The Denver Nuggets deserve more praise. Despite injuries to every single one of its starters, Denver sits just a game out of the No. 2 seed in the Western Conference. The Brooklyn Nets deserve no such praise.
My Nets vs. Nuggets predictions heap Denver’s praise largely on Jamal Murray.
Nets vs Nuggets best bet: Jamal Murray Over 24.5 points (-112)
Jamal Murray has scored 24 points in back-to-back games, just the hook short of notching this modest prop.
But before that, he was playing some of the best basketball of his career, including clearing this prop in four of five games while shooting 56% from the field.
With Aaron Gordon sidelined tonight, expect Murray to return to that form, though he barely actually left it.
The Denver Nuggets need this from Murray. The West is crowded below the Thunder, with the next six teams within four games of each other. If Murray were not playing this well, Denver very well may be considering the Play-In Tournament as we approach the trade deadline.
Instead, the Nuggets can expect home-court advantage in the playoffs thanks to Murray shooting 43.9% from deep, averaging 7.5 assists, and scoring 25.9 points per game.
Nets vs Nuggets same-game parlay
Before his 0 of 6 showing from deep on Tuesday, Murray had hit at least three 3-pointers in 24 of 41 games. As the Nets continue to scuffle, look for Murray’s shooting to propel the Nuggets to their fourth straight win against the spread.
Nets vs Nuggets SGP
Jamal Murray Over 24.5 points
Jamal Murray Over 2.5 threes
Nuggets -6.5
Our "from downtown" SGP: Revenge of MPJ
While this is asking a lot of Jamal Murray, he is Denver's only remaining genuine starter. A lot will be asked of him. The one thing that will not be asked of Murray is defending Michael Porter Jr., who has plenty of reason to want to inflict some pain on his old team.
Nets vs Nuggets SGP
Jamal Murray Over 24.5 points
Jamal Murray Over 2.5 threes
Jamal Murray Over 8.5 assists
Nuggets -6.5
Michael Porter Jr. Over 25.5 points
Nets vs Nuggets odds
Spread: Nets +6.5 | Nuggets -6.5
Moneyline: Nets +220 | Nuggets -270
Over/Under: Over 209.5 | Under 209.5
Nets vs Nuggets betting trend to know
Brooklyn is 1-5 against the spread in its last six games on the road. Find more NBA betting trends for Nets vs. Nuggets.
How to watch Nets vs Nuggets
Location
Ball Arena, Denver, CO
Date
Thursday, January 29, 2026
Tip-off
9:00 p.m. ET
TV
YES, Altitude
Nets vs Nuggets latest injuries
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This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 16: Austin Barnes #15 of the Los Angeles Dodgers throws a warm up toss in the sixth inning during a game against the Colorado Rockies at Dodger Stadium on April 16, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The 36-year-old Barnes had spent over a decade in the Dodgers organization, dating back to being acquired in a trade from the Marlins in 2014. He made his big league debut in 2015 and—outside from an outlier 2017 season in which he put up a 142 wRC+ and 3.7 fWAR—has largely served as a glove-first backup catcher. He was finally released by Los Angeles last May and was subsequently signed by the Giants the following month. Barnes had a brief unremarkable stint in San Francisco’s minor league system before he was released by them in August.
Now Barnes will try to find a new home with the Mets. Of course, assuming Francisco Alvarez and Luis Torrens remain healthy, the odds of him breaking camp with the team are virtually non-existent. Barnes will instead likely be battling with Hayden Senger—himself a glove-first backstop with little to no offensive prowess, but one who has the benefit of youth—to serve as the team’s third catcher option in case one of their top two guys go down at any point. If he does not win that battle, then he may well ultimately find himself being released by a third team in the near future.
Barnes received an invitation to major league spring training.
The 36-year-old Barnes appeared in just 13 games for the Dodgers last season before he was released in May.
A month later, Barnes signed a minor league contract with the Giants, but didn’t make it back to the majors and was released in August.
He’ll try to extend his career with the Mets, who have Francisco Alvarez, Luis Torrens and Hayden Senger on their 40-man roster.
Austin Barnes Getty Images
Barnes spent 11 seasons with Los Angeles, most recently as a backup to Will Smith, prior to being designated for assignment to make room for catching prospect Dalton Rushing.
Known for his excellent work behind the plate, Barnes appeared in the playoffs in eight of his 11 seasons with the Dodgers.
The Mets also announced their signing of Craig Kimbrel to a minor league contract with an invite to major league spring training after the 37-year-old former closer split last season between Atlanta and Houston.
DENVER, COLORADO - JANUARY 20: LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers looks on as Peyton Watson #8 of the Denver Nuggets defends during the third quarter at Ball Arena on January 20, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Tanner Pearson/Clarkson Creative/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Denver Nuggets have been ravaged by injuries this season. Nikola Jokić and Cameron Johnson have both been out since late December due to knee injuries. Christian Braun has been out for a few weeks due to an ankle injury. And Aaron Gordon recently aggravated the hamstring strain that sidelined him for more than a month earlier this year.
Those injuries couldn’t have come at a better time for Peyton Watson. In their absence, the fourth-year wing is averaging a career-high 14.4 points, 5 rebounds, 1.9 assists, 1.5 threes, 1.2 blocks and 1 steal in 30.1 minutes per game. He’s also shooting a career-best 49.9% overall and 41.1% from deep.
According to longtime NBA insider Jake Fischer, rival executives have become “increasingly curious” about Denver’s “likely struggles” to re-sign Watson this summer when he becomes a restricted free agent. Fischer mentioned that teams “projected to have cap space—notably such as the Lakers—are already preparing interest.”
In early January, Spotrac’s Keith Smith projected the Lakers to have roughly $55 million in cap space this offseason. To get to that figure, they’d have to renounce all of their free agents other than Austin Reaves, but including LeBron James. If Marcus Smart turns down his $5.4 million player option, they could get north of $60 million.
Either way, the Lakers are poised to be one of the offseason’s biggest spenders. And with the free-agent class getting increasingly whittled down, restricted free agency may be their best path forward.
That should put Watson firmly on their radar, particularly given the Nuggets’ upcoming financial outlook.
Why the Nuggets might not be able to keep Watson
Between Jokić ($59.0 million), Jamal Murray ($50.1 million), Gordon ($32.0 million), Johnson ($23.1 million) and Bruan ($21.6 million), the Nuggets already have roughly $185.7 million tied up in those five alone. The 2026-27 salary cap is currently projected to be $166 million, so the Nuggets will be well over that figure if they keep that core in place.
Add in Zeke Nnaji ($7.5 million), Julian Strawther ($4.8 million), DaRon Holmes II ($3.4 million), Jalen Pickett ($2.4 million) and Hunter Tyson ($2.4 million), and the Nuggets could already have $206.2 million in salary on their books for next season. That’s not counting Jonas Valančiūnas, whose $10 million salary is fully non-guaranteed.
The first apron is projected to be $210.7 million next season, while the second apron is projected to be $223.7 million. The Nuggets could re-sign Watson and go blasting over the second apron, but that would result in some harsh team-building restrictions, including the inability to aggregate contracts in trades.
The question for the Lakers or any other interested Watson suitors is how much the Nuggets would be willing to match in an offer sheet.
Over the past month, Watson has averaged 21.2 points, 5.8 rebounds, 2.5 assists, 2.1 threes, 1.4 blocks, and 1.3 steals in 35.9 minutes per game while shooting 49% overall and 42% from three. If that level of production was sustainable moving forward, he’d likely be looking at offers in the $30-plus million range.
However, a small sample size of star-caliber output isn’t always enough for a restricted free agent to break the bank. Just ask Philadelphia 76ers guard Quentin Grimes, who wound up settling for his one-year, $8.7 million qualifying offer this past offseason.
Since Watson played somewhat sparingly over his first three seasons, teams might not be swayed by his recent performance meriting high-end starter money. If anything, Nickeil-Alexander Walker might be the template other teams try to follow.
The Atlanta Hawks acquired Alexander-Walker via sign-and-trade this offseason by handing him their full $14.1 million non-taxpayer mid-level exception. He’s rewarded them by averaging a career-high 20.3 points, 3.5 rebounds and 3.5 assists in 32.9 minutes per game.
Like Watson, Alexander-Walker primarily came off the bench during the first few years of his NBA career. He had started 68 games across six seasons prior to his arrival in Atlanta, but he never had a sustained stretch of production like Watson is having right now.
The non-taxpayer MLE is projected to be $15.1 million next season. Unless the Nuggets trim salary, a contract in that range alone would push them dangerously close to the second apron. Anything worth $20 million or more would cause them to go over it.
Other suitors who are below the first apron could also offer Watson the non-taxpayer MLE, so the Lakers might have to offer him slightly more to entice him to sign with them. Even if they went into the $17-18 million range to start, they still could have north of $35 million to spend on other free agents before they re-sign Reaves.
Watson might not be the type of splashy star signing whom Lakers fans are hoping for, but the Lakers could do far worse than signing a 23-year-old forward who’s showing flashes of significant upside.
We're well into the second half of the NBA season, with the latest NBA win totals markets coming into a much sharper focus.
The Oklahoma City Thunder — despite some recent stumbles — still have the highest projected win total (and are the only team projected North of 60 wins), followed by the Detroit Pistons and San Antonio Spurs, while the Washington Wizards, Sacramento Kings, and Indiana Pacers are expected to finish in the basement.
Here are the latest NBA win totals odds for every team over the remainder of the season.
2022-23 was the first time in the past 18 regulation-length NBA seasons that a team failed to win 60 games. The Celtics won 64 last year to start the trend anew.
A team from the Western Conference has had the NBA's best record in nine of the last 13 seasons.
Recent trends suggest that the West produces more 50-win teams than the East, at an average of 5.0 over the past 13 regulation-length seasons, compared to 3.15.
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The Golden State Warriors made history twice during the 2015-16 season when they became the first team to win 73 regular-season games — and the first team to lose an NBA Finals after taking a 3-1 lead.
How to bet NBA regular season wins totals
Season win totals are self-explanatory: betting on how many wins a team will have that regular season.
Oddsmakers set a projected number of wins for each team — based on past success, returning personnel and a variety of intangible factors — and offer Over/Under betting options, allowing you to wager on if a team will exceed that win total (Over) or fall short of it (Under). This total includes regular-season games only.
For example, if oddsmakers calculate the Charlotte Hornets to win around 35 games this upcoming season, they would set the Over/Under at 35.5. Thus, if Charlotte wins 35 or fewer games, they cash the Under. If Charlotte wins 36 or more games in the given season, they cash the Over.
Over 35.5 wins (-110) Under 35.5 wins (-110)
On top of the season win total itself, some oddsmakers may set an assigned cost to the Over and Under bets — also known as vig or juice — depending on the implied probability of the team winning more or less than that total.
Season win totals are considered futures betting odds, and sportsbooks will take action on season win totals from the time they post the odds until the start of the season. Futures bets are then graded at the end of the season when all results are final.
This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here
DETROIT, MICHIGAN - JANUARY 01: A general view of a Wilson brand official NBA game ball made with genuine leather on the court during the game between the Detroit Pistons and Miami Heat at Little Caesars Arena on January 01, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Nic Antaya/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Last Sunday’s matchup between the Dallas Mavericks and Milwaukee Bucks was postponed after Dallas’ team plane couldn’t take off at Love Field on Sunday afternoon.
On Thursday, the NBA announced the makeup date of the game, which will occur nearly a month after predicted. Local reporters predicted the game could be made up during the extended break of the All-Star Game. Instead, the game will be played Tuesday, March 31 at 8 p.m. EST.
Additionally, the NBA announced a change to Dallas’ matchup with the Memphis Grizzlies, originally scheduled for April 1. Since Dallas plays March 30 and, now, March 31, the NBA prevented a ‘three games in three nights’ scenario by moving Dallas’ game against the Grizzlies up three weeks. The game will now be played Thursday, March 12, at 8 p.m. EST.
Dallas plays in Atlanta on the 10th, will head to Memphis on the 12th, and will come home to play the Cleveland Cavaliers on the second night of a back-to-back.
On the back end, Dallas will now get an extra day off between games in early April, returning to Dallas to play the Orlando Magic on April 3 and a nationally televised game against the Los Angeles Lakers on April 5.
The team will likely look very different when they face the Bucks in late March. Kyrie Irving is expected to be back sometime after the All-Star Break and Anthony Davis could be back from his thumb injury, assuming he’s still on the team. Milwaukee could also look different as recent reporting has suggested Giannis Antetokounmpo’s time with the Bucks may be coming to an end as he is “ready for a new home,” according to ESPN’s Shams Charania.
So while fans may have bought tickets for an exciting rematch of the Giannis-Flagg duel we saw in November, they could be seeing two very different teams.
NEW YORK (AP) — The NBA has announced new dates for four games as a result of the winter storm’s impact on the Memphis and Dallas areas.
Poor weather last weekend forced the postponement of two scheduled Sunday games: Dallas at Milwaukee and Detroit at Memphis.
The Nuggets-Grizzlies game has been rescheduled for March 18, while the Mavericks-Bucks game now will take place March 31.
The dates have been changed for two other upcoming games to accommodate the weather-related schedule shifts. Memphis will host Dallas on March 12 rather than April 1. A Grizzlies home game with the New York Knicks will be April 1 instead of March 18.
There isn’t an English equivalent to this Japanese word, which covers a wide range of emotions related to frustration.
You can feel kuyashii because you failed. Or because you gave your best and it wasn’t enough. Or because you didn’t give your best. Or because you were upset by what someone said. Or because you were humiliated.
Whatever the source of the anguish, ultimately you feel kuyashii because you can’t accept what happened.
The Dodgers’ Shohei Ohtani celebrates a walk against the Toronto Blue Jays during Game 7 of the World Series, on Nov. 1, 2025. AP
In a television special by NHK that was aired in Japan last month, Shohei Ohtani reflected on his pitching performance against the Blue Jays in Game 7 of the World Series.
Only four days removed from his previous start, Ohtani looked gassed. He barely escaped a bases-loaded jam in the second inning. In the third, disaster struck, as he served up a three-run home run to Bo Bichette. The Dodgers were down, 3-0. With only one out in the inning, Ohtani was replaced by Justin Wrobleski.
Slipping into the past tense, Ohtani said to NHK of the home run by Bichette: “Kuyashikatta.”
Dodgers manager Dave Roberts sensed what Ohtani was feeling when he removed the ball from his hand on the Rogers Centre mound.
“There was a lot of frustration,” Roberts said, “maybe some anger.”
Reaching greater heights
Before leaving his home country in late 2017, Ohtani staged a news conference in Tokyo. There, he clearly articulated his goal for his upcoming MLB adventure.
“As long as you’re playing baseball,” Ohtani said, “I think it’s natural to want to be the No. 1 player.”
Ohtani celebrates the Dodgers’ win in Game 7 of the 2025 World Series. AP
That designation has belonged to him for the last five years, a period in which he has won four MVP awards. His move to the Dodgers two years ago helped him fill the most significant gap in his resume. The Dodgers recovered from his 2 ⅓-inning start in Game 7 and went on to beat the Blue Jays, making him a back-to-back World Series champion.
But what makes a four-time MVP is an ability to discover new forms of inspiration, and Roberts thinks Ohtani’s memories of his final start will propel him to greater heights.
“There’s always something that Shohei needs to fuel him,” Roberts said. “He’s already the best player in the game, most likely, probably, the best to ever lace them up. So, how does he keep motivated? Things that have frustrated him or angered him. And going short in Game 7 probably is something that he’s not gonna let happen again.”
Ohtani is extremely polite in formal environments and playful when interacting with his teammates, his demeanor concealing the intensity described by Roberts. But it’s there.
Ohtani is Kobe Bryant with a glove and a bat.
Roberts thinks it’s entirely possible this is the year in which Ohtani wins the only major prize that has eluded his grasp in his first eight seasons: the Cy Young Award.
“I would not be surprised to see him and (Yoshinobu) Yamamoto both vying for a Cy Young in ‘26 and be (in) the top-three conversation all year,” Roberts said.
Responding to challenges
Ohtani was made available by the Dodgers in a news conference between games 2 and 3 of the National League Championship Series against the Brewers. Because he was in an offensive slump, he was asked multiple questions about how his pitching affected his hitting. The viability of his two-way role was being questioned.
Ohtani after giving up a base hit in the 2025 World Series. AP
Two days later, Ohtani shut up his skeptics, blasting three home runs and striking out 10 batters over six scoreless innings.
Ohtani has said he isn’t motivated by what reporters say or write about him. However, when he’s in situations that would make the average person feel kuyashii, he responds with performances that redefine the boundaries of reality.
When he joined the Nippon-Ham Fighters of the Japanese league out of high school, his decision to be a two-way player was criticized by the country’s baseball establishment, which accused him of underestimating professional competition.
Within a few years, he was the best player in the league — as a two-way player.
When Ohtani moved to the United States, he struggled at the plate in his first spring training with the Angels, inspiring questions of whether he could hit in the majors.
In the season that followed, he was named the Rookie of the Year — primarily as a hitter because an elbow injury limited him to 10 games pitched.
When he was told by Angels management before the 2021 season that he wouldn’t have any days off built into his schedule — he previously didn’t play the days before and after he pitched — he thought the team was trying to force him to give up either pitching or hitting.
Ohtani went on to win his first MVP award.
People familiar with Ohtani’s history, including Roberts, know what this means. Ohtani will be a monster of a pitcher this year.
Pushing the boundaries
Ohtani was the No. 3 starter on a Dodgers postseason rotation that included Blake Snell, a two-time Cy Young Award winner, and Yamamoto, the World Series MVP.
Outside of that last start against the Blue Jays, Ohtani performed well as a pitcher, going 2-1 with a 3.50 ERA in the three other games he started. The team’s reliance on him obscured what Ohtani was up against last season, spending most of the year rehabilitating.
Ohtani celebrates a single in Game 7 of the World Series. AP
Ohtani didn’t throw a pitch in his first season with the Dodgers in 2024, as he was recovering from an elbow operation he underwent the previous year. He returned to the mound in mid-June of last year, but even then, he was in recovery mode. His overwhelming talent allowed him to rehabilitate in major league games, first by pitching just an inning, then two, then three. His first five-inning start was in the last week of August.
Studying data about the control problems of pitchers in their first year back from Tommy John surgery, Ohtani adjusted his delivery to generate more velocity on his pitches. Previously, he placed more emphasis on control than speed, he told NHK.
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Now, in his second year back from his second elbow reconstruction, the 31-year-old Ohtani should be able to pitch in a way that he believes is most effective.
Roberts doesn’t expect Ohtani to make the 28 to 32 starts generally required for a pitcher to be considered for the Cy Young Award — the manager said he wants to be mindful of Ohtani’s pitching future — but the two-way star could be ready to have the most complete season of his career.
He’s healthy. He’s in his prime. And, considering how last season ended, he might have the inducement to once again push the boundaries of what’s possible.
Veteran spinner Adam Zampa says the conditions Australia faced in Pakistan for the T20 World Cup warm-up match would have been “alien” for the younger guys in the squad and that batting will be much easier when they eventually get to India.
The 2026 NBA Rookie of the Year odds race is hitting the stretch run, and, well, it's that much of a race right now.
No. 1-overall pick Cooper Flagg remains the clear odds-on favorite, sitting at -400 (an implied probability of 80%), with Charlotte's Kon Knueppel — his teammate at Duke last season — the only other player within striking distance.
SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 24: Ryan Loutos #52 of the Washington Nationals smiles before the game against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park on June 24, 2025 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Outside T-Mobile Park, at the corner of Edgar and Dave, a small crowd gathers.
They wear well-loved King’s Court t-shirts, increasingly esoteric shirseys and BreakingT collabs whose pit stains betray their age. One of them has on a few different variations of leopard print, some are festooned in arboreal paraphernalia, another a MacDougall Bats polo. There is no evidence of Night Court, but there are many pairs of glasses.
“One of us, one of us, one of us!” they chant gleefully as the 6’5” figure of Ryan Loutos disappears inside the ballpark.
A computer science graduate from Washington University in St. Louis, where all the best, brightest and most beautiful people go to school (Hi Claire! I love you! Does this very public shout-out make up for the fact I’m very delinquent in returning your phone call?), Loutos signed as an undrafted free agent with the Cardinals in 2021. His fastball velo bloomed from 92 to 97 MPH in their system, and he made his big league debut in 2024. Midway through 2025, the Cardinals designated him for assignment, then sent him to the Dodgers for cash. Shortly after that, Los Angeles DFA’d him and the Nationals picked him up. 2025 produced an objectively catastrophic performance from Loutos, but in November the Mariners scooped him up off waivers.
Every time Loutos has surfaced in the news, there’s been some heralding of his non-baseball skills. Namely, he’s a big ‘ol nerd. He used his computer science degree to develop a pitching analytics software while pitching for the WashU bears, and before the Cardinals signed him he had plans to accept a job offer as a software engineer in Chicago. The winter after joining the Cards, Loutos partnered with their front office to create a similar software to be used throughout their minor league system (called “Chirp,” which is extremely cute). He also became the de facto tech support in the locker rooms.
“I’ve definitely been that guy for all my minor league teammates,” Loutos told MLB.com after he was promoted back in 2024. “The players will come to me first because I’m their friend and they’re comfortable around me. Because I know the ins and outs of the app, I was always the guy players would go to. The number one question was always ‘Why is my velocity so low on here?’. But it was good to know the app and be able to help out.”
He’s since worked in the offseason with Premier Pitching, helping them develop similar software for pitching analytics. With the Mariners’ reputation as a pitching analytics powerhouse, Loutos is a natural fit, particularly in continuing to build connection between the front office and the data they generate and the players who are producing the, ahem, raw material.
To be honest, I couldn’t find much of notable interest in his pitching profiles, but that doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist. I queried John Trupin, who, as podcast listeners know, is incapable of delivering a succinct answer. He noted that Loutos’ four-seamer is similar to Justus Sheffield’s (oof) in that it has hardly any spin to it, and that his sweeper has scarcely any sweep, presenting so convincingly like a 12-6 curveball that some write-ups on him note a curve as part of his arsenal.
A little more from John: “My initial sentiment on Loutos is that there’s a little Taylor Williams in him – his sweeper and slider are both astonishingly close to purely vertical/12-6 curveballs that do not actually sweep. For Williams that was a “gyro” slider that didn’t break but just dropped and spun like it should break. His four-seamer is really just a sinker, I’m struggling to ID who it reminds me of. They may try to get him to expand use of his split-change, he’s been working on it for a couple years.”
From a pure pitching standpoint, Loutos is clearly just another arm for the pile. But with his analytical knowledge and background, there could be some interesting ways for him to grow within the Mariners system. (And a shared high school alma mater with skipper Dan Wilson certainly doesn’t hurt either!)
The Washington Nationals just released their 2026 Minor League coaching staff. With Paul Toboni taking the reins, there are naturally a lot of new faces. However, there are also some returning staff members. The staffs are also bigger than they have been in the past, which is an example of Toboni’s focus on player development.
Here’s the entire player development staff, including all levels of the minor and coordinators: pic.twitter.com/kMx2yDd8uz
Every minor league team is going to have more staff members than they did last year. To build a player development machine like Paul Toboni wants, you need plenty of cogs. That is what he is trying to build here.
There are going to be new staff positions this year. Last year, there was only one trainer and one conditioning coach at each level. This year there will be an assistant trainer and an assistant conditioning coach at each level. There will also be a defense coach at each level, something we did not have last year. Lastly, there are assistant hitting and pitching coaches at each level as well.
Few things that stand out about the Nats’ minor league dev. staff at first glance:
– An assistant/associate athletic trainer & strength and conditioning coach at each level (Only 1 trainer/S&D coach before) – A defensive coach at each level – Asst. pitching coaches at affiliates
All of this is very exciting for an organization that will be built on player development. These new hires also show a real commitment to Paul Toboni’s vision. While they may not be spending in free agency, ownership is putting their money where their mouth is here.
Despite all the new faces, the Double-A and Triple-A managers will remain the same. Matt LeCroy has been a beloved minor league manager for a long time now. This will be his sixth season managing Triple-A Rochester and his 18th season in the Nationals organization. From all of the clips you see of him, LeCroy seems like a wonderful person. He was also in the mix to be the Nats interim manager last year.
Double-A manager Delino DeShields will also be back. This will be his fourth season managing the Harrisburg Senators. However, the Nats are bringing in new managers for both A ball clubs. Chris O’Neill will serve as the Fred Nats manager. He was previously the hitting coach at VCU. The High-A manager will be Ted Tom, who also served in the college ranks. He was most recently the hitting coach at UCF.
There are going to be so many new voices in the organization, which I love to see. These staffers have a mix of youth and experience, though the Low-A staff is very young. The pitching coach for the Fred Nats is only 27 and the assistant pitching coach is even younger at 24. Both have experience working in pitching labs, such as Driveline. The physical therapists name is also James Wood, which I found funny.
A few takeaways: 1. There are a lot more people on these staffs than what we are accustomed to, which I love 2. I looked at the press releases and the Fred Nats staff is crazy young lol. At least half of them are in their 20's. 3. WHO is the physical therapist haha https://t.co/msGdZhRHU3
As you get into the upper minors, the coaches are usually older, which makes sense. Most of the Triple-A staff is in their 40’s or 50’s. Following the progress of the minor league teams should be very exciting this year.
The Nats have a deep pool of prospects after their offseason trades. The system is especially deep at the lower levels. With this revamped development team, we should see prospects have breakout years. I am excited to see who will be helped the most by these changes. This kind of stuff is why the Paul Toboni hire is so exciting.
SAN FRANCISCO — The Giants haven’t announced the Harrison Bader move yet, but when they do, they’ll need an open 40-man spot. They made room with a minor trade on Thursday.
The Giants sent right-hander Kai-Wei Teng to the Houston Astros for minor league catcher Jancel Villarroel and international slot money. The trade cuts into their pitching depth a bit, but they needed the spot for Bader, who agreed to a two-year, $20.5 million deal earlier this week.
Teng, 27, made 12 appearances for the Giants the past two seasons, including seven starts last year. But the Giants added two free agents to what currently is a full rotation, and they have plenty of young depth. There are high hopes for Hayden Birdsong, who had his 2025 season go off the rails, and Teng likely would have entered camp behind Carson Whisenhunt, Blade Tidwell and Trevor McDonald, who opened eyes in two late-season appearances.
Teng’s path to a roster spot would have been as a reliever, and there are reasons to think that might have been successful. While he struggled with his command as a starter and had some wild innings, he also struck out 39 batters in 29 2/3 innings.
The trade closes the door on the Sam Dyson trade, which ultimately favored the Giants. Dyson made just 12 appearances for the Twins and then never pitched in MLB again. The Giants got Teng, along with outfielder Jaylin Davis, who recently retired, and right-hander Prelander Berroa, who got traded to Seattle for Donovan Walton.
Villarroel, 21, was No. 13 on MLB Pipeline’s Astros top 30 last year and is currently ranked 20th on their Baseball America list. He has a .378 on-base percentage in four minor league seasons and finished last season in High-A.
The Giants have been light on minor league catching depth, and they also got international slot money, which could be helpful at a time when they’re hoping to add to their 2026 class that originally included just three players because Luis Hernandez got a $5 million bonus.
Which team is the frontrunner to land Giannis Antetokounmpo? Depends completely upon who you ask.
League sources NBC Sports has spoken with lean toward Golden State because it can offer up to four first-round draft picks (ones that could be very valuable after Curry retires, Antetokounmpo fades, and the Warriors struggle). Anthony Slater at ESPN reports the same thing.
"The quicker Milwaukee acts, league executives believe, the better chance Golden State has to win the bidding war."
Other people are hearing other things — welcome to the Wild West of rumors.
"Miami and — surprise — Minnesota," if you ask NBA insider Marc Stein. Miami has been waiting for this moment, he added on his Substack.
"You've surely noted that the Heat have held back on making the best possible trade offers it could have for players such as Damian Lillard, Kevin Durant and, most recently, Ja Morant. Miami has been clinging to its most coveted draft capital for the right All-Star pursuit. And this appears to be it. The Heat's best offer is presumed to be a package headlined by Wisconsin native Tyler Herro, rising big man Ke'lel Ware and tradeable first-round picks in 2030 and 2032."
Miami's best offer would be Herro, Ware, Jaime Jaquez Jr., Kasparas Jakucionis, Terry Rozier's expiring contract, and Miami's two tradable first-round picks, reports Ira Winderman of the Sun Sentinel.
Minnesota makes this list because Antetokounmpo reportedly likes the idea of teaming up with Anthony Edwards. The problem is the Bucks want a ton of draft picks back in a trade and Minnesota can only offer a swap or two, but that's it.
KAT frustrated with trade rumors
Giannis Antetokounmpo forced the Bucks and Knicks to talk trade late in the offseason, but those discussions went nowhere.
Those discussions still had repercussions. In those rumored talks, Karl-Anthony Towns was headed to Milwaukee in the trade, which led to some "hard feelings," reports Sam Amick at The Athletic.
Just ask the Knicks, whose talks with the Bucks about Antetokounmpo last summer led to hard feelings with Karl-Anthony Towns that, per team sources, remain to this day. That's the double-doozy that every team seeks to avoid — the failure to land the player they're pursuing that is followed by a step backward, relationship-wise, with the player who learned he was nearly sent packing in the process.
Towns has earned the ire of Knicks fans this season for his inconsistent play — even though he is likely an All-Star when the reserves are announced Sunday — and his defense. Plenty of New Yorkers are ready to trade him, although how much the Bucks want him is the other half of the equation.
When will Antetokounmpo be traded?
This is not the sexy thing to say, it does not draw in viewers or drive clicks at the trade deadline, which is why discussion of it seems to get buried. It's also the reality, according to league sources NBC Sports has spoken with:
An Antetokounmpo trade is more likely to happen this offseason than at the trade deadline in a week. Far more likely.
Not everyone sees it that way. For example, ESPN’s Brian Windhorst said on the network’s show Get Up that front offices he has spoken with "all believe" the Bucks will trade Antetokounmpo before the Feb. 5 deadline. Read into that whatever you wish.
The vast majority of people NBC Sports has spoken with who expect this to be just the start of a longer process. Eric Nehm, the very well-connected Bucks writer for The Athletic, summed it up this way in The Bounce newsletter:
"It's hard to imagine a situation in which the Bucks actually maximize their return for Antetokounmpo before the deadline. There just aren't many teams out there that have the flexibility with the cap, the young player with superstar potential and the draft picks needed to make an enticing offer before the deadline. That means the Bucks will need a team to make a desperation offer without proper competition or accept an offer that does not meet the standard for a two-time NBA MVP and 10-time All-Star.
"That should make it unlikely for a trade to happen in the next week, but teams are not always dictated by logic in these situations."
Milwaukee's early communication to teams making Antetokounmpo trade inquiries has led several front offices to surmise that the Bucks might be trying to establish price points for each particular buyer now in order to more thoroughly conduct a trade auction during this summer. "They're asking for the moon," one general manager told The Stein Line on Thursday morning. "All of your young players and all of your draft picks."
Maybe things change in the next week, but there is zero reason for Milwaukee to rush this decision. Any move GM Jon Horst makes is going to be met with backlash from the fan base — Antetokounmpo is the beloved best player in franchise history who won them a title in 2021 — so he needs to make the best trade possible to help with that (just ask Nico Harrison). There is more value to be had this summer.
Other Antetokounmpo trade notes
• Atlanta could assemble the most Bucks-friendly trade package if they want, with Jalen Johnson — who should be an All-Star this season — and control over a number of the Bucks' future draft picks. Except, the Hawks refuse to put Johnson in any offer and are not jumping into the fray, reports Marc Stein on his Substack. This is absolutely the right play by Atlanta — the goal would be to pair Johnson and Antetokounmpo, not swap the young All-Star for an older one.
"I've been told that the Rockets will not be bidders. Now, hey, nobody was under oath, but I've been told that repeatedly, and I'll say that they've got a pretty good track record of shooting me straight."
Houston made their big swing last summer with Kevin Durant, and going after Antetokounmpo would mean surrendering key parts of their young core — such as Amen Thompson — which is rightfully too high a price for a team already a threat in the West.
• San Antonio, a team linked to Antetokounmpo last summer, also is not getting in the mix, MacMahon added.
"I have been told by folks with the Spurs, 'We're not a home for Giannis.' And there's been a lot of smoke going back to the summer, but everything in San Antonio is about the Wemby [Victor Wembanyama] timeline, and this is a decade past the Wemby timeline when you bring in Giannis at his age."
• Philadelphia has not jumped in to chase Antetokounmpo, but he and Tyrese Maxey share the same trainer (Drew Hanlen) and that has the 76ers on Antetokounmpo's radar, according to Jake Fischer.