NBA season 2025-26 preview: Seven best duos in the NBA

The era of the "Big Three" is over. Dous are what is in around the league.

Blame the second apron of the NBA's luxury tax, but the days of front offices thinking in terms of needing three elite stars to win a title is at an end. It was always difficult to assemble such teams, but now the tax apron makes it incredibly difficult to keep three max players together with enough support around them to win for any length of time.

Elite duos — with a roster of high-quality role players around them — is the direction the league is heading now. Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown in Boston won a ring two years ago, while last season it was Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams.

Who are the best duos in the NBA? Here are my top seven (followed by some honorable mentions/names to watch).

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams (Thunder)

"I think both of us just trust each other, have the same mindset, winning mindset, want the best for each other above all," Gilgeous-Alexander said during the Finals of his chemistry with Williams. "Me and him are also naturally really good friends. We talk all the time on and off the court. Always together. That helps with it, for sure. Then we just use our experiences together to grow."

SGA and J-Dub were the driving force behind Oklahoma City winning 68 games last season, and they are the reason Adam Silver will be handing the team rings on opening night (right here on NBC and Peacock). It helps that their games complement each other.

Last season, the Thunder had a +13.1 net rating in the regular season when Gilgeous-Alexander and Williams shared the court (that was a still-impressive +7.1 in the playoffs). Their play and that ring makes them the most decorated duo in Thunder history — which is no small honor considering this franchise saw Russell Westbrook and Kevin Durant, and then Westbrook and Paul George.

One can argue OKC is a "Big Three" with Chet Holmgren — and all three are now on max extensions — but at the core, it is Williams and Gilgeous-Alexander that are the driving force that makes the Thunder the team to beat this season.

Nikola Jokic and Jamal Murray (Nuggets)

This remains the most devastating and unstoppable pick-and-roll combination in the league. This duo is why a championship banner hangs in Ball Arena.

They didn't take a step back last season: Denver had a +11.1 net rating when they shared the court, across 58 games. This season, the Nuggets' duo is surrounded by a deeper roster of quality role players — Cameron Johnson, Bruce Brown and Tim. Hardaway Jr. join returners Aaron Gordon, Christian Braun and Peyton Watson — but it is Jokic and Murray who make Denver the biggest threat to Oklahoma City in the West.

Donvan Mitchell and Evan Mobley (Cavaliers)

If any team outside OKC is close to a "Big Three," it is the Cleveland Cavaliers. Any combination of Mitchell, Mobley and Darius Garland works (and if you doubt how critical Garland is, think back to last year's playoffs and how their offense struggled as Garland was not nearly himself trying to play through a turf toe injury).

However, we are putting Mitchell and Mobley as the key duo — if the Cavaliers are going to make it to the NBA Finals for the first time without that "kid from Akron," this is the duo that will fuel it. Mobley is the Defensive Player of the Year who added 18.5 points and 9.3 rebounds a game last season, and the Cavaliers are banking on him making another offensive step forward next season. Mitchell is the first-team All-NBA rock this team relies on for big plays, a guy who averaged 24 points and five assists a game last season.

When Mitchell and Mobley shared the court last season, the Cavaliers had a +11.1 net rating. Do that again and Cleveland likely sets itself up to repeat as the No. 1 seed in the East and give itself a chance to make it to the Finals.

Stephen Curry and Draymond Green (Warriors)

At the end of the day, these are the two men Steve Kerr trusts more than any others — they were the Warriors' most used pairing last season, and the team had a +7.3 net rating when they shared the court.

Curry's legendary shooting and handles are the gravity that opens up the Warriors' offense, and Green's passing out of the short roll keeps the offense humming. Plus, Green remains the middle linebacker of the Warriors' defense.

Yes, the Warriors have Jimmy Butler plus some key role players, but if Golden State is going to make postseason noise, it will be because Curry and Green are in vintage form.

Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns (Knicks)

This duo, thrown together just before the opening of training camp last season, ended up lifting the Knicks to the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time in 25 years.

It also was not a seamless fit. The Knicks had a +4.9 net rating when Towns and Brunson shared the court, with weak defensive numbers holding them back. That defense looked better by the playoffs, after Mitchell Robinson had returned and played next to Towns.

The potential is there for more, and new coach Mike Brown will lean into the depth of this roster, seeking better combinations while giving his stars some rest. Still, if the Knicks are going to take advantage of their opportunities in the East this season, it has to start with Brunson and Towns, and them being a little more comfortable and playing better off each other this season.

LeBron James and Luka Doncic (Lakers)

Two of the highest IQ players in the game next to each other, two brilliant passers who can both score. This duo has the potential to be unstoppable.

That wasn't the case last season, when Doncic was shockingly traded to Los Angeles at the February deadline — the Lakers had a +2 net rating when they shared the court. Defense was what held them back.

Now, with a full training camp to iron out the kinks, expectations are high in Los Angeles (they always are with Lakers fans), especially with "skinny" Luka showing up to camp. However, defense remains the primary concern: Doncic is a solid team defender but can be targeted individually, LeBron can dial up stretches of defense still but is no longer a consistent force on that end, and another starter in Austin Reaves is a target. That's going to put a lot of pressure on new center DeAndre Ayton to clean up issues in the paint and around the rim. How coach J.J. Redick handles this team's defense will be one of the key questions of the season.

Still, with the duo of LeBron and Luka, the Lakers can beat anybody on a given night.

James Harden and Ivica Zubac (Clippers)

The most overlooked duo in the NBA: They played the third most minutes of any two-man combo in the league last season, and the Clippers had a very impressive +10.3 net rating when they shared the court.

While he has a deep roster to lean on through 82 games, expect coach Tyronn Lue to play a lot of Harden and Zubac together, using their two-man game. Lue, as a coach, leans into what works and this pairing works.

Honorable mention:

• Victor Wembanyama and De'Aaron Fox (Spurs). We only saw them together for five games last season (before Wembanyama's shoulder blood clots ended his season), but if they mesh as expected, I could look foolish for not having them in the top seven.
• Kevin Durant and Amen Thompson (Rockets). A potentially devastating pairing on the wing, and one with a lot more shot creation and team organization responsibilities now that Fred VanVleet is out for the season.
• Paolo Banchero and Franz Wagner (Magic). We only got to see them together for 40 games last season (the team had a +3.8 net rating in the minutes they shared the court). Orlando is poised for a leap this season, but needs this duo to stay healthy and take a step forward together.
• Trae Young and Jalen Johnson (Hawks). Another team with a great offseason, but if this team is going to make the leap from being a perpetual play-in team to a top-four squad, these two have to carry the heavy load. Last season the Hawks were a +4.3 when they were on the court together, but that was only in 34 games due to injuries.
• Paul George and Joel Embiid (76ers). Potentially as good as any duo on this list, but they have to stay healthy and on the court this season. Last season they played just 18 games together and both enter this season with questions about their health.

NBA season 2025-26 preview: 7 best duos in the NBA

The era of the "Big Three" is over. Dous are what is in around the league.

Blame the second apron of the NBA's luxury tax, but the days of front offices thinking in terms of needing three elite stars to win a title is at an end. It was always difficult to assemble such teams, but now the tax apron makes it incredibly difficult to keep three max players together with enough support around them to win for any length of time.

Elite duos — with a roster of high-quality role players around them — is the direction the league is heading now. Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown in Boston won a ring two years ago, while last season it was Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams.

Who are the best duos in the NBA? Here are my top seven (followed by some honorable mentions/names to watch).

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams (Thunder)

"I think both of us just trust each other, have the same mindset, winning mindset, want the best for each other above all," Gilgeous-Alexander said during the Finals of his chemistry with Williams. "Me and him are also naturally really good friends. We talk all the time on and off the court. Always together. That helps with it, for sure. Then we just use our experiences together to grow."

SGA and J-Dub were the driving force behind Oklahoma City winning 68 games last season, and they are the reason Adam Silver will be handing the team rings on opening night (right here on NBC and Peacock). It helps that their games complement each other.

Last season, the Thunder had a +13.1 net rating in the regular season when Gilgeous-Alexander and Williams shared the court (that was a still-impressive +7.1 in the playoffs). Their play and that ring makes them the most decorated duo in Thunder history — which is no small honor considering this franchise saw Russell Westbrook and Kevin Durant, and then Westbrook and Paul George.

One can argue OKC is a "Big Three" with Chet Holmgren — and all three are now on max extensions — but at the core, it is Williams and Gilgeous-Alexander that are the driving force that makes the Thunder the team to beat this season.

Nikola Jokic and Jamal Murray (Nuggets)

This remains the most devastating and unstoppable pick-and-roll combination in the league. This duo is why a championship banner hangs in Ball Arena.

They didn't take a step back last season: Denver had a +11.1 net rating when they shared the court, across 58 games. This season, the Nuggets' duo is surrounded by a deeper roster of quality role players — Cameron Johnson, Bruce Brown and Tim. Hardaway Jr. join returners Aaron Gordon, Christian Braun and Peyton Watson — but it is Jokic and Murray who make Denver the biggest threat to Oklahoma City in the West.

Donvan Mitchell and Evan Mobley (Cavaliers)

If any team outside OKC is close to a "Big Three," it is the Cleveland Cavaliers. Any combination of Mitchell, Mobley and Darius Garland works (and if you doubt how critical Garland is, think back to last year's playoffs and how their offense struggled as Garland was not nearly himself trying to play through a turf toe injury).

However, we are putting Mitchell and Mobley as the key duo — if the Cavaliers are going to make it to the NBA Finals for the first time without that "kid from Akron," this is the duo that will fuel it. Mobley is the Defensive Player of the Year who added 18.5 points and 9.3 rebounds a game last season, and the Cavaliers are banking on him making another offensive step forward next season. Mitchell is the first-team All-NBA rock this team relies on for big plays, a guy who averaged 24 points and five assists a game last season.

When Mitchell and Mobley shared the court last season, the Cavaliers had a +11.1 net rating. Do that again and Cleveland likely sets itself up to repeat as the No. 1 seed in the East and give itself a chance to make it to the Finals.

Stephen Curry and Draymond Green (Warriors)

At the end of the day, these are the two men Steve Kerr trusts more than any others — they were the Warriors' most used pairing last season, and the team had a +7.3 net rating when they shared the court.

Curry's legendary shooting and handles are the gravity that opens up the Warriors' offense, and Green's passing out of the short roll keeps the offense humming. Plus, Green remains the middle linebacker of the Warriors' defense.

Yes, the Warriors have Jimmy Butler plus some key role players, but if Golden State is going to make postseason noise, it will be because Curry and Green are in vintage form.

Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns (Knicks)

This duo, thrown together just before the opening of training camp last season, ended up lifting the Knicks to the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time in 25 years.

It also was not a seamless fit. The Knicks had a +4.9 net rating when Towns and Brunson shared the court, with weak defensive numbers holding them back. That defense looked better by the playoffs, after Mitchell Robinson had returned and played next to Towns.

The potential is there for more, and new coach Mike Brown will lean into the depth of this roster, seeking better combinations while giving his stars some rest. Still, if the Knicks are going to take advantage of their opportunities in the East this season, it has to start with Brunson and Towns, and them being a little more comfortable and playing better off each other this season.

LeBron James and Luka Doncic (Lakers)

Two of the highest IQ players in the game next to each other, two brilliant passers who can both score. This duo has the potential to be unstoppable.

That wasn't the case last season, when Doncic was shockingly traded to Los Angeles at the February deadline — the Lakers had a +2 net rating when they shared the court. Defense was what held them back.

Now, with a full training camp to iron out the kinks, expectations are high in Los Angeles (they always are with Lakers fans), especially with "skinny" Luka showing up to camp. However, defense remains the primary concern: Doncic is a solid team defender but can be targeted individually, LeBron can dial up stretches of defense still but is no longer a consistent force on that end, and another starter in Austin Reaves is a target. That's going to put a lot of pressure on new center DeAndre Ayton to clean up issues in the paint and around the rim. How coach J.J. Redick handles this team's defense will be one of the key questions of the season.

Still, with the duo of LeBron and Luka, the Lakers can beat anybody on a given night.

James Harden and Ivica Zubac (Clippers)

The most overlooked duo in the NBA: They played the third most minutes of any two-man combo in the league last season, and the Clippers had a very impressive +10.3 net rating when they shared the court.

While he has a deep roster to lean on through 82 games, expect coach Tyronn Lue to play a lot of Harden and Zubac together, using their two-man game. Lue, as a coach, leans into what works and this pairing works.

Honorable mention:

• Victor Wembanyama and De'Aaron Fox (Spurs). We only saw them together for five games last season (before Wembanyama's shoulder blood clots ended his season), but if they mesh as expected, I could look foolish for not having them in the top seven.
• Kevin Durant and Amen Thompson (Rockets). A potentially devastating pairing on the wing, and one with a lot more shot creation and team organization responsibilities now that Fred VanVleet is out for the season.
• Paolo Banchero and Franz Wagner (Magic). We only got to see them together for 40 games last season (the team had a +3.8 net rating in the minutes they shared the court). Orlando is poised for a leap this season, but needs this duo to stay healthy and take a step forward together.
• Trae Young and Jalen Johnson (Hawks). Another team with a great offseason, but if this team is going to make the leap from being a perpetual play-in team to a top-four squad, these two have to carry the heavy load. Last season the Hawks were a +4.3 when they were on the court together, but that was only in 34 games due to injuries.
• Paul George and Joel Embiid (76ers). Potentially as good as any duo on this list, but they have to stay healthy and on the court this season. Last season they played just 18 games together and both enter this season with questions about their health.

Mets owner Steve Cohen apologizes to fans after team misses playoffs: 'The result was unacceptable'

Mets owner Steve Cohenapologized to the fans following Sunday's loss, which resulted in the team missing the playoffs after racing out to a 45-24 record.

"Mets fans everywhere. I owe you an apology," Cohen wrote on X (formerly Twitter). "You did your part by showing up and supporting the team. We didn’t do our part. We will do a post-mortem and figure out the obvious and less obvious reasons why the team didn’t perform up to your and my expectations.

"We are all feeling raw emotions today. I know how much time and effort you have put into this team. The result was unacceptable. Your emotions tell me how much you care and continues to motivate the organization to do better. Thank You to the best fans in sports."

The Mets entered the year with World Series expectations, but had one of the worst records in baseball from the middle of June through the end of the regular season.

That resulted in them falling out of playoff position, even though they had a chance in the final weekend to secure a spot in the postseason.

Had the Mets won Sunday's game against the Marlins in Miami, they would've punched their ticket to the Wild Card Series, where the Dodgers were waiting.

Instead, the Mets lost, 4-0, bringing their campaign to a close.

As the Mets look to reshape their roster ahead of the 2026 season, there are lots of burning questions.

Among them: the futures of Pete Alonsoand Edwin Diaz, how to fix the starting rotation, and whether the offensive core will be shaken up. 

Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns will hold his end-of-season news conference on Monday at 3:30 p.m. It will air live across SNY's social media platforms. 

NHL Should Be Inspired By MLB And CFL's Rule Changes

If you weren’t paying attention to the larger sports picture last week, you may have missed the significant changes two prominent pro sports leagues made to their product.

The first was MLB’s decision to finally employ video review of balls and strikes calls. The second was the CFL’s move to radically alter the dimensions of their playing surface and the changes to their goal-post locations.

“Tradition Meets Innovation” was how the CFL painted its changes. That was a smart way to put it, because all leagues absolutely should be using technology and thinking outside the box when it comes to changing the way they provide entertainment. This is why the NHL needs to be equally brave when it comes to changing the way its game functions.

For a while now, we’ve argued that the NHL should be employing a third referee – an off-ice official who serves as an “eye-in-the-sky” referee who can buzz down to the two on-ice referees and get a stoppage in play to make a call the two on-ice refs have missed.

Yes, it would be a significant change for the NHL, but the decisions made by the MLB and CFL are equally huge, if not even more so.

When you change the size of your playing field, you’re making a big move. When you use video replay to challenge balls and strikes, you’re making a big move. But there’s only one real question you should be asking – does this move lead to a fairer, more entertaining game? Clearly, the CFL and MLB believe that’s the case. A system that leads to fewer missed calls is absolutely a system the NHL should be employing.

Anyone who’s watched an NHL game in recent years knows the action has gotten nearly impossibly quick, and the two-referee system can’t help but miss out on a penalty call or get it wrong here and there.

But at a time when parity has never been greater, one or two blown calls can decide how a game or series plays out.

So while it might feel foreign at first to see an on-ice sequence stopped out of nowhere, if an eye-in-the-sky referee makes a call, they’d do so knowing the call will be watched and re-watched over and over again. It’s paramount they get the call right. But if we’re giving the off-ice referee final say in calls – and that’s the idea here, so as not to have endless delays and debate waiting for calls to be finalized – then we have to be assured the off-ice referee knows what they’re doing.

But the bottom line isn’t about the particulars of a three-referee, eye-in-the-sky official to be added to the mix. The bottom line is that calls are being made that would have otherwise been missed. That’s what MLB is doing with its new video replay rule changes. And that’s a noble reason for the NHL to reconsider its officiating system.

The whole idea is that no team or fan base should be able to point to a blown call as the reason their team didn’t succeed. (Of course, we’ll never get to 100 percent satisfaction with every call that’s made, but that’s something we should aspire to nonetheless.)

Chris Rooney and Graham Skilliter (Jerome Miron-Imagn Images)

How would this type of change come about? Well, the NHL would have to run it by the competition committee and the Board of Governors, but the league has shown in the past it can pass any change it likes in short order, depending on the urgency behind it. For full proof, search up “the Sean Avery Rule” and see for yourself the speed at which the league can change a rule when it really wants to.

In any case, we will continue to discuss the three-referee system, as we believe it has value. If we accept the officials as human-and-therefore-flawed actors in this sports business, finding a way to cover off some of the calls they’ll inevitably miss is what they should be doing all the time, over and over, until they get close to total success in that regard.

Remember, it wasn’t all that long ago that the NHL had only a one-referee system. Can you imagine all the calls they’d have missed if they stubbornly stuck to their one-ref system because of hollow notions of “tradition?” The mind truly boggles at the thought. 

So yeah, the NHL should follow the lead of the CFL and MLB and do what’s within its power to change the game for the better. A static league is not always a successful one, and the NHL needs to bear that in mind when the notion of change arises again.

For action-packed issues, access to the entire magazine archive and a free issue, subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/free. Get the latest news and trending stories by subscribing to our newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com.

Kings' veteran guard Dennis Schröder ready to run point with his new team

Kings' veteran guard Dennis Schröder ready to run point with his new team originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SACRAMENTO – Almost to a man, the Kings spent much of Monday’s media day gushing about the offseason acquisition of Dennis Schröder.

The 32-year-old point guard is part of general manager Scott Perry’s makeover meant to get his squad back to being relevant after an overwhelmingly disappointing 2024-25 NBA campaign left fans wringing their hands and muttering in frustration when they walked out of a beam-less Golden 1 Center last season.

First-time head coach Doug Christie was at the forefront, leading the cheers. Schröder was a player the coach had been eyeing for some time, and Christie sounded like a kid on Christmas morning while talking to reporters about the veteran point guard during Monday’s media day.

“Identifying Dennis in the offseason was big for me,” Christie said. “I’m a super, super fan. I really appreciate how he brings his heart to the game. Handing him the basketball makes me feel real comfortable that he’s going to bring the right type of demeanor and leadership and all of those things.

“As a coach, I want him to exemplify me on the floor. And if you guys know me, I’m a little rough and I think that that is a lot of what you see with him. He’s not backing down. Super excited to have him, super excited that he is our point guard and leading us into the future.”

Signing Schröder to a three-year, $45 million contract over the summer solved the Kings’ biggest offseason question.

Sacramento has been without a true point guard since trading away De’Aaron Fox early last season. Zach LaVine played out of position and ran the point for most of the season after Fox’s departure, with Keon Ellis coming off the bench to orchestrate the offense while LaVine rested.

Schröder’s arrival theoretically should bring some stability to Sacramento’s backcourt, a sentiment that is shared by several of his new teammates, who expressed their fondness after he helped Germany capture the gold medal at the FIBA EuroBasket tournament.

“True guard, veteran guard that knows the game,” Malik Monk said. “Just came off MVP (In EuroBasket). Not too many people can say that and come back and play in the NBA. That just shows how great he is of a player.”

Kings’ big man Domantas Sabonis echoed Monk, pointing out Schroder’s international success as being a key factor.

“Dennis is fantastic,” Sabonis said. “He’s been proving it in FIBA the last couple of years, doing amazing things. (Has) a high IQ and who can get all of us in the right position.”

Therein lies the rub.

Schröder has made his bones in the NBA by playing tight, efficient and gritty defense. A first-round pick by the Atlanta Hawks in 2013, he will be asked to bring that same intensity to the state capital while being handed the reigns to run Christie’s offense.

It’s a challenge Schröder welcomed, given that the Kings’ offensive firepower trio of scorers in Sabonis, LaVine and DeMar DeRozan should make facilitating the offense pretty easy.

“How we want to play, everybody is touching the ball, everybody is sharing it,” Schröder said. “We play fast. Everybody shooting a lot of threes, putting pressure on the rim. I think that’s the most fun playing basketball. I think everybody just going to be engaged defensively. I think it starts there and then offensively.

“If we commit on winning basketball, I think we’re going to be really, really tough. It starts tomorrow with training camp, getting on the same page, everybody being focused and willing to commit to basketball, winning basketball.”

Schröder brings a lot more to the Kings than just his defense and the ability to run an offense. With 12 years of experience under his belt, Schroder brings a voice of experience and leadership that should benefit a team with a young roster like Sacramento’s.

“I think just playing with pace, defensively, picking up 94 feet, bringing intensity on that end, kind of that dog mentality,” Schroder said. “Offensively playing with pace, sharing the ball, move the defense side to side, That’s how we play with the national team and we had a lot of success that way. And I hope that we can come together as a team doing the same things, and it’s going to be really, really hard to stop us then.”

As much as the spotlight is on Schröder and the Kings’ offense, his main focus will remain on defense.

“That’s my game, always try to do the right things for the team defensively,” he said. “I think we can pick it up another level. And that’s that’s the reason why I’m here. I’ve been doing this my whole life. I always had to find my way so I can impact the game. That’s just my identity. That’s how I play. And I hope that the Kings organization, my teammates love that and bring the same physicality or the same mindset.

“Because if we do that, I think it’s really, really tough to beat us and to play against us.”

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'He's Done What We Asked Him To Do': Easton Cowan Remains On Fourth Line As Maple Leafs' Lineup Begins To Take Shape

Before the Toronto Maple Leafs headed to Gravenhurst, Ontario, for a team-bonding trip, they practiced at Ford Performance Centre with a trimmed-down group of players.

There aren't many surprises as we cross the midway point of Maple Leafs training camp. Max Domi remains with Auston Matthews and Matthew Knies. Bobby McMann is with John Tavares and William Nylander. Matias Maccelli is beside Nicolas Roy and Dakota Joshua. Easton Cowan is with Scott Laughton and Steven Lorentz.

It's not shocking to see Cowan remain with Toronto's fourth line. But it's telling that he stayed there while Nick Robertson, David Kampf, and Calle Jarnkrok skate as a line wearing grey jerseys, usually designated for scratches.

Maple Leafs head coach Craig Berube doesn't want to set anything in stone yet, though.

"I mean, I don't ever count anything out, and I don't want to do that. I don't think it's fair," Berube said on Monday. "Camp's still on. Camp's still going. There's people staying here and training, working, so we'll see how it goes. I'm not going to count anything out."

Despite not giving any information on who might make the team for opening night (which is nine days away), Berube's answer on how Cowan has surprised him at this training camp was rather interesting.

"I think the detail of his game. We talked about before camp, him and I, about what he needs to do to play in the NHL right now. What's going to get him to the NHL right now, and I think he's done that," Toronto's head coach said.

"He's taken that, and he's done what we asked him to do. The hounding part of the game. Just the work ethic and the compete, playing predictable, playing direct, and for me, he's done that so far in camp, and he's done it in the games too."

Has Easton Cowan’s Previous Experience As A 4th Liner Set Him Up For Similar Role With The Maple Leafs?Has Easton Cowan’s Previous Experience As A 4th Liner Set Him Up For Similar Role With The Maple Leafs?Easton Cowan is doing everything he can to make the Toronto Maple Leafs out of training camp, and it’s showing.

Even Maple Leafs captain Auston Matthews has been impressed with the 19-year-old.

"You can see the confidence has always been there. He's a little bit bigger, a little bit stronger (this year). It looks like the pace doesn't really affect him. He's keeping up with the pace really well," Matthews said.

"He's the kind of player that I find can slow the game down as well and speed it up when he has to. When he's on the ice and he has the puck on his stick, he can make a lot happen and can kind of do a lot of different things to control the game...

"He's had a great camp so far. It's been a lot of fun to see and just kind of see him progress over the last three years from when he was first drafted to see kind of where he is at now. And obviously his ceiling is going to continue to grow."

Simon Benoit skated alongside Oliver Ekman-Larsson during practice on Monday despite wearing a red non-contact jersey. He's been dealing with an upper-body injury since the opening days of training camp.

Henry Thrun, Philippe Myers, and Dakota Mermis appear to be the three players who'll battle to become Toronto's seventh defenseman. Anthony Stolarz and Dennis Hildeby were the two goaltenders on the ice with the main group.

Maple Leafs Officially Sign Anthony Stolarz To 4-Year, $15 Million Contract ExtensionMaple Leafs Officially Sign Anthony Stolarz To 4-Year, $15 Million Contract ExtensionThe Toronto Maple Leafs have signed goaltender Anthony Stolarz to a four-year contract worth $15 million, the club announced on Sunday afternoon.

Stolarz, who signed a four-year, $15 million extension with the Maple Leafs on Sunday, received an ovation from his teammates before practice, and even led the club in stretches at the conclusion of the skate.

"It was good. It's a long process. I'm happy with it," Stolarz said. "I got to a number that my family, agent and I felt comfortable with, and obviously (Brad Treliving) felt comfortable with as well. So looking forward to being in Maple Leaf for this year and four more years."

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Maple Leafs Officially Sign Anthony Stolarz To 4-Year, $15 Million Contract Extension

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Golden State vets address Jonathan Kuminga cloud hanging over Warriors Media Day

Golden State vets address Jonathan Kuminga cloud hanging over Warriors Media Day originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO – At the annual event when the NBA reintroduces itself to the world, as the Warriors did on Monday, it is incredibly difficult for a reserve player to overshadow three teammates destined for the Hall of Fame.

It ought to be impossible when that reserve is not even in the building.

Yet that’s how it played out at Chase Center. To the podium strode Stephen Curry, four-time NBA champion and one of the top 10 players in NBA history. Then came Draymond Green, four-time All-Star and a binding ingredient to those four championships. Then came Jimmy Butler, six-time All-Star making his Golden State training camp debut.

Jonathan Kuminga, reserve forward, was nowhere and everywhere.

“As leaders on the team, you have to acknowledge what’s going on and don’t make it more than what it is other than a team trying to figure out the situation that’s front of us and the challenge that’s front of us,” Curry said. “Knowing JK’s situation, knowing the new faces that we’re adding to the roster, we talk about it every year going into a training camp what it’s going to take for that particular team to win.

“This is a little different because you have a guy that’s trying to figure out his situation, and we respect that process. It’s going to play out, and when he’s here, ready to work, like we expect him to be locked in on doing what he needs to do to help us win.”

Green, co-leader of the Kuminga cheerleading camp – along with Golden State CEO Joe Lacob – more directly addressed the absence of the 22-year-old forward whose contract status has been in limbo since July.

“Any time a teammate’s not here, it sucks,” Green said. “And, obviously, not having multiple [teammates] here due to the situation, is unfortunate. Media Day marks the start of something. It marks the start of another NBA season.”

The Warriors are starting training camp with at least four roster spots unfilled. There were five vacancies before Gary Payton II re-signed Monday morning. There will be two when Al Horford and De’Anthony Melton, both of whom have agreements in place, sign contracts sometime this week. Seth Curry remains a possible addition.

Kuminga’s absence hovered like a cloud above the usually upbeat Media Day proceedings. It begat the absences of Horford, Melton and, possibly, Seth Curry. None were available as Warriors because none officially are on the roster, which vetoed Curry, Green and Butler from making specific references to them.

“If we’re talking about a guy like that, he’s won it, which I really, really respect,” Butler, speaking hypothetically, said of Horford. “And he’s been in this league for a long time for a reason. Elite defender. Can make shots. Plays basketball the right way. Super smart. More than anything, he wins.

“So, wherever that guy ends up, I know he’s going to help that team.”

Horford will end up with the Warriors. Just not yet. Same with Melton and, again, possibly Seth Curry.

This Golden State embargo is an unintended consequence of Kuminga’s contract status going unresolved through July, August and deep into September. All involved parties are inhibited – and will be until Warriors-Kuminga business is settled. The deadline for the qualifying offer – which would please neither side – is Wednesday.

“Like I tell everybody that asks me, not [only] in the media, but random people, and my friends: I’m not into all that,” Butler said. “I hope it gets resolved.”

It is, in many ways, downright astonishing that all of this revolves around someone who projects to come off the bench for the Warriors. The starting forwards are Green and Butler. The starting center will be Horford. The starting guards will be Stephen Curry and perhaps a name coach Steve Kerr picks from a hat.

The game plan of Kuminga and his agent, the intrepid Aaron Turner, is perhaps the most audacious in American professional sports. Has the contract status of a reserve, no matter the sport, ever spent an entire offseason at or near the top of a league’s news cycle? How often does reserve, no matter how talented, hold the key to a franchise completing its roster?

This months-long saga doesn’t quite match the stunning temerity Ben Simmons displayed in ghosting the overtures of the New York Knicks – a troubling indication of uninterest – but it leaves even more observers wondering where this standoff is headed.

There is tremendous potential for an enormous downside, as this summer of irresolution has laid the groundwork for an unimaginably heavy burden on Kuminga. No matter the jersey he wears, he must be spectacularly good for this to make sense.

The Warriors, at least publicly, hope it’s their team.

“Some things are pretty straightforward, some things aren’t,” Stephen Curry said. “This is definitely in the ‘aren’t’ category.

“But when he comes and he’s here, he should be a professional and do exactly what he expects to do and take advantage of his opportunities to help us win. Everybody who is in the locker room, that’s what you’re committed to do. I don’t have any concerns that he’ll approach it that way, and that’s what we expect.”

Kuminga’s status is the last thing Curry or Green or Butler hoped to address. They had no choice. They were available, and Kuminga’s absence was louder by comparison.

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Penguins Make Five More Roster Cuts On Monday

The Pittsburgh Penguins trimmed their training camp roster again on Monday. 

Before the morning skate, they announced that they have reassigned Cal Burke, Finn Harding, Atley Calvert, Nolan Renwick, and Aaron Huglen to the Wilkes-Barre Scranton Penguins training camp. The WBS Penguins training camp will start at the UPMC Lemieux Sports Complex on Monday before moving to Northeast Pennsylvania at a later date.

The Penguins' training camp roster is now down to 43 players heading into Monday's preseason game against the Detroit Red Wings. There will likely be more cuts coming later in the week before the Penguins' final preseason game against the Buffalo Sabres on Friday. 

Puck drop for Monday's preseason contest will be at 7 p.m. ET and fans can stream the game on the Penguins' official website or listen to it on 105.9 'The X.'


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Cora reveals Lucas Giolito won't pitch in Red Sox-Yankees playoff series

Cora reveals Lucas Giolito won't pitch in Red Sox-Yankees playoff series originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Red Sox starter Lucas Giolito will not pitch against the Yankees in the American League Wild Card series, according to manager Alex Cora.

Giolito is dealing with an elbow injury.

“He’s not going to be on the roster,” Cora said at Yankee Stadium on Monday with Game 1 slated for Tuesday night. “He’s been battling with his elbow the last few days.”

Giolito on Monday went to see Dr. Jeff Dugas, an orthopedic surgeon who specializes in shoulder, elbow, and knee injuries in athletes. Cora did not have any details pertaining to the visit. Dugas is the same doctor who performed the internal bracing procedure on Giolito that sidelined him for the 2024 season.

“Hopefully it’s nothing major, but he won’t be ready for this one,” Cora said.

Giolito was expected to start Game 3 in New York if the series reached three games.

The best-of-three playoff series will feature Red Sox left-hander Garrett Crochet on the mound opposite Yankees left-handed Max Fried in Game 1. Right-hander Bryan Bello is now cemented into the second spot and will face New York left-hander Carlos Rodon in Game 2.

If the series extends to Game 3, the Red Sox could give the ball to a rookie starter like Connelly Early or Kyle Harrison. Yankees right-hander Cam Schlittler is expected to take the mound in Game 3, if the two teams split the first two games.

Giolito’s most recent appearance came against the Toronto Blue Jays on Tuesday. The 31-year-old allowed one run on three hits in 4.2 inning while striking out three batters.

Giolito played a key role in Boston’s second-half surge. He recorded a 3.41 ERA across 26 starts (145 innings) and provided the Red Sox with a reliable starter behind Crochet.

Playoff Window Slams Shut on Mets as Hectic 2025 Season Ends

After a wild set of Games 162 on Sunday across North America, the New York Mets are out of Major League Baseball’s playoffs, and the Cincinnati Reds are in. This season, the Reds won four of their six games in head-to-head competition to send the Mets packing despite having identical 83-79 records.

“It’s just straight-up disappointing,” Mets slugging first baseman Pete Alonso said in the clubhouse after a 4-0 loss to the Marlins at Miami.

Like the Mets, the Reds lost Sunday, 4-2, at Milwaukee. Even so, the Reds earned the prize of facing the defending World Series Los Angeles Dodgers in a three-game NL Wild Card Series starting Tuesday night at Dodger Stadium.

The Polar Bear also told reporters he would opt out of the second year of his contract worth $24 million and take another shot at free agency after hitting 38 homers and leading the team with 126 RBIs.

The tie-breaking format giveth and taketh away. Last year, the Mets benefited from it, qualifying on the final day of the season when they and the Atlanta Braves had the better head-to-head records against the Arizona Diamondbacks, who were eliminated.

“I’m still smarting from that,” D-backs manager Torey Lovullo said at Petco Park where the D-backs were swamped by the playoff-bound San Diego Padres, 12-4. This year, Arizona was eliminated with two games to go.

In the American League, the New York Yankees will renew their long rivalry against the Boston Red Sox in a best-of-three Wild Card Series beginning Tuesday night at Yankee Stadium. They finished atop the East with an AL-best 94-68 record, tied with the Toronto Blue Jays, who won the division by virtue of bettering the Yankees in the season series, 8-5.

If the Yankees defeat Boston, the Blue Jays will be awaiting in an AL Division Series beginning Saturday in Toronto.

“The AL East is maybe the best division in baseball,” Yanks starter Luis Gil told writers in the home clubhouse at Yankee Stadium after defeating the Baltimore Orioles, 3-2.

The Jays beat the Rays, 13-4, at Toronto to win the division title.

The Cleveland Guardians completed their comeback from 15.5 games behind the Detroit Tigers on July 8, winning the AL Central by a game when they defeated Texas, 9-8, at Progressive Field on Sunday and Detroit lost at Boston, 4-3. The Tigers and Guardians will continue their battle in the other AL Wild Card Series, beginning Tuesday in Cleveland.

Out west, Cal Raleigh didn’t hit a home run this weekend, but finished his breakout season with 60, setting the record for a catcher and for a switch-hitter, and coming two shy of Aaron Judge’s AL-record of 62 set three years ago. The AL West-winning Mariners were swept by the Dodgers.

Judge finished atop MLB in batting average (.331), OPS (1.144), OPS+ (212) and WAR (9.7), among other categories. Raleigh and Judge are the two favorites to win AL MVP, and the debate continues to rage. The vote of two writers in every AL city is due by game-time Tuesday.

Clayton Kershaw finished his 18-year MLB regular-season career Sunday with 5 1/3 innings of four-hit, no-run ball, including one walk and seven strikeouts. He came back in May after multiple offseason surgeries to record an 11-2 record and a 3.36 ERA. 

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said Sunday was a fitting close of another chapter in Kershaw’s career. He totaled 222 wins, a .698 winning percentage, a 2.54 ERA and 3,045 strikeouts during his years in MLB. His message to Dodger teammates was utilize every opportunity, like the chance to repeat as World Series winners for the first time since the Yanks won three in a row from 1998-2000.

“[Kershaw said] take advantage of [every opportunity],” Roberts said. “And I think those guys really bonded when Clayton mentioned how special this team was.”

The remaining NL series offers the Padres vs. the Chicago Cubs in Wrigley Field. It may be ancient history, but the last time these two teams met in the postseason was 1984 when the Padres overcame two opening losses at Wrigley to win the last of the best-of-five NL Championship Series in San Diego.

As dramatic as Cleveland’s comeback was, so was the Mets’ collapse. They had the best record in baseball of 45-24 on June 12 and went 38-55 the rest of the way. This happened despite the team having the second-highest payroll in baseball of $340.6 million and signing Juan Soto to a 13-year, $765 million contract this past winter.

Comparatively, the NL Central-winning Milwaukee Brewers and their Central foe Reds both made it with payrolls of $142.2 million and $140.9 million. Milwaukee had the best record in baseball at 97-65.

For that matter, the Tigers and Guardians in the AL Central spent $170.1 million and $121.4 million respectively.

The Mets, in the nation’s largest market, won the offseason but choked during the regular season.

“This was a team that was not only built to play in October, but to play deep in October,” Mets manager Carlos Mendoza told the media on Sunday. “Call it sad, frustrating. I mean, you name it.”

Mendoza now finds himself on the bubble along with Arizona manager Lovullo and Bob Melvin of the San Francisco Giants, whose clubs were eliminated despite high payrolls and even higher expectations. Even though Lovullo is under contract, he said on Sunday he hasn’t been told by Arizona management if he’ll be back in 2026. Mendoza knows the score. 

“All year I’d been saying, ‘We have the talent, we have the talent,’ but we’re going home,” Mendoza said. “I take responsibility. I’m the manager. It starts with me. I’ve got to take a long look here. How I need to get better. That was the message to the whole team as well.” 

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Mets All-Star first baseman Pete Alonso will opt out of contract and test free agency again

MIAMI — Pete Alonso will opt out of his contract with the New York Mets and enter free agency again this fall, the All-Star first baseman said after the team missed the playoffs.

Alonso tested the open market last offseason before ultimately staying with the franchise that drafted him in 2016 out of Florida. He signed a two-year, $54 million contract in February that paid him $30 million this season with a $24 million player option for next year.

Alonso indicated he’d like to return to the Mets again, but added he wants to win a championship.

“There’s some great guys in this clubhouse, there’s some great people on the staff,” he said. “And every single day, it’s just been a pleasure coming to work and putting on the orange and blue. I’ve really appreciated and been nothing but full of gratitude every single day. Nothing’s guaranteed, but we’ll see what happens.

“I’ve loved being a Met, so hopefully they’ve appreciated me in the same (way).”

The 30-year-old Alonso earned his fifth All-Star selection this season. He batted a career-best .272 with 38 homers, 126 RBIs and a career-high 41 doubles — tied for most in the National League.

Along the way, he broke the Mets’ franchise record for home runs, surpassing Darryl Strawberry’s previous mark of 252.

“I think the biggest thing is, I want to win,” Alonso said. “I know we didn’t this year, but we had the right pieces I think, we just didn’t do it. At the beginning of the year, you just want to have the best possible chance to hold up the trophy at the end and see yourself being a champion. So for me, it’s why I do this. I want to be on top of the mountain. I want to win a World Series. That’s the ultimate goal.”

The Mets entered the regular-season finale needing a win at Miami and a Cincinnati loss in Milwaukee to make the playoffs.

The Reds lost 4-2 to the NL Central champion Brewers, but New York was eliminated with a 4-0 loss to the Marlins.

Alonso has 264 homers and 712 RBIs in 1,008 games over his seven-year career — all with the Mets. He has played in a team-record 416 consecutive games, the second-longest streak in the majors behind Atlanta first baseman Matt Olson (783).

“I love Pete,” longtime teammate Brandon Nimmo said. “Obviously, we got to see Pete at his absolute best this year, just absolutely destroying baseballs. ... I’m sure the Mets will be in contact with him this offseason a lot. But if it did happen to be my last (game with him), I’ve enjoyed every second of it.”

Panthers to dress some veterans, but rest most, in first home preseason game

For the first time since they skated on the ice with the Stanley Cup, the Florida Panthers will be back playing hockey in Sunrise on Monday.

Florida will welcome the Carolina Hurricanes to Amerant Bank Arena as they begin their preseason home stretch.

Starting Monday, the Panthers will play their final four exhibition games over a six-day stretch that includes games in Sunrise, Orlando and Tampa.

The expectation, according to Panthers Head Coach Paul Maurice, is that Florida will run veteran lineups – meaning you’ll see the majority of the expected NHL roster – in their final two preseason games.

To a lesser extent, that also includes Monday night against the Hurricanes, which will be the first time some of those veteran players have a chance to play in the preseason.

Maurice has been taking it easier with his vets, holding much of Florida’s expected Opening Night roster out of the grueling elements of training camp during the first week, but now they’re all in the thick of it.

We still won’t be seeing the likes of Sam Reinhart, Aaron Ekbald, Carter Verhaeghe, Sam Bennett, Seth Jones, Brad Marchand, Evan Rodrigues, Anton Lundell, Niko Mikkola or Eetu Luostarinen on Monday, though.

The veteran players who will take the ice against Carolina will be Sergei Bobrovsky, Jesper Boqvist, Jeff Petry, A.J. Greer, Uvis Balinskis, Jonah Gadjovich, Luke Kunin and Mackie Samoskevich.

Florida will be facing a Carolina squad that, at least in a preseason context, will be looking for a smidge of revenge.

Last week, a Panthers roster full of prospects, young pros and a couple NHL hopefuls traveled to Raleigh and earned a comeback victory over a Hurricanes group full of veteran stars that will be on their Opening Night roster.

Now the tables will be somewhat turned.

While the Panthers aren’t exactly throwing out starts that compare with Sebastian Aho, Seth Jarvis, Nikolaj Ehlers and Andrei Svechnikov, the Hurricanes aren’t bringing their big guns to Sunrise, either.

A much more watered-down Carolina group, in terms of NHL regulars, will face the Cats on Monday, as none of those aforementioned Hurricanes who played in the previous meeting are on the game roster.

Face-off from Amerant Bank Arena is set for 6 p.m.

It will be the first time Panthers fans will get a look at the brand-new scoreboard hovering above the ice, and the LED boards that wrap around the seating bowl, all of which were installed over the summer.

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Photo caption: Sep 24, 2025; Raleigh, North Carolina, USA; Carolina Hurricanes defenseman Ronan Seeley (91) can’t get to the puck against Florida Panthers left wing Nolan Foote (25) during the second period at Lenovo Center. (James Guillory-Imagn Images)

Mourinho’s return looms large as Chelsea and Maresca endure untimely blip

The comparison with Mourinho’s glory days will be clear as he returns with Benfica, but Stamford Bridge hierarchy is firmly behind their current man

Only league champions get their picture on the wall in the Drake Suite at Stamford Bridge. The room is named after Ted Drake, the author of Chelsea’s first title, and features images of a host of club legends: a beaming Carlo Ancelotti, one of Antonio Conte kissing the Premier League trophy and, as Enzo Maresca no doubt noted as he arrived to preview his young side’s Champions League tie with Benfica, three photographs of the manager whose latest return to west London conjures wistful memories of the days when Chelsea were the most feared team in England.

Here comes the Special One. José Mourinho, who won three league titles across two spells at Chelsea, is in town with Benfica and will surely enjoy a wonderful reception. Maresca, meanwhile, inspires less warmth. He has taken Chelsea back into the Champions League, along with winning the Conference League and the Club World Cup, but does not have his name sung by fans and was booed after losing 3-1 to Brighton on Saturday.

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It’s early, but every Premier League title contender already looks flawed

With late goals a major factor, the four major players for the trophy saw their narratives crystalize over the weekend

There’s always a danger this early in the Premier League season of reading too much into a single set of games. Titles may be lost in September but they are very rarely won. This past weekend, though, did feel like one where many of the prevailing narratives crystalised as Arsenal dug deep to win the sort of game they’ve become used to losing, Liverpool’s defensive shortcomings were exposed as they lost for the first time this campaign, Manchester City swept aside lesser opposition in the manner of old and Chelsea fell apart again.

Liverpool have looked defensively shaky all season. Having been the team of control in the last campaign, making the unremarkable 2-0 win a trademark, they have become the side of the late winner, clinching games this season in the 88th, 94th, 100th, 83rd, 95th, 92nd and 85th minutes. That was never going to be sustainable, but the question was whether general performances would improve, or whether the late strikes would dry up.

This is an extract from Soccer with Jonathan Wilson, a weekly look from the Guardian US at the game in Europe and beyond. Subscribe for free here. Have a question for Jonathan? Email soccerwithjw@theguardian.com, and he’ll answer the best in a future edition.

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Warriors excited for first full NBA season of the Jimmy Butler experience

Warriors excited for first full NBA season of the Jimmy Butler experience originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO – Warriors rookie Alex Toohey’s introduction to star teammate Jimmy Butler was more than a lesson on the court. It was an eye-opener to the other side of the NBA as he walked around Butler’s San Diego home. 

“I learned that you can do quite a few things with a bit of money,” Toohey said Monday at Warriors Media Day. 

Butler hosted his Warriors teammates for a few days as a sort of minicamp before the official start of training camp. Basketball certainly was a focal point. Everything else was just as important, if not more. 

The bigger goal one week before training camp begins was getting to know the small details of a group that is around each other more than their own families for over seven months, and even longer to reach the Warriors’ objective of contending for a championship. To become an unbreakable team, Butler, going into his 15th season, knows the intricacies of what it takes. 

Wine was flowing, stories were told and laughs were had – just like it’s supposed to go with family. As he basically trademarked last season, Butler found his joy again once he was traded to the Warriors in February. Butler made it a point after the season to find time in the offseason to be around his new teammates when his busy schedule that spans the globe allowed him to. 

But this retreat was different. He has found time to create chemistry in the past. Inviting a team into his home was an intimate decision Butler was set on doing in pursuit of his first title ahead of his first full season with the Warriors. 

“Maybe a couple times, but not at my own home, and I just wanted to be around my guys,” Butler said of his San Diego minicamp. “I got the opportunity to see a lot of them over the summer or to go where they are from. Maybe not see them, but see people I know from their neck of the woods. So it was important for me to welcome – those are guys, like my family, into my home and have a good time and let them in a little bit of my life.” 

If the 30 regular-season games and 11 playoff games Butler played after joining the Warriors was an appetizer of what’s to come, he and the Warriors are ready to devour a full four-course meal. Perhaps with a glass of Pinot on the side, too. 

“I get to do this thing from day one,” Butler said. “Be with the guys from day one and do what we started out to do from the very beginning. I’m super hyped and I’m super excited. I got to train with my guys this summer. I got to talk with all the guys. I see what they have been doing. I see how they have been working. I’m glad that I get to be here from this media day on up.” 

The Warriors were 25-26 last season before Butler’s team debut on Feb. 10. His Warriors introduction was a 21-point comeback road win against the Chicago Bulls, his original team, where Butler scored 25 points and had four assists. From that game on, the Warriors after adding Butler went 23-8 the rest of the regular season, losing the one game he missed. 

They had two different five-game win streaks and one that lasted seven games. Their success together was on the fly, learning plays and how each other operates with little time to breathe. The Warriors saw what kind of team they can be with Butler, Steph Curry and Draymond Green all healthy, and are confident a real run at another ring was on the table if Curry’s hamstring held up. 

That kind of tease has given them the ultimate confidence of a full offseason, training camp and preseason together before the real lights turn on. 

“You can build an identity from the beginning,” Green said. “Defensive terminology and all the things that you build starting in training camp, we’re able to do that this year.” 

Drama surrounded Butler going into last season, which wound up being his final one as a member of the Miami Heat. Tensions rose until they hit a boiling point, including multiple team suspensions that put an ugly end to all the good Butler did in South Beach. He’s at a completely different place one year later. 

“I think first it helps him just as a human being, as a player, to have something that he knows, a situation he knows based on how last year ended and how we do things, what he can help, continue to help us do at a high level, but then just have that clarity coming in where we can have the conversations that we were having in a very short span after the trade last year,” Curry said. “And the way that we finished playing, or our record towards the end of the year, it was fun for all of us.” 

Butler’s smile and outlook at media day matched the shine from diamonds on his ears and the rings on fingers. He’s at peace but hungry for more. The Warriors immediately signed Butler to a two-year, $111 million contract upon acquiring him in February, aligning him with Curry and Green to accomplish what those two have done four times: Win a championship. 

The reigning champion Oklahoma City Thunder are full of young players in their prime. Anthony Edwards and the Minnesota Timberwolves are coming for more. Kevin Durant and the revamped Houston Rockets are ready for battle, and Nikola Jokić’s Denver Nuggets never can be counted out. 

Neither can the Warriors. Butler knows what he’s here for and sees last season’s short-lived success as just a taste of what’s to come. 

“I don’t think we’re going to catch anybody by surprise,” Butler said. “I think everybody knows what we’re capable of. We’re ready to rock.”

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