Category: Sport

  • NBA Playoffs: What to expect in Spurs-Trail Blazers series

    NBA Playoffs: What to expect in Spurs-Trail Blazers series

    After putting together a Kia MVP-worthy regular season, Victor Wembanyama readies for his first playoff series.

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    This 2-7 Western Conference first-round series between the San Antonio Spurs and Portland Trail Blazers is unexpected in some ways.  

    Who expected the Spurs to go from 34 victories last season to 62 this season? Who expected the Trail Blazers – under acting head coach Tiago Splitter who took over early in the season – to go from 36 victories to 42? 

    San Antonio won the season series, taking two of three from Portland including a 112-101 victory on April 8, a game in which the Spurs’ Victor Wembanyama and Stephon Castle did not play. 


    Series schedule

    Here’s how to watch the Spurs vs. Trail Blazers series:

    All times Eastern Standard Time

    • Game 1: Portland at San Antonio | Sunday April 19 (9 ET, NBC/Peacock)
    • Game 2: Portland at San Antonio | Tuesday April 21 (8 ET, NBC)
    • Game 3: San Antonio at Portland | Friday April 24 (10:30 ET, Prime Video)
    • Game 4: San Antonio at Portland | Sunday April 26 (3:30 ET, ESPN)
    • Game 5: Portland at San Antonio | Tuesday April 28
    • Game 6: San Antonio at Portland | Thursday April 30
    • Game 7: Portland at San Antonio | Saturday May 2

    * = If necessary


    Regular-season results

    Nov. 26: Spurs 115, Trail Blazers 102
    Jan. 3: Trail Blazers 115, Spurs 110
    Apr. 8: Spurs 112, Trail Blazers 101


    Top storyline

    Victor Wembanyama’s first playoff series. In his third season, Wembanyama was special – special enough to warrant Kia MVP consideration and put himself in outstanding position to win his first Defensive Player of the Year Award. This season, he averaged 25 points, 11.5 rebounds, 3.1 assists, 3.1 blocks and 1.0 steals and shot 51.2% from the field, 34.9% on 3-pointers. His impact shines in other statistics, too. The Spurs are elite with Wembanyama on the court, scoring 120.5 points and allowing 103.6 points per 100 possessions – plus-17 net rating. When he’s not in the game, those stats drop to 114.3/113.7/plus-0.6). How will that translate in the 22-year-old star’s first playoffs? How does the seemingly unflappable Wembanyama handle the gravity of a best-of-seven series? 


    Keep your eyes on

    Mitch Johnson. A historian needs to go back to the late 1990s to find a Spurs playoff team not coached by Gregg Popovich. That changes with this Spurs series against the Trail BlazersSpurs coach Mitch Johnson took over for Popovich near the start of the 2024-25 season after Popovich had a stroke. Johnson was the interim coach last season and got the full-time job. It will be fascinating to watch his decisions. Popovich is the Spurs’ president of basketball operations, and Johnson has Pop’s mentoring and insight. It’s an advantage to rely on a guy who coached a team to five NBA championships, 22 consecutive playoff appearances and 170-114 career playoff record. 


    One more thing to watch for each team

    For Spurs: Their young(ish) guys beyond Wembanyama were tremendous this season, too. But key contributors Keldon Johnson, Stephon Castle, Dylan Harper, Julian Champagnie and Carter Bryant have never played in the playoffs. They will encounter stressful moments, and watching the Spurs work through those times – with the help of veterans De’Aaron Fox and Harrison Barnes – is a compelling subplot. 

    For Trail Blazers: Forward Deni Avdija posted All-NBA-caliber numbers this season: career highs in points per game (24.2), free-throw percentage (80.2%) and assists (6.7) along with 46.2% shooting from the field and 6.9 rebounds per game. The Blazers have an intriguing present and future with a talented roster and a new ownership group led by Tom Dundon. 


    One key number to know

    16% — The Blazers got 16% of their points, the league’s highest rate, from second chances. They ranked fourth in offensive rebounding percentage (35.4%) and third in second-chance points per 100 possessions (18.1). Only the Nets and Wizards were less efficient than the Blazers in regard to initial offense (prior to a rebound), and no team relied more on second chances to score.

    Now they’ll face the team (San Antonio) that led the league in defensive rebounding percentage (72.4%). The Blazers had some success on the offensive glass in the regular season series, retaining 32.5% of available offensive boards over their three games against the Spurs, the fifth highest rate for any team against the Spurs. But all three games were played without Victor Wembanyama, who had the highest individual defensive rebounding percentage (28.5%) among players who averaged at least 10 minutes in 40 games or more.

    — John Schuhmann


    The pick

    Spurs in five. The Spurs have too much offense and too much defense  ranked No. 3 in both categories – and too much Wembanyama. 

    * * *

    Jeff Zillgitt has covered the NBA since 2008. You can email him at jzillgitt@nba.com, find his archive here and follow him on X.

  • Lakers remain without Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves as playoffs begin

    Lakers remain without Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves as playoffs begin

    Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves remain out indefinitely as the Lakers’ postseason run begins.

    EL SEGUNDO, Calif. (AP) — Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves will not return from injury in time to begin the Lakers’ first-round playoff series against the Houston Rockets, leaving Los Angeles without its top two scorers.

    “They’re out indefinitely,” Lakers coach JJ Redick said after practice Tuesday at the Lakers’ training complex. “I’m not going to have an update for you this week.”

    Dončić strained a hamstring and Reaves strained an oblique during the Lakers’ loss to the Thunder on April 2 in Oklahoma City, and neither returned during the regular season. The Lakers host the Rockets in Game 1 on Saturday night.

    Dončić will return to Los Angeles on Friday after traveling to Spain last week for treatment on his hamstring, a person with knowledge of the decision told The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because Dončić and the Lakers aren’t revealing details about the NBA scoring champion’s recovery.

    Reaves is in Los Angeles, and he shot free throws with several teammates after practice ended Tuesday. The reported severity of his oblique strain seems likely to keep him out of the entire first-round series, although the Lakers haven’t put any timeline on either player’s recovery from injuries that frequently require a full month of healing or more.

    Dončić and Reaves combined to average 56.8 points, 13.8 assists and 12.4 rebounds per game when healthy this season, and their absences put a massive anchor on LA’s hopes of playoff advancement. Yet the Lakers still went 3-2 in the stars’ absence, earning home-court advantage in the first round, after LeBron James resumed his role as the focal point of the offense.

    Los Angeles also employed Luke Kennard as a ballhandler and initiator, and guard Marcus Smart is back after missing nearly three weeks with a right ankle injury. He is eager to play a role in countering the Rockets’ defensive pressure.

    “They’re aggressive, and we’re going to try to use it against them,” Smart said. “We’ve got some things put in, some different guys that are going to bring it up. They’re going to come out firing, and we’ve got to come out firing, too.”

    Backup center Jaxson Hayes is also ready to return after missing the final four games of the regular season to rest a left foot injury.

    “I was going to play no matter what,” Hayes said. “If I was hurting, I’d be playing.”

  • Heat’s Bam Adebayo exits SoFi Play-In Tournament game after hard fall

    Heat’s Bam Adebayo exits SoFi Play-In Tournament game after hard fall

    Bam Adebayo lies on the ground after being tripped by the Hornets’ LaMelo Ball during the 2nd quarter.

    CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Miami Heat center Bam Adebayo limped off the court early in the second quarter of Tuesday night’s SoFi Play-In Tournament game against Charlotte after he got tripped by Hornets point guard LaMelo Ball, causing him to land hard on his back.

    The Heat said Adebayo would not return.

    Ball was on the ground after driving to the basket and missing a shot when he appeared to take a swipe at Adebayo’s left foot with his left hand, causing Adebayo to fall backward. Adebayo stayed down as the action moved to the other end of the court and then back again before play was stopped.

    After being attended to by trainers, he got to his feet and walked off under his own power and was taken to the locker room.

    Ball was not called for a foul and the play could not be reviewed because play wasn’t stopped.

    Adebayo scored 83 points in a game last month.

  • Starting 5: The SoFi Play-In Tournament is here

    The Heat and Hornets meet tonight to get the SoFi Play-In Tournament slate rolling.

    Eight teams. Four Playoff spots. Three Play-In nights.

    The SoFi NBA Play-In Tournament tips off tonight on Prime – and the stakes are sky-high:

    • No. 10 Heat at No. 9 Hornets (7:30 ET, Prime): Loser goes home
    • No. 8 Blazers at No. 7 Suns (10 ET, Prime): Winner advances to Playoffs

    Welcome to the 2025-26 postseason.

    Brandon Miller, Bam Adebayo, Devin Booker, Deni Avdija, Shaedon Sharpe


    5 STORIES IN TODAY’S EDITION 🏀

    Play-In Begins: Three keys for Heat-Hornets & Blazers-Suns, plus what’s next

    Charlotte’s Surge: A rare turnaround fueled by a record-breaking 3-point trio

    Miami’s Blueprint: Play-In vets lean on pace, depth and a proven formula

    Phoenix’s Fire: A new identity and a red-hot superstar setting the tone

    Portland’s Push: Avdija’s rise, a defensive surge and a squad that knows how to beat the best


    BUT FIRST … ⏰

    Play-In Schedule

    The postseason tips off tonight on Prime with the opening games of the SoFi NBA Play-In Tournament. First, the Hornets host the Heat (7:30 ET | Tap To Watch), followed by the Blazers visiting the Suns (10 ET | Tap To Watch).

    The Play-In continues Wednesday on Prime with Magic-76ers (7:30 ET) and Warriors-Clippers (10 ET).

    Need A Refresher? Here’s how the Play-In Tournament works

    • Hit the Playoff Hub for the full postseason bracket, schedule and the latest news and stories.

    WNBA Draft: The Dallas Wings selected UConn guard Azzi Fudd with the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 WNBA Draft, reuniting her with former Husky teammate Paige Bueckers, who Dallas drafted No. 1 overall last year.


    1. SOFI NBA PLAY-IN TOURNAMENT TIPS TONIGHT: WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW

    Tonight's Play-In Slate

    The 82-game, 173-day regular season marathon is over.

    The postseason is here.

    The SoFi NBA Play-In Tournament tips off tonight on Prime, starting with a win-or-go-home showdown in Charlotte, followed by a win-and-in game in Phoenix.

    Before we break down how each team got here, let’s take a look at three things to watch in both matchups.

    East | No. 10 Heat at No. 9 Hornets (7:30 ET, Prime): Two of the league’s most explosive offenses meet with both teams’ seasons on the line.

    • Charlotte Shot-Making: The Hornets led the regular season in made 3s, hitting 16.4 per game at a 37.8% clip – the 2nd-best percentage in the NBA
    • Miami Speed: The Heat play faster than anyone, leading the league in pace en route to 120.9 ppg – trailing only Denver for the highest-scoring offense
    • Pace vs. Patience: While Miami thrives on the run, ranking 2nd in fastbreak ppg (18.4), Charlotte operates deep into possessions, ranking 2nd in field goal frequency with 7 to 4 seconds left on the shot clock

    Norm Powell, Kon Knueppel, Devin Booker, Donovan Clingan

    West | No. 8 Blazers at No. 7 Suns (10 ET, Prime): In the nightcap, two of the league’s top defenses square off as two All-Star guards lead the way offensively.

    • Avdija Ignition: Deni Avdija (24.2 pts, 6.9 reb, 6.7 ast) has reached new heights in Portland’s return to the postseason, joining Luka Dončić and Nikola Jokić as the only players averaging at least 24/6/6 this season
    • Book Balling: Devin Booker rolls into the Play-In red-hot, averaging 29 ppg since March 1, including five 30-pieces in his last six games
    • Strength vs. Strength: The Blazers enter tonight on a 10-4 run, backed by the league’s best DefRtg in that span. The Suns have boasted a top-10 defense all season and have allowed over 120 points just twice in the last month

    2025-26 Playoff Picture

    How The Play-In Works: With the stage set, here’s how each Play-In team can punch their ticket to the Playoffs.

    • Tuesday & Wednesday’s Stakes: The No. 7 vs. 8 winners advance to their respective conference Playoffs, while the No. 9 vs. 10 losers are eliminated
    • Friday Finale: Friday features the final Play-In games (all on Prime), with the No. 9 vs. 10 winners facing the No. 7 vs. 8 losers. The winners take the final Playoff spots
    • Playoffs This Weekend: The First Round tips Saturday on Prime and ABC, followed by another full day of Playoff hoops Sunday on ABC and NBC

    2. PATH TO PLAY-IN: NO. 9 HORNETS

    Brandon Miller, LaMelo Ball

    No team this century has made the postseason after an 11-22 start or worse through 33 games.

    Until the 2025-26 Hornets.

    As the calendar flipped to 2026, so did Charlotte’s season, going 33-16 the rest of the way to secure its first postseason berth in three years.

    Fueling the turnaround? An offense that can erupt at any moment.

    • The Evolution: Charlotte didn’t just lead the NBA in made 3s — it became the league’s most efficient offense in 2026, posting an NBA-best 120.7 OffRtg
    • The Backcourt Base: Brandon Miller (20.2 ppg) and LaMelo Ball (20.1) have thrived in their second season together, combining for 40.3 ppg, with Ball adding 7.1 assists

    Kon Knueppel, LaMelo Ball, Brandon Miller

    The Missing Piece: While Miller and Ball deliver steady production, Kon Knueppel has provided the spark, unlocking another level to Charlotte’s attack.

    • Kon’s Record Clip: Knueppel drilled an NBA-best 273 3s this season, shattering the rookie record and becoming the first rookie ever to lead the league in triples
    • Right Behind Him? Ball with 272, as he and Knueppel joined Steph Curry & Klay Thompson (4x) as the only teammates to rank 1st and 2nd in the NBA in made 3s in a season
    • Triple Threat: Since Jan. 1, Ball (1st), Miller (3rd) and Knueppel (4th) all rank top-5 in 3s, becoming the first teammates to do so since the 3-point line was introduced in 1979-80
    • Deep Edge: That’s led to Charlotte knocking down an NBA-best 849 triples in 2026 – 78 more than the next closest team

    LaMelo Ball, Kon Knueppel

    Hive Humming: But it’s not just the 3s, it’s how seamlessly Knueppel has fit into Charlotte’s star backcourt.

    With Knueppel, Ball and Miller on the floor, the Hornets boast a 130.3 OffRtg– the best mark of any 3-man lineup in the NBA this season (min. 60 GP).

    • “His impact on our culture – he’s part of one of the biggest franchise turnarounds in a winning season,” said Hornets coach Charles Lee of Knueppel
    • “He’s one of the most efficient players, not only as a rookie, [but] in the NBA as a whole,” Lee said.

    That chemistry has translated to wins. With Miles Bridges and Moussa Diabaté joining Knueppel, Ball and Miller in the starting lineup, Charlotte is 31-9 this season – all since Jan. 1.

    Now, after entering the new year 11 games below .500, Charlotte sits two wins from its first Playoff berth in a decade.

    • “It means a lot,” said Lee. “After the start that we had, for the guys to be resilient and dig down a little bit more for an opportunity to be in the [Playoffs] – it’s exciting. And I know that we’re hungry.”

    3. PATH TO PLAY-IN: NO. 10 HEAT

    Heat

    They’ve been here before and they know what it takes.

    No team has won more SoFi Play-In games than the Heat, who now look to reach the Playoffs through the Play-In for a record fourth straight year.

    • “It’s nuts. It makes you feel alive,” said Heat coach Erik Spoelstra on the Play-In Sunday. “Once you’re in it, it’s exhilarating. You have to embrace the competition.”

    Miami’s season has featured a range of ups and downs.

    The Heat opened the year 13-7, then went 16-20 leading into the All-Star break. They responded with seven straight wins in March, highlighted by Bam Adebayo’s historic 83-point game.

    Miami closed the season on a 5-10 slide, but enters tonight on a two-game win streak, with back-to-back 140+ point outings – a snapshot of Miami at its best.

    • Full Throttle: While leading the league in pace, the Heat have tallied 12 140+ point games, setting a new single-season NBA record
    • Heating Up: All 12 of those games have resulted in wins, with three coming in Miami’s last five outings
    • Steady Fuel: Driving the attack is Norman Powell, posting 21.7 ppg in his first All-Star season, while Adebayo (20.1 pts, 10 reb) anchors the team on both ends

    Bam Adebayo, Tyler Herro

    But Miami is most dangerous when it’s sharing the rock. The Heat are the only team in the NBA ranked top-5 in both passes made and assists this season, with seven players averaging double figures.

    • Depth Delivering: That includes 45 games with at least six double-digit scorers, the most of any postseason team
    • Winning Formula: When Miami eclipses its season assist average (29 apg), it is 28-7
    • “We know what the drivers are for our success,” said Spoelstra on Sunday. “We have enough experience of doing it the right way to put ourselves in a position to win.”

    Now, Miami will look to become just the second team to advance from the Play-In as a No. 10 seed. The first? The Heat – last season.

    • “It’s a Game 7,” said Spoelstra on tonight. “I want our guys to take on the challenge and do whatever is necessary.”

    4. PATH TO PLAY-IN: NO. 7 SUNS

    Devin Booker, Dillon Brooks

    After missing the postseason in 2024-25 for the first time in five years, Phoenix’s path back began before last season even ended.

    Hours before Game 7 of the NBA Finals, the Suns hit reset, agreeing to trade Kevin Durant in what would become a historic seven-team deal.

    In came Jalen Green and Dillon Brooks to join new head coach Jordan Ott, reshaping the team around Devin Booker.

    New core. New coach. New identity.

    • Defense First: Phoenix finished 27th in DefRtg last year. This season, they rank 9th, while allowing the 6th fewest ppg (111.1)
    • Relentless Edge: The Suns don’t just defend, they wreak havoc. Phoenix ranks top-5 in deflections (5th), steals (4th) and caused turnovers (3rd) – trailing only Detroit and OKC in the latter
    • Defense To Offense: That pressure creates opportunity the other way, with Phoenix averaging 19.9 ppg off turnovers – the 5th-most in the NBA
    • “That’s who we have to be,” said Ott of Phoenix’s defensive identity. “That’s how we’ve found success … our physicality, take it to the legal limit and have overall intent every possession.”

    Devin Booker

    At the heart of the Suns’ resurgence is Booker, who’s leveled up as the stakes have climbed.

    In a loaded West postseason push, Booker’s 29 ppg since March 1 ranks 3rd in the NBA, trailing only Luka Dončić (36) and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (29.1).

    • When It Matters: Book has delivered late, too, ranking 7th in 2nd-half scoring (13.9 ppg, min. 60 GP) and sitting among 12 players with 100+ clutch points this season, including a last-second winner to beat OKC on Jan. 4
    • Emerging Duo: He’s also led Phoenix with 6 assists per game, meshing alongside Green, who’s averaged 20.7 pts since March 1

    Devin Booker

    But Booker’s impact goes beyond the box score. The 11th-year superstar has set the tone for the Suns’ postseason return, elevating those around him while embracing Phoenix’s hard-nosed identity.

    • “He has a pulse of the game as well as anyone I’ve been around,” said Ott of Booker. “I think that’s been one of the biggest parts of our season – is his belief in his teammates…
    • “He always makes the right play and plays hard defensively … he wants to play a certain way and he goes and does it.”

    5. PATH TO PLAY-IN: NO. 8 BLAZERS

    [ ]

    The Blazers won 21 games in 2023-24.

    Two years later, they’ve doubled that total, going 42-40 for their first postseason appearance in four seasons.

    A big reason why? Deni Avdija.

    • The Leap: In his second season with Portland, the 25-year-old has blossomed into a premier playmaker, averaging career highs in points (24.2) and assists (6.7), while adding 6.9 rebounds, en route to his first All-Star nod
    • The Company: Only one other Blazer has averaged 24/6/6 in a season: Hall of Famer Clyde Drexler.
    • But it’s Avdija’s intangibles that make him invaluable
    • “He wants to win so bad,” said Blazers interim head coach Tiago Splitter. “[He makes] a lot of those winning plays, those 50/50 balls. It’s amazing to see.”

    Donovan Clingan, Jrue Holiday, Deni Avdija

    That mindset epitomizes Portland. In a stacked West, the Blazers have made their mark in the margins – defending, crashing the glass and forcing turnovers – and are now playing some of their best ball.

    • The Slide: The Blazers went 5-7 from All-Star weekend to March 15, struggling to find a spark as Avdija nursed a back injury
    • The Response: Portland answered by digging deep defensively, sparking a 10-4 run to close the regular season where it led the NBA in DefRtg (106.6)
    • The Anchor: Manning the middle is sophomore center Donovan Clingan, who ranks 7th in the NBA in double-doubles (37) and 4th in blocks (130)
    • The Disruptors: Jrue Holiday and Toumani Camara have formed an elite perimeter defensive duo, with Holiday leading Portland in total plus/minus (+197), while Camara paces the team in steals (94)
    • The Result: Extra possessions, as Portland ranks 2nd in offensive rebounds, 6th in total rebounds and 7th in caused turnovers

    Jrue Holiday, Robert Williams III

    Those winning plays have shown up against the league’s best. The Blazers are one of three teams to beat the West’s top four seeds this season – the Thunder, Spurs, Nuggets and Lakers (2x) – and have also taken down the East’s No. 2 Celtics.

    Now, they’ll need that same edge in an elimination game where every possession is magnified.

    • “The intensity is different,” said Holiday (a two-time NBA champion) of the postseason. “What’s on the line is different … the games come down to possessions a lot more, and who makes more plays.”

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  • Heat great Udonis Haslem participates in Reddit AMA

    Heat great Udonis Haslem participates in Reddit AMA

    Heat great Udonis Haslem spilled the beans in a Reddit AMA.

    Udonis Haslem, a three-time NBA champion and 20-year member of the Miami Heat, shared insights from his playing career and current executive role as part of a Reddit AMA. Check out what he had to say:

    In 2014 Finals, where you played the Spurs for the second time. Much has been talked about the ball-movement of that Spurs team. I want to know how you see that series, especially as a vet in Miami.

    The ball movement was tremendous. Obviously, they were well coached. A lot of times, you get in situations where you look back, and you say that you beat yourself, and we wish we could do some things differently, but honestly, I can’t say that we beat ourselves. I just have to say that the Spurs were the better team in that series, and they beat us. Congratulations. It was just one of those things.–Udonis

    Since you played with the Heat for so long, you’ve had tons of different teammates, so which ones were your favorite ones, and do you have any funny stories involving them?

    I think everybody understands Dwyane. He’s my favorite teammate. Everybody knows the Dwyane Wade that they know now, and the great basketball player, and the great man, that he is now, but I remember meeting him, and I never met nobody that hadn’t been in a dentist so long with so many damn cavities.

    That’s just what I remember when we went to take our physicals. We used to do everything together, and we had to go to the dentist, and I was waiting in the dentist’s waiting room forever. I had never waited in the dentist’s waiting room that long for anything, and he was back there getting his teeth fixed, because he had so many cavities growing up, so that was funny, but Dwyane’s my favorite teammate.

    My older brother went to UF while you were there. He said he remembers you and the team riding around campus on golf carts lol. What’s your favorite memory at UF?

    I had so many great memories at UF. My favorite memory at UF is probably meeting my wife. I was standing in front of my dorm room outside with my pit bull, and I wasn’t supposed to have a dog on campus, or in my dorm room, anyway. I was one of those guys, I kind of defied all the rules. So I had a dog living with me on campus, and I was standing outside of my dorm room with my pit bull and a couple of my teammates.

    My now-wife, Faith, was coming back from track practice, walking past the dorm room, when she stopped and started playing with my dog. Then me and her started talking, and the rest is history. So that’s probably my favorite moment from UF.

    Out of all 20 of your seasons, which year was the most special to you personally?

    My final year was probably the most special to me, and that’s just because that was the year that wasn’t about me. I think every year up until that point was about me.

    It was about what I wanted to do, it was about extending my career, it was about playing for a championship, it was about all the things that you play this game for.

    I think my final year wasn’t about me.

    My final year was about everyone who sacrificed to help me get to that point in my career. Everybody who sacrificed for me to be the person that I needed to be, like my parents who sacrificed so much. The city of Miami that supported me for so long. My wife, while I was away, traveling so much, and my kids, while I was away. That final year was about them. I wanted them to celebrate that year.

    UD, HEAT lifer here. So refreshing to have your voice nationally reppin’ the 305. Can you share a bit about who helped prepare and mentor you for your budding career as an analyst and what it’s been like from your first TV appearance until now?

    I’ve had so many conversations with a lot of people. I’ve had conversations with the great Mark Jones, who’s about to retire, and he’s had an amazing career. I’ve had conversations with Isaiah Thomas, with my brother, Dwyane Wade. I’ve had conversations with just a couple of different people who are already on that level. Some of my Miami Heat family as well, the people over there in PR. Shout out to JJ, my guy, Jason Jackson.

    So many people I’ve had conversations with, about taking this step, and they all encouraged me, and I have to be honest about it, too. About 10 years ago, we were on vacation, and Dwyane told me that he thought I would be good at analysis and TV, and I told him he was crazy. But those are some people who helped me take this step and be more comfortable making the movement.

    My knowledge of the game and basketball was always great. I’ve had great coaches. I played for Stan Van Gundy, Pat Riley, and Erik Spoelstra. You go down my college tree, I played for Billy Donovan. I played for Anthony Grant, who’s at Florida.

    You go down to high school, I played for Frank Martin, so I’ve had great coaching, so I have to obviously give them credit as well.

    What’s a piece of advice you would give to the rookie version of yourself? It can be about basketball but also about off-court stuff.

    Be patient. Your journey may not look like everybody else’s, but that doesn’t mean you’re not going to reach your destination, so just be patient.

    Udonis Haslem thinks Nikola Jokić and the Nuggets might be underrated heading into the playoffs.

    What are your predictions for the SoFi Play-In Tournament and the 2026 NBA playoffs?

    Are you kidding me? You know what my prediction is: the Miami Heat!

    Hopefully, fingers crossed. Charlotte’s been playing amazingly. It’s going to be a tough game, tough task, but hopefully they can get through that. And then hopefully they deal with the winner between Philadelphia and Orlando. And they haven’t beaten Orlando yet this year, so that’ll be a tall task. Detroit has played well. I’d be crazy to believe that anybody’s going to win the East besides Boston, the way they’ve played, getting Jayson Tatum back, and what Joe Mazzulla’s been able to do, shout out to them. And I think that the New York Knicks and Atlanta Hawks series is going to be very, very interesting.

    Out West, I don’t think that the Lakers are just going to get landslided like people think, just because Luka and Austin Reaves are out. I understand Houston has KD and those guys, but I think the Lakers are going to make that a series. I think JJ’s going to coach well, I think they’re going to compete, and I think they’re going to make that a series, so I don’t think that’s going to go the way people think that’s going to go. OKC has been amazing. I expect them to be right there in the Finals, but I’m really interested in watching the Denver Nuggets because they’re my surprise team. I think everybody’s looking at OKC and San Antonio right now, and I think everybody’s forgetting about Denver.

    Joker is playing amazing, Jamal Murray’s great, and they’re healthy.

    What was the most significant tactical change on defense from the time you entered the league to when you retired?

    So much more zone. I think when I came into the NBA, you would just use zone, because you couldn’t guard somebody. Well, actually, when I first came in, they didn’t have zone. And then they brought it back, but you really only use zone a little bit when you can’t guard somebody. I think now they use zone just to throw the team off, just to mess up the team’s rhythm, confuse them a little bit.

    I think the zone defense is something that has been technically a huge difference from when I first came into the league to the way they use it now. Sometimes they even pick up full court and fall back into a zone.

    I have lived here in the 305 since 1972. I taught in Liberty City and Allapattah and when I was a kid my dad took me to see Mychal Thompson play in high school with the Jackson 5. The heartbeat of our city was amplified big time in 1988 when Ted Arison got us a seat at the NBA table, then his son and grandson made that chair into a throne. 3 rings, 2 insane Jimmy runs to the Finals, and a Wilt-Bam-Kobe later, I want to ask you: How often do you sit back and enjoy the memories? Can you pick 1 favorite?

    Not as often as I should right now. I’m still building, I’m still growing, I’m still pushing.

    Every now and then, I sit back and think about the journey, and how amazing it’s been to be a part of those three championships, to be a kid growing up in Miami, and to watch the Miami Heat grow, to watch from that little first arena that was Overtown, and now moving a little bit down the street to downtown.

    Alonzo Mourning coming to Miami. And thinking that Juwan Howard was going to come to Miami and play with Alonzo Mourning, then that contract got rescinded.

    I just remember the history. I remember Tim James, who was from Liberty City, went to Northwestern, went to the University of Miami, and got drafted by the Miami Heat.

    He was the original Mr. Miami that played for the Heat before me and wore the number 40. So, if anybody wants to know the story of me wearing the number 40, it was to represent Tim James, who was the original kid from Miami, Liberty City, who played for the Miami Heat first. I was second. And my father also wore No. 40.

    So, yes, the history of the Heat runs through my veins, and I know it like my own history. So it’s been amazing to watch, but I don’t look back very often, because I’m too focused on looking forward.

    Hi UD! Appreciate all you did for Miami Heat. How do you personally define “Heat Culture?” Is it just a grind day-in and day-out? Waking up early at 5 am; first in, last out?

    I’m a person who gives up at the first sign of resistance: I cannot go to the gym because I don’t want to wake up early. What is the most important advice you have to be disciplined as you? For example, the story of you going from Undrafted to an NBA champion (and one day, the Hall!)

    If I could define Heat Culture, it’s about getting comfortable being uncomfortable. I think the way you do that is you embrace the suck. You embrace the struggle. You embrace the grind, and you live in those moments. Once again, understanding what the goal is. Heat Culture is also about enjoying somebody else’s success and understanding that it’s not always about you. You’re probably not going to have the role that you want, but you can still play a role in a winning situation. And also, Heat Culture is about sacrifice.

    That’s the biggest thing that people don’t understand. I think people feel like only role players have to sacrifice, but I think the stars have to sacrifice, the coaches have to sacrifice, I think everybody has to sacrifice, which, if you’re talking about winning the championship, I think that’s the biggest thing that people don’t want to do.

    I think people feel like only certain people have to sacrifice, but everybody has to sacrifice if you want to win a championship. You look at what the Lakers were able to do, and LeBron James had to move to the third row, and they were on a hell of a run until those guys got hurt. You look at when we had our run. Chris Bosh was one of the top three power forwards in the game, and took a third option to be on a championship team, so that’s a huge sacrifice.

    You’ve done a crazy good job at cultivating this mutual respect between yourself, the organization, and the fans. That is, your relationship with the team seems to be the most “about it” of anyone, it’s really difficult to imagine the Heat organization not having Udonis Haslem involved somewhere.

    Are there other people you think about in this sort of “ambassador” role for the organization? Like other guys around the league, players or staff, that you think as like “This guy is all about this team and this city”? Has there been anyone outside the org that you look to and think “I want to represent my team the way this person does”?

    Yeah, you think about guys like Nick Collison, who’s an Oklahoma City legend, and I think he’s one of the guys. I don’t know if he’s still in the front office there, but I think he’s all about that team, all about that city. So, shout out to Nick Collison for what he’s been able to do, and the relationship he has over there.

    I kind of carved out my own lane. I can’t really say that there’s anybody who does it the way I do it. I literally just came from practice yesterday with the Miami Heat. I flew all the way in from L.A. just to go to practice for the last game. I attend training camp, and when I say go to practice and attend training camp, I’m actually practicing and competing and running, and I’m part of the team with these guys.

    For these guys to listen to me, for these guys to respect me, I want to get to the bottom of it with these guys. So I start at the bottom, and I work up with these guys, and that’s where we build these relationships. So when I have to have those uncomfortable conversations with them, they trust me because we’ve built that relationship in our most vulnerable moments. We’re tired, we’re sweating, we’re beating each other up, and that’s where the respect and the love comes from. That’s the way I do it. That’s the way I tap in with these guys. It’s a little bit different. I don’t think most 45-year-old retired guys who played 20 years are going to training camp, running around, and beating these guys up and getting beaten up. But I enjoy it. The recovery is taking me a little longer than it used to. I still enjoy it because I earn their respect, and they listen to me.

    On the 2004-2005 Miami Heat team you played with:

    • Eddie Jones
    • Christian Laettner
    • Alonzo Mourning
    • Shaquille O’Neal
    • Steve Smith

    Do you think having that many 10 year+ veterans (who had productive careers in the NBA) helped you with accelerating your development in Year 2?

    If so: What specific gaps/weaknesses did any one of them (whether executing on the court or even mentally understanding something) directly help with you?

    And lastly: Is there any advice that any of them gave you (whether it was for the games, practice, conducting or maximizing yourself away from the team, or how to set yourself up post playing days) that any of them gave you that stuck with you throughout/during your career? Thank you.

    Yes, I learned so much from those guys. Alonzo Mourning was in the weight room every day. And as a basketball player, you don’t think that’s ideal to be in the weight room every day, but I learned from Alonzo just how to hit that weight room every day and just work on my body and build my body, and you don’t have to be lifting to gain actual muscle. Just lifting to be proactive and prevent injuries and different things like that.

    Eddie Jones was a South Florida legend. So for me, just being from South Florida, having the opportunity to play with Eddie Jones, I was in awe of him. So many guys, Steve Smith, “Smitty” too. I’m a Miami kid. Steve Smith is not from Miami. Eddie Jones is a South Florida guy, he’s from Pompano. Steve Smith is a Heat legend. So, coming from Miami, getting a chance to be around Steve Smith and play for Smitty, I was in awe of that.

    I wanted to learn as much from him. He talked to me about things off the court. Cars? That holds no value, young fella. Look into watches and different things like that. So I was able to learn those kinds of things from Steve Smith, and all these guys gave me a little bit of something that they had, and I was able to kind of turn it into how it authentically works for me and how I can be a veteran with those same skill sets that they had, but in my own authentic way.

    What was the best five minutes of basketball you’ve ever seen someone play? Teammate or opponent

    I’ve seen a lot of great basketball. I did not see the Kobe 81 game, so I didn’t see that with my own eyes. I saw Dwyane drop 55, I think, against the Knicks in Miami. So I probably would say that’s the one I’ve seen with my own eyes, when I was present. Watching on TV, just having the opportunity to watch my brother Bam score 83 was amazing. Just the first quarter alone, he scored 31. I was just in awe watching the first quarter.

    Udonis Haslem is frequently asked about his perspective for Ray Allen’s clutch 3 in Game 6 of the 2013 NBA Finals.

    Hi Udonis, I’m a really huge fan of yours and was glued to my screen during the 2013 NBA Finals. Can I ask what was going through your head and your reaction when you saw Ray Allen hit that clutch 3-pointer to send the Spurs to overtime in Game 6?

    I had the perfect angle as a rebounder. You know when a shot comes from one side of the basket, it was coming from the right corner, that the rebound most likely will bounce to the left corner. So I was sitting right on the left corner baseline, right in front of the shot. When Ray released it, I knew it was good. I can tell, as a rebounding guy, that it was not long, it wasn’t short, it was right on target. So I kind of anticipated it going in.

    I mean, all that just happened so fast. But it also seemed like it was happening so slowly. And I just remember the shot going in, and I had the perfect angle watching it, and I just remember Ray saying, “Get those damn ropes out of here.”

    And just the look on Bron’s face, and the excitement. In moments like that, with that team that has been put together, that team is put together to win. There’s no other reason you put together a super team but to win. And if a super team does not win, then it gets broken up, and that’s the reality of it. So I’m looking at this situation as if we don’t win, we might not be together next year. That’s the truth. You put together a super team for one reason only, and if it doesn’t get done, you break it up.

    You built a reputation as one of the most respected players in the league. What does it actually take to earn that kind of respect in a team?

    You have to be all the things that you say you are. You can’t talk about it and not be about it. I think so many times we hear people talk, talk, talk, but their actions don’t match their words. I’m a person who makes sure that my actions match my words.

    I might tell you, hey, I’m going to meet you at the gym tomorrow at 6 o’clock to shoot, and I do not want to get up tomorrow to meet you at 6 o’clock to shoot, but because I told you that, I’m going to do it. So for me, I think the reason why I’m so respected is that everything I say I’m going to do, I do it. I’m authentic with it. I’m also very, very selfless when it comes to my teammates, my team, my city, my community.

    I know how to celebrate other people and put other people first. Those are qualities that I think help people respect me. And I’m about winning. I’m about the right things. And I treat everybody the same way. I treat the janitor the same way I treat the CEO.

    What was the most pivotal point in your NBA journey?

    The most pivotal point in my NBA journey was when I didn’t get drafted. I really feel like having to go to Europe and going through that one year in Europe, I think that had to be a part of my journey. I think if I had gotten drafted, then I could have had a career that maybe lasted a few years, and I could have been out of the league.

    But that year, I had a chance to go to Europe. I matured a lot. I embrace the suck, like I talked about. You know, this sucks, but this is what my journey looks like. I embraced that. And I had a humongous chip on my shoulder. I’d probably call it a boulder. I probably had a boulder on my shoulder when I came back, and that helped me as well.

  • Waiting for kidney and pancreas transplants, Heat equipment manager remains focused on work

    Waiting for kidney and pancreas transplants, Heat equipment manager remains focused on work

    Rob Pimental, the Miami Heat’s director of team operations, awaits kidney and pancreas transplants.

    MIAMI (AP) — Rob Pimental is standing at his desk inside his office, getting through what’ll be another 12-hour day. The Miami Heat director of team operations is staring at an oversized computer screen, typing away on a flight plan, a half-eaten bowl of salad to the left of his keyboard.

    An IV stand on wheels is set up behind him. On the floor, a clear bag holds dialysis fluid.

    “Hey, don’t mind that,” he says to a visitor, as he nods toward the tubing and bag at his feet.

    This has been Pimental’s reality for nearly a year now. He’s been a Type 1 diabetic for about 30 years, and last spring his health took a serious turn — his kidneys began failing and, probably for a variety of reasons, his blood pressure was soaring. He’s been on a transplant list for months, awaiting both a new kidney and pancreas.

    The call might come this week. It might come next year. Nobody knows.

    “We’ve all just kind of wanted to rally around him,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “We support him as much as possible, but also we let him know, one, we love him, and two, we really appreciate everything that he does and that he’s still able to do it, despite everything.”

    April is National Donate Life Month, and it hits particularly close to home for the Heat. Alonzo Mourning, one of Miami’s all-time great players, a Hall of Famer and the team’s vice president for player programs, needed a life-saving kidney transplant in 2003. He’s been an invaluable resource for Pimental throughout this process.

    “That’s a big thing, having Zo around me all the time,” Pimental said. “He’s been through this and just to have him come in and walk me through some steps I didn’t understand and then just be there if I have a question, it means something. Sometimes he walks in and he’s like, ‘Man, you look good today. You good? You feeling good? You look good.’ That means a lot, because he knows what I’m going through.”

    Pimental — one of the league’s longest-tenured equipment managers — wasn’t on the plane that carried the Heat to the play-in tournament on Monday. He hasn’t been able to fly with the team this season, which is the biggest change to the way he’s handled the job that he’s had in Miami for 15 years.

    He gives himself dialysis twice a day and relies on the help of other Heat staffers and people he oversees probably more than ever before — along with constant comic relief from former Heat players Kyle Lowry and Kevin Love, who check in on Pimental all the time — but he’s still finding a way to make it work.

    “It’s meant a lot because he’s meant so much to us, as a mentor, as someone we look up to, as someone who has put so many years into this league,” said locker room manager Marvin Ulysse, who reports directly to Pimental. “I felt like it was our duty to get him through this journey. He’s a big brother to us. We’re like his human dialysis in a way.”

    Pimental hasn’t missed a beat, even though he can’t travel. When problems pop up, he handles them from home. He still works long days — but has also appreciated being around his wife and children more than he has in the past.

    That said, there are scary times. He often wakes up in the middle of the night and grabs at his phone, fearful that he’s missed the call telling him that organs are awaiting him. The unknown is stressful. He’s worried about what’ll happen to his kids if something happens to him.

    Each day, he said, brings hope.

    “Dialysis is working, I’m still here,” Pimental said. “Just like somebody said to me awhile back, you’ve got to learn how to string as many good days together as you can so when that one bad day comes, you can handle it. And that, I think, is what we’re doing right now. The Heat have been very, very supportive throughout this whole thing. But to be honest, the only motivation I need is my wife and my kids. To be here for them, that’s the only motivation I ever needed.”

  • NBA Fantasy — Salary Cap Edition: 2025-26 recap, part 1

    NBA Fantasy — Salary Cap Edition: 2025-26 recap, part 1

    The top manager in NBA Fantasy — Salary Cap Edition for 2025-26 rostered the 76ers’ Tyrese Maxey.

    The final GameDay has come and gone. No more points. No more transactions.

    The book has officially closed on the 2025-26 season of NBA Fantasy — Salary Cap Edition. Fantasy general managers can now rest, no longer needing to keep a close eye on their roster or be prepared to make moves whenever possible to climb league standings.

    It’s time to reflect on the champion, memorable moments and identify some All-Fantasy players:


    Final podium

    The crown belongs to general manager Adam Boustani and his team “Dima Maghreb” of the United Kingdom. He crossed the finish line with 32,611 total fantasy points (TFP) to place first among 63,940 total players for the 2025-26 season.

    Across the past 25 weeks, Boustani made 52 transactions and wound up with a roster value of $105.9M. He still had $0.4M in the bank when all was said and done. He outlasted Jack Bones’ “Peace and Love” (32,274 TFP) and Ezra Tsegaye’s “colesaidimdreamville” (32,166 TFP).

    Maintaining a perfect balance of stars and bargains allowed Boustani to rake in fantasy points as he started the right players on the right GameDays. His final roster features Nikola Jokić, Tyrese Maxey and Kevin Durant, who ultimately ranked No. 1, No. 4 and No. 7, respectively, in TFP.

    Those three stars combined for 11,807 TFP on a total salary of $54.4M, and averaged 168.2 fantasy points per game (FPPG) combined. Their contributions were essential to Boustani’s success, but he also benefited from players who flew under the radar.

    The highest-value players on his winning roster were Collin Gillespie, Maxime Raynaud and VJ Edgecombe. Gillespie distinguished himself as this season’s best bargain, producing 30.3 FPPG at $5.6M. Raynaud and Edgecombe, meanwhile, accounted for 61.6 FPPG combined on $13.3M.

    Boustani’s roster also featured Amen Thompson (3,398 TFP on $13.7M), Donovan Clingan (2,672 on 8.9), Daniss Jenkins (1,630 on 5.0) and Gui Santos (1,458 on 5.0). This season was also a bit of redemption for Boustani, who finished third overall in 2024-25.


    GameDays to Remember

    March 10, 2026

    The story has been told many times before, but it’s one that will be worth telling for years and years to come. Bam Adebayo put on a performance for the ages with a season-high 110 fantasy points. His 83 points scored that night for the Miami Heat against the Washington Wizards rank second-most all-time for a single game, trailing only Wilt Chamberlain’s 100 on March 2, 1962. Adebayo also collected nine rebounds, three assists, two blocks and two steals in the process.

    Dec. 25, 2025

    If there’s a truly singular talent in today’s league, it’s Jokić. He continues to defy what’s believed to be possible on the hardwood. That was precisely the case on Christmas Day, when the three-time MVP gave the gift of 108 fantasy points. The Denver Nuggets needed overtime to defeat the Minnesota Timberwolves, but got plenty of help from Jokić’s 56 points scored, 16 rebounds, 15 assists and two blocks. It was his masterpiece in another masterful fantasy season.

    Nov. 10, 2025

    This season signified arrival for the Detroit Pistons. Leading them into title contention has been Cade Cunningham, who had a statistical anomaly of an outing with 101 fantasy points against the Wizards. His titanic effort of 46 points scored, 12 rebounds, 11 assists, two blocks and five steals has been overshadowed by more recent performances, but remains quite the feat. A late-season injury pushed him down the TFP rankings, but his 56.1 FPPG were good for 3rd.


    All-Fantasy First Team

    PG: Luka Dončić — 4,113 TFP (2nd), 64.2 FPPG (2nd), 217.6 FSV (115th)

    SG: Jaylen Brown — 3,552 TFP (10th), 50.0 FPPG (9th), 250.1 FSV (64th)

    SF: Kevin Durant — 3,598 TFP (7th), 46.1 FPPG (21st), 226.3 FSV (96th)

    PF: Jalen Johnson — 3,854 TFP (3rd), 53.5 FPPG (6th), 260.4 FSV (48th)

    C: Nikola Jokić — 4,464 TFP (1st), 68.6 FPPG (1st), 194.9 FSV (159th)


    All-Fantasy Second Team

    PG: Tyrese Maxey — 3,745 TFP (4th), 53.5 FPPG (7th), 240.1 FSV (80th)

    SG: Donovan Mitchell — 3,436 TFP (13th), 49.0 FPPG (11th), 226.1 FSV (97th)

    SF: Deni Avdija — 3,213 TFP (19th), 49.4 FPPG (10th), 245.3 FSV (71st)

    PF: Scottie Barnes — 3,686 TFP (6th), 46.0 FPPG (22nd), 242.5 FSV (75th)

    C: Victor Wembanyama — 3,523 TFP (11th), 55.05 FPPG (4th), 185.4 FSV (179th)


    All-Fantasy Third Team

    PG: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander — 3,743 TFP (5th), 55.04 FPPG (5th), 198.0 FSV (154th) 

    SG: Desmond Bane — 3,030 TFP (24th), 36.9 FPPG (58th), 218.0 FSV (114th)

    SF: Kawhi Leonard — 3,138 TFP (21st), 48.2 FPPG (14th), 207.8 FSV (137th)

    PF: Julius Randle — 3,307 TFP (17th), 41.8 FPPG (38th), 250.5 FSV (63rd)

    C: Alperen Sengun — 3,483 TFP (12th), 48.3 FPPG (13th), 213.7 FSV (124th)

  • 19 incredible stats to know about LeBron James before his 19th playoff run

    When the Los Angeles Lakers open the 2026 NBA Playoffs against the Houston Rockets on Saturday (8:30 p.m. ET, ABC), LeBron James will begin his 19th postseason run. To celebrate that historic achievement, here are 19 stats you need to know about one of the greatest careers in sports history.


    19th playoff appearance

    James ties Karl Malone and John Stockton for the most playoff appearances in NBA history, while passing Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Tim Duncan, who had 18 apiece. His 19 playoff appearances are more than six NBA franchises have in their entire histories: Orlando (18), Memphis (14), Minnesota (14), Toronto (14), Charlotte (10) and New Orleans (nine).


    All-time scoring leader

    James leads all players in scoring in both the regular season (43,440 points) and the playoffs (8,289 points). He is the only player in NBA history with 50,000 combined points in the regular season and playoffs, currently at 51,729 (and counting).

    In the playoffs, he’s scored in double figures a record 290 times, including a record 261 games with 20+ points, a record 123 games with 30+ points, as well as 29 games with 40+ points and one 50+ point game.

    All-time leader in games played

    Earlier this season, James became the NBA’s all-time leader in regular-season games played (now at 1,622 at season’s end). During that time, he’s played against 36% of all players in NBA history. He also leads all players in playoff games (292) and can reach the 300-game benchmark with a first-round series win.


    All-time leader in field goals made

    No player in NBA history has made more buckets than James in the regular season (15,961) or in the playoffs (8,229). Of those playoff buckets, 480 have come from beyond the arc, as James ranks third behind Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson for the most 3-pointers made in playoff history.


    All-time leader in minutes played

    James leads all players in minutes played in both the regular season (61,029) and playoffs (12,062). That is the equivalent of 42.38 days in the regular season and 8.38 days in the playoffs.


    Top 5 all-time in assists

    James is one of only four players in NBA history to rack up over 12,000 assists, with his 12,016 dimes trailing only Stockton, Jason Kidd and Chris Paul. In the playoffs, James’ 2,095 assists rank second only to Magic Johnson.


    Top 5 all-time in triple-doubles

    All-around play has always been at the core of James’ game, as evidenced by his 125 regular-season triple-doubles (fifth all-time) and his 28 playoff triple-doubles (second all-time, just two behind Johnson).

    James also has the most such games in NBA history:

    • 20+ points, 5+ rebounds, 5+ assists (971 games)
    • 25+ points, 5+ rebounds, 5+ assists (729 games)
    • 30+ points, 5+ rebounds, 5+ assists (426 games)

    LeBron vs. everybody

    James is the only player in NBA history to post 40 points or more in a game against all 30 teams. He is also one of only three players (along with Russell Westbrook and Luka Dončić) to post triple-doubles against all 30 NBA franchises.


    An MVP Race fixture

    With four Kia MVPs, LeBron is tied with Wilt Chamberlain for the third-most in NBA history behind Abdul-Jabbar (six), Michael Jordan, and Bill Russell (five each). James has finished in the top five in MVP voting 14 times, including 13 consecutive years from 2006-18.

    In addition to his four MVP wins, LeBron has four second-place finishes, tied with Larry Bird and Jerry West for the most runner-ups. James has top-two finishes in MVP voting across three different decades:

    • 2000s: Second in 2005-06; first in 2008-09
    • 2010s: First in 2009-10, 2011-12 & 2012-13; second in 2013-14 & 2017-18
    • 2020s: Second in 2019-20

    Most combined wins

    No player has more wins across the regular season (1,048, second to Abdul-Jabbar) and the playoffs (an NBA record 184) than James’ 1,232 combined. James has more playoff wins than 21 active NBA franchises.

    The only nine with more:

    • Los Angeles Lakers (466)
    • Boston Celtics (429)
    • Philadelphia 76ers (250)
    • San Antonio Spurs (222)
    • Golden State Warriors (217)
    • New York Knicks (210)
    • Detroit Pistons (190)
    • Chicago Bulls (187)
    • Oklahoma City Thunder (186)

    Most Playoff series wins

    Over his first 18 playoff appearances, James racked up an NBA record 41 playoff series wins. He is 15-3 record in the first round, 12-3 in the conference semifinals, 10-2 in the conference finals and 4-6 in the NBA Finals. James’ 41 series wins are more than 24 active franchises.

    The only six with more:

    • Los Angeles Lakers (112)
    • Boston Celtics (94)
    • Golden State Warriors (48)
    • Philadelphia 76ers (48)
    • San Antonio Spurs (45)
    • New York Knicks (45)

    Only one to win Finals MVP with 3 different teams

    James has been named Finals MVP during each of his four championship runs, giving him the second-most Finals MVPs in league history behind Jordan’s six. James is the only player to win the award while playing for three different teams: the Miami Heat (2012, 2013), the Cleveland Cavaliers (2016) and the Los Angeles Lakers (2020).


    An NBA Finals staple

    James has participated in 12.7% of all NBA Finals ever played (10 of 79). His 10 Finals appearances are tied with Abdul-Jabbar for the third most all-time, behind Russell (12) and Sam Jones (11). James’ run of eight straight Finals appearances (2011-2018) is only matched by the Russell-era Celtics teams of the 1950s and 1960s.


    Only member of the 10K-10K-10K club

    James is the only player in NBA history to tally at least 10K points, 10K rebounds, and 10K assists over the course of a career. No other player possesses the 10K-rebound and 10K-assist combo — Westbrook is the closest, but only reaches 9,000 rebounds.

    James ends the 2025-26 season with career totals of 43,440 points, 12,095 rebounds, and 12,016 assists.


    Averaging 20+ points in record 23rd season

    Not only is James the first player to play 23 NBA seasons, but he’s also averaged at least 20 points in every one of those seasons, including a record 20-season run averaging 25+ points (2004-05 through 2023-24).

    Adding in his points and rebounds, James has averaged at least 20 points, five rebounds and five assists for 23 straight seasons. No other player has a streak longer than 10 seasons.


    The double-digit scoring streak

    James scored at least 10 points in 1,297 games from Jan. 6, 2007 to Dec. 1, 2025. His streak was longer than every NBA career except for these 25 players.

    When the streak was broken on Dec. 4, 2025, James had eight points with the ball in his hands in the closing seconds of the fourth quarter in a tie game against the Raptors. Rather than looking to keep his scoring streak intact, James dished the game-winning assist to Rui Hachimura, who buried a corner 3-pointer at the buzzer.


    Most All-Star selections

    Earlier this season, James earned his 22nd consecutive All-Star selection. That extended his record for the most selections ever, which began in his second NBA season (2004-05).

    In addition to being the NBA’s all-time scoring leader in the regular season and playoffs, James also has the most points in NBA All-Star history with 449.


    Most All-NBA selections

    With a record 21 selections, James has earned All-NBA honors in more seasons than the entire careers of every NBA player in history, outside of these seven:

    • LeBron James (23 seasons)
    • Vince Carter (22)
    • Kevin Garnett, Dirk Nowitzki, Robert Parish, Chris Paul, and Kevin Willis (21 each)

    With 13 All-NBA First Team selections, James has two more than any player in league history, topping Kobe Bryant and Malone with 11 apiece.


    Scoring as a youngster … and as a veteran

    James is the only player in NBA history to score 40+ points as both a teenager and a 40-year-old.

    • Teenager (3x): 41 points vs. Nets on March 27, 2004 (19 years, 88 days old), 43 points vs. Pistons on Nov. 24, 2004 (19y, 330d), 40 points at Hawks on Dec. 28, 2004 (19y, 364d)
    • 40+ Year Old (2x): 40 points at Blazers on Feb. 20, 2025 (40y, 52d), 42 points vs. Warriors on Feb. 6, 2025 (40y, 38d)

    James is the only player in NBA history with multiple 40+ point games in his 40s. His three 40+ point games as a teenager are second all-time behind rookie Cooper Flagg (four).

  • Starting 5: The 2026 NBA postseason bracket is set

    The postseason field and SoFi Play-In matchups are set following Sunday’s 15-game regular-season finale.

    How do you secure a top-3 seed in the wild West?

    How about becoming just the third team in the last 75 years to enter the postseason on a 12+ game win streak?

    No. 3 in the West belongs to Nikola Jokić’s Nuggets. Meanwhile, the rest of the 2025-26 postseason bracket is LOCKED.

    The SoFi NBA Play-In Tournament starts Tuesday. Start your Monday with how we got here – and what’s next ⬇️

    Nikola Jokić


    5 STORIES IN TODAY’S EDITION 🏀

    Bracket Set: This week’s postseason stakes, showdowns and everything ahead

    Wild West Finish: Nuggets streak to No. 3, Lakers lock in No. 4, Blazers & Clips race for No. 8

    East Playoff Chaos: Four teams, two guaranteed Playoff spots and one frantic finale

    East Play-In Push: The East race closed with six squads separated by just three games

    Roundup: Pistons hit 60 dubs, more postseason teams roll and a record day for rookies


    BUT FIRST … ⏰

    Scores & Schedule

    The SoFi NBA Play-In Tournament tips off Tuesday on Prime, as the East’s No. 9 Hornets host the No. 10 Heat (7:30 ET), before the West’s No. 8 Blazers visit the No. 7 Suns (10 ET).

    What’s Next: The SoFi Play-In Tournament continues Wednesday and Friday, before the NBA Playoffs start Saturday. See the full schedule here, plus key dates here.

    Got Postseason Questions? Head to the Playoffs Hub

    Ten Years Ago, Today: Kobe Bryant closed his career with an iconic 60-point finale. On that same day (April 13, 2016), the Warriors capped a 73-9 season – the best regular-season record in NBA history.


    1. 2025-26 POSTSEASON STARTS TUESDAY: WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW

    2025-26 postseason bracket

    It took 1,230 games. It took a season’s worth of movement. It came down to the final day.

    Now, the 2025-26 NBA postseason is set – and it all starts Tuesday.

    • The SoFi NBA Play-In Tournament opens tomorrow on Prime with the East’s No. 9 vs. 10 win-or-go-home showdown (Hornets vs. Heat, 7:30 ET) and the West’s No. 7 vs. 8 matchup (Suns vs. Blazers, 10 ET)
    • Wednesday’s Slate: The Play-In continues as the East’s No. 7 Sixers welcome the No. 8 Magic (7:30 ET, Prime), before the West’s No. 9 Clippers host the No. 10 Warriors (10 ET, Prime)
    • The Stakes: The No. 7 vs. 8 winners advance to their respective conference Playoffs, while the No. 9 vs. 10 losers are eliminated
    • Friday Fireworks: Friday features the final Play-In games, with the No. 9 vs. 10 winners facing the No. 7 vs. 8 losers. The winners take the final Playoff spots
    • Playoffs This Weekend: Two of sports’ signature days await when the Playoffs tip on Saturday & Sunday – with hoops all day Saturday on ABC & Prime, then all day Sunday on ABC & NBC/Peacock

    Sunday postseason possibilities

    How We Got Here: Sunday started like this ⬆️, with 10 postseason seeds undecided: four in the West (Nos. 3, 4, 8, 9) and six in the East (No. 5-10).

    It finished like this ⬇️, with 14 of Sunday’s 15 games featuring postseason teams and nine swing games that shaped the postseason bracket.

    NBA standings

    But before we break down an epic Sunday, let’s take a look at this week’s postseason matchups.

    Each East Matchup, Real Quick:

    No. 10 Heat at No. 9 Hornets (Play-In): Only Denver scored more points than Miami (120.9 ppg) this season, while Charlotte ranks 1st in OffRtg since Jan. 1 – setting the stage for an electric win-or-go-home showdown in Tuesday’s SoFi Play-In opener.

    No. 8 Magic at No. 7 Sixers (Play-In): Orlando and Philly each finished 45-37, with Philly earning the tiebreaker with a 2-1 head-to-head record. Now, they meet for a fourth time, with the winner advancing to the Playoffs.

    No. 4 Cavaliers vs. No. 5 Raptors: The Cavs are 16-6 with both Donovan Mitchell and James Harden in the lineup. They’ll face Scottie Barnes and Toronto’s top-5 rated defense in the First Round of the Playoffs.

    No. 3 Knicks vs. No. 6 Hawks: Led by Jalen Johnson and Nickeil Alexander-Walker, Atlanta finished the season on a 19-5 run for their first top-6 Playoff berth in five years. Their reward? Jalen Brunson and the Knicks, who are a top-3 seed for a third straight season.

    No. 1 Pistons & No. 2 Celtics get their opponents from the Play-In.

    Tyrese Maxey, Paolo Banchero, Jalen Johnson, Karl-Anthony Towns

    Each West Matchup, Real Quick:

    No. 10 Warriors at No. 9 Clippers (Play-In): In another can’t-miss duel, Kawhi Leonard leads the Clippers against Steph Curry’s Warriors – with both teams’ seasons on the line.

    No. 8 Blazers at No. 7 Suns (Play-In): Deni Avdija’s breakout All-Star campaign has Portland in the postseason for the first time since 2021. Now, the Blazers face Devin Booker and the Suns with a Playoff berth up for grabs.

    No. 4 Lakers vs. No. 5 Rockets: In the first-ever postseason matchup between two players with over 75,000 combined points, LeBron James leads the Lakers against Kevin Durant’s Rockets.

    No. 3 Nuggets vs. No. 6 Wolves: Led by Nikola Jokić, the Nuggets (W12) join the 2018 Sixers and the 1973 Bucks as the only teams in the last 75 years to enter the postseason on a 12+ game win streak.

    Waiting on the other side is Anthony Edwards’ Wolves, who ended Denver’s season two years ago in Game 7 of the West Semifinals.

    No. 1 Thunder & No. 2 Spurs get their opponents from the Play-In.

    Kawhi Leonard, LeBron James, Kevin Durant


    2. WILD WEST SET: NUGGETS EARN NO. 3, LAKERS LAND NO. 4, BLAZERS TAKE NO. 8

    Nikola Jokić, LeBron James

    After weeks of win streaks, superstar surges and contenders shuffling spots night after night, the final piece in the West’s top six – the No. 3 seed – came down to two simultaneous tip-offs.

    The Lakers needed a win and a Nuggets loss to secure it, while Denver – riding an 11-game heater – needed just a dub.

    Los Angeles did its part.

    Lakers 131, Jazz 107: LeBron James tallied 18 points, 6 boards and 3 steals in the 1st half, while Deandre Ayton and Rui Hachimura posted matching double-doubles (22 pts, 10 reb) as the Lakers raced past Oscar Tshiebwe (29 pts, 17 reb) and the Jazz. | Recap

    That put the pressure on Nikola Jokić and the streaking Nuggets – with the No. 2 Spurs standing in their way.

    Nuggets 128, Spurs 118: Jokić was clinical (23 pts, 8 reb, 7-12 FG in 18 mins) as Denver jumped out to a 70-56 halftime lead and never looked back, topping the Victor Wembanyama-less Spurs for a 12th straight win and the No. 3 seed, edging the Lakers by one game. | Recap

    • 🔒 Denver At No. 3: Julian Strawther added 25 points for the Nuggets, who have earned a top-4 seed in the West for four straight years
    • Offensive Surge: To get there, Denver paced the NBA in points this season (122.1 ppg), including 130.1 ppg amid its win streak
    • Record Run: Only one other team in NBA history has scored that many points amid a 12-0 run – the Nuggets in 1982

    Nikola Jokić

    Leading The Charge? Jokić (27.7 pts, 12.9 reb, 10.7 ast), who is now just the second player ever to average a triple-double in consecutive seasons, joining Russell Westbrook (3 straight, 2017-19).

    • Special Season: Jokić is now the first player in NBA history to lead the league in rebounds and assists per game in the same season, since leaders were determined by per-game averages in 1969-70
    • Spurs Shine: De’Aaron Fox (24 pts, 6 reb, 5 ast) and Stephon Castle (10 pts, 11 reb, 9 ast) led San Antonio with Wemby out

    Darius Garland, Deni Avdija

    In the West Play-In picture, the Blazers and Warriors entered Sunday battling for the No. 8 seed.

    Clippers 115, Warriors 110: Bennedict Mathurin posted a near triple-double (20 pts, 9 reb, 8 ast) and LA held off a late push from Steph Curry (24 pts, 6 reb, 4 3s) and Golden State to complete its record turnaround, needing a Portland loss to secure the No. 8 seed. | Recap

    • Historic Turnaround: After a 6-21 start, LA finished the season 42-40, becoming the first team ever to finish over .500 after being 15 games below .500

    But the Blazers refused to give up position.

    Blazers 122, Kings 110: Deni Avdija was operating (25 pts, 6 reb, 10 st), while Jrue Holiday poured in 23, as Portland outpaced Precious Achiuwa (27 pts, 11 reb) and Sacramento to lock in the No. 8 seed, setting up Tuesday’s Play-In matchup vs. No. 7 Phoenix. | Recap


    3. EAST PLAYOFF CHAOS: 2 SEEDS OPEN, 4 TEAMS CHASING, 1 FINISH

    Buddy Hield, Jaime Jaquez Jr.

    In the East, Sunday opened with seed Nos. 5-10 all undecided.

    For the Hawks, a win would secure them the No. 5 seed, while a loss would open the door for the Raptors, who were also racing the Magic and Sixers for No. 6.

    And with scenarios aplenty, Miami sparked the chaos.

    Heat 143, Hawks 117: Jaime Jaquez Jr. (26) and Norman Powell (25) combined for 51 points, while Bam Adebayo was everywhere (25 pts, 10 reb, 3 stl, 2 blk), leading Miami to a near wire-to-wire win over Buddy Hield (31 pts) and Atlanta. | Recap

    • Heat Warning: It’s Miami’s 12th game with 140+ points this season, surpassing the 2023-24 Pacers (11) for the NBA’s single-season record

    Immanuel Quickley, Brandon Ingram

    With Atlanta’s loss, Toronto needed a win and a Magic loss to climb to No. 5.

    Raptors 136, Nets 117: RJ Barrett (26 pts), Brandon Ingram (25 pts, 9 reb) and Scottie Barnes (18 pts, 12 reb, 12 ast) were cooking, as the Raptors never trailed after 7:46 in the 1st quarter to secure at least a top-6 spot – with more still in play. | Recap

    That brings us to Boston, where the Magic needed a win in hopes of earning the No. 6 seed – while Toronto needed an Orlando loss to jump to No. 5.

    Celtics 113, Magic 108: Baylor Scheierman (30 pts, 7 reb, 7 ast) and Luka Garza (27 pts, 12 reb) led the way for the Celtics, with Garza drilling a go-ahead triple with 32 left to edge Orlando in crunch time, despite Paolo Banchero’s triple-double (23 pts, 10 reb, 11 ast). | Recap

    • 🔒 Toronto To No. 5: With their win, plus losses by Atlanta and Orlando, the Raptors jumped the Hawks for the No. 5 seed
    • 🔒 Atlanta To No. 6: That moved Atlanta to the East’s final guaranteed Playoff spot, solidifying the top-6 seeds

    4. EAST PLAY-IN PUSH: SIXERS SECURE NO. 7, HORNETS TAKE NO. 9

    Tyrese Maxey

    That left the East’s No. 7-10 seeds up for grabs, with Orlando and Philly fighting for No. 7 and Miami and Charlotte racing for No. 9.

    76ers 126, Bucks 106: While Toronto’s win ended Philly’s hopes of a top-6 finish, the Sixers earned the No. 7 seed with a win over Milwaukee, as Tyrese Maxey (21 pts) fueled a decisive 38-16 3rd-quarter run to take control for good. | Recap

    • 🔒 7 vs. 8 Play-In: That moved Orlando to No. 8, with Philly earning homecourt in their Play-In matchup on Wednesday (7:30 ET, Prime)

    Brandon Ingram, LaMelo Ball, Kon Knueppel

    Charlotte needed a win to secure the No. 9 seed over Miami.

    Hornets 110, Knicks 96: LaMelo Ball (5 3s), Brandon Miller and Coby White scored 19 points apiece as the Hornets pulled past Miles McBride (21 pts) and the Knicks, securing homecourt in Tuesday’s No. 9 vs. 10 Play-In matchup against the Heat. | Recap

    • Record Rook: Kon Knueppel (14 pts, 6 reb, 5 ast) hit three triples, becoming the first rookie to lead the league in made 3s in a season, finishing with a rookie-record 273
    • Frantic Finish: The East race closed with six teams (No. 5 Toronto through No. 10 Miami) separated by just three games

    5. ROUNDUP: POSTSEASON SQUADS DUB, MORE ROOKIES SHINE

    Paul Reed, Jamaree Bouyea, Clint Capela

    Sunday’s action continued as postseason squads geared up, while more rookie records fell.

    Pistons 133, Pacers 121: Paul Reed didn’t miss a shot (26 pts, 11-11 FG, 4-4 FT), while Tobias Harris added 24 points as the Pistons beat the Pacers to finish the season with an East-best 60-22 record. | Recap

    • Sweet 60: It’s just the third 60-win season in Detroit franchise history, along with 2005-06 (64-18) and 1988-89 (63-19) – the latter ending in an NBA title

    Meanwhile, the Suns took down the West’s No. 1 seed.

    Suns 135, Thunder 103: Jamaree Bouyea posted 27 points and 9 dimes as Phoenix denied OKC its 65th win of the season, with both teams resting their starters with their seeds already locked. | Recap

    Rockets 132, Grizzlies 101: Clint Capela tallied a season-high 23 points and 13 boards as the No. 5 Rockets rolled to their 10th win in 11 games. | Recap

    Cavaliers 130, Wizards 117: Nae’Qwan Tomlin (26 pts, 8 reb, 5 ast) and Tyrese Proctor (22 pts, 11 reb, 8 ast) led the No. 3 Cavs to a wire-to-wire win over the Wizards, ending Cleveland’s regular season with five wins in its last six games. | Recap

    Jeremiah Fears, Derik Queen, Ryan Nembhard, Cooper Flagg

    Wolves 132, Pelicans 126: Already locked into the No. 6 seed, the Wolves capped their regular season with a win behind Terrence Shannon Jr. (26 pts, 5 reb, 5 ast), overcoming big nights from rookies Jeremiah Fears (36 pts, 10 reb, 5 ast) and Derik Queen (30 pts, 22 reb). | Recap

    • Rare Rookie 1-2: Fears & Queen are the first rookie teammates to each post 30-point double-doubles in the same game since Boston’s Bill Russell & Tom Heinsohn in 1950-51

    Speaking of rookie duos…

    Mavericks 149, Bulls 128: Cooper Flagg closed his standout season with 10 points, while fellow first-year player Ryan Nembhard (17 pts, 9 reb, 23 ast) made history, passing his coach, Jason Kidd (17), for the most assists in a game by a Mavs rookie. | Recap

    • Coop 🤝 MJ: Flagg is the first rookie since Michael Jordan (1984-85) to lead his team (or finish T-1st) in total points, rebounds, assists and steals in a season since steals were first tracked in 1973-74

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  • Michigan State’s Jeremy Fears says he’s declaring for the NBA Draft

    Michigan State’s Jeremy Fears says he’s declaring for the NBA Draft

    Jeremy Fears averaged 15 points and 9.4 assists per game in his third season with the Spartans.

    EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) — Jeremy Fears, who led Michigan State in scoring and the nation in assists per game, will declare for the NBA Draft while maintaining his college eligibility, he announced on Instagram on Friday.

    Fears was an Associated Press All-Big Ten first-team selection and an AP All-America second-team pick after averaging 15 points and 9.4 assists per game in his third season with the Spartans.

    “This is an important step in my journey and I’m looking forward to learning, growing and competing against the best as I continue to develop my game,” he wrote. “I’m grateful for Coach (Tom) Izzo, the Michigan State staff, my teammates and my family for their continued support and belief in me.”

    Underclassmen can maintain their eligibility by applying to the NBA’s undergraduate advisory committee by Thursday at 11:59 p.m. Eastern. The committee provides feedback on players’ draft prospects to help them decide whether to remain in the draft. Players who choose to return to school must withdraw from the draft by May 27 at 11:59 p.m. Eastern.

    A player would lose his eligibility if he hires an NCAA-certified agent before applying to the advisory committee or at any point if he hires an uncertified agent.