Winners and Losers: Cavs at Bucks – James Harden helps steer the ship

MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - MARCH 17: James Harden #1 of the Cleveland Cavaliers dribbles the ball against the Milwaukee Bucks during the first quarter at Fiserv Forum on March 17, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. 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 Patrick McDermott/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers picked up a win on the road against the Milwaukee Bucks. Let’s go over today’s winners and losers.

LOSER – Perimeter Defense

I’m not sure how this gets better. Cleveland’s shown a general lack of interest in defending the perimeter this season. It’s probably due to a combination of poor effort and not having the right personnel. All I know is it’s something to be worried about.

The Cavaliers should be able to impose themselves over a team like the Bucks. No disrespect, but a 28-39 team that ranks 21st in offense and doesn’t have Giannis Antetokounmpo should be easy enough to bully. So when the Bucks started to look comfortable operating their offense, I started to get anxious.

Three-point variance is one thing. I believe the Cavs have lost a few games this season due to simple bad luck. It happens to everyone. But tonight was no such case. The Cavs didn’t contain the point of attack or recover to contest three-point shots. Not at a winning rate, at least.

The sample size is large enough to call this a legit trend. Not only do we have their last few games against the Dallas Mavericks and Orlando Magic as examples, but the Cavs are allowing opponents to shoot the third-best three-point percentage in the NBA against them.

That’s… startling.

LOSER – Donovan Mitchell

Mitchell has had a brilliant season. Perhaps the best he’s ever played. So please, do not interpret this section as slander. I’m not getting swept up in the moment. But Spida is having trouble spinning his web right now.

It’s not just his 4-14 shooting from tonight. Every star player is going to have games where shots don’t fall. The problem is his decision-making. Mitchell’s taken some unnecessary shots that would feel bold even if he was rolling. They look truly bad when he’s struggling, as he did in Milwaukee.

There’s value in recognizing when it’s not your night and instead shifting your attention to playmaking. Using yourself as a decoy to create for others. This is something we’ve seen him do in the past. He didn’t do it in this one.

Mitchell’s process has been questionable for a few games. He’s felt quick to call his own number and is possibly feeling some growing pains next to James Harden. The offense hasn’t felt as seamless as it did in their first weeks together. And, the defense has fallen off a cliff, as we highlighted above.

WINNER – Rapid Fire Round Up

I wouldn’t say that any individual player stole the show tonight. Not when it took this much effort to beat the Bucks. But I do think it’s worth highlighting the names who helped secure the win.

Evan Mobley finished with 27 points, 15 rebounds and 3 blocks. The easiest offense of the night came whenever the Cavs played through Mobley. He had a major advantage in the paint and made quick work whenever he drew a mismatch.

James Harden was also decisive on offense. He came out aggressive, scoring in bunches to start the game and carrying Cleveland’s backcourt with his playmaking. The Cavs don’t get over the hump without Harden keeping them alive throughout.

Finally, Sam Merrill, Max Strus, and Keon Ellis hit key shots. Merrill ended the game with 17 points while Ellis hit two big threes in the fourth quarter. Meanwhile, Strus, in just his second game of the season, helped Cleveland close the door on this one. It says a lot about how much Kenny Atkinson trusts Strus to lean on him — and he delivered.

Josh Hart's big night in Knicks win over Pacers '100 percent fueled by Mike & Ike'

With Jalen Brunson missing his first game in two months due to a neck issue Tuesday night, the Knicks knew they’d need someone to step up and carry their offense.

Fittingly, on the Mike and Ike sponsored t-shirt giveaway night at MSG, it was Josh Hart who delivered. 

“He must’ve ate some pregame,” Mike Brown joked. 

Whatever Hart did, it certainly worked, as he put together one of the most efficient scoring performances of his Knicks career in a commanding win over the Pacers

He had nine points in the first quarter, then added 10 more in the second to go into the halftime break with a game-high 19 points on a perfect 4-for-4 from three-point land. 

Hart wasted no time drilling his fifth three on the opening possession of the third.

His heroics only continued from there, as he knocked down bucket after bucket to stretch his total out over the 30-point mark for the first time this season. 

With the game out of reach, he wouldn’t record a bucket in the fourth, but still finished with a game-leading and new Knicks career-high 33 points. 

He missed just one of his 13 field goals and was a perfect 5-for-5 from behind the arc. 

“Mike and Ike night, I knew I had to turn up a little bit,” Hart said postgame. 

“It was fun just being aggressive,” he continued. “Today my PD guy was just telling me to be aggressive, so I just went out there and just played my game and was shooting my shots and I was comfortable with it.”

That aggressiveness is exactly what Brown wants to see from Hart moving forward.

“I just like the fact that he took the right shots, he didn’t hesitate,” the head coach said. “He was 5-for-5 from the three-point line and at least four of them were from the corner, and he’s been really, really good from the corner all year -- if he’s open, we don’t want him to hesitate.

“Usually, when he does hesitate, he takes a couple of dribbles to the basket and it messes up his rhythm and stuff like that. He puts in the work, so for him to let it fly like he did tonight and more of them going in, I was more excited about that than anything else.”

Game Recap: Phoenix lets another one slip as Minnesota pulls away, 116-104

MINNEAPOLIS, MN - MARCH 17: Jalen Green #4 of the Phoenix Suns drives to the basket during the game against the Minnesota Timberwolves on March 17, 2026 at Target Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by David Sherman/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Suns’ game against the Minnesota Timberwolves on Tuesday night carried real weight. This was one of those opportunities you circle, one where you can make up ground and shift the standings in your favor as you try to climb out of the Play-In.

And they let it slip.

Phoenix walked out of Minnesota with a 116-104 loss, and the story felt familiar. The Timberwolves brought physicality, defensive intensity, and rim protection, and it took the Suns out of what they wanted to do. For the third straight game, a quality defense made second-half adjustments that completely disrupted Phoenix’s offense. Once that happened, everything unraveled. The offense stalled, and the response on the other end did not hold. The paint opened, possessions became easier for Minnesota, and it turned into a layup line. That has been the pattern during this stretch. When the offense goes quiet, the defense does not stabilize things. The Suns scored just 18 points in the 4th.

Phoenix shot 38% from the field, and the inefficiency showed up everywhere.

Jordan Goodwin went 1-of-6. Collin Gillespie finished 4-of-13. And Jalen Green, whose last name happens to align with St. Patrick’s Day, had an ironic night, going 3-of-17 and scoring only nine points.

Now the Suns find themselves three games out of the sixth seed with 13 to go, and the margin for error continues to shrink.

Game Flow

First Half

Minnesota came out with a clear intention. Attack the interior, lean into their size, make Phoenix feel it early. No surprise there. But to the Suns’ credit, they had a counter ready. They went five out with Oso Ighodaro pulling Rudy Gobert away from the paint, and that changed the geometry of the floor immediately. The lane opened. The spacing felt clean. Suddenly, those driving angles were there, and Phoenix took advantage.

Phoenix opened the game 7-of-11 from the field, and every single make came with an assist attached to it. The ball was moving. The offense was breathing, and Collin Gillespie was at the center of it. Four assists on those seven made field goals, orchestrating, reading, making the right decision. He kept things connected, which is when this offense looks its best.

The first round of rotations brought a familiar name back into the mix. Ryan Dunn checked in, which stood out considering the past few games had leaned toward Rasheer Fleming or Haywood Highsmith in those minutes. This time, Jordan Ott gave the sophomore a longer look. Khaman Maluach was part of that initial rotation as well.

Devin Booker set the tone early in a way that felt both encouraging and familiar. He had a pair of and-1 opportunities, leaning into Minnesota’s physicality and turning it into an advantage. There was a stretch where he scored 9 consecutive points. It echoed what we saw in Boston, where he carried the load and kept Phoenix steady when things could have tilted.

Minnesota stayed within reach through effort plays. Long rebounds bounced their way, and they capitalized. Five offensive rebounds early turned into 11 second-chance points, which kept them afloat while Phoenix controlled much of the flow.

While last night it was Derrick White and Payton Pritchard catching fire from beyond the arc, this time it was Bones Hyland for Minnesota. He checked in midway through the quarter and immediately got going, finishing 4-of-5 from the field and 3-of-4 from deep for a quick 11 points.

Despite Phoenix scoring 39 points in the first quarter and shooting 46.2% from three, they only led by three at the end of the frame. Devin Booker led all scorers with 12 points on 4-of-6 shooting, and Collin Gillespie added six assists as the Suns took a 39–36 lead into the second.

With Devin Booker on the bench to start the second, it was Jalen Green running the offense, and he was doing a good job. He hit a step-back three and delivered a smooth assist to Rasheer Fleming in the lane. But there is a reason we call him “Guacamole”. Because sometimes is browns fast, and it did for Green in the second. He went 1-of-8 in the quarter, including a missed wide-open layup at the end of the quarter.

With 9:24 left in the quarter, Naz Reid went down on a play where Jordan Goodwin grabbed a couple of offensive rebounds. Reid came down on Goodwin’s ankle and tweaked it. The Suns challenged the play, and for the 48th time this season, they were right as Goodwin was fouled. Insult to injury for Minnesota, although Reid would return in the third.

Rasheer Fleming continued to look good early, starting 3-of-5 from the field and 2-of-4 from beyond the arc, with one of those attempts being a grenade passed to him with under a second on the shot clock.

As the second quarter went on, both teams traded blows. Five minutes in, the Suns were being outscored 15–14 by the Timberwolves. The Suns’ offense started to sputter, going 3-of-12 from the field, but it came at a time when Minnesota cooled off as well. Still, with 2:23 left in the second quarter, the 11-point lead Phoenix built early was gone as the Timberwolves tied the game.

The Suns shot 35.7% from the field in the quarter, and Jalen Green struggled, going 3-of-14 in the first half with eight points and four assists. Oso Ighodaro led the way efficiently with 14 points on 7-of-9 shooting to go along with five rebounds, while Devin Booker added 14 points on 5-of-11 shooting.

Minnesota had three players in double figures, led by Bones Hyland with 15 off the bench, Julius Randle with 13, and Jaden McDaniels with 12. Entering halftime, the Suns trailed 64–63.

Second Half

Collin Gillespie has struggled offensively of late, and he had zero points in the first half. But he opened the second half with a pair of three-point makes. It was clear the Suns made a point to get him involved, as he had four of their first six shot attempts.

The Suns’ offense started to go cold again, as they put together another scoreless stretch. They missed eight consecutive shots midway through the third, and turnovers began to pile up. Credit Minnesota’s defense; they were dictating the pace and disrupting everything Phoenix tried to run. Despite all of that, with six minutes left in the quarter, the Suns only trailed by two.

Devin Booker was clearly frustrated with the physicality, which is not surprising against a team like Minnesota. They lean into that style and make you feel it on every possession. On one end, Booker thought he deserved an and one after getting bumped on a drive and finish at the rim. On the other, Bones Hyland attacked and got a foul call on a very similar play. Jordan Ott challenged it and lost, but the moment stood out.

The physicality was ramping up on both sides, and you could feel the temperature rising. Players were chirping, reactions were getting sharper, and the officials were right in the middle of it as the game started to take on that edge.

Ryan Dunn, who had logged consecutive DNPs, played quality minutes in the third. He had seven points and four rebounds in the quarter, along with an impressive block on Bones Hyland. For someone who has not seen the floor much lately, his number was called, and he delivered.

Devin Booker once again carried a heavy load, especially with Jalen Green struggling to find offense. Booker scored or assisted on 15 consecutive points in the third, keeping Phoenix afloat. Late in the quarter, with under 30 seconds left, he tried the Chris Paul slow roll move, letting the ball drift up the floor. Minnesota jumped it, forced the turnover, and Booker followed it with a frustration foul on Julius Randle.

The next possession? Booker turned it over again, which led to a fast break layup for Minnesota.

So despite a solid individual quarter, where Booker had 12 points on 4-of-11 shooting, the team struggled as a whole. Phoenix shot 7-of-21 from the field, good for 33%, while Minnesota stayed hot at 10-of-23.

Heading into the fourth quarter, the Suns trailed 92–86.

This was starting to feel like one of those games where every Suns possession required real work to even get a shot up, while on the other end, it was a turnstile in the paint for Minnesota. Soon, the Suns were down 10.

The slide continued. Phoenix opened the quarter 0-of-5, while the Timberwolves came out 3-of-3, added and ones, and jumped out to a 7–0 run to start the fourth.

Once again, it was the paint where the opposition set up camp, started a fire, and got comfortable.

Minnesota opened the quarter 6-of-6 from the field, and every make came at the rim. They did not miss their first shot until the 6:32 mark, living in the paint and dictating everything on that end of the floor. Phoenix put together a 9–2 run late in the quarter, getting the deficit to within nine with 1:32 left in the game. But alas, it was too much to overcome.

Up Next

Phoenix gets one night of rest as they pack their bag and head to the final stop on their six-game road trip. That stop? San Antonio, Texas.

Cavs beat Bucks 123-116 behind Evan Mobley’s double-double

MILWAUKEE, WI - MARCH 17: Evan Mobley #4 of the Cleveland Cavaliers dunks the ball during the game against the Milwaukee Bucks on March 17, 2026 at Fiserv Forum Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Gary Dineen/NBAE via Getty Images). | NBAE via Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers beat the Milwaukee Bucks. Evan Mobley and James Harden tied to lead all scorers with 27 points. Mobley also contributed 15 rebounds and 3 blocks.

Milwaukee was without Giannis Antetokounmpo in this game. The Cavaliers saw the return of Sam Merrill and Jaylon Tyson, though Jarrett Allen and Craig Porter Jr. are still on the sidelines. Max Strus, who made his season debut on Sunday, played another 23 minutes tonight.

Cleveland opened the game strong, with big performances from James Harden and Evan Mobley in the opening quarter. Harden scored 14 points in the opening frame while Mobley immediately established himself as a mismatch punisher. This dual threat was firing on all cylinders and made you think this would be a quick game.

Sadly, the Cavs’ defense once again let them down.

Poor closeouts led to a three-point barrage from Milwaukee. The Bucks cut into Cleveland’s lead before they had any chance to truly build a cushion. In no time, the Cavs found themselves trailing going into halftime after allowing the Bucks to hit eight threes in the second quarter.

Defense has been a concern all season. The Cavaliers are struggling to dictate the terms of engagement, succumbing to the will of their opponent on most nights. Opposing teams have been launching three-pointers at far too high a rate. This is something that will need to be resolved before the playoffs begin.

The Cavs did just enough to squeak this one out in the fourth quarter. They can thank Sam Merrill, Keon Ellis and Strus for each hitting big shots down the stretch to keep them in front.

Tonight’s win gives the Cavs a 42-27 record. They have 13 games left before the postseason begins. The most important thing right now is getting healthy. But it would make us all feel better if they took some meaningful steps forward defensively along the way.

LaMelo Ball has 30 points and 13 assists as Hornets beat short-handed Heat 136-106

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — LaMelo Ball had 30 points and 13 assists, and the Charlotte Hornets pulled away in a huge fourth quarter to beat the short-handed Miami Heat 136-106 on Tuesday night.

Coby White scored 24 points off the bench and rookie Kon Knueppel added 22 as Charlotte (35-34) won for the ninth time in 12 games. Brandon Miller scored 16 for the Hornets, who are 10th in the Eastern Conference.

Tyler Herro had 20 points and eight rebounds to lead the Heat (38-31), who dropped their second straight following a season-best seven-game winning streak. They played without star forward Bam Adebayo, who sat out with right calf tightness after being listed as questionable before the game.

Adebayo hadn't missed a game since Dec. 27. He scored 83 points last Tuesday in a 150-129 win over Washington, second-most in NBA history behind Wilt Chamberlain's 100-point game in 1962.

Andrew Wiggins missed his sixth consecutive game with a toe injury, and Miami forward Nikola Jovic (back) did not play for the 12th game in a row. He was listed as probable before the game and was expected to return.

Miami remained seventh in the East, a half-game behind Orlando.

Miles Bridges had 14 points and 10 rebounds for the Hornets, back home from a 2-2 trip against Western Conference teams. After leading 96-88 through three quarters, they outscored Miami 40-18 in the fourth.

Moussa Diabate grabbed 13 boards to go with eight points and four assists.

Ball, who also had six rebounds, reached 6,000 career points on a basket in the third quarter. He also scored 30 points last Wednesday in a 117-109 victory at Sacramento.

Norman Powell scored 17 points for Miami, which had won five consecutive meetings with the Hornets.

Up next

Heat: Host the Los Angeles Lakers on Thursday night.

Hornets: Host the Orlando Magic on Thursday night.

___

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

Timberwolves 116, Suns 104: Life Without Ant

MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - MARCH 17: Bones Hyland #8 of the Minnesota Timberwolves celebrates his three-point basket against the Phoenix Suns in the first quarter at Target Center on March 17, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by David Berding/Getty Images) | Getty Images

They made you sweat a little bit for it, didn’t they?

The Phoenix Suns came into Target Center on the tail end of a back-to-back, playing in Boston and losing to the Celtics the night before. Making things more intriguing was was the Minnesota Timberwolves relation in the standings to Phoenix. Separated by just two games, a loss would creep the Wolves closer to play-in territory in the middle of a rocky stretch.

Even with Anthony Edwards out for the Wolves, his squad was still 3.5 point favorites.

One of the most durable players in the league, Edwards’ timetable was revealed Tuesday afternoon as a re-evaluation in 1-2 weeks. Without their heartbeat, a source of energy and production was going to need to reveal itself. Early on in the game, that source was non-existent.

Blitzing pick and rolls lazily and leaving the rolling big wide open, oftentimes reserve big Oso Ighodaro. Ighodaro is averging jsut under 5 points per game this season. He started out the game 5-6 from the field and paired it with 10 points. He wasn’t doing anything outside of the norm; simply setting screens and rolling hard.

More to Ighodaro’s big start was a Wolves team that seemed lost without their best player, standing in a circle pointing at each other in trying to figure out who would inevitably set the tone.

Answer? Bones Hyland.

Not only did Hyland get his jumper working early, he also did his part in instilling pace into the Wolves offense, making in synonymous with rhythm and allowing the Wolves to ease into the game offensively. Though the Suns held a near double-digit lead for much of the first half, the home team was able to pull it back down and strolled into halftime with a one point lead.

Notable adjustments were made on the hard roller Phoenix was sending to the basket. Rudy Gobert stayed down in coverage defensively, and it forced the Suns, specifically Jalen Green, to hoist shots. Green finished the game 3-17 from the field.

Pair an increase in defensive involvement from Minnesota with a Julius Randle second half surge and the drag race down the floor that Hyland and Ayo Dosunmu created, it was a night that came up aces for the Wolves after a less than ideal start.


MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA – MARCH 17: Julius Randle #30 of the Minnesota Timberwolves celebrates his dunk against the Phoenix Suns in the fourth quarter at Target Center on March 17, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The Timberwolves defeated the Suns 116-104. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by David Berding/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Goosebumps Once Again

Anthony Edwards and Julius Randle had been going through another awkward stretch on the court.

Over their last six games together, they carry a -4.0 net rating. Uncharacteristic yes, but the product on the court was much worse than what the net rating simply gives you.

Prone to falling into your-turn, my-turn offense where one starts taking shots when they feel like the other isn’t passing as much, therefore taking flow out of the offense, was starting to rear its head.

It’s never ideal when your best player goes down and needs to miss time, but in this situation, it might be beneficial for Randle to take the reigns in order to get his confidence back for Edwards’ return and a playoff push. Heading into the Oklahoma City game, Randle had hit on just 27 percent of this threes since the new year. Over the last two games now, Randle is shooting 62 percent.

But according to Head Coach Chris Finch, it’s not the shot in which he’s seen the biggest sign of improvement for Randle over the last couple games.

“His decisiveness,” he said. “The ball is finding him earlier in the offense, and I think he’s also trusting the next play a little more too.”

Randle said after the game that not much changes with Edwards not in the lineup. It’s hard to imagine that being the case. Randle has played extremely free over the last two games, and a tough third quarter from Edwards in Oklahoma City took rhythm out of the offense when he had the hot hand.

“Regardless, I gotta be aggressive,” he said.

I don’t want to sound like this is at all a slight on Ant. But sometimes, when that production gets taken out of the lineup in a group of talented players, it can force new solutions to arise, and perhaps that production can be replaced in the aggregate by good ball movement and free flowing offense that Edwards can work to ingrate into upon his return.

Randle finished the night with 32 points, marking the first time this season he’s finished with back to back 30 point games.


MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA – MARCH 17: Jaden McDaniels #3 of the Minnesota Timberwolves goes to the basket against Royce O'Neale #00 of the Phoenix Suns in the fourth quarter at Target Center on March 17, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The Timberwolves defeated the Suns 116-104. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by David Berding/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Emptying the Notebook

1). Jaden McDaniels activity on offense while Edwards is out is a non-negotiable. He was an efficient 6-12 from the field for 16 points, but I would have loved to see him a little more active. Granted, he had his hands full guarding Devin Booker (to which he got called for a couple really tough fouls), but this stretch of games is one where i’d like to see Jaden start demanding the ball. The ball being in his hands is one of the best forms of offense this team can put together.

2). This game showed the problem the NBA has on its hands from a game flow standpoint. It was after 9:00 (CST) and the game still had time left in the third quarter. Due to flagrant reviews, coach challenges, and regular timeouts, there were several times in which eye-rolling pauses were taken to make everything was set up perfectly on the floor. Look, I appreciate the effort that the NBA has put in in making sure the determinations on the floor are correct. However, it’s getting to a point where it’s taking pace out of the game, which is one of the best parts about the game itself. I hope there are tweaks that can be made in the next couple offseasons (think the Sky Judge the NFL has, or a shot clock getting put on how long a game stoppage takes for a challenge. Just a couple thoughts.


Up Next

The Wolves will bring in an easier challenge for a back-to-back on Wednesday night against the tanking Utah Jazz. The Jazz will be without Lauri Markkanen, and are literally trying to lose. It would be very hard to blow that one, let alone at home.

Tipoff at Target Center will be at 7:00 PM CST.


Highlights

Cade Cunningham injury update: Pistons star exits with back spasms

Detroit Pistons guard Cade Cunningham left the March 17 game against the Washington Wizards after just 5 minutes due to back spasms.

Cunningham was seemingly hurt while playing defense on Wizards guard Tre Johnson early in the first quarter.

Johnson lost the ball and Cunningham went to dive for the loose ball. Johnson went to regain his dribble and landed on top of Cunningham, who was descending to the hardwood.

Cunningham was slow to get off the floor but was eventually lifted up with the help of teammates Jalen Duren, Tobias Harris and Duncan Robinson.

NBA Exansion is here – What does it mean for the Utah Jazz roster?

LAS VEGAS, NV - JULY 9: Danny Ainge CEO of Basketball Operations for the Utah Jazz and Austin Ainge Director of Player Personnel for the Boston Celtics smile and look on during the 2022 NBA Summer League on July 9, 2022 at the Cox Pavilion in Las Vegas, Nevada. 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 2022 NBAE (Photo by David Dow/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

According to Shams Charania, the NBA will hold a Board of Governors meeting to vote on adding two expansion teams in Seattle and Las Vegas.

Shams mentions that “A growing number of owners are believed to support expansion because of the long-term revenue growth for the league from the Las Vegas and Seattle markets.” That revenue growth could be great but it’s not just that, NBA owners would also receive somewhere around $300M each as part of the expansion fee. I know I can be a little radical at times, but something tells me that’s part of the reason owners are booking their private jet as fast as they can to sign warming up to the idea.

Aside from Ryan Smith getting more money than one can count, how does this affect the Jazz? Well, it does give Smith some money to offset a Jazz cap situation that could get really expensive, really soon. That’s a possibily but that’s Smith’s choice. As far as the team itself, it likely means an expansion draft.

Tim Bontemps at ESPN did a great writeup on what an expansion draft would look like:

During the 2004 expansion that brought in the Charlotte Bobcats (now Hornets), existing NBA teams were allowed to protect up to eight players under contract for the next season from being selected.

Past expansion draft rules required that a team had to leave at least one player unprotected, even if the team had fewer than eight players under contract heading into the offseason. Those with options to become a free agent count toward that total, and, if selected, the player’s former team would receive a trade exception in the amount of that player’s 2028-29 salary.

Teams were also allowed to protect players who could become restricted free agents, but past expansion draft rules did not transfer RFA status to the expansion team. The drafting team would be at risk of losing a player for nothing. (However, the player would not be allowed to re-sign with his original team.)

In past expansion drafts, teams were allowed to select only one player from each existing NBA franchise.

There were no two-way players in 2004, so the league will need to determine if they can be protected in a future expansion draft. Every two-way player whose contract is up normally becomes a restricted free agent.

One thing to point out is that the NBA and NBPA would be operating under the current collective bargaining agreement, which runs through the 2029-30 season. There is a provision however that allows either side the option to terminate the CBA on June 30, 2029, if there is notice given on or before Oct. 15, 2028.

So, according to this, Utah would have to make at least one player under contract available for draft. If we use next season as an example (26-27) here is a list of players under contract (I’m assuming the Jazz will sign Walker Kessler, and they should keep their new draft pick):

Jaren Jackson Jr.

Lauri Markkanen

Keyonte George

Ace Bailey

Walker Kessler

New Draft Pick

John Konchar

Cody Williams

Brice Sensabaugh

Svi Mykhailiuk (Non-Guarantee)

Kyle Filipowski (Non-Guarantee)

Isaiah Collier

With this list of players, Utah would have to choose one player to make available to draft. My guess is that the Jazz will guarantee Filipowski and Svi, at the very least, to make sure they have a wide array of choices for who they make available. I wouldn’t be surprised if someone like Blake Hinson gets a contract just for this type of situation.

That said, it does bring up an interesting question: who would you be willing to give up from this list for the draft?

John Konchar

Cody Williams

Brice Sensabaugh

Svi Mykhailiuk

Kyle Filipowski

Isaiah Collier

This makes for an interesting wrinkle to upcoming offseasons when looking at different signings. I’m sure the Jazz are already thinking about this and will likely make signings to ensure they keep the players they want on the roster going forward. There may be a signing made for the sole purpose of being made available for drafting. For some teams, this may become a situation where maybe they hope a player gets picked. Maybe there’s a team with an albatross contract that they’d love to offload. Personally, I’m excited to see how this works out.

One thing to also consider is whether it makes things awkward if the Jazz make a player available, but he’s not drafted? I could see that being a difficult wrinkle as well. It may mean nothing, but it certainly will make that specific player more willing to move on in the future.

Josh Hart has big night to propel Jalen Brunson-less Knicks past Pacers

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows Josh Hart, who scored a game-high 33 points, reacts during the Knicks' 136-110 blowout win over Pacers on March 17, 2026 at the Garden, Image 2 shows OG Anunoby, who scored 26 points, goes up for a dunk during the Knicks' blowout win over the Pacers at the Garden, Image 3 shows Jose Alvarado, who scored 16 points, drives on Quenton Jackson during the Knicks' blowout win over Pacers at the Garden

The Knicks didn’t need Jalen Brunson. They had his podcast partner.

Josh Hart dropped 33 points — his most since joining the team three years ago — as the Brunson-less Knicks went on a scoring binge Tuesday to beat the Pacers 136-110 at the Garden.

Hart, who played just 26 minutes and sat the entire fourth quarter because it was a blowout, was nearly perfect while hitting all five of his 3s and shooting 12-for-13 overall.

Josh Hart, who scored a game-high 33 points, reacts during the Knicks’ 136-110 blowout win over Pacers on March 17, 2026 at the Garden. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

Hart fell 11 points shy of his career high of 44, set in 2022 with the Trail Blazers. His previous best with the Knicks was 31.

“I just like the fact he took the right shots,” coach Mike Brown said. “He didn’t hesitate. …

“Just tried to give him confidence, let it fly, let it fly. And live with the results.”

Tuesday’s resounding victory — a fourth straight win for the Knicks (45-25) — was their first game in over two months without Brunson, who sat with a neck strain. The All-Star watched in street clothes as the offense took off without him.



Jose Alvarado, making his first start with the franchise because of Brunson’s absence, rose to the occasion with 16 points and 10 assists. He entered the evening on a nine-game skid without hitting a 3-pointer, missing all 11 of his attempts during that stretch.

Then Alvarado hit three treys before halftime against the Pacers, finishing 4-for-7 from deep.

OG Anunoby, who scored 26 points, goes up for a dunk during the Knicks’ blowout win over the Pacers at the Garden. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

“It was a weight off my shoulders,” Alvarado said. “I wasn’t really focused on [my shooting slump], but obviously it was in the back of my mind, something that’s not who I am. I just trust the work.”

The Knicks scored 72 points in the first half, including 19 from Hart and 18 from OG Anunoby.

The lone inefficient shooter was again Mikal Bridges, whose night started inauspiciously — he twisted his ankle while badly missing a layup — and who had just four points at the break on 2-for-7 shooting.

Jose Alvarado, who scored 16 points, drives on Quenton Jackson during the Knicks’ blowout win over Pacers at the Garden. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

Bridges finished with 10 points on 4-for-12 shooting.

It continued a slump for Bridges, whose confidence has looked shaken since the All-Star break.

But that didn’t matter Tuesday. The rest of the Knicks caught fire.

“It was special,” said Karl-Anthony Towns, who had 22 points to go with 11 rebounds. “It’s a game obviously we’re missing JB. We all understood the importance of picking up the slack, and I thought all of us in this locker room, particularly Josh, did a great job of playing team basketball. It was great for all of us — obviously one person’s not gonna replace Jalen, but we all can collectively come together and try to play better basketball for each other with his absence.”

The Pacers (15-54) long ago committed to tanking and own the worst record in the league. They lost Tyrese Haliburton for the season, and their second-best player, Pascal Siakam, was out Tuesday because of a knee problem.

Still, Indiana has played harder against the Knicks this season, which is probably related to a rivalry built on consecutive head-to-head playoff series.

On Tuesday, the Pacers led by six early but were quickly overwhelmed by New York’s hot shooting.

Especially Hart’s. The turning point was a 15-2 run to end the half.

The Knicks never looked back.

Caufield’s 40th of season the winner as Canadiens top Bruins 3-2 in overtime

MONTREAL (AP) — Cole Caufield scored 4:38 into overtime as the Montreal Canadiens edged the Boston Bruins 3-2 in a rivalry matchup Tuesday night.

Caufield tapped a pass from Nick Suzuki into the back of the net for his 40th of the season, becoming the first Canadien to reach the mark since Vincent Damphousse in 1993-94.

Suzuki and Josh Anderson also scored while Jakub Dobes made 26 saves for Montreal, which snapped a two-game losing skid.

Brendan Gallagher picked up an assist in his 900th NHL game, all for Montreal.

Pavel Zacha had both goals for Boston, and Jeremy Swayman stopped 28 shots.

The Canadiens sat third in the Atlantic Division and one point ahead of the Bruins — with one game in hand — heading into Tuesday’s games.

Zacha opened the scoring on the power play 2:22 into the first period when he shoveled home a backhand after Alexandre Carrier’s double-minor for high-sticking put the Canadiens on a four-minute penalty kill.

Suzuki replied at 10:30, casually deking to his backhand following a net-front pass from Juraj Slafkovsky to beat Swayman and tie the game.

Five minutes into the second period, Zacha tipped Viktor Arvidsson’s pass for his second of the night after defensive-zone confusion between Montreal’s Lane Hutson and Oliver Kapanen left the Bruins center all alone in front of the net. Anderson evened the score again at 13:15 in the second with a deflection on Hutson’s point shot.

Bruins star winger David Pastrnak extended his point streak against Montreal to 14 games, tying Bobby Orr for the longest by a Bruins player against the Canadiens.

Up next

Bruins: Host Winnipeg on Thursday.

Canadiens: Visit Detroit on Thursday.

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

Knicks 136 , Pacers 110: Scenes from a scene that never gets old

Mar 17, 2026; New York, New York, USA; Indiana Pacers guard Quenton Jackson (29) shoots past New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) in the second quarter at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images | Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

The past two playoffs, the Knicks lost to the Pacers despite Jalen Brunson’s heroics. Tonight the Knicks beat beat them 136-110 despite Brunson’s absence due to ankle and cervical owies.

Interviewed after the final buzzer, Josh Hart said he was able to have a big scoring night because Brunson wasn’t around to hog the ball. When you become just the fourth Knickerbocker* to score 30+ points shooting 90% or better, you can say whatever you want. 33 points on 12-of-13 shooting for Hart. For you Knick numerologists out there, that’s a holy trinity of digits: Patrick Ewing, Dick Barnett and Malik Rose. Amen y amen.

Hart was joshing, but the Knicks let many hands make light work of the captain’s absence. Six Knicks scored in double-figures with five dishing four or more dimes. It all added up to a Pleasantville-like frictionlessness: 38 assists to nine turnovers. If this were a video game, you’d have raised the difficulty level a few. Not that Indiana didn’t make it a game for most of the night; the fifth law of thermodynamics states the Pacers will always be more of a problem for the Knicks than it seems they should. For Knicks fans of almost any age, any win over any Pacers team goes down smooth.

That’s four straight wins for your favorite team’s favorite team. Russell Richardson’s got your recap a-comin’. Cleveland’s in a dogfight late with the Giannis-less Bucks. Go Giannis-less Bucks!

*Hart joins Walt Bellamy, Willis Reed and Bernard King

Calum Ritchie has early power-play goal and assist as Islanders top Maple Leafs 3-1

TORONTO (AP) — Calum Ritchie had a goal and an assist on a pair of first-period power plays as the New York Islanders beat the Toronto Maple Leafs 3-1 on Tuesday night.

Brayden Schenn scored his first goal since being acquired from St. Louis ahead of the trade deadline, and Emil Heineman also scored for the Islanders, who have won nine of 12.

Ilya Sorokin made 24 saves for New York, and Mathew Barzal had three assists.

Steven Lorentz scored for Toronto. Joseph Woll stopped 31 shots.

The Leafs fell to 2-1-1 since losing captain Auston Matthews for the season to a knee injury — a run on the heels of an ugly 0-6-2 slide that all but cratered their playoff hopes.

New York's Matthew Schaefer picked up an assist to move within one point of becoming the fourth rookie defenseman in franchise history to reach 50 in a season. The 18-year-old is looking to join Stefan Persson (56 in 1977-78), Denis Potvin (54 in 1973-74) and Vladimir Malakhov (52 in 1992-93).

Schenn scored on the game's first power play at 4:15 of the first. Ritchie doubled New York's lead at 9:43, also with the man advantage.

Toronto entered Tuesday with the NHL’s third-best penalty kill at 83.5%. New York’s power play was 29th at 15.9%.

Up next

Islanders: Visit Ottawa on Thursday.

Maple Leafs: Host Carolina on Friday.

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

Grading the Mavericks: Dallas is going about its tank the right way

The Mavericks were 2-3 this past week and dropped to 13th place in the West. They lost by double-digits thrice, to Atlanta (124-112), Cleveland (138-105), and New Orleans (129-111), and beat Memphis (120-112) and Cleveland (130-120). Cooper Flagg led the team in scoring with 20 points per game. 

Grade: B

The Mavericks got clobbered in Dallas by the Cavaliers, but the other four games were valiant showings. They won two of them, including a huge bounce-back in Cleveland, and lost two in the late stages. With the loss to New Orleans, the Mavericks now own a share of the sixth-best odds for the number one pick (8.3 percent) and a 34.8 percent chance for a top-four selection. They are absolutely still trying, as much as a 23-win team can try, and the players have found ways to still get up for games as they did in Cleveland.

Daniel Gafford has looked great in the limited action that he has had. Despite playing just 52 minutes in two games, he tallied 36 points and 24 rebounds. Naji Marshall continues to defy modern basketball and had a near triple-double in New Orleans with 32 points, eight rebounds, and seven assists. Max Christie found his shot again and made almost 45 percent of the threes he took.

After playing eight-of-nine on the road, the Mavericks play three home games next week against the Hawks, Clippers, and Warriors.

Straight A’s: P.J. Washington

It only took three-or-so months, but Washington is playing good basketball like he was to begin the year. He has shot above 50 percent in two consecutive games for the first time since February 24, and just the second time since December 27. He made seven of his 12 threes in those games and was a big reason they beat the Cavaliers and got out to a hot start against the Pelicans. The better he plays, the better it is for Dallas going into the offseason. They need some confidence that he can be a piece if they decide to keep him, or evidence that he’s still a valuable asset if they decide a trade is necessary.

Currently Failing: The Unction

Tired legs win out this time of year, and that is certainly the case with the older players on the Mavericks. Klay Thompson played in just two of the five games this past week due to rest, and Khris Middleton shot 33 percent on his shots inside the arc. When Thompson last played, he shot 0-of-5 on threes in 16 minutes. Let’s hope the Mavericks have enough oxygen to get these two safely to April.

Extra Credit: Ethically Tanking

One of the main points of contention in NBA circles, and one that Adam Silver claims will be addressed this offseason, is tanking. What the Jazz have done this year, like resting starters for entire fourth quarters of close games, is egregious. Not new, but particularly egregious. And with Dallas only owning their pick this season before they lose control through 2030, there has been a running dialogue in Mavericks chats and forums about how they should be doing even more to lose. I vehemently disagree. 

What the Jazz, and other teams through the years, have done damages culture. Telling key players they cannot finish winnable games in hopes the team gets a better chance to draft their replacement doesn’t leave a good feeling throughout the organization. It is grimy and underhanded, and, like we saw not even a year ago, there is karma involved in these things.

Much more important than losing a few games for a percentage point is learning how to win and committing to a winning culture. The Mavericks already have their franchise cornerstone. If all of these guys were not a part of the future, then maybe I would have a different opinion. But Cooper Flagg will be here. Max Christie will be here. Naji Marshall and P.J. Washington will likely be here. The Mavericks are 4-16 in their last 20 games; they don’t need to do any more losing. The few and far between wins are what are keeping these guys from caving to any sort of losing habits. Winning is fun, and that is how it should be. If guys are healthy, they should play and play to win. If they do their part, the chips will fall exactly where they need to be.

Charlie Coyle's 4-point night leads the Blue Jackets to a 5-1 win over the Hurricanes

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Charlie Coyle had a goal and three assists, Danton Heinen scored his 100th career goal and the Columbus Blue Jackets beat the Carolina Hurricanes 5-1 on Tuesday night.

Mason Marchment, Denton Mateychuk and Mathieu Olivier also scored for Columbus, which has gotten points in a season-high 10-straight games (6-0-4). Cole Sillinger and Adam Fantilli each added two assist, and Jet Greaves stopped 27 shots.

Andrei Svechnikov scored and Brandon Bussi made 25 saves for the Hurricanes.

Marchment scored on a power play 5:25 into the first period, and the Blue Jackets have scored in the opening 10 minutes in 13 of their last 20 games. Coyle added another power-play goal in the final minute of the first.

Svechnikov scored his 25th goal of the season with 5:55 left in the second period before Heinen and Mateychuk scored 34 seconds apart.

Olivier capped the scoring 7:38 into the third period.

Up next

Hurricanes: Host Pittsburgh on Wednesday.

Blue Jackets: Host the New York Rangers on Thursday.

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

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Gilgeous-Alexander scores 40 in Thunder's 10th straight win, 113-108 over Magic

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 40 points and the Oklahoma City Thunder beat the Orlando Magic 113-108 Tuesday night for their 10th straight win.

Chet Holmgren added 20 points and 12 rebounds for the Thunder and Ajay Mitchell had 16 points, five of them during a mid-fourth quarter run that put the Thunder ahead to stay.

Paolo Banchero had 32 points, 10 rebounds and five assists for Orlando. Jalen Suggs added 14 points for the Magic, who lost on a second straight night after a seven-game win streak of their own.

Gilgeous-Alexander's record 129th game scoring 20 or more points was accomplished on 14 for 27 shooting and 9 of 11 free throws. He hit 3 of 5 3-point shots, the final one giving the Thunder a 102-96 lead with 3:11 remaining.

His streak of 20-plus point road games, also an NBA record, reached 61 games.

Holmgren scored on three dunks and a midrange jumper while Oklahoma City opened the second quarter on a 19-5 spurt to lead 45-27, the largest lead of the game.

Jevon Carter started Orlando's response with back-to-back 3-pointers, and Banchero opened the third quarter with a scoring burst to put the Magic up by seven points.

Gilgeous-Alexander was on the bench when Mitchell scored inside to lift the Thunder to a 91-90 lead with 8:05 left. He followed with a three-point play and Isaiah Joe added a 3-pointer.

Center Isaiah Hartenstein played his third straight scoreless game for the Thunder, finishing with seven rebounds and eight assists in 16 minutes.

Up next

Thunder: Play at Brooklyn on Wednesday night.

Magic: Play at Charlotte on Thursday night.

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