Sacramento takes on Philadelphia on 6-game losing streak

Sacramento Kings (12-36, 14th in the Western Conference) vs. Philadelphia 76ers (25-21, sixth in the Eastern Conference)

Philadelphia; Thursday, 7 p.m. EST

BOTTOM LINE: Sacramento aims to stop its six-game skid with a win over Philadelphia.

The 76ers have gone 13-13 at home. Philadelphia ranks fourth in the Eastern Conference with 12.3 offensive rebounds per game led by Andre Drummond averaging 3.5.

The Kings are 3-20 on the road. Sacramento has a 3-2 record in one-possession games.

The 76ers average 116.6 points per game, 4.2 fewer points than the 120.8 the Kings give up. The Kings average 10.5 made 3-pointers per game this season, 2.3 fewer made shots on average than the 12.8 per game the 76ers give up.

TOP PERFORMERS: Tyrese Maxey is scoring 29.2 points per game with 4.2 rebounds and 6.8 assists for the 76ers. Joel Embiid is averaging 20.9 points and 6.1 rebounds while shooting 52.2% over the last 10 games.

DeMar DeRozan is averaging 19.1 points and 3.9 assists for the Kings. Russell Westbrook is averaging 18.8 points over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: 76ers: 4-6, averaging 114.4 points, 41.0 rebounds, 24.5 assists, 10.4 steals and 5.3 blocks per game while shooting 47.2% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 117.4 points per game.

Kings: 4-6, averaging 113.2 points, 42.4 rebounds, 26.4 assists, 5.9 steals and 4.3 blocks per game while shooting 49.7% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 116.0 points.

INJURIES: 76ers: Charles Bassey: out (personal), Quentin Grimes: out (ankle).

Kings: Keegan Murray: out (ankle), Malik Monk: out (ankle), Zach LaVine: out (back).

___

The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Luka Dončić’s original wishlist for centers included Walker Kessler, Jalen Duren

It seems like quite some time ago that the Lakers showed aggression on the trade market. We’re only two weeks removed from it being a full year since Rob Pelinka pushed his chips on the table and acquired, and unacquired, Mark Williams at the deadline.

In that moment, the Lakers were on a mission to make sure Luka signed his extension. As they sought out a center upgrade, they included Luka in the conversation, asking him the type of center he wanted and, as we’ve now learned, specific names to target as well.

In a recent livestream, Lakers beat writer Jovan Buha gave some full details on who Luka named as the centers he wanted to partner with (h/t rosiros/Reddit).

“…They just trade for Luka, they have the meeting in Rob’s office with ‘Which centers do you want to play with?’ I’ve already reported this that several of the centers on the list were Walker Kessler, Jalen Duren, I believe Nic Claxton was also on that list. They tried to get all three of those guys with the Dalton Knecht package. They did not get any of them. The one guy they were able to land was Mark Williams, who I do believe was lower on the list overall. [Onyeka] Okongwu was also on that list. They were not able to get Okongwu either.”

While we’ve learned about the Lakers’ interest in many of those names before and after acquiring Luka, hearing them together as part of Luka’s wishlist is new context. The biggest takeaway from this is that Luka knows ball because all of these would be great fits alongside him.

That being said, let’s dive into each of the names and the links the Lakers have had.

With Kessler, he’s a player who has constantly been linked to the Lakers over the last few years. Most recently, the team was still expressing interest in him during the offseason but the Jazz weren’t reciprocating.

Duren is an interesting one because it was reported that the Lakers tried to trade for him at the deadline last year, but the Pistons weren’t willing to part with him. They were proven right in their belief as he’s had a breakout year this season.

Claxton has been the fan choice for the center of the future for much of the last year. However, there’s been little in terms of credible reporting linking him to the Lakers in that time.

Obviously, the team attempted to trade for Williams, but it was reported in the offseason that they also called the Hawks about Okongwu.

All of these names make sense to pair with Luka, but that type of center is a valued commodity on the trade market. Teams also know that the Lakers are in search of a lob-catching center, so it’ll cost a premium to acquire one.

But if this is who Luka is interested in acquiring, perhaps the Lakers should involve him more often in these discussions.

You can follow Jacob on Twitter at @JacobRude or on Bluesky at @jacobrude.bsky.social.

Thunder, Pelicans get into heated scuffle as game descends into chaos in final seconds

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Saddiq Bey #41 of the New Orleans Pelicans and Jaylin Williams #6 of the Oklahoma City Thunder exchange words during the second half at Paycom Center on January 27, 2026 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
pelicans-thunder

The Thunder and Pelicans came together after the final buzzer of Tuesday’s game, but they weren’t exchanging dinner plans. 

A bench-clearing scuffle broke out in the waning seconds of the fourth quarter as Thunder guard Lu Dort and Pelicans guard Jeremiah Fears got into a shoving match as the game came to a close, leading to teammates, coaches and officials to try and calm the situation down. 

The game ended in a 104-95 win for the Thunder, but Fears and Dort’s scuffle was the biggest moment of the night between the two teams. 

New Orleans guard Jeremiah Fears (0) is taken off the court after a fight with guard Luguentz Dort at the end of the Thunder’s 104-95 home win over the Pelicans game at Paycom Center. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Video showed Fears had to be restrained by members of the Pelicans organization, and even team president Joe Dumars got on the court to try to calm things down. 

Fears was seen being held back as he was moved down the tunnel toward the team locker room. 

No fouls were issued since the game was over, though it’s unclear if the league will hand down any supplementary discipline. 

New Orleans’ Saddiq Bey and Jaylin Williams of Oklahoma City exchange words during the second half of the Thunder’s home win over the Pelicans on Jan. 27, 2026 at Paycom Center. Getty Images

“I had heard them going back and forth after I made the last two free throws, but I wasn’t sure what happened,” Thunder star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander told reporters after the game. “And then I turn around and they were face-to-face. I’m sure it was nothing crazy, though. Typical basketball scuffle.”

Thunder head coach Mark Daigneault told reporters that he thought the officiating crew lost control of the game in the final few minutes, saying that the “whole altercation at the end started way before.”

Dort finished the night with 12 points and eight rebounds, while Fear had seven points and two rebounds coming off the Pelicans’ bench. 

The loss moved the Pelicans to 12-37 on the season, as they sit in last place in the Western Conference. 

The Thunder remained best in the conference with their 38th win of the season.

'Can't Name Anything Good Today': Canucks Drop Their Third-Straight Game With 5-2 Loss To The San Jose Sharks

If you ask the Vancouver Canucks how they felt about tonight’s 5–2 loss to the San Jose Sharks, the reception won't be positive. Not only did both of their goals come from blueliners Tom Willander and Filip Hronek, but Kevin Lankinen was also pulled within the first half of the first period after allowing three goals on six shots faced. Nikita Tolopilo joined the game in relief, stopping 25 of 27 shots faced. 

“I don't think we played good anywhere today. I think pretty much every detail was bad. Can't name anything good today,” Willander, who scored the game’s opening goal, said post-game. “Ultimately, I think at least the last few times we had results like this, I think we did a decent job in many parts of our game. But today, I thought it was awful.” 

Willander isn’t wrong. Despite scoring first, Vancouver quickly surrendered three goals within the span of five minutes, erasing their lead within a matter of seconds. The very thing Canucks Head Coach Adam Foote had called the team out on a week ago had returned — their penchant for getting down on themselves after things don’t go their way. 

“We tried to do too much in the neutral zone [...] kind of got off what we’re all about — getting in deep, fore-checking — and looked like we were just out of sorts for a while there, just chasing.” 

As opposed to previous games, Vancouver’s effort just didn’t seem to be there tonight. They spent a good chunk of the third period hemmed in their own zone, unable to generate even a shot on net until finally being able to fully break the puck out. 

With trade rumours circulating throughout the past few days, all eyes seemed to be on Evander Kane. While not necessarily just there for Kane, there were 17 scouts in Vancouver’s press box tonight, including two from the Anaheim Ducks and two from the Toronto Maple Leafs. Kane did end up on the scoresheet tonight, dropping the gloves with Timothy Liljegren and taking an extra roughing penalty in this sequence. 

Tonight marks the third time in four games that Vancouver’s penalty kill has surrendered two power play goals against, as they also allowed two against the New Jersey Devils and the Washington Capitals. In a 10-game span, they have surrendered two or more goals while on the penalty kill five times. One of these goals-against came while Vancouver was down two players. 

Vancouver’s power play also capitalized tonight, scoring their second goal of the game a little more than halfway through the third period. However, the man-advantage also got a near-full two-minute 5-on-3 opportunity and was unable to score while on that. This was their first power play goal in six games.  

A shout-out needs to be given to Vancouver-based superstar Macklin Celebrini, who recorded his third multi-point game against the Canucks this season. His quick shot tied the game at one goal apiece for the Sharks, with Vancouver’s lapse in defensive-zone coverage leaving Celebrini all alone at the top of the faceoff dot. On San Jose’s second goal, it was Celebrini who took the puck away, keeping it in at the line and allowing former Canuck Adam Gaudette to score. The forward finished the game with four points against his hometown team. 

Jan 27, 2026; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks forward Drew O'Connor (18) stick checks San Jose Sharks forward Macklin Celebrini (71) in the third period at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images
Jan 27, 2026; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks forward Drew O'Connor (18) stick checks San Jose Sharks forward Macklin Celebrini (71) in the third period at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images

Stats and Facts: 

  • Evander Kane becomes the first Canuck to hit 60 penalty minutes on the season 
  • Elias Pettersson claims sole possession of ninth all-time in assists by a Canucks with 291 
  • Macklin Celebrini registers 2+ points against the Canucks in each of three games against Vancouver this season 

Scoring Summary: 

1st Period: 

1:15 - VAN: Tom Willander (3) from Elias Pettersson and Jake DeBrusk 

1:51 - SJS: Macklin Celebrini (27) from Will Smith and Sam Dickinson 

4:43 - SJS: Adam Gaudette (11) from William Eklund and Macklin Celebrini 

5:55 - SJS: Tyler Toffoli (15) from Alexander Wennberg and Sam Dickinson 

2nd Period: 

9:07 - SJS: Will Smith (15) from John Klingberg and Macklin Celebrini (PPG) 

3rd Period: 

0:28 - SJS: John Klingberg (10) from Will Smith and Macklin Celebrini (PPG) 

9:15 - VAN: Filip Hronek (5) from Elias Pettersson and Jake DeBrusk (PPG) 

Up Next: 

The Canucks continue their home stand with a matchup against the Anaheim Ducks on Thursday. Vancouver won their last game against the Ducks by a score of 5–4 in what was a very entertaining offensive battle. Thursday’s puck drop is scheduled for 7:00 pm PT. 

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.

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Egor Dёmin shoves Dillon Brooks in Suns-Nets late-game dust-up

A rookie tried to give Dillon Brooks a taste of his own medicine, and it ended up costing his team.

Nets guard Egor Dёmin shoved Brooks late in Brooklyn’s 106-102 loss on Tuesday, Jan. 27, leading to a small dust-up that cleared assistant coaches off the bench.

With the Suns up by two with 1:14 left to play, a loose ball spilled into the Nets' side of the court. As several players dove for the ball, it eventually ended up in the hands of Nets forward Zaire Williams. Three Suns players mobilized quickly to try to get their hands on it for a jump ball, which was granted by the officials.

One of those Phoenix players was Dillon Brooks, who’s known for his physical and controversial play. As Brooks lingered over Williams, Dёmin came over and placed his hands on Brooks’ back, lightly shoving him, though Dёmin did extend his arms with the shove.

Brooks exaggerated the contact and flailed onto the court, which prompted Suns players to confront Dёmin. Nets guard Terrance Mann and forward Michael Porter Jr. came to the rookie’s defense, as more than a dozen assistant coaches from both teams rushed to separate the scuffle.

That mostly defused the encounter, as Dёmin walked away and Brooks lay on the floor. Brooks would eventually get up and jaw with Mann, though the matter was resolved shortly after.

Officials assessed two separate double-technicals to Dёmin and Suns guard Grayson Allen and to Mann and Suns forward Royce O’Neale. Porter was also assessed a technical, which led to a Suns free throw.

“I got pushed in the back,” Brooks told reporters after the game. “They made the right call when they looked at the review for a very long time. … It didn’t deserve my energy”

Brooks won the ensuing jump ball, but Brooklyn couldn’t convert any of its finals shots, eventually dropping the game.

Dёmin, however, may have been dishing out a little payback.

With around 30 seconds left in the first half, Brooks and Dёmin were engaged in a boxout situation, when Brooks, who had his hands raised throughout most of the action, continued to use his body to leverage Dёmin further back, toward the first row. Eventually, as the two became entangled, Brooks shoved Dёmin to the ground.

Brooks was given a technical for the play, his 15th of the season. This is significant because he will draw a one-game suspension if he’s called for his 16th; Brooks has played in 41 games this season.

“I just feel like that play wouldn’t have happened if they blew their whistle with the foul called, because it ended up being a foul call and then they had to give me a T after ’cause I’m trying to get the guy off me,” Brooks said.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Dillon Brooks, Egor Dёmin involved in late-game dust-up

Observations From Blues' 4-3 Loss Vs. Stars

ST. LOUIS – Did someone say deja vu?

Unfortunately for the St. Louis Blues, it came to fruition and not in a good way.

For the second straight meeting with the Dallas Stars, they fall in a one-goal game, this time 4-3, due to icing the puck, losing a defensive zone face-off and seeing a goal scored late in the third period.

Thomas Harley scored with 1:07 left and spoiled the Blues’ valiant third period comeback while playing shorthanded due to injury in another one-goal loss on Tuesday at Enterprise Center, dropping the home side to 19-25-9.

Down three goals in the third period and playing without Jake Neighbours (lower-body injury) and Jordan Kyrou (upper-body injury), Brayden Schenn scored twice and Robby Fabbri scored his first Blues goal over six years to erase a three-goal third-period deficit but to no avail. Jordan Binnington made 20 saves to fall to 2-10-1 in his past 13 starts.

Let’s dissect Tuesday’s game observations:

* Another icing leads to another goal-against for a loss – With the naked eye, it looked worse than originally thought, but on the play that led to the Harley goal, Tyler Tucker had full control of the puck moving up the lefthand side. He goes for a pass off the boards trying to hit Alexey Toropchenko near the Dallas bench, but on replay, the puck caromed off the boards, bounded up where Toropchenko couldn’t corral the puck for an icing.

This just happened four days ago in Dallas when both Philip Broberg and Colton Parayko each iced the puck, and ultimately, the Stars won the draw and Jason Robertson scored with 1:00 remaining in a 3-2 win denying the Blues of at least a point.

Same thing here.

Personally, if Tucker is making that play, I’d like to see a direct pass, and if Toropchenko doesn’t handle it, then it’s on him. It’s just dangerous in that situation.

So it turns into an icing, Dallas can get its top players on the ice, while the Blues have their fourth line out there with Tucker and Logan Mailloux.

Nick Bjugstad loses the draw, and I understand when in each instance along with Friday, someone can say, ‘Win the face-off.’ Yes, this is true, but the draw was lost back to the point, and Harley’s shot caromed off Mathieu Joseph and change direction past Binnington.

Game. Set. Match:

Blues coach Jim Montgomery was not critical of this one as he was of the plays on Friday.

“We have complete momentum in the game and that icing actually, I believe it was Tucker, uses an indirect for us to gain lines like we had been doing all period,” Montgomery said, “and it hits the boards and it jumps up five feet. I think [Toropchenko] couldn’t get a stick on it. That’s a physical thing with the boards. It’s not a mental mistake. It’s not like we panicked. We actually made a real sound play. The puck hit the boards toward the end of the period, the boards are snowy, it hits snow and it’s going to pop like that, and then you need an Albert Pujols to knock it out of the air there.

“(This was) very different. That one was in control of ours; we made a mistake, we didn’t support the puck. We had support on the puck (Tuesday), we knew the guy was open. That was a good hockey play.”

Schenn, who has three goals the past two games, said, “Late in the game, yeah, poise, if that’s what you’re taking (about). The Dallas game before and this one, you have to have poise with the puck, but the forwards or players out there have to support each other and able to get the red line to not put yourself in those positions. We did it twice against them and they made us pay for them both times.”

A fifth consecutive loss (0-4-1) and a fourth straight game in which the Blues were in and found a way to lose.

“It sucks losing,” Schenn said. “When you battle back like that, play hard for one another and get rewarded with some goals. Again, same team, same result, losing in the last minute. It’s not fun losing, but got to keep on pushing our foot down and trying to get better. We’re finding ways to lose hockey games and we have to learn how to win them.”

* Down two more players, a third period for the ages comeback was for naught – When Neighbours left after the first period and Kyrou after the second, they were not only down to 10 forwards but down three goals.

What’s the point, right? Wrong.

The Blues showed some valiant fight, and it started with Fabbri, who continues to show why the Blues brought him back, scratching and clawing for every inch when he’s given the opportunity.

It looked inconsequential at the time and only drew browning points for Fabbri scoring his first Blues goal in his second stint since his last goal on Oct. 17, 2019 before being traded to the Detroit Red Wings. He made it 3-1 at 3:15 on a play in which he started it with a strong hit and ensuing shot from the slot off Justin Faulk’s feed:

The Stats challenged the play for offside and Joseph was in question on the far side, but the league came back that the play was onside with the following ruling: It was determined that Joseph legally tagged up at the blue line before Faulk entered the offensive zone with the puck on his stick prior to Fabbri’s goal.

“It definitely feels good to get the first one, but it’s a lot more fun around the rink when you’re winning,” Fabbri said. “I’ll definitely take more wins after this one.

“Once you get one on the board, everyone starts to put the foot on the gas there and we did that. When you start rolling shift after shift and you kind of get some momentum and the crowd gets into it, the bench gets into it and it’s just one of those things where we were kind rolling there and it was a good period, so we’ve just got to build off that.”

There had to be some juice on the bench, because as Schenn said in his remarks postgame, “I was dishing up pregame today and ‘Binner’ said ‘Fabs’ is going to score tonight, so I guess ‘Binner’ had the read on that one.”

Fabbri replied, “He actually chose the stick for me to use. Maybe we’ve got something going there.”

But for there being not much life in the building, there was a glimpse of it now, and when Schenn made it 3-2 at 6:22 off a really nice pass by Jimmy Snuggerud, the place started to get some jump in it:

“I think Robby Fabbri got us going,” Montgomery said. ‘He had a big hit right before his goal and then we get the quick counter, 72 hitting nine, nine has some good poise. And then I think we got rolling. I really liked the line of [Dalibor] Dvorsky between Snuggerud and Schenn. Obviously they got the goals, but they just seemed to be going and making plays, 10-15 foot passes.”

The Stars seemed to have a hammerlock on the game late, but a fortuitous bounce finally went the Blues’ way when Harley’s clearing pass around the boards off referee Stephen Hiff right to Snuggerud, who found Schenn in the left circle and the captain roofed his shot at 15:50 to make it 3-3:

“Just attitude we’re going to come out in the third period and put a solid effort together for our fans,” Schenn said of the comeback. “At the end of the day, our special teams aren’t helping us right now and it’s tough falling behind 3-0 in this league against a good team, but I thought we came out in the third period and played hard for one another, inspired each other and like I said, close but not good enough.”

The couple of older vets (Schenn and Fabbri) and a couple of young pups (Snuggerud and Dvorsky) fueled a comeback that nobody saw.

“Our effort, falling behind 3-0 and not quitting, having the perseverance to keep going,” Montgomery said. ‘We had lost two forwards; we were down to 10 forwards. It was nice to see that scrappy, never-say-die attitude that we had.”

* Special teams continue to be a problem – As Schenn mentioned above, the Blues’ special teams are anything but special this season.

They give up two more power-play goals, the third time in the past four games and fifth time in 10 games they’ve allowed multiple power-play markers.

The first put Dallas up 1-0 when Matt Duchene scored the first of two goals in 40 seconds at 3:20 of the second period when Mikko Rantanen found a seam to deliver a dime of a pass to Duchene on the backdoor through Tucker and past Faulk:

And although the slashing penalty call by Hiff on Dvorsky was not a good one at 17:58 of the second, the Blues needed a kill to keep it a two-goal game and Roope Hintz scored eight seconds later for a 3-0 lead off a face-off win and one-timer from the interior of the right circle:

So for the night, the PK was 1-for-3 and the power play went 0-for-3 with one shot on goal. It simply isn’t good enough and it’s cost this group plenty this season.

The PK is 29th at 73.9 percent, and the PP is 25th at 16.9 percent. Again, not nearly good enough.

Image

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Knicks Notes: Jose Alvarado remains on NY's radar, Mike Brown shakes up closing lineup

On Tuesday night, the Knicks closed their win over the Sacramento Kings with Jalen Brunson, Mikal Bridges, Miles McBride, OG Anunoby and Mitchell Robinson on the floor.

“This was a tight ball game and so I just rode that group,” Mike Brown said postgame.

Brown’s decision worked well; the Knicks went on a 13-0 run over four minutes late in the fourth to close the victory.

On Saturday, Brown also didn’t hesitate to put Bridges and Karl-Anthony Towns on the bench late in New York’s road win over the 76ers.

Brown has not shied away from benching his starters down the stretch of close games in his first 40-plus contests as Knicks head coach. 

“We needed to get the win,” Brown said after the team's third straight victory following a 2-7 stretch.

Towns played 27 total minutes on Tuesday after playing just 16 minutes on Saturday. 

He said following the matchup that the wins mean much more to him than his minutes totals.

“He saw what he saw,” Towns said of Brown. “We got a win. That’s the most important thing…That’s all I care about, this team cares about, New York cares about -- the wins.”

TRADE WINDS

There will be rumors about Towns and other big-name Knicks ahead of next Thursday’s NBA trade deadline. 

One player that remains squarely on New York’s radar ahead of the deadline is Pelicans guard Jose Alvarado

We noted New York's interest in Alvarado last month and can say that nothing has changed on that front -- the Knicks still see the NY-native as a player who can help bolster their bench/rotation. 

Alvarado is averaging 7.9 points and 3.2 assists across 36 games for New Orleans this season. 

Celebrini's 4 points lead Sharks to 5-2 win over Canucks

VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) — Macklin Celebrini had a goal and three assists, the San Jose Sharks scored three first-period goals in a span of 4:04, and went on to beat the Vancouver Canucks 5-2 on Tuesday night.

Adam Gaudette, Tyler Toffoli, Will Smith and John Klingberg also had goals for the Sharks, and Yaroslav Askarov improved to 17-13-1 with 23 saves.

Celebrini now has 78 points in 51 games this season.

Tom Willander scored the game’s first goal for Vancouver at 1:15 of the first period, with the teams playing four-on-four. Filip Hronek added his team’s first power-play tally in six games in the third.

After the Canucks announced on Tuesday that Thatcher Demko is set to undergo hip surgery and will be out for the rest of the year, Kevin Lankinen was pulled after giving up three goals on six shots over 5:55. Nikita Tolopilo gave up two goals on 27 shots in relief.

The Sharks were 2 for 4 on the power play, with Klingberg’s goal coming at five-on-three. The Canucks were 1 for 4.

In addition to Demko, who has been sidelined since Jan. 10, the Canucks were missing forward Brock Boeser and defenseman Zeev Buium. Both were injured in Vancouver’s 3-2 home loss to the Pittsburgh Penguins on Sunday.

After Conor Garland and Dmitry Orlov took roughing minors just 44 seconds into the game, Willander beat Askarov with a long shot from the blue line to open the scoring at 1:15. But the lead was short-lived, as Celebrini logged his 27th of the year just 36 seconds later.

Up next

Sharks: At the Edmonton Oilers on Thursday in the second game of a five-game trip.

Canucks: Host the Anaheim Ducks on Thursday in the seventh game of an eight-game homestand.

___

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Report: Spurs’ Jeremy Sochan to look for a new home via trade

Jeremy Sochan might not be in San Antonio for much longer. The Spurs have granted his representation permission to talk to teams in the hopes of finding a landing spot for the young forward via trade, according to The SteinLine’s Marc Stein($).

“League sources say that Jeremy Sochan and his representation have received permission from the Spurs to explore the landscape for a potential new home via trade,” Stein wrote.

The news, while unfortunate, is not exactly surprising. Sochan, who started 149 games and played an average of 27 minutes a game in his first three seasons in San Antonio, has had a small bench role this year. The No. 9 overall pick of the 2022 NBA Draft is posting career lows across the board in 13 minutes a night and has only suited up for 27 games despite being available for more. He wasn’t inked to an extension over the summer despite being eligible and is slated to enter restricted free agency next offseason, so, understandably, he’s looking for a new team that will allow him to showcase his talents in hopes of getting a lucrative second contract.

Sochan seemed to be a part of the core during his first two years with the Spurs. He was drafted to be a defensive lynchpin and connective piece and delivered on both ends, looking like a potential perimeter stopper and showing a good floor game for a power forward. The problem from the start was his lack of range as a jump shooter, which made him an awkward fit in the current NBA. San Antonio tried to work around it as he rebuilt his shot by playing him as a lead ball handler and, later on, at center, but he started losing minutes late last season and has not been able to crack the rotation for Mitch Johnson in 2025/26. He’s currently shooting 26 percent from beyond the arc on limited attempts.

It’s unclear what the market for Sochan would be. The Spurs traded their other two first-round picks from the 2022 draft, Malaki Branham and Blake Wesley, to the Wizards for Kelly Olynyk and a low-value second-round pick last summer, but Sochan should, in theory, yield a better return. His impending free agency, however, could be enough to dissuade a team from making a serious offer, since it’s clear he should be available next offseason despite his restricted free agent status, as San Antonio seems ready to move on. Still, there might be some suitors interested in giving him a tryout while having his Bird rights, or he could be valuable as an expiring contract.

Nothing appears imminent. The Knicks could be a potential destination in a move that would get the Spurs Guerschon Yabusele, according to Clutch Points’ Brett Siegel, but there hasn’t been confirmation of New York’s or San Antonio’s interest in such a swap. It’s also possible a trade doesn’t materialize, and Sochan finishes the season with the team that drafted him. But it would not be surprising to see the forward wearing another jersey this season.

Sochan is averaging 4.2 points, 2.7 rebounds, and one assist per game this season.

Nets fall to Suns, 106-104, after teams scuffle late in fourth quarter

PHOENIX (AP) — Mark Williams scored 27 points, Dillon Brooks had 26 and the short-handed Suns beat the Brooklyn Nets 106-102 on Tuesday night in a game that featured a scuffle late in the fourth quarter.

After Brooks put the Suns ahead 104-102 on two free throws with 1:23 remaining, a steal by the Suns’ Royce O’Neale led to a scramble for the ball in the paint. Brooks tried to wrestle the ball away from Ziaire Williams after the whistle, and the Nets’ Egor Demin pushed Brooks.

Several players started jawing at each other and assistant coaches from both sides gathered on the floor as officials tried to restore order. Demin, Mann and Michael Porter Jr. received technical fouls for the Nets, and the Suns’ Grayson Allen and O’Neale also got technicals. Brooks did not receive a technical after getting one earlier in the game.

Allen added 18 points for the short-handed Suns, who ended a two-game skid. Devin Booker missed his second straight game after rolling his right ankle in a loss at Atlanta on Friday night, and Jalen Green also sat with a nagging right hamstring injury.

Porter finished with a season-high 36 points for the Nets, who have lost six straight and 14 of 16. Demin added 15 points, but Brooklyn struggled to find secondary scoring.

When Porter made a 3-pointer with 9:47 left in the third quarter, he had 12 of the Nets’ 24 baskets for 27 points.

Phoenix led 91-81 midway through the fourth, but Brooklyn responded with a 19-5 run capped by Porter’s 3 for a 100-96 lead with 3:33 left. Williams scored four quick points for Phoenix and then Allen tied it at 102-all with 1:39 remaining.

Up next

Nets: At Denver on Thursday night.

Suns: Host Detroit on Thursday night.

Red Wings’ Kane ties Stars’ Modano as highest-scoring American-born players in NHL history

NHL: Los Angeles Kings at Detroit Red Wings

Jan 27, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Detroit Red Wings right wing Patrick Kane (88) handles the puck during the second period against the Los Angeles Kings at Little Caesars Arena. Mandatory Credit: Brian Bradshaw Sevald-Imagn Images

Brian Bradshaw Sevald-Imagn Images

DETROIT — Patrick Kane of the Detroit Red Wings has tied Dallas’ Mike Modano as the highest-scoring U.S.-born players in NHL history.

Kane matched Mike Modano by recording his 1,374th point on an assist on a goal by Alex DeBrincat late in Detroit’s 3-1 loss to the Los Angeles Kings on Tuesday night. He got there a couple of months after turning 37, while Modano was 40 when he scored a goal to register point No. 1,374.

“Nothing really went right for us tonight, so it’s tough to really think about (the record) right now, but hopefully next game’s a better result and (I) can move past Mike next game,” Kane said after the game. “That’d be nice, to do that and do it with a win.”

He will have a chance to move ahead of Modano when the Red Wings host the Washington Capitals on Thursday.

Kane has been one of the faces of American hockey since getting taken with the first pick in the 2007 draft by Chicago. He helped the Blackhawks win the Stanley Cup three times from 2010-15 as a co-headliner of one of the most successful runs since the league’s salary cap era began in ’05.

Earlier this month, Kane became the 50th player and fifth American to score 500 goals, following Keith Tkachuk, Jeremy Roenick and Joe Mullen. Brett Hull, a dual citizen who was born in Canada and played internationally for the U.S., had 741 goals and 1,391 points.

Kane won the Calder Trophy as rookie of the year in ’07-08, the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP in 2013 and the Hart Trophy as regular-season MVP in 2015-16, when he also led the league in scoring.

Kane has 1,374 points on 500 goals and 874 assists in 1,341 career NHL regular-season games.

Modano retired in 2011 with 561 goals and 813 assists in 1,499 games.

Utah Jazz vs Los Angeles Clippers: Recap and final score

Lauri Markkanen finally returned for the Utah Jazz tonight, but the young squad was unable to hang with the Los Angeles Clippers. In the end and after a valiant fight (even holding a lead for much of the 1st half), Utah fell to the Clips with a score of 115-103. The 2nd half ended up being a major struggle and the wheels really fell off.

Lauri struggled a bit to shoot in this first game back and the Jazz were also missing young Most Improved Player candidate Keyonte George (rest) and tank commander Jusuf Nurkic (undisclosed illness). Throughout the game, Utah did receive positive contributions from Isaiah Collier, Cody Williams, and (most importantly) Ace Bailey. There were also some good stretches from Kyle Filipowski throughout the game.

However, the Jazz struggled with Kawhi Leonard. He simply couldn’t be stopped and knows the exact spots to exploit. In tonight’s matchup, Kawhi ended with 21 points, 7 rebounds, and 4 assists. The superstar has been on a tear lately, averaging 28.8 points, 5.6 rebounds, and 3.4 assists in his last 10 games and is ALSO on a streak of 25 straight games with 20+ points, which is insane. Ever since they sent Chris Paul home, the Clips have just been scorching through the league and add yet another win. They started the season pretty poorly and somehow they are now 22-24 and smack dab in the middle of the play-in standings.

Utah, as we all know, is losing games for a reason. The positive is that we are seeing fantastic growth from our young guys. As previously mentioned, Ace, Cody, and Isaiah all had great games. Ace particularly shot well with 4-9 from three and 2o points in the loss. Cody continues to look more dominant and decisive with yet another highlight play. Collier, filling in for Keyonte, distributed well and ended the night with a solid 9 assists.

The Clips were just too much to handle. Lauri looked a tad sluggish and the youth on the rest of the roster really stuck out at times, especially in the 2nd half where LA pulled out ahead. Kris Dunn hounded our young guards and had a THREE back-to-back steals and fast breaks. Kris ended up with 14 points on his former team.

It was just never gonna happen with Kawhi and James Harden playing at such a high level. The Clips do look like they may end up being a force in the playoffs this year and the Jazz continue to compete, but lose in the end. That’s all we want right? This one was definitely not the most entertaining watch and the crowd was quite lifeless. Everyone go catch up on some AJ Dybantsa, Cam Boozer, or Darryn Petersen highlights. It’ll help the pain go away.

Utah will take on Golden State tomorrow night in a back-to-back at Delta Center (7:oo PM MST).

Lakers vs. Cavaliers preview: LeBron James’ annual visit to The Land

After stacking another victory on the road, the Lakers (28-17) move on to Cleveland where they will take on the Cavaliers (28-20) for the first time this season. Los Angeles hopes to make it three wins in a row and improve their record to 4-1 in this current eight-game road trip.

Start time and TV schedule

Who: Los Angeles Lakers vs. Cleveland Cavaliers

When: 4 p.m. PT, Jan. 28

Where: Rocket Arena

Watch: ESPN, Spectrum SportsNet


Over the years, the Cavaliers have been one of those teams that regularly give the Lakers trouble. One of the reasons is because of how they’re built with so much size, athleticism and speed that perfectly exposes the Lakers’ defense. Even when Anthony Davis was anchoring the Lakers’ defense, the Cavs were still not a good matchup for the purple and gold.

In fact, over the last five years, the regular season series between the teams has never been split. One has swept the other and it’s going to be interesting to see if that’s the case again this year with one significant change in place.

For the Lakers, this will be Luka Dončić’s first time competing against the Cavs since arriving in Los Angeles. That alone changes the purple and gold’s dynamic in terms of how they match up with the Cavs. It makes for a fun matchup between Dončić’ and Donovan Mitchell and theoretically between Austin Reaves and Darius Garland, though neither will be suiting up for this one. Expect Marcus Smart, Jake LaRavia and and Gabe Vincent to get Reaves’ minutes as per usual.

Speaking of injuries, the Cavs have more to report as well. Evan Mobley, unfortunately, recently sustained a left calf strain injury so he’s also not going to suit up on Wednesday. Suffice it to say this game will be completely different matchup wise and it’ll be up to the Lakers to capitalize against a Cavaliers team without two of their top three scorers. Mobley’s absence could also impact the Cavaliers’ defense, which ranks 13th in the league.

Moreover, this will also be LeBron James’ seventh time playing the Cavs on their homecourt as a Laker. As usual, James will get the love and recognition he rightfully deserves from the crowd but don’t expect him to take it easy. The King always plays well against his former team, averaging 28.1 points, 7.2 rebounds and 7.1 assists against them. It’ll be nice to see another classic performance from LeBron.

More importantly, it’ll be ideal to see another team-spirited win. The Lakers have picked it up as of late thanks to their defense, which has shown signs of improvement since their recent victory against the Toronto Raptors. Rui Hachimura in particular has been spectacular off the bench and it’ll be nice to see this continue. Another strong performance from him and the rest of the Lakers’ role players will most likely guarantee a win in this one.

Let’s see if the Lakers can continue their winning ways on the road as James returns back home to Cleveland once again on Wednesday.

Notes and Updates

  • For the Lakers’ injury report, Austin Reaves (left calf strain) and Adou Thiero (right MCL sprain) are listed as out.
  • As for the Cavaliers, Garland (right great toe sprain), Max Strus (left foot surgery) and Mobley (left calf strain) are out. De’Andre Hunter (right knee soreness) and Sam Merrill (right hand sprain) are probable.

You can follow Nicole on Twitter at @nicoleganglani.

Knicks’ improved defense key during three-game winning streak

Call it a players only meeting, or don’t. 

Whatever it was, the message appears to have gotten through. 

The Knicks have suddenly turned things around following their brutally rough stretch, taking home their third consecutive victory on Monday night over the Sacramento Kings

Jalen Brunson was terrific late, but leading the way was the Knicks’ improved defense. 

Things were evened at 72 apiece through three quarters, but then Mike Brown’s shook up lineup turned things up and held Sacramento to just 15 points in the final frame.

Mitchell Robinson stayed in alongside Brunson, Miles McBride, Mikal Bridges, and OG Anunoby to close things out and the move worked tremendously. 

New York’s tenacious defense helped limit the Kings to just 40 percent shooting from the field and 16 percent from three-point land on the night. 

“It was an ugly game, but our defense stayed solid throughout,” Mike Brown said.

“We were able to grind it out and find a way,” Brunson added. 

The Knicks are now averaging just 87.3 points allowed during their brief winning streak, and they’ve held opponents under the triple-digit mark in two of those three games. 

So, what exactly has sparked this drastic turnaround?

Robinson said one of the biggest things has been their communication. 

Brunson, on the other hand, pointed in another direction.

“Our attention to detail, our focus, those are big components,” the captain said. “We have the ability to be a really good team if we do those things, the little things have to be important.” 

For New York to get where they hope this season, they’ll need to keep this up. 

The improved defense will have another very big test right away, as they head to Toronto to face the Raptors in a matchup of two of the Eastern Conference heavyweights in the second night of a back-to-back on Wednesday.  

Nets waste big Michael Porter Jr. effort, fall to Suns in chippy affair

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Michael Porter Jr. who scored a game-high 36 points, drives on Mark Williams during the Nets' 106-102 loss to the Suns on Jan. 27, 2026 in Phoenix

The Nets lost a late lead. Then they lost forward Ziaire Williams. And in the end, they lost 106-102 to Phoenix before 17,071 at Mortgage Matchup Center.

Brooklyn wasted a huge night by Michael Porter Jr., who had 36 points on 15-of-24 shooting and 6-of-10 from deep. And they squandered a big fourth-quarter run, leading with a minute left before blowing that lead.

“We had the lead after being down pretty much the whole game,” said Jordi Fernández. “Positive fight, positive competitiveness; but not good enough. And we want to be good (enough) to win games.”

Michael Porter Jr. who scored a game-high 36 points, drives on Mark Williams during the Nets’ 106-102 loss to the Suns on Jan. 27, 2026 in Phoenix. Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Egor Dëmin had 15 points and five rebounds, while Williams added 11 points and five assists before getting hurt in a late-game fracas between the teams.

The Nets had seized a 102-100 lead after Williams’ free throws capped a 16-2 run.

But they saw Grayson Allen (18 points) knot it on a finger roll with 1:39 to play. And after Porter lost the ball, Dillon Brooks (26 points) sank two at the charity stripe to put Phoenix ahead for good.

After Terance Mann lost the ball to Royce O’Neale, Williams dove on the floor for the loose ball. Brooks pounced on him to pry it loose. Dëmin — who had been thrown down hard by Dillon for a technical earlier — pushed the Suns instigator off Williams.



Mann and Phoenix’s Royce O’Neale got into it as hostilities ensued, and Williams got injured when a Suns staffer ran into him trying to break up the melee.

“Yeah, he’s hurt. We don’t know exactly what it is right now. It was a member of the other team running in to break up the fight, and he ran into him and hurt him,” Fernández said. “So, we’ll see how long it is; hopefully it’s not a long time.”

The Nets called a timeout trying to get a clean look for Porter, but they committed a shot clock violation with 34.1 seconds left.

Allen’s layup left Brooklyn down by four with 12.8 ticks remaining, and a Porter miss sealed it.

“There were a couple of options we could’ve executed,” Dëmin said. “But it was great defense by Phoenix, probably poor execution by us.”

Brooklyn has lost six straight and is a game out of a Top 3 spot in the lottery race.