The Celtics and Pistons have wrapped up their regular season series. What stood out?

The dust has settled on the regular season series between Boston and Detroit right at the midway point in the season, culminating in a 104-103 Pistons win that came down to the final possession. 

After four games, we have a pretty clear idea of what to expect of this matchup between the Eastern Conference’s two best teams. If there’s one thing we’ve learned from this series alone, it’s that Detroit has maintained a clear identity in J.B. Bickerstaff’s second year in charge. 

They’re nasty, physical and a genuine pain to deal with. The Pistons have no problem turning a game into a drudgerous affair, in fact I think they prefer it that way. With that style comes a playoff-like intensity in every game they play. Although in the case of Boston specifically, things don’t exactly appear to be all Kumbaya. 

But that playoff intensity is important because as it stands, these two teams have a real chance of seeing each other in some capacity in the postseason, and we have a pretty clear idea of what that hypothetical series would look like if the season ended today. 

In some ways, this matchup gives strong hints of the 2022 Eastern Conference Finals against the Miami Heat, who took the Celtics to seven games with a centerpiece star, a physically imposing big man and a collection of role players built to make life a living hell on opposing offenses. When Duncan Robinson signed his three-year contract to join the Pistons, it was meant to be that the Pistons’ transformation from a confusing amalgamation of players with no clear fit into a team with an identity built for a seven-game series was all but solidified. 

Outside of the 3-1 series record, the raw head-to-head numbers tell us a compelling story. When these two teams play, it consistently comes down to the wire, and we’ve gathered a few observations that are worth highlighting if these two ever see each other again this spring. 

Jaylen Brown can (and will) carry the load   

Jaylen Brown has been a downhill force in this four-game series, averaging 35 points on 44/34.5/72 splits. In this most recent loss, Brown was often the sole source of offense in the first half, before things opened up for Sam Hauser and Anfernee Simons in the third quarter. 

In the fourth quarter, Brown aggressively sought his spots, right down to the very last possession, one that generated a fadeaway jumper at the elbow that had a chance of bouncing in. 

Considering the score differential of this series is a tight +11 in favor of Detroit, we’ve seen a heavy dose of clutch minutes between these two teams. If there is any semblance of playoff-like basketball in a regular season setting, it’s within those 5-under-5 opportunities. 

In the case of the Celtics, that means a lot of Jaylen Brown isolations. Regardless of what they throw his way, Brown attacks with brute force and finishes in pirouette form. It’s a fascinating collision of elite-level attacking against elite-level defensive pressure. 

Brown holds a 43% usage rate against the Pistons, higher than his 36% usage for the season (for reference, he is second in the league behind Luka Doncic in usage, who is at 38%). 39% of his field goal attempts against Detroit came off possessions where he had 3-6 dribbles, and 24.5% were off seven or more dribbles before firing. 

In the majority of his late-game chances with the ball, Brown is seal hunting. 

Specifically, he’s Duncan-hunting. The two are well-acquainted from years of Miami/Boston battles, and this year has been no different, with Brown consistently seeking that mismatch switch. In total, Brown has matched up with Robinson for a grand total of 5:04 in four games, and he’s scored 32 points on 56.5% shooting from the field and 67% from three. 

To put that in perspective, his 32 points on Robinson is the most he’s scored on any one matchup so far this season, even more than Tobias Harris, who has guarded Brown more than anyone to this point with 28:47 matchup minutes where Brown has scored 31 points on 30% efficiency. 

All this to say, Brown wants to attack this hard-nosed defense head-on. He’s taken no less than 25 shots in this series with a great deal of success, but that activity can also come at the cost of offensive flow. 

Clearly, Brown takes on the challenge to win these game, and he knows he can score against this team, but it does open up some hints of Brown’s past tunnel vision. Detroit, especially with Robinson matched up, has no problems collapsing its help, and last night Brown’s four turnovers were the most on the team (although to his credit, just one happened in the fourth quarter). 

Who’s on Cade? 

The Celtics have done an overall pretty good job on Cade Cunningham, who had his worst outing against Boston on Monday after shooting 4-of-17 for 16 points. Half of his scoring output came from the free throw line, where he went 8-of-10, and a lot of credit should go to Jaylen Brown and Jordan Walsh, who spent the bulk of the time guarding him, holding the All-Star starter to a combined four points on 2-of-9 shooting. 

But Cunningham, like a true superstar, is more than just a bucket-getter. Even in an off-night, Cunningham still dished out 14 assists without a single turnover to his name, while having three stocks on the other end. 

The challenge is not in just holding Cade from catching fire as a scorer, it’s in stymieing his entire flow. To completely stifle Cunningham is to stifle the entire foundation upon which the Pistons offense is built. That’s a huge task. That’d be like attempting to remove the entire engine of a Ford F-150 with someone already behind the wheel. 

But in Boston’s collection of wing defenders, who’s been the most successful attempting it? The aforementioned Walsh and Brown may be the best answers. 

Walsh is third in matchup minutes against Cunningham this season, behind Dyson Daniels and Davion Mitchell, and he’s been up to the challenge. His defense against Cade in Boston’s win on Nov. 26 was a major factor in that clutch closeout, and in total, he’s held him to 17 points, five assists and four turnovers on 31% shooting in three games.

In nine total minutes this series, Brown has held Cunningham to 2-of-10 shooting for five points with five assists, and just one shooting foul. 

Cade has found ways to consistently attack his own mismatches to get to his 29-point average in his four Boston matchups, generating the most success against Derrick White and Payton Pritchard. White rarely found himself guarding Cunningham last night, in fact it was on just three partial possessions, but in their four games, Cunningham’s 20 shot attempts against White are the second most he’s taken against any player, and he’s shooting 50% on those looks. 

To help on Cade is to sell out on the notion that he’ll make the right read, but to a player you’d rather live with beating you. That was the case last night, and Cunningham assisted on four Robinson threes and 11 of Tobias Harris’ team-high 25 points. Cunningham plays winning basketball in this Detroit ecosystem, and it’s a fun challenge to consider the pros and cons of the many approaches you can have to dealing with his offensive gravity. 

Detroit puts Boston’s rebounding outlook into greater focus 

Even as Boston’s emphasis on defensive rebounding has turned that issue from glaring to middle of the road, this matchup in particular really shows just how far apart Boston’s 16th-ranked defensive rebounding is from Detroit’s fourth-best offensive board-crashing. 

The Celtics are not alone in this dilemma. The Pistons average 13 offensive rebounds a game, led by Jalen Duren’s four per outing, which is third best in the league behind Steven Adams and Donovan Clingan. 

So it’s not just a Celtics issue, yet the Celtics do in fact struggle especially hard against this specific matchup. Detroit’s 15.3 offensive rebounds per game against Boston is well above their season average, and in total, they’ve won the collective rebounding battle 191-164. 

It’s worth noting the Celtics have progressively gotten better in this department these last two matchups, even winning the glass battle 45-41 on Monday thanks to a 14-9 offensive rebounding difference headlined by a combined nine offensive boards between Jaylen Brown and Derrick White, but it is still an issue this matchup presents. In a series that drags out to six or seven games, the chances of low-scoring slugfests only rise, and the team that can create more second chance opportunities through their rebounding and paint scoring will have the advantage. 

The Pistons and Celtics are both top-10 teams in second-chance points (Celtics are third, Pistons sixth), but where the interior scoring differs is in overall points in the paint, which Detroit is second in with 58.3 compared to Boston’s 28th-ranked 44 points inside. 

There’s no debate that Luka Garza and Neemias Queta are generally good rebounding and interior bigs, but is this the kind of conference matchup that Brad Stevens looks at and identifies as proof of additional frontcourt assistance? Do they stand firm and await the return of Jayson Tatum, one of the league’s best rebounding forwards who’s averaged double-doubles in each of the past three postseasons? 

Only time will tell, but the battle on the boards has been a huge element to this regular season series, and it’s only amplified once you hit a series format. 


The Celtics have three months and 40 games left before any real conversations about this matchup possibility begin to take shape. It makes this a bizarre conversation to even be thinking about by mid-January, yet we’ve got four legitimately entertaining games’ worth of film we can unpack from the Eastern Conference’s two best teams in case they do ultimately meet come playoff time.

DeSantis loses bet on Miami Hurricanes, owes Indiana governor key lime pie and stone crabs

PINELLAS PARK, Fla. (AP) — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said Tuesday that he owes Indiana Gov. Mike Braun some key lime pie and stone crabs for losing a bet after Indiana's 27-21 win over Miami earned the college football team the national championship.

DeSantis said at a news conference on nursing education that he will be sending the key lime pie, as well as stone crabs from the famous Miami Beach eatery, Joe's Stone Crab, to the Indiana governor due to his losing wager on the Miami Hurricanes at the hands of the Indiana Hoosiers Monday night in Miami Gardens, Florida.

The Florida governor said he had been promised sugar cream pie, also known as Hoosier pie, and pork tenderloin from the Indiana governor if Miami had won.

DeSantis joked that it might be quicker just to drop off the pie and stone crabs at Marco Island, a barrier island on Florida's southwest coast which is popular with Midwestern vacationers and snowbirds this time of year.

“You know, honestly, half of Indiana is in Marco Island this time of year,” DeSantis said. “Can I just bring this stuff to Marco Island? It would be a lot easier for us.”

Best NBA Player Props Today for January 20: Quickley Cooks in Golden State

College football has officially wrapped up, so it’s a great day to dive into NBA action with seven games on the board and a full slate of NBA player props.

I’ve found my three favorite NBA picks for the day, including Anthony Edwards lighting up the Jazz and Domantas Sabonis finding his form in a matchup against the Heat.

Best NBA player props today

PlayerPickbet365
Timberwolves Anthony EdwardsOver 3.5 threes<<-110>>
Kings Domantas SabonisTo record a double-double<<+150>>
Raptors Immanuel QuickleyOver 15.5 points<<-125>>

Prop #1: Anthony Edwards Over 3.5 threes

-110 at bet365

The Utah Jazz defense is bad enough as it is. Now, they’re playing the second half of a back-to-back and must try to contain Anthony Edwards.

The Minnesota Timberwolves star is putting up 29.6 points per game while shooting a ridiculous 41.8% from 3-point range. He now faces a Jazz team that’s dead last in defensive rating, and their perimeter defense is a big problem.

Utah surrenders the most 3-point attempts per game while allowing the second-highest opponent 3-point shooting percentage. Edwards has hit 4+ threes in five of his last six games, and he'll do it again tonight.

  • Time: 9:00 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: FDSN-North, KJZZ

Prop #2: Domantas Sabonis to record a double-double

+150 at bet365

Domantas Sabonis is still getting back up to speed after missing two months with a knee injury. Still, I’m betting we get a classic Sabonis performance when the Sacramento Kings host the Miami Heat.

The Heat are, of course, one of my favorite fades when it comes to rebounds. Their high pace and volume of shooting result in a lot of rebounds, and they surrender the second-most rebounds per game.

Sabonis has a rebounding total of 8.5, but instead of taking the Over, let’s back the big man to record his first double-double since his return.

  • Time: 10:00 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: FDSN-Sun, NBCS-California

Prop #3: Immanuel Quickley Over 15.5 points

-125 at bet365

The Golden State Warriors were dealt a huge blow with Jimmy Butler tearing his ACL. The Warriors lose one of their best defenders, and they already allow opposing point guards to shoot the sixth-highest percentage from beyond the arc this season.

Immanuel Quickley has had an up-and-down season for the Toronto Raptors, but he’s averaging 17.6 points per game over his last 13 games and has topped 15.5 points 10 times over that stretch. 

He'll take advantage of this matchup as the Dubs try to find their bearings without Butler.

  • Time: 10:00 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: Sportsnet, NBCS-Bay Area

These props are available now at bet365, one of our best betting sites.

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Highlights: Victor Wembanyama drops a 33-point double-double in win over Jazz

Coming off a dramatic win against the Minnesota Timberwolves, the Spurs concluded their 3-game homestand by taking on the Utah Jazz. The Spurs started hot, outscoring the Jazz 34-26 in the first quarter. The Jazz cut the deficit to four at halftime, but the Spurs dominated the third quarter. They outscored the Jazz 35-23 and carried a 16-point lead into the fourth. The Spurs’ lead reached 24 at one point, and they shut down any chance at a Jazz comeback. Thanks to hot shooting and solid defense, the Spurs won 123-110.

Victor Wembanyama dropped a double-double: 33 points (7-12 3PT) and 10 rebounds to go along with two blocks, two steals, and an assist. Vic was en fuego from three and converted all six of his free throws. After draining nine combined threes against the Bucks and the Timberwolves, Vic dropped a season-high seven threes against the Jazz alone. Since shaving his head, the Spurs are 3-0, and Wemby is averaging 31.3 points per game, 9.7 rebounds, and 2 blocks on 55% field goal shooting, 59% three-point shooting, and 87% free-throw shooting. Not bad for a first-time all-star starter.

The stove is warm… Vic drains the open three in transition! Guard up Jusuf Nurkic!

THE STOVE IS BURNING! Vic and Fox run the pick and fade, and Vic is left wide open for another three!

Just throw it up there! HB leads the fastbreak and lobs it up to Wemby who slams it down!

Stephon Castle dropped 18 points, eight assists, two rebounds, and a block. After struggling to draw fouls in the first half, Steph’s determination to stay aggressive rewarded him with whistles, and he drained seven of 10 free throws. He also drained tough and contested mid-range jumpers. The turnovers were once again a problem, but Steph still managed to toss lobs and bounce passes for eight dimes. After covering Keyonte George, his next assignment will either be Amen Thompson or possibly even Kevin Durant.

AREA 51 ALERT! Steph crosses half court and immediately lobs to Wemby, who jams it home!

Another Steph lob! After the Fox swipe, Steph leads the 3 on 1 fastbreak by lobbing it up for a Julian Champagnie jam! Julian finished with 13 points and four rebounds!

THREE LOBS FOR STEPH! Steph finds the cutting Luke Kornet who finishes the lob! Luke filled the stat sheet with seven points, seven rebounds, four assists, three blocks, and a steal!

Dylan Harper dropped 15 points (6-7 FG), five assists, three rebounds, a steal, and a block. Dyl shot a career-high 85.7% from the field, and he cashed in his points from the midrange, from a three, and from slashing to the cup. These last four games from Dyl have shown what he is capable of on a nightly basis. It is a welcome sight after his cold stretch.

Spurs Ball Movement! Dyl drives in, fakes the shot, and bounces it to Luke under the basket for the slam all in one motion!

ROOKIE POSTER! Dyl skies to the rim and posterizes Nurkic! The rook also stares him down after the play!

De’Aaron Fox dropped 14 points, eight assists, five rebounds, and four steals. D-Fox was efficient from the field and led the offense with either Steph or Dyl. Most of all, he was excellent defensively. He swiped a season-high four steals by pickpocketing whoever drove into the paint and interrupting the passing lanes. Thanks to the rest of the supporting cast, D-Fox attempted just 11 shots, but made six of them. It will be exciting to see if he is named an all-star reserve on February 1st.

Carter Bryant dropped a career-high 11 points (4-5 FG), three rebounds, two blocks, and a steal. In just fourteen minutes, Carter was efficient from the field and made solid defensive plays. He also finally secured a dunk and decided to add an alley-oop slam as a bonus. The rookie impressed Spurs fans and the coaching staff, and it might convince Mitch Johnson to give him more playing time as the season carries on.

FINALLY! After many missed dunks throughout the season, the Spurs’ ball movement results in Luke finding Carter open under the basket for a converted slam dunk!

ANOTHER ROOKIE JAM! After the steal, D-Fox leads the fastbreak and lobs it up to a trailing Carter, who slams it home with two hands!

Harrison Barnes dropped 10 points, four assists, a rebound, and a block. HB was solid on drives to the cup and made hustle plays that most 33-year-olds usually don’t make. After a long, cold stretch of games, this homestand has been a welcoming reminder of who HB has been for this team: A solid veteran who stretches the floor.

All in all, this was a great way to close out the three-game homestand. An injured version of the Jazz team that defeated the silver and black in late December can still score with the best. However, the Spurs’ 21 stocks and sixteen threes proved to be the difference. Both rookies also finished in double figures and showed flashes of their true potential. This team faces a quick turnaround in a familiar I-10 rivalry foe, and this time the silver and black will mostly be at full strength.

Finally, here are the full game highlights.

The Spurs go on the road to battle the Houston Rockets on a SEGABABA at 7:00 P.M. (CST) on NBC/Peacock/FDSN-SW.

How to watch LA Lakers vs Denver Nuggets: TV/live stream info for tonight's game

Tonight's Coast 2 Coast Tuesday NBA action tips off with a San Antonio Spurs vs Houston Rockets showdown at 8:00 PM ET, followed by a matchup between the LA Lakers vs Denver Nuggets at 10:00 PM. Live coverage begins at 7:00 PM on NBC and Peacock. See below for additional information on how to watch both games and follow all of the NBA action on NBCSN and Peacock. Peacock will feature 100 regular-season games throughout the course of the 2025-2026 season.

Click here to sign up for Peacock!

LA Lakers:

The Lakers are coming off a 110-93 victory over the Toronto Raptors on Sunday night. Luka Doncic finished with 25 points and 7 assists, while LeBron James had 24 points and 7 assists. The duo has carried the team in the absence of Austin Reaves, who has missed 15 of the team's last 17 games with a calf injury.

Doncic, who is in his first full season with the Lakers, leads the league in scoring with an average of 33.3 points per game.

Denver Nuggets:

The Denver Nuggets fell 110-87 to the Charlotte Hornets on Sunday, snapping the team's four-game win streak. Jamal Murray led the Nuggets with 16 points in the loss. The veteran guard has remained a key contributor for the Nuggets, who have been without three-time MVP Nikola Jokic since he suffered a hyperextended knee and bone bruise on December 29.

Murray is on pace to average career highs in scoring (25.9 ppg), assists (7.3
apg), rebounds (4.4 rpg), field-goal percentage (49.0%), and three-point percentage (44.7%) this season.

NBA: Portland Trail Blazers at Golden State Warriors
With Butler’s season-ending injury, fantasy managers are forced to pivot after the loss of a top-25 player.

How to watch LA Lakers vs Denver Nuggets:

  • When: Tonight, Tuesday, January 20
  • Where: Ball Arena, Denver, CO
  • Time: 10:00 PM ET
  • Live Stream:Peacock
  • TV Channel: NBC

What other NBA games are on NBC and Peacock tonight?

NBA: Oklahoma City Thunder at Houston Rockets
Nikola Jokic’s injury gives Gilgeous-Alexander a clear lead for the award.

How to watch the NBA on NBC and Peacock:

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.

How to sign up for Peacock:

Sign up here to watch all of our LIVE sports, sports shows, documentaries, classic matches, and more. You'll also get tons of hit movies and TV shows, Originals, news, 24/7 channels, and current NBC & Bravo hits—Peacock is here for whatever you’re in the mood for.

NBA on NBC 2025-26 Schedule

Click here to see the full list of NBA games that will air on NBC and Peacock this season.

What devices does Peacock support?

You can enjoy Peacock on a variety of devices. View the full list of supported devices here.

The All-Star process still struggles to place Devin Booker

The All-Star break is creeping up, with the league’s best and brightest set to descend on Southern California and the Intuit Dome on February 15. As for the format, your guess is as good as mine. Something involving USA versus the World, or some other experimental twist the league cooked up in a boardroom. The details are still fuzzy for me, which somehow feels very on brand for the event at this point.

What was not surprising at all was the list of starters. Devin Booker was not on it. When the league made things official yesterday, his name was nowhere to be found.

And honestly, that tracks.

Booker is not the type of player who racks up a massive fan vote by bouncing from franchise to franchise. You can be annoyed that he pulled in only 418,652 fan votes, sure. If everyone in the greater Phoenix area, roughly 5.19 million people, clicked his name one time, he would have walked in as a starter. That is not how this works, and I am fine with that.

I do not ever expect him to be voted in as a starter. Not in a conference loaded with former MVPs and international stars who carry the weight of entire countries behind them. We have seen this movie before. The Yao Ming years taught us that lesson loud and clear. If you are an international player, the fan vote is going to lean your way.

To the league’s credit, they have tried to balance the popularity contest. Starters are now decided by 50% fan vote, 25% player vote, and 25% media vote. It helps. It does not change the reality. Booker has never been about the pageantry. He has always been about the work.

And that is where this conversation gets interesting.

Booker finished 16th in fan voting in the West, but 9th in player vote and 12th with the media. That tells you a lot. For one, this is a brutal field. The Western Conference is stacked, and sorting through fringe All-Stars is not an easy job for anyone. Devin Booker lives right in that space this season.

I still believe he should represent the Suns. The All-Star Game is not only about raw numbers. It is about stories. About freezing a season in time and remembering what mattered when you look back years later. And the Suns are one of the best stories in the league. Full stop.

That said, this is not a classic Devin Booker statistical year. We have covered that ground. His value shows up in the margins, in how he impacts winning beyond the box score. But when you stack that against other fringe cases, like Jamal Murray doing what he is doing in Denver, especially without Jokic, it becomes a real debate. Not disrespectful. Not dismissive. Just complicated.

The player vote is the part that really jumps out to me. It is the reminder that your favorite player’s favorite player is Devin Booker. He is a hooper’s hooper. The guys who actually play this game respect what he does and how he goes about it. That is why he landed 9th in the Western Conference among players.

Now we wait for the rest of the picture. The All-Star reserves will be revealed at 4 p.m. Arizona time on February 1, with the remainder of the roster announced on NBC and Peacock. That is when we find out whether Booker gets his spot.

And for anyone keeping score at home, Dillon Brooks finished 21st in the player vote and 24th in the fan vote.

Grading the Mavericks: it will be hard to tank with Jason Kidd as head coach

The Mavericks were 3-1 this past week and moved to 12th place in the West, but are just two games back of 10th. They lost to Denver (118-109) before beating Utah twice (144-122, 138-120) and then traveled to New York, where they dismantled the Knicks (114-97). Max Christie led the team in scoring this with 24 points per game. P.J. Washington and Daniel Gafford played in just one of the four games due to ankle injuries and personal reasons. Cooper Flagg missed two games with an ankle sprain as well, while Max Christie missed two with an illness. Kyrie Irving (knee) and Anthony Davis (finger) remain out.   

Grade: A-

The Mavericks had a good week! They lost to a Denver team that got its key pieces (other than Nikola Jokic) back recently, but ran the table after that. Both wins against Utah came in bizarre blowouts, where the Jazz looked like they didn’t care about hiding their attempt to tank. Then, with whiffs of January 25th, 2010, Dallas blew the Knicks out of the water in one of the most shocking wins in recent memory. It was a double-digit spread in the Knicks’ favor, but the game was over by halftime. Max Christie hit six threes in the first half, leading the Mavericks to 75 points and a 28-point halftime lead. It was never close, and the Knicks looked helpless against a Dallas team that had Dwight Powell and Moussa Cisse as its only two available centers.

Naji Marshall continues to be incredible. He averaged 20.3 points and 4.3 assists this week and did not cool off, shooting 54.2 percent from the field. Brandon Williams played marvelously, scoring 16.5 points a night in electrifying fashion. A lot of guys, including Dwight Powell, stepped up with regular starters out of the lineup. With games against the Warriors, Lakers, and Bucks this upcoming week, it was good to gain momentum before the schedule toughens up. 

Straight A’s: Jason Kidd

As much as Jason Kidd frustrates fans to no end with his experimental style, the one thing you cannot take away from him is his ability to get guys to play hard. The Mavericks started four different starting lineups in as many games and won their last three by an average of 19 points. Caleb Martin, who averaged less than three points in 47 games for Dallas before this week, looked serviceable in a starting role and even scored 14 points against Utah. The 144 points last Thursday against the Jazz were the 10th most points in franchise history, and they did it with no Cooper Flagg and 10 different guys playing 20-plus minutes. Hell, they signed Jeremiah Robinson-Earl the day of that game, and got 55 solid minutes from him in three subsequent appearances. Dallas’ goal of pairing Flagg with a top-five pick in this upcoming draft is in jeopardy, simply because this team will not lie down while Kidd is at the helm. 

Currently Failing: Jaden Hardy

Unfortunately, it is so over for Jaden Hardy. In three blowout wins this week against Utah and New York, games in which the Mavericks won by 22, 18, and 17 points, Hardy was a team-worst minus-13 and shot 37.9 percent from the floor. He has not played much this season, but with opportunity presenting itself via the injury bug, he completely dropped the ball. Hardy was given the starting nod in chapter one of the series against Utah, and the fact that he did not start the second installment while playing just 17 minutes total in that game should tell you everything you need to know. The following two-minute appearance against the Knicks seems to signal that Kidd is done with the fourth-year guard. I don’t blame him; I have had enough of watching him.

Extra Credit: Klay Thompson

Klay Thompson shooting the ball is a beautiful thing. The beauty increases tenfold when the shots go in, and did they ever this week. Thompson hit 18 of his 38 threes (47.4 percent) and 25 of his 50 shots (50 percent). He went nuclear in the first half of the Saturday matinee against the Jazz, scoring all 23 of his points in just 14 minutes. At times, Thompson plays like he is on his way out of the league. But he still has stretches of greatness in him, and it is a magical thing to witness when it happens. 

Clippers vs Bulls Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight’s NBA Game

The Chicago Bulls will welcome the red-hot Los Angeles Clippers to the United Center tonight, who have won six straight games. 

James Harden's playmaking is at a high level, but my Clippers vs Bulls predictions are eyeing Chicago’s defense to keep him in check. 

Read more in my NBA picks for Tuesday, January 20. 

Clippers vs Bulls prediction

Clippers vs Bulls best bet: James Harden Under 8.5 assists (+102)

Los Angeles Clippers veteran James Harden is showing shades of his old self this season, posting averages of 26.1 points, 8.1 assists, and 4.8 rebounds. While he has cashed the Over in dimes in three of his last four, the Chicago Bulls do a good job of containing opposing guards from facilitating the rock. 

Chicago is allowing fewer than eight assists per contest to point guards and shooting guards. Harden is also averaging just 7.3 dimes on the road, compared to 8.9 at home, and he’s finished Under 8.5 assists in two of his last three away appearances. 

The Beard always makes an impact as a passer, but Chicago will contain his ability to drop dimes here. 

Clippers vs Bulls same-game parlay

Coby White is averaging 18.1 PPG as one of the Bulls’ go-to options. The former UNC standout has played worse at home, though, averaging 16.4 points compared to 20.1 on the road. 

White has cashed the Under in points in four of his previous five appearances at the United Center, and the Clippers are flourishing as a whole at the moment.

Los Angeles heads into this contest as a +140 underdog on the moneyline, which screams value. The Clips haven’t lost since January 7, and four of their six victories during this unbeaten run have been on the road. 

Clippers vs Bulls SGP

  • James Harden Under 8.5 assists
  • Coby White Under 18.5 points
  • Clippers moneyline

Our "from downtown" SGP: Vooch Struggles From Deep

Nikola Vucevic has cashed the Under in converted triples in four of his last five games

Clippers vs Bulls SGP

  • James Harden Under 8.5 assists
  • Coby White Under 18.5 points
  • Clippers moneyline
  • Nikola Vucevic Under 1.5 threes

Clippers vs Bulls odds

  • Spread: Clippers +140 | Bulls -165
  • Moneyline: Clippers +3.5 (-105) | Bulls -3.5 (-115)
  • Over/Under: Over 226 (-110) | Under 226 (-110)

Clippers vs Bulls betting trend to know

The Clippers have hit the 1H Moneyline in 26 of their last 40 games (+14.40 Units / 23% ROI). Find more NBA betting trends for Clippers vs. Bulls.

How to watch Clippers vs Bulls

LocationUnited Center, Chicago, IL
DateTuesday, January 20, 2026
Tip-off8:00 p.m. ET
TVFDSN Southern California, CHSN

Clippers vs Bulls latest injuries

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Defensive Player of the Year preview: Victor Wembanyama, Rudy Gobert, Chet Holmgren

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: Defensive Player of the Year.

NBA Defensive Player of the Year: Victor Wembanyama

2. Rudy Gobert
3. Chet Holmgren

Analysis of Defensive Player of the Year race

It's not a question of whether Victor Wembanyama should be the midseason winner of this award, it's whether he should qualify in games played (and if he will qualify for the 65-game threshold at the end of the season). He has missed 14 games this season (and had one game of less than 20 minutes played), if that number gets above 17 he will not qualify under the league's (ridiculous) 65-game rule. That said, with midseason awards this year, I am taking the position that if the player has not yet reached 17 games missed, he qualifies. In Wemby's case, he has said the timing of his return from injury was partially in hopes of qualifying for postseason awards.

Wembanyama's case is easy to make. It's not his 2.6 blocks per game (which leads the league), or the fact he has blocked six 3-pointers already this season (and has 41 blocks at the rim), or the fact the Spurs defense is 8.8 points per 100 possessions better defensively when he is on the court (and his replacement at center when out, Luke Kornett, is a quality defender in his own right, so that number is not artificially inflated), or his incredible rim protection numbers, or even that he is the anchor of the league's third-best defense. None of that. It's simply the Wemby effect when he is on the court — no player makes opponent rethink their decisions and dribble out of the paint, or pull up early and take bad shots, or just alter everything more than Wembanyama. He simply changes the geometry of the court on defense like nobody else.

If Wembanyama does not qualify, I would go with Rudy Gobert for DPOY right now — he has lifted an otherwise unimpressive Timberwolves defense (bottom three in the league when he is off the court) to a top-10 defense when he is on it. His rim protection stats are elite, but more than that, he has been the defensive anchor that has helped the Timberwolves play like a contender for a couple of months. He has been incredibly impactful as a defender. This would be Gobert's fifth DPOY for good reason.

Holmgren deserves credit for being the anchor of the league's best defense and lifting it to a new level this season, but when he is off the court the Thunder are still a top-three defense in the league. Holmgren shouldn't be blamed for being on a good team with a lot of defenders, and he has shown he can do more than drop back and protect the rim, he can switch out and guard on the perimeter when asked. Still, I would have him third in impact behind the two men above him.

There are other names worth mentioning here. Ausar Thompson got serious consideration from me, sort of as the representative of a very good Pistons defense (Isaiah Stewart would be a good representative, too, but might not make the games requirement). The versatile and underrated Bam Adebayo deserves a mention here, he has been fantastic for the No. 3 defense in the league. Derrick White, Amen Thompson, Evan Mobley and Scottie Barnes all deserve a mention here as well.

Betting Defensive Player of Year Race

We reached out to the NBC Sports betting experts for their thoughts on the DPOY race and how they might bet it.

Jay Coucher, NBC Sports Lead Betting Analyst

If Wemby qualifies, he should win the award handily— he is in a tier of his own for defensive impact. If he doesn't qualify, it's likely Chet v Gobert, with the edge going to Chet for making last year's clear #1 defense even better this year.

Drew Dinsick, NBC Sports Betting Analyst

Qualification is the name of the game in this market. The low probability of Wemby qualifying would likely find him the winner. If not Wemby, Chet is the clear most likely choice as the standout of the amazing Thunder defense. The availability of Chet is far from a certainty, however, which would create a black swan event like we had last season for this award. Best guess would be Rudy Gobert taking home his fifth DPOY in that instance but his price at +300 now means you are counting on at least a 25% chance that Chet does not qualify which seems like a reach at this time.  

Defensive Player of the Year preview: Victor Wembanyama, Rudy Gobert, Chet Holmgren

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: Defensive Player of the Year.

NBA Rookie of the Year: Victor Wembanyama

2. Rudy Gobert
3. Chet Holmgren

Analysis of Defensive Player of the Year race

It's not a question of whether Victor Wembanyama should be the midseason winner of this award, it's whether he should qualify in games played (and if he will qualify for the 65-game threshold at the end of the season). He has missed 14 games this season (and had one game of less than 20 minutes played), if that number gets above 17 he will not qualify under the league's (ridiculous) 65-game rule. That said, with midseason awards this year, I am taking the position that if the player has not yet reached 17 games missed, he qualifies. In Wemby's case, he has said the timing of his return from injury was partially in hopes of qualifying for postseason awards.

Wembanyama's case is easy to make. It's not his 2.6 blocks per game (which leads the league), or the fact he has blocked six 3-pointers already this season (and has 41 blocks at the rim), or the fact the Spurs defense is 8.8 points per 100 possessions better defensively when he is on the court (and his replacement at center when out, Luke Kornett, is a quality defender in his own right, so that number is not artificially inflated), or his incredible rim protection numbers, or even that he is the anchor of the league's third-best defense. None of that. It's simply the Wemby effect when he is on the court — no player makes opponent rethink their decisions and dribble out of the paint, or pull up early and take bad shots, or just alter everything more than Wembanyama. He simply changes the geometry of the court on defense like nobody else.

If Wembanyama does not qualify, I would go with Rudy Gobert for DPOY right now — he has lifted an otherwise unimpressive Timberwolves defense (bottom three in the league when he is off the court) to a top-10 defense when he is on it. His rim protection stats are elite, but more than that, he has been the defensive anchor that has helped the Timberwolves play like a contender for a couple of months. He has been incredibly impactful as a defender. This would be Gobert's fifth DPOY for good reason.

Holmgren deserves credit for being the anchor of the league's best defense and lifting it to a new level this season, but when he is off the court the Thunder are still a top-three defense in the league. Holmgren shouldn't be blamed for being on a good team with a lot of defenders, and he has shown he can do more than drop back and protect the rim, he can switch out and guard on the perimeter when asked. Still, I would have him third in impact behind the two men above him.

There are other names worth mentioning here. Ausar Thompson got serious consideration from me, sort of as the representative of a very good Pistons defense (Isaiah Stewart would be a good representative, too, but might not make the games requirement). The versatile and underrated Bam Adebayo deserves a mention here, he has been fantastic for the No. 3 defense in the league. Derrick White, Amen Thompson, Evan Mobley and Scottie Barnes all deserve a mention here as well.

Betting Defensive Player of Year Race

We reached out to the NBC Sports betting experts for their thoughts on the DPOY race and how they might bet it.

Jay Coucher, NBC Sports Lead Betting Analyst

If Wemby qualifies, he should win the award handily— he is in a tier of his own for defensive impact. If he doesn't qualify, it's likely Chet v Gobert, with the edge going to Chet for making last year's clear #1 defense even better this year.

Drew Dinsick, NBC Sports Betting Analyst

Qualification is the name of the game in this market. The low probability of Wemby qualifying would likely find him the winner. If not Wemby, Chet is the clear most likely choice as the standout of the amazing Thunder defense. The availability of Chet is far from a certainty, however, which would create a black swan event like we had last season for this award. Best guess would be Rudy Gobert taking home his fifth DPOY in that instance but his price at +300 now means you are counting on at least a 25% chance that Chet does not qualify which seems like a reach at this time.  

Maryland's David Coit named AP men's college basketball player of the week

The Associated Press national player of the week in men’s college basketball for Week 11 of the season:

David Coit, Maryland

Coit averaged 36.5 points in two games last week, including an XFINITY Center-record 43 points in a 96-73 win over Penn State. The 5-foot-11 guard nicknamed "Diggy" tied a school record with nine 3-pointers and became the first Maryland player since Gene Shue in 1952-53 to have multiple 40-point games in a season.

Coit had 30 points in the first half against the Nittany Lions and became the first Maryland player since Nick Caner-Medley in 2006 to have consecutive 30-point games after scoring 30 in a loss to Southern California. Coit shot 23 of 41 from the field and 13 of 26 from 3-point range in the two games.

Runner-up

Cameron Boozer, Duke. The 6-9 freshman averaged 25.5 points, 13.5 rebounds, 3.5 assists and 2.0 steals, while shooting 63.6% from the field in road wins over the ACC's Bay Area schools. Boozer finished with 21 points, 13 rebounds and three assists in No. 5 Duke's 71-56 victory at California. He followed with 30 points, 14 rebounds, four assists, four steals and a blocked shot in an 80-50 win over Stanford.

Boozer was the AP player of the week in Week 5 of the season.

Honorable mention

JT Toppin, No. 12 Texas Tech; John Blackwell, Wisconsin; Eric Pratt, Stony Brook.

Keep an eye on

Delrecco Gillespie, Kent State. The 6-8 forward averaged 8.1 points per game last season, but has become one of the nation's best scorers this year. Gillespie has increased his scoring average to 19.8 points per game this season while grabbing 12.6 rebounds. He had 29 points and 13 rebounds in a win over Toledo last week, then finished with 20 points, 15 rebounds and five assists in a win against Buffalo. Kent State is a game behind No. 25 Miami (Ohio) in the Mid-American Conference and hosts the RedHawks on Tuesday.

___

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Cedric Coward is learning in the defensive deep end as one of NBA’s best rookies

Cedric Coward was never going to be your average rookie.

Drafted No. 11 overall at 21 years old, Coward’s path to the NBA was anything but conventional. There were no USA Basketball camps, no high profile AAU circuits, no McDonald’s All American games. Instead, his journey ran through Division III Willamette University, then Eastern Washington in the Big Sky, before a short six game stint at Washington State that was cut short by injury.

That unconventional background has not slowed his introduction to the league. If anything, it has accelerated it.

Rather than being eased in, Coward has been thrown straight into the deep end by Memphis, starting games and taking on real responsibility at the defensive end. Night after night, he is asked to guard players with more size, polish, and NBA experience than he had ever previously encountered. And yet, he has handled the challenge with a level of composure that belies his rookie status.

“It’s been great,” Coward said. “I done got my *** busted a couple times, but I’ve also played guys pretty well at the same time. You’re learning multiple things at one time.”

What has separated Coward early is not just that he survives these matchups, but how he impacts them. For a player listed as a shooting guard, his shot blocking stands out immediately. Coward offers a level of rim protection that is rare for his position, rotating from the perimeter to contest at the basket with timing and length rather than reckless gambling.

Head coach Tuomas Iisalo sees that defensive profile as both unusual and foundational.

“He’s a very unique defender for his position,” Iisalo said. “He’s basically a shooting guard or off guard and offers for that position a ton of rim protection, a ton of length, and also defensive rebounding, which is often the importance of that is maybe marginalised.”

That combination shows up in the numbers and on film. Coward is one of only two rookies to post both a positive offensive and defensive Actual EPM, according to Dunks and Threes, alongside VJ Edgecombe. Context matters. He is not being sheltered. He is defending primary options on the perimeter, then sliding into help situations where his length can erase mistakes at the rim.

Those plays are not accidents. They reflect preparation and awareness. Coward studies tendencies, understands angles, and rarely overcommits. He is willing to concede a difficult pull up if it allows him to stay in position to contest the next action at the rim.

Memphis ranks as a top 15 defensive team overall, but the Grizzlies are 4.4 points better defensively when Coward is on the floor. That improvement is not accidental. His presence changes what lineups can attempt defensively, allowing more pressure at the point of attack because there is unexpected rim protection behind it.

Iisalo is careful not to frame Coward’s early success as a finished product.

“Every rookie has a lot to learn,” Iisalo said. “He’s had a lot of early success in the league, but it’s very important to think about like the best years are far ahead. It’s just constant learning and no better way to learn than to be in the deep end. Against great players and just having different type of matchups.”

For Coward, progress is defined less by perfection and more by response.

“I think for me, it’s just always making sure whatever mistake I made, you try not to make the same mistake twice.”

During the third quarter of the NBA London game, Coward was guarding Franz Wagner and pre-empted a screen, momentarily giving up a clean driving lane to the rim. Once he realized the mistake, he did not give up on the play. He recovered to get back into the action with a rear view contest that slowed Wagner’s gather. That split second mattered. It gave Jaren Jackson Jr the time he needed to shift over and protect the rim. Plays like that explain why the trust is already there. Despite his rookie status, Coward has been empowered with one of the most demanding roles on the roster. Guarding elite wings while also serving as a secondary rim protector is rarely a task handed out lightly, yet Memphis has not hesitated.

“To be able to have the opportunity to do that,” Coward said, “and to be able to have the team believe in me to do that, it gives me more faith.”

For a player who arrived without the traditional pedigree, Coward’s early NBA story has been defined by substance over reputation. The learning moments are still coming, sometimes painfully so, but the defensive impact is already real. And for Memphis, that blend of uncommon skill set and long runway may be the most encouraging sign of all.

Lakers vs Nuggets Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight’s NBA Game

On the heels of an NBA All-Star starter snub, LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers head into the altitude to face the Denver Nuggets tonight.

On Monday, James found out that he will not be in the starting lineup for the league’s annual showcase for the first time in his 23-year career. 

Just how will “The King” respond?

My Lakers vs. Nuggets predictions paint a big game for James, but maybe not in the way you think.

Here are my best NBA picks for January 20.

Tip-off is set for 10:00 p.m. ET from Ball Arena in Denver, with the game airing on NBC. 

Lakers vs Nuggets prediction

Lakers vs Nuggets best bet: LeBron James Over 12.5 rebounds + assists (-120)

LeBron James has no problem doing the little things that win basketball games.

Through nine games this month, James has beefed up his assist and rebound rates significantly, averaging 7.6 in both stat categories in January. 

His rebounding chances have increased from 8.6 to 10.9 in that span, while LeBron's potential assists have grown from 10.7 in the first three months to 13.6 in January.

The Los Angeles Lakers superstar has blown through his combo prop market in those nine contests, eclipsing his rebounds + assists total in seven of those games. 

Meanwhile, the Denver Nuggets are walking wounded at the moment. Nikola Jokic is the most significant loss, especially when it comes to keeping opponents off the glass, as Denver has allowed nearly eight more rebounds per game since Dec. 29. 

Standouts like Aaron Gordon, Jamal Murray, Christian Braun, and backup center Jonas Valanciunas are also out or playing through injuries tonight.

LeBron's projections range from 12.4 rebounds + assists to 14.7 combined. My number sits closer to 14 boards + dimes for the "King", which makes the Over 12.5 on this combo prop playable even at -145.

Lakers vs Nuggets same-game parlay

The Nuggets have run into some rotten teams lately, picking up wins over Milwaukee, New Orleans, Dallas, and Washington. Los Angeles is a step up.

James is averaging both 7.6 assists and 7.6 rebounds over the last nine games.

Luka Doncic can inflict damage from downtown, especially with the Nuggets having to help inside with an undersized interior.

Lakers vs Nuggets SGP

  • Lakers moneyline
  • LeBron James Over 12.5 rebounds + assists
  • Luka Doncic Over 3.5 threes

Our "from downtown" SGP: Hollywood Knights

Los Angeles is getting healthier while Denver’s lineup limps into Tuesday.

James has gone Over his rebounds + assist prop in seven of his last nine games.

Luka’s projections lean toward four makes from deep against Denver.

The Nuggets' defense has taken a step back without Jokic, which is saying something.

Lakers vs Nuggets SGP

  • Lakers moneyline
  • LeBron James Over 12.5 rebounds + assists
  • Luka Doncic Over 3.5 threes
  • Luka Doncic Over 3.5 threes

Lakers vs Nuggets odds

  • Spread: Lakers -1.5 (-110) | Nuggets +1.5 (-110)
  • Moneyline: Lakers -125 | Nuggets +105
  • Over/Under: Over 227.5 (-110) | Under 227.5 (-110)

Lakers vs Nuggets betting trend to know

The Nuggets are 27-16 to the Over/Under this season. Find more NBA betting trends for Lakers vs. Nuggets.

How to watch Lakers vs Nuggets

LocationBall Arena, Denver, CO
DateTuesday, January 20, 2026
Tip-off10:00 p.m. ET
TVNBC

Lakers vs Nuggets latest injuries

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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

Steph Curry jersey from '22 Finals sells for record $2.45 million

Steph Curry's Game 6 jersey from the 2022 NBA Finals now ranks as his most expensive piece of memorabilia. (Credit: Getty Images)
Steph Curry's Game 6 jersey from the 2022 NBA Finals now ranks as his most expensive piece of memorabilia. (Credit: Getty Images)

A new record price has been paid for a Stephen Curry jersey.

Curry’s jersey from Game 6 of the 2022 NBA Finals, the only one he wore in the Warriors' title-clinching victory in Boston, sold for $2.45 million in a private sale that was announced over the weekend. Curry scored 34 points in the game and won his only NBA Finals MVP.

The jersey was previously sold in 2022 by Barry Meisel of Meigray for $1.7 million. Meisel confirmed to cllct the initial sale was conducted through the Meigray Golden State Warriors game-worn program.

The new price paid is the highest ever for a Curry gamer, besting the previous record of $1.758 million paid last year for the second game of the star’s career in which he scored the first 3-pointer of his career.

The most expensive Curry card ever sold fetched $1.08 million, making this jersey the most valuable Curry-related piece of memorabilia to sell publicly.

The buyer was represented by Curio Advisor and wishes to remain anonymous.

"With this Curry jersey, there’s already a precedent established for his high-end market, so we can use previous comparable sales times his market multiple to find valuations that are comfortable for both parties," Curio Advisor's Bradley Calleja said. "There’s more buy-side demand in sports memorabilia right now than I’ve ever seen, especially with items of the highest quality.

"We’ve also never had more engagement from institutions, investment funds and even countries that are looking to expand their portfolios to include not just blue-chip art, but game-worn memorabilia. Pieces like this are timeless, and sit at the confluence of authenticity, scarcity and virality."

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Will Stern is a reporter and editor for cllct, the premier company for collectible culture.

Jimmy Butler suffers season-ending knee injury: Fantasy basketball fallout and potential targets

Follow Rotoworld Basketball on X for the latest news around the NBA!

Monday's nine-game NBA slate ended on a sour note, as the Golden State Warriors' win over the Miami Heat came at a high cost. Star forward Jimmy Butler injured his right knee during the third quarter and did not return. The team's worst fears would be realized in the hours that followed, with it being reported that Butler would miss the rest of the regular season with a torn ACL.

Replacing a player of Butler's caliber is not easy, and it's going to take more than one player to pick up the slack. Through 38 games, he averaged 20.0 points, 5.6 rebounds, 4.9 assists, 1.4 steals and 0.8 3-pointers in 31.1 minutes, shooting 51.9% from the field and 86.4% from the foul line. That production was good for top-25 per-game value in nine-cat formats, something that only one other Warriors player (Stephen Curry) can claim at this point in the season.

The Warriors do have some low-rostered players whose names will be called in the coming weeks. Here's a look at the fantasy fallout from Butler's injury.

→ Watch the NBA Coast 2 Coast Tuesday on NBC and Peacock: The Spurs take on the Rockets at 8 p.m. ET before the Lakers and Nuggets tip off at 10 p.m. ET. Both games are available on Peacock. Check your local listings for the NBC game in your area.

NBA: Portland Trail Blazers at Golden State Warriors
NBA: Portland Trail Blazers at Golden State Warriors

2025-26 Fantasy Basketball Top 200 Rankings: Warriors lose Jimmy Butler to torn ACL

With Butler’s season-ending injury, fantasy managers are forced to pivot after the loss of a top-25 player.

The last time Butler missed a game, on Jan. 17 against the Hornets, rookie Will Richard (6% rostered on Yahoo) was inserted into the starting lineup. In 31 minutes, he accounted for 11 points, six rebounds, five assists, three steals, one block and one 3-pointer, shooting 5-of-12 from the field. Richard has started 15 games this season, averaging 8.7 points, 3.5 rebounds, 1.7 assists, 1.1 steals and 1.4 3-pointers in 22.6 minutes. There are better options than Richard for fantasy managers to choose from, even if he is Steve Kerr's choice to fill the void in the starting lineup.

Brandin Podziemski (36% rostered) is at the top of this list, and he had his most productive night of the season on Monday. In 30 minutes off the bench, he tallied a season-high 24 points, six rebounds, four assists, one steal and three 3-pointers, shooting 9-of-19 from the field. Even if he isn't moved into the starting lineup, Podziemski's scoring ability takes on added importance in the aftermath of Butler's injury.

Moses Moody (17%) has been a fixture in the starting lineup since mid-December, and he'll have additional opportunities to contribute regardless of who is named the fifth starter. And experienced fantasy managers know not to sleep on De'Anthony Melton (10%), who can be a fantasy standout when healthy. The concern for him is availability, as back-to-backs have been off the table since his return from an ACL tear suffered early last season. Melton did not play against the Heat, but his ability to fill a stat sheet can make him a league-winner down the stretch, as long as he's able to stay healthy.

Some may be wondering about where this leaves Jonathan Kuminga (17%), who began the season as a starter but has not appeared in a game since Dec. 18. Also, he reportedly requested a trade not long after becoming eligible for a move on Jan. 15. While Kerr said during his postgame availability that Kuminga would be ready if his name were called, his most significant value in accounting for Butler's absence will likely be via trade.