 Thursday, try to extend team's season one more game

INDIANAPOLIS — Tyrese Haliburton will play in a win-or-stay-home Game 6 for Indiana on Thursday night.

"Tyrese will play..." Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said. "He was strength tested at 5 p.m. and did very well. Went through walkthrough. There's no set minutes limit. We will watch and monitor things very closely from the beginning of the game through the entirety of the game. We'll go from there."

Haliburton suffered a strained calf on a first-quarter drive in Game 5. While he went back to the locker room for a stretch, he came back out and still played 34 minutes on the night, but he scored just four points on 0-of-6 shooting. That is what Carlisle has to monitor: if Haliburton is out on the court but not helping the team — or is actively hurting it because he can't move well enough — Carlisle will have to make a tough decision about how much to play the team's offensive conductor.

Expect the Thunder to test him early on both ends of the court.

"I'll say it again, he's a great player," Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said of Haliburton. "If there's one thing we know, you don't underestimate great players. In this situation, we're expecting his best punch. Indiana is a great team. We're expecting their best punch. I have no doubt he's dealing with stuff, but we're expecting him to come out and play like a great player would play. We have to prepare for that."

Haliburton is averaging 15 points, 7.2 assists and 6.2 rebounds a game through these Finals, but is shooting 29.4% from 3. The Pacers are 12-3 in these playoffs in games Haliburton has scored 20+ points, which includes a Game 3 victory in the Finals in which he scored 22 points.

Pacers force Game 7 with 108-91 rout of Thunder in NBA Finals

Pacers force Game 7 with 108-91 rout of Thunder in NBA Finals originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Indiana has forced the two best words in sports.

With their backs against the wall at home, the Pacers crushed the Oklahoma City Thunder 108-91 in Game 6 of the NBA Finals Thursday, facing a winner-takes-all scenario in Game 7.

The game was close after one, but Indiana used a 36-17 differential in the second quarter to pull away, followed by a 26-18 advantage in the third. The Pacers led by as much as 31, but saw the final score get cut into by the Thunder in garbage time.

Tyrese Haliburton played through a calf strain that’s typically a multi-week injury and recorded 14 points and five assists in 23 minutes, while shooting 5 of 12 from the field and 3 of 7 from deep. The blowout score provided Haliburton some extra key minutes of rest.

Obi Toppin led Indiana in scoring with 20 points off the bench, mainly helping keep the cushion safe in the fourth quarter. Backup point guard T.J. McConnell played 24 minutes off the bench and added 12 points on 6 of 12 shooting.

Haliburton was aided in the starting lineup by Andrew Nembhard’s 17 points, as the shooting guard maximized his touches on 5 of 7 shooting overall, with a 3 of 5 clip from deep. Pascal Siakam shot 6 of 14 overall for 16 points and 13 rebounds. The only Indiana starter who did not reach double figures was center Myles Turner, who had three points on a 1 of 9 clip from the field.

Oklahoma City’s star duo of league MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and possible Finals MVP candidate Jalen Williams were kept in check. Gilgeous-Alexander was held to 21 points on 7 of 15 shooting with 7 of 8 free throws, four rebounds and two assists, while turning the rock over eight times. Williams mustered 16 points on 6 of 13 shooting.

Chet Holmgren, the Thunder’s star big man, had it even worse with just four points on 2 of 9 shooting and six rebounds. Oklahoma City also shot just 8 of 30 from downtown, a clip of 26.7%. Indiana wasn’t explosive at 35.7%, but had the volume edge with 15 of 42 makes.

That’s also before mentioning Indiana’s 68% free-throw rate on 25 attempts, while the Thunder had 80.8% on 26 attempts. The Thunder also turned it over 10 more times than Indiana (21 to 11), with OKC conceding 19 points off mistakes to the Pacers’ 13.

With both teams vying for their first ever NBA championship, everything is on the line in the final game of the season.

Game 7 in Oklahoma City is set for Sunday at 8 p.m. ET, 5 p.m. PT.

Pacers force Game 7 with 108-91 rout of Thunder in NBA Finals

Pacers force Game 7 with 108-91 rout of Thunder in NBA Finals originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Indiana has forced the two best words in sports.

With their backs against the wall at home, the Pacers crushed the Oklahoma City Thunder 108-91 in Game 6 of the NBA Finals Thursday, facing a winner-takes-all scenario in Game 7.

The game was close after one, but Indiana used a 36-17 differential in the second quarter to pull away, followed by a 26-18 advantage in the third. The Pacers led by as much as 31, but saw the final score get cut into by the Thunder in garbage time.

Tyrese Haliburton played through a calf strain that’s typically a multi-week injury and recorded 14 points and five assists in 23 minutes, while shooting 5 of 12 from the field and 3 of 7 from deep. The blowout score provided Haliburton some extra key minutes of rest.

Obi Toppin led Indiana in scoring with 20 points off the bench, mainly helping keep the cushion safe in the fourth quarter. Backup point guard T.J. McConnell played 24 minutes off the bench and added 12 points on 6 of 12 shooting.

Haliburton was aided in the starting lineup by Andrew Nembhard’s 17 points, as the shooting guard maximized his touches on 5 of 7 shooting overall, with a 3 of 5 clip from deep. Pascal Siakam shot 6 of 14 overall for 16 points and 13 rebounds. The only Indiana starter who did not reach double figures was center Myles Turner, who had three points on a 1 of 9 clip from the field.

Oklahoma City’s star duo of league MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and possible Finals MVP candidate Jalen Williams were kept in check. Gilgeous-Alexander was held to 21 points on 7 of 15 shooting with 7 of 8 free throws, four rebounds and two assists, while turning the rock over eight times. Williams mustered 16 points on 6 of 13 shooting.

Chet Holmgren, the Thunder’s star big man, had it even worse with just four points on 2 of 9 shooting and six rebounds. Oklahoma City also shot just 8 of 30 from downtown, a clip of 26.7%. Indiana wasn’t explosive at 35.7%, but had the volume edge with 15 of 42 makes.

That’s also before mentioning Indiana’s 68% free-throw rate on 25 attempts, while the Thunder had 80.8% on 26 attempts. The Thunder also turned it over 10 more times than Indiana (21 to 11), with OKC conceding 19 points off mistakes to the Pacers’ 13.

With both teams vying for their first ever NBA championship, everything is on the line in the final game of the season.

Game 7 in Oklahoma City is set for Sunday at 8 p.m. ET, 5 p.m. PT.

Why Doc Rivers believes Steph Curry's brother Seth is ‘perfect' Warriors fit

Why Doc Rivers believes Steph Curry's brother Seth is ‘perfect' Warriors fit originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Should the Warriors pair Steph Curry with his younger brother Seth? Longtime NBA coach Doc Rivers certainly believes so.

During an interview on “The Bill Simmons Podcast,” Rivers stated that the pending free agent’s most ideal fit would be playing alongside his older brother in the Bay Area.

“I actually think the perfect place for him would be Golden State,” Rivers told Simmons. (h/t ClutchPoints)

Rivers then doubled down on his belief that the pair of sharpshooting brothers would excel playing on the same team together.

“I don’t know if it’s possible or not,” Rivers explained. “I don’t know if either one of them would want it actually, but I do think, forget that, it has nothing to do with that, it’s the way they play, he fits perfect. I’ve said that for two or three years and whenever you bring it up to the family they kind of uh that’s not… But I do think it’d be sensational. It would be great for him.”

While Steph widely is recognized as the greatest shooter of all time, Seth actually led the NBA with a 45.6 3-point percentage during the 2024-25 season.

Seth averaged 6.5 points in 15.6 minutes per game for the Charlotte Hornets in his latest campaign, but was highly efficient beyond the arc, which potentially could provide the Warriors with a huge boost to the perimeter shooting issues that plagued the Warriors for large stretches last season.

Seth is an 11-year NBA veteran who has had stints with the Dallas Mavericks, Philadelphia 76ers, Phoenix Suns, Brooklyn Nets, Portland Trailblazers, Sacramento Kings, Cleveland Cavaliers and Memphis Grizzlies as well as his most recent NBA run with the Hornets.

While it remains to be seen if this reunion will come to fruition, it is fun to envision a world where “Splash Brother” takes on an entirely new meaning.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Pacers force Game 7 with 108-91 rout of Thunder in NBA Finals

Pacers force Game 7 with 108-91 rout of Thunder in NBA Finals originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Indiana has forced the two best words in sports.

With their backs against the wall at home, the Pacers crushed the Oklahoma City Thunder 108-91 in Game 6 of the NBA Finals Thursday, facing a winner-takes-all scenario in Game 7.

The game was close after one, but Indiana used a 36-17 differential in the second quarter to pull away, followed by a 26-18 advantage in the third. The Pacers led by as much as 31, but saw the final score get cut into by the Thunder in garbage time.

Tyrese Haliburton played through a calf strain that’s typically a multi-week injury and recorded 14 points and five assists in 23 minutes, while shooting 5 of 12 from the field and 3 of 7 from deep. The blowout score provided Haliburton some extra key minutes of rest.

Obi Toppin led Indiana in scoring with 20 points off the bench, mainly helping keep the cushion safe in the fourth quarter. Backup point guard T.J. McConnell played 24 minutes off the bench and added 12 points on 6 of 12 shooting.

Haliburton was aided in the starting lineup by Andrew Nembhard’s 17 points, as the shooting guard maximized his touches on 5 of 7 shooting overall, with a 3 of 5 clip from deep. Pascal Siakam shot 6 of 14 overall for 16 points and 13 rebounds. The only Indiana starter who did not reach double figures was center Myles Turner, who had three points on a 1 of 9 clip from the field.

Oklahoma City’s star duo of league MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and possible Finals MVP candidate Jalen Williams were kept in check. Gilgeous-Alexander was held to 21 points on 7 of 15 shooting with 7 of 8 free throws, four rebounds and two assists, while turning the rock over eight times. Williams mustered 16 points on 6 of 13 shooting.

Chet Holmgren, the Thunder’s star big man, had it even worse with just four points on 2 of 9 shooting and six rebounds. Oklahoma City also shot just 8 of 30 from downtown, a clip of 26.7%. Indiana wasn’t explosive at 35.7%, but had the volume edge with 15 of 42 makes.

That’s also before mentioning Indiana’s 68% free-throw rate on 25 attempts, while the Thunder had 80.8% on 26 attempts. The Thunder also turned it over 10 more times than Indiana (21 to 11), with OKC conceding 19 points off mistakes to the Pacers’ 13.

With both teams vying for their first ever NBA championship, everything is on the line in the final game of the season.

Game 7 in Oklahoma City is set for Sunday at 8 p.m. ET, 5 p.m. PT.

In wake of Knicks' interest, Houston Rockets reportedly extend Ime Udoka's contract

As part of their coaching search, the New York Knicks contacted the Houston Rockets and requested permission to speak with Ime Udoka. Houston shot that idea down.

That sparked something with the Rockets, and while Udoka reportedly has two years remaining on his current deal, he has agreed to a contract extension with the team, a story broken by Shams Charania of ESPN and confirmed by other reports. This makes Udoka one of the highest-paid coaches in the league, Charania added.

Udoka, along with general manager Rafael Stone, helped build the defense-first culture of the Rockets, taking a team that won just 59 games across three seasons before he arrived and transforming them into one of the fastest-rising teams in the West. Last season, the Rockets went 52-30 and finished the two-seed in the West, making the playoffs for the first time in five years behind a young core of Alperen Sengun, Amen Thompson and Jalen Green. They were bounced in seven games in the first round of the playoffs by a more seasoned Golden State Warriors team. The Rockets thrived this season thanks to a pressuring top-five defense, but in the postseason, they needed another go-to scorer in the half court, which is why they have been linked to Kevin Durant (how interested the Rockets are in the 37-year-old next season Durant is up for debate).

Udoka was never leaving this team on the rise in Houston for New York, but it opened the door to an extension that locks him in as the Rockets' coach for the foreseeable future. It's a smart move by the Rockets.

Houston has locked up center Steven Adams with an extension and is expected to do the same with Fred VanVleet this summer. The Rockets will be in the midst of numerous trade rumors this summer, as they are seen as one piece away from true title contention. The Rockets also love and trust their young core, they are not going to blow it up. That's going to make for one interesting summer in Houston.

Ace Bailey cancels pre-draft workout with 76ers. Teams are talking, could he slide down draft boards?

The news on Wednesday that Airious "Ace" Bailey, cancelled his workout with the Philadelphia 76ers has brought an issue simmering on the back burner to the front burner and a full boil:

Bailey's predraft choices — not working out for any team, seemingly not having any agency in his predraft process being run by his agent, Omar Cooper, and some rather bold/outlandish quotes — have made several teams at the top of the draft hesitate, league sources told NBC Sports. Enough that he is seen by many as sliding down draft boards. Check out what Jonathan Givony and Shams Charania of ESPN wrote in their story breaking the news about Bailey's 76ers cancellation.

Bailey's predraft strategy has perplexed NBA teams over the past month, as he is currently the only U.S.-based prospect yet to visit any clubs. He has declined invitations from multiple teams in his draft range, which is considered to be anywhere from No. 3 to No. 8...

Sources say Bailey's camp has informed interested teams that it believes he is a top-three player in the draft, but also seeks a clear path to stardom, hoping to find a situation with ample minutes and usage to maximize his full potential.

Long-time basketball insider Jeff Goodman of Field of 68 threw Cooper's name into the fire after the 76ers' cancellation, echoing what many people in the basketball world have been saying quietly.

Bailey is brash. That's not a bad thing — Anthony Edwards was and is brash, but he also shows an understanding of the game and desire to learn that can bring some humility. Most importantly, Edwards backs it all up. Right now, Bailey's version of brash is just rubbing teams the wrong way.

On paper, Bailey checks all the boxes of a prototypical modern NBA wing: He's 6'8", a freak athlete, high motor, can create his own shot, can shoot the 3 (36.7% this season), and is a tough shot maker, averaging 18.4 points and 7.2 rebounds a game. The ceiling for Bailey has always been high, and moments at Rutgers last season showed that potential. However, he's polarizing because some scouts question how much of that potential he will live up to.

At one point, Bailey was considered almost a lock for the No. 3 pick (after Cooper Flagg and Dylan Harper), but now he is sliding down draft boards. For example, ESPN's plugged-in Givoney has Bailey going No. 6 to the Wizards.

The 76ers (assuming they keep the No. 3 pick, no sure thing) would ask Bailey to play a role in the guard rotation with Tyrese Maxey, along with stars Joel Embiid and Paul George, on a team with title aspirations next season. This report suggests Bailey is looking for a team that will turn over the keys to the offense to him next season. That's a much shorter list., but it also may not matter to teams who would just draft him anyway.

Charlotte, at No. 4, features LaMelo Ball running the offense, along with Brandon Miller on the wing. Would they rather have a shooter like Duke's Kon Knueppel? Utah at No. 5 is trying to build a style and culture in the mold of Oklahoma City and Indiana. Would they want to bring Baley into that, or pass? The Wizards at No. 6 or the Pelicans at No. 7 may be the kind of fit Bailey is looking for, but how strong is their interest in him? Brooklyn would be another team that would take him and give him the keys to the offense, if he falls that far.

Time will tell how Bailey's predraft decisions play out — if he plays well on the court next season, all this will be forgotten (and some GMs could be in trouble for passing on him). However, if he doesn't fulfil his potential, it's the GM who drafted him who could face trouble. That mix is what has teams high on the draft board having lengthy discussions about Bailey.

Who are the most expensive sports teams in history?

The Los Angeles Lakers' proposed $10billion (£7.45bn) sale to the TWG Global CEO Mark Walter would make them the most expensive sports team in the world.

Should the sale of the Lakers - who have been owned by the Buss family since 1979, be completed - it will be the most expensive takeover in sports history.

Forbes named Dallas Cowboys ahead of the Lakers' estimated sale value with a valuation of $10.1bn (£7.5bn). However, they were last sold in 1989 to owner Jerry Jones.

The previous record sale for a sports team is one of the Lakers' NBA rivals in the Boston Celtics, who were sold for $6.1bn (£4.5bn) in March this year.

Of the 10 highest-recorded sports team sales, nine of them are from American franchises across American football, basketball and baseball.

What about English football teams?

Chelsea celebrate winning the 2024-2025 Conference League trophy
Chelsea's sale in 2022 is among the most expensive ever recorded for a sports team [Getty Images]

Chelsea's sale to Clearlake Capital and Todd Boehly for $5.4bn (£4bn) is the fourth highest in sports history.

No other football team enters the top 10 in terms of highest recorded sports team sales.

Manchester United, with a valuation of $6.55bn (£4.9bn) are viewed as the most valuable English football team, ranking 14th in Forbes' list. Although they did trail neighbours Manchester City in Deloitte's Football Money League for 2025.

Liverpool (27th) and Manchester City (32nd) also feature in Forbes' most valuable sports teams list.

Top 10 highest sports team sales

  1. Los Angeles Lakers (Basketball) $10bn
  2. Boston Celtics (Basketball) $6.1bn
  3. Washington Commanders (American football) $6.05bn
  4. Chelsea (Football) $5.4bn
  5. Denver Broncos (American football) $4.65bn
  6. Phoenix Suns/Phoenix Mercury (Basketball) $4bn
  7. Dallas Mavericks (Basketball) $3.5bn
  8. Charlotte Hornets (Basketball) $3bn
  9. New York Mets (Baseball) $2.4bn
  10. Carolina Panthers (American football) $2.275bn

*Figures are based on highest sports team sales and at the Los Angeles Lakers' expected sale price

This article is the latest from BBC Sport's Ask Me Anything team.

What is Ask Me Anything?

Ask Me Anything is a service dedicated to answering your questions.

We want to reward your time by telling you things you do not know and reminding you of things you do.

The team will find out everything you need to know and be able to call upon a network of contacts including our experts and pundits.

We will be answering your questions from the heart of the BBC Sport newsroom, and going behind the scenes at some of the world's biggest sporting events.

Our coverage will span the BBC Sport website, app, social media and YouTube accounts, plus BBC TV and radio.

More questions answered...