Warriors need to go all in on LeBron James, Anthony Davis — it’s the only way

The Warriors can’t waste another season for Steph Curry. 

They need to go all in on trying to acquire LeBron James, which means they need to get Anthony Davis

James reportedly would be much more interested in going to Golden State if they acquire Davis, whom he played alongside on the Lakers for 5 ½ seasons, winning a championship in 2020. 

LeBron James is considering several teams, but the Warriors might land him if they also add Anthony Davis. Getty Images

The Warriors need to make it happen. 

Free agency is flying past them, and they virtually have the same roster they had last season. Curry will turn 39 during the upcoming season. Their only chance to compete for another championship is adding James — and Davis — to their roster. 

Acquiring Davis would mean trading Jimmy Butler for salary-matching purposes. It would mean they’d have to give up multiple first-round picks and pick swaps. It would mean they’d dent their future. 

But it would also mean the sunset of Curry’s career wouldn’t be wasted.

Curry, who’s widely considered the greatest shooter of all time, is still a top-10 player. The Warriors need to give him a real chance to win his fifth ring. They need to take some risks. 

They kept the band together by re-signing longtime coach Steve Kerr. Now they have to give the band a chance to really sing. 

For the Warriors, acquiring the oft-injured Davis is widely considered foolish around the league. 

He’s 33 years old. He appeared in just 20 games last season for the Mavericks before being traded to the Wizards in February. His contract is worth $58 million this season and a nearly $63 million player option for 2027-28. In other words, it’s gigantic. 

But what other option do the Warriors have to vastly improve their roster and compete for a title?

As for giving up first-round picks, yes, that’s a tough pill to swallow. But it’s the only way they can complete this blockbuster deal. Not pulling the trigger means they’re going to tread water for another season. It means mediocrity.

Steph Curry is widely considered the greatest shooter of all time, is still a top-10 player. Getty Images

Other teams are taking big risks.

Look at what the Lakers paid for Walker Kessler: $130 million over four years AND two first-round picks and two swaps. Was that a great deal? No way. Was it worth it for them to give Luka Doncic his dream center and a shot at competing in the West? Clearly. 

As currently constructed, there’s no way the Warriors can get past the elite teams in the West. If they convinced James to come aboard and traded for Davis, they’d have a shot.

Even though James will turn 42 next season, he’s still capable of being the best player on the court on any given night. Last season, he averaged 20.9 points, 6.1 rebounds and 7.2 assists. He pretty much single-handedly carried the Lakers past the Rockets in the first round of the playoffs. 

James changes the Warriors’ ceiling. He’d bring so much business to The Bay. Imagine how much people would pay to watch James and Curry share the court? They’d be the hottest ticket in the league.

As for Davis, he’s vastly underrated here.

Let’s not forget that when Davis is healthy, he’s an absolute force on both ends of the court. He’s a 10-time All-Star, five-time All-Defensive Team selection and a three-time league leader in blocks. 

He arguably should’ve won a Defensive Player of the Year award as well.

Davis’ stock plummeted when the Lakers traded him to the Mavericks for Doncic in February 2025. Since then, he has been injury-riddled. He has been the butt of jokes. 

Next season, Davis is going to be out for revenge, especially if you put him alongside James, Curry and defensive wizard Draymond Green. If each of those guys believed they had a real shot to win, they’d each elevate their games. They’d be dangerous.

Davis would help boost the Warriors, especially if he reunites with LeBron James. Getty Images

The Warriors must go all in. 

And they must act fast. 

It’s clear the Warriors are falling out of the James sweepstakes. 

James’ agent, Rich Paul, is a mastermind at controlling narratives. In an episode of his “Game Over” podcast that aired Friday, he showed a whiteboard that listed the 10 teams that could land James in free agency.

The Warriors were tucked into the top left corner of the board as though they were an afterthought, while the 76ers, Heat, Timberwolves, Nuggets and Cavaliers were featured front and center. 

When asked if the Warriors’ placement on the board meant something, Paul balked. 

“You can think whatever you think,” Paul said. “This is my board. You decide what you want to think.” 

It was cryptic. It was confusing. 

But above all else, it was a warning. 

If the Warriors want to compete, they need to take a big risk. 

They need to get Davis so they can get James.


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Maliq Brown Snuffs One!

SAN FRANCISCO, CA - JULY 5: Maliq Brown #15 of the San Antonio Spurs drives to the basket during the game against the Golden State Warriors during the California Classic Game on July 5, 2026 at Chase Center in San Francisco, California. 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 Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Noah Graham/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

In his second NBA Summer League game, the former Blue Devil didn’t offer much offensively, but his defense is what Duke fans have come to expect, and then some. And that, he had plenty of.

One play in particular is going to get lots of oohs and aahs from fans and probably some from his teammates and the San Antonio management team.

Take a look. Former Michigan star Yaxel Lendeborg looks like he’s going to get an easy layup, but Brown comes rushing into the frame and absolutely soars to flick it out of bound.

This is not the clever defense we saw at Duke, where Brown mostly outsmarted you on the ground. This is some surprising hang time. If he had jumped just a little later, he would have had to have kept one eye on the rim, because his head would have run into it.

It was probably pretty sweet to do that to Lendeborg, since Duke beat Michigan late in the season and missed a chance to do it again in the Final Four.

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How to watch Brad Stevens, Bill Chisholm address Jaylen Brown trade

How to watch Brad Stevens, Bill Chisholm address Jaylen Brown trade originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Boston Celtics fans are still looking for answers following Wednesday’s stunning trade of Jaylen Brown to the Philadelphia 76ers. C’s president of basketball operations Brad Stevens and owner Bill Chisholm will look to quiet some of the uproar when they speak to the media on Monday afternoon.

The Celtics scheduled a 4 p.m. ET press conference to address the Brown trade. Stevens and Chisholm will presumably tag-team a plethora of questions about Brown’s departure, including what led to the decision to send the 2024 NBA Finals MVP to Philly, and why they chose the Sixers’ trade package.

Brown recently opened up about the trade during his Twitch live stream. Monday’s press conference will give Stevens and the Celtics a chance to share their side of the story and explain what the move means for the franchise’s short- and long-term futures.

Here’s how to watch Monday’s press conference…

When is the Celtics’ press conference?

Celtics president of basketball operations Brad Stevens and owner Bill Chisholm are expected to address the media on Monday, July 6.

What time is the Celtics’ press conference?

The press conference is scheduled for 4 p.m. ET.

How to watch the Celtics’ press conference

The press conference will air live on NBC Sports Boston at 4 p.m. ET during Felger & Mazz. You can also watch the press conference live on NBC Sports Boston’s YouTube channel or via the YouTube video player below:

Sixers release roster for 2026 Las Vegas summer league

Sixers release roster for 2026 Las Vegas summer league  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Sixers’ summer league roster is all set.

The team on Monday released its roster for the Las Vegas summer league, which will run from Thursday, July 9 through Sunday, July 19 and include at least five games for all 30 teams. The Sixers’ opener is Thursday at 5:30 p.m. ET vs. the Pistons. Their first four games will air on NBC Sports Philadelphia+.

Sixers player development associate coach T.J. DiLeo will serve as summer league head coach for a second straight season. Below is the Sixers’ 15-player squad:

The two players on the Sixers’ main roster are No. 22 overall pick Labaron Philon Jr. and second-year big man Johni Broome. Philon should have ample opportunity to display the skills that helped him average 22.0 points and 5.0 assists as an Alabama sophomore.

“I would say with the ball handling, it definitely started in the streets in my mom’s backyard,” he said at his introductory press conference. “And at Alabama, working on everything I needed to work on. Working on getting to the paint, working on slowing things down and making the game easy for you and the people around you. 

“I feel like that’s one of the best traits that I bring to the table, really — just making the game easy for others, getting into the paint and being able to provide for myself and my teammates. I feel like just working on that footwork and things like that is very important, just to have those options and not just look to score the ball.”

Undrafted rookies on the roster include guard Duke Miles, who’s reportedly signed an Exhibit 10 contract with the Sixers, and Yale product Nick Townsend, the 2025-26 Ivy League Player of the Year.

Open Thread: Spurs Tony Parker and Patty Mills to reunite with ASVEL

SAN ANTONIO, TX - JANUARY 21: Tony Parker #9 and Patty Mills #8 of the San Antonio Spurs speak during the game against the Indiana Pacers on January 21, 2018 at the AT&T Center in San Antonio, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2018 NBAE (Photos by Mark Sobhani/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

In 2014, the San Antonio Spurs won their fifth NBA title.Tony Parker and Patty Mills were the Spurs two point guards during that historic run. Recently, Tony Parker was named the new head coach of ASVEL. And now, Patty Mills is heading to ASVEL to play under his former teammate.

Mills played for the Spurs from 2012-2021. He played for seven NBA teams over sixteen seasons. Last year he was hired as the general manager for the University of Hawaii.

Mills now heads to France, his fourth international team.


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Monday Posted & Toasted Notes: Mitch reveals the truth, afraid Melo take

A wild brown-throated sloth, Bradypus variegatus, Landing Casual, Upper Amazon River Basin, Loreto, Peru. (Photo by: Sergi Reboredo/VWPics/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

Crazy slow start to Monday around these places, and on top of that, the muscles on my right leg don’t feel willing to cooperate when I try to move around. Links and notes next, so I can forget about my pains.

  • Mitchell Robinson finally explained how he injured his hand before the NBA Finals and opened up massively on tons of personal stuff, which we all know Mitch for as a sentimental man. Spoiler: it involved a punch and his knuckle, and it surely is a hella sad story.

““I would like to address the concerns regarding my finger, which was actually my knuckle. To provide some context, I had been dealing with personal issues, relationship problems, and internal struggles, which affected my performance on the basketball court. In this league I simply follow the instructions given to me y’all have seen videos of everything I’m very capable of doing. Moving forward to the Eastern Conference finals, after our victory in Cleveland, everything seemed to be going well. We were celebrating our achievement, but for me, things took a turn for the worse.

“As many of you know, I am a compassionate and private person who enjoys listening to country music. Without going into details about my upbringing, I am extremely protective of my siblings, whom I care for deeply. Upon returning to New York, I received an unexpected phone call, and my family members contacted me, informing me that my youngest brother had been involved in a car accident. I did not see the messages until I arrived home late that night. As the eldest sibling, I felt a deep sense of concern, and I immediately went into panic mode. I began returning calls and texts, and when I FaceTimed my brother, I thought he was deceased. He was wearing a neck brace, unresponsive, and not speaking.

“I broke down in tears, feeling like a failure for not being able to protect my siblings. Being 910 miles away, I felt helpless. In a moment of frustration, I banged my hand on my truck. As many of you know, I have a deep affection for my trucks, but my siblings and daughter are my top priority. Before judging someone, it is essential to understand their circumstances, which may not be publicly known. Life is unpredictable, and it is how we respond to challenges that truly matters.

“After consulting with doctors, I was able to gain the confidence in myself to go in and get the job done and WE DID 2026 NBA CHAMPS.so at the end of the day I battled with so much throughout this season even made a huge sacrifice to not see my daughter as much this season because I needed to focus and lock in so she can have a better future than I did.”

  • Carmelo Anthony said on 7PM in Brooklyn that he does not think the rest of the league is intimidated by the Knicks following their title-winning season. According to Melo, all the Knicks did was catch fire for a minute.
  • That’s also probably why Miami added Giannis Antetokounmpo, Philadelphia added Jaylen Brown, Boston stole Mitch and redrew their whole blueprint, the Hornets outright tapped out, and the Raptors went nostalgic and brought back an aging Kawhi. As I wrote the other day, though, Parity… or just plain dumb randomness?
  • Jalen Brunson, meanwhile, is having a better summer than me. That’s for sure.
  • Ric Bucher “touched” on the LeBron James “situation,” and didn’t hold back. A tease:

“I had to smile when it was reported that LeBron informed the Lakers that he didn’t intend to play for the Lakers next year. As if the Lakers weren’t intending for that to be the case. But kudos to the Lakers for allowing LeBron to present it that way and preserve some dignity on the way out.”

You can follow Antonio on Twitter at @chapulana.

Kings draft pick Alex Karaban drops one-word recipe for winning basketball

Kings draft pick Alex Karaban drops one-word recipe for winning basketball originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Kings are looking to rebuild their roster this NBA offseason with the hopes of returning to playoff contention.

During the 2026 NBA Draft, Sacramento selected Arkansas guard Darius Acuff Jr. and UConn forward Alex Karaban in the first round and Houston guard Emanuel Sharp in the second round to add much-needed depth to its roster.

NBC Sports California contributor Deuce Mason recently spoke with Karaban, who revealed the characteristic that he believes brings winning basketball to a team.

“I think it’s accountability,” Karaban said.

“Everyone wants to be buddy-buddy with their teammates and just try to be nice to everyone. But at the end of the day, if we’re hard on each other and we’re holding each other accountable, it’s going to make us closer when we have the good moments and realize that those real talks and the pain that we went through in practices were truly worth it.

“I think now people can be afraid to say what’s on their minds, and if someone is messing up, people just don’t want to critique people anymore. I think accountability is a huge thing. That’s something I learned how to be more comfortable with [UConn] coach [Dan] Hurley.”

Karaban was a key piece to UConn’s back-to-back NCAA championships during the 2022-23 and 2023-24 seasons. The 6-foot-8, 210-pound forward averaged 12.5 points, five rebounds, two assists and one block per game in 150 starts in five seasons with the Huskies, including a redshirt year during the 2021-22 season.

Near the end of the 2026 draft, the Kings acquired the No. 29 overall pick from the Cleveland Cavaliers in exchange for the No. 34 selection and a future second-round pick to select Karaban after already successfully drafting Acuff Jr. at No. 7 overall.

The Kings have had two consecutive losing seasons with a 40-42 record during the 2024-25 season and a 22-60 record last season, following two winning seasons with at least 46 victories.

Coming from a winning culture at UConn and having a mindset of keeping each other accountable, Karaban brings a certain trait the Kings need heading into the 2026-27 NBA season that potentially can deliver more victories for Sacramento.

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The five stages of the Jaylen Brown trade, and what's next for Celtics

The five stages of the Jaylen Brown trade, and what's next for Celtics originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

For maybe the first time in league history, the NBA’s annually awkward summer moratorium might have been a good thing. It gave everybody in Boston nearly a full week to process the Jaylen Brown trade.

Celtics president of basketball operations Brad Stevens and lead owner Bill Chisholm will make their first official comments on the trade on Monday afternoon, finally spinning forward a trade that left everyone’s heads spinning. The league’s annual break, an awkward dead zone where trades and signings get negotiated but can’t be finalized over a six-day accounting stretch, gave Celtics fans the opportunity to navigate the entire five-stage grief spectrum.

From the denial that Paul George could truly be the headliner in a Brown package, to maybe the first bit of anger directed at Stevens in his 13 years in Boston, to bargaining whether George is really that much of a dropoff from Brown given his Round 1 performance last season, to the depression that the Jays era is truly over, it feels Boston fans have emerged from the July 4 holiday weekend having finally arrived at acceptance.

We’re guessing most don’t feel any better about the trade itself. But it’s time to move forward.

We’re not certain there’s much Stevens and Chisholm can say Monday about the Brown situation that will make anyone feel much better. They will smother Brown with praise for his decade-long contributions to the organization, including being a monster part of delivering Banner 18. They will likely tiptoe around the circumstances that forced the team to move as quickly as it did at the start of the offseason, especially given the seemingly lukewarm market for Brown’s services.

The best we might hope for is a clearer vision of what comes next.

You can twist yourself into a pretzel trying to determine how we ended up here. The three years, $185 million remaining on Brown’s max-money deal, coupled with the potential for a two-year, $142 million extension later this month, likely left Boston pondering harder if two supermax players commanding 35 percent of the cap was sustainable long-term.

Sprinkle in some analytical debate about Brown’s overall impact on winning, his arrival at his age-30 season, and the perpetual consternation about the 1A/1B stature of him and running mate Jayson Tatum, and it all might have all simmered together to force the Celtics to make a swallow-hard decision on his future.

We’d consider ourselves a numbers guy, leaning heavily into analytics during our time covering the Celtics. We’ve long shrugged our shoulders at Brown’s sometimes unexplainable on/off numbers.

The Celtics owned a +6.4 net rating during Brown’s 2,443 minutes on the court this past season. That’s a strong number and one that stat site Cleaning the Glass says puts the team on the same 56-win pace that Brown ultimately delivered the team. Boston was somehow 5.6 points per 100 possessions better without Brown, per Cleaning the Glass data. There’s some noise in there: lower-leverage minutes with an overachieving bench competing against some lesser competition. But it’s also Brown’s fourth straight season in the negative, including having a minus-8.9 on/off differential in the 2024 title season.

We struggle to reconcile with those numbers. You can’t watch what Brown did in the 2024 Finals, or nearly the entirety of last season, and suggest that he doesn’t impact winning. His greatest strength was his desire to take on challenges on the biggest stage, often producing his best moments when the stakes were the highest or the competition the toughest.

But now, coming off an MVP-caliber season and with Boston pondering the need to reel back in a sky-high usage rate with a healthier Tatum, we understand the consternation that has long existed about how exactly the Tatum/Brown combo might share duties moving forward. That Boston couldn’t immediately put the sort of surefire championship-ready supporting cast around them, this while navigating the new second-apron minefield the new collective bargaining agreement has delivered, added a layer of complication.

So the Celtics made a tough decision to pivot. Unfortunately for them, a very public pursuit of Giannis Antetokounmpo, which might have further forced Boston’s hand, created an expectation for the level of player that might have been obtained in return for Brown.

While there were all sorts of risks with Antetokounmpo, including health and the need to pay him a very hefty long-term contract at an even more advanced age, the idea of pairing two top-10 players was at least intriguing to the Boston fan base. Landing on a past-his-prime George earning his own super max money at age 36 was not the Plan B most expected.

Maybe the Celtics simply felt like it was time to rip the Band-Aid. There was a justifiable fear that, if things didn’t go well this season, Brown’s trade value could have diminished even lower than what Boston seemingly settled for. We refuse to believe that there wasn’t a higher probability that league volatility might have eventually pushed Brown’s value up again, but certainly that was another part of the risk that Stevens and Co. had to ponder.

Maybe the bigger “What if?” is whether the Celtics should have moved off Brown last summer. If the team knew it was going to navigate the so-called gap year the team vehemently pushed back against, then could the Celtics have gotten a bigger haul for Brown (or even Derrick White) and chased a lottery pick while Tatum rehabbed?

The 2025-26 season was such a joy to watch that it feels weird to suggest the team should have embraced a far less enticing path. That said, that route might have expedited the return to true contender status. Hindsight is, of course, 20/20.

Little good can come from lingering on the past. What’s done is done. We’ve had an entire moratorium to process this trade. You don’t have to like it, but this is the path that Boston brass has chosen.

Stevens deserves some benefit of the doubt given his track record. He built a title team in 2023. The last two summers have been incredibly painful with the teardown in the aftermath, but there’s a pathway to a similar roster splurge in the summer of 2027.

The Celtics can reset pesky repeater penalties by staying under the luxury tax again this year. Next summer could provide an opportunity to chase a new star to pair alongside Tatum. There’s a very real pathway to combining the final year of George’s contract with Boston’s growing pile of picks and chasing one of the league’s biggest names.

Of course, we’re not patient around here.

The Celtics will still be competitive this season. George showed in the playoffs that he has something left in the tank, Boston will simply have to be diligent in how quickly they dispense it. There will be an opportunity for Payton Pritchard to step into a bigger spotlight yet again, and White will get every opportunity to show last year was simply an outlier shooting season. Newcomers Mitchell Robinson and Mike Conley can aid in winning.

But all eyes are on the summer of 2027. That’s when Stevens and Co. will have a real chance to show why they made the Jaylen Brown trade.

Bay Area native, G League guard Chance McMillian chasing Warriors roster spot

Bay Area native, G League guard Chance McMillian chasing Warriors roster spot originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO – Pat Spencer’s impending departure from the Warriors created, at least on paper, a vacancy on the roster for a combo guard who can come off the bench and invigorate an offense that sometimes stagnates when Stephen Curry is on the bench.

Chance McMillian is using the California Classic Summer League to submit his application for the opening.

After a solid season with the Santa Cruz Warriors, McMillian came into the weekend at Chase Center realizing Golden State is holding roster auditions; only first-round pick Yaxel Lendesborg is guaranteed to make the team. McMillian, a 6-foot-3 Bay Area native and childhood fan of the Warriors made a nice bid to get a deeper look.

Playing 17 minutes off the bench Sunday afternoon, McMillian produced 12 points and three assists in a 98-69 win over the San Antonio Spurs. His totals for the first two games – 24 points on 9-of-13 shooting from the field, including 4 of 6 from deep; six assists, six rebounds, three steals over 35 minutes – indicate that he knows his way around the court.

“He creates good situations for himself, good open looks,” Summer League coach Khalid Robinson said. “And then, when plays break down, he’s a very talented guy that can go create something for us. He gives us a little bit of everything.”

McMillian’s road to this opportunity has had more detours than Bay Area freeways at night. From two high schools in Vallejo to Grand Canyon University in Phoenix, where he spent three seasons. From GCU, he went to Texas Tech, where he played two seasons and as a senior was named to the All-Big 12 second team.

The Warriors brought McMillian into their circle last summer after he went undrafted, despite knowing surgery on his left ankle would render him unavailable. Once he recovered, he was assigned to Santa Cruz, he appeared in 30 games (24 starts), averaging 17 points, on 44.7-percent shooting from the field, including 35.7 from beyond the arc, with 5.0 assists and 4.3 rebounds.

“That whole Santa Cruz coaching staff just had unbelievable confidence in me,” McMillian said. “I felt that. I just put in the work, and each day it was just getting better for me. So, I credit the coaching staff.”

McMillian shot 40.8 percent from distance in college but was so unimpressed with his deep shot last season under coach Lainn Wilson with the Sea Dubs that he has spent countless hours in the gym at Chase Center since April. 

“Lainn and his staff did a great job with him, just teaching him like how we want to play, our spacing, making good decisions,” Robinson said. “He had a full season of doing that. He’s worked throughout this summer, like the past two months on this, with the same teaching points. He’s done a very good job of carrying over the things from Santa Cruz and postseason into the Summer League.”

In his desire to improve, McMillian also is taking cues from Curry.

“My last year at Texas Tech, I played off ball, and I literally pulled up some of his film on how he gets open off the ball,” he said. “I remember getting face-guarded at the start of conference. And he was getting face-guarded, too, in big games. So, I was just picking and choosing on how he was moving off the ball, like little things on how to get open.”

McMillian, 25, would love a chance to be on the same roster as Curry. There is a path, probably with a two-way contract. But a lot can happen between early July and late September, when Golden State opens training camp.

Spencer, who last week reached agreement to join the Phoenix Suns, began last season on a two-way contract with the Warriors before being promoted at midseason to a standard NBA contract. He used grit, fearlessness and a few memorable scoring outbursts to elevate himself from intermittent appearances to being a staple in Golden State’s rotation.

When given an opportunity, Spencer exploited it.

McMillian is seeking an opportunity to fill a void on a roster still in progress. His best bet, as the California Classic ends Monday night and the team moves to the Las Vegas Summer League later this week is to maintain the early trajectory that began with the last two games.

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Quinten Post reportedly signing three-year, $30M Grizzlies contract offer sheet

Quinten Post reportedly signing three-year, $30M Grizzlies contract offer sheet originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

A recent Warriors NBA draft success story could be on his way out.

Third-year center and restricted free agent Quinten Post is signing a three-year, $30 million contract offer sheet with the Memphis Grizzlies, ESPN’s Shams Charania reported Monday, citing sources.

As Charania mentions, the Warriors, with Post being a restricted free agent, have until 11:59 p.m. ET on Tuesday to match the offer.

However, it appears unlikely they will, given the team already has signed veteran bigs Kristaps Porziņģis and Al Horford to new contracts this offseason.

Golden State selected Post with the No. 52 pick in the 2024 NBA Draft, and the Dutch big man quickly established himself as an intriguing stretch big in coach Steve Kerr’s system.

In 109 career games (49 starts) across two seasons with the Warriors, Post averaged 7.8 points, 3.8 rebounds and 1.4 assists per game on 44.3-percent shooting from the field and 36.4 percent from 3-point range in 16.9 minutes per game.

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Utah Jazz vs Memphis Grizzlies: Summer League Preview, start time, how to watch

SALT LAKE CITY, UT - JULY 4: Cody Williams #5 of the Utah Jazz drives to the basket during the game against the Atlanta Hawks during a 2026 NBA Salt Lake City Summer League game on July 4, 2026 at Jon M. Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City, Utah. 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 Melissa Majchrzak/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

If you are anything like me, you have been watching highlights from the Utah Jazz summer league victory on Saturday afternoon incessantly with a massive cheesy grin every single time. Luckily for people like us, the Jazz take the floor once again, this time against a familiar face in Taylor Hendricks and the #3 overall pick in the 2026 NBA Draft, Cameron Boozer.

SALT LAKE CITY, UT – JULY 4: Darryn Peterson #22 of the Utah Jazz drives to the basket against the Atlanta hawks during the first half of of their 2026 NBA Salt Lake City Summer League game at the Jon M Huntsman Center on July 4, 2026 in Salt Lake City, Utah. 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 Chris Gardner/ Getty Images) | Getty Images

How to Watch the Salt Lake City Summer League?

Who: Utah Jazz vs Memphis Grizzlies

When: Monday, July 6, 2026 | 7:00 MT

Where: Jon M. Huntsman Center, Salt Lake City, UT

How to watch: Prime Video, ESPN, League Pass, KJZZ, Jazz+

Players to Watch

Darryn Peterson

Coming as a surprise to absolutely no one, the main player to watch in this one is once again going to be Darryn Peterson. After an absolutely superb debut showing on Independence Day, where he tallied 28 points on 11/21 shooting to go along with 5 rebounds, 2 assists, and 2 steals, all eyes will be on him to see how he will follow up those 4th of July fireworks. This time out, he will face off against the #3 overall pick, Cameron Boozer, who will surely look to make a statement against him. Darryn is the marquee player on the floor every time he plays in Summer League. As such, he has a target on his back. There are lots of guys on the opposing roster who will look to embarrass him to make a bigger name for themselves. One thing in particular to keep an eye on in this game is the turnovers. Darryn was responsible for 8 turnovers on Saturday night, and while not all of them were his fault, that is definitely a number that should be cleaned up as he gets more comfortable on the floor with his teammates.

Cody Williams

Cody Williams looked amazing in the Jazz Summer League Opener. The pessimistic side of things could look at his performance and say, “That is what 3rd-year players should do in Summer League. The optimistic side of that, however, is that there were legitimate stretches early in Cody’s NBA career when he genuinely didn’t look like he was going to make it through his rookie contract. It is really nice to see him getting stronger and more confident with the ball no matter the setting. If he can keep it up, he could be a really important player for this Jazz team with his length and defense as well.

SALT LAKE CITY, UT – JULY 4: Cody Williams #5 of the Utah Jazz drives to the basket during the game against the Atlanta Hawks during a 2026 NBA Salt Lake City Summer League game on July 4, 2026 at Jon M. Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City, Utah. 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 Melissa Majchrzak/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Cameron Boozer

Cameron Boozer will come out hungry and ready to prove a point to the Jazz. Last time out, he scored 15 points on 7/11 shooting in a dominant win over the Thunder. His dad, Carlos, we all know, works in the front office for Utah and during the predraft process, was quoted in an interview with Marc Spears as saying, “If they miss the boat, they will regret it,” when asked why NBA teams should take his son. You can bet your bottom dollar that Cameron feels the exact same way and wants to embarrass Darryn Peterson in front of his home fans. Although they won’t be matched up head-to-head very often, watch out for the two guys to try to really go at it.

Lakers’ Luka Doncic making most of NBA offseason

Luka Doncic appears to be making the most of his NBA offseason.

Doncic posted a series of photos on his Instagram Story on Sunday afternoon that included pictures of him enjoying some time out on the water.

The first photo of Doncic featured him free-falling into the ocean with his arms spread and feet going straight down.

The second photo of Doncic featured him riding on a jet ski in the deep ocean.

It’s been a busy week for the Lakers as they are now ready to fully embrace Doncic as their franchise player after news broke Wednesday that LeBron James informed the Lakers he would not return to the franchise next season.

As the Lakers are preparing for life without James, they’ve been one of the NBA’s more active teams since the offseason began.

The Lakers made a splash in building around Doncic as they landed his dream big man, Walker Kessler, in a sign-and-trade with the Jazz in a deal that cost the Lakers four first-round draft picks.

Besides adding Kessler, the Lakers also focused on getting younger.

The franchise signed Quentin Grimes, Sandro Mamukelashvili and Collin Sexton.

They also made a splash in the NBA draft, selecting Cameron Carr with the No. 24 pick on June 23.

The Lakers also gave Austin Reaves a four-year, $185 million contract extension.

With a revamped, youthful roster that doesn’t feature James headlining it, a new era of Lakers basketball is underway.

Doncic is only 27 years old and is entering his prime. He is a six-time All-Star and a two-time scoring champion. Doncic was a vital part in helping the Mavericks reach the NBA Finals in 2024.

Utah Jazz add depth with new signing of Creighton guard

SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 03: Trey Alexander #23 of the New Orleans Pelicans warms up before the game against the Sacramento Kings at Golden 1 Center on April 03, 2026 in Sacramento, California. 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 Lachlan Cunningham/Getty Images) | Getty Images

According to Jake Fischer, the Utah Jazz have signed Trey Alexander to a two-way contract.

Alexander is a 6’5” guard who played at Creighton. His last two seasons have been with New Orleans and Denver, where he’s played a total of 33 games. His sample size last season is just 9 games, so it’s a small sample size. But those numbers are a solid 51.4% from the field and 50% from three. Again, those are small sample sizes, but his numbers increased since his rookie season, and the hope would be that they could continue to improve.

Utah is in a position now to take chances on players with potential, and if you can find a diamond in the rough, it can be a game-changer. Maybe they get play time and can help the team with depth during the season. Or, if they become a player who can hold their own on the floor, they can either trade them or make other moves that improve the team.

Right now, the Jazz are on a big upward trend. Darryn Peterson looks like the missing piece Utah has been hoping for. The starting unit will go through a lot of changes, but the other things that need to happen are improvements around the edges of the lineups. If Utah can hit on different ancillary moves, it can extend the current era much longer. Jazz fans can only hope that one of these two-way contracts ends up being a contributing addition to the team. If they do, it gives a team an edge that can take them over the top.

NBA insider rips LeBron James, says Lakers were done with him when they acquired Luka Doncic

It’s been nearly a week since LeBron James informed the Lakers he wasn’t going to play for them next season, but apparently, the Lakers were prepared for it.

According to NBA insider Ric Bucher, on his show “On The Ball With Ric Bucher,” the Lakers have been preparing for a life without James since they acquired Luka Doncic in 2025.

“I had to smile when it was reported that LeBron informed the Lakers that he didn’t intend to play for the Lakers next year. As if the Lakers weren’t intending for that to be the case,” Bucher said on his show. “But kudos to the Lakers for allowing LeBron to present it that way and preserve some dignity on the way out.”

Bucher went on to call out James and his agent, Rich Paul, for saying that every NBA team was interested in acquiring James by saying, “If teams were interested, he wouldn’t have to reach out to them.”

LeBron James recently left the Lakers, but an NBA insider says the Lakers knew they were done with him when they traded for Luka Doncic. Getty Images

At 41 years old, James is coming off a season in which he played in 60 regular-season games, averaging 20.9 points, 6.1 rebounds and 7.2 assists. James is still playing at a high level, but his numbers were below his career average of 26.8 points, 7.5 rebounds and 7.4 assists.

“It’s a sign that LeBron and Rich are struggling with the new reality, which is LeBron simply isn’t valued the way he once was. He does not have the leverage he once did,” Bucher said. “Which is not an indictment, no one is going to invest in a player that is turning 42 years old next season and comes with the outsized attention and servicing that LeBron does.”

In 2025, the Lakers shocked the world when they announced they were trading Anthony Davis to the Mavericks for Doncic in a three-team deal that included the Jazz.

Doncic was just removed from helping the Mavericks reach the NBA Finals the season before and was in the middle of having a great year, averaging 28.1 points, 8.3 rebounds and 7.8 assists per game.

Luka Doncic has been the Lakers’ focus for a while now, according to an NBA insider. Getty Images

While James’ next destination is unknown, it won’t be with the Lakers because the team is focusing on building around Doncic.

So far, the Lakers have acquired Walker Kessler in a sign-and-trade with the Jazz, which included multiple draft picks.

They also signed Quentin Grimes, Sandro Mamukelashvili and Collin Sexton.

Before free agency began, the Lakers re-signed Austin Reaves to a four-year, $185 million contract, making him the richest player who went undrafted in NBA history.