Grading the Devin Carter trade, other free agency moves

ATLANTA, GA - MARCH 28: Devin Carter #22 of the Sacramento Kings drives to the basket during the game against the Atlanta Hawks on March 28, 2026 at State Farm Arena in Atlanta, Georgia. 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 Adam Hagy/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Free agency technically kicks off later today, but there are already reports flying around about signings, trades, and option decisions all over social media.

The Hawks have been busy in both making moves pertaining to rostered players as well as acquiring players from other teams. Yesterday, Malik Brown broke down what new addition Aaron Wiggins brings to the team, but I’ll go over all the rest of the moves and give my two cents on the important ones.

Picking up Mouhamed Gueye’s $2.4 million 2026-27 option

‘Mo’ Gueye has had a rapid rise from second rounder to G Leaguer to rotation player for the Hawks. He can be an absolutely devastating defender — in the right situation at least — with a penchant for pinning shots off the glass.

The offensive game is still a work in progress, especially if he never develops into a corner three-point shooter, but it’s smart to hold onto as many elite defenders for use in certain lineups even if that overall leap never happens.

A no-brainer.

Grade: A

Trading two second-round picks for Aaron Wiggins

I’ll be brief since Malik covered Wiggins’ on-court potential the other day. Two seconds is a low cost to pay for a solid bench wing with some on-ball upside and shooting potential who also comes from an elite Thunder defensive scheme.

His contract over the next two years is right around $17 million combined (declining from 2026-27 to 2027-28), and he fits the timeline of the current roster. I say it’s a home run move on the margins.

Grade: A+

Guaranteeing Buddy Hield’s $9.7 million salary for 2026-27

This one is a shocker — at least in a vacuum.

Hield came over with Jonathan Kuminga in the return for sending Kristaps Porzingis to the Golden State Warriors, but it quickly became clear that the Bahamian international wasn’t in the Hawks’ plans. Hield mostly only saw garbage time the second half of last season, though he was lauded for his leadership in the locker room as the Hawks stormed into the playoffs as the 6 seed.

With the Hawks facing a deadline (pushed back to the guarantee date on the calendar already), the team had to decide whether to waive him and eat the $3 million guaranteed portion of his salary or fully guarantee the entire thing, presumably as salary filler.

They chose the latter.

Taken alone, that choice gets a D from me as Hield is realistically no more than a veteran minimum-caliber player as he enters his age 34 season in 2026-27. Maybe he can step in off the bench and space the floor a bit while not hurting you too much on defense, but clearly his best days are behind him, making his almost $10 million salary much too much for his services.

Still, I have a sneaking suspicion that this decision was made with a particular trade scenario in mind.

Grade: Incomplete

Declining Jonathan Kuminga’s $24.3 million 2026-27 team option

Within the fanbase, a decision either way would have had its two camps of supporters versus detractors.

Kuminga had some real highs and some clear lows in his short time in Atlanta, averaging 12.3 points (58% true shooting), 5.3 rebounds, and 2.1 assists in 22.1 minutes per game in the regular season after the trade deadline. Similarly, in the first round against the Knicks, his performance was mixed but ultimately needed off the bench.

Jonathan Kuminga is still fairly young (23 years old) with athletic gifts you can’t teach, but even still the $24.3 million price tag is nothing to sneeze at. Presumably, the Hawks could have either declined his option and extended him at a lower annual value so that he doesn’t hit free agency in 2027 or picked up the option as part of a trade.

Instead, they did neither. Still, similar to the Hield decision, we’ll have to wait to see if the Hawks give Kuminga a new deal or merely let him walk to a suitor willing to meet his price.

Grade: B- pending a possible re-signing, C if he walksgiven Porzingis’ new deal with Golden State

Trading for Devin Carter, 2033 second-round pick

While Devin Carter has disappointed as an older lottery pick from just two drafts ago, it’s such a low-risk pickup that this trade almost impossible to criticize. Based on the reporting, it sounds like the Hawks are giving up essentially nothing to pick up the 6-foot-2 point guard.

Carter was 22 when he entered the draft from Providence, and in the two years since he’s struggled with injuries — most notably a torn left labrum the offseason he was drafted leading to just 74 games in two seasons — and shooting woes (career 27% shooter from three). He’s more of a defensive-minded guard to be sure, but he’ll need to make himself more useful than he’s been on offense to have real a role in the NBA.

My read is the Hawks are mainly absorbing his $5.2 million salary for next season (with a team option in 2027-28 that they’ll need to decide on by October) for the low cost of also picking up a 2033 second-round pick which helps offset the two they sent out for Aaron Wiggins. Any upside they get from his play on the court is icing on the cake, but they can cut him out of the rotation if needed after acquiring Wiggins and Kingston Flemings this offseason.

Grade: A-

Tigers vs. Yankees prediction: Odds, recent stats, trends, and best bets for June 30

It may well be the pitching matchup of the season tonight in Motown when Cam Schlittler and the Yankees (48-36) take the field at Comerica Park against Tarik Skubal and the Tigers (36-49).

 

The Yankees will need this year's Cy Young favorite to be at his best if they are to snap their now five-game losing streak. Last night's series opener belonged to Detroit from nearly the first pitch. The Tigers rolled to a 7-3 victory behind a dominant performance from Casey Mize, who fired seven shutout innings, allowed just one hit, and matched a career high with 10 strikeouts. Detroit jumped on Yankees starter Ryan Weathers early and often, scoring five runs in the first two innings and adding two more in the fourth to build a 7-0 lead. Kevin McGonigle drove in two runs, Hao-Yu Lee added two RBIs, and the Tigers took advantage of two New York errors. The Yankees did not score until the eighth inning, when Amed Rosario launched a three-run homer, but that was the extent of their offense. New York managed only three hits and struck out 13 times. The loss was their eighth in their last nine games.

 

As mentioned, tonight's pitching matchup is special. Detroit sends ace Tarik Skubal (+6000 at DraftKings to repeat as Cy Young winner) to the mound. The left-hander takes the ball for the Tigers with a 3-4 record, 3.32 ERA, 0.99 WHIP, and 66 strikeouts in 59.2 innings. There is an expectation that the defending Cy Young winner will return to form, but he has yet to be the dominant ace he was prior to his arm issues. In three starts since his return, Skubal has given up nine earned runs in 16.1 innings. The Yankees counter with the current favorite to win the Cy Young Cam Schlittler (-115 at DraftKings), who has emerged as the ace of this loaded New York staff. Schlittler is 8-4 with a sparkling 1.62 ERA, 0.92 WHIP, and 118 strikeouts across 100 innings.

 

The availability of Jazz Chisholm Jr. is a question mark. He exited Monday's game after a collision with Jasson Domínguez and has reportedly entered concussion protocol.

 

Lets dive into tonight’s matchup and find a sweat or two.

 

We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on the how to catch first pitch, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.

 

Follow Rotoworld Player News for the latest fantasy and betting player news and analysis all season long.

 

Game Details and How to Watch: Tigers vs. Yankees

 

  • Date: Tuesday, June 30, 2026
  • Time: 7:05PM EST
  • Site: Yankees Stadium
  • City: New York, NY
  • Network/Streaming: MLB.TV, Tiger.TV, TBS, Prime Video

 

Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out.

 

The Latest Odds: Tigers vs. Yankees

The latest odds as of Tuesday courtesy of DraftKings:

  • Moneyline: Detroit Tigers (+114), New York Yankees (-137)
  • Spread: Tigers +1.5 (-188), Yankees -1.5 (+154)
  • Total: 7.0 runs

 

Probable Starting Pitchers and their Stats: Tigers vs. Yankees for June 30

  • Tigers: Tarik Skubal
    Season Totals: 59.2 IP, 3-4, 3.32 ERA, 0.99 WHIP, 66K, 8 BB
  • Yankees: Cam Schlittler
    Season Totals: 100.0 IP, 8-4, 1.62 ERA, 0.92 WHIP, 118K, 20 BB

Who’s Hot? Who’s Not! Tigers vs. Yankees

  • Ben Rice has not had a hit since last Wednesday going 0-18 over his last 5 games
  • Rice has 2 hits (both singles) in his last 8 games (2-31)
  • Anthony Volpe is 1-17 over his last 6 games
  • Cody Bellinger is 1-18 over his last 5 games
  • What little history the Tigers have against Cam Schlittler is not great as they are a collective 3-15 (.200) against him
  • Paul Goldschmidt is 7-13 with 4 HRs against Tarik Skubal in his career
  • Kevin McGonigle was 2-4 last night and is 7-21 over his last 6 games
  • Zach McKinstry is 11-35 over his last 11 games
  • Spencer Torkelson is 4-10 over his last 3 games
  • Tarik Skubal has struck out Jasson Dominguez 4 times in 8 career ABs against him
  • Skubal has K’d Anthony Volpe 6 times in 12 career ABs against him

 

 

Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!

 

Top Betting Trends & Insights: Tigers vs. Yankees

 

  • The Yankees are 39-45 on the Run Line this season
  • The Tigers are 42-43 on the Run Line this season
  • The OVER has cashed 37 times in Detroit’s 85 games this season (37-44-4)
  • The OVER has cashed 38 times in the Yankees’ 84 games this season (38-42-4)

 

Expert picks & predictions: Tigers vs. Yankees

 

Rotoworld Bet Best Bet

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Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts.

 

Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.

 

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for tonight’s game between the Tigers and the Yankees:

 

  • Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is staying away from a play on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: Rotoworld Bet is staying away from a play on the Run Line.
  • Total: Rotoworld Bet is recommending a play on the Game Total OVER 7.0

 

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Kawhi Leonard Next Team Odds: Raptors Reunion For Two-Time Finals MVP

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What will be Kawhi Leonard's next team? The odds are out: while the NBA operates at maximum volume, Kawhi Leonard has always moved in total silence. 

While other superstars use public leverage plays and loud social media hints to dictate their futures, the league’s most enigmatic multi-time Finals MVP prefers to let his representation and closed-door front-office panic do the talking.

As confirmed by ESPN's Shams Charania, the Los Angeles Clippers are nearing a definitive agreement to send two-time Finals MVP Kawhi Leonard back to the Toronto Raptors.

On Kalshi, the Kawhi Leonard Next Team odds reacted instantly, throwing the entire board into a vertical spike that pushed Toronto shares from a heavily contested frontrunner into an absolute monopoly.

For macro-traders on the prediction markets, it is no longer about speculating on a potential destination: it is a lesson in contract settlement velocity, asset allocation, and squeezing out the final scraps of market efficiency before the league office locks the books.

Key Takeaways:

  • The Northern Monopoly: Toronto has completely conquered the board, surging to a 97% implied probability as short-sellers scramble to cover their positions.
  • The Price of Certainty: "Yes" shares for the Raptors are trading at an institutional ceiling of 99¢, indicating that the market treats this blockbuster trade as an absolute certainty.
  • The Collateral Damage: Former trailing options like Oklahoma City, Dallas, and the incumbent Clippers have been completely flattened, drifting down to raw micro-fractions.
img src="https://img.covers.com/betting/sportsbooks/336/kalshi.svg" alt="Kalshi Logo" width="194" height="62" loading="lazy"

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Kawhi Leonard Next Team Odds: Top Contenders

Total market liquidity scaled past $500,000 ($530,017 vol at the time of writing). This rush of capital reflects a classic late-stage migration where high-volume participants aggressively lay heavy capital to clear out the remaining cents on a near-guaranteed contract.

The underlying financial mechanics of this transaction required significant matching blocks. Leonard enters the final stretch of the offseason carrying a massive $50 million expiring contract.

While Clippers owner Steve Ballmer originally signaled an intense preference to keep his cornerstone and retool the roster in Los Angeles, the underlying structural pressure of looming league-mandated salary-cap circumvention findings completely altered the organizational math. Faced with punitive luxury tax restrictions, the Clippers' front office finally pulled the trigger on a comprehensive asset haul.

Kawhi Leonard Next Team Odds: Value Picks vs. Structural Certainty

In a prediction market trading at 99¢, the traditional concept of a "value pick" is fundamentally flipped. You are no longer looking for undervalued narratives; you are evaluating the cost of insurance or exploiting minor pricing inefficiencies before formal resolution rules lock down the capital.

Toronto Raptors Toronto Raptors | ‘Yes’ 99¢ | 97% Chance

Buying a contract at 99¢ is a pure capital efficiency play favored by institutional portfolios. You are risking $0.99 to yield a single penny of profit once the league office formally ratifies the paperwork.

While the profit margin is razor-thin, the probability of a multi-team deal collapsing after the specific asset components have been fully leaked to the national media is exceptionally low.

For traders looking for a safe, short-term treasury-style yield to park idle cash, clearing out the last few percentage points of this board is a standard execution play.

Toronto Raptors Toronto Raptors | ‘No’ 2¢ | 3% Chance

If you are a dedicated chaos merchant, buying the 'No' shares on Toronto at 2¢ is the only viable contrarian position left on the board.

The risk-to-reward ratio is mathematically spectacular: a tiny 2¢ risk yields a 98¢ payout if the entire trade dissolves at the eleventh hour.

Roster history tells us that Kawhi Leonard’s medical file is a permanent variable; if an unforeseen anomaly emerges during the mandatory incoming physical exam, the Raptors could theoretically pull back the contract. It is a true black-swan lottery ticket, but one that carries genuine structural justification given the player's extensive injury profile.

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Expert Context: The Trade Mechanics

The exact asset cascade required to move a $50 million contract under the modern collective bargaining agreement is staggeringly complex. According to the direct reporting from Shams Charania, the Clippers are receiving a substantial package consisting of "Brandon Ingram, Gradey Dick, 2 first-round picks, 1 pick swap and 2 second-rounders."

This tells us a massive story regarding front-office positioning. The Clippers previously expressed zero structural interest in a generic, one-for-one player package revolving around Ingram. However, Toronto successfully forced the issue by throwing in a premium young floor-spacer in Gradey Dick alongside a heavy treasure chest of future draft capital.

By surrendering their long-term draft depth, the Raptors' management successfully satisfied the Clippers' demands for an accelerated rebuilding toolkit, allowing Los Angeles to reset their cap sheet while staying competitive under the shadow of impending league sanctions.

Market Resolution Requirements & Strategic Considerations

For traders holding active positions on Kalshi, understanding the exact legal language governing the contract resolution is vital for risk insulation.

  • Roster over Rumor: Kalshi contracts for this market do not formally settle when an insider tweets a "nearing deal" update. The market explicitly resolves based on the first franchise Leonard is officially under contract with or rostered on for an active regular-season game appearance.
  • The Physical Exam Variable: Every major NBA transaction is contingent on the incoming player successfully passing a mandatory team medical review. Because Leonard is a historic load-management asset coming off a decorated but fragile availability track, smart traders keep a close eye on local Toronto health streams before completely over-leveraging into the 99¢ line.
  • Capital Velocity Management: If you accumulated Toronto shares back when they were trading at a modest 37¢ or 77¢, the smartest operational play is often to liquidate your position right now at 99¢. Locking in a guaranteed 22% to 62% return immediately frees up your active balance to deploy into secondary offseason markets, completely eliminating the minor risk of an administrative snag delaying your payout for weeks.

Northern Renaissance: The Raptors' Outlook with Kawhi

The moment this transaction officially clears the league office, the structural baseline of the Eastern Conference will be completely rewritten. Bringing Leonard back to the franchise he led to the mountain top in 2019 provides an immediate defensive identity to an ascending roster.

From a purely tactical perspective, Leonard will slot into a highly functional, lower-usage perimeter role alongside Scottie Barnes. This structural pairing allows Toronto to preserve his health via systematic regular-season load management without completely sacrificing their baseline win floor.

With elite spacing now insulated by the team's remaining rotation assets, macro-traders are already looking past this specific player market and aggressively buying into Toronto's Eastern Conference championship futures on secondary sports boards.

The Raptors are instantly accelerating their timeline, transforming from a patient development project back into a legitimate, battle-tested playoff threat.

How to Trade Kawhi Leonard Next Team Odds on Kalshi

Trading binary contracts on live NBA front-office movements offers a highly responsive, tactical experience that completely bypasses the static limitations of traditional sportsbooks.

  • Account Setup: Complete your profile configuration and fund your active trading account via secure bank wire or standard transfer to ensure your capital is fully liquid before breaking news hits.
  • Navigate: Click into the main sports market portal, filter your view by the "Next NBA Team" directory, and locate the active Kawhi Leonard dashboard.
  • Execute: Assess the current contract spread to decide if you want to back the heavy Canadian favorite via ‘Yes’ shares or buy ‘No’ contracts to profit from a potential breakdown in negotiations.
  • Monitor: Track your risk allocations in real-time through the live portfolio dashboard, allowing you to close out positions early to secure clean yields or mitigate your downside exposure.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

Islanders News: Prospect camp begins, free agency looms

True statement. | Getty Images

It’s the end of June, July beckons. Do you know where your prospects are? How about your free agents?

Islanders News

  • The Islanders wasted no time after the draft getting the kids to Long Island. Development camp began Monday morning with greetings and interviews and breaking into Blue and White. [Isles]
  • Adam Boqvist, Marc Gatcomb and Max Shabanov did not receive qualifying offers. [Post]
  • Islanders Anxiety: Mike and Dan review the final week, plus some bonus Masterleaf Theatre. [LHH]
  • Three Islanders free agency needs and some suggestions for filling them. [Newsday]
  • What would a successful free agency look like, anyway? (There’s a lot of crap out there.) [Newsday]
  • Speaking of…here’s a ranking of teams’ cap situations. “The Islanders should be in a strong position to build around Matthew Schaefer, Ilya Sorokin, Bo Horvat and Mathew Barzal, but the team’s cap sheet is handcuffed by several overpaid veterans.” [Athletic]

Elsewhere

  • Florida made a couple acquisitions, sending A.J. Greer to Anaheim for pending free agent Radko Gudas’ rights, and they sent a third to Vegas for goalie Akira Schmid. [NHL]
  • The Hurricanes acquired the negotiating rights to pending UFA John Carlson, who wants to move back east. [NHL]
  • Bourne: What the Leafs might be doing, or should do given what they’re doing. [Sportsnet]
  • Anders Lee is among the free agents the Senators should maybe target. [Sportsnet]
  • The Oilers invited three women pros to their development camp. [NHL]

The Cavs can’t afford to keep or lose Dean Wade

CLEVELAND, OH - MAY 15: Dean Wade #32 of the Cleveland Cavaliers is introduced before the game against the Detroit Pistons during Round Two Game Six of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on May 15, 2026 at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse in Cleveland, Ohio. 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 Lauren Leigh Bacho/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers have built one of the most expensive teams in the league, and one somehow devoid of depth at the most premium position.

The pursuit of talent over position has led to a team with too many overlapping skill sets at guard and center. That is coming back to bite them as they simultaneously can’t afford to be with or without the only rotation player who can naturally shift between small and power forward.

Dean Wade isn’t the ideal starting small forward for a championship-level team. He’s an exceptional point-of-attack defender who can legitimately guard each position on the court. Every team can use a player like that. It’s the offensive side that holds him back.

Wade is a respectable outside shooter for his size, but he hasn’t registered above the fifth percentile for offensive usage in the past five seasons. The hesitancy to pull the trigger when he has an opening, combined with his inability to provide much else as a passer, ball handler, or inside finisher, contributes to that number being so low. An offense can’t function at its capacity if one of its players is participating so little in the outcome of possessions.

Despite these warts, the market for Wade is robust. Every team is either looking for a star athletic wing or a way to slow down their opponent’s. Wade is the latter. And if you’re able to play him in a more ideal role, you’d probably get better results.

It’s been reported that Wade isn’t going to give the Cavs a hometown discount. His market could be upward to the entire non-tax midlevel exception of $15 million per year.

The Cavaliers can match that. They have Wade’s Bird rights, which means they can go over the salary cap to retain him. The concern comes with what that means for the rest of the cap sheet.

The second apron makes it very difficult to reshape your team. The Cavs found that out the hard way this past season as they were the only team above the second apron. James Harden opting out of his contract has allowed the Cavs to duck below that threshold by $42.1 million. But if they are going to stay below — or even get below the first apron — they’ll need more than just signing Harden to a more team-friendly deal.

Moving Dennis Schröder or Max Strus for smaller contracts or cap relief is a possibility that was already on the table. Trading either or both would become vital if you were to retain Wade near the $15 million per year mark. It’s also worth noting that these changes would be aimed at bringing back a group that fell in four games to the New York Knicks — not one that’s a proven championship contender you want to keep intact.

Despite that, if the Cavs lose Wade, there really isn’t a simple solution for replacing him.

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The Cavs don’t have enough wings to take up Wade’s minutes internally. Strus has proven that he can start at the three with this group, but he can’t do so and also provide backup minutes at power forward. Neither can Jaylon Tyson at 6’6″ if he takes another step forward in his development.

Cleveland’s core four doesn’t have the same exact skill sets, but from a team construction standpoint, they functionally occupy similar archetypes. Donovan Mitchell and Harden are both most effective with the ball in their hands while not providing much resistance as point of attack defenders. Jarrett Allen and Evan Mobley are both at their best as play finishers, not play creators. They’re also more traditional rim protectors that aren’t as useful when they’re forced to guard in space. Both sets require compromises elsewhere. This creates lineups where you have multiple players with the same skills and the same weaknesses.

Redundancy on its own isn’t a problem. Having multiple elite ball handlers and rim protectors is extremely useful over an 82-game season. However, in the playoffs, you need to be able to play in a variety of ways depending on the matchup. This is where the repeated strengths and weaknesses of the core are an issue.

The ideal role players for this kind of team would be players who have well-rounded games. Unfortunately for the Cavs, it’s difficult to find well-rounded role players for a variety of reasons. The main one being that if their games were that well-rounded, they’re usually not actually in the role-player tier.

So instead, the Cavs have opted for specialists to plug holes. There’s lineups and situations that someone like Sam Merrill is extremely useful in. And there’s situations and lineups where it doesn’t quite work. The same isn’t true for Wade.

With the team’s strengths and weaknesses, nearly every grouping benefits from Wade’s point of attack defense, rebounding, switchability, and occasional shooting. This is why the Cavs have consistently played better with Wade on the court.

Lineups with Wade playing last season were three points better than they were when he was off. That drastically increased in the playoffs. The Cavs were 10.6 points better with Wade on the floor compared to without him. That was second only to Harden (+12.7).

Wade has consistently paired well with the front court of Allen and Mobley. Lineups with all three have been in the 98th percentile or better in defensive rating in four of their five seasons together. This includes lineups with all three posting a 99.4 defensive rating (100th percentile) this past season.

It’s easy to see why when you watch these groups play. Wade can guard the opposing team’s best perimeter player. The two bigs can switch any pick-and-rolls without giving up significant mismatches with backline help behind them. And Wade does enough as a shooter and rebounder to round out those lineups. This is just one example of a grouping that Wade can elevate.

On one hand, it’s difficult to justify giving $15 million per year for a player with such a low usage offensively, and who can be a liability in the playoffs when he isn’t taking outside shots. At the same time, there’s no one on the roster, nor anyone that the Cavs could easily acquire, who would better provide the defensive versatility and rebounding that Wade does.

This is one of the many areas where the lack of roster balance hurts the Cavs. Every team under this CBA has weak points and role players that hold groups together. That’s fine. But ideally, those glue guys aren’t the only players at that particular position.

Wade’s importance is a byproduct of valuing skill over position. That philosophy can lead you to stealing Allen in a multi-team trade or picking up an All-Star guard like Darius Garland instead of taking Jarrett Culver because he played a more valuable position. But when taken to its furthest extreme, you end up with a roster that is only glued together by an undrafted free agent that isn’t good enough to elevate the group to the next level, but also too expensive to justify really paying if it handcuffs your ability to make other moves.

The Cavs have a difficult choice to make with the start of free agency later today. Either they pay Wade more than they can easily rationalize doing, considering their cap situation. Or, they lose him for nothing, and will need to spend valuable assets and likely create holes elsewhere in the roster trying to find a replacement.

Neither is a good option. But the Cavs need to choose one, and hope to reinforce the wing position at some point this summer, regardless of which direction they decide to go.

Who’s most likely to jumpstart the offense?

NEW YORK, NY - JUNE 29: Spencer Jones #78 and Cody Bellinger #35 of the New York Yankees look on during the game against the Detroit Tigers at Yankee Stadium on June 29, 2026 in New York, New York. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The worst-kept secret about the Yankees right now is that they’re hurting for some offensive fireworks. With Aaron Judge, Giancarlo Stanton, Trent Grisham, and Ryan McMahon all on the IL right now, over a third of the starting lineup is missing and the consequences can be felt in their five-game losing streak. They’ve been on no-hit alert in back-to-back nights now, and in general the lineup has failed to get much of anything going on a consistent basis. Nearly everyone in the lineup is slumping, and as a result they haven’t scored more than four runs in a game in over a week. That just won’t do.

So there’s been many culprits responsible for the offense’s cold streak, but who can pull them out of the doldrums? In an ideal world there would be several hitters getting close to finding their form again, but sometimes you just need one guy to get on a heater to take the pressure off the rest of the team. It doesn’t matter who does it, but someone’s gotta step up and be the one to put the lineup on their back for at least a little bit. Let’s go over some candidates, shall we?

Ben Rice has been the 1B to Aaron Judge’s 1A in the lineup for the majority of the year, but with Judge now out Rice unfortunately entered a pretty big slump regressing back to the mean a bit. His June’s been rough, but he still stacks up as the team’s best hitter this year and thus stands the best chance of carrying the load with some timely homers if he gets back on track. The lack of protection might be a contributing factor to Rice’s slump, but right now there’s no guarantee of any protection coming up and they simply need somebody to get the torch lit.

Aside from Rice, the next best hitter would be Cody Bellinger, and he’s in the right place to find his groove. Bellinger’s got some of the most egregious home/away splits you could ask for going on this season, hitting to a 207 wRC+ in Yankee Stadium while hitting for a 64 wRC+ anywhere else. That latter mark is quite concerning, but seeing as the Yankees are at the start of a homestand as we speak, there’s no harm in keeping the pattern going for another week.

It’s been a major surprise just how well Paul Goldschmidt’s done this year, but the long-time veteran has fit into his role exceptionally since taking on a small one-year deal to return to the Yankees. He’s gotten more playing time than originally expected with Stanton’s injury, and that has only expanded with Judge also out now, but they’ve never needed him more than now with the rest of the offense struggling. He’s been arguably the most successful of the bunch during June, encapsulated by his two-homer day against Tarik Skubal last week, but if he could fully turn on the 2022 Matt Carpenter magic for a bit his Yankees stint could quickly rise to legendary status.

Perhaps though, the answer simply doesn’t lay with the lineup as is. Perhaps the return of Grisham and/or McMahon will be the catalyst that turns things around, and they’re both nearing that point. Grisham could be back during this homestand, with a short rehab stint that could last as long as a single game being all that stands between him and his name being penciled back into the lineup. McMahon is due back shortly after him, and while he hasn’t been as impactful with the bat overall he’s had his moments and could certainly ingratiate himself by slapping a clutch home run to bail out the rest of the position players.


Whoever the answer is, the Yankees would love it if they got to work immediately as they’ve got another game in front of them. Before we get to their attempt to even up this series though, let’s run through what’s in store here first: Jeff considers what Minnesota could have to offer as our trade partner series kicks off, Peter covers the Roundup, Kento honors Jerry Kenney’s time with the Yankees on his birthday, Michael goes through the past week’s action down on the farm, and Andrés examines Henry Lalane’s resurgence and how it could position him as a trade chip this season.

Today’s Matchup

New York Yankees vs. Detroit Tigers

Time: 7:10 p.m. EST

TV: Amazon Prime Video, Detroit SportsNet, TBS

Venue: Yankee Stadium, Bronx, NY

LeBron James will play next season but plans to leave Lakers: Reports

LeBron James will play next season but plans to leave Lakers: Reports originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

LeBron James isn’t retiring — but he reportedly will be on a new team next season.

The NBA’s all-time leading scorer is expected to leave the Los Angeles Lakers as a free agent, according to multiple reports.

ESPN’s Shams Charania reported Tuesday that James informed the Lakers that “the franchise can move on without him because he will play elsewhere.”

James, 41, spent eight seasons with the Lakers after previous stints with the Cleveland Cavaliers (2003-10, 2014-18) and Miami Heat (2010-14). He led the Lakers to their 17th NBA championship in the 2019-20 season, which ended in the bubble in Orlando due to Covid.

Over his Lakers tenure, James became the league’s top all-time scorer, made eight All-Star appearances and seven All-NBA teams. He averaged 25.9 points, 7.7 rebounds and 7.9 assists per game in the regular season with 63 postseason games played.

James also famously joined his son, Bronny James, on the floor for the last two seasons as the first father-son duo to play together. The Lakers fully guaranteed the younger James’ $2.3 million contract for next season on Monday.

Things have changed in recent years for James, though, since the Lakers acquired Luka Doncic. The younger superstar became the face and future of the franchise, leaving James to play in a secondary role alongside Austin Reaves.

Last season, the Lakers went 53-29 and lost in the second round to the Oklahoma City Thunder. James played just 60 games, causing him to miss out on All-NBA for the first time since his rookie year.

Now a free agent for the fourth time in his career, James’ next move could be his last. He will enter his 24th NBA season as the league’s oldest player.

James’ next team has been speculated as the Golden State Warriors, who reportedly could look to pair in-house stars Steph Curry and Draymond Green with James and his former teammate Anthony Davis. Other teams pursuing James could include his former homes in Cleveland and Miami, though they’ll have less money to spend compared to Golden State.

NBA free agency officially opens at 6 p.m. ET/3 p.m. PT on Tuesday, June 30.

LeBron James reportedly leaving Lakers, will play elsewhere in 2026-27 season

LeBron James reportedly leaving Lakers, will play elsewhere in 2026-27 season originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

It’s the end of an era for LeBron James.

The 22-time NBA All-Star will continue his career next season and has informed the Los Angeles Lakers that the franchise can move on without him because he will play elsewhere, ESPN’s Shams Charania reported Tuesday, citing James’ Klutch Sports agent Rich Paul.

This story will be updated …

2026 LeBron James Next Team Odds: Latest Movement as 'The King' Eyes Championship Fit

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Just when you thought Giannis' move to Miami was the biggest story of the summer... LeBron James reminds everyone who the biggest star in the NBA really is.

We have officially reached the ultimate turning point of the summer, and Kalshi's LeBron James Next Team odds are responding to a tectonic shift in player movement with the news that James will be moving to new pastures for the 2026-27 season.

LeBron James Next Team Odds: Top contenders

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TeamKalshiBuy 'Yes'Buy 'No'
ClevelandCleveland Cavaliers-11754¢48¢
Golden StateGolden State Warriors+40020¢82¢
Miami Miami Heat+52516¢85¢
Philadelphia 76ers Philadelphia 76ers+132994¢
Minnesota Minnesota Timberwolves+240097¢
Denver Denver Nuggets+490099¢
Stays with Los Angeles Lakers or Retires+490099¢
Atlanta Atlanta Hawks+9900No
Brooklyn Brooklyn Nets+9900No
Boston Boston Celtics+990099¢

Pricing provided by Kalshi — accurate as of July 9

The platform’s real-time prices are currently accounting for massive leverage plays, front-office panic, and a potential roster reconstruction that could permanently rewrite the balance of power in professional basketball. Traders are moving at breakneck speed to separate genuine transactional smoke from typical agent-driven leverage plays.

But sit tight, as LeBron's agent & right-hand man, Rich Paul, doesn't see a decision coming as fast as we all may think.

Key takeaways:

  • Cleveland tightens its grip: The Cavaliers remain the clear market leader, climbing to 54¢ (-117) as a return to Cleveland continues to be priced as the most likely outcome.
  • Warriors hold second: Golden State has moved up to 20¢ (+400), keeping the Warriors firmly in the No. 2 spot despite Cleveland maintaining a sizable lead at the top.
  • Miami slips while Philly rises: The Heat have cooled to 16¢ (+525), while Philadelphia has climbed to 7¢ (+1329), creating a clearer second tier behind Cleveland and Golden State.
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The breaking news has fundamentally inverted the Kalshi board. Before the announcement, the incumbent Lakers held a fragile 46% favorite status, with Golden State trailing closely at 37%. In the hours after the tweet was released, the market volume swelled from $5.5 million to $20.5 mil in small trades, now reaching $35.2 mil in volume.

With the Lakers now officially out of the running, per Klutch Sports, the board is consolidating around specific landing spots that possess the unique salary cap mechanics required to absorb a 41-year-old superstar chasing his final ring.

LeBron James next team odds: Value picks

Sharp predictive traders understand that elite value isn't found by simply backing the current favorite. It’s found by exploiting localized inefficiencies where the trading public has overreacted to a single headline or entirely underpriced a highly realistic luxury tax constraint.

Cleveland Cleveland Cavaliers | ‘Yes’ 54¢ | 54% chance

If the hyper-complex multi-team financial trade architecture required to bring Anthony Davis to the Bay Area hits a structural snag under the new CBA luxury tax rules, the market will experience an instant, violent secondary correction.

While Yahoo Sports notes the Warriors' pitch is to "reunite with AD, team up with Steph Curry and Draymond Green", any failure to land Davis voids the deal entirely. If that superteam floor collapses, a sentimental return to Northeast Ohio instantly becomes the ultimate default narrative for the entire sports media apparatus.

Golden State Golden State Warriors | ‘Yes’ 20¢ | 20% chance

When the layout of a superteam blueprint becomes this obvious, you don't overthink the entry price.

The Warriors are pitching an absurd, legacy-defining "Big 4" designed to unite LeBron James with Steph Curry, Draymond Green, and Anthony Davis. As Shams Charania previously reported, “Golden State Warriors forward Draymond Green is declining his $27.7 million player option to become a free agent... This move gives the Warriors flexibility to pursue LeBron James in free agency.”

While the market has already factored in much of this smoke, the elimination of LA means Golden State is the only logical destination positioned for an immediate title run. Buying in before the contract becomes official still offers immense leverage against the final confirmation.

Miami Miami Heat | ‘Yes’ 16¢ | 16% chance

Not long after LeBron's announcement, the Heat were quietly available at a low price of 8¢; the Heat represent a low-cost lottery ticket for extreme portfolio diversification. Bleacher Report previously ranked Miami among LeBron's top potential landing spots, and Erik Spoelstra's institutional stability remains highly attractive to an ageing icon.

With the Lakers verified as out of the picture, Miami's baseline probability is technically higher than a simple 16% flyer. Risking pennies here protects your capital if the primary Western Conference options unexpectedly descend into a financial stalemate.

Los Angeles Stays with Los Angeles Lakers or Retires | ‘No’ estimated 98¢ and locking in

Early on June 30, paying 55¢ for a 'No' ticket on the incumbent favorite was a sharp contrarian play. Now, following the announcement that LeBron "will play elsewhere", it has become an absolute mathematical certainty.

If you can still scrape any remaining liquidity on the 'No' side before the market formally resolves or completely locks down, you are essentially picking up free yield on an outcome that has been explicitly ruled out.

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Expert context: Why the LeBron James next team markets are shifting

The structural engine driving this historic market realignment is a corporate ambush masterfully timed right before the free-agency gates open. The entire sequence of events is highly dependent on a high-wire transactional cascade across multiple teams.

The initial piece of the puzzle fell into place when Draymond Green declined his massive player option to give Golden State the immediate breathing room to facilitate a max slot.

However, as Shams Charania strictly specified, “LeBron James will ONLY sign with the Warriors if they land Anthony Davis in a trade.” Kevin O’Connor of Yahoo Sports provided the precise corporate roadmap, revealing that “The Warriors are attempting to trade with the Wizards for Anthony Davis and then sign free agent LeBron James.”

To satisfy the brutal salary cap matching requirements of the modern CBA, Golden State is aggressively leveraging Jimmy Butler’s expiring contract alongside an absolute haul of future draft assets to pry Davis loose from Washington. Rich Paul's sudden public statement that the Lakers can "move on without him" is the definitive proof that this multi-team framework is moving well past the conceptual stage.

LeBron is actively forcing the leverage window, giving the Warriors a clear ultimatum to finalize the Davis acquisition tonight or risk watching him survey the secondary market.

Strategic considerations for traders

  • Trade the Cascade, Avoid the Resolution: You do not need to hold your contracts until an official contract ink dries. The second a credible insider tweets that the Wizards and Warriors have agreed on the Anthony Davis trade framework, Golden State's contract will instantly clear 85¢—that is your optimal window to sell your "Yes" shares for a massive, clean profit.

  • Arb the Stale Contracts: Look across alternative trading pools for participants who haven't updated their portfolios in light of the Klutch Sports declaration. Buying up mispriced "No" shares on the Lakers remains a pure execution victory.

  • Monitor the Hard-Cap Aprons: Building a Big 4 under modern NBA collective bargaining guidelines is a financial nightmare. Watch closely for any leaks suggesting Washington is demanding additional young assets that would trigger an un-tradeable hard-cap restriction for Golden State.

How to trade LeBron James Next Team Odds on Kalshi

Trading high-volume NBA futures on a designated contract exchange like Kalshi offers a highly responsive, data-backed alternative to traditional, static sportsbooks.

  • Account Setup: Create your profile and fund your active Kalshi account securely via bank wire or standard transfer to ensure your liquidity is ready ahead of the midnight free-agency window.
  • Navigate: Click directly into the main sports interface, filter by the "Next NBA Team" tab, and select the dedicated "LeBron James Next Team" market.
  • Execute: Evaluate the live pricing spreads to determine if you want to back the surging Bay Area superteam narrative via ‘Yes’ shares or protect your position by purchasing ‘No’ contracts against the field.
  • Monitor: Track your risk exposure continuously through your live portfolio feed, giving you the power to sell out of your positions early to lock in your returns or cut your losses.

Secondary markets

The radioactive fallout from LeBron's verified Lakers departure is already bleeding directly into broader NBA future contracts. The second Rich Paul's statement cleared the wires, Los Angeles' 2027 NBA Championship futures experienced a catastrophic downward drift.

Concurrently, if Golden State successfully checks the final box on the Anthony Davis acquisition cascade, expect their Western Conference title odds to compress dramatically. Smart macro-traders are already shorting the Lakers' regular-season win total market on secondary boards, capitalizing on the vacancy of a historic superstar asset before the casual betting public can adjust their baselines.

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Yankees news: Jazz Chisholm Jr. leaves Monday’s game with injury

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JUNE 29: Jazz Chisholm Jr. #13 of the New York Yankees reacts as he is taken out of the game after colliding with a teammate during the fourth inning against the Detroit Tigers at Yankee Stadium on June 29, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Adam Hunger/Getty Images) | Getty Images

NBC Sports: In case you missed it, Jazz Chisholm Jr. exited Monday’s game against the Tigers early. While tracking a fly ball, he collided with Jasson Domínguez, taking the outfielder’s arm straight to the head. According to Aaron Boone, he has not been diagnosed with a concussion, but he is in concussion protocol.

The Athletic | Brendan Kuty: The Yankees have not looked good of late, including getting swept in a four-game series at the hands of the rival Red Sox over the weekend. Despite the recent losing streak, the Yankees’ record is right near the top of the American League, and was the best in the AL until the recent defeats. Considering the Yankees’ roster makeup, it’s probably best for them to go all in at the Trade Deadline, with the likes of Aaron Judge and Gerrit Cole currently in their 30s.

ESPN | Jorge Castillo: Two of the players whose injury recoveries are most important to the Yankees’ chances are Max Fried and Giancarlo Stanton. In some hopeful news, the two are set to face off in a live batting practice session on Tuesday. Stanton’s timeline is still largely unclear, but if all goes well for Fried he could begin a rehab assignment shortly after this session.

CBS Sports | Matt Snyder: While the Yankees have gotten stinkers out of the rotation, bullpen, and defense of late, the major reason for the recent struggles have been due to a slumping offense. There are several reasons for that, but they’re ones the Yankees are going to have change quickly if they do want to make a run in October. Some of their stars (including their biggest one) are injured, sure, but the supporting cast just hasn’t done much supporting at all during this stretch or for the season at large and that’s a concern that won’t go away easily.

Lastly, the Yankees will have a fresh arm in their bullpen tonight after needing to use six arms to record 22 outs in relief of an ineffective Ryan Weathers yesterday. Yerry de los Santos threw two innings after Weathers left the game, and he’ll now head back to Triple-A. The RailRiders were off yesterday, so the Yankees will have their pick of the litter.

Celtics legend Robert Parish considers possible Jaylen Brown trade ‘disturbing’

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - JANUARY 21: Jaylen Brown #7 of the Boston Celtics looks on against the Indiana Pacers during the first half at TD Garden on January 21, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by China Wong/Getty Images) | Getty Images

From afar, Robert Parish has taken notice of the Jaylen Brown trade speculation dominating the offseason discourse, and The Chief has taken his stance.

Parish is firmly against the idea of trading Brown, as the four-time champion adamantly expressed during an appearance Monday on SiriusXM NBA Radio. In explaining his position on the matter, Parish called out the Celtics, and specifically team president of basketball operations Brad Stevens, for what he deems a “serious miscalculation” by the organization following their pursuit of Giannis Antetokounmpo.

“First of all, you don’t get rid of a talent like Jaylen Brown unless he asked to be moved, not to mention the backcourt with he and (Jayson) Tatum is a proven formula. So why would you wanna make that move?,” Parish said. “I find it disturbing, and it’s uncomfortable, and not to mention I don’t understand — never have, never will — why ownership and management want respect and loyalty from players, but they only give you loyalty and respect when it’s in their best interest.”

Boston, MA – March 18: Former Boston Celtics center Robert Parish watches the action in the second quarter. The Celtics played the Golden State Warriors at TD Garden on March 18, 2026. (Photo by Barry Chin/The Boston Globe via Getty Images) | Boston Globe via Getty Images

Brown was the reported centerpiece, attached to two future first-round picks, offered to the Milwaukee Bucks in exchange for Antetokounmpo before the Miami Heat finalized an agreement last Monday.

The rumors have only picked up steam since then, as Brown remains one of the biggest names on the reported trade block with an uncertain future in Boston.

During his press conference after the first round of last week’s 2026 NBA Draft, Stevens sidestepped all questions regarding the Brown trade topic. Stevens described Brown as “a big part of us,” while also unwilling to dive into the specifics of their offseason discussions after revealing he and Brown have met to speak.

Brown has yet to comment on the trade rumors specifically, but has been outspoken ever since Boston’s early postseason exit against the Philadelphia 76ers in the first round. He’s utilized his FCHWPO Twitch channel and X account to keep his voice heard throughout the offseason, whether it’s challenging ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith or basketball analytics to debunk narratives he considers disingenuous or “clickbait.”

Back in March, Parish returned to TD Garden and briefly met with Brown pregame, ahead of his historic performance against the Golden State Warriors in which Brown surpassed Dave Cowens to crack the franchise’s top-10 scoring list.

Parish praised the entire team amid its underdog run without Jayson Tatum.

Brown, in response, praised Parish right back.

“Obviously Parish is a legend, so it’s good to see him out there,” Brown told reporters, per CLNS Media. “He looked good — looks in great shape — so it’s great to have him around. I haven’t gotten to meet him or talk to him, so hopefully next time he comes back, I’ll make it an emphasis to go say hello.”

Parish’s perspective is one Celtics fans likely share after a decade of watching Brown grow from a second-unit contributor to a champion and MVP candidate who’s given Boston everything it’s needed and more.

‘Kyrie guy' Yaxel Lendeborg recalls wild celebration after Cavs' 2016 Finals win

‘Kyrie guy' Yaxel Lendeborg recalls wild celebration after Cavs' 2016 Finals win originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Yaxel Lendeborg is not shy about the fact that he’s a big Kyrie Irving fan, and while bringing up the 2016 NBA Finals might offend Warriors fans, it’s a point of pride for the 23-year-old.

“I’m a Kyrie guy, so I go wherever he goes,” Lendeborg told NBC Sports Bay Area’s Bonta Hill and Monte Poole. “I’m a Cavaliers fan at that time. We played [the Warriors] in the Finals like three years in a row. I’m like, ‘Man, I hate these guys, I’m so tired of them.’ “

While the Warriors got the better of the Cavaliers in 2015, a go-ahead 3-pointer from Irving helped seal Cleveland’s first franchise title and gave a young Lendeborg plenty to cheer about.

“That Game 7 when Kyrie hit that shot, I was in New York at our cousin’s house,” Lendeborg recalled to Hill and Poole. “He hit that shot, I ran down the hallway like 10 times screaming, ‘Let’s Go! Go Cavs!’ all this other stuff. It’s so ironic that I’m here now.”

Lendeborg is now teammates with a pair of Warriors who went through that devastating defeat – Draymond Green and Steph Curry – but says he hopes there’s no hard feelings. Lendeborg admitted he used to “hate” Curry in his post-2026 NBA Draft press conference, to which the Warriors superstar replied, “I’m going to work hard to be your new favorite player,” on social media.

“I was a teenager, I was in high school, come on, man,” Lendeborg said. “[Steph] commented on my post on Instagram. I haven’t really said nothing else about it. I just told him we’re all good, tried to leave it at that.”

Now 10 years removed and all in on playing for Golden State, Lendeborg and the rest of the squad will try to bring another title to the Bay Area.

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What the heck are the Charlotte Hornets up to after Ball trade?

SAN FRANCISCO, CA - FEBRUARY 25: Stephen Curry #30 of the Golden State Warriors greets LaMelo Ball #1 of the Charlotte Hornets after the game on February 25, 2025 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 2025 NBAE (Photo by Noah Graham/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Never say never. Back in March, WSOC-TV asked Steph Curry the question he’s been fielding for years, and instead of the usual diplomatic deflection, Steph grinned and said it outright: you always keep your options open. The question was: will he leave the Warriors to join his hometown Charlotte Hornets? Dell Curry’s number 30 went up into the rafters at Spectrum Center that same week, and Steph had already asked his dad, half-joking but clearly not entirely, whether an exception could be made if it ever came to that. Dell didn’t even blink. Quick yeah, he said. We’d take it down for that, no doubt.

That wasn’t a one-off answer, either. He’s repeated some version of that ever since, always with the same grin, like he knows exactly how much weight the words carry and enjoys carrying them anyway. Since 2022, the Warriors front office has dealt primarily with one question: does this move give Steph another real chance? They traded for Jimmy Butler mid-season because the timeline mattered more than the asset cost. They abandoned the two-timeline philosophy once it became clear that developing tomorrow’s core was costing today’s championship window.

The Hornets just acted like time is their greatest asset. Charlotte had a young, exciting core that played its way to the edge of the playoffs, the kind of team that makes a building loud again, and the front office looked at it and decided the ceiling wasn’t high enough.

Over the span of three days, the Hornets traded away both LaMelo Ball and Miles Bridges, the two most talented players on a roster that had just spent a full season looking like the most fun, most dangerous version of itself in over a decade. LaMelo and Josh Green went to Minnesota for Naz Reid, an unprotected 2033 first-round pick, three first-round pick swaps, and three second-round picks. Bridges went to Phoenix days later in a separate deal. By the time the dust settled, Charlotte had also added Grayson Allen and Royce O’Neale, restocking the roster with exactly the kind of high-IQ, hard-working, three-point-shooting professionals Charlotte has been hunting for.

Buried in that swap is the actual headline. Kon Knueppel just led all rookies in made threes, breaking the rookie record outright with 273 of them, and he did it while deferring to Ball and Brandon Miller most of the season. Charlotte didn’t wait around to see whether handing him the keys later would work out. They moved the timeline up on purpose, while his stock was rising and before Ball’s injury history or trade value had the chance to slide the other way.

Warriors fans know exactly what that feeling is like from the other side of it. Dub Nation spent years watching their own front office wrestle with the same question Charlotte just answered: what do you do with young, talented, occasionally electric pieces who don’t quite fit the timeline you’re trying to win on right now?

Golden State’s version of that question has played out in real time for half a decade, and it hasn’t always ended cleanly. There’s a particular kind of grief in watching a player who made the building louder, who gave you reasons to stay up late checking League Pass, get treated as a trade chip instead of a building block because the front office decided the fun wasn’t the same thing as the path to a banner. Charlotte fans are living that grief right now, watching LaMelo Ball, the most purely entertaining player that organization has had in a decade, get reduced to draft compensation.

The Hornets’ front office looked at a fun, playoff-adjacent roster and decided the version built with picks and cap flexibility gave Charlotte a better chance to become a contender.

The two franchises are solving the exact same problem from opposite directions. Golden State is potentially sacrificing tomorrow for one last run with Steph while Charlotte just sacrificed today for a better tomorrow. That’s probably the right basketball decision, by the way. But if you’ve spent years imagining Steph one day finishing his career where it started for his family, Charlotte just made that ending dramatically harder to picture.

Steph has never closed the door. That’s what has made the fantasy endure for so long. Every few years he smiles, says you always keep your options open, and Hornets fans let themselves dream again.

Dodgers vs A's Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today's MLB Game

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Another slugfest is expected tonight at Sutter Health Park when the heavily favored Los Angeles Dodgers face the Athletics in Game 2 of their three-game series.

The Dodgers are overpriced tonight (-144), and my Dodgers vs. Athletics predictions and MLB picks are expecting a bounce-back victory for the highly undervalued A’s (+138) on Tuesday, June 30. 

Who will win Dodgers vs A's today: Athletics moneyline (+134)

The market is flat-out wrong, pricing the Los Angeles Dodgers as road favorites tonight based on their uber-pristine surface stats.

Justin Wrobleski is the ultimate regression candidate; his 2.71 ERA is a mirage masked by a fraudulent 4.32 xERA and a bottom-tier 17.8% whiff rate.

Conversely, Jeffrey Springs is dynamically unlucky. His bloated 5.52 ERA hides a much sharper 4.41 xERA and a strong .244 xBA, while his 20.6 % strikeout rate provides a true missing-bat floor.

Take the Athletics to +115 tonight.

Covers COVERS INTEL: The Athletics are batting .261 with a .789 OPS with runners in scoring position.

Dodgers vs A's Over/Under pick:  Over 10.5 (-121)

The elements align perfectly for a high-scoring dog fight tonight.

With 90-degree heat and the wind blowing out at Sutter Health Park, flyball tendencies will be heavily penalized.

Wrobleski lacks a solid bat-missing floor (17.8% Whiff%), while Springs possesses an extreme flyball profile (13th percentile groundball rate).

Combined with an Athletics bullpen surrendering a massive 2.55 HR/9 over the last two weeks, routine flyballs turn into cheap home runs in that bandbox.

These two clubs light up the scoreboard whenever they meet and are 9-1 to the Over in their past 10 meetings.

Hammer the Over to 11 runs and -130.

Phil Naessens' 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets: 9-11, +0.01 units
  • Over/Under bets: 8-10, -3.35 units

Dodgers vs A's weather

Hot, humid weather and winds gusting to 10.9 mph make this an ideal night for hitting for the Dodgers and Athletics. 

Dodgers vs A's odds

  • Moneyline: Dodgers -144 | A's +138
  • Run line: Dodgers -1.5 (+108) | A's +1.5 (-113)
  • Over/Under: Over 10.5 (-113) | Under 10.5 (+108)

Dodgers vs A's trend

The Over is 9-1 in their last 10 H2H meetings. Find more MLB betting trends for Dodgers vs. A's.

How to watch Dodgers vs A's and game info

LocationSutter Health Park, West Sacramento, CA
DateTuesday, June 30, 2026
First pitch9:40 p.m. ET
TVSNLA, NBCSCA
Dodgers starting pitcherJustin Wrobleski
(9-2, 2.71 ERA)
A's starting pitcherJeffrey Springs
(3-7, 5.52 ERA)

Dodgers vs A's latest injuries

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

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Warriors risk overpaying with reported two-year Kristaps Porziņģis deal

Warriors risk overpaying with reported two-year Kristaps Porziņģis deal originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Warriors on Monday slid toward Phase II of their planned summer refresh. Unless there is an encouraging medical update they haven’t shared, they run the risk of overpaying.

Golden State reached agreement on a two-year contract with Kristaps Porziņģis worth a reported $40 million. It could be responsible for every dollar, as the second year includes a player option.

Though the Warriors beat the free-agency clock, which starts at 3 p.m. Tuesday, their haste comes with a generous dollop of generosity. They’re waving their wallet at a wish. It’s unlikely that many other NBA teams were preparing to pull up to the free agency bazaar to dig into their pockets and offer Porziņģis $20 million per year.

Even $15 million per year would be easier to understand, especially if it came with a team option. As is, it’s a lot of cash for a part-time player, even one as talented as Porziņģis.

The Warriors know what KP can do. They closely observed his audition last season, when he appeared in 15 of their 31 remaining games after acquiring him from the Atlanta Hawks in February in exchange for Jonathan Kuminga.

During those 15 games, Porziņģis showcased his unique set of skills. At 7-foot-3, he was a defensive presence in the paint and a fabulous floor spacer on offense. He’s a good passer with a knack for getting to the free-throw line. He comes closer than anyone in the NBA to replicating San Antonio Spurs wunderkind Victor Wembanyama.

But KP’s marvelous gifts too often come wrapped in medical supplies. From the mysterious ailment that results in fatigue – mysterious because the cause has been debated – to back, knee and ankle issues, Porziņģis spent more time watching the Warriors, sometimes from a distance, than working up a sweat on the court.

This is not a case of bad luck, bad breaks or freak injury. This is Porziņģis’ history. He averaged 49 games per season over the last four, with five different teams. The Mavericks traded him to the Wizards, who traded him to the Celtics, who traded him to the Hawks, who five months ago traded him to the Warriors.

Porziņģis, 31, is the latest project for Rick Celebrini, the man responsible for devising plans to maximize the health of everyone on Golden State’s roster. It’s a massive task, but KP is a believer. Porziņģis needed less than two months to proclaim Celebrini as “the GOAT” of his profession.

Given his journey, Porziņģis has had copious experiences with dozens of doctors, surgeons, and trainers. He should know what makes a good practitioner.

If Porziņģis appears in more than 60 games, the risk the Warriors are taking could be lavishly rewarded. He could regain All-Star status, and Celebrini would deserve an handsome bonus.

But if KP spends the season limping back and forth between the court and the trainer’s room, it will look like the Warriors bought too high.

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