Rumors Connect Former Panthers Defenseman, Pair Of Goaltenders To Florida

We’re now just one week away from the 2026 NHL Draft in Buffalo and less than two weeks from the start of a new league year.

Between the annual prospect selection and the opening of free agency a few days later, player movement and contract signings will make for a fun few days around the NHL.

The Florida Panthers should be in the thick of the fun.

Florida holds the ninth overall selection at next week’s draft, and they also have over $15 in cap space to work with.

That means Panthers General Manager Bill Zito will have some options to work with, and you better believe he and his staff have been diligently preparing for several potential situations, depending on how the chips may end up falling.

We’ve touched on several of the storylines surrounding Florida, from Sergei Bobrovsky’s pending free agency to the potential mutual interest between the Panthers and Dylan Larkin, and now we can toss a couple new updates into the mix thanks to a pair of fresh reports.

During a recent appears on Inside Sports, David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period reported that interest remains from Florida in goaltenders Jordan Binnington and Connor Hellebuyck.

Either of those two netminders landing in Pantherland would almost certainly mean that Bobrosky was not returning, so one domino falling will impact the other, whichever and whenever that may be.

Both Binnington and Hellebuyck are under contract and would require a trade to end up wearing a Panthers sweater next season. 

Binnington, 32, has one year remaining on his current deal with a $6 million average annual value (AAV), while Hellebuyck, 33, has five years left on his contract that pays an AAV of $8.5 million. 

Additionally, ESPN’s Kevin Weekes linked the Panthers to former Cats defenseman Radko Gudas.

Even though he just turned 36, Gudas can still play at a high level and has an idea of what would be expected of him under Paul Maurice in Florida.

The final season of Gudas’ three with the Panthers was Maurice’s first, when Florida marched to the 2023 Stanley Cup Final only to come up short against the Vegas Golden Knights.

After a successful run with Florida, Gudas signed with the youthful Anaheim Ducks, who promptly named him their captain. 

He’s hitting the market after earning a $4 million AAV over three years on his last deal, and will likely be seeking something in the $3.5 to $4 million range on his next deal, according to Weekes.

Currently, the Panthers have six defenseman under NHL contracts for next season: Aaron Ekblad, Gus Forsling, Seth Jones, Niko Mikkola, Dmitry Kulikov and Uvis Balinskis.

Obviously there are only so many assets and so much money to go around, so it will be interesting to see whatever ends up happening with the Panthers at all three positions.

Will Zito go into the season with seven defensemen on NHL contracts?

What direction will the team end up doing in goal?

How does the ninth overall pick at next week’s draft play into the decision?

Let us know down in the comments how you think things should play out.

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Photo caption: Jan 15, 2024; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Anaheim Ducks defenseman Radko Gudas (7) looks on against the Florida Panthers during the second period at Amerant Bank Arena. (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)

Anaheim Ducks Offseason Rumor Roundup: 6/19/26

The 2026 Stanley Cup has been awarded to the Carolina Hurricanes, and the NHL is now firmly in the 2026 offseason. The 2026 NHL Entry Draft is one week away, qualifying offers are due to RFAs after that, and unrestricted free agency will begin shortly after that. 

A handful of trades have already taken place throughout the league, and more are reportedly on the way. This is the time of year when breadcrumbs from NHL insiders are entire meals for interested parties. 

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The Anaheim Ducks are coming off their most successful season in a decade, and their roster situation has them as one of the more intriguing teams when it comes to potential movement. 

Here’s what’s been reported and speculated about the Ducks over the last week:

Mason McTavish

The smoke continues to billow around McTavish (23) and from a variety of outlets. It undoubtedly stems from interested opposing teams looking to land a talented, distressed asset and the fact that he served as a healthy scratch for two of the Ducks’ 12 playoff games this spring after signing a six-year contract with a $7 million AAV. 

Bruce Garrioch of the Ottawa Citizen continues to link McTavish to his hometown Ottawa Senators. He listed McTavish as one of a handful of forwards with whom the Sens have shown “some level of interest.”

“A league executive told ‘The Citizen’ that they believe that McTavish is a legitimate fit for the Senators,” Garrioch reported in his latest column. 

ESPN’s Kevin Weekes joined in, taking to Twitter on Wednesday to report on opposing clubs’ interest in McTavish.

“Per sources another name getting plenty of attention is (forward) McTavish of the (Anaheim Ducks), he has skill, grit, term, and upside,” Weekes tweeted. “Teams are calling, it would have to be a quality ‘hockey trade’ I’m told. See how this goes…”

Darren Dreger of TSN seems convinced it’s a “when, not if” situation in Anaheim in terms of McTavish’s future. 

“I’m in the belief that Mason McTavish of the Anaheim Ducks is going to be traded. I know there’s definitely a lot of chatter around McTavish, around the National Hockey League,” Dreger relayed on the “Starr and McKenna” radio show. 

Right Shot Defensemen

The current biggest hole on the Ducks’ depth chart sits on the entire right side of the blueline. All three of their veteran blueliners (Jacob Trouba, John Carlson, Radko Gudas) will see their contracts expire on July 1 if they’re not signed to extensions. 

Carlson has already made it known, via his agent, that he will not be returning to the Ducks and intends to test the unrestricted free agency waters. The Athletic’s Pierre LeBrun was first to break the news

“John Carlson is headed to market. His agent, Rick Curran, has informed the Anaheim Ducks GM Pat Verbeek of that,” LeBrun reported on Tuesday. “Both sides talked about a potential extension, but Carlson is moving on.”

The most probable of the three to return seemed to be Jacob Trouba, who found a fit next to Jackson LaCombe on the team’s top pair for the majority of his tenure in Anaheim. However, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reported in passing on “The Fan Hockey Show” on Wednesday that Trouba intends to follow Carlson to free agency. 

“(John) Carlson’s hitting the market, and it sounds like (Jacob) Trouba is hitting the market here too,” Friedman said. 

Ducks captain Radko Gudas may not be far behind his brethren, as Kevin Weekes, again, tweeted that if Gudas hits the market, teams will be interested in his services. 

“Per sources, I’m told Anaheim Ducks captain (defenseman) Gudas is gaining interest in the marketplace,” Weekes tweeted. “If him and the Ducks can’t get a deal done, the Florida Panthers and Toronto Maple Leafs are among potential fits. He’s physical, experienced, playoff tested, on a 2-3 year term between $3.5 million and $4 million-plus.”

The Blockbuster that Got Away

Lastly, Dreger dropped a bombshell to end last week, when he was on the “Starr and McKenna” show, indicating there were discussions of a deal being had between the St. Louis Blues and the Ducks that included Robert Thomas and Colton Parayko heading to Anaheim and Mason McTavish, Pavel Mintyukov, and Roger McQueen going back to St. Louis. 

“There was a bigger deal, I’m told, that was down the road, and it included Mason McTavish going to the St. Louis Blues,” Dreger said. “I believe that (Robert) Thomas and (Colton) Parayko could have been part of that. I head Mintyukov, maybe McQueen, who signed not that long ago with the Anaheim Ducks. So, it doesn’t matter because it didn’t happen, but Mason McTavish’s name has been out there for a while.”

There were likely other pieces in play with that potential deal, and we’ll never know what halted the discussions. It would have changed the complexion of the Ducks on their playoff run and into the future. It’s since been reported that Thomas is now off the table from St. Louis, so any hopes of this trade being revisited should be quelled. 

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Joy, Chaos, and Grown Men Crying: Inside the Knicks Championship Parade

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JUNE 18: Jalen Brunson #11 and Karl-Anthony Towns #32 of the New York Knicks celebrate with the Larry O'Brien Championship Trophy during the New York Knicks Championship ticker tape parade and victory rally celebrating winning the 2026 NBA Finals on June 18, 2026 in New York City. The New York Knicks defeated the San Antonio Spurs in five games to win their first NBA Championship in 53 years. (Photo by Angelina Katsanis/Getty Images)
The Knicks' first title in 53 years brought the whole city together. A first-person report from the Canyon of Heroes.

OG Anunoby is at the free-throw line. He misses the first. My entire body tenses. The second shot falls. The Knicks are up by 4. The Spurs inbound the ball. The clock reads 7.7. San Antonio has no timeouts and less than eight seconds to bring the ball up the floor and somehow score 4 points. Any rational basketball fan would say that the game is all but over. Although, if you're a Knicks fan, it's that "but" that keeps your lungs from filling completely. In a game that was essentially over, I felt exactly like Quint from Jaws describing his rescue from the wreckage of the Indianapolis, "You know that was the time I was most frightened? Waitin' for my turn." Letting yourself believe would be tempting the fate of God. No matter how intellectually certain victory seemed, there was always that nagging doubt, a voice screaming this doesn't happen for Knicks fans. But, like Quint, our turn finally came. The Knicks are NBA champions once again, 53 years after the years of Clyde Frazier and Willis Reed. Those 53 years were the 1,100 men that went in the water, and we all know only "three hundred and sixteen men come out, the sharks took the rest." Sharks with names like Michael Jordan, Hakeem Olajuwon, Tim Duncan, Reggie Miller, and Tyrese Haliburton.

The jubilation of New York City over the past month reached its pinnacle today when, at long last, New York City had a parade to celebrate their very own New York Knickerbockers entering the Canyon of Heroes and the books of history. The New York Post is reporting today's parade as the largest ticker-tape parade in Big Apple history. Knicks fans flooded lower Manhattan, hoping to catch a glimpse of the team that brought the Larry O'Brien Trophy back to Madison Square Garden. Knicks fans were so desperate to figure out ways into the celebrations that I heard from two different attendees (who asked not to be named) about the ways they skirted around the law. One man claimed he walked the parade route at 3 a.m., trying to find hidden access routes past the barricades. He said he had found the perfect spot and even buried a set of bolt cutters there, but his access was blown when some less-than-careful teenagers stumbled upon his entry and their babbling alerted the cops. Another attendee showed me his homemade "all-access" badge, which, along with his confidence, succeeded in granting him access to the closed-off ceremony plaza. Knicks fans are devoted.

Fittingly, Mike Breen, the voice of the Knicks, was the emcee of the ceremony at City Hall, in which Mayor Zohran Mamdani presented everyone in the Knicks organization with a key to the city. The oppressive heat and humidity muted the crowd response slightly, so the Knicks City Kids didn't get the response they were probably expecting, but once the champions came out, a crowd of fans, celebrities, and former players (John Starks was in the crowd chomping on a rather large cigar) "paid homage to their heroes" in the parlance of Walt "Clyde" Frazier.

The entirety of City Hall Park was closed off with several moats of barricades, so even with a press pass (real or homemade) it took some doing to get through. I made it through security at 6:30 a.m. and found a spot directly across from the dais, nestled between a cable news video village and one of five confetti cannons that, when fired, covered City Hall Park so completely in orange and blue confetti that I almost lost some of my own video equipment. From the moment I landed in my spot to the final speech, there was a consistent roar from the crowd behind me on Broadway. Every 20 minutes or so we would hear a large swell of noise before it diminuendoed back to its steady ambient. Inside the park, the audience ran deep with Knicks devotees, such as superfans John Turturro and Ben Stiller, and members of the extended Knicks media universe like 7PM in Brooklyn podcast co-host The Kid Mero and Roommates Podcast co-host Matt Hillman. Josh Safdie had what looked like an Arri camera on a shoulder rig filming the speeches, no doubt for the upcoming A24 documentary he and Stiller are making on the Knicks.

Sports still seem like the most socially acceptable reason for grown men to cry. Parade attendee Peter Abbadessa admits to getting a little emotional when the final second ticked off the clock. Abbadessa said, "It means everything to me as a fan and as a New Yorker. My family, we've been in New York here since 1896. It's everything to bring this city together. It's a dream come true." And it's true: the Knicks are unique among New York sports teams in that they don't split the city — they unite it. Yankees or Mets. Giants or Jets. Rangers or Islanders. All the other New York fan bases are split, but in New York there's only one NBA team that matters, and for too long was a source of nothing but heartache and disappointment. Photographer Chris Bacarella said this championship "felt like watching the ’07 Giants on steroids."

The joy this Knicks run has sparked has been nothing short of magical, and it extended beyond the confines of New York, as the Knicks fans travel, so does the jubilee. Los Angeles writer and comedian Colby Smith needed to do nothing more than leave his apartment in a Staten Island Ferry T-shirt: "And a guy pointed at me and goes 'we did it bro.'" After each game of this Knicks' final run, New Yorkers spilled into the streets across the five boroughs, hugging and high-fiving strangers, chanting together, crying together, feeling together. I've never felt a coming together like this before in this city. There's a reason why comedian Desus Nice called this the "reverse 9/11." Parade attendee Nick B. said, "I think my biggest concern about winning was that it'd be this momentary burst, like after all these years actually winning would ultimately be a letdown. It's almost been the opposite — it's been sustained joy over days."

Photo by Matt Strickland

The post-championship Knicks have already given us a plethora of perfect moments, most of them coming from OG Anunoby, starting when directly after winning a title OG went live from the Knicks locker room for 18 seconds, during almost all of which he spent asking his celebrating teammates how to turn it off. Jeremy Sochan hasn't seemed to have worn a shirt since Game 5. Mikal Bridges similarly went on Instagram Live completely faded and demanded a "big-headed" statue for Jalen Brunson. The starting five has appeared hungover on daytime talk shows and hungover on late-night talk shows, and there's something very beautiful about their celebrations paralleling the good-hearted debauchery occurring throughout the city. This title has become a great coming together. All walks of life are joining their celebrations. Even non-Knicks fans are feeling the energy. Even the amount of ire toward the hated "bandwagon fans" was kept surprisingly at a minimum. Comedian Alise Morales watched Game 5 from the Del Close Marathon, a 24-hour improv comedy festival hosted by UCB. She said, "It was definitely a mix of huge lifelong Knicks fans, new fans, and out-of-towners who were just excited to be experiencing New York at such a high point ... It was honestly one of my favorite moments in my 15 years in NYC. People were just so hyped to be together and be celebrating." The relief of winning was so great that the die-hard Knicks fans opened their arms and embraced the love, no matter where it came from.

The city is alive. New York Forever.

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2025-26 Season in Review: Sidney Crosby

PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA - MARCH 31: Sidney Crosby #87 of the Pittsburgh Penguins skates with the puck in the third period during the game against the Detroit Red Wings at PPG PAINTS Arena on March 31, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Justin Berl/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Vitals

Player: Sidney Crosby
Born: Aug 7, 1987
Height: 5’11”
Weight: 200 pounds
Hometown: Cole Harbour, Nova Scotia, Canada
Shoots: Left
Draft: First round pick (1st overall) in 2005 by the Penguins
2024-25 Statistics: 68 games played; 29 goals; 45 assists; 74 points; one goal and four assists in six playoff games
Contract Status: 2026-27 is the final season on Crosby’s current contract. He’s eligible to officially extend on July 1.

Story of the Season

“This is where I want to be,” Sidney Crosby said at the start of 2025 training camp. “I love it here… I talk about the first day, and you think about first impressions. I didn’t know a lot about Pittsburgh prior to being drafted, and I showed up at the airport and could barely move. The support that I felt from day one, the relationships that I formed here, the memories, the teammates, the fans. I mean, you go down the list.”

“I’m so grateful and thankful that I’ve had the opportunity to play here as long as I have. And I think anyone who knows me knows what the city means to me and how special it is.”

2025-26 was a season of affirmation between Sidney Crosby and the Penguins. The long-time captain had to endure speculation about his future like never before in the summer of 2025 (not helped by his agent saying a trade was “always a possibility”). All that external noise placed the captain at an unavoidable, awkward late-career crossroads that he never wanted to be at in the first place.

In the end, Sidney Crosby did what he always does: set aside the outside noise, get to work and help his team win. Crosby roared out the gates, scoring eight goals and 15 points in the first 12 games of the season to do his part for the 8-2-2 record that Pittsburgh jumped out to at the beginning of the season.

From there, the future took care of itself with the Pens weathering some storms of blown leads and Crosby there to help lead them along the way. By the Olympic break the Pens were second in the Metropolitan Division and fourth in the Eastern Conference via points percentage with a 29-15-12 record that had them on track for qualifying for the playoffs.

Then came the road bump in Italy. Crosby’s Olympic tournament ended with a knee injury in the quarterfinals on February 18th. He would attempt to test his leg and make the effort to see if he could play for the gold medal game on the 22nd, but the damage was too great. The Canadians ended up losing in OT, only generating one goal, providing a surreal and unexpected finish derailed in large part by the absence of their captain.

Upon coming back to the States, it was announced Crosby would miss a minimum of four weeks, a timeline he hit on the nose by returning to the lineup on March 18th, exactly four weeks after the injury was suffered. He would record a goal and an assist in his return.

Those last 26 games of the season after the Olympic break could be seen as the rest of the team holding up their end of the bargain to their veteran leader. Crosby only played in 12 of the final 26 games – scoring just two goals (while adding in 13 assists). There was a time when two goals and 15 points from Crosby over a 26-game span would spell doom. That time was not 2025-26, when players up and down the whole lineup stepped in and stepped up. The Pens still managed to lock up a playoff spot in a relatively drama-free fashion, despite a limited impact from their brightest star. They showed that this team, with major inputs from Erik Karlsson, Egor Chinakhov, Bryan Rust, Anthony Mantha and Rickard Rakell, were able to shoulder the load to deserve to make the playoffs for the first time since 2022 and silence the naysayers decrying Crosby playing out his days with a moribund franchise.

It’s a nice story from that perspective; the star player made it clear he wanted things to go better and certainly carried his end of the bargain while he could. When he couldn’t, plenty of others were there to do the rest and keep the Penguins in second place in the division – far better than preseason projections.

There was nothing nice about the postseason, however. Crosby, like many of his teammates, had a poor start to the playoffs, falling into an 0-3 hole. He rebounded have two very strong performances in Games 4+5 (producing four total points to help keep the season alive) but the Pens ultimately bowed out in Game 6.

Though things didn’t play out exactly as he would have liked, the 2025-26 season was another successful campaign for Crosby. He extended his NHL record streak of point/game seasons to 21. He passed Steve Yzerman and Mario Lemieux in career points this year, two legends and major influences of Crosby’s formative years. Passing Lemieux obviously stands out in that Crosby has taken over the all-time point record for the franchise, that crazy as it sounds, there was no absolute guarantee he would finish out his days with had the club continued to mire below the playoff picture.

Thanks to a great 2025-26 from Crosby and the Pens at large, that debate about a change will recess, possibly and thankfully for good. Sidney Crosby is where he wants to be and still a major factor in making the Penguins relevant. This past year he proved it to them, and the rest of the franchise from the players to the coaches to managers were able to reciprocate.

Monthly Splits

via Yahoo

The splits tell the story of Crosby’s red hot start in the season’s first two months, followed by a decrease in goals following his injury. The ice time was also down in March/April as the Penguins made sure their captain was right and ready for the playoffs where he was back to his usual 20+ minute per night workload.

Regular season 5v5 advanced stats

Data via Natural Stat Trick. Ranking is out of 18 forwards on the team who qualified by playing a minimum of 150 minutes.

Corsi For%: 50.2 (8th)
Goals For%: 55.2 (9th)
xGF%: 51.8 (7th)
Scoring Chance%: 49.6 (10th)
High Danger Scoring Chance%: 51.6 (12th)
5v5 on-ice shooting%: 12.0 (8th)
On-ice save%: .896 (11th)
Goals/60: 0.95
Assists/60: 1.61
Points/60: 2.56 (4th)

A good indicator of just how successful a season it was for Crosby would be to isolate the Pens’ on ice shooting percentage with him on the ice. If he and his teammates are converting, he’s done well. In the odd year when it’s been a challenge, then it’s been frustrating. This year was very good – and even better was seven other Penguin forwards enjoyed more success in this department to indicate a very strong offensive performance. Crosby managing to finish above a 2.5 P/60 in his first line center role at age-38 is yet another feather in his cap as one of the top offensive players of all time.

Charts n’at

Via Advanced Hockey Stats and NHL Edge

Sidney Crosby: still very good at hockey! WAR has detected no fall off in his game as Crosby advances deep into his late 30’s. His style and ways are different from his athletic peak earlier in the career, but the results are still better than just about everyone when it comes to generating offense.

You’d expect good things from the microstats, and as usual Crosby never disappoints. He’s still elite as an in-zone offensive weapon with the familiar tenets of his game to create a ton of chances for his teammates while also scoring plenty of goals for himself. Zone entry struggles are the only indicator of a player that doesn’t have quite the same number of tools available that he once did.

There’s aging well, and then there’s this look above. Crosby’s production today is basically the same as it has been since 2014 when the Mike Johnston era helped to usher him out of his pure peak days from 2005-13. The highs aren’t quite as high recently as they were in the 2019-22 period, but considering Crosby is pushing 40 his rates of production remain incredibly impressive, and just as consistent as we all have come to know over the past 21 years as the absolute trademark of Crosby’s game. If his career has taught anything it’s that he’s always going to be very good, and somehow he’s never going to be anything else.

Crosby gets around the ice well and is one of the big influences in the modern game for taking harsh angle shots, but he knows at this stage that a nose for the net is where goals are going to come from. Zone starts being friendly for offense set him up for success and then he continues the territorial domination in a major way to play a lot in the offensive zone and avoid as much time as possible being in his own end of the rink.

Interestingly, as seen above in the advanced stats, the Pens’ first line was more selective in the amount of shots (be it by design or inability to produce a large quantity). That plus the zone entries likely influenced the decision to get Egor Chinakhov up to the first line. It’s not that playing with Rickard Rakell and ol’ trusty Bryan Rust doesn’t work, but given the ages of all three there is a need for some young blood and fresh skill on the Pens’ first line. That will be interesting to track moving forward to see if Pittsburgh keeps working to develop a Chinakhov-Crosby connection or reverts back to the known quantity of playing with veterans.

The chart of where goals were scored this season shows a player still willing and able to work into the high danger areas and then convert once there. An underrated talking point with Crosby is how his scoring touch has provided an ability to remain a 30-40 goal scorer this late in his career. That adds such an impressive element in his massive portfolio of hockey success. For someone known for his playmaking abilities, it’s actually his high rate of goals that deserves a lot of the credit for his late-career sustainment of being one of the world’s best. I’m not sure we would have really expected that to be the case 10 or 20 years ago for how just his game would evolve at this point.

Overall, Crosby’s wheels are more than fine at his advanced age. This data looks better on the page than it might on the ice, eight of the nine 22+ bursts came in calendar 2025 (the ninth was in January). Despite his best efforts, the aging process is going to drain him as the long grind of a season goes along. Then obviously a knee injury isn’t going to help the cause. Father Time will always be undefeated but Crosby can still more than hang with the players in the league when it comes to getting from Point A to Point B, despite being one of the oldest players now. His burst isn’t as dynamic as it once was to skate through the defense successfully on any given shift like when he was a young player, but he remains a very strong skater overall with very nice burst ability.

Highlights

Questions to ponder

The timing of his decision for when Crosby wants to extend his contract in Pittsburgh is the biggest Sid-centric question of this offseason. By all accounts, Crosby’s desire to play is not slowing down, but his next contract for 2027-28 would commit him to playing as a 40-year old. Until he puts pen to paper and signs on for 2027-28, the whole future direction of the Pens could be considered up in the air since a much different path forward would take effect depending on whether Crosby plays or not.

Crosby signed his last contract just before camp in September 2024, will he do something similar so that the inevitable questions about potential retirement don’t get brought up every day in every city? That’s not a topic he will want lingering or to address regularly, yet it certainly won’t go away easily either without resolution. It really doesn’t seem like this upcoming year will be his final season, but at the same time he’s more than earned the right not to be in a hurry. Crosby’s always said he needs to find out the information from his body to dictate decisions about the future, that info can only be learned in due time. The timing will be what everyone is watching out for going into 2026-27.

Ideal 2026-27

At this point Crosby’s chasing legends, he currently is seventh place in all-time NHL scoring (1761). He is 89 points away from Gordie Howe in fourth and will be hunting down Marcel Dionne (1771) and Ron Francis (1798) next year. Always team-oriented, Crosby would just as soon do whatever it takes to keep the Pens’ bounce-back from being a one-year wonder and help Pittsburgh remain a playoff team as a best case scenario. But since this is a personal ideal, that would involve a 90 point season to pass Howe, a contract extension for 2027-28 and another appearance in the Stanley Cup playoffs come next spring.

Bottom line

Crosby’s case to be the greatest of his time doesn’t need any more supporting evidence but he provided more anyways with one of the best age-38 seasons in NHL history. 2025-26 was both rewarding for him to play well and lead the Pens back to the playoffs after three straight seasons of missing the postseason, yet filled with significant frustrations due to the injury suffered at the Olympics that knocked the rest of his season off track.

PensburghGrade: A

Pittsburgh’s leader and captain came through one more time, to the surprise of absolutely no one. The first half of his season was A+ work, his performance was likely limited from there due to the injury. Still, the production was there, the wins were back and now he’s setup for a 22nd season with the Penguins with reason to be energized and excited for the upcoming season.

Why the Red Sox shouldn’t trade Willson Contreras

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - JUNE 14: Willson Contreras #40 of the Boston Red Sox hits a solo home run during the sixth inning against the Texas Rangers at Fenway Park on June 14, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Paul Rutherford/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Last week, I wrote and encouraged the Red Sox to totally tear down the roster with a 2014-style fire sale at the trade deadline on Aug. 3rd. 

I still stand by that for the large portion of sellable pieces. The Willson Contreras decision in that conversation became a complicated one for me and one that i’ve spent the last week thinking about rather often. In that period of reflection, the answer to what to do with Boston’s first baseman became pretty obvious to me. 

The Red Sox cannot trade Willson Contreras. 

The veteran is a rare sign of life in an otherwise dismal season that will cause several people their jobs by year’s end. Contreras is a borderline All-Star in 2026. If he doesn’t make the team, it won’t be due to any fault of his own, but more so due to the ridiculous surges of others around the American League. 

He’s enjoying his best offensive season at age 34 and clearly has plenty left in the tank after shifting away from catching during his tenure with the St. Louis Cardinals. Contreras would be a hot commodity given the usual need for right-handed power every summer. That’s intriguing for a should-be seller like the Red Sox, though there’s a different story to tell that’s even more important about the construction of the roster moving forward. 

When you have a chance to keep a hole filled for a while, take it. How long have the Red Sox been trying to find a staple at second base since the end of Dustin Pedroia’s days as an everyday player? (Newsflash: They still are).

Triston Casas still holds potential in the wild world of Red Sox Twitter/X, but the reality is that  he’s only played one full season (he did receive ROTY votes) since his 2022 call-up. It would be way easier to navigate the position if Casas could really be healthy and contribute. Ultimately, Boston would be viciously irresponsible to build the lineup in years to come with the expectation of Casas being a regular. 

Contreras is under team control through 2027 with a club option for 2028. His no-trade clause also carried over from the Cardinals, limiting Boston’s best shot at another quality return at the deadline. 

The Red Sox should probably listen for a potential undeniable offer at the deadline, but for a team that lacks real hitters the way they do, can they totally afford to lose the only one they have?

Candidates To Replace Manny Malhotra As Head Coach Of The Abbotsford Canucks

The Abbotsford Canucks are looking for a new head coach. With Manny Malhotra stepping up to coach in Vancouver, a prominent spot has now opened for the Abbotsford bench. The franchise is looking into different candidates to fill the leadership role. 

Manny Malhotra led the team to their first championship in franchise history in only his first year coaching. His leadership and passion were the motors that drove every player to play their best, come together as a team, and lift the cup. 

During the 2025-26 season, the AHL Canucks were looking to defend the championship but fell to ninth place in the Pacific Division. With Malhotra joining the NHL team, Abbotsford must search for a head coach who will not only concentrate on developing players but also focus on teamwork, leadership and passion.  

If the Canucks were to look internally, one possible candidate is Jordan Smith, who is the team's current assistant coach. He joined the organization in 2025 from the St. Louis Blues AHL affiliate, the Springfield Thunderbirds. He led Abbotsford to the championship alongside Malhotra. Given Smith already knows the prospects, organization, and team philosophy, he has the tools to continue guiding the team.  

Another internal hire could be Harry Mahesh. He joined the organization in 2024, alongside Malhotra. He spent the 2023-24 season as a Coaching Development Associate for the NHL’s Toronto Maple Leafs. His expertise and knowledge of the group are beneficial, especially in the short term. Mahesh is knowledgeable about development, which is one of the core principles of any AHL team.  

Abbotsford Canucks celebrate winning the 2025 Calder Cup (Photo Credit: @abbycanucks on "X")
Abbotsford Canucks celebrate winning the 2025 Calder Cup (Photo Credit: @abbycanucks on "X")

Externally, Abbotsford may look into Nolan Baumgarter. He currently works as an assistant coach for the Ottawa Senators. His history with the Canucks organization is extensive. He was signed as a free agent by Vancouver in 2002 and played four seasons, split between 2002-03 and 2008 to 2012. He retired with the Chicago Wolves in the AHL and returned to the organization as an assistant coach. He was behind the bench between 2017 to 2021, giving him experience with player development. Baumgertner knows the ins and outs of both the NHL and the AHL, which could make him a good fit for the head coach position.  

Vancouver has also reportedly been interested in adding Jessica Campbell to the organization. Campbell became the first female coach behind the NHL bench in 2024. She was behind the bench with the Seattle Kraken for two seasons before announcing she was leaving after her contract expired. She has experience in assisting the AHL’s Coachella Valley Thunderbirds and would bring a fresh perspective to the Abbotsford bench.  

Ultimately, the organization should be casting a wide net to find the perfect candidate. Whoever leads the team’s bench must be someone who understands the importance of developing players while maintaining team morale and igniting passion. Whoever steps in next must have a winning mentality that will push the team to achieve great things. 

Make sure you bookmark THN's Vancouver Canucks site and add us to your favourites on Google News for the latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more. Also, don't forget to leave a comment at the bottom of the page and engage with other passionate fans through our forum. This article originally appeared on The Hockey News.

Latest From THN’s Vancouver Canucks Site:

Communication & Teaching Headline The Canucks’ List Of Qualities For Their Assistant Coaches & Abbotsford’s Head Coach

Vancouver’s Most Recent PWHL Draft Pick Has Ties To Former Canucks Captain Messier

Three Canucks Stars Named In Recent Batch Of Trade Rumours 

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Knicks Bulletin: ‘I swear I’m on the team, bro’

NEW YORK, NY - JUNE 18: Karl-Anthony Towns and Mayor Mamdani are seen outside City Hall at the New York Knicks ticker-tape parade on June 18, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by XNY/Star Max/GC Images)

Ticker.

Tape.

Parade.

James Dolan

On the future of the Knicks:

“We’re gonna keep working to bring you even better basketball. Although it’s hard to imagine that we get much better than this. But we will, right fellas?”

On delivering a championship to New York City:

“When I look out over the Knick fans here, you all don’t look older than 53 years. Some of you weren’t waiting 53; you weren’t born yet, but we’re very, very happy to have brought you a championship. I’m very proud of our team.”

Mike Brown

On Knicks fans and playing at Madison Square Garden:

“Playing in front of you guys when we had our ups was fantastic, but you’re the most knowledgeable foundation in the whole NBA. Your guys’ energy when we had our downs was off the charts, and I want to thank you for it. There’s nothing better than walking into the iconic building of MSG and getting down night after night after night in front of you guys. You guys made us feel the energy that brought us over the hump when we didn’t feel like playing, when our game wasn’t at the top again.”

Jalen Brunson

On believing the Knicks would finish the job:

“Somehow, some way. I knew we were going to find a way to get this done. Most importantly, thank you to the fans. Not gonna lie, though, y’all. Y’all are some pretty hard critics, but we appreciate it.”

On winning the championship:

“Damn, we really did it, dawg.”

On his critics and doubters:

“There’s a lot of people who have a lot of opinions. But when you prove them wrong, you really ought to, you don’t have to say s–t to them. Nah, they don’t deserve it.”

Miles McBride

On the championship parade:

“Couldn’t have imagined a better turnout. Thank you, Knicks nation.”

Tyler Kolek

On being mistaken for a fan and nearly tackled by the cops:

“I swear I’m on the team, bro.”

Leon Rose

On Mike Brown and the coaching staff:

“Mike Brown and our entire coaching staff, you came in this season with enormous expectations and completely exceeded them, and you did it with so much class that resonated with New Yorkers.”

Walt Frazier

On the championship parade crowd:

“This has exceeded any expectations I ever saw that we had. I mean, when we played, everybody was from the USA, so mainly our audience was black and white, but now they’re Hispanics, they’re Chinese, all different races that follow the NBA. It’s just been a magnificent thing to witness.”

On the 1973 celebration:

“That day was a lot of hoopla for us. Maybe we had 200 people here and some dignitaries, so we were very happy with that.”

On seeing the city embrace the Knicks:

“They would be amazed at what has happened to the Knicks and how they’ve really captivated the city this year. This has exceeded any expectations I ever thought that we’d have.”

Carmelo Anthony

On the championship’s impact:

“The whole city won. New Yorkers are, as they say, ‘lit’ right now.”

Spike Lee

On attending his first championship parade:

“I’ve never been to a parade ever. But I’m glad it’s this one!”

Zohran Mamdani

On New York during the Knicks’ championship run:

“New York City has just had some of the two most magical months in as long as any of us can remember. Over these past few weeks, as the Knicks kept winning, our city has come together as one.”

On the 53-year wait:

“For 53 long years we have watched, and we have waited. We have watched from nosebleeds and through gritted teeth, on televisions in the windows of electronic stores, and from projectors balanced on fire escapes. We have watched alone in our apartments with our heads in our hands, shoulder to shoulder at bars where the signal flickers, alongside friends and family who we wish, more than anything, could be here today, sharing this moment.”

On finally seeing a championship in New York’s streets:

“We waited without ever knowing if this day would come. We waited because we knew deep down in our sick, suffering hearts that it would. New York City, this team has done it. The New York Knicks are NBA champions.”

On the parade bringing the city together:

“So often, when this city comes together, it is because we are forced to by a moment of tragedy or adversity. What a gift it is to be brought together by pure, unfiltered joy.”

On why the championship reflected New York City:

“Let’s not pretend that this was inevitable. If you will allow me, I want to travel back in time. Eight days, Game 4, nine minutes and 33 seconds left in the fourth quarter. The Knicks are down 20. The analytics guys, the sports betting companies, the pundits who watch from far away, they do what they do. They run the numbers, they calculate the odds, they write the Knicks off, they give the Spurs a 99.6% chance of winning the game, a 99.6% chance of tying up the series 2-2, of reclaiming the momentum with the next game in San Antonio, a 99.6% chance of silencing the Garden of another year of watching and waiting, but there is one thing that the pundits just don’t get about this team, they just don’t get about this city. It is in that .4% that we go to work.”

On New York’s identity:

“Most of all, it’s in that .4% that the Knicks do what New Yorkers have always done. When we are told something is impossible, we find a way, we win. Standing here before what feels like the entire city, there is a Jalen Brunson quote I can’t stop thinking about. ‘You are allowed to think about the worst possible scenario, but you got to go out there and do something about it.’ The Knicks did not just win for New York City, they won like New York City. What is New York if not your back up against the wall, a dream that feels just out of reach, a rent payment you don’t know how you’ll ever make? What is New York if not 99.6% of the world stacked against you, and who are New Yorkers if not people who hear those odds and smile, who look at a .4% chance of success and ask, why are you giving me a head start? This is our city. This is our team.”

Mark Levine

On New York’s resilience:

“We do not back down, no matter how far behind we are. We were down on 9/11, and we came back. We were down in (Hurricane) Sandy, and we came back. We were down during COVID, and we came back. We were down against the Cavs, against the Spurs and we came back. We are New York. We don’t stop fighting. You should be afraid of us. We are the champs because of the New York Knicks.”

Aaron Judge

On New York sports success:

“A Knicks championship in June and a Yankees World Series in October would bring world peace. There’s a lot of winning going on in New York, so we got to keep that going. I like the team we have. I like the opportunity we’ve got in front of us. It’s going to be an exciting rest of the year.”

On attending Game 4:

“I went to Game 4 with my wife. We were kind of worried in the third quarter, but we knew the Knicks. Like [Jalen] Brunson said: They show up about thirty minutes late, take care of business. That was a special game. Never forget it.”

RZA

On Wu-Tang’s role in the Knicks’ run:

“At the end of the day, the first thing goes to the hard work of the coach and the players. But energy is everything. Energy can multiply. And so when the Wu-Tang came with that energy, we put a spark. So I like to tell people, we lit that wick that led to that explosion.”

On the Madison Square Garden vibes after the Game 4 performance:

“The building felt different after our performance. I think eventually that energy resonated and just permeated into our great New York team. Bong bong.”

On which other game could Wu-Tang have saved:

“Game three. I’m only saying game three because, look, if Wu-Tang would’ve performed, I don’t think the President would’ve took a nap. Our President, he’s a New Yorker. When that Wu joint would’ve been on, he would’ve been like, ‘Yo, you know what? Let’s keep the party rocking.’”

Kendrick Perkins

On Vincent Goodwill calling the title a participation trophy:

“That was a bunch of bulls–t. It was all the way disrespectful, and when I heard him say it, the first thing came to mind is that your ass never was an athlete then. You couldn’t have never participated or been a basketball player or played on anybody’s team talking that type of nonsense. That was the most asinine thing that I’ve ever heard.”

On Goodwill’s disrespect of current and past champions:

“You disrespect the guys who are champions by saying it’s a participation trophy. Like what the f–k are we talking about? Do you know that one in those eight teams that won over the last eight years, one of them was Steph Curry. And I guarantee you if you go ask Steph Curry which one of them was his greatest championship, nine times out of ten he’s going to say the fourth one, not just because he won Finals MVP but because he had to overcome the obstacle of being a defensive liability. And he did that.”

On the need for more media responsibility:

“As the media, we have a f–king responsibility, man, to make sure that we say and do the right things. We don’t go on the stage, on the platform, right after somebody just been crowned champions and call that s–t a participation trophy. Even if you’re thinking that, you don’t say that.”

Alex Moss

On creating the Knicks Larry O’B pendant:

“I knew they were going to win. I f—king knew they were going to win this thing. So I made it.”

On supporting New York creators:

“I think that it’s important to embrace people from this city who are doing great things for the city. We live and breathe New York, everyone in the company. Imagine if someone like Jason of Beverly Hills was making the Knicks pieces. It just doesn’t make sense.”

Stephen A. Smith

On Jalen Brunson saving the NBA from French-mad copycatters:

“He [Brunson] literally saved the NBA because if Victor Wembanyama and the San Antonio Spurs had captured an NBA championship, everybody would be evolving their game planning, their drafting, their analysis and everything that come with it. Everything would have been evolving around ‘How we do knock off the [7-foot-4] alien from France?’”

On Brunson’s influence on basketball:

“To see him [Brunson] play and to use his marvelous footwork, basketball IQ, poise, seasoning and fearlessness… to see him do that, just think about what that would mean to everybody. Think about what that does for the game of basketball. Without him winning this title, our default position would’ve been ‘How are we going to deal with the [7-foot-4] alien’?”

On drafting taller players to counter Wembanyama:

“You would’ve seen cats who might’ve been inferior talent, but they would’ve still turned around and drafted them anyway just because they were 6-foot-10 or 6-foot-11 or 7-feet tall because you need height when you’re going up against Wemby.”

On the Knicks being the best team in the East for 2027:

“We’re gonna keep it a buck. [The] New York Knicks shouldn’t be the favorites next season, even if they are the champions. If you know basketball and you’re covering basketball, you know what happened this year. You could look at this team and legitimately say the New York Knicks deserve to be the favorites coming out of the East. Without question, the Knicks should be the favorites to represent the Eastern Conference in next year’s NBA Finals — not the Celtics. I don’t give a damn if Jayson Tatum is healthy, okay?

On the Thunder being the No. 1 team in the West:

“We can’t put anything past the Oklahoma City Thunder. The Oklahoma City Thunder were in Game 7 of the Western Conference Finals. The Oklahoma City Thunder were without Jalen Williams and Ajay Mitchell, your second and third [best] scorers.

“When [Williams] is healthy, you can’t key on [Shai Gilgeous-Alexander] the way [the Spurs] did, double and triple teaming him. As a result, the reigning two-time MVP is free to get loose…so gotta look at it from that standpoint. Ajay Mitchell, some were debating whether he was better than Jalen Williams or not, that’s how much of a stud they both are, and they were both out.”

On his 2027 NBA Finals prediction:

“If they’re healthy, they beat the Spurs in the conference finals. Spurs ain’t in the Finals, they beat the Spurs and they would’ve been favored over the Knicks. So I think because that’s the reality, Oklahoma City is number one, Knicks number two and then everybody else is behind them. I believe right now, if you’re making a prediction, it should be the New York Knicks and the Oklahoma City Thunder will meet one another in the NBA Finals next year.”

Draft Slot History: Best players ever selected at picks 40 through 31

PHOENIX, AZ - 1993: Danny Ainge #22 of the Phoenix Suns dribbles circa 1993 at the America West Arena in Phoenix, Arizona. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 1993 NBAE (Photo by Andrew D. Bernstein/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Once upon a time, there was no limit to the number of draft rounds. It lasted as long as there were teams interested in drafting players. As the league expanded and evolved, the draft actually became smaller, eventually adopting the two-round format we know today in 1989. Even then, the second round began at pick No. 28 because there were only 27 teams in the league. The modern draft structure didn’t fully take shape until 2004, when the NBA expanded to 30 teams, and the draft became the 60-pick event we grew accustomed to for the next two decades.

That historical context is important as we continue our journey through picks 40 through 31. If you go back far enough, many of these selections weren’t even second-round picks. The 31st overall pick, for example, was a third-round selection in 1969. In 1960, the 40th overall pick was the final selection of the fifth round.

Times have certainly changed. But regardless of whether a player was selected in the second round, third round, or fifth round, the draft slot remains the draft slot. The objective of this exercise is to determine the best player ever selected at each position, regardless of the era in which they were chosen.

Today, we close out the modern front end of the second round. Before we begin, let’s take one final look back at the players who earned the title of best player selected at each draft position from No. 60 through No. 41.

PickPlayerYear
60Michael Cooper1978
59Pat Cummings1978
58Kurt Rambis1980
57Manu Ginobili1999
56Amir Johnson2005
55Luis Scola2002
54Sam Mitchell1985
53Anthony Mason1988
52Rasual Butler2002
51Kyle Korver2003
50Steve Kerr1988
49Eddie Johnson1997
48Marc Gasol2007
47Paul Millsap 2006
46Jeff Hornacek1986
45Bob Dandridge1969
44Malik Rose1996
43Michael Redd2000
42Stephen Jackson1997
41Nikola Jokic2014

And now, on with the show…

40. George Gervin (1974)

NEW YORK – CIRCA 1978: George Gervin #44 of the San Antonio Spurs drives on Butch Beard #9 of the New York Knicks during an NBA basketball game circa 1978 at Madison Square Garden in the Manhattan borough of New York City. Gervin played for the Spurs from 1974-85. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Honorable Mentions:

  • Gar Heard (1970)
  • Monta Ellis (2005)

Suns Taken at 40:

  • George Gervin (1974)*
  • Oso Ighodaro (2024)**

*opted to stay in the ABA
**rights obtained on draft day

Ah, what might have been…

The Iceman, George Gervin, spent the first two seasons of his professional career in the ABA. Then, with the fourth selection of the third round in the 1974 NBA Draft, the Phoenix Suns took a chance on him. It was a gamble. The Suns hoped the NBA’s appeal would lure Gervin away from the San Antonio Spurs of the ABA and bring him to Phoenix. But it never happened. He remained with the Spurs until 1976, when the NBA absorbed four ABA franchises, including San Antonio.

By that point, Gervin was already a three-time ABA All-Star. When he officially entered the NBA in 1976 at age 24, he immediately established himself as one of the league’s premier scorers. What followed was an incredible run. Gervin played 10 seasons in the NBA and was selected to the All-Star Game in nine of them. The only season he missed was his final year, when he played all 82 games for the Chicago Bulls.

His first nine NBA seasons, all with the Spurs, were nothing short of spectacular. Gervin led the league in field goals made three times. He led the league in field goal attempts three times. Most importantly, he captured scoring titles in 1978, 1979, 1980, and 1982. Night after night, he was an offensive machine.

By the time his career ended, Gervin had accumulated a résumé that included nine NBA All-Star appearances, three ABA All-Star selections, four scoring championships, seven All-NBA selections, and eventual induction into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.

Not bad for the 40th overall pick. And if you’re a Suns fan, it’s impossible not to wonder. What if he had said yes?

What if the Suns had successfully convinced him to leave the ABA and come to Phoenix in 1974? History unfolded differently, and Gervin became synonymous with the Spurs. Still, it’s one of those fascinating “what if” moments in franchise history.

Because for a brief moment, the rights to one of the greatest scorers the game has ever seen belonged to the Phoenix Suns.

39. Khris Middleton (2012)

AUBURN HILLS, MI – OCTOBER 26: Khris Middleton #32 of the Detroit Pistons handles the ball against the Atlanta Hawks on October 26, 2012 at The Palace of Auburn Hills in Auburn Hills, 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. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2012 NBAE (Photo by Allen Einstein/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Honorable Mentions:

  • Alvin Attles (1960)
  • Jerami Grant (2014)
  • Earl Watson (2001)

Suns Taken at 39:

  • Lloyd Kerr (1969)
  • Kevin Magee (1982)
  • Rafael Addison (1986)
  • Russ Millard (1996)

From one of the best players ever drafted outside the top 30 in George Gervin, we move to a player whose résumé is impressive in its own right, even if it doesn’t carry quite the same historical weight. Khris Middleton is the clear choice at No. 39.

The reality is, there isn’t a ton of high-end talent that has come from this draft slot, which makes Middleton’s career stand out even more. A three-time All-Star and an NBA champion, he has spent 14 seasons in the league proving that second-round picks can become foundational pieces of championship teams.

And he’s been remarkably consistent while doing it.

Over the course of his career, Middleton has averaged 16.1 points and 4.7 rebounds per game while shooting an impressive 38.5% from beyond the arc. Honestly, I didn’t realize his career three-point percentage was that high until I dug into the numbers. That’s elite efficiency sustained over more than a decade.

What makes Middleton’s career even more impressive is the role he played in Milwaukee. He wasn’t merely a complementary player. He was the co-star next to Giannis Antetokounmpo during one of the most successful eras in modern Bucks history. When Milwaukee won the championship in 2021, Middleton was often the player tasked with creating offense late in games and delivering in big moments. That’s a lot to ask of a player drafted 39th overall.

As we work our way through the 30s, Middleton might end up feeling a little underwhelming compared to some of the names that are still to come. That’s not a criticism of him. It’s more a reflection of how surprisingly strong this section of the draft has been throughout NBA history.

Because if you told any franchise they could guarantee themselves Khris Middleton with the 39th pick, they’d sprint that card to the podium. I’d happily take that every time.

38. Lou Dampier (1967)

LEXINGTON, KY – 1975: Louie Dampier of the Kentucky Colonels dribbles during a game played circa 1975 at Freedom Hall in Lexington, Kentucky. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 1975 NBAE (Photo by NBA Photos/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Honorable Mentions:

  • Steve Blake (2003)
  • Chandler Parsons (2011)
  • Spencer Dinwiddie (2014)

Suns Taken at 38:

  • Dean Garrett (1988)*

*opted to play internationally

As we arrive at the 38th overall pick, we find a collection of solid role players and long-term contributors. What we don’t find is an obvious NBA star. In fact, the best player ever drafted at this slot barely had an NBA career at all. That’s what makes Louie Dampier such an interesting case.

Normally, this exercise focuses almost entirely on NBA accomplishments. Dampier is one of the rare exceptions because what he accomplished in the ABA simply outweighs anything anyone else drafted at this position achieved professionally.

The Cincinnati Royals selected Dampier with the 38th overall pick in the 1967 NBA Draft. The Royals franchise would eventually become the Kansas City Omaha Kings, then the Kansas City Kings, and ultimately the Sacramento Kings. But Dampier never played for them. Instead, he chose the ABA, joining the Kentucky Colonels and becoming one of the defining players of that league.

Over nine seasons with Kentucky, Dampier averaged 18.9 points and 5.6 assists per game while establishing himself as one of the premier guards in the ABA. He was selected to seven All-Star Games, earned four All-ABA honors, and helped lead the Colonels to the 1975 ABA championship. For nearly a decade, he was one of the faces of the league.

Then everything changed in 1976. When the NBA absorbed four ABA franchises, the Kentucky Colonels were not among them. The franchise ceased operations, forcing Dampier to find a new home. That home became San Antonio.

At age 32, Dampier joined the Spurs and spent three seasons in the NBA. His contributions were modest compared to what he had accomplished in the ABA. He averaged 6.7 points per game during his NBA career and served more as a veteran presence than a star player.

But that’s okay. This selection isn’t about what he did in the NBA. It’s about the totality of his professional basketball career. When you look at everything Dampier accomplished in the ABA, seven All-Star appearances, a championship, multiple All-ABA selections, and nearly 19 points per game over nine seasons, his résumé easily rises above everyone else drafted 38th overall.

It’s one of those unique moments where the ABA history matters every bit as much as the NBA history. He’s in the Hall of Fame. And because of that, Louie Dampier earns the nod at No. 38. That and I just couldn’t give it to Steve Blake.

37. Nick Van Exel (1993)

OAKLAND, CA – 1997: Nick Van Exel #9 of the Los Angeles Lakers dribbles circa 1997 at the Oakland Coliseum in Oakland, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 1997 NBAE (Photo by Rocky Widner/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Honorable Mentions:

  • Mehmet Okur (2001)
  • Archie Clark (1966)
  • Eddie House (2000)

Suns Taken at 37:

  • Phoenix has never drafted from this position

The 37th overall pick has produced some solid NBA players over the years, but there isn’t a name that immediately jumps off the page as a franchise-changing talent. That said, I’m giving this one to Nick Van Exel. Suns fans of a certain age probably remember him well. In fact, many of us remember him because he always seemed to be a thorn in Phoenix’s side.

Van Exel was selected by the Los Angeles Lakers in 1993 and quickly established himself as one of the more entertaining point guards of his era. He played with flair, confidence, and a level of swagger that made him easy to root for if he was on your team and incredibly frustrating if he wasn’t.

His best years began in Los Angeles, where he earned the lone All-Star selection of his career in 1998. By that point, he had become one of the league’s better offensive guards, capable of scoring in bunches while also creating opportunities for teammates.

Over a 13-year career, Van Exel played for six different organizations. While many remember him as a Laker, some of his most productive seasons actually came with the Denver Nuggets. From 1998 through 2001, he averaged 17.7 points and 8.4 assists per game, proving he could be much more than a complementary player. He was a legitimate offensive engine who could run a team while still providing plenty of scoring punch.

And yes, he played well against Phoenix. That probably factors into my memory of him more than I’d like to admit. In 46 career games against the Suns, Van Exel averaged 14.0 points and 6.4 assists while shooting 40% from the field, 37% from three, and 70% from the free throw line. Those aren’t overwhelming numbers, but they felt impactful whenever Phoenix faced him.

Sometimes, certain players simply stick with you. Van Exel is one of those players for me.

36. Maurice Cheeks (1978)

PISCATAWAY, NJ – CIRCA 1979: Maurice Cheeks #10 of the Philadelphia 76ers drives to the basket against the New Jersey Nets during an NBA basketball game circa 1979 at the Rutgers Athletic Center in Piscataway, New Jersey. Cheeks played for the 76ers from 1978-89. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Honorable Mentions:

  • Clifford Robinson (1989)
  • Malcolm Brogdon (2016)
  • Mitchell Robinson (2018)

Suns Taken at 36:

  • Art Beatty (1968)
  • Jimmy Connor (1975)*
  • Charles Jones (1984)

*opted to play in the ABA

Uncle Cliffy, Cliff Robinson, was drafted 36th overall and certainly deserves a mention here. He had a fantastic career and was one of the most versatile forwards of his era. But if we’re talking about the greatest player ever selected at No. 36, it’s got to be Maurice Cheeks.

Drafted in the second round of the 1978 NBA Draft by the Philadelphia 76ers, Cheeks became one of the defining point guards of the 1980s. He wasn’t the flashiest player on the floor, and he certainly wasn’t the highest scorer. What he was, however, was a winner. Cheeks played a pivotal role on the 1983 Philadelphia 76ers championship team, one of the most dominant teams of that era.

His résumé is impressive. He was a four-time All-Star, a five-time All-Defensive Team selection, and one of the best perimeter defenders of his generation. Over the course of a 15-year career, Cheeks averaged 11.1 points, 6.7 assists, and 2.1 steals per game while consistently doing the little things that winning teams need.

What makes that 1983 76ers team so fascinating is the balance it possessed. You had the finesse and brilliance of Julius Erving. You had the overwhelming force of Moses Malone. Then you had Maurice Cheeks setting the tone in the backcourt, defending everybody, running the offense, and making life miserable for opposing guards. That team was loaded. And Cheeks was a huge reason why it all worked.

His career eventually took him to New York, Atlanta, San Antonio, and New Jersey, but he’ll always be remembered as a Sixer first and foremost.

And speaking of championships, congratulations are in order. More than four decades after winning a title as a player, Cheeks added another championship to his résumé this season as an assistant coach with the New York Knicks.

35. Draymond Green (2012)

SACRAMENTO, CA – DECEMBER 19: Draymond Green #23 of the Golden State Warriors in a game against the Sacramento Kings on December 19, 2012 at Sleep Train Arena in Sacramento, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2012 NBAE (Photo by Rocky Widner/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Honorable Mentions:

  • DeAndre Jordan (2008)
  • PJ Tucker (2006)
  • Rick Mahorn (1980)

Suns Taken at 35:

  • Allen Murphy (1975)*

*opted to play in the ABA

You’d be hard-pressed to find a more impactful player drafted 35th overall than Draymond Green.

At first glance, his statistical profile might not overwhelm you. For his career, Green has averaged 8.7 points, 6.8 rebounds, 5.6 assists, and 1.3 steals per game. Those numbers are solid, but they don’t immediately scream Hall of Fame. That’s because Draymond’s value has never been fully captured by the box score. His impact comes from everything else.

It comes from his defensive versatility. It comes from his leadership. It comes from his basketball IQ. It comes from his willingness to do all of the dirty work that winning teams require. And yes, it comes from the attitude and edge he brings to the court every single night.

Love him or hate him, Draymond Green helped define an era of basketball. The Golden State Warriors won four NBA championships with Green serving as the emotional heartbeat of the team. While Stephen Curry was the engine and Klay Thompson was the flamethrower, Green was the connective tissue that made everything work.

Green is a four-time All-Star, a two-time All-NBA selection, a nine-time All-Defensive Team honoree, and the 2017 Defensive Player of the Year. He has spent more than a decade serving as one of the league’s most versatile and disruptive defenders. For a second-round pick, that’s extraordinary value.

Finding a player who can become a franchise cornerstone is difficult enough in the lottery. Finding one at No. 35 overall is the type of outcome that changes the trajectory of an organization. That’s exactly what happened in Golden State. Draymond Green may never be remembered as the greatest scorer or the most talented player from his era, but his impact on winning is undeniable.

34. Carlos Boozer (2002)

CLEVELAND – OCTOBER 18: Carlos Boozer #1 of the Cleveland Cavaliers dribbles the ball during the NBA preseason game against the Utah Jazz on October 18, 2002 at Gund Arena in Cleveland, Ohio. The Cavaliers won 95-91. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory copyright notice: Copyright NBAE 2002 (Photo by David Liam Kyle/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Honorable Mentions:

  • Don Buse (1972)
  • Jae Crowder (2012)
  • Mario Chalmers (2008)
  • CJ Miles (2005)

Suns Taken at 34:

  • Don Buse (1972)*
  • Tyler Ulis (2016)

*opted to play in the ABA

I honestly forgot Carlos Boozer wasn’t a lottery pick. Coming out of Duke in the early 2000s, it felt like every notable Blue Devil ended up hearing his name called in the first half of the first round. But Boozer slipped all the way to No. 34, where the Cleveland Cavaliers selected him in the 2002 NBA Draft.

Looking back at the history of the 34th pick, it’s kind of interesting. You see names like Don Buse, Jae Crowder, and Mario Chalmers. None of them were superstars, but all of them carved out meaningful careers. It feels like this is the lunch pail draft slot, the place where teams find players who show up, put their heads down, and go to work. Boozer certainly fits that description.

After beginning his career in Cleveland, he eventually landed with the Utah Jazz, where he played the best basketball of his career. It was there that he became a two-time All-Star and earned an All-NBA Third Team selection. For several seasons, Boozer was one of the more productive power forwards in the league. He wasn’t flashy. He wasn’t revolutionary. He simply produced. Night after night, he gave you points, rebounds, toughness, and consistency. That’s why coaches loved him and why he remained a valuable player for so long.

By the time his career came to an end, Boozer had spent 13 seasons in the NBA while averaging 16.2 points and 9.5 rebounds per game. Those are impressive numbers for any player, let alone one drafted 34th overall. Was he a franchise-changing star? No. But he was dependable. He was productive. And he was always there. Sometimes that’s exactly what makes a player successful.

33. Jalen Brunson (2018)

PORTLAND, OR – DECEMBER 23: Jalen Brunson #13 of the Dallas Mavericks during in action against the Portland Trail Blazers at Moda Center on December 23, 2018 in Portland, Oregon.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 Jonathan Ferrey/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Honorable Mentions:

  • Bob Love (1965)
  • Kevin Duckworth (1986)
  • Happy Hairston (1964) What a name…

Suns Taken at 33:

  • Lamar Green (1969)
  • Scott English (1972)
  • Gary Melchionni (1973)
  • Butch Feher (1976)

Jalen Brunson, the newly minted NBA Finals MVP, was selected 33rd overall in the 2018 NBA Draft. And yes, it’s one of those drafts that can drive Suns fans insane if you stare at it for too long.

The Suns didn’t draft Luka Doncic. Shai Gilgeous Alexander went after Mikal Bridges. And Phoenix selected Elie Okobo while Brunson remained on the board. That’s why it’s usually best not to spend too much time looking backward. If you do it long enough, you’ll lose your mind.

When you look at the history of the 33rd overall pick, there are some solid players. Plenty of guys carved out respectable NBA careers. Brunson is different. He’s already a three-time All-Star. He’s already a three-time All-NBA selection. Now he’s an NBA champion and an NBA Finals MVP. And he’s only 29 years old.

If there’s one word to describe Jalen Brunson, it’s winner.

He won at the AAU level. He won at Villanova. He won in Dallas. And now he’s won at the highest level the sport has to offer. Everywhere he goes, success seems to follow.

What’s most impressive is the way he’s done it. Brunson isn’t an overwhelming athlete. He isn’t physically imposing. He doesn’t possess the size that teams traditionally look for when building around a franchise player. He simply knows how to play basketball. He’s tough. He’s smart. He’s disciplined. And when the game gets tight, he consistently delivers.

The Knicks didn’t win this championship because Brunson was along for the ride. They won it because he was the engine. He was the primary reason they reached the mountaintop. He was the player opposing defenses were trying to stop. He was the player making winning plays when the pressure was at its highest. For the 33rd overall pick, that’s about as good as it gets. And unless someone comes along with an even more decorated résumé, Jalen Brunson may hold this spot for a very long time.

32. Rashard Lewis (1998)

26 Feb 1999: Rashard Lewis #7 of the Seattle Supersonics walks on the court during the game against the San Antonio Spur at the Key Arena in Seattle, Washington. The Sonics defeated the Spurs 92-82 . Mandatory Credit: Otto Greule Jr. /Allsport | Getty Images

Honorable Mentions:

  • Bill Bridges (1961)
  • Caldwell Jones (1973)
  • Ivica Zubac (2016)

Suns Taken at 32:

  • Nick Vanos (1985)
  • Chad Gallagher (1991)*
  • Davon Reed (2017)
  • KZ Okpala (2019)

*opted to play internationally

As we prepare to close out the second round, the 32nd overall pick presents an interesting case. There isn’t a long list of All-Stars at this draft slot. The most accomplished player selected here is Rashard Lewis, whom the Seattle SuperSonics drafted directly out of high school in 1998.

Like many high school prospects of that era, Lewis needed time to develop. The talent was obvious, but it took a few seasons before everything came together. By his fifth year in the NBA, he had blossomed into one of the league’s better forwards, averaging 18.1 points and 6.5 rebounds per game while showcasing the kind of size and shooting ability that would become highly coveted in the years that followed.

Lewis earned two All-Star selections during his career, the first with Seattle in 2005 and the second with the Orlando Magic in 2009.

His move to Orlando elevated both his profile and his impact. With the Magic, Lewis became a key piece of a team that consistently competed near the top of the Eastern Conference. Alongside Dwight Howard, he helped usher in a modern style of basketball that relied heavily on floor spacing and three-point shooting from the power forward position.

The Magic never quite got over the hump, but they came close. In the 2009 NBA Finals, Lewis averaged 17.4 points and 7.6 rebounds per game against the Los Angeles Lakers. Orlando ultimately fell short, but Lewis played well on the biggest stage.

After his time with the Magic ended, he was traded to Washington in a deal involving Gilbert Arenas. From there, his career slowly began to wind down. Still, there was one final accomplishment waiting for him. Lewis joined the Miami Heat and won an NBA championship in 2013. His role was limited by that point, and he played only 12 minutes during the Finals, but a championship is a championship.

When it was all said and done, Lewis put together a career that most second-round picks could only dream of. He became a two-time All-Star, a key contributor on a Finals team, and eventually an NBA champion.

31. Danny Ainge (1981)

BOSTON – 1981: Danny Ainge #44 of the Bosoton Celtics watches the action from the bench during a game played in 1981 at the Boston Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 1981 NBAE (Photo by Dick Raphael/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Honorable Mentions:

  • Doc Rivers (1983)
  • Bojan Bogdanovic (2011)
  • Manute Bol (1985)

Suns Taken at 31:

  • Fred Saunders (1974)
  • Joe Ward (1986)
  • Negele Knight (1990)
  • Elie Okobo (2018)
  • Rasheer Fleming (2025)*

*rights obtained on draft day

We have some good names at the 31st overall pick, including Doc Rivers and Manute Bol. Both have strong cases, and both left their mark on NBA history. But this one is Danny Ainge’s.

The pesky, annoying son of a bitch out of BYU was drafted by the Boston Celtics in 1981 and quickly became the type of player opponents hated, and teammates loved. Long before Dillon Brooks was irritating fan bases around the league, Ainge was doing it in Boston. He was a pest. An agitator. An annoyance. And he played a key role on two Celtics championship teams during the 1980s.

By 1988, Ainge had fully come into his own. After becoming a regular starter during the 1984-85 season, he earned the lone All-Star selection of his career in 1988. That same season, he led the NBA with 1.8 made three pointers per game, a number that feels quaint today but was impressive for the era.

Boston eventually traded him to the Sacramento Kings in February 1989. The Kings then dealt him to the Portland Trail Blazers that offseason, a move that would eventually intersect with Phoenix Suns history.

Ainge helped Portland eliminate the Suns in the 1992 Western Conference Semifinals, a series that proved to be a turning point for the franchise. That 53-win Phoenix team had grown tired of postseason disappointment, and the loss helped push the organization toward the blockbuster trade that brought Charles Barkley to the Valley. Ironically, the Suns also brought in Ainge that same offseason via free agency.

His arrival paid immediate dividends. Ainge played 80 games for Phoenix during the 1992-93 season and helped the Suns reach the NBA Finals. It was the sixth Finals appearance of his career and his second consecutive trip after reaching the championship round with Portland the year before. Unfortunately for Ainge and the Suns, Michael Jordan was waiting on the other side. Just as Jordan had denied Portland in 1992, he denied Phoenix in 1993.

Ainge would spend the final three seasons of his career with the Suns, serving as a veteran leader and valuable contributor during one of the best stretches in franchise history. He would then join the coaching staff, and towels were thrown. You know the story.

When it was all said and done, he played 14 NBA seasons, averaged 11.5 points per game, and shot 37.8% from beyond the arc. More importantly, he won two championships, made an All-Star team, appeared in six NBA Finals, and built a reputation as one of the fiercest competitors of his generation.


And with that, we close the book on the second round and step into territory where the talent pool starts getting a little richer.

What stands out most from picks 40 through 31 is how many different paths to success exist in professional basketball. Hall of Famers, champions, All-Stars, role players, and a few fascinating “what ifs” all emerged from this stretch of the draft. It’s a reminder that value can be found anywhere if an organization knows what it’s looking for.

The lottery may grab the headlines, but NBA history has always been built on finding gems long after the spotlight has moved on.

Tyrese Maxey’s All-NBA leap kept the Sixers afloat

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - MAY 08: Tyrese Maxey #0 of the Philadelphia 76ers reacts during Game Three of the Second Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs against the New York Knicks at Xfinity Mobile Arena on May 08, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 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 Emilee Chinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Tyrese Maxey’s 2025-26 campaign started very similar to his year from a season prior. He was tasked with an incredible minutes load in order to lead whatever starting lineup was able to make it onto the court for the Sixers that night. Unlike the previous season, he was ready for the burden.

Coming out firing, Maxey was one of the league’s top scorers averaging 30.8 points per game through the first two months of the season shooting 46% from the field and 39% from three-point range. Even as his averages dipped as the season went on to 28.3 points and 6.6 assists per game on 46%/36%/89% shooting splits, it was still good enough for him to earn his second All-Star appearance and first selection to Third Team All-NBA.

On top of being the league leader in minutes per game, a reason Maxey’s production waned was a finger injury he suffered in March that sidelined him for roughly three weeks. He was able to return to form before the end of the regular season and played as big a part as any in the team’s comeback from down 3-1 in the series to defeat the Boston Celtics in the first round.

He tweaked that finger again early in their second-round matchup against the New York Knicks. Looking hampered, Maxey and the Sixers were dead on arrival against the eventual 2026 champions.

Despite having a familiar end, Maxey’s regular season was a delight from start to finish. He became the efficient scorer he needed to in order to be the No. 1 option of an offense, he handed the keys off to VJ Edgecombe enough to allow him to grow as a long-term running mate in the backcourt, and his chemistry with Joel Embiid made it possible to integrate the big fella quickly after extended absences.

Turning production into wins was the next step in Maxey’s journey. There’s still a lot of room for him to grow, but for the first time in Embiid’s career, it was a genuine debate as to weather he or Maxey was the most important Sixer on the floor to do so.

Obviously, the majority of the 3-1 deficit the Sixers fell into came before Embiid had returned from his appendectomy. At the same time, the only game the Sixers had a chance of taking off New York, Game 2, came without Embiid in the lineup and the difference in that game ended up being the minute and a half Maxey spent on the bench.

That’s one of many reasons why his performance in that series is weird to evaluate. The finger injury definitely hampered him. After averaging 26.9 points on 21.6 shots a game in the Boston series, he averaged just 18.3 points on 15 shots against the Knicks.

The second round series defeat highlighted a truth that had been emerging all season: it was hard for the Sixers to win if Tyrese Maxey wasn’t absolutely cooking.

That somehow hasn’t been as straightforward for the starting point guard on a max contract. The Sixers’ offense dramatically shifts to work around Embiid when he returns to the court, and it normally takes a game or two for them to figure that out and adjust. The most famous example of this may now be Game 4 against Boston.

Maxey even said during the season that he was struggling with the amount of roles he had to take on any given night.

His ability to do so is what’s made him the bridge for the franchise to transition from era to era. He sits right in between the aging former MVP trying to extend his career and the 20-year old who just had a potentially franchise-altering rookie season. For as long as the Sixers have their supposed “Big 4” on the roster, it is Maxey’s job to make it all make sense.

Houston’s Chris Cenac Jr.’s potential may be too enticing for Lakers to pass on

The 2026 NBA Draft is on the horizon, bringing one of the most significant dates on the league’s calendar. 

Childhood dreams of making it to the NBA will be achieved. 

Teams will turn draft assets into tangible players who they hope will contribute to winning in the short- and long-term future.

Former Houston star Chris Cenac Jr. (right) would be the steal of the draft if he still is available when the Lakers pick at No. 25. Getty Images

And in the background, teams will continue to explore the options that’ll help them achieve their goals for 2026-27. 

For the Lakers, who have a first-round pick in the draft (No. 25), the opportunity the draft presents as it pertains to roster building can’t be whiffed on.  

In their pursuit of assembling a roster that’ll be competitive against the 2026 Western Conference champion Spurs and 2025 NBA champion Thunder, the Lakers have two main options for their first-round pick: trade it for a player who’s ready to compete for a title now alongside Luka Doncic or select a prospect whom they plan to develop and hope will help now and in the future. 

If the Lakers choose the latter, there isn’t a shortage of options. 

Toward the top of that list should be Houston big man Chris Cenac Jr., whose potential and upside may be too enticing for the Lakers to pass on.


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Chris Cenac Jr., Houston big

2025-26 stats: 9.5 points (48.5% shooting — 55.1% on 2s, 33.3% on 3s), 7.9 rebounds, 24.8 minutes

Measurements: 6-foot-10 ¼ (without shoes), 239 pounds, 7-foot-5 wingspan, 9-foot-0 ½ standing reach  

Why draft Chris Cenac Jr.?

Cenac’s mix of size, fluidity and athleticism make him one of the more intriguing long-term prospects who could be available when the Lakers are on the clock with their first-round pick. 

He runs the floor and changes ends like a much smaller player. He’s a constant threat in transition and at the rim as a lob finisher and straight-line driver because of his physical tools and motor.

Lakers GM Rob Pelinka might be intrigued by Cenac’s mix of size, fluidity and athleticism. Getty Images

His hustle and willingness to play through contact was evident in his rebounding. Cenac averaged 2.2 offensive rebounds and did well converting second-chance opportunities. 

He showed flashes of reliable shooting from beyond the arc and midrange, with his perimeter shooting being one of the swing skills that’ll determine whether he reaches his potential. 

His ball-handling skills are more advanced than most players his size.

Cenac should be able to switch onto perimeter players in the NBA because of his size, quickness and effort.

He isn’t a traditional rim protector for a big man, but he showcased the ability to be a weakside shot blocker. 

The Lakers know they need to get younger and more athletic to keep up in the Western Conference, and Cenac would address both of those areas.

It’s important to point out that Cenac is repped by WME, the same agency that represents Doncic as well as Lakers big men Deandre Ayton and Jaxson Hayes.

Areas of improvement?

Cenac needs to get stronger to be a reliable big-man option.

He hustles and has a high motor, but needs to strengthen his frame to keep up with the NBA’s physicality and be able to play with force at the next level. 

His offensive game needs significant development: His lack of polish led to inconsistencies with his scoring.

The tools and potential from his passing to shooting are evident, but he isn’t a reliable offensive creator because of the inconsistencies. 

His 62.1% free-throw shooting with Houston is discouraging when it comes to hopes of him becoming a reliable perimeter shooter.

He also struggled with his non-dunk finishes, showing a lack of touch.

Cenac needs a team that’ll be patient with his development.

Hannes Steinbach could be impact rebounder for Warriors

The Warriors possess the No. 11 pick in this month’s NBA draft.

Who they pick with their highest selection since 2021 could hold the cards to not only the final years of Steph Curry’s career but also the future direction of the franchise.

This week, we are profiling five possible prospects GM Mike Dunleavy Jr. could target.

Former Washington forward / center Hannes Steinbach would help the Warriors improve on the glass. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Continuing with Part 3:

Hannes Steinbach

Age: 20

Position: Forward / Center

Height/weight: 6-foot-10 / 250 pounds

School: Washington

Why he’s a fit

The Warriors got a taste of what it was like to have a dynamic big man last season. But with Kristaps Porzingis and Al Horford’s futures up in the air, how about developing one of their own?

Steinbach will have been 20 for just over a month when his name is called on draft night, but the German big man already has experience as a professional overseas, as well as on the international stage. His domestic debut produced an eye-popping statistical freshman season.

Following in the footsteps of previous countrymen Detlef Schrempf and Christian Welp, Steinbach starred for the Huskies and lived up to his predecessors.

Steinbach dominated around the rim to the tune of 18.5 points and 11.5 rebounds per game, recording double-doubles in 22 of his 30 games — most in the nation.

His 353 total rebounds also led the country, and he has been described as the best rebounder in the draft class — an area of need for a Warriors team that didn’t have a player average more than six boards per game.

If Warriors coach Steve Kerr (above) has forward / center Hannes Steinbach on his roster next season, Golden State’s rebounding should improve significantly. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Why he’ll last until No. 11

The last time the Warriors spent a lottery pick on a big man it didn’t go so well.

Steinbach, however, is more Kevon Looney (30th overall, 2015) than James Wiseman (No. 2 overall, 2020). He is not a rim runner or a rim protector and has nothing more than a nascent perimeter shot but comes as a ready-made rebounder with a relentless motor.

The Warriors have struggled to incorporate traditional big men into their offense, but Steinbach’s cutting ability could help him succeed in Steve Kerr’s motion system.

Playing professionally in Germany and competing for his country on the international stage —  leading the Germans to the gold-medal game against Team USA in the FIBA U19 championships — makes Steinbach’s offensive game more mature than other amateur bigs.

However, he faced questions about how his size would hold up against NBA centers.

Steinbach helped assuage those concerns with a strong showing at the NBA combine, measuring in taller than 6-10 with a wingspan that adds another 4 inches. Most notably, he tipped the scales at 248 pounds after entering college at 220.

NBA comp: Domantas Sabonis

With a crafty offensive game, a physical frame and a magnet for rebounds, the NBA’s other successful European big men — Alperen Sengun being another — provide a frame of reference for the type of player Steinbach can become.

ICYMI

Yaxel Lendeborg could be steal of NBA draft

Brayden Burries could be instant playmaker for Warriors


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Trade Talk: Making a deal with the in-state rival Spurs

SAN ANTONIO, TX - JUNE 13: Keldon Johnson #3 of the San Antonio Spurs looks on during the game against the New York Knicks during Game Five of the 2026 NBA Finals on June 13, 2026 at Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE(Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant /NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Dallas Mavericks could use all the draft help they can get next week, and should be looking for picks in any trades they entertain. We previously looked at trade scenarios with the Sacramento Kings for Malik Monk, the Philadelphia 76ers for former MVP Joel Embiid and the Oklahoma City Thunder for Isaiah Joe. Today we look at a potential opportunity with the in-state rival San Antonio Spurs.

Once again joining me for this potential transaction are MMB’s Jack Nowicki and Bryan Porter.

The trade proposal

The Mavericks use their Traded Player Exception (TPE) to take on Keldon Johnson, and boost their draft capital by way of the Spurs’ 2027 first round pick and 2030 first round pick (which originally belonged to Dallas) for P.J. Washington.

The discussion

Mike: Ok, so this one admittedly took me a minute to really digest. I personally value Washington highly, but just have no real sense for what he’d go for on the market. I was afraid he wouldn’t fetch two first rounders, but it could make sense here. The Spurs don’t really “need” the picks, and a young vet like Washington could add a ton of value to them either starting in place of Julian Champagnie, or coming off the bench in Johnson’s role. My big question is would they want to give up an expiring and picks, in exchange for Washington and his three remaining (albeit relatively bargain) years? Bryan, you proposed this version of the trade – how do you see it as a win for both teams?

Bryan: For San Antonio, one of their recurring issues in the playoffs was the inability to protect the rim when Victor Wembanyama was pulled out of the paint. They also showed an inability to get defensive rebounds if Dylan Harper wasn’t crashing the glass with the bigs, and they lacked big forwards to throw at larger shot creators and post scorers in the clutch. Washington answers all that at a more than reasonable price for a Spurs team looking to carry their surprising form into next year. They could have this for the cost of a player who is beloved by the organization but who was ineffective for most of the playoffs, the 20th pick (even in a good draft) and a relinquished pick swap that likely wouldn’t amount to much if Masai Ujiri does his job properly anyway. Most importantly, they keep Washington away from Oklahoma City and the Denver Nuggets who faced similar issues this post season. For the Mavericks, we send out a valuable role player who has endeared himself to the fanbase, but replenish some draft capital for a move toward young talent this offseason. 

Mike: All compelling arguments! I was especially intrigued by the notion of an added bonus for San Antonio by way of preventing another West contender from having Washington’s services. You rarely ever hear of a team’s rationale being that, but you have to believe it factors into some of these trades. The Mavs would be wise to leverage that angle when and where they can.

What say you, Jack? Are you on board with this one, or do you have a counter argument as to why this either won’t work or the Mavs should pursue another avenue?

Jack: I agree with all of Bryan’s arguments listed above, as this trade makes a ton of sense for both sides. The Spurs are incredibly young and talented, but as we’ve seen in recent years, future success isn’t guaranteed. Adding an instant-impact veteran who fills a massive void in the frontcourt should be the top priority for the Spurs this offseason. While Washington had an up-and-down year last season, most of that could be attributed to a bad roster around him with a void of reliable playmaking. Washington would feast off Wembanyama’s gravity offensively, while further boosting the big-man’s shot-blocking impact. The Mavericks would obviously massively benefit from this trade seeing as they not only gain another pick in a great draft, but start the process of regaining their future picks. The main holdup in this deal could be Keldon Johnson, as his off-court value was massive for a young Spurs team last season.

Mike: I came into this discussion leery of the Spurs’ desire to give up their end of this deal, but have to admit I’ve been swayed a fair bit. Washington could be a huge pickup for San Antonio. As effective a front office as the Spurs have, the Mavs having Ujiri gives me confidence they won’t be pushed around (especially if they can leverage those other contenders). I could see the Spurs trying to finagle the deal so Harrison Barnes can be incorporated in lieu of Johnson (would have to be some sort of sign-and-trade, as Barnes if an unrestricted free agent). Barnes played 77 games and appeared in every playoff game… until he was outright benched for the final three games of the Finals. Throughout this season, he had some oddly limited minutes. If Dallas engages with the Spurs, I’d say they need to be careful not to get saddled with Barnes unless the haul of picks is too compelling to say no to. Getting Johnson gives the Mavs a vet leader to replace the one they’d be losing, and gives them a lot of contract flexibility. I’m more sold than I was that both teams could be big winners with the trade as proposed.

Bryan: The key question regarding Johnson is this: is he at the starting line for a longer arc of growth as a playoff player, or is this just about what we can expect from him going forward? As an off-ball slasher who isn’t a great connector or shooter, his game is certainly more suited to regular season play with a regular season whistle. Will the Spurs bank on further internal growth or decide to seek an upgrade?

Join the conversation in the comments section below! I invite you to follow me @_80MPH on X, and check back often at Mavs Moneyball for all the latest on the Dallas Mavericks.

Friday BP: Can the Giants match their 2025 trade deadline?

Robbie Ray and Tyler Mahle walking into a game together.
SAN FRANCISCO, CA - MARCH 25: Robbie Ray #38 and Tyler Mahle #54 of the San Francisco Giants arrive prior to the game between the New York Yankees and the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park on Wednesday, March 25, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Kavin Mistry/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

If you’re no stranger to McCovey Chronicles, then you’re probably aware that I’ve been pretty critical of Buster Posey during his tenure. Err, during his tenure as president of baseball operations, I should specify. Not sure I ever had a criticism of Posey during his tenure as Face of the Franchise/Captain America/All-World Catcher/Hugger Extraordinaire/Three-Time Champion.

While I’m in favor of giving Posey more time before reaching any grand conclusions, most of the results have been poor. His free agency signings have been middling. His managerial decisions have backfired. His control of the image of the Giants has been slipping. His unwillingness to address the bullpen has been baffling.

But there’s one area where Posey (and general manager Zack Minasian) have excelled without question: deadline deals.

The 2025 trade deadline was bizarre for the San Francisco Giants. Just a few days before the deadline, the Giants, still clinging to the belief that they could be competitive, were reported to be buyers. Then they lost a few games, admitted defeat, and turned into sellers.

What followed was excellence. The Giants sent out the expiring contract of Tyler Rogers for Drew Gilbert, Blade Tidwell, and José Buttó. They traded Camilo Doval (who currently has a 5.08 ERA this year), and got back Jesús Rodríguez, Parks Harber, Carlos De La Rosa, and Trystan Vrieling. They moved on from Mike Yastrzemski, an impending free agent, and received Yunior Marte in return.

It seems that the Giants are once again heading for sell-town. And they once again have some intriguing options: starting pitchers Robbie Ray and Tyler Mahle, and soon-to-be-four-time All-Star second baseman Luis Arráez are all on expiring deals. So too is reliever JT Brubaker. Center fielder Harrison Bader and starting pitcher Adrian Houser aren’t on expirings, but are paid modestly and have veteran cachet.

Barring a shocking winning streak, the Giants will have to fold their hand yet again, and turn their eye to the future. Can they match last year’s impressive deadline wheeling and dealing?

Stay tuned, I guess.

What time do the Giants play today?

The Giants kick off a series with the Miami Marlins tonight at 4:10 p.m. PT.

Friday Rockpile: Brett Sullivan and the Tao of the pitching catcher

May 24, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Colorado Rockies Catcher Brett Sullivan (26) pitches against the Arizona Diamondbacks in the eighth inning at Chase Field. Mandatory Credit: Anna Carrington-Imagn Images | Anna Carrington-Imagn Images

In 2015, Brett Sullivan was drafted by the Tampa Bay Rays.

In 2023, he made his MLB debut as a catcher with the San Diego Padres.

This season, the 31-year-old Colorado Rockie made another MLB debut, this time as a pitcher. The catcher, who played some infield in college and in the minors, but has spent most of his career as a backup catcher, had a simple philosophy.

“Try to get off the mound as fast as possible. That’s it,” Sullivan said. “I don’t want to be out there that long, so I just try to let the defense make all the plays for me. They’ve done a good job.

“The approach is to throw it maybe very slow, and then sometimes not as slow,” he continued, “but know that hopefully they hit it to my defense. That’s a whole approach.”

The Rockies signed Sullivan to a minor-league deal in the offseason, and he immediately made an impact as a mentor to young catchers Hunter Goodman and Braxton Fulford in spring training. Little did Rockies fans know that he’d be spending time on the other side of home plate.

On May 19, Sullivan pitched a scoreless, hitless ninth inning in a 10-0 loss to the Rangers. Having only pitched one time in the minors, he didn’t hesitate when the Rockies coaching staff asked him if he could “go out there and throw strikes.”

“I was like, ‘Yeah, I got it,’ and that was basically it,” he said. “So I keep it simple, but hopefully I don’t have to do it again because that means we’re not winning. I don’t know what I’m doing. I’m just lobbing it up there.”

Sullivan has pitched in three more games since May 19 — all, unfortunately, in four blowout losses. However, he’s posted three scoreless innings and totaled a 4.15 ERA in 4.1 innings with six hits, two runs, including one homer, one walk and one strikeout. With his humorous and outgoing personality, he doesn’t take preparing for his side pitching job too seriously.

“I just sat on the bench, and then when the next inning was over, I just walked out onto the mound. I didn’t warm up — no routine, no nothing, just straight from the bench,” Sullivan said. “I grabbed Jimmy Herget’s glove and walked right out there.”

Sullivan said he’s used Herget’s glove three times and Ryan Feltner’s once, adding he grabs whatever is closest. 

Even if he’s just eating an inning, Sullivan has earned some impressive stats on the mound. On May 26 against the Los Angeles Dodgers, Sullivan became the only player besides Shohei Ohtani to hit a home run and pitch in a game. 

“It feels good to be in the same category as him, you know,” Sullivan jokingly said. “No, it’s that was just a fluke — a crazy, lopsided game — and you get asked to pitch, and then it happens that your spot in the order came up and facing another position player. But they all count. And it’s a fun story.”

He also pitched [kind of] like Ohtani by putting up a scoreless frame.

In his most recent outing, the ninth inning in a 19-6 loss to the Giants on May 31, Sullivan recorded his first and only career strikeout thus far. It was a memorable one, too, coming against three-time All-Star and World Series Champion Rafael Devers.

“I don’t know if I threw a strike to him, but the umpire called them, so we’ll take it,” Sullivan said. “And again, good story. For it to be Devers, who’s going to be a Hall of Famer, is funny.”

Sullivan said he kept the ball to remember the moment. However, Sullivan said he’s not practicing pitching, but does have a great response when asked what his best pitch is.

“I throw like a little air cutter, and I hope that it’s slow enough that the gravity takes it the other way off their barrel,” Sullivan joked. “That’s my best pitch right now.”

Since May 26, in Sullivan’s Ohtani game, the Stockton, Calif. native has hit four homers in 23 at-bats. That includes a two-homer game against the Chicago Cubs on June 11.

Sullivan didn’t have any home runs in his 78 at-bats before that day in L.A. Some might say being a pitcher has made him a better hitter. Sullivan credits something else, namely, taking Mickey Moniak’s advice that he needed new pants.

“I changed my wardrobe a lot,” he said. “I would say that’s the biggest change. I switched it up. I am now wearing Mickey Moniak’s clothes, and we’re gonna roll with that.

“There’s honestly not much else to it,” he continued. “This game is a funny game, it’s a tough game, but when you just have a clear mind, let things go, have fun with it, I think that things happen.”

Moniak told him he needed new pants, and Sullivan proudly said, “I listened.”

“I’m just trying to bring him a little piece with him to the plate with me,” Sullivan said. “It’s good.”

From the easy-going attitude and the sneaky pop at the plate to his ability to pitch and stay positive as a journeyman, Sullivan’s Tao of the backup catcher now also includes pitching. With the Rockies facing struggles in the bullpen and injuries to the starting rotation, it’s likely Sullivan will be back on the mound again at some point this season. It’s a role he’s happy to play if the Rockies need him.

“I think it’s just to help the bullpen when games like that are really lopsided,” Sullivan said. “You don’t want to waste one of those good arms because the next day is an opportunity to win a game, and we’ll need those guys fresh.

“So, if I could just go in there and save those guys, then you know that’s a small victory for the next day.”


On the Farm

Triple-A: Albuquerque Isotopes 3, Sugar Land Space Cowboys 2 (10)

Drew Avans hit a walk-off single to score Nic Kent in the bottom of the 10th to lead the Isotopes to victory.

Jose Cordova hit a sac bunt to move Kent to third base to set-up the winning run. Albuquerque struck first when Zac Veen hit an RBI triple in the first inning to score Chad Stevens. Veen was thrown out at home trying to stretch it to an inside-the-park homer, but the Isotopes went up 1-0. The Space Cowboys tied the game in the seventh and took a 2-1 lead in the eighth. Albuquerque answered right back to tie the game 2-2 when Mike Antico hit an RBI single to score Avans.

Gabriel Hughes had a scoreless outing, striking out six while walking three and only giving up one hit in 4.2 innings. Jordan Romano kept the Space Cowboys off the scoreboard in the ninth and Erasmo Ramírez walked one, but struck out one in a scoreless, hitless 10th to earn the win. Avans, Veen and Ryan Ritter recorded two hits apiece to make up the majority of Albuquerque’s 10 hits.

Double-A: Hartford Yard Goats 10, Reading Fightin’ Phils 6

Hartford rallied from a 5-2 deficit with a three-run seventh inning on its way to a 10-6 win on Thursday. Conner Capel hit two homers, while GJ Hill added an insurance solo homer in the eighth and Roc Roggio did the same in the ninth. Capel went 3-for-5 with five runs driven in and Hill and Roggio each recorded two hits and two RBI. Davison Palermo earned the victory after throwing 1.2 scoreless innings, Carlos Torres posted the hold by limiting Reading to one run in two innings with a strikeout. Dyan Jorge drew two walks and scored two runs.

High-A: Vancouver Canadians 13, Spokane Indians 9

Despite taking the lead in the first, second and third innings, Spokane couldn’t hold on to any of them and lost on Thursday night. Max Belyeu and Jack O’Dowd started the game with solo homers in the first as the Indians jumped out to a 2-0 lead. Jacob Hinderleider scored on a wild pitch and Belyeu hit an RBI single in the second inning to take 4-3 lead. In the third, Tommy Hofpe added a two-run homer and Kelvin Hidalgo hit an RBI single to put Spokane up 7-4 in the third. O’Dowd answered back after Vancouver tied up the game again when he hit a sac fly and Hofpe recorded an RBI double to put the Indians back on top 9-8 in the sixth, but that was the last rally for Spokane as the Canadians got the final comeback with a five-run seventh.

Low-A: Fresno Grizzlies 2, Inland Empire 66ers 3

Tanner Thach hit a two-run homer in the first inning and the Grizzlies took a lead they never lost in a big win on Thursday night. Thach came up a triple short of the cycle, finishing the game with five RBI, three hits and three runs scored. Roldy Brito doubled on a two-hit night and scored two runs, Wilder Dalis added a double and run-scoring single and Ashly Andujar added a two-run single.

Riley Kelly started the game strong for Fresno, throwing 4.2 scoreless innings with eight strikeouts, three hits and three walks. Manuel Olivares recorded the win after holding the 66ers to one run on three hits with five strikeouts, while Luke Hansel pitched the ninth and struck out two, despite giving up a solo homer.


Looking back on notable first half rookie Rockie performances | Purple Row

Skyler Timmins explores the impressive debut TJ Rumfield is making so far in Colorado, comparing him to other breakout rookies in Rockies history like Todd Helton, Wilin Rosario and Trevor Story. What do they all have in common? Ten homers and 50 hits before the All-Star break.

Renck: Rockies had their Paul Skenes in Ubaldo Jimenez. Ex-ace has ideas on how to develop next power pitcher. | Denver Post ($)

The Rockies begin a home series against the Pirates today and on Saturday, Paul Skenes is slated to pitch. With a struggling rotation, Troy Renck points out that the Rockies need an ace like they had 16 years ago in Ubaldo Jiménez.

ValleyCats INF Parker Coddou Headed to Colorado Rockies | TCValleyCats.com

The Tri-City ValleyCats, an independent professional baseball team out of Troy, NY that plays in the Frontier League, announced that infielder Parker Coddou was signed to a deal by the Colorado Rockies. From 2002 through 2020, the ValleyCats were the Class-A short season affiliate of the Houston Astros. Coddou, who scored 25 runs and posted 23 hits, while also leading the ValleyCats in stolen bases with 14, becomes their third player to be signed by an MLB organization this season.


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MLB News Outside The Confines: Feeling a draft

Good morning. I hope you’ve already checked out the owners-proposed changes to the draft by now.