The Phoenix Suns started one of their two six-game road trips of the season with heartbreaking losses to the Miami Heat and the Detroit Pistons, but ended it strong with a 106-99 victory over the New York Knicks on Saturday. Devin Booker missed the team’s game against Detroit, but returned to score 27 points against New York.
Here are the main questions for Week 13 that we want your thoughts on:
Clutch Game Woes
Since all three of the Suns’ games this week were at one point within five points, all of their games were clutch games. Down the stretch with opportunities to beat the Pistons and Heat, Phoenix struggled to make shots and execute defensively. Against the Knicks, the Suns did a better job of weathering storms. When the Knicks cut the lead to five late, the Suns responded swiftly to secure the win. Both games in which the Suns struggled to execute late Devin Booker was either playing injured (he hurt his ankle in the second half against the Heat), or didn’t play.
Are you concerned about how the Suns played down the stretch this week, or was it a product of their best player’s health?
Jalen Green’s Return Looming
Listed as Questionable tonight against the Brooklyn Nets, Jalen Green could make his return from his hamstring injury after missing more than two months. It has been reported that Collin Gillespie will return to the bench when Green returns so the team’s starting lineup will consist of: Devin Booker, Jalen Green, Dillon Brooks, Royce O’Neale and Mark Williams.
How should Jordan Ott handle the starting lineup and bench rotations with a career 20-point-per-game scorer about to return? How should Ott handle his minutes? Would you play him on both sides of a back-to-back?
Enduring Shooting Struggles
Dillon Brooks had a rough shooting week, to say the least. He shot 32% from the field and 17% from three, including 1/10 from deep on Tuesday against the Heat. Despite struggles from its second-leading scorer, the team stayed competitive in all of its games, and Grayson Allen, Collin Gillespie, and others stepped up. When Devin Booker was struggling with his shot last month, his teammates stepped up to secure victories.
How have the Suns been able to withstand some of their best players struggling to make shots? Are you concerned about Brooks’ efficiency for the longterm?
For more questions on the Suns follow @HoldenSherman1 on X for content after every game.
Suns fall to hear 127-121 after rallying from double double-digits in the second half.
Devin Booker, Grayson Allen and Dillon Brooks all score at least 24 but it wasn't enough.
We've reached the midpoint of an NBA season that has been filled with surprises — Detroit and Boston lead the East, San Antonio is second in the West — and also far too many injuries to stars. It's also given us jaw-dropping moments, and not just the ones Victor Wembanyama seems to deliver us on a nightly basis.
The midpoint also means it's time to take stock of the NBA postseason awards. All week long, I will make my picks for some of the NBA's top awards at this point in the season, plus get betting angles from NBC Sports experts. Today: MVP.
NBA MVP: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander
2. Nikola Jokic 3. Luka Doncic 4. Jalen Brown 5. Giannis Antetokounmpo
Note: I have excluded from my list only players who have already missed more than 17 games and will not reach the league's (unnecessary) 65-game threshold to qualify for the award. While multiple players on this list ultimately may not qualify, we're not trying to predict the future here.
Analysis of MVP
This is Shai Gilgeous-Alexander's race to lose.
As it was a year ago, this was really a two-man race between SGA and Nikola Jokic, but Jokic's injury not only puts him behind now, it basically dooms his case as long as Gilgeous-Alexander stays healthy — at the end of the season, if Jokic has played 66 games and Gilgeous-Alexander 76, voters will factor that in.
Not to take anything away from SGA, who has more than earned a repeat MVP win, averaging 31.8 points, 6.2 assists and four rebounds a game, shooting 39.6% from 3 and being a quality defender on the other end of the court. He is again a team that is on pace for about the 68 wins it had a season ago. Gilgeous-Alexander may have won this award even if Jokic had been healthy.
The rest of this list will look different at the end of the season because there is a real chance Jokic (who has to return from his knee injury by Jan. 30, then not miss any more games) and Antetokounmpo (can only miss three more games this season) could well fall short of the league's 65-game cutoff. Also on the bubble of making the cutoff is Wembanyama, who can only miss three more games this season and was sixth on my list. This could open up spots for Donovan Mitchell and Tyrese Maxey, who were in serious consideration for the top five as well.
Doncic deserves his No. 3 seed because of the make-Mavs-fans-cry stats he is putting up, including leading the league at 33.3 points per game. He is the driving force of a top-10 offense, and the Lakers are top-six in the West because of him.
Jalen Brown has been the driving force in Boston and, by the end of the season, could be higher on this list, but he more than deserves his spot. Antetokounmpo has put up statistics this season that are in line with the top three here, but the struggles of the Bucks knock him down a peg.
Betting MVP Race
We reached out to the NBC Sports betting experts for their thoughts on the MVP race and how they might bet it.
Jay Coucher, NBC Sports Lead Betting Analyst
Barring a miraculous 65-game qualification by Nikola Jokic, this should essentially be a bet on Shai Gilgeous-Alexander staying healthy. The Thunder are pacing for 68 wins and Shai's stats - basic and advanced - are otherworldly as usual. Even if Jokic were to improbably squeak across the qualification threshold, Shai is still the likely favorite given games played matter in an award about "value", and Jokic will have missed a month of the season.
Welcome to Week in Review: a Monday feature that looks back at the week that was for the San Antonio Spurs, takes a look at the week ahead, and more. Enjoy!
Week 12: The hunt for the Spurs’ 2025 offense continued into the second week of 2026, with them splitting another set of games. Despite only hitting 4 threes, they got their most comfortable win since Christmas against a Lakers squad missing LeBron James and Austin Reeves, followed by upsetting a hot Celtics team in a defensive slugfest in their own building. However, sandwiched around those wins were one-point losses at Memphis and Minnesota, both of which featured the Spurs blowing double-digit leads and losing focus in the fourth quarter.
The joy that came from beating the Thunder three times in less than two weeks — with the climax of the Spurs’ hot December being embarrassing them on their own court on Christmas — was finally gone as they hit rock bottom of their 10-game slump ever since. After a tight first half, OKC returned the favor with a second half offensive thrashing that the Spurs had no answer for, with plenty of trash talk and taunting to let out all their pent up frustration from last month. This is officially a rivalry.
After going 4-6 across the last 1o games, the Spurs needed a confidence-boosting win, and they finally got one against a Bucks team that is dealing with its own turmoil and had nothing going beyond Giannis Antetokounmpo and a little spurt from Kyle Kuzma. Meanwhile, the Spurs achieved all three points needed to bust out of their slump: they hit their threes (16-37, 43%), the guards all had good games (De’Aaron Fox, Stephon Castle and Dylan Harper combined for 47 points and 19 assists in three quarters of work), and the Spurs took their opponent seriously, resulting in a blowout win that wasn’t nearly as close as the final score indicated, with the Spurs leading by as much as 39.
The Spurs got revenge against one of the teams who gave them trouble during their slump, but they had to sweat it out first. Similar to their two losses in Minnesota this season, the Spurs got out to a big lead early, leading by 25 at halftime, but took their foot off the gas in the second half. A 55-point outing from Anthony Edwards, including 26 points in fourth quarter, brought his team surging back to take the lead late, but fortunately for the Spurs, Victor Wembanyama was able to match him shot-for-shot in the clutch, and a big three from Keldon Johnson sealed the deal (but not without plenty of free throw drama to give everyone a heart attack first).
The Spurs suffered their first loss to the Thunder last week, but they remain comfortably in the top three in the West after surviving a wild game against fourth-place the Wolves on Saturday.
Three takeaways
1. The Spurs’ loss in Oklahoma City on Tuesday was the end of their worst five-game stretch of offense (103.4 points scored per 100 possessions) this season, with their trio of guards – De’Aaron Fox, Stephon Castle and Dylan Harper – combining to shoot just 34% over the five games. San Antonio ranks 26th offensively (111.0 scored per 100) since Christmas. 2. But the offense returned as they returned home to beat the Bucks and Wolves. The three guards scored more efficiently, Castle had 19 assists and just two turnovers over the two games, and Victor Wembanyama scored 39 points against Minnesota. Though he’s first in defensive rebounding percentage, he’s just 61st in offensive rebounding percentage (6.9%) among 289 players who’ve averaged at least 15 minutes per game. But he sealed the win by rebounding Julian Champagnie’s missed free throw in a crowd of Wolves with four seconds left. 3. With that win, the Spurs are 21-1 when they’ve scored at least 116 points per 100 possessions and 6-3 within the top five in the West, set to visit the fifth-place Rockets (1-0) twice in the next 10 days. They’ll be at a rest disadvantage for the first of those two visits (Tuesday).
Coming up: The Spurs are 9-1 against the eight teams that have lost at least 60% of their games, with the one loss having come (at home) to the Jazz. They’ll face Utah twice this week and also complete their season series with the Pelicans.
The Spurs are tied with the Denver Nuggets for the second-best record in the Western Conference*. What has made this Spurs team so unique throughout the season to this point is their ability to find production from a lot of other players outside of Victor Wembanyama and Stephon Castle.
Not to mention, San Antonio’s defense has been among the best in the league lately, only surrendering an average of 105.6 points per game over its last seven contests.
(*Note: the Nuggets lost to Charlotte last night, so the Spurs are now a half game ahead of them.)
Coming up: Mon. 1/19 vs. Utah Jazz (14-28); Tues. 1/20 at Houston Rockets (25-15); Thurs. 1/22 at Utah Jazz (14-28); Sun. 1/25 vs. New Orleans Pelicans
Prediction: 4-0 — I predicted a game too early for the Spurs to get out of their slump last week by choosing them to go undefeated, but I’m throwing caution to the wind and predicting the same this week. The Spurs will have zero excuses against two of the three worst teams in the West, and while Houston can sometimes be a house of horrors for them, the Rockets have struggled of late. Granted, this is the second game of a back-t0-back for the Spurs, but its an early tip-off today, and Houston is just a 45-min flight away. (I also just flat out hate the Rockets and want this win!)
Kevin Durant described Hall of Famer Dirk Nowitzki as "somebody I looked up to, I idolized," and then went out and, with a fourth-quarter free throw, moved past Mavericks legend into sixth on the NBA's all-time scoring list.
Durant finished the game with 31,562 points, two more than Nowitzki (31,560). Next up on the scoring list for KD is Michael Jordan at 32,292.
"To be up there with Dirk, somebody I looked up to, I idolized, I competed against," Durant said postgame, via the Associated Press. "We had some great battles. He always was supportive of my career and my game. So, you know to be up there with a legend like that, it's just insane. And be right under Michael Jordan, it's crazy, man. I want to continue to keep stacking, keep climbing up the charts, just see how I finish. It's been amazing so far."
Nowitzki had nothing but praise for Durant after the milestone.
Houston went on to beat the Pelicans 119-110 behind seven 3-pointers and 32 points from Jabari Smith Jr., plus 21 points and eight rebounds from Alperen Sengun.
Week 13 has come and gone, and fantasy managers can go confidently to the waiver wire to add some more quality options.
A young Utah player is lighting up the scoreboard, while a Bulls backup big man continues to show off his versatility. High-scoring guards are getting it done in Dallas and Golden State, while Indiana can officially say that it’s found a starting center.
Cleveland’s premier role player has filled in for numerous injured Cavs this season, and after dominating in Friday’s narrow win over Philadelphia, he’s got at least another week in the starting five.
Here are the top fantasy basketball waiver wire adds for Week 14.
Priority Adds
1. Jaylon Tyson
2. Jordan Miller
3. Jay Huff
4. Brice Sensabaugh
5. Jalen Smith
6. Naji Marshall
7. Brandon Williams
8. Sam Hauser
9. De’Anthony Melton
10. Sandro Mamukelashvili
Since joining the starting lineup, Marshall has posted 18.6 points, 4.7 rebounds, 4.3 assists, 1.7 steals and 1.0 triples across 30.9 minutes. In those seven games, he’s ranked 66 in per-game fantasy value, yet he’s widely available in Yahoo! leagues. Dallas continues to deal with injuries across the roster, and Marshall has taken full advantage of his new opportunities. With Anthony Davis on the shelf indefinitely, Marshall has the runway to be a useful fantasy option for the rest of the season.
Brice Sensabaugh, Utah Jazz (27 percent rostered)
Sensabaugh has been on a roll, averaging 25.6 points and 2.6 triples across his last five games while shooting efficiently from the field and from the charity stripe. Sensabaugh has scored 25+ in four of his last five, and three straight, including a monstrous 43 points on Wednesday against the Bulls. He won’t stay this hot all season, but Utah should be incentivized to get him more playing time, and Lauri Markkanen has a well-documented history of being unavailable.
Over the Bulls’ last four games, Smith has averaged 13 points, 10.5 rebounds, 2.3 assists, 0.8 steals, 1.0 blocks and 2.0 triples across 29.8 minutes. Chicago has deployed a double-big lineup in two of those, with Smith starting alongside Nikola Vucevic. Smith’s minutes will surely trend down once Josh Giddey is back in action, but he’s proven to be a capable backup big man who can deliver meaningful production off the bench.
Tyson is enjoying a breakout campaign, and his strong production was on display Friday night when he delivered a career-high 39 points against the Philadelphia 76ers. In the final seconds of a tied game, Tyson drove baseline and dished to Evan Mobley who converted the game-winning dunk. He’s a top-90 player on the season and a top-50 guy over the last week. Darius Garland (toe) is going to be re-evaluated in 7-10 days, which means Tyson should have at least four more starts on the horizon. It’s preposterous that he’s still available in 80% of Yahoo! leagues, and Tyson is this week’s top add off the wire.
Huff has provided top-100 value to fantasy managers over the last month, and he’s been a third-rounder over the last two weeks. Across his last seven games, the big man has turned 22.9 minutes into 13.9 points, 3.3 rebounds, 1.1 assists, 1.0 steals, 1.6 blocks and 2.0 triples. A guy who can hit triples and block shots while limiting turnovers and shooting efficiently will always have a place on fantasy rosters.
Across his last three games, B-Will has posted 20 points, 4.3 rebounds, 3.0 assists, 1.0 steals and 0.7 blocks. He’s been highly efficient from the field and mildly efficient from the charity stripe. He ranks inside the top 120 in per-game fantasy value over the last three weeks, and he should see plenty of run down the stretch for the injury-riddled Mavericks.
Sandro Mamukelashvili (11 percent rostered)
Collin Murray-Boyles has been the more productive backup center for Toronto in recent contests, but CMB left Sunday’s loss to the Lakers early with a thumb injury. Mamu stepped up and delivered a 20/6/2/1/1 line across 24 minutes. Toronto plays a back-to-back on Tuesday-Wednesday to kick off its upcoming road trip, and if Murray-Boyles and Jakob Poeltl (back) remain sidelined, Mamukelashvili could be in line for big minutes.
Hauser has started each of his last seven appearances for Boston, and he’s offered strong numbers to fantasy managers. Across his last four outings, Hauser has averaged 18.5 points, 5.5 rebounds, 2.3 assists and 5.0 triples. He went off for 30 points and 10 treys in Saturday’s win over the Hawks, becoming the first player in Celtics history to record at least 10 three-pointers in multiple games.
Sam Hauser was LETHAL from downtown in the @celtics' road win tonight!
30 PTS
10 3PM
It's his second career game with 10+ 3PM, making him the only player in Celtics history with multiple such performances! pic.twitter.com/cZOt2tWMHA
Jordan Miller, Los Angeles Clippers (9 percent rostered)
Miller ranks as a third-rounder over the last week, averaging 14.7 points, 4.3 rebounds, 4.3 assists, 2.0 steals and 1.7 triples across 35.7 minutes in his last three outings. Miller has seen increased run with Bogdan Bogdanovic and Derrick Jones Jr. sidelined, but Kawhi Leonard is also set to miss at least two more games after sitting out Friday against the Raptors. Though Kobe Sanders has started the Clippers’ last two games, Miller has been far more productive.
De’Anthony Melton, Golden State Warriors (8 percent rostered)
Melton still isn’t ready to play both games of back-to-back sets, so he’ll sit out Monday. Prior to Monday’s absence, he appeared in seven straight games with averages of 15.4 points, 2.9 rebounds, 1.6 assists, 0.9 steals, 0.6 blocks and 2.4 triples across 22 minutes. He’s a top-100 player in that span, and he’s become a regular part of Golden State’s rotation, making him a worthwhile waiver wire addition.
Other options:Jake LaRavia (20%), Ace Bailey (20%), Keldon Johnson (19%), Ryan Kalkbrenner (18%), Miles McBride (17%), Egor Dëmin (17%), Klay Thompson (16%)
See below for additional information on how to watch the Mavs v Knicks game and all of the NBA action on NBC and Peacock. Peacock will feature 100 regular-season games throughout the course of the 2025-2026 season.
The Mavs beat the Utah Jazz 138-120 on Saturday night, headlined by three 20-plus point scorers. Klay Thompson led the way for Dallas with a team-high 23 points, sinking six 3-pointers, all off the bench. Brandon Williams got the start and recorded 22 points, 4 rebounds, and 5 assists. Max Christie finished with 22 points.
Despite recent team injuries, Dallas has won its last two games, and are 3-2 in its last five contests.
Rookie forward Cooper Flagg, averaging 18.8 points, 6.3 rebounds, and 4.2 assists on the season, is questionable after missing the last two games with a left ankle sprain.
Dallas is 17-26, currently in 12th place in the Western Conference, only 2 games behind the 10th-placed Memphis Grizzles.
The Knicks lost to the Phoenix Suns 106-96 on Saturday night. Karl-Anthony Towns and Miles McBride each scored 23 points in the loss. Towns also finished with 11 rebounds.
Guard Jalen Brunson, ninth in the league in scoring (28.2 ppg), is questionable after missing the last two contests with a right ankle sprain.
New York has gone 2-8 in its last 10 games, and is currently on a three-game losing streak.
Tonight's game is the second meeting between the Mavs and Knicks this season. New York won the first contest back on November 19, 2025, 113-111.
Peacock NBA Monday will stream up to three Monday night games each week throughout the regular season. Coast 2 Coast Tuesday presents doubleheaders on Tuesday nights throughout the regular season on NBC and Peacock. On most Tuesdays, an 8 p.m. ET game will be on NBC stations in the Eastern and Central time zones, and an 8 p.m. PT game on NBC stations in the Pacific and often Mountain time zones.
Check local listings each week. Both games will stream live nationwide on Peacock. NBC Sports will launch Sunday Night Basketball across NBC and Peacock on Feb. 1, 2026. For a full schedule of the NBA on NBC and Peacock, click here.
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The scene in the home locker room was not an unusual one after the Sixers fell to Cleveland on Friday night, 117-115. Reporters milled about the center of the oval-shaped room. Attendants, dressed all in black, scurried here and there, cleaning up after the players.
Veteran guard Eric Gordon, who did not play for the 34th time in 40 games this season, dressed quickly and headed for the door. Jabari Walker and Kyle Lowry lingered at their lockers. Tyrese Maxey and Trendon Watford, long-time friends and next-door neighbors in this space, commiserated at theirs. And Jared McCain, the slumping sophomore guard (also a non-participant on this night, and soon to be assigned to the G-League), was still in uniform as he sat and stared at his phone.
At the far end of the room, next to the door leading to the areas that are off-limits to civilians, an illuminated message board listed the menu for the players’ postgame spread: Meatloaf (with sweet, tangy glaze, crispy onions) … Honey-glazed chicken … Blackened barramundi (and Cajun remoulade) … Collard Greens … Hoppin John’s (rice and black-eyed peas) …
Somehow home cooking has not agreed with the Sixers this season. Somehow they are 10-11 within Xfinity Mobile Arena (and 12-7 outside it), a troubling trend for a team that at the very least has playoff aspirations.
They are the only team in the league that is above .500 overall, and below it at home. Moreover, they have never in their history finished above the break-even mark while losing more than they’ve won in their own gym.
Strange, no?
When asked point-blank why they can’t win at home, veteran forward Kelly Oubre Jr. playfully recoiled.
“Oooh, that’s a hard-hitter right there,” he deadpanned, before saying that the Sixers are prone to “lapses where we’re up, the (opposing) team gets momentum, goes on runs and we get a little bit frantic.”
Certainly the team’s spate of ill health has played a part in its home struggles. Paul George and Joel Embiid have each missed nine games in Xfinity, while Oubre sat out 12 (and 19 overall) after suffering a knee injury in mid-November. Watford also had an extended absence.
Coach Nick Nurse was not eager to pin the problem on injuries, though he is hard-pressed to explain it otherwise.
“But I would say that the prep has been great here at home,” he said. “The guys have been great as far as their concentration, the way they’re approaching the practices in the morning, all those kinds of things.”
Still, they have dropped nine of their last 14 home games, including four of their last five, after going 5-2 to start the season. Nurse said he and his staff have mulled lineup changes, changes to the group opening the second half and strategic tweaks.
“Hopefully,” he said, “it will just be one of those funky things we can just turn around. We need to, because we’ve got a lot of games coming up at home.”
There are four this week — Monday against Indiana, Tuesday against Phoenix, Thursday against Houston and Saturday against New York. There are also home dates against Sacramento, Milwaukee and New Orleans the last week of the month.
Friday’s game, the Sixers’ second straight against the Cavaliers in South Philly, was a study in frustration. While the Sixers got off to a slow start in Wednesday’s 133-107 drubbing, they faltered down the stretch in this one, frittering away an 11-point fourth-quarter lead and ultimately losing on Evan Mobley’s dunk with 4.8 seconds left, off a feed from Jaylon Tyson.
Tyson, a second-year wing, was brilliant all game long, with a career-high 39 points, including seven three-pointers in nine attempts. As Oubre said, “He had a halo over him tonight. He was shooting to God’s net.”
Tyson rescued the Cavs on a night when their leading scorer, Donovan Mitchell, missed nine of 13 shots and settled for 13 points, nearly 17 beneath his average.
“We made someone else beat us, and (Tyson) did,” Maxey said.
There were other oddities on Cleveland’s side of the ledger. Philly native De’Andre Hunter, who seemingly can’t make a shot against anybody else this season, lit up his hometown team for the second straight game, scoring 16 off the bench. Another Cavs sub, Tyrese Proctor, came in shooting 29.5 percent from the arc, but nailed three of five triple tries while scoring 13.
Embiid poured in 33 points to top the Sixers. Maxey added 22 but shot 9-for-23 from the floor against Tyson’s sticky defense.
Then there was VJ Edgecombe, the prize rookie. Somehow he took only five shots, making four. Nurse acknowledged that Edgecombe could have been more aggressive, especially in the open court. At the same time the coach said it was “just one of those games where the ball didn’t find him much.”
Little things like that added up. Quentin Grimes missed a layup and Maxey came up empty on a corner three, either of which could have stanched the bleeding when Cleveland went on a game-tying 13-2 flurry midway through the final period.
The Sixers recovered and went up seven, but Tyson sandwiched his last two bombs around Hunter’s fast-break dunk over Embiid, leading to a hectic final two minutes. Cleveland ultimately won it when Tyson collected Lonzo Ball’s inbounds pass against a fronting George, drove the baseline from left to right and shoveled a pass to Mobley, who was left unattended when Embiid came with defensive help.
And just like that, the home fans were left disappointed. Again.
“They were just kind of in their own rhythm and their own flow,” Oubre said of the Cavs, “and we’ve got to disrupt that. We could be more disruptive throughout the game and be more physical and tough with our play – not being dirty, but just going out there and letting the other team know that we’re here to stand in front of you. We’re not going to let you get what you want.”
That’s correct in a larger sense, too. The Sixers need to make a stand on their own court, need to find a recipe for success. Otherwise the home cooking is going to continue to be unsatisfying, no matter how much tangy glaze or Cajun remoulade is added to it.
Is it to constantly pursue new goals, to push ourselves towards our best possible selves? Is it to contemplate the horrors of the indifferent universe in the face of mass human suffering? Is it to gain control over our feeble existence, or simply to delude ourselves into thinking we can ever control anything, let alone ourselves?
However sad, however existentially depressing or brutally nihilistic your answer is, I promise mine is worse. Because right now, the meaning of my life… is to figure out what the heck is going on with this Celtics season.
I’ve often used philosophy — particularly the existential variety — to explain important concepts in Celtics discourse. Existentialism, and its component branches, are (to me) the extension of human reason to try to explain things that resist understanding. Sports, while played by humans, is a lot like that, given that, despite mountains of “understanding” about it, we are for some reason still unable to predict the results of sporting events. Isn’t that crazy?
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA – DECEMBER 26: Head coach Joe Mazzulla of the Boston Celtics looks on against the Indiana Pacers at Gainbridge Fieldhouse on December 26, 2025 in Indianapolis, Indiana. 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 Justin Casterline/Getty Images)
So philosophy has been my outlet for Celtics thoughts that never had real-world applications, and the 2021-2025 arc was perfect for that. It was a four-year microcosm of life itself, complete with failures, triumphs, self-doubt, perseverance, intrigue, boredom, and then… conclusion. Glorious conclusion! No more hope, only recollection and blissful finality.
But right now… things have unconcluded themselves. Right now philosophy is FAILING me and I don’t know what to do guys. Please help me I’m scared and the darkness is closing in and I’ve stared so long into the void it’s now staring back at me.
It was over! Jrue Holiday and Kristaps Porzingis were gone. Jayson Tatum was out for the year. This was a gap year. I was moving on. I had astral-projected myself from this mortal coil and begun to see things big picture, biding my intellectual time until there was something concrete to dissect, something serious to discuss and get emotionally invested in.
But Jaylen Brown said no, Payton Pritchard and Derrick White said no. Lately, Anfernee Simons has been saying no. Hugo Gonzalez and Luka Garza have repeatedly been saying no. Neemias Queta won’t stop saying no!
BOSTON, MA – DECEMBER 22: Xavier Tillman #26 celebrates with Jaylen Brown #7 of the Boston Celtics during the game against the Indiana Pacers on December 22, 2025 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 2025 NBAE (Photo by Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images)
They all, in one voice that sounded a lot like Joe Mazzulla, said “no, you are REQUIRED to believe in us. You are required to hope that Jayson Tatum comes back this season because you are required to think we can win a championship THIS year.”
And faced with this ultimatum, I have officially blinked.
The Celtics are the two seed right now, and barring a truly unfathomable collapse, they will make the playoffs outright and avoid the Play-In. In point of fact, they might be in the EXACT SAME SITUATION THEY WERE IN LAST YEAR going into the playoffs: two seed, careening towards the Knicks in the second round. What?
I don’t think society is adequately discussing how ridiculous this is, so let me break down this blueprint for success very slowly for us:
Step 1: Lose your best player to an Achilles tear, get eliminated from the playoffs
Step 2: Use that as the excuse to gut your roster of expensive contracts, salary-dump two All-Stars
Step 3: Do not make any significant additions in Free Agency besides castoff journeymen, rely on unproven wings and bigs for massive rotational minutes
Step 4: Every single player on the team gets simultaneously better all at once, while the Eastern Conference gets simultaneously worse
Step 5: Profit
Existentialism is the extension of human reason onto the unknowable, but that is irrelevant when human reason dictates that the Celtics cannot possibly be succeeding at this level. But they are… and you can check this piece out if you want my efforts to explain why.
Because beyond the why are the implications of this whole shabang. Sports discourse is primarily driven by two things: groupthink and reactive takes. Most people in the regular person world will say what they hear other people around them saying, it’s a safe bet, and that is generally a reaction to explain why of course that happened I mean it’s so obvious for reasons x, y, z, and yada yada yada.
But find me who said x, y, or z OR yada yada yada before said thing happened! You cannot, because the people brave enough to actually try to predict the outcomes of things have to use flimsy things like logic and analytics and evidence-based argumentation rather than simply reacting to narratives and saying things will happen to sustain them.
That’s why this Celtics season is freaking me out. Because unless you said something like, “I think Jaylen will go up a level” (no prior evidence to suggest he would, his efficiency had been decreasing year over year) or “Pritchard can become a three-level scorer playing 30+ minutes” (he’d never been anything close to that) or “I think we’re primed for a Luka Garzassaince” (are you kidding me, bro?), then you should be as shocked as I am. But I don’t feel like people are sufficiently shocked.
It is possible that the meaning of sports — not unlike the meaning of life — is the perceived throughline between a collection of completely random events. Because if you stop and actually dissect the reasons for all the things happening, you’re probably going to find more questions than answers.
In short, this Celtics season has taught me the folly of sports prediction in general. If I call something exactly — like when I said we should trade for Jrue Holiday or when I unironically said the Bucks would trade Khris Middleton and a swap for Kyle Kuzma a month and a half before it happened — am I actually smart? If I’m demonstrably wrong about something — like I was with this entire Celtics season — am I actually dumb? Or is this just one big cumulus cloud of randomness swirling around and I just think it looks like a seahorse?
We can draw a line of best fit only after we have all the data, but we can’t possibly predict the data itself. Reactive takes in sports work because that’s just the best we can do. If every take was proactive, we’d have a bunch of losers like me claiming credit when I was right when I was really just lucky.
I use philosophy to talk about the Celtics, and other stuff, because I have a desire to understand the world. But these Celtics have taught me that sometimes it’s okay not to understand things, but to just embrace what’s going on anyhow. In the weirdest possible way, this is me officially embracing them.
The Miami Heat swap coasts when they travel to the Bay Area to battle the Golden State Warriors on Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
Miami is traveling light, with standout guard Tyler Herro skipping the trip due to a rib injury. All-Star forward Bam Adebayo has done his best to fill that gap, with my Heat vs. Warriors predictions focusing on his playmaking.
Here are my best NBA picks for this non-conference clash on Monday, January 19.
Heat vs Warriors prediction
Heat vs Warriors best bet: Bam Adebayo Over 2.5 assists (-150)
On top of scoring and hitting the boards, Adebayo has dished out a total of 17 assists the last four games.
While Miami expects to have Davion Mitchell in action, the offense will continue to run through Adebayo with Herro sidelined.
On the season, Bam is averaging 2.8 dimes on 4.6 potential assists. But in that four-game frame, his potential helpers have jumped to 5.5.
There’s been a spike in his playmaking over the past month, with Adebayo averaging 3.5 assists in his previous 11 games.
With Herro out, the Golden State Warriors’ defense can focus its attention on Adebayo and force the undersized center to move the ball and create for his teammates.
In his last matchup with the Dubs, Adebayo handed out three assists in another game with the limited Herro in action.
Player projections for tonight’s tilt in San Francisco range from 3.0 to 4.2 assists from Adebayo tonight, with my number at 3.5. That should have the Over 2.5 priced closer to -200 than its current ask of -150 at bet365.
Heat vs Warriors same-game parlay
The Warriors, 16-6 SU at home this season, are heating up and face a Miami team still missing its top offensive threat.
Adebayo has taken on a bigger playmaking role the past month, averaging 3.5 dimes over his last 11 outings. Bam is projected for as many as 4.5 assists.
Stephen Curry hasn’t been as active from outside the last four games, but his projections still call for five or more triples. Curry faces a Heat defense allowing 13.8 triples per game (10th most).
Heat vs Warriors SGP
Warriors moneyline
Bam Adebayo Over 2.5 assists
Stephen Curry Over 4.5 3-pointers
Our "from downtown" SGP: Big night for Wiggins
Andrew Wiggins scored 17 in this “revenge” matchup last time and is forecasted for 15+ tonight.
Heat vs Warriors SGP
Warriors moneyline
Bam Adebayo Over 2.5 assists
Stephen Curry Over 4.5 3-pointers
Andrew Wiggins Over 14.5 points
Heat vs Warriors odds
Spread: Heat +5.5 | Warriors -5.5
Moneyline: Heat +185 | Warriors -220
Over/Under: Over 238.5 | Under 238.5
Heat vs Warriors betting trend to know
The Warriors are 5-1 SU and ATS when hosting Eastern Conference foes this season. Find more NBA betting trends for Heat vs. Warriors.
How to watch Heat vs Warriors
Location
Chase Center, San Francisco, CA
Date
Monday, January 19, 2026
Tip-off
10:00 p.m. ET
TV
FDSN-Sun, NBCS-Bay Area
Heat vs Warriors latest injuries
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This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here
The Indiana Pacers are effectively a G-League roster right now. Without Tyrese Haliburton, their offense has dipped toward the bottom in the league, and they don’t have much interior defensive resistance.
The Philadelphia 76ers are coming off a tough loss and get a get-right game at home. When healthy, the Sixers are formidable, and they should have a full roster tonight.
Tyrese Maxey is playing at an MVP level, and rookie VJ Edgecombe is a defensive nightmare for Indiana’s guards, setting up a clear talent gap that should show for four quarters tonight.
Pacers vs 76ers same-game parlay
Edgecombe is on a tear, averaging 20.8 PPG over his last ten, clearing 16 in seven of those.
Meanwhile, Indiana’s league-worst offense won't provide the scoring push needed to hit the game total, and I expect a gritty, low-scoring affair.
Pacers vs 76ers SGP
76ers -8
VJ Edgecombe Over 14.5 points
Under 228.5
Our "from downtown" SGP: Huff and Puff
Jay Huff is a versatile scoring threat, averaging 12 PPG over his previous 10, and meets a middle-of-the-pack 76ers interior scoring defense, allowing more than 50 PPG in the paint.
Pacers vs 76ers SGP
76ers -8
VJ Edgecombe Over 14.5 points
Under 228.5
Jay Huff Over 10.5 points
Pacers vs 76ers odds
Spread: Pacers +8 (-110) | 76ers -8 (-110)
Moneyline: Pacers +260 | 76ers -320
Over/Under: Over 228.5 (-110) | Under 228.5 (-110)
Pacers vs 76ers betting trend to know
The Indiana Pacers have only hit the Game Total Over in 18 of their last 50 games (-17.20 Units / -31% ROI). Find more NBA betting trends for Pacers vs. 76ers.
How to watch Pacers vs 76ers
Location
Xfinity Mobile Arena, Philadelphia, PA
Date
Monday, January 19, 2026
Tip-off
7:00 p.m. ET
TV
FDSN-Indiana, NBCS-Philadelphia
Pacers vs 76ers latest injuries
Not intended for use in MA. Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.
This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Oklahoma City Thunder (4th)
Victory Wembanyama, San Antonio Spurs (2nd)
The All-Star starters are determined based on a combination of voting by fans (50% of the vote), current NBA players (25%) and a media panel (25%). The seven reserves for each conference will be selected by NBA head coaches, with that group to be unveiled at a later date.
Jokić and Antetokounmpo were the top scorers in the combined vote for each conference. The players who just missed the cut included Minnesota Timberwolves guard Anthony Edwards and Cleveland Cavaliers guard Donovan Mitchell. Here’s a look at the full results:
A look at the 2026 NBA All-Star starters voting results. (NBA)
This year’s All-Star Game will look a little different than past years, with a revamped U.S. vs. World format. There will be two U.S. teams and one World team competing in a round-robin tournament featuring four 12-minute games.
The 2026 NBA All-Star Game is set for Sunday, Feb. 15, airing on NBC and Peacock. All events from All-Star Weekend, including the Slam Dunk Contest and Three-Point Contest, will be on NBC for the first time since 2002.
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Oklahoma City Thunder (4th)
Victory Wembanyama, San Antonio Spurs (2nd)
The All-Star starters are determined based on a combination of voting by fans (50% of the vote), current NBA players (25%) and a media panel (25%). The seven reserves for each conference will be selected by NBA head coaches, with that group to be unveiled at a later date.
This year’s All-Star Game will look a little different than past years, with a revamped U.S. vs. World format. There will be two U.S. teams and one World team competing in a round-robin tournament featuring four 12-minute games.
The 2026 NBA All-Star Game is set for Sunday, Feb. 15, airing on NBC and Peacock. All events from All-Star Weekend, including the Slam Dunk Contest and Three-Point Contest, will be on NBC for the first time since 2002.
The Detroit Pistons have won two of three head-to-head matchups with the Boston Celtics this season, and they’ll look to add another win when the Top 2 seeds in the Eastern Conference face off at Little Caesars Arena tonight.
Both teams are playing excellent defense, and my Celtics vs Pistons predictions call for a low-scoring game in Detroit.
Here are my best free NBA picks for this heavyweight bout on Monday, January 19.
Celtics vs Pistons prediction
Celtics vs Pistons best bet: Under 224 (-110)
Over the last 10 games, the Detroit Pistons have surrendered the fewest points in the Association at 104.1, and the Boston Celtics have surrendered the fifth-fewest points at 109.
Detroit also has the best home defense, allowing just 106.7 ppg — fewer than the Oklahoma City Thunder at Paycom Center. That number has lowered to 97 points across its last six at Little Caesars Arena.
The Pistons rank 14th in pace, and the Celtics are dead last, making this matchup a methodical grind rather than a track meet.
Celtics vs Pistons same-game parlay
Defense has led the Pistons to a 13-3 record as home favorites. I'm more comfortable taking Detroit straight up than betting the spread.
Jalen Duren has averaged 12.2 rebounds per game at home compared to just 9.5 on the road. He's pulled down at least 11 boards in 17 of 33 contests, including 10 of 16 at home.
Celtics vs Pistons SGP
Under 224
Pistons moneyline
Jalen Duren Over 10.5 rebounds
Our "from downtown" SGP: Brown gets clamped
Jaylen Brown is averaging nearly 30 points per game this season, but he's recorded 31+ in just 16 of 38 games — including seven of 19 on the road.
Celtics vs Pistons SGP
Under 224
Pistons moneyline
Jalen Duren Over 10.5 rebounds
Jaylen Brown Under 30.5 points
Celtics vs Pistons odds
Spread: Celtics +3.5 | Pistons -3.5
Moneyline: Celtics +130 | Pistons -155
Over/Under: Over 224 | Under 224
Celtics vs Pistons betting trend to know
Boston has hit the Under in seven of its last 10, and Detroit has gone Under in nine straight. Find more NBA betting trends for Celtics vs. Pistons.
How to watch Celtics vs Pistons
Location
Little Caesars Arena, Detroit, MI
Date
Monday, January 19, 2026
Tip-off
8:00 p.m. ET
TV
NBC/Peacock
Celtics vs Pistons latest injuries
Not intended for use in MA. Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.
This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here
Happy Martin Luther King Jr Day, everybody. On a day when we remember a great man—and wonder if we’ll ever see another—a Knicks (25*-17) team that’s been less than great of late will try to leverage home-court advantage and snap a three-game losing streak.
Their opponent, the Dallas Mavericks (17-26), are flopping around near the bottom of the Western Conference barrel. After flipping Luka Dončić to the Lakers last February, Dallas defied the odds and won the draft lottery. Their number one pick, the phenom Cooper Flagg, is their new centerpiece. Pairing him with veterans Anthony Davis, Klay Thompson, and D’Angelo Russell has brought uneven results, however. Injuries, road struggles, and front-office turnover have undercut consistency. Even with Flagg making a strong case for Rookie of the Year, Dallas remains well outside the playoff picture.
When they met on November 19, the Knicks slipped by the Mavs 113-111 in Dallas. Jalen Brunson scored 28 points in his return from an ankle injury. Despite poor free-throw shooting (19-of-35) and early three-point struggles, New York sealed the win when Landry Shamet hit two late triples and drew a crucial charging foul in the final seconds. The Mavericks, missing Flagg due to illness, got 23 points each from bench players D’Angelo Russell and Naji Marshall, but couldn’t overcome their starters’ limited output in a game.
Coach Jason Kidd has the Mavs playing solid defense, but their offense ranks among the worst in the league. They are one of the NBA’s worst shooting teams from downtown, which means that they’ll sizzle beyond the arc against the Knicks. Dallas will be shorthanded, with multiple rotation players sidelined. Daniel Gafford (ankle), D’Angelo Russell (illness), and P.J. Washington (personal) are all out, while Anthony Davis remains out indefinitely with a finger thing. Flagg is listed as a game-time decision with a bum ankle.
Prediction
ESPN.com favors the Knicks by 76%. Yeah, we hope. They have stumbled through a rough January, culminating in Saturday’s morale-busting loss to Phoenix. Jalen Brunson’s ankle issue and Josh Hart’s nagging injuries (both are GTD’s with sore ankles) have compounded the team’s inconsistency, as have up-and-down performances by Karl-Anthony Towns and the other starters. A win today would bail a few buckets of water out of what has felt like a sinking ship. Let’s make it so. Knicks by eight.
Game Details
Date: Monday, January 19, 2026 Time: 5:00 PM ET Place: Madison Square Garden, Manhattan, NYC TV: NBC Follow: @ptknicksblog and bsky
* Should be one more, but the Cup final doesn’t count.