Brooklyn Nets survive near-collapse vs. Chicago Bulls, win 112-109

Ishika Samant/Getty Images

The Brooklyn Nets returned home to face the Chicago Bulls on Friday night after completing a miraculous 3-game road trip. Miraculously, the Nets lost all games to teams with a combined 39-70 record. Perhaps it’s a sign that this year’s attempt at tanking is blessed by the basketball gods, but that’s no consolation to Head Coach Jordi Fernández.

“I don’t think I really move on [from tough losses],” said Jordi with half a smile pregame. “It’s what I tell the players, but me personally, it’s a different story.”

The trip began with the Nets blowing a late eight-point lead to the Memphis Grizzlies as the hosts closed on a 13-0 run; it ended with Saddiq Bey hitting a 30-foot prayer and the New Orleans Pelicans winning a contest they only led for five minutes. But while those losses featured late-game heartbreak, their loss to the Dallas Mavericks may have been the most improbable. Dallas, the worst 3-point shooting team in the league, shot 44% from deep compared to just 24% for the Nets. It still came down to clutch time.

The Chicago Bulls have survived Josh Giddey’s absence, a respectable 4-4 since their leader injured his hamstring, but they would need similar luck to hand Brooklyn their sixth straight loss. Early on, they didn’t get it. Six different Brooklyn Nets hit a 3-pointer in the first quarter, then Danny Wolf opened up the second quarter by going glass at the end of the shot-clock…

It seemed like it was just one of those nights. For both teams. Ten Nets played, ten Nets scored, and the team as a whole shot 19-of-40 from deep. Conversely, the Bulls committed just eight turnovers and shot 58.8% inside the arc, playing a respectable offensive game without Giddey … aside from the fact that they couldn’t throw a seashell in the ocean, shooting 5-of-23 from deep through three quarters.

As such, the Nets were in cruise control, beginning with a dominant second quarter. Wolf’s bank shot certainly helped, but he had a solid night overall. After entering the night shooting under 38% from the floor in the new year, Wolf put up 13/4/4 on 5-of-8 shooting. Crucially, he didn’t turn it over once…

The rookies in the starting lineup, Egor Dëmin and Drake Powell, weren’t as impactful, combining for eight points on 2-of-11 shooting. However, Nolan Traore picked up the slack off the bench, hitting a couple 3-pointers and dishing six assists…

As a reward, Nolan closed the game over Dëmin, and somehow, the pressure was on. What had been a comfortable game for two hours turned sweaty in the fourth quarter as the Bulls finally woke up from three, with four makes from Jalen Smith. That uneasy feeling swept through Barclays Center with the Nets looking down the barrel of another excruciating loss, missing layup after layup and turning it over anytime Chicago needed a boost…

Fernández’s nightmare quickly turned reality; suddenly, the Nets were inbounding, trailing by one. He didn’t draw up anything too complex — a simple pin down for Michael Porter Jr. — but the Bulls were confused nonetheless. Coby White switched onto the much taller MPJ, who curled the screen, bounced off White’s hip downhill, and finished a layup with 5.4 seconds left.

Did Jordi draw it up exactly like that, down to the last detail? Not exactly: “No, I just need him to catch the ball after that. He knows what he’s doing.”

Michael Porter Jr., likely All-Star, was a worthy hero as any. Noah Clowney got off the schneid, hitting four threes to notch a 23-and-11 double-double while Nic Claxton put up 7/14/5, his season-high in rebounds. Still, it was MPJ who led all scorers with 26, scoring 12 of Brooklyn’s 23 fourth-quarter points.

But the Nets did need one final stop, and it was here the Drake Powell erased any concern about his quiet offensive night. Tre Jones attempted to enter it to Nikola Vučević, who led them in scoring with 19, at the top of the key. It appeared the visitors were setting up a handoff with White, simply trying to put their two most dynamic threats in an action together, but they never got there…

Powell pogo’d, reached out, deflected the pass, and secured the loose ball. Clowney then made his free-throws, while Vooch missed a desperation heave as the buzzer sounded. To Drake, it seemed simple: “Just trying to have active hands, high activity on the ball, and just do my best to make a tough entry pass. That was the main thing.”

The Nets did juuuust enough, buoyed by a couple heroic plays from a vet and a rookie. The Nets mercifully won a close game, and Jordi Fernández could exhale: “The lesson is that there’s no safe lead in the NBA. Teams will always punch back and obviously, give them credit … but it’s way better to learn that winning than losing, right?”

“It was a little bit of déjà vu, just seeing the game kind of slipped away, but it’s nice figuring out ways to win those games as opposed to figuring out ways to lose them.” — Nic Claxton

Final Score: Brooklyn Nets 112, Chicago Bulls 109

Milestone Watch

  • Michael Porter Jr.’s game-winning layup with 5.4 seconds remaining tonight was his second career go-ahead field goal with under ten seconds remaining.
  • This was Clowney’s 10th career game with 20 points and his sixth of the season, his 11 rebounds were also a career-high. This was his second career double-double.

The win didn’t move the Nets up in the Tankathon rankings. They remain in fifth but now two games behind Washington and Utah who are tied for third and fourth. So not big deal.

Next Up

<p>Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images</p><br>

This was the first half of a home-and-home, so next up for the Brooklyn Nets is the Chicago Bulls over at their place. Tip-off is scheduled for 7:00 p.m. ET on Sunday evening.

Winners and Losers: Cavs at 76ers – Jaylon Tyson has no fear and no ceiling

The Cleveland Cavaliers won a thrilling game against the Philadelphia 76ers. They couldn’t have done it without Jaylon Tyson.

Let’s see who won and lost the night.

WINNER – Jaylon Tyson

I gave Tyson a rare A+++ in my player grades. If that tells you anything about the game he just played.

It was the type of game that’s almost hard to talk about. He was perfect, in every single way. What else is there to say?

Tyson had a career-high 39 points. It only took him 17 shots to get there, as he missed just 4 attempts all night. He was a flamethrower from behind the arch (7-9 three-point shooting) and just as impressive attacking the basket.

He capped it off with an aggressive drive and dump-off pass to Evan Mobley for the game-winning bucket.

Tyson has shown no fear this season. And, he’s starting to show that his ceiling might be higher than anyone could have predicted. This was already the sixth time this season that Tyson has scored 19+ points on 70% or better shooting from the floor. That type of efficiency from a second-year player who is also a plus defender is almost unheard of.

LOSER – Ball Security

You can rarely blame an entire loss on one single factor. But hey, if the Cavs had lost tonight, they would have only had one thing to blame.

Turnovers were a serious problem in this game. That’s to be expected when Darius Garland isn’t there to run the offense. Still, 12 turnovers at halftime had the Cavs trailing a game they should have been winning. The 76ers finished with 32 points off Cleveland’s turnovers, a stat that should have been a backbreaker.

It takes some serious grit and determination to win a game when you’re spotting the other team that many points. Granted, Philly deserves credit for the swarming defense that they played. But also, the Cavs had plenty of unforced errors in this one, as well.

Winning can cure everything. Though I don’t think the Cavs should expect to get away with this many turnovers again.

LOSER – Evan Mobley’s Usage

This might sound harsh, because I loved the 17 points that Mobley scored on Wednesday, but now I’m complaining about his 15 points tonight. The thing is, Mobley should have gotten more opportunities with Cleveland’s injuries, not fewer.

I understand that Philly loaded up against Mobley. They know as well as we do that the Cavs needed him to score tonight with DG and Sam Merrill on the sidelines. Mobley has done a great job of reading the defense and making the correct pass this season.

Still, it should be easy to replicate the actions that Mobley excels at running. Those side pick-and-rolls that lead into jump hooks should be available at any given time. Yet, for some reason, the Cavs consistently struggle to keep Mobley involved offensively.

Putting more on Mobley’s plate shouldn’t be complicated. He doesn’t have to be a Giannis-prototype or an elite floor spacer. Can he just get a few extra possessions scoring in the short-roll? That’s all I want.

I’m glad he got the rock with the game on the line. Even if it was a simple drive and dump-off pass. That’s the type of action that Mobley can dominate. You just have to get to the basket and find him, because you can trust that he’s always lurking.

WINNER – Nae’Qwan Tomlin Dunks

Tomlin dunks every ball like he’s trying to rip the rim straight off the backboard. Had he played 40 years ago, he’d likely be responsible for several game stoppages and hoop repairs.

We love the intensity that Tomlin brings to the game. His ferocious dunks are instant highlights. And, because he goes so hard in the paint, defenders are learning to get out of his way. Joel Embiid side-stepped an opportunity to contest Tomlin on one of his violent attacks in the second half.

There isn’t much else to say about this. I just had to give him a nod.

Darryn Peterson scores 26 and Flory Bidunga adds a double-double as Kansas tops Baylor 80-62

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Freshman Darryn Peterson scored 26 points on 11-of-13 shooting, Flory Bidunga had 23 points, 11 rebounds and five blocks, and Kansas beat Baylor 80-62 on Friday night.

Kansas led by 15 points after opening the game on a 19-4 run, but the Bears rallied behind an 8-0 run to take their first lead at 37-36. The Jayhawks scored the final seven points of the half, capped by a stepback jumper by Peterson, who had 20 points on 8-of-10 shooting.

Bidunga threw down an alley-oop dunk while being fouled and he made the free throw to cap Kansas’ 15-3 run to begin the second half for a 58-40 lead. Baylor began the second half by making just 1 for 6 shots — after missing its final four field goals of the first half.

Kansas led by at least 14 points the rest of the way.

Peterson, averaging a team-high 21.8 points per game, has six games of 20 or more points for Kansas (13-5, 3-2 Big 12), which was coming off an 84-63 win against No. 2 Iowa State on Tuesday. The Jayhawks have shot above 50% from the field the past two games.

Cameron Carr led Baylor (11-6, 1-4) with 24 points and five 3-pointers. Tounde Yessoufou added three of Baylor's 11 3-pointers and 20 points.

It marked the first time since Dec. 10, 1966, that the two teams met while both were unranked in the AP poll.

The Jayhawks lead the all-time series with Baylor, 37-11, including 21-1 at Allen Fieldhouse

Up next

Baylor: Returns home to play No. 15 Texas Tech on Tuesday.

Kansas: Goes on the road to face Colorado on Tuesday.

___ Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here and here (AP News mobile app). AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball

Nets survive Bulls' fourth-quarter push, hang on to win, 112-109

NEW YORK (AP) — Michael Porter Jr. made a go-ahead layup with 5.4 seconds remaining after Brooklyn had blown a 20-point lead in the fourth quarter, and the Nets beat the Chicago Bulls 112-109 on Friday night.

Porter scored 26 points and Noah Clowney had 23 points and 11 rebounds for the Nets, who snapped a five-game losing streak. Day’Ron Sharpe scored 14 points and rookie Danny Wolf had 13.

Nikola Vucevic scored 19 points and Ayo Dosunmu had 18 for the Bulls in the opener of a home-and-home series.

Head coach Jordi Fernandez thought the Nets could’ve won all three games on their just-completed road trip, but it appeared they wouldn’t need to worry about another close finish after a 15-0 run in the second quarter helped them take a 17-point halftime lead, their second-largest of the season.

Cam Thomas’ three-pointer to open the fourth quarter made it 92-72 before the Bulls scored the next 11 points. Thomas hit another three to stop that surge, and the Nets still led by six with under a minute remaining.

The Bulls then scored seven straight points to go ahead 109-108 on Tre Jones’ layup with 11.4 seconds remaining. The Nets ran a play to get Porter the ball near the basket, and he put the Nets back on top. Rookie Drake Powell then stole Chicago’s pass in from the sideline and Clowney’s two free throws made it 112-109 before Vucevic missed a rushed three-pointer.

Brooklyn had a 42-38 lead with about 4 1/2 minutes remaining in the second quarter that should’ve been cut to two, but Matas Buzelis missed a fast-break dunk attempt with nobody around. Clowney then converted a pair of three-point plays during a personal run of seven straight points, and after Porter made a three-pointer, Clowney hit one to extend the lead to 17 before Egor Demin made two free throws to end the run and make it 57-38.

Up next

The teams play Sunday in Chicago.

How many points did Darryn Peterson score tonight? Baylor vs Kansas box score

If Kansas basketball's win over Baylor on Friday, Jan. 16 proved anything, it was that Darryn Peterson is in fact one of the best players in men's college basketball.

The freshman star guard took over in the Jayhawks' 80-62 win over the Bears at Allen Fieldhouse with 26 points on 11-of-13 shooting from the field with two rebounds and three assists.

His 26-point outing gives him his fourth game of at least 20 points in Kansas' last five games. It's the sixth game this season that Peterson, who has missed some time with a hamstring injury, has reached that mark, as well.

And he could have had more: Peterson made his last basket with 16:41 to go and didn't play at all in the final 8:01.

Here's a deeper look into Peterson's night against the Bears, including a look at his full box score:

Darryn Peterson stats vs Baylor

Here's a look at Paterson's stats from Friday's game against Baylor:

  • Points: 26
  • Shooting: 11-for-13
  • 3-point shooting: 2-for-4
  • Free throw shooting: 2-for-4
  • Rebounds: 2
  • Assists: 3
  • Steals: 1
  • Turnovers: 0
  • Minutes: 23

Darryn Peterson highlights

Here's a look at a few highlights from Peterson's night against the Bears:

Did Kansas basketball win today?

Yes, led by Peterson's 26 points, Kansas picked up its third Big 12 win of the season with an 80-62 victory over Baylor on Jan. 16. The Jayhawks improved to 13-5 (3-2 in Big 12 play) on the season with the win.

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fastDownload for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Darryn Peterson points today: Kansas freshman dominates vs Baylor

Kendall Coyne Schofield scores in OT as the Minnesota Frost beat the New York Sirens 3-2

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Kendall Coyne Schofield scored in overtime off a nice assist by Taylor Heise and the Minnesota Frost beat the New York Sirens 3-2 on Friday night.

Heise faked a shot and sent it across the goal on a breakaway for Coyne Schofield's redirection. Coyne Schofield increased her point total to 14 this season and Heise recorded her 10th assist, four coming in the last two games.

It was the first of five regular-season meetings between Minnesota (5-2-2-3) and New York (6-0-1-5). Last season, the Sirens went 3-2-1-0 against Minnesota.

Heise's first assist to Britta Curl-Salemme opened the scoring with 11:05 left in the first period after a misplay by the Sirens goaltender. It was Curl-Salemme's fifth goal of the season and league-leading 14th point. Curl-Salemme has points in 10 of 12 games this season.

Kelly Pannek gave Minnesota a 2-1 lead just 35 seconds into the second on a hard shot in close for her fifth goal of the season. Coyne Schofield picked up the assist.

Casey O’Brien, with a jailbreak goal, tied it at 1-all for New York with 2:49 left in the first.

Taylor Girard set a career high in goals with her fifth to tie it at 2-all at 4:04 of the second.

Up next

Minnesota: Returns home to play Montreal on Wednesday.

New York: Plays Montreal in a Takeover Tour game at Capital One Arena in Washington, D.C. on Sunday.

___

AP women’s hockey: https://apnews.com/hub/womens-hockey

Panthers wrap up road trip in DC looking to head home on high note

The longest road trip of the season for the Florida Panthers will come to an end on Saturday night.

Florida has a chance to end the trip with an even record, but they’ll have to take down the stingy Washington Capitals first.

The Cats lost the first two games on their trip, in Toronto and Montreal, before picking up a pair of dubs in Ottawa and Buffalo.

After a four-day break, Florida resumed their roadie Friday against the Carolina Hurricanes but were romped out of Raleigh, losing by an embarrassing 8-1 final score.

The big question surrounding the Panthers is when their injured star forwards will be healthy enough to get back in the lineup.

Matthew Tkachuk has been nearing a return for over a week now, shedding his non-contact jersey and joining his teammates for a few full-contact practices.

Panthers Head Coach Paul Maurice has said that it’s down to how Tkachuk feels as he recovers from the ramped up, physical practices, so perhaps Saturday will be the day he’s ready to return.

Brad Marchand had been labeled day-to-day by Maurice with an undisclosed injury, but he went on Injured Reserve Friday as the Cats made room on the 23-man roster for Cole Schwindt.

Marchand and Tkachuk can both join the roster at any time, and Florida has flexibility as Noah Gregor and Tobias Bjornfot have both previously cleared waivers and can be sent to AHL Charlotte, though Bjornfot is a defenseman so he’d likely stay over the forward.

Here are the Panthers projected lines and pairings for Saturday’s soiree in D.C. if Tkachuk does crack the lineup:

Eetu Luostarinen – Anton Lundell – Sam Reinhart

Carter Verhaeghe – Sam Bennett – Matthew Tkachuk

Mackie Samoskevich – Evan Rodrigues – A.J. Greer

Jesper Boqvist – Cole Schwindt – Luke Kunin

Gus Forsling – Aaron Ekblad

Niko Mikkola – Uvis Balinskis

Donovan Sebrango – Jeff Petry

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Photo caption: Jan 8, 2026; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; Florida Panthers center Sam Bennett (9) celebrates with his teammates at the bench his second goal of the game against the Montreal Canadiens during the third period at Bell Centre. (David Kirouac-Imagn Images)

Player Grades: Cavs at 76ers – Evan Mobley wins it with go-ahead dunk

The Cleveland Cavaliers pulled off a stunner in Philly. This one was equally stressful and rewarding.

All grades are based on our usual expectations for each player.

Donovan Mitchell

13 points, 12 assists, 9 rebounds, 6 turnovers

Mitchell was quiet for most of this game. He only attempted five shots in the first half as Philly focused most of their defensive attention on him. Mitchell did a great job of countering this by being a playmaker rather than pressing the issue. He eventually found a small rhythym in the second half, giving the Cavs just enough to pull off a win.

I would have given Mitchell an extra letter grade had he taken better care of the ball. Six turnovers are a bit much.

Grade: B

Jaylon Tyson

39 points, 4 assists, 5 rebounds

Tyson was phenomenal tonight. A career-high in points on absurd efficiency (13-17 shooting). This is the type of performance that Tyson has replicated multiple times this season, to lesser degrees. The more he proves he can score at this rate, the more valuable Tyson becomes as a prospect. This might be a future All-Star caliber player.

If his red-hot shooting wasn’t enough, Tyson also dished the game-winning assist. A cool, calm, and collected approach from a player who has shown no fear through his sophomore season.

Grade: A+++

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Evan Mobley

15 points, 5 rebounds, 4 assists, 4 blocks, 1 steal

I wish we could have seen more from Mobley, considering the injuries to Darius Garland and Sam Merrill. But Philly did a good job of keeping Mobley away from the paint. That is, until the very final possession, where Mobley caught a pass and dunked it home for the win.

Grade: B

Tyrese Proctor

13 points, 2 rebounds, 1 assist, 2 steals, 11 minutes

Proctor took advantage of his opportunity today. He was an efficient 5-8 from the floor and arguably should be playing ahead of Lonzo Ball, at this point.

Grade: A+

Craig Porter Jr.

2 points, 11 assists, 3 rebounds

Porter might not be a threat to shoot the ball, but he keeps finding ways to be effective anyway. He matched his career-high with 11 assists and grabbed 2 offensive rebounds.

Grade: B+

De’Andre Hunter

16 points, 4 assists, 3 rebounds, 1 steal, 1 block

Hunter is starting to trend in the right direction. He’s been more efficient recently (7-13 tonight) and threw down a monster dunk in the fourth quarter. It took him a minute, but this is what we expected to see from Hunter this season.

Grade: A-

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Jarrett Allen

10 points, 7 rebounds, 1 assist, 1 steal

Allen was fairly timid tonight. At least, compared to how he played in his previous matchup with Philly. He still did a fine job of keeping Embiid away from the glass, but he could have been more assertive on offense.

Grade: B

Nae’Qwan Tomlin

9 points, 5 rebounds

Tomlin is an energizer. You know this by now. He threw down a couple of thunderous dunks tonight and gave Cleveland a surge of momentum when they needed it most.

Grade: A

Lonzo Ball

0 points, 3 rebounds, 1 assist, 1 steal

I don’t know, man.

It’s hard to see Ball turning his season around at this point. He just doesn’t seem to have any juice as a shot creator anymore. I don’t think he’s played well enough to stay ahead of any other guard on the roster right now.

Grade: D-

Jaylon Tyson’s 39 points lead Cavs to second-straight win in Philadelphia

Jaylon Tyson’s career-high 39 points helped the Cleveland Cavaliers overcome an 11-point fourth-quarter deficit to defeat the Philadelphia 76ers 117-115. Despite the impressive scoring, Tyson won the game by finding Evan Mobley for an easy dunk with five seconds left for the game-winning basket.

Cleveland was once again shorthanded without the services of Darius Garland (toe), Sam Merrill (hand), Dean Wade (knee), and Max Strus (foot). This led to head coach Kenny Atkinson going with his 23rd starting lineup of the season that featured Craig Porter Jr. at point guard in place of Garland.

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The Cavs played like a team that lacked their starting point guard. They turned it over 12 times in the first half, which directly led to 21 points for Philadelphia. This allowed the Sixers to take a seven-point lead into the break.

Neither team could gain traction in the third quarter, but the Sixers’ strong start to the fourth pushed their lead to 11.

The Cavs fought back then. They played some of their best basketball of the night in a four-minute stretch in the fourth that saw them tie the game after a 10-0 run.

Cleveland had all the momentum with five minutes to play in a time game, but then they threw it all away. They turned it over on three straight possessions in a stretch that felt eerily similar to the start of the game. The Sixers scored on each of the giveaways as what was a tie game quickly turned into a seven-point advantage for Philadelphia.

The Cavs once again battled back with a 10-2 run to take a one-point lead with two minutes left in the fourth. Both teams exchanged baskets for the last two minutes.

A Tyrese Maxey floater tied the game at 115 with eight seconds left.

Atkinson called a timeout and drew a play up for Mitchell. When Lonzo Ball wasn’t able to get it inbounded to Mitchell, he instead turned to the high scorer of the night. Tyson immediately beat his man off the catch, drove baseline, waited until the help defense came, and then made a beautiful drop-off pass to Mobley, who put the game away with a dunk.

Maxey had a chance to win the game with a desperation jumper from just inside halfcourt, but he wasn’t able to get it to go.

Tyson was Cleveland’s best player on Friday. He seemingly couldn’t miss from deep as he went 7-9 from beyond the arc, which opened up the rest of his offensive game. Overall, Tyson connected on 13 of his 17 attempts from the field. This led to a career-high 39 points to go along with five rebounds and four assists.

The Cavs needed that kind of performance with Donovan Mitchell struggling. The Sixers double-teamed him and forced the ball out of his hands anytime they had a chance to do so. This resulted in him finishing with just 13 points on 13 shot attempts with 12 assists and six turnovers.

De’Andre Hunter had another strong performance. He provided 16 points off the bench, with seven of them coming during the fourth-quarter comeback.

Mobley scored 15 points, including three in the final 30 seconds, to secure the victory.

Tyrese Proctor also made a positive contribution as he added 13 points on 5-8 shooting in 11 minutes of action. Porter provided 11 assists and two points in the win.

The Sixers were led by 33 points and five rebounds from Joel Embiid. Maxey had 22 points on 9-23 shooting with nine assists.

This wasn’t the prettiest game, particularly in the first half, but the Cavs found a way to dig deep and secure a hard-fought road victory. They’ve now won three out of their last four and seven of their last 10.

The Cavs will be back in action on Monday, Martin Luther King Jr. Day, as they host the defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder. Tip-off will be at 2:30 PM.

Grizzlies’ asking price for Ja Morant revealed amid trade buzz

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Ja Morant handles the ball during overtime against the Philadelphia 76ers at FedExForum on December 30, 2025 in Memphis, Tennessee.
Ja Morant

If Ja Morant does get traded by the Grizzlies, it’s now becoming clearer what Memphis might get in return — or at least want.

The controversial two-time NBA All-Star has seen his game, availability and value plummet over the last couple of seasons. Now, in trade rumors, Morant — who is in the third year of a five-year, $197 million deal — could be in for a Trae Young-like fate and be on the move.

On Sirius XM’s “Deals and Dunks,” longtime NBA insider Marc Stein said Memphis is looking to receive a first-round pick and a younger player in return for Morant.

Ja Morant handles the ball during overtime against the Philadelphia 76ers at FedExForum on December 30, 2025 in Memphis, Tennessee. Getty Images

“It’s hard to pinpoint clear-cut suitors. Miami, we know, is interested,” he said. “There has been some dialogue between the teams. How far it’s actually gone, I imagine the Heat would just try to steal him for expiring.

“I don’t know how far the Heat would be willing to go as far as draft capital and young players to put into an offer — We do know with Miami, whenever there’s a star player available, they will at the very least investigate it.”

Young, despite his individual accolades, was dealt by the Hawks to the Wizards last week for CJ McCollum and Corey Kispert. Although Travis Schlenk — the Hawks general manager when Young was there — is the current Wizards vice president of player personnel, making Washington an obvious landing spot once Young’s time in Atlanta soured.

Young, unlike Morant, can opt into free agency this summer.

Ja Morant is currently with the Grizzlies for the NBA Berlin Games in Germany. NBAE via Getty Images

Morant is making $39.4 million this season and is set to take $42.1 million and $44.9 million in each of the next two seasons, respectively.

The Heat have contracts that are tradable in the $26-to-$31 million range, like guard Tyler Herro, swingman Andrew Wiggins, and the expiring deal of guard Terry Rozier, who has been on leave all season due to an ongoing betting scandal.

Rozier pleaded not guilty in early December, and the next hearing is scheduled for March 3.

The Heat could use Rozier as a trade chip ahead of the Feb. 5 trade deadline, as ESPN reported this week.

Other teams rumored to be interested in Morant now include the Pelicans, according to a report from Michael Scotto of HoopsHype, adding them to a list that reportedly includes the Kings, Raptors and Bucks.

Morant, who has never played 70 games in a season, has been limited to just 212 games — regular season and playoffs — since the 2021-22 season, missing 178 games and counting in the process due to injuries and suspensions.

This year, he’s averaging 19 points and 7.6 assists, shooting a career-worst 40.1 percent from the floor, and just 20.8 percent on 3-pointers, also a career-low.

Panthers fall flat in embarrassing 9-1 loss to Hurricanes

The Florida Panthers couldn’t keep their brief winning streak alive as they continued a long road trip Friday night in Raleigh.

Florida ran into a buzzsaw as the Carolina Hurricanes dominated much of the contest, taking down the Panthers 9-1 at Lenovo Center.

Carolina controlled the majority of the opening period and were eventually rewarded for their strong start.

Jordan Staal made a perfect cross-zone pass to a streaking Nicolaj Ehlers, who quickly went to his forehand and wired the puck past Sergei Bobrovsky to send the Hurricanes into the first intermission with a 1-0 lead.

They outshot Florida 13-3 in the opening frame.

Florida bounced back quickly though, knotting the score less than 90 seconds into the second period.

Rookie Sandis Vilmanis carried the puck into Carolina’s zone, dropping it for Mackie Samoskevich who was quickly checked off the puck by Sean Walker.

The puck kept sliding across the zone, and Uvis Balinskis walked into a one-timer that beat Brandon Bussi to tie the game at one.

For the Panthers, it was all downhill from there. 

A pair of goals about three minutes apart by Mark Jankowski and Alexander Nikishin gave Carolina a comfortable two-goal edge heading into the third period.

Early in the final frame, Andrei Svechnikov make it 4-1 Hurricanes on a power play goal that came just after a 5-on-3 advantage came to an end.

That wasn’t an issue for Carolina because a few minutes later they had another two-man advantage, and this time Ehlers picked up his second goal of the game, extending the Canes’ lead to four.

Just 21 seconds later, Taylor Hall scored a fourth straight power play goal for the Hurricanes to give them a 6-1 lead.

Ehlers completed his hat trick less than 90 seconds after Hall’s goal, causing headgear to litter the ice and creating a delay that the Panthers were surely salty about, as it meant they had to wait that much longer before getting the hell out of there.

Eventually, the game did come to an end, but not before Hall scored another one to give the Hurricanes an eighth goal, and Eric Robinson scored moments later to make it 9-1 because why not. 

On to Washington.

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Photo caption: Jan 16, 2026; Raleigh, North Carolina, USA; Carolina Hurricanes center Jordan Staal (11) is stopped on his breakaway attempt by Florida Panthers goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky (72) during the first period at Lenovo Center. (James Guillory-Imagn Images)

Poor close, Cavs’ hot shooting doom Sixers, who move to 10-11 at home

A fitting loss to cap off a terrible Philly sports week

The Sixers blew a 10-point lead in the fourth quarter, falling 117-115 at the last second to the Cleveland Cavaliers, completing the sweep of the season series.

Joel Embiid had a classic Joel Embiid performance, leading all Sixers with 33 points shooting 10-of-22 from the floor. Tyrese Maxey at least looked better than he did Wednesday, putting up 22 points on 9-of-23 shooting, hitting a game-tying floater but not a potential half-court heave to win it.

VJ Edgecombe was again derailed by foul trouble, finishing with 10 points going 4-of-5. Paul George quietly steadied the second unit, having 14 points on 6-of-12 shooting along with five assists.

Jaylon Tyson led all scorers with 39.

Somehow Dominick Barlow was not only available, but back in the starting lineup after suffering a nasty looking back contusion Wednesday, leaving every Sixer available. The Cavs were down Darius Garland, Dean Wade, Sam Merrill and Max Strus.

Here are some thoughts at the buzzer.

First Quarter

  • Yet another game with a fast offensive start as the teams combined to make 11 of their first 14 field goal attempts. Embiid got dunked on by Evan Mobley to open up the game’s scoring, but had comfortably settled in to his midrange by the nail on the other end. The Sixers were the first team to make an impact on the defensive end of the floor. Dominick Barlow didn’t seem too hampered, blocking a shot and ripping the ball away from Donovan Mitchell on two early plays while Maxey snagged an early steal as well.
  • That aggression, and some miscommunication, got the Sixers in a bit of trouble. Multiple times early two Sixers would follow the same Cavalier, leaving another wide open, but they were meeting even less resistance on the other end. Embiid and Maxey went to their actions frequently and got a good look just about every time, including a beautiful one-handed layup by Maxey after Embiid’s bounce pass led him perfectly to the spot.
  • Embiid wouldn’t stay as efficient from the field but he continued to control things, getting a couple trips to the line to round out a 13-point quarter. The offense did miss him when he checked out, going scoreless after he buried a three at the 3:13 mark. Cleveland buried a couple threes in the final minute to knot the game at 31 after one.

Second Quarter

  • Maxey came off the floor but with George and Edgecombe returning it once again gave the offense some structure — the latter got himself a really nice layup cutting around the former. The Sixers also had their best stretch of protecting the basket to this point, thanks in large part to two blocks from Adem Bona.
  • Thanks to seven steals in the first while only giving it away once themselves, the Sixers were thoroughly dominating the turnover battle. Just after extending their lead to double digits, two turnovers of their own gave that momentum right back to Cleveland. Edgecombe had the ball taken away from him way too easily while Kelly Oubre Jr. threw a pass that was way too easy to pick off. Those were big reasons for the 8-0 run the Cavs ripped off, but Craig Porter Jr. missing a pair of free throws settled things down for the moment.
  • Maxey was able to spring free for an open three off the catch as well as a steal-and-slam, but this was another half in which he was struggling to create. The length Cleveland was throwing at him might have bothered him, but he just seemed to be having a harder time holding on to the ball. The Cavs were only able to load up on him more when Edgecombe had to sit the end of the half with foul trouble. Quentin Grimes replaced him and looked rough missing his first three shots of the night, but buried two threes to give the Sixers a seven-point lead at the half.

Third Quarter

  • Both Embiid and Tyson started the second half with the same rhythm they started the game with. While Embiid continued to enjoy open midranges off pick-and-pops, something just seemed slightly off with his two-man game with Maxey. For example, he threw the between-the-legs way drop pass way too early and dumped it into Jarrett Allen’s lap.
  • A strong take with his left hand was just the type of basket Maxey needed, though that didn’t seem to get him going in any way. Another silly mistake, this time Oubre needlessly fouling Nae’Qwan Tomlin on a dunk again, gave the Cavs momentum to cut into the lead the Sixers threatened to push to double digits.
  • Oubre did his best to make up for it though — he put back a missed Embiid layup, created a fast break layup for himself by running out after a miss, and knocked down a three. The Cavs took advantage of yet another sloppy turnover, but Maxey answered with a contested three to beat the shot clock and keep the lead at seven as the third expired.

Fourth Quarter

  • Sitting a good chunk of the game in foul trouble, Edgecombe hadn’t scored since his perfect 3-of-3 start to the night. Naturally, he opened the scoring for the Sixers in the fourth, matching a Mitchell three with one of his own. His second-unit running mate helped him lead the way as George knocked down a couple of baseline jumpers.
  • The Sixers’ offense went cold enough after that for the Cavs to rip off a 10-0 run to tie the game. It wasn’t due to getting bogged down either. They pushed up a possession to get Maxey a wide open three in the corner that he missed, Grimes beat his man off the dribble for a wide open layup but just smoked it. The Sixers answered with a 7-0 run, for once it was them taking advantage of silly mistakes. Tyson messed up taking the inbound and turned it over after another Maxey fast break layup, and Mobley stepped out of bounds trying to drive from the corner on the following possession.
  • Once again, the Sixers ran bland offense down the stretch, and it again cost them. The first was a play that took way too long to develop after Maxey got doubled, Embiid couldn’t feel the defenders coming as the slow lob pass came to him and it was stolen. Maxey then went nowhere on a drive and had his runner blocked by Mobley. Embiid tried to post up Allen, got stonewalled and threw up an airball. Cleveland stormed back with another Tyson three giving them a one-point lead with less than two minutes to go.
  • Maxey had a lot more space on his next drive and got fouled, retaking the lead at the line. They forced a miss on the following possession, but swinging to an open Oubre resulted in a missed three and De’Andre Hunter put Cleveland back in front. George was able to shake his defender but his turnaround jumper in the paint was no good.
  • George and Oubre both played tough defense on Mobley who missed as well, but Oubre got enough forearm to be whistled for a foul — a challenge couldn’t overturn it. Mobley split his pair, giving the Sixers a chance to tie or go in front with 22.2 to go. Maxey and Embiid spent most of that time exchanging the ball, giving Maxey runway to tie the game with a floater with 8.1 seconds remaining. Cleveland went to their hot hand, Tyson got the ball on the baseline, spun, beat his defender, and drew to the help to get Mobley an open dunk with four seconds to go. Now of timeouts the Sixers could only get up a half court heave that didn’t fall.

Huff's career-high 29 points power Pacers to a 127-119 win over the Pelicans

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Center Jay Huff had a career-best 29 points and nine rebounds and led five players in double figures as the Indiana Pacers beat the New Orleans Pelicans 127-119 on Friday night.

The 7-foot-1 Huff, who entered Friday averaging 8.4 points, shot 13 for 17 from the field and 3 for 6 from 3-point distance. The center's previous high was 22 points, achieved last year while with the Memphis Grizzlies in a win over the Dallas Mavericks. Huff was acquired by Indiana in a trade with Memphis during the offseason.

Pascal Siakam scored 20 of his 27 points in the first half, and Andrew Nembhard added 19 points and 10 rebounds for the Pacers, who won for the fourth time in five games. Aaron Nesmith and Quenton Jackson scored 12 points apiece as Indiana closed out a 3-1 homestand and improved to 8-16 at home.

Zion Williamson led New Orleans with 27 points on 10-for-12 shooting from the field and 7-for-10 shooting from the line. Williamson was 8 for 8 from the field in the first half, when he scored 21 points.

Trey Murphy III scored 22 points, Saddiq Bey added 20, Jeremiah Fears finished with 16, Derik Queen had 14 and Jordan Poole 11 for the Pelicans, who are 3-16 in road games. Queen also had 12 rebounds.

The Pacers trailed by two points after one quarter and raced to a 10-point lead in the second quarter for a 73-66 edge at the break. The 73 points is the Pacers' highest-scoring first half of the season. Indiana led 102-93 after three periods.

Up next

Pelicans: At the Houston Rockets on Sunday.

Pacers: At the Detroit Pistons on Saturday in the opener of a five-game trip.

___

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

NBA Free Agency Rumors: Utah Jazz interested in Austin Reaves?

New Los Angeles Lakers and Utah Jazz trade rumor

On the latest Kevin O’Connor show, O’Connor mentioned that the Utah Jazz “are going to be a team with big interest” in Austin Reaves.

Reaves will be an unrestricted free agent this offseason and will draw significant interest leaguewide. So, regardless of whether this is actual intel on the Jazz or just an assumption from O’Connor, it makes sense. For O’Connor to call out the Utah Jazz specifically is interesting. Perhaps this was why the Utah Jazz unfollowed O’Connor on Twitter recently?

Regardless, this is definitely interesting. It also makes sense with Utah’s trajectory. Utah has filled its books with expiring contracts this season, so it has room to make deals this upcoming offseason. Austin Reaves would be a great target with that money. Then, if they are able to bring him over, they can also sign Walker Kessler afterwards and go over the cap. It’s a plan that makes a ton of sense and could lead the Jazz to be major players next season.

On top of this is whether Utah wins this upcoming lottery. If Utah can add a top-tier prospect and a high-level prospect like Austin Reaves, it could be a massive run for the team.

Also, would there be anything better than getting a player from the Lakers to join the Utah Jazz? This would become maybe the best offseason in team history if this all played out.

Where the Rangers could start their retool before NHL trade deadline

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Rangers Rookie Brennan Othmann (78) when the New York Rangers held their training camp Wednesday, September 10, 2025 at Madison Square Garden Training Center in Greenburgh, NY, Image 2 shows Rangers left wing Alexis Lafrenière juggles the puck in the first period at Madison Square Garden in Manhattan, New York, Monday, January 05, 2026.

With team president and general manager Chris Drury waving the white flag on the Rangers season with a letter talking of a retooling of the roster, here’s a look at who could be on the move before the Olympic break and March 6 trade deadline:

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1. Artemi Panarin

In a meeting with Drury on Friday, Panarin was informed that the Rangers would not be extending him. As one of the last remaining big names on the impending free agent board, Panarin naturally has been in the middle of trade chatter all season. He is also one of the highest-valued assets the Rangers have in their lineup and should be able to fetch a mini haul. His full no-move clause, however, puts Panarin in the driver’s seat. Drury will have to work closely with Panarin and his camp to arrange a deal that the star Russian wing is on board with.

2. Brennan Othmann

Another player who has been in the rumor mill nearly all season, Othmann has been tabbed as needing a fresh start. The No. 16 overall pick in 2021 has struggled to translate his game to the NHL level over 33 career games. It simply has not been a fit in New York.

Rangers Rookie Brennan Othmann (78) when the New York Rangers held their training camp Wednesday, September 10, 2025 at Madison Square Garden Training Center in Greenburgh, NY. Robert Sabo for NY Post

3. Carson Soucy

In the final year of his deal, Soucy, and his $3.25 million cap, hit is easily moveable. There are plenty of teams that could use a stay-at-home defenseman who can play on either side.



Compared to last season, Soucy has been much more effective in his role for the Rangers through his 41 games. The Rangers, who gave up the 2025 third-round pick they received from the Golden Knights for Reilly Smith to acquire Soucy, should be able to find a team in need of defensive depth for the playoffs.

4. Alexis Lafrenière

If the Rangers wanted to make a splash and partially change up the team’s DNA, dealing Lafrenière before his modified no-trade clause — with an eight-team no-trade list — kicks in for the 2027-28 season would be a way. Nights like his three-assist effort in the Winter Classic are too few and far between.

The 2020 first overall pick was the consensus top selection at the time the Rangers won the draft lottery, but he never has been able to produce or lead like one. Lafreniere’s track record in the NHL hasn’t done much for his trade value, which means Drury should want to pounce on the first legitimate offer.

Rangers left wing Alexis Lafrenière juggles the puck in the first period at Madison Square Garden in Manhattan, New York, Monday, January 5, 2026. JASON SZENES/ NY POST

5. Vincent Trocheck

The market for centers right now is one the Rangers will want to explore. There is a high demand for quality centers, which makes Trocheck another valuable trade chip for the Rangers. Since J.T. Miller was just named captain and Mika Zibanejad has a no-move clause until it becomes modified in 2029-30, Trocheck’s 12-team no-trade list that kicked in this season makes him one of the Rangers’ easiest centers to trade. The Rangers are already thin down the middle, but Trocheck may be the player who could fetch the kind of deal that Drury is looking for.

6. Braden Schneider

Primarily a third-pair defenseman over his five seasons in New York, Schneider hasn’t had the strongest season as he’s taken on a bigger role in the absence of Adam Fox. The Rangers never quite gave him an extended top-four opportunity unless it came on the heels of an injury, but the 24-year-old also hasn’t seized the role either. The Rangers would likely be willing to move on from Schneider as he heads toward restricted free agency — with arbitration rights — at the end of this season. Schneider would be a beneficial addition to any contender’s defensive depth.