I always start these columns thinking there would barely be a couple of links to interesting stuff included in the bullet points, and I always end up with a massive list of stories and notes. Can’t help myself.
- Mandatory Knicks’ cap update, courtesy of ESPN’s Bobby Marks. New York now has six players under contract (Jose Alvarado, Landry Shamet, Mo Diawara, Deuce McBride and Tyler Kolek form the bench with an average height of 6-4 and one above 6-5), is letting Ariel Hukporti (7-0) go to market, and will have to explore re-signing RFA/UFAs Mitchell Robinson (not happening), Jordan Clarkson (likely), Kevin McCullar (probable), Dillon Jones and Trey Jemison (never ever). All in all, the Knicks have $9 million to fill three roster spots, of which one/two could go to their 2026 rookies on super-min deals worth just $1.3 million (if I’m correct).
- The second-apron saga isn’t going away any time soon, or at least not until the Knicks have a proper backup center in their roster—of whom, as of now, they have exactly zero. The New York Post’s Stefan Bondy added more wood to the James Dolan fire on Monday. A tease (emphasis mine):
“People around the league believe going into the second apron is worthwhile for a legit championship contender. But the Knicks have operated as if they’re avoiding it, and sources said Dolan communicated his directive to the front office. Kevin Looney is pictured during the Pelicans’ March 29 game. Getty Images According to The Athletic, Dolan’s reluctance is mostly about spending more money. Could the owner change his mind in the 11th hour? Yes, theoretically. But there’s been no indication Dolan will.”
- Further down the piece, Bondy laid out one realistic path under the cap: bringing back Clarkson and Hukporti on minimum deals ($2.45 million each) while signing veteran center Kevon Looney (mutal interest reported) for roughly the same price.
- The New York Daily News echoed the same we’ve been reading and writing about regarding Mitch: even if the Knicks sacrifice other free agents (which they already are doing—even if not for much savings—in finishing Hukamania), there still will not be enough room to give Robinson the meaningful raise he’ll surely command elsewhere without breaking Dolan’s mandate.
- Little brother Brooklyn, meanwhile, seems ready to weaponize its cap space as the current NBA economy demands. According to The New York Post’s Brian Lewis, the Nets are expected to prioritize absorbing contracts and landing talent via trade rather than chasing big-name free agents. Among those mentioned as possible targets are the Pelicans’ Trey Murphy III, the Thunder’s Cason Wallace, and the Celtics’ Jaylen Brown—although reports point to a Nets interest in signing Knicks backup center Robinson once FA opens on Tuesday.
- One of free agency’s spiciest storylines involves Pistons center Jalen Duren, who is tired of Detroit’s low-ball offers and seems locked into bolting out of Motown in a sign-and-trade deal that ends up filling his pockets to the max. The Kings and the Lakers are both set to met Duren starting at 6 p.m. today, and Sacramento appears the most aggressive and best-positioned franchise to land him, according to The Athletic. Here’s the gist (SAC would flip Domantas Sabonis for Duren) and a sample:
“The Kings plan to pitch the Pistons on a sign-and-trade offer that would send Sabonis to Detroit and could give the Pistons a worthy replacement for Duren. Duren very much wants to play in Sacramento, while Sabonis is likewise interested in landing with the Pistons.
“As for the Lakers, (their) best offerings might be draft capital rather than quality players, as Detroit could trade Duren into the Lakers’ salary-cap space.”
- You might think Jaylen Brown was tripping with his very public and never-ending streams and comments reacting to everything that hits the interwebs. Well, it turns out the Celtics are the ones showing some serious signs of lunacy. ESPN’s Shams Charania says the Celtics have asked multiple teams for “at least four first-round picks” in exchange for ostracized Jaylen. You know the league’s reaction to that? One anonymous general manager is predicting Boston to settle for “40 cents on the dollar.” What’s that? A first and a second? Can’t wait!
- The Heat could do nothing to prevent Andrew Wiggins from cashing in, as he should, with the Mixtape King opting into his player option and then signing a $64 million contract on top of that. That’s important because, believe it or not, Miami is (h/t Anthony Chiang of the Miami Herald) in an even worse cap situation than the Knicks, having just $19 million to fill four roster spots, and that means they won’t be able to re-sign their best RFA in Norman Powell.
- Once-renowned Bradley Beal could be the biggest Miami Heat signing this free agency after he declined his player option following a six-game campaign. See what I was saying? The Heat might sign-and-trade Powell to get something in return.
- Portland, meanwhile, completed the latest NBA blockbuster and, in a nod to the good old times, decided to bring back the Jail Blazers (watch the Netflix doc if uninitiated) vibes by landing Ja Morant. Incredibly, the Grizzlies did worse.
- Speaking of nostalgia, the Bucks are bringing former point guard and shorts extraordinaire T.J. Ford back to Milwaukee as part of their coaching staff.
- Tingus Pingus Kristaps Porzingis signed a two-year deal with the Warriors and pretty much put an end to the Steph-AD-LeBron Hurt 3 Dream before it got off the ground.
- New York City is keeping the championship celebration alive for another month. Mayor Zohran Mamdani announced that every member of the Knicks will receive a temporary blue-and-orange street sign in Manhattan, with each sign placed on the street matching that player’s jersey number whenever possible (looking at you, Agent 00).
- The New York Post already found plenty of fans convinced they’ll become collector’s items long before then. Some of them openly said they’d gladly be the ones to steal them. Never change, New York.
- Not only does Ben Simmons claim he’s ready for an NBA comeback, but he’s already naming places. “Miami I walys would be nice,” he said, and “maybe I’ll go back to Philly.” Just like that, as if he had switched on God mode in NBA 2K. Sometimes you just have to laugh.
- And if what you want is to laugh, then don’t let this ESPN segment skip your viewing schedule today. What about the years-on-end same-old-Knicks narrative? Where’s that now? Ah, how things have changed…