Bloodied Onyeka Okongwu shows off gruesome injury after taking elbow to face

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Atlanta Hawks forward Onyeka Okongwu (17) reacts after being hit in the jaw with an elbow by Boston Celtics guard Jaylen Brown (7) during the second half at the TD Garden on January 28, 2026. , Image 2 shows Hawks forward Onyeka Okongwu has some serious dental work in his future after taking an elbow to the face during Atlanta's 117-106 win over the Boston Celtics Wednesday, January 28, 2026.

Hawks forward Onyeka Okongwu has some serious dental work in his future after taking an elbow to the face during Atlanta’s 117-106 win over the Boston Celtics Wednesday.

Taking to his Instagram Story after the game, Okongwu shared a photo of his bloodied mouth and some of his front teeth, which appeared pushed back and knocked out of place.

“Good winssss birdsss,” Okongwu wrote.

Hawks forward Onyeka Okongwu has some serious dental work in his future after taking an elbow to the face during Atlanta’s 117-106 win over the Boston Celtics Wednesday, January 28, 2026. Instagram/Onyeka Okongwu

Okongwu caught an elbow in the mouth from Celtics guard Jaylen Brown, who was trying split a double-team from Okongwu and Hawks guard Dyson Daniels during the fourth quarter.

Brown was assessed a flagrant 1 offensive foul.

Okongwu went over to the bench and then jogged back onto the court to shoot his two free throws.

He made one to give the Hawks a 107-92 lead over Boston.

After the game, Brown explained that his elbow to Okongwu’s face “wasn’t intentional,” and sympathized with him over the injury.

“Just being aggressive like I always am,” Brown said. “Just a basketball play. It’s unfortunate. Okongwu is a good player.

Atlanta Hawks forward Onyeka Okongwu (17) reacts after being hit in the jaw with an elbow by Boston Celtics guard Jaylen Brown (7) during the second half at the TD Garden on January 28, 2026. Brian Fluharty-Imagn Images
Atlanta Hawks forward Onyeka Okongwu (17) grimaces after being flagrantly fouled by Boston Celtics guard Jaylen Brown (7) during the second half of an NBA basketball game, January 28, 2026, in Boston. AP

“I know from my own experiences with a fractured face and chipped teeth, that s–t is a hassle. It wasn’t intentional, and I know it’s going to be a long day at the dentist tomorrow, so hopefully he has a good recovery.”

It’s unclear if Okongwu, who’s only missed two of the Hawks’ games this season, will miss time for dental work.

“I mean, he’s tough,” Hawks head coach Quin Snyder said after the game. “He took quite a shot. It’s a good thing that dentistry as a profession is — I don’t know what he’s going to need, but he’s pretty banged up. He took quite a shot.

“I told him he’s still handsome, but it’s a good thing that people can repair his teeth, because he’s going to need some work.”

Okongwu finished with 17 points, six rebounds and three assists.

Canadiens: Looking For Revenge Against the Nordiques

For the second time this season, and for the first time in the province this year, the Montreal Canadiens will be taking on the Colorado Avalanche masquerading as the Quebec Nordiques on Thursday night at the Bell Centre. Thanks to a derogation from the league, the visitors will be wearing their blue jerseys, which should give every fan who lived through the Quebec-Montreal rivalry a trip down memory lane.

The last time the two teams met, the Habs were obliterated by the Avs, who put seven goals past Jakub Dobes. Brock Nelson led the charge with two goals and two assists while Nathan MacKinnon and Gabriel Landeskog had three points each. The latter won’t be a problem for the Canadiens tonight as he’s currently injured, but Devon Toews, who has been out for three weeks, is now considered day-to-day and could return. Just like the Canadiens’ last opponents, the Vegas Golden Knights, the Avs are coming off a frustrating 5-2 loss against the Ottawa Senators and will be looking to bounce back in the second game of their back-to-back.

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At one stage this season, the Avs looked near invincible, but since we’ve entered 2026, they have lost two games in a row three times, so it doesn’t look like an impossible mission for the Canadiens. Still, Colorado has won seven of the last 10 duels between the two teams, including the previous two.

Martin St-Louis has already announced that Dobes will be in the net, giving him a chance to avenge the seven-goal beating he took in November. The Czech netminder has a 1-1-0 record against the visitors with a 3.84 goals-against average and a .864 save percentage. After his strong performance against the Golden Knights, he has brought his GAA on the year back under 3.00 at 2.96, and his SV now stands at .890. Meanwhile, Samuel Montembeault has a 1-0-1 record against Colorado with a 2.61 GAA and a .916 SV.

Colorado’s starter has yet to be confirmed, but since Mackenzie Blackwood played in Ottawa last night, it would make sense for Scott Wedgewood to get the start, even though his record against the Habs isn’t excellent. He’s 0-1-0 with a 4.45 GAA and a .778 SV, while Blackwood is 6-0-2 with a 2.41 GAA and a .922 SV.

Up front, the Avs will want to keep a close eye on Nick Suzuki, who has 10 points in as many games against them. Phillip Danault also has 10 points when facing Colorado, but in 21 games, and Brendan Gallagher completes the top three with nine points in 17 games.

Colorado would be smart to pay attention to Cole Caufield, as well. The sniper has five points in seven games against the visitors, but he’s on an incredible run right now with points and goals in his last six games. He’s got 11 points in that span, including nine goals. His goal-scoring streak matches those of Max Pacioretty (2014-15) and Max Domi (2019-20) for the longest in 30 years for a Hab player. He still has a long way to go to break the franchise record that was set by Joe Malone, who scored in 14 consecutive games in 1917-18. Newsy Lalonde is in second place with goals in 13 straight games in 1920-21, and multiple players have had nine-game goal streaks with the Habs: Lalonde, Aurele Joliat, Maurice Richard, Bernard Geoffrion, and Denis Savard. The Franchise’s last seven-goal game streak dates back to 1981-82 when Steve Shutt accomplished the feat.

Meanwhile, the Canadiens will want to find a way to contain Nelson, who now has 31 points in 33 games against the Habs, Brent Burns, who has 21 points in 29 games, and Nathan MacKinnon, who has 20 points in as many games. As for Artturi Lehkonen, he has seven points in just six games against his former team.

Puck drop is set for 7:00 PM, and you can catch the game on RDS, TSN2, and ALT. Justin Kea and Frederick L'Ecuyer will be the referees, while Michel Cormier and Devin Berg will be the linemen.


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Arizona Cardinals taking one last swing at Klint Kubiak

The Arizona Cardinals coaching search could stretch through the Super Bowl.

In a recent report, coming out late last night, the team has scheduled another interview with Klint Kubiak, the Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator.

So, the Cardinals have been waiting and taking their time trying to get another shot at Kubiak, but so are the Las Vegas Raiders.

Both teams will have to do a quick sales job, before Kubiak returns his focus to the Seahawks in their quest for another Super Bowl.

The question becomes, what do the Cardinals have to offer over the Raiders?

If Kubiak was to turn towards the Cardinals, I think the biggest thing it would signal, at least to the Raiders, is a lack of belief in likely first overall pick Fernando Mendoza. While there is a debate on the rest of the roster, their is an unquestioned reality that having Mendoza if you believe he can be a franchise guy, is better than the Cardinals options at quarterback, thus negating basically all other roster construction questions.

If Kubiak decides to go back to Seattle to wait until the next coaching cycle, then it would say a lot about both moribund franchises.

The problem seems to be, that all the “insiders” continue to say it isn’t likely Kubiak would come to Arizona, so are the Cardinals wasting their time?

Is pursuing Kubiak the right move? What do you think?

Stars vs Golden Knights Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight’s NHL Game

The Vegas Golden Knights have enjoyed a lot of success in January, posting an 8-4-2 record while ranking 2nd in goals.

My Stars vs. Golden Knights predictions expect them to snap their mini two-game losing streak on home soil against Dallas.

Let’s break down my NHL picks for Thursday, January 29.

Stars vs Golden Knights prediction

Stars vs Golden Knights best bet: Golden Knights moneyline (-125)

The Vegas Golden Knights possess one of the league’s most talented rosters, and the results are starting to reflect that.

Only the Sabres have outscored the Golden Knights in January, and their underlying numbers are also strong. The Golden Knights have controlled better than 53% of the expected goal share across all situations this month, sitting eighth in the NHL – ahead of the Dallas Stars.

They are likely to generate more than their fair share of chances and put a lot of stress on Jake Oettinger. He's a solid goaltender, but he has struggled of late when going up in class.

Oettinger has lost three of his past four against Top-10 scoring offenses, allowing 15 total goals and posting a sub-.900 save percentage in each of those games.

He doesn’t have the best track record against the Golden Knights in the regular season, either, allowing at least three goals in four straight.

Vegas has scored 4+ in four of its past five at home and six of the last nine. Coming off back-to-back losses to close out their road trip, the Golden Knights will no doubt be looking to make a statement back on home ice.

Stars vs Golden Knights same-game parlay

Jack Eichel has created goals in bulk, no matter the matchup. Isolating games against Top-10 teams in limiting goals (which the Stars are), Eichel has piled up 16 assists through 14 games. He recorded at least one helper in 10 of 14, including eight of the last nine.

Mark Stone has scored in eight of his last nine home games following a day off. He and Eichel have picked up points on the same goal a whopping 27 times this season. If Eichel gets his assist, there’s a pretty good chance it comes on a Stone goal.

Going the other way, Jason Robertson appears the most reliable target in a tough matchup. He has averaged 3.5 shots per game against Top-10 shot suppression teams this season.

Stars vs Golden Knights SGP

  • Golden Knights moneyline
  • Jack Eichel Over 0.5 assists
  • Mark Stone anytime goal
  • Jason Robertson Over 2.5 shots on goal

Stars vs Golden Knights odds

  • Moneyline: Stars +105 | Golden Knights -125
  • Puck Line: Stars +1.5 (-240) | Golden Knights -1.5 (+195)
  • Over/Under: Over 6.5 (+115) | Under 6.5 (-135)

Stars vs Golden Knights trend

Vegas has won four of its past five games at home. Find more NHL betting trends for Stars vs. Golden Knights.

How to watch Stars vs Golden Knights

LocationT-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas, NV
DateThursday, January 29, 2026
Puck drop10:00 p.m. ET
TVVictory+, Vegas 34

Stars vs Golden Knights latest injuries

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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Red Hot Red Wings Clash With Ice Cold Capitals in High Stakes Clash

After breaking out in a big way, seeing career breakouts from many players across the roster and sitting far ahead in the standings above what everyone expected, the Washington Capitals took everyone by surprise last season. 

They finished with a 51-22-9 record, the second-best in the NHL, but have since regressed into a subpar hockey club. Washington now sits outside the playoff picture with a 25-22-7 record, while another team has captured the same magic the Capitals experienced last season in the Detroit Red Wings.

The Motor City hockey club has been sensational this year in many of the same ways Washington dominated the league a season ago, with one key difference. Detroit’s roster is significantly younger and appears far better positioned for sustained success beyond this season. 

Still, the Capitals aren't a team to take lightly as they still have the makings of the team they had last season. Despite their record, Washington has beat the likes of the Carolina Hurricanes, Montreal Canadiens, Minnesota Wild and Tampa Bay Lightning at different points this season. It should make for an exciting clash and could end up being a historic night. 

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Lineup Storylines

Wednesday could be another historic night in this Red Wings season as veteran winger Patrick Kane is one point away from breaking Mike Modano's record for most points by an American-born player. It was confirmed by John Buccigross that Modano will not be in attendance despite being a Livonia, Michigan native but he did confirm that when they would honor the record at the following home game, that Modano would make sure that he was there.

Detroit has been starting to show signs of mortality lately as they've been narrowly edging out wins over their last eight games with three overtime wins, two regulation losses and one overtime loss.

They've won just two games in regulation during this span with narrow margins going in the favor of the Red Wings but that could quickly change and flip against them. Washington hasn't been so lucky as they are long overdue for a shift in momentum with a 7-13-4 record over their last 24 games with the sixth-worst goals against per game average at 3.63 during this span. 

If the Red Wings offense can drive the offense, they should be able to win this game and it starts with the bottom-six forwards. We know over Detroit's recent hot streak that the top six will do their part as the Dylan Larkin and Lucas Raymond duo have a combined 11 goals over the last 11 games while the lethal second line trio of Alex DeBrincat, Patrick Kane and the surprising breakout of the season Andrew Copp have also combined the same mark at 11 goals over the same 11-game stretch. 

We know these units will produce but if they don't the bottom of the lineup outside of the recently hot James van Riemsdyk needs to find their spark. The third line is starting to make significant moves as rookie Emmitt Finnie has assists in two of his last three games, center J.T. Compher chipped in two goals during the Wings 5-1 rout over the Winnipeg Jets while van Riemsdyk has helped drive the offense for the unit with points in eight of his last 11 games, totaling four goals and eight assists for 12 points. 

Bookmark The Hockey News Detroit Red Wings team site to stay connected to the latest newsgame-day coverage, and player features

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This line chipping in would be a massive help and although scoring isn't expected from them, the fourth line getting a goal would be a massive help as well. The trio of forwards have all been riding lengthy point droughts with Mason Appleton at 13 games, Elmer Soderblom at 11 games and Michael Rasmussen saw a burst in production when playing with van Riemsdyk but has since gone ice cold with no points in ten games. If this unit can muster together even just one goal, it would go a long way. 

On the opposing end, hockey legend Alex Ovechkin is always a threat to score, even at 40 years old. The league's greatest goal scorer is still doing his thing with 22 goals and 23 assists for 45 points in 54 games. His production at such a young age is miraculous but also speaks to the skill of his teammates. 

Dylan Strome has emerged in Washington as a late career breakout with a career-best 82 points last season but has seen a step back this season with 42 points in 52 games. The surprise for this Capitals team this season has been winger Tom Wilson, who turned his physcial, gritty style of play into a true difference-making kind of player with a team-leading 46 points and plus-20 rating in 45 games and even earned himself a spot on Team Canada for the 2026 Winter Olympics. 

Wilson has done very well playing with a relatively unknown 23-year-old kid named Justin Sourdif. The former Florida Panthers third-round pick has quietly broken out in a big way this season with 11 goals and 13 assists for 24 points and a plus-13 rating in 50 games.

The numbers may not seem impressive but Sourdif is a rookie, who entering this season hadn't played more than four NHL games. His rise into a top-six player for Washington has come out of nowhere and he will need to be watched by the Red Wings defense. 

Goalie Matchup

Detroit: John Gibson (Season: 21-10-1 record, 2.60 GAA, .906 SV% | VS WSH: 4-6-4 record, 2.92 GAA, .906 SV% in 15 games)

Washington: Charlie Lindgren

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What we learned from the Spurs win over the Rockets

I was tired before this game even started. I had just spent two straight days in 10 hours of meetings, and I was mentally done. It was my department’s annual meeting at work, and usually it’s a “destination” event. Sometimes it’s in San Antonio — yes to that! It’s my hometown, an easy drive from Houston, and the Riverwalk rocks. It’s been in Dallas before (no fun — longer drive and an uninteresting city in my opinion), but this year, it was going to be in Florida! (Fun, plus I haven’t been there since I was four years old!)

Regardless of where, it’s supposed to be anywhere but Houston since over half my department is here, with the rest scattered around the eastern half of the country, and the goal is to have everyone together where there’s dinner and bonding afterwards while no one can slip out and go home. It’s tiring, but I enjoy the bonding part of it (at least dinner, I’m not part of the crowd that goes drinking until 2AM just to be suffering through the next day of meetings).

However, for budgetary reasons, Florida got canceled, and the meeting was here in our downtown Houston office, with all the remote folks on conference call. Without being in a hotel, there was still the commute to and from work, making the day even longer, and I didn’t get to see coworkers from around the country whom I talk to often but am lucky to see in-person once a year. And for the cherry on top, this was the third year in a row the meeting was impacted by a winter storm, which ended up canceling Monday’s events and jamming everything into Tuesday and Wednesday. In other words, it was just two super long work days with the only plus being free breakfast and lunch.

After all that, an 8:30 Spurs-Rockets tip-off felt even more brutal than usual. Compound that with a horrible first 20+ minutes of action where the Spurs looked completely helpless — it felt like they weren’t even trying while the Rockets were slicing right through their defense on their way to a 16-point lead with 3:22 left in the first half — and I was ready to write a cranky WWL this morning. Longtime Pounders probably know I’m usually an optimist and try not to be too critical (they’re young, this is Mitch Johnson’s first full season as a head coach, give him a chance, etc.), but I wasn’t having it last night. Not after they showed a similarly atrocious effort in a home loss to the Pelicans a few days ago, and not after this issue with complacency and inconsistency has been going on for over a month now.

This was what I had to say while texting with Jeje Gomez and Jacob Douglas during the first half, right after a slew of Rockets offensive rebounds (including one where the ball bounced between three Spurs who were just watching before a Rockets player who was outside the play grabbed it) and careless backcourt turnovers: “I can give them (the Spurs) a grace period for stuff like shooting slumps, but poor effort and complacency is unforgivable. How many more ‘wake up call’ games do the need (before they get the memo)?”

Apparently, my superpower is the reverse jinx, because not long after that, they figured something out. They got more physical, stopped being careless with the ball, and started getting stops and rebounds. I was personally shocked that they were still in the game and only down by eight at the break, and in a reverse from last week’s game in Houston, the team that started hot fell off a cliff in the second half, especially the fourth quarter, and by then the Spurs were running over them so badly that even Kevin Durant was about to throw a fit.

This is what we expect to see from this team: physical, hungry and determined. The second half brought me joy the same way the first half brought me frustration, and it turned this entire WWL on its head. Was this finally the wakeup call they will take to heart, or are we destined to be frustrated again if a Charlotte Hornets team currently playing well above its record catches them off guard on an early Saturday tip-off? We’ll find out then, but in the meantime, I’ll relish the win against a rival that I already saw as a scheduled loss, which seemed even more likely after 21 minutes of play.

Takeaways

  • Just like this game and the Spurs as a whole, it was a tale of (almost) two halves for Stephon Castle. For the first 21 minutes, he was the frustrating version of himself: sporadic on defense, indecisive on offense, and leaving everyone clamoring for him to just let De’Aaron Fox have the ball-handling duties. Then, like everyone else, he flipped a switch and was the best version of himself by the second half. He guarded and annoyed the Rockets best players, from Kevin Durant to Alperen Sengun, and contributed on offense by not trying to do too much, simply taking the lanes the defense gave him and finishing at the rim. As he showed last night, he’s a game changer for the Spurs when everything is clicking, and now we just need to see it on a more consistent basis.
  • I was ready to give Victor Wembanyama an equally hard time on here while watching the first half. He was passive and looked frustrated on both ends, which has been a common theme for him against physical teams like the Rockets. But perhaps my biggest concern was watching him get manhandled by the similarly slender Durant. Granted, Durant is a bit thicker with 4 extra pounds to cover at last 5 fewer inches (I still say Wemby is closer to 7’7” than 7’4”, but whatever), but he’s still 15 years older. While he’s still a very good player at age 37, he should not be pushing Wemby around on his way to the basket or preventing Wemby from doing the same on the other end. Fortunately, Wemby figured that out in the second half and picked up: attacking everyone on defense, blocking shots, and muscling his way to the rim for shots or free throws. To both Wemby and Castle: more of this, please.
  • Our Editor-in-Chief J.R. Wilco has told me he feels the same way, but I have a passionate sports hate for Sengun, and I’m not even going to pretend like I don’t know why. I’m sure he is a great guy off the court, but man, I can’t stand watching him play basketball. He flops too much for such a big dude, he’s a Luka Doncic-level whiner with the same whiney face and “I’ve never committed a foul in my life but am fouled every time I touch the ball” attitude, and his body language is terrible. He’s an All-Star level player that I’m sure we would love if he was a Spur — we all know the mistake the Spurs made in drafting you-know-who ahead of him in 2021 — but ultimately, I’m glad he’s not. I just don’t like him, and it’s only compounded by him being on a direct rival.

Cody Bellinger is excited to rejoin the New York Yankees after a lengthy free agency

NEW YORK — Cody Bellinger listened to pitches from other teams during his second foray into free agency, but he made it clear to his agent, Scott Boras, that calls from the New York Yankees come first.

It took more than two months, but Bellinger officially is returning to the Yankees. The versatile outfielder spoke with the media after becoming the last of the free-agent hitters to reach a new agreement by signing a five-year, $162.5 million contract.

“I spoke my mind to Scott all the time whether it was on any different occasion,” Bellinger said. “I definitely really enjoyed my time. I love playing in New York and I love the stadium. I made that very clear to Scott there as well.”

Bellinger’s new deal with the club includes a $20 million signing bonus, half payable April 1 and the remainder Aug. 1. The contract also includes a full no-trade provision.

The 30-year-old receives a $32.5 million salary in each of the first two seasons, $25.8 million in the next two and $25.9 million in 2030.

He can opt out after the 2027 or 2028 seasons to become a free agent for the third time. If a work stoppage leads to no games being played in 2027, the agreement specifies the opt outs will shift to after the 2028 and 2029 seasons.

Bellinger’s second free agency was a much-wider process than his first. After getting non-tendered by the Los Angeles Dodgers in November 2022, he agreed to a one-year, $17.5 million deal with the Chicago Cubs.

“You work your whole life pretty much in order to get into this type of position,” Bellinger said. “So, you want to enjoy the ride and, you want to understand (everything). You want to take in all these many different things that are being thrown at you.

“So it’s a combination of wanting to enjoy the process and hear what everyone’s got to say and ultimately expressing what you really want and where you want to see your future at.”

A two-time All-Star acquired by the Yankees from the Chicago Cubs in December 2024 after Juan Soto signed with the New York Mets, Bellinger hit .272 with 29 homers and 98 RBIs last year — including .302 with 18 homers and 55 RBIs at Yankee Stadium. A left-handed hitter, he played 149 games in the outfield and seven at first base in his first season since 2022 without a stint on the injured list.

Bellinger appeared in 152 games, last season his most since winning the MVP, a Gold Glove and Silver Slugger Award with the Dodgers. He also hit .353 against left-handed pitching, .348 with runners in scoring position and .304 with runners on base.

“Badly, Badly,” manager Aaron Boone said when asked how much he was hoping Bellinger would return.

A Gold Glover in 2019, Bellinger also made standout defensive plays in right and left field.

On July 6, Bellinger also made an 89.8 mph throw from left field after making a shoestring catch on Soto to start a double play in a 6-4 win over the Mets.

Three months later, he made a 95.3 mph throw from right field to get Bo Bichette at the plate in the sixth inning of a 3-1 win over Toronto.

“He can win a game in a lot of different ways and that became very apparent to us,” Boone said.

Bellinger is joining a roster mostly intact from last year when the Yankees won 94 games, beat the Red Sox in three games in the wild-card series before getting outscored 34-19 in a four-game ALDS loss to the Blue Jays.

Bellinger has a .261 average with 225 homers and 695 RBIs in eight seasons with the Los Angeles Dodgers (2018-22), Cubs (2023-24) and the Yankees.

He earned $57.5 million from the three-year, $80 million contract he reached with the Cubs before the 2024 season. Bellinger declined a $25 million option for 2026 in favor of a $5 million buyout.

Rockets NBA trade rumor round up

Why are we talking about trade rumors? How many of these articles…

Oops. Sorry. Thought I was in the comments section.

Look. It’s trade season. There will be trades. There will be trade discussions. If you’re someone who gets irrationally furious at the mere mention of an NBA trade (a surprisingly common cohort), the internet is not for you. Go to the park.

If you’re still here, let’s take a look at some Houston Rockets trade rumors.

Coby White

We’re mostly talking about guards here, for obvious reasons.

Whether those reasons are obvious to Ime Udoka is a different question.

To us laymen, it sure looks like Houston needs a player who can handle the ball. It ought to be someone who also has at least a semblance of off-ball value. The Rockets don’t need to revolutionize their offense by bringing in a ball-dominant star. Alperen Sengun is doing well with playmaking reps, and both Amen Thompson and Reed Sheppard are making progress throughout the season.

White would suffice. He’d make the offense more dynamic. He’s averaging 19.0 points and 4.7 assists per game this year, and shooting 37.0% from long-range.

There are complications. White’s on an expiring deal. The Rockets would likely be looking at flipping Dorian Finney-Smith’s nearly identical contract and a heavily-protected first-rounder for a potential rental. It doesn’t feel like Stone’s style.

Let’s look at some lower-risk moves.

Jose Alvarado

Here’s the conundrum: lower risk means lower reward. Spoiler: The other guards on this list would not be certain to usurp Aaron Holiday in the rotation.

Although it wouldn’t be absurd to prefer Alvarado’s statistical profile. He’s averaging 12.9 points, 5.2 assists, and 1.6 steals per 75 possessions to Holiday’s 15.9, 2.7, and 1.1. Alvarado (-2.2) has a marginally better Box Plus/Minus than Holiday (-2.6). He may be the better player.

Does he move the needle enough to be worth doing – well, anything? That’s a different question. If Alvarado can be had for a couple of second-round picks, the juice should be worth the squeeze, but parting with anything substantial would be a mistake.

On that note…

Chris Paul

The Clippers have to trade Paul. They won’t get anything valuable in exchange for the right to roster him for the second half of the last season of his career. The Rockets could send Jeff Green, and unless the Clippers are including Paul in a larger deal elsewhere, they’d have to accept that deal.

So, for the Rockets, the question becomes three-pronged: Will they play Paul, do they want his voice in the locker room over Uncle Jeff’s, and will they play him enough to justify making that deal if not?

It seems like Paul began to grate on the Clippers. He’s always been prickly. It shouldn’t have shocked anyone if he wasn’t able to co-exist with James Harden.

Personality-wise, it feels like he’d be a better fit in Houston. There’s no coddling under the Ime Udoka regime. If Paul is cussing Reed Sheppard out for overhelping on defense, Udoka is likely to nod in agreement.

Still, there are basketball realities to consider. Paul averaged 7.7 points, 8.7 assists, and 1.8 steals per 75 possessions in 16 games for the Clippers. This is a man who can no longer score at an NBA level, as evidenced by Paul’s 41.3 True Shooting % (TS%) during that stretch. It’s hard to think of the right adjective for that number. Horrifying? Yes. Paul’s efficiency this year should make you feel horrified.

Still, as Sigmund Freud said, sometimes a 16-game stretch is just a 16-game stretch. If Paul even just caught fire from beyond the arc at the right time for Houston, he could change their season. He’s still evidently haunted by nightmares where he makes the wrong read in the pick-and-roll. Paul can still orchestrate an offense as well as anyone.

Honestly, I don’t know. Maybe? That’s where I stand on any of these. An emphatic maybe.

Here comes a stronger opinion…

Another Big

Here’s what I initially wrote:

No!

No, no, no. One more no: No. Wait, that’s two more no’s. Nooooooo!

On the buyout market? Sure. Where is Nerlens Noel? Isn’t it time for his annual half-season of NBA basketball?

Trading for a big man would be comically absurd. If the deadline comes, and the Rockets acquire Yves Missi at nearly the same price the Timberwolves pay for Coby White…

Well, I’ll write an article about it.

That was before the Adams injury. Hopefully, the big man rests up well and is back on the floor as soon as possible, but there may be an opportunity here.

I’ll cede some ground: Get a stretch big. Adding another non-shooting big – so, not Missi – would still be senseless. The double big lineups have been lacklustre this year. Now that we’re tinkering, let’s try something new. Someone like Andre Drummond (yes, he shoots now), Bobby Portis, or Zach Collins would be good. Just know that if the Rockets get a non-shooting big…

I will write an article about it.

Top 25 Mets Prospects for 2026: Brandon Sproat (5)

On January 21, 2026, Brandon Sproat was traded to the Milwaukee Brewers. This list, and Sproat’s place on it, was compiled back in late-November. For continuity’s sake, I decided upon including Sproat’s profile, but for all intents and purposes, every player on our list below Sproat can be considered to have moved up a spot on it.

Always more focused on hitting than pitching while playing little league and travel ball in the Pensacola area, Brandon Sproat left coaches stunned when he finally tried out for the Pace High School varsity baseball team in his junior year there. With a fastball that sat in the high-80s-to-low-90s and a full arsenal of secondary pitches, the right-hander instantly became the best player on the team. He dominated hitters not just across Santa Rosa County, but all over Florida, a baseball hotbed. In his junior year, he posted a 1.78 ERA in 59 innings, helping lead Pace to Florida’s Class 7A State Championship Game, and in his senior season, he posted a 1.53 ERA in 32 innings. Over the two seasons that he pitched for the Patriots, he made 27 starts and 5 relief appearances, posting a cumulative 1.83 ERA. The Texas Rangers selected Sproat in the 7th round of the 2019 MLB Draft and offered him an over-slot deal, but the right-hander elected to honor his commitment to the University of Florida instead, looking to really develop as a pitcher with the Gators and hear his name called earlier in the 2022 MLB Draft.

Overview

Name: Brandon Sproat
Position: RHP
Born: 09/17/2000 (Age 25 season in 2026)
Height: 6’3”
Weight: 215 lbs.
Bats/Throws: R/R
Acquired: 2023 MLB Draft, 2nd Round (University of Florida)
2025 Season: 26 G (25 GS), 121.0 IP, 97 H, 62 R, 57 ER (4.24 ERA), 53 BB, 113 K, .271BABIP (Triple-A) / 4 G (4 GS), 20.2 IP, 18 H, 11 R, 11 ER (4.79 ERA), 7 BB, 17 K, .310 BABIP (MLB)

Initially, it looked like turning down the Rangers and their money might have been a miscalculation, as the right-hander missed most of his freshman season thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic. He appeared in 4 games out of the bullpen at the beginning of the season prior to the suspension and eventual outright cancellation of the season, and allowed 1 earned run over 6.0 innings, giving up 2 hits, walking 3, and striking out 8. That summer, as many players did, he supplemented his time on the mound by pitching in an independent collegiate league, the Texas Collegiate League. Pitching for the Tulsa Drillers, the right-hander allowed 4 earned runs over 10.1 innings, allowing 6 hits, walking 11, and striking out 7.

In 2021, he returned to Florida and appeared in 16 total games, starting 2 midweek games and making 14 appearances out of the bullpen. All in all, he posted a 6.65 ERA in 21.2 innings, allowing 29 hits, walking 15, and striking out 18. Over the summer, he made a brief appearance with the Chatham Anglers of the Cape Cod Collegiate Baseball League, allowing 3 earned runs in 2 innings with 3 hits allowed, 4 walks, and 2 strikeouts.

In 2022, his junior season, Sproat finally established himself, serving as the team’s Saturday starter following an injury to Hunter Barco. Making a team-high 16 starts, the right-hander posted a 3.41 ERA in 89.2 innings, allowing 84 hits, walking 33, and striking out 82. Analysists believed that based on his stuff and performance, Sproat would be selected early on the second day of the 2022 MLB Draft, and sure enough, he was. With their third round pick, the 90th selection overall, the Mets selected the right-hander. The two sides were unable to agree to terms, and Sproat ended up returning to Florida for a senior season, fulfilling a promise to graduate from college and potentially fulfilling a promise to teammates, classmates and Florida fans to bring a championship to Gainesville.

Sproat gave it all he could, but he and the Gators ended up falling just short of winning that championship in 2023. The right-hander appeared in 19 games as the staff ace and posted a 4.66 ERA in 102.1 innings with 81 hits allowed, 43 walks, and 134 strikeouts. Florida made the College World Series, defeating the University of Virginia in the first round, Oral Roberts University in the second round, and TCU in the semifinals, but lost to Louisiana State University in the finals two games to one. Sproat took the mound in game one, matching up against Tigers ace Ty Floyd, and pitched four innings in Florida’s one and only win in the series, allowing two runs on six hits, with five walks and seven strikeouts and not factoring into the decision. With the Gators’ eventual loss, Spoat’s career at the school came to an end. In total, he appeared in 56 games for them, starting 37, and tossed 223.2 innings. He posted a cumulative 4.27 ERA over the course of his four seasons at Florida, with 202 hits allowed, 99 walks issued, and 242 strikeouts.

Having given the Mets permission to potentially select him a second time around prior to the start of the 2023 MLB Draft, the Mets did just that, selecting him a second time, this time in the second round, the 56th player selected overall. The two sides agreed to a $1,474,500 signing bonus, exactly the MLB-recommended slot value, and Sproat finally became a professional baseball player. He did not suit up for the Mets for the remainder of the season.

Over the off-season, Amazin’ Avenue ranked Sproat the Mets 14th top prospect on the Mets Top 25 Prospects list for 2024. He was assigned to start the season with the High-A Brooklyn Cyclones, but it quickly became apparent that he was not being challenged at the level. He appeared in 6 games for the Cyclones, starting 5 of them, and posted a 1.07 ERA in 25.1 innings, allowing 12 hits, walking 16, and striking out 33. He was promoted to Double-A Binghamton in mid-May and was just as good against Double-A hitters, posting a 2.45 ERA in 62.1 innings over 11 starts with 39 hits allowed, 15 walks, and 77 strikeouts. He was promoted to Triple-A Syracuse in early August and the wheels finally fell off of his excellent season. The right-hander wrapped up his first professional season there, making 7 starts and posting a bloated 7.85 ERA in 28.2 innings, allowing 36 hits, walking 11, and striking out 21.  Despite its poor ending, the right-hander had a successful season and catapulted his name into the discussion not only for Mets top prospect, but among the best nationally as well.

Amazin’ Avenue ranked the right-hander the Mets’ top prospect coming into the season, but he stumbled out of the gate, once again struggling at the Triple-A level. In March/April, he posted a 5.48 ERA in 23.0 innings over 6 starts, allowing 21 hits, walking 12, and striking out 17. In May, he posted a 6.56 ERA in 23.1 innings over 5 starts, allowing 25 hits, walking 10, and striking out 17, and in June, he posted a 4.15 ERA in 21.2 innings over 5 starts, allowing 19 hits, walking 13, and striking out 15. In late June, a lightbulb finally went on. It wasn’t one thing specifically, but suddenly everything started clicking for Sproat. Thanks to a combination of throwing his fastball harder and using a more effective pitch mix, the right-hander went on a terrific run in the month of July. In 27.0 innings over 5 starts, the right-hander posted a 0.67 ERA, allowing 14 hits, walking 8, and striking out 33. His streak of success ended in August, but by that point, the organization was looking at internal options to bolster the starting rotation and the Mets’ dwindling playoff aspirations, and Sproat was in consideration for a call-up. Sure enough, in mid-September, the Mets selected his contract from the Syracuse Mets, joining fellow recently-promoted right-handers Nolan McLean and Jonah Tong.

In his first big league start on September 9th, Sproat allowed 3 runs on 3 hits over 6.0 innings against the Cincinnati Reds, walking 4 and striking out 7. In his next start, against the Texas Rangers on September 13th, the right-hander threw six scoreless innings, scattering 6 hits and not walking a single batter while striking out 3. His next start, which came on September 19th against the Washington Nationals, was his first real clunker, allowing 4 runs over 4.0 innings. His next and final start of the year, September 26 against the Miami Marlins, was a similar clunker that saw him allow 4 runs over 4.2 innings. All in all, Sproat posted a 4.49 ERA in Queens, allowing 18 hits, walking 7, and striking out 17 in 20.2 innings of work and a 4.24 ERA in 121.0 innings with the Syracuse Mets, allowing 97 hits, walking 53, and striking out 113.

The 6’3”, 210-pound Sproat has a solid pitching frame. The right-hander throws from a three-quarters arm slot with a long, whippy arm action through the back. His delivery is fairly simple with few moving parts, and he repeats it well. He struggled with his control earlier in his career while playing at Florida, but has improved in that regard since turning pro, as the Mets worked with him to raise his arm slot a bit and remove some of the crossfire from his delivery, as they identified his lagging arm being the root cause of his control issues.

Sproat has a wide assortment of pitches that he is comfortable using, incorporating multiple fastballs, breaking balls, and off-speed pitches. His pitch mix changed slightly in Queens as compared to his mix while in Syracuse. In Triple-A, he threw his four-seam fastball 26% of the time, his sinker 21.3% of the time, his sweeping slider 16% of the time, his gyro slider 15% of the time, his changeup 15% of the time, and his curveball 7% of the time. In Queens, Jeremy Hefner had Sproat throw his sinker 34% of the time, his sweeping slider 19% of the time, his curveball 15% of the time, his changeup 15% of the time, his four-seam fastball 14% of the time, and his gyro slider 3% of the time.

Sproat’s four-seam fastball averaged 96.2 MPH while playing in Syracuse and 96.7 MPH in his cup of coffee with the Mets, topping out at 100 MPH. While it has plenty of velocity- the pitch was in the 94 percentile in Syracuse and in the 78 percentile in the majors in terms of average velocity- it features a well-below average spin rate. With an average spin rate hovering around 2,000 RPM, the pitch has minimal life and movement. Batters hit .258/.390/.423 against it in Triple-A with a 24.3% Whiff% and in a much smaller sample size, .143/.282/.143 with a 6.3% Whiff% in Queens. The pitch is almost a brute pitch offering, with Sproat having success with the pitch when he is throwing it as hard as he can and sniffing triple-digits but missing considerably fewer bats when the pitch’s velocity backs up.

His sinker sits in a similar velocity band, averaging 95.7 MPH in Syracuse and Queens, topping out at 100 MPH. Triple-A batters hit .268/.366/.366 against it with a 13.7% Whiff% while MLB batters hit .333/.262/.519 against it with a 6.7 Whiff%. Jeremy Hefner had Sproat throw the pitch more than his four-seam fastball, and while its metrics aren’t that great either, the bit more vertical and horizontal movement that it has helped with its damage suppression, resulting in more ground balls and weaker exit velocities in batted ball events.

Sproat’s sweeping slider averaged 85 MPH, while his harder gyro slider averaged 89 MPH. Like his fastball, both pitches recorded spin rates well below average for their respective pitch types, with his sweeping slider averaging 2,400 RPM and his gyro slider averaging 2,090 RPM at Triple-A and the MLB combined. While his sweeping slider has less movement than the MLB average in 2025, the pitch was effective against Triple-A and MLB hitters alike, resulting in a .104./211/.269 BAA in Syracuse with a 33.8% Whiff% and a .077/.268/.077 BAA with a 34.6 Whiff% in the small sample size of his MLB call-up. His gyro slider, used more in Syracuse than in Queens, did not achieve such results, resulting in a .291/.381/.382 BAA with a 29.3 Whiff%.

His changeup, which was an effective offering and arguably his most effective offering while a collegiate player, has remained an effective pitch against professionals. Triple-A batters hit .194/.243/.284 against it with a 29.7% Whiff%, while MLB batters hit .182/.234/.273 against it with a 8.3% Whiff%. The pitch hovers around 90 MPH with a spin rate of 1650 RPM, giving it roughly 30 inches of vertical drop and 16 inches of horizontal movement. Ironically, despite its arm-side fade, the pitch was more successful against right-handers than the left-handers change-ups usually neutralize.

Rounding out his arsenal, Sproat also throws a high-70s-to-low-80s curveball with big 11-5 shape. Much like his change-up, while conceptually his bender should have been more effective against left-handed hitters, it was actually better against right-handers.

Trouble against left-handers has plagued Sproat for his young professional career. In Triple-A, right-handers hit .180/.276/.272 against him with a 28.1% Whiff%, as opposed to the .260/.353/.390 left-handers hit against him with a 23.6% Whiff%. Left-handers also hit the ball harder and further, with more advantageous launch angles.

2026 Mets Top 25 Prospect List

6) A.J. Ewing
7) Jacob Reimer
8) Ryan Clifford
9) Will Watson
10) Jack Wenninger
11) Mitch Voit
12) Jonathan Santucci
13) Elian Peña
14) Zach Thornton
15) Nick Morabito
16) R.J. Gordon
17) Chris Suero
18) Dylan Ross
19) Ryan Lambert
20) Antonio Jimenez
21) Edward Lantigua
22) Eli Serrano III
23) Randy Guzman
24) Daiverson Gutierrez
25) Boston Baro

Sharks vs Oilers Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight’s NHL Game

The Edmonton Oilers welcome the San Jose Sharks to Rogers Place on Thursday, January 29, and all eyes will be on superstars Macklin Celebrini and Connor McDavid.

While San Jose is treading water in the Western Conference playoff race, my Sharks vs. Oilers predictions and top NHL picks expect Edmonton to win convincingly.

Sharks vs Oilers prediction

Sharks vs Oilers best bet: Oilers -1.5 (+120)

The San Jose Sharks are turning heads, but they’re sinking against the NHL contenders and have lost each of their past three games against teams occupying a postseason position by a combined score of 15-5.

Going into Rogers Place to face the Edmonton Oilers and superstars Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl is another huge uptick in class for the Sharks.

Edmonton has scored 13 times across its past two games, and San Jose has allowed the third-most goals per game this season.

Sharks vs Oilers same-game parlay

In addition to the highlighted San Jose defensive shortcomings, Edmonton has had its own trouble keeping the puck out of its net, allowing 15 goals over the past three games.

Turning to Oilers winger Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, he’s been a consistent scoring source and plays with McDavid in all offensive situations.

Nugent-Hopkins has marked the scoresheet in nine of his past 13 games, and he’s been on the ice with McDavid for a monster 6.84 goals per 60 minutes.

Sharks vs Oilers SGP

  • Oilers -1.5
  • Over 6.5
  • Ryan Nugent-Hopkins Over 0.5 points

Sharks vs Oilers odds

  • Moneyline: Sharks +175 | Oilers -215
  • Puck Line: Sharks +1.5 (-130) | Oilers -1.5 (+110)
  • Over/Under: Over 6.5 (-135) | Under 6.5 (+115)

Sharks vs Oilers trend

The Edmonton Oilers have hit the Over in 17 of their last 25 home games (+8.10 Units / 28% ROI), and the San Jose Sharks have played to the Over in 13 of their last 20 games (+6.15 Units / 26% ROI). Find more NHL betting trends for Sharks vs. Oilers.

How to watch Sharks vs Oilers

LocationRogers Place, Edmonton, AB
DateThursday, January 29, 2026
Puck drop9:00 p.m. ET
TVSportsnet One

Sharks vs Oilers latest injuries

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here

‘I’m battling Father Time’: LeBron James reflective and tearful in possible Cleveland farewell

LeBron James is nearing the end of his long NBA career.Photograph: Jason Miller/Getty Images

A 60-second tribute video honoring LeBron James has become routine over the past eight years whenever he returns to Cleveland, the city where his NBA journey began.

But Wednesday night at Rocket Arena was different – and it felt that way long before James’s Los Angeles Lakers fell 129-99 to the Cavaliers in a nationally televised game.

For the first time, James struggled to contain his emotions.

As his name was announced during pregame introductions, the crowd rose in a thunderous standing ovation that lingered longer than usual. Minutes later, during the game’s first break, the tribute video played on the jumbo screen hanging above the court. James remained seated on the Lakers’ bench, watching intently along with nearly 20,000 fans who understood they were witnessing something more than a routine return.

The video featured a montage of historic moments from James’s Cavaliers career, highlighted by his unforgettable performance in Game 5 of the 2007 Eastern Conference Finals – when he scored 25 consecutive points, capped by a game-winning layup against the Detroit Pistons. It was the night that first cemented James not only as a superstar, but as Cleveland’s own.

Several times Wednesday night, James lowered his head and wiped away tears with the inside of his jersey. He later reached for a paper towel, dabbing his eyes before the game resumed.

“The moment they put up [the tribute video], the Detroit game, looking up in the rafters and I saw our championship banner [from Cleveland’s 2016 NBA title] … it was a lot of reflection,” James said after the game. “Being present in the moment. It got to me a little bit for sure. I was super thankful.”

On Wednesday, James finished with 11 points, five assists and six turnovers – his worst performance in his return games – but the stat line was secondary to the night’s emotion.

Now in his 23rd NBA season since he was drafted No 1 overall by the Cavaliers in 2003, James’s Hall of Fame résumé includes being the league’s all-time leading scorer, four championships with three different teams, countless playoff moments and nearly every significant individual milestone the league has to offer. Yet as the finish line slowly comes into view, whenever that may be, moments like Wednesday carry deeper meaning. This may have been the final time James played an NBA game in the city where it all began.

Related: Welcome to Duncanville: why the road to the NBA runs through Dallas

“Because it could be [my last season]. I haven’t made a decision on the future, but it very well could be [my final game in Cleveland],” James said. “No matter if it’s here or in Washington playing in our next game, or in the Barclays on this road trip. Obviously, it means more here for me personally because I grew up 35 miles south of here.”

What made the night feel different wasn’t the tribute itself – the Cavaliers have done this many times before – but the collective awareness inside the building. This didn’t feel like a reunion tour stop. It felt like a pause. A moment when a city and its greatest athlete quietly acknowledged, without saying it out loud, that there may not be many of these nights left.

The ovation lingered. Fans stayed on their feet. Some recorded on their phones. Others simply watched. Cleveland no longer demanded anything from James. The city was offering gratitude.

The emotions extended well beyond the court. The night was even more meaningful because James was able to share it with his son and teammate, Bronny, along with several family members watching from a suite.

“It was pretty cool just sitting over there and watching [Bronny] continue to live out his dream,” James said. “My mom was here watching her son and her grandson. I don’t even know how to wrap that all into one in my brain. It’s so weird and so cool and so surreal.”

Bronny, who scored eight points in the loss, felt the weight of the moment himself. As in his game at Rocket Arena last season, the crowd erupted when he entered the game and cheered loudly after his fourth-quarter dunk. It was a symbolic passing of time inside the same building where his father once ruled the league.

“Very nostalgic to be here,” Bronny said. “I was here pretty much every day as a kid, so it feels good to be out here. I was almost emotional myself. Being home is another feeling. It’s crazy to come back and have so much love. It got him. It almost got me.”

James’s mother, Gloria James, was also reflective. She has been present for nearly every step of her son’s career, from his earliest NBA games to the moment he lifted Cleveland’s first championship banner in 2016.

“I don’t get as emotional as I used to, but I did a little,” Gloria James told the Guardian. “I’ve been there from day one, every single game he’s played in the NBA. Thinking about all of those years and being here tonight – it’s memorable and awesome.”

For those who know James best, the emotion wasn’t surprising.

Chris Dennis, once a James family adviser, said the reaction inside the arena reflected how intertwined James’s story is with Cleveland’s identity.

“They were hyped when LeBron came back into the game after the video, because the fans are a part of who he is,” said Dennis, who is managing partner of Tribute Sports. “A lot of those fans grew up watching LeBron. When you grow up with a dude that represented your city, you’re going to show that love.”

Dennis said the moment hit harder because James understands, even if he hasn’t said so publicly, that time is no longer on his side.

“I’m not basing this on anything I’ve heard,” Dennis said. “But he knows he’s toward the end of his career. It’s harder for him to prepare for games. It’s not easy for a 41-year-old to get ready and play at this level every night.”

Planning for the end is new to James, whose career for most of its duration centered on what he would accomplish next. Now, the question lingers quietly in the background: what comes after?

Several paths remain. James, who spoke before the game about mapping out offseason golf plans, could retire. He could re-sign with the Lakers. Or, in a storybook ending, he could return once more to Cleveland.

Only James knows which direction he will choose.

“The question gets asked more, and the thought creeps into my mind more at 41 years old,” James said. “Of when the end is and where the finish line is when it comes to hanging this thing up. I’m in a battle with Father Time, and I’m taking it personally – seeing how many times I can be victorious over him. But I won’t be one of those guys who won’t be able to walk off the court. That’s for sure.”

On Wednesday night, near the Lakers’ locker room after the game, James gathered with family members, including his mother, surrounded by love, memories, and reflection – not knowing if it would be the last time in this arena.

Time will tell.

Charles Barkley calls out NBC over Michael Jordan controversy: ‘Bad look’

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Former Phoenix Suns player Charles Barkley in attendance at an NBA Cup game, Image 2 shows Michael Jordan speaking while seated in a brown armchair
Barkley on Jordan

This won’t help Charles Barkley re-enter Michael Jordan’s good graces.

Barkley called out NBC for its controversial Michael Jordan usage during its NBA coverage, with one interview being splintered into different segments to be used throughout the season instead of regular chats with the legendary player that some expected for the format.

“It’s a bad look for NBC and it’s just a bad look, plain and simple,” Barkley said on SiriusXM Radio on Wednesday, according to Awful Announcing.

“They couldn’t fly to Michael like once a month and do a new interview? That makes NBC look really bad, plain and simple.”

Charles Barkley in November 2025. Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Many NBA fans loved the idea that Jordan — who can be reclusive — agreed to contribute to the new “NBA on NBC” coverage in its return to the air, hoping to regularly here his takes on the league.

NBC stated Jordan would be a “special contributor.”

Barkley, who had a falling out with Jordan due to critical comments about his Charlotte ownership, said in May that he was “shocked” to learn of Jordan’s decision, but added that he did not expect a ton from him.

Well, it turns out the Round Mound of Rebound had the right idea.

The special contribution from Jordan consisted of one sit-down interview with Mike Tirico that has been cut into different clips for his “MJ: Insights to Excellence” segment.

Instead of Jordan touching on the topics of the day, such as Giannis Antetokounmpo asking out of Milwaukee, the interviews are focused on broader topics.

Michael Jordan during a clip used by NBC. @NBAonNBC/YouTube

“I was excited. We need Michael Jordan affiliated with the NBA, but now you see this thing coming out with NBC and you’re like, ‘Wait, y’all did one interview like five months ago and y’all gonna sprinkle it throughout the season?’ Come on, man,” Barkley said. “That’s disingenuous by NBC. That’s crazy, man. I’m so disappointed at the way that worked out.”

Tirico recently addressed the pushback against the segments, focusing on the positives while noting there are no plans yet for a second interview.

“Was it what everyone wanted? Probably not,” Tirico said on the “SI Media with Jimmy Traina” podcast earlier this month. “Was it better than not hearing from Michael Jordan? You’re damn right it was. And if we get another shot at it, will I be more than excited to be a part of it? You betcha. In our world right now, all you want to do is make the final answer before you know everything. I love that Michael trusted us enough to sit and do something that he hasn’t done in a long, long, long time.”

As Barkley criticizes NBC, he’s also expressed some frustration with his new bosses at ESPN over the lack of usage of his “Inside the NBA” show in its transition after exiting TNT.

Pistons at Suns predictions: Odds, recent stats, trends and best bets for January 29

MVP candidate Cade Cunningham leads the Detroit Pistons (34-11) into Phoenix for a game tonight against the Suns (28-19) minus Devin Booker (ankle).

The Pistons lead the Eastern Conference by six games over the Knicks and the Celtics. Cunningham and co. have won four straight on the road and own one of the league’s best road records this season with 15 wins in 21 games. Cunningham leads the Pistons in scoring (25.3ppg) but is also averaging nearly 10 assists per game (9.8).

The Suns are one of the real revelations this season. Winners of six of their last ten, Phoenix sits just a half-game behind Luka Doncic and the Pacific Division-leading Lakers and seventh overall in the Western Conference. However, Devin Booker is sidelined tonight and for at least the next week. While this is a team whose identity lies in its defense (No. 3 in the West allowing just 111.6PPG), they will need to find a replacement for his presence on the court and his 25 points per game.

This is the second meeting of the season between these teams. Detroit won earlier this month on January 16, 108-105, in Motown. Grayson Allen poured in 33 points for Phoenix in a losing effort.

Lets take a closer look at the matchup and take into consideration lineups, injuries, and other factors affecting the line and total.

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

After 24 years, the NBA is back on NBC and Peacock, combining the nostalgia of an iconic era with the innovative future of basketball coverage. The NBA on NBC YouTube channel delivers fans must-see highlights, analysis, and exclusive and unique content. 

Game Details and How to Watch Live: Pistons at Suns

  • Date: Thursday, January 29, 2026
  • Time: 9PM EST
  • Site: Mortgage Matchup Center
  • City: Phoenix, AZ
  • Network/Streaming: FDSN Detroit, Suns Live

Rotoworld has you covered with all the latest NBA 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!

Game Odds: Pistons at Suns

The latest odds as of Thursday courtesy of DraftKings:

  • Moneyline: Detroit Pistons (-180), Phoenix Suns (+150)
  • Spread: Pistons -4.5
  • Total: 214.5 points

This game opened Pistons -5.5 with the Total set at 215.5.

Be sure to check out DraftKings for all the latest game odds & player props for every matchup this week on the NBA schedule! 

Expected Starting Lineups: Pistons at Suns

Detroit Pistons

  • PG Cade Cunningham
  • SG Duncan Robinson
  • SF Ausar Thompson
  • PF Tobias Harris
  • C Jalen Duren

Phoenix Suns

  • PG Collin Gillespie
  • SG Grayson Allen
  • SF Dillon Brooks
  • PF Royce O’Neale
  • C Mark Williams

Injury Report: Pistons at Suns

Detroit Pistons

  • Caris LeVert (illness) is listed as questionable for tonight’s game

Cleveland Cavaliers

  • Collin Gillespie (hand) is listed as questionable for tonight’s game
  • Devin Booker (ankle) has been ruled OUT of tonight’s game
  • Jalen Green (hamstring) is listed as questionable for tonight’s game

Important stats, trends and insights: Pistons at Suns

  • The Suns are 15-6 at home this season
  • The Pistons are 15-6 on the road this season
  • The Suns are an NBA-best 31-16 ATS this season
  • The Pistons are 23-22 ATS this season
  • The OVER has cashed in 19 of the Suns 47 games this season (19-28)
  • The OVER has cashed in 19 of the Cavs’ 45 games this season (19-25-1)
  • Grayson Allen is averaging 3.3 made 3-pointers in his last 10 games
  • In 8 games in January, Jalen Duren has pulled down more than 9 rebounds just twice

Rotoworld Best Bet

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Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the NBA calendar based on data points like recent performance, head-to-head player matchups, trends information and projected game totals.
 
Once the model is finished running, we put its projections 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 Pistons and Suns’ game:

  • Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is recommending a play on the Pistons on the Moneyline
  • Spread: Rotoworld Bet is staying away from a play ATS
  • Total: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Game Total UNDER 214.5

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Penguins recall forward Rutger McGroarty

With forward Bryan Rust serving a three-game suspension and defenseman Jack St. Ivany now sidelined following surgery, there was going to be a roster move coming for the Pittsburgh Penguins before they begin their current three-game home stand. That roster move came on Thursday morning, and it is the return of forward Rutger McGroarty.

The Penguins officially announced the recall of McGroarty after a four-game stop in Wikes-Barre/Scranton following his recovery from a concussion. He was injured during a collision with a teammate in practice. During his four-game stay in Wilkes-Barre/Scranton he recorded five assists, furthering his impressive AHL numbers for the season. He has four goals, eight assists and 12 total points in nine games at the AHL Level.

He has two goals and an assist in 16 games with the Penguins.

With McGroarty back, the question now becomes what sort of role he take with the Penguins and where he will slot back into the lineup.

The Penguins have really settled their forward line combinations and have four lines that are working extremely well together at the moment. The easiest solution would be to simply plug McGroarty into Rust’s spot on the top line and keep the Evgeni Malkin-Tommy Novak-Egor Chinakhov line together, the Ben Kindel-Anthony-Mantha-Justin Brazeau line together and the Connor Dewar-Blake Lizotte-Noel Accairi line together.

Why disrupt multiple lines that are all working if you do not have to do so?

Crosby and McGroarty also produced well together in their brief ice-time together at the end of the 2024-25 season.

The other option could be a potential reunion of McGroarty with Ben Kindel, with one of the veteran forwards (Brazeau or Mantha) getting bumped to the top line.

Based on the lines at the morning skate, the Penguins are going to go with the latter option as Brazeau has skated on the right side of the Crosby-Rakell line, while McGroarty is on the left side with Kindel and Mantha.

At the end of the day, just so it is not Kevin Hayes drawing back into the lineup there really is not a bad decision here. The important thing is just putting a good lineup out there that can keep this run going. The other important thing is McGroarty making the most of this opportunity and making a good impression no matter what line he plays on. Making the playoffs is now a very realistic goal for this season, and perhaps even an expectation at this point, but seeing growth from young players and positive development there is also a big priority. Bryan Rust’s suspension is unfortunate for the Penguins, but it is still a big opportunity for McGroarty to get another look with the NHL team.

Palat Dealt to Islanders: Devils React to Sudden Trade

The New Jersey Devils may have lost to the Winnipeg Jets on Tuesday night, but before the game began, news broke that forward Ondrej Palat was inactive.

​Later on in the night, it was announced that Palat had been traded to the New York Islanders along with New Jersey’s third-round pick in the 2026 NHL Draft and the club’s sixth-round pick in the 2027 NHL Draft in exchange for forward Maxim Tsyplakov.​

The trade was finalized right before the game began, head coach Sheldon Keefe explained.

​"It's challenging. It's not ideal. It happened so close to the game. He's there saying goodbye to all the guys,” Keefe said to NJD.tv.  “It's challenging, but it's part of the business, part of the deal. You have to press on and get ready for the game. You have to be a pro in those moments. That's the reality of it."​

​The team played without the left winger and fell 4-3 to the Jets. ​Lenni Hameenaho scored his second NHL goal, but it was not enough for a comeback.

​While the team suffered another loss, Tsyplakov's addition took the headlines that night. ​

Tsyplakov is in his second season in the NHL, having recorded 2 points in 27 games. ​

The Devils were able to offload Palat’s entire $6 million salary cap hit for this season and next. ​

The team had reportedly been discussing trading Palat for some time; his hefty contract was not aligning with his production for the Devils this season.

In return, the Devils acquired Tsyplakov, a younger, less expensive player. ​Captain Nico Hischier shared how he felt about Palat’s sudden departure.

​"Definitely not easy. Everybody in here knows what Palat meant to this team, to this organization. He's a guy who won it. He taught us a lot. A great teammate. It's never easy to see a guy go like that, but we wish him all the best. We all know it's part of the business."​

The Devils now prepare to face the Nashville Predators on Thursday at 7 PM.

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