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  • Arizona’s Tommy Lloyd says Bryce James has made ‘huge progress,’ calls redshirt decision ‘a long play’

    While Bronny James declared for the NBA Draft close to two years ago, after just one season at USC, his younger brother, Bryce, is now biding his time at Arizona.

    Bryce James, the 18-year-old son of four-time NBA MVP LeBron James, has been redshirting the 2025-26 season, and, according to head coach Tommy Lloyd, the first-year guard has made “huge progress.”

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    “He’s been with us through the summer and now, and the redshirting decision was just a long play to give Bryce the most options in his career as his career unfolds,” Lloyd said in an interview with reporter Chancellor Johnson that made the rounds Tuesday.

    Lloyd added: “I have a real strong belief that Bryce is going to be a contributor at Arizona in the near future. He’s really shown a lot of progress in just kind of not only learning our system but just physically maturing.”

    The Wildcats remain undefeated and have been the top team in the AP Poll the past eight weeks. While they’ve piled up six top-25 wins, James has been watching from the bench.

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    The 6-foot-5, 195-pound Sierra Canyon product has yet to make his collegiate debut.

    Lloyd explained that James is a year behind most players in his class. James turns 19 in June. He was a three-star prospect and the No. 231 overall recruit in the 2025 cycle, per the Rivals industry ranking.

    “So part of the thinking was let’s slow it down and let Bryce’s physical development catch up with his peers, and it really has,” Lloyd said, via Johnson.

    “We love having Bryce around. What I’ll say about Bryce is he’s a normal person, a normal kid. He’s a great teammate. He draws no extra attention to himself. That’s all from the outside. Those people do it. But on a day-to-day basis, he’s a really valued member of our team, and he’s a great young man.”

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    James, who notably also held an offer from Ohio State, helped Sierra Canyon win the CIF state Division I championship last year.

    The year before that, he played on the Nike EYBL circuit with Strive For Greatness. Across 14 games with them in spring 2024, he averaged 6.9 points and 2.2 rebounds, shooting 36.8% from deep, per ESPN, which reported that James made multiple 3s in seven games during that span.

    Bryce James wasn’t nearly as highly touted of a recruit as his older brother, whom the Los Angeles Lakers ultimately selected in the second round of the 2024 NBA Draft, setting the stage for father-son NBA history.

  • Kawhi Leonard added to NBA All-Star roster by commissioner Adam Silver

    Kawhi Leonard is an All-Star after all.

    The NBA announced on Tuesday that commissioner Adam Silver had named Leonard an All-Star after he failed to make the cut for starters as voted on by fans, players and media, or for the reserves named by NBA head coaches.

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    Per ESPN’s Shams Charania, Silver added Leonard to the player pool to bring the number of U.S. All-Stars up to 16 for the new U.S. vs. the World All-Star game format. The format will feature two U.S. teams of eight players and a third international team that compete in a tournament-style format at the Feb. 15 All-Star game. Leonard will be part of the USA Stripes team, with full rosters announced Tuesday.

    Leonard’s addition to the roster will also give the host Clippers an All-Star representative, as they did not have one before.

    Kawhi Leonard is the only All-Star representative for the host Clippers at the Feb. 15 All-Star game.

    Kawhi Leonard is the only All-Star representative for the host Clippers at the Feb. 15 All-Star game.

    (ASSOCIATED PRESS)

    Leonard’s omission from the initial All-Star roster caused an uproar as the six-time All-NBA selection and two-time Finals MVP is in the midst of one of his best seasons.

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    [Get more Clippers news: Los Angeles team feed]

    Leonard is having the best scoring season of his career with 27.6 points per game. He’s tied for the league lead with 2.1 steals per game and is also averaging 6.1 rebounds, 3.6 assists and 0.6 blocks.

    The Clippers got off to a 6-21 start, which may have played an impact in neither Leonard nor teammate James Harden making the initial cut. But they’ve gone 17-5 since that start to surge back into playoff contention in the Western Conference.

    As usual, availability is an issue for Leonard. But he’s remained relatively healthy by his standards, having played in 36 of the Clippers’ 49 games as of Tuesday.

  • NFL claims that ICE won’t be at Super Bowl, in conflict with previous DHS, Trump administration statements

    The NFL expressed Tuesday that it’s “confident” that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents won’t be at the Super Bowl on Sunday, in conflict with previous statements from Department of Homeland Security (DHS) officials.

    Cathy Lanier, the NFL’s chief security officer, addressed the topic during a security briefing with reporters ahead of Sunday’s game at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California.

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    “There’s no planned ICE enforcement activities,” Lanier said. “We are confident of that.”

    Lanier’s claim stands in conflict with repeated statements from DHS officials that ICE will have a presence at the Super Bowl amid a nationwide campaign targeting immigrants for deportation under President Donald Trump. The NFL has no control over what decision DHS or the Trump administration make regarding ICE at the Super Bowl.

    DHS: Super Bowl not a ‘safe haven’

    DHS adviser Corey Lewandowski said on a podcast in October that the Super Bowl would not be a “safe haven” for targets of ICE activities.

    “There is nowhere that you can provide safe haven to people who are in this country illegally,” Lewandowski said. “Not the Super Bowl and nowhere else. We will find you. We will apprehend you. We will put you in a detention facility, and we will deport you.”

    DHS Secretary Kristi Noem echoed Lewandowski’s statement, saying on the same podcast that ICE will be “all over” the Super Bowl.

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    Lewandowski and Noem made their statements shortly after the NFL announced that Puerto Rican artist Bad Bunny would headline the Super Bowl halftime show. Noem said this of the NFL when asked what message she wanted to send the league in response to its decision to feature Bad Bunny:

    “They suck, and we’ll win,” Noem said. “They won’t be able to sleep at night because they don’t know what they believe. And they’re so weak, we’ll fix it.”

    Bad Bunny pushes back

    Bad Bunny is a vocal critic of the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement campaign and reiterated his stance during an acceptance speech at the Grammy awards Sunday night.

    “Before I say thanks to God, I’m going to say ICE out,” he said. “We’re not savages, we’re not animals, we’re not aliens, we are humans and we are Americans … The hate gets more powerful with more hate. The only thing that is more powerful than hate is love.

    “So please, we need to be different. If we fight, we have to do it with love.”

    NFL commissioner Roger Goodell reiterated the league’s support for Bad Bunny as the Super Bowl halftime performer in a news conference Monday.

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    ICE, DHS plans for Super Bowl remain murky

    DHS has not confirmed in recent days whether or not it has plans for ICE enforcement at and around the Super Bowl. Per the Associated Press, DHS spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin refused to say whether federal immigration agents will be present around the game.

    The AP reports that DHS official Jeff Brannigan indicated in private calls with local law enforcement and the NFL that ICE does not plan to conduct enforcement activities around the Super Bowl. DHS has not publicly confirmed that stance, and concerns remain among critics that a Trump administration prone to changing its mind could do so if that is the plan.

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    ICE and its tactics are under increased nationwide scrutiny in the aftermath of the shooting deaths of U.S. citizens Alex Pretti and Renee Good by agents.

  • Bulls trade Nikola Vučević to Celtics for Anfernee Simons: What the deal means for fantasy basketball

    The Chicago Bulls have been busy this trade season and the latest pre-deadline casualty was big man Nikola Vučević, who was sent to the Boston Celtics in a deal for guard Anfernee Simons on Tuesday afternoon, per ESPN’s Shams Charania. The teams also swapped second-round picks in the trade, which was the second deal made by Chicago on Tuesday.

    Vučević, 35, was in the final year of a contract worth around $21 million. Simons, 26, is also on an expiring deal worth $27.6 million. Chicago had previously dealt Kevin Huerter and Dario Sǎrić to the Pistons as part of a three-team deal with the Timberwolves earlier in the day. The Bulls picked up guards Mike Conley Jr. and Jaden Ivey in the process.

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    Below, Yahoo fantasy basketball analyst Dan Titus will provide his reaction to the trade with analysis for key players.

    Fantasy basketball impact

    Nikola Vučević – PF/C, Boston Celtics

    Celtics shoring up their frontcourt with Vuče is a good real-life basketball move that will likely still translate well to fantasy. I don’t expect Vuče to play 30 minutes a night with a capable backup big like Neemias Queta present, but he’ll still be the preferred fantasy option of the two going forward. The Celtics land an efficient and consistent big man who can stretch the floor and still be a capable rebounder. I don’t anticipate too much of a drop off when it comes to his fantasy output in points or 9-cat leagues. Queta, on the other hand, becomes droppable in 10s, and a hold, wait-and-see in 12s.

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    Jalen Smith – PF/C, Chicago Bulls

    One of the early winners at the trade deadline, those who stashed Smith are elated to hear Vuče is on his way to Beantown. Smith was already operating in a larger capacity, starting alongside Vuče in six of his last seven games before suffering a calf injury. With Zach Collins out, Smith now has a stronghold over the center minutes in Chicago. He’s been providing nearly top-100 value over the past couple of weeks, but if the Bulls don’t add any additional pieces to the frontcourt, I’d project he’d be at least a top-60 type of player across formats.

  • Biggest 2026 Super Bowl bets: Top 10 largest Super Bowl LX wagers still alive

    The 2025 NFL Playoffs have finally come down to one game: Super Bowl LX between the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks

    There have been plenty of futures wagers on teams to win the Super Bowl, beginning last February and going throughout the season, and we’ve been keeping track of all the biggest reported Super Bowl wagers bettors here. But with only a few teams remaining, plenty of those futures wagers (we’re looking at you, Lions, Ravens and Chiefs), have gone by the wayside.

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    These are the biggest bets (by liability) that bettors are sweating as the Super Bowl LX in Santa Clara, California, approaches on Feb. 8, 2026.

    Top 10 biggest Super Bowl LX bets (by liability)

    1. $2 million on New England Patriots to win Super Bowl 60 at +200 odds (Caesars)

    Bet wins $4 million

    2. $50,000 on Seattle Seahawks to win Super Bowl 60 at 60-1 odds (BetMGM)

    Bet wins $3 million

    3. $1.1 million on Patriots to win Super Bowl 60 at +188 odds (Circa Sports)

    Bet wins ~$2.1 million

    4. $50,000 on Patriots to win Super Bowl 60 at 35-1 odds (DraftKings)

    Bet wins $1.75 million

    5. $725,000 on Patriots to win Super Bowl 60 at +195 odds (BetMGM)

    Bet wins $1.41 million

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    6. $10,000 on Patriots to win Super Bowl 60 at 80-1 odds (DK)

    Bet wins: $800,000

    7. $30,000 on Patriots to win Super Bowl 60 at 22-1 odds (BetMGM)

    Bet wins: $660,000

    [Check out Yahoo Sports’ new sports betting content hub]

    Losing wagers from eliminated teams

    • $50,000 on Chicago Bears to win Super Bowl 60 at 66-1 odds (BetMGM)

    Bet wins $3.3 million

    • $50,000 on Houston Texans to win Super Bowl 60 at 40-1 odds (DraftKings)

    Bet wins $2 million

    • $100,000 on Denver Broncos to win Super Bowl 60 at +900 odds (BetMGM)

    Bet wins: $900,000

    • $100,000 on Broncos to win Super Bowl 60 at +900 odds (Hard Rock Bet)

    Bet wins: $900,000

    • $7,200 on Houston Texans to win Super Bowl 60 at 100-1 odds (Caesars)

    Bet wins $720,000

    • $9,000 on Chicago Bears at to win Super Bowl 60 at 75-1 odds (Caesars)

    Bet wins: $675,000

    • $60,000 on Buffalo Bills to win Super Bowl 60 at +850 odds (BetMGM)

    Bet wins: $510,000

    • $50,000 on Buffalo Bills to win Super Bowl 60 at +650 odds (Caesars)

    Bet wins: $325,000

    • $16,250 on San Francisco 49ers to win Super Bowl 60 at 18-1 odds (DK)

    Bet wins: $292,500

    • $5,000 on Steelers to win Super Bowl 60 at 80-1 odds (Caesars)

    Bet wins: $400,000

    • $10,000 on Pittsburgh Steelers to win Super Bowl 60 at 40-1 odds (Hard Rock Bet)

    Bet wins: $400,000

    • $10,000 on Steelers to win Super Bowl 60 at 40-1 odds (Caesars)

    Bet wins: $400,000

    • $25,000 on Las Vegas Raiders to win Super Bowl 60 at 100-1 odds (DraftKings)

    Bet wins: $2.5 million

    • $10,000 on Raiders to win Super Bowl 60 at 100-1 odds (DraftKings)

    Bet wins: $1 million

    • $50,000 on Cincinnati Bengals to win Super Bowl 60 at 20-1 odds (BetMGM)

    Bet wins: $1 million

    • $8,000 on Indianapolis Colts to win Super Bowl 60 at 125-1 odds (Caesars)

    Bet wins: $1 million

    • $3,196.96 on New York Jets to win Super Bowl at 250-1 odds (DraftKings)

    Bet wins: $799,240

    • $2,500 on New Orleans Saints to win Super Bowl 60 at 300-1 odds (Caesars)

    Bet wins: $750,000

    • $8,000 on Dallas Cowboys to win Super Bowl 60 at 80-1 odds (Caesars)

    Bet wins: $640,000

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    • $3,000 on NY Jets to win Super Bowl 60 at 200-1 odds (Caesars)

    Bet wins: $600,000

    • $54,500 on Detroit Lions to win Super Bowl 60 at 10-1 odds (BetMGM)

    Bet wins: $545,000

    • $60,000 on Kansas City Chiefs to win Super Bowl 60 at +900 odds (Caesars)

    Bet wins: $540,000

    • $2,500 on NY Jets to win Super Bowl 60 at 200-1 odds (Caesars)

    Bet wins: $500,000

    • $2,000 on Cleveland Browns to win Super Bowl 60 at 200-1 odds (Caesars)

    Bet wins: $400,000

    • $2,500 on Indianapolis Colts to win Super Bowl 60 at 150-1 odds (Caesars)

    Bet wins: $375,000

    • $3,000 on Indianapolis Colts to win Super Bowl 60 at 120-1 odds (DraftKings)

    Bet wins: $360,000

    • $30,000 on Lions to win Super Bowl 60 at 10-1 odds (DraftKings)

    Bet wins: $300,000

    • $1,500 on New York Giants to win Super Bowl 60 at 200-1 odds (Caesars)

    Bet wins $300,000

    • $1,000 on New Orleans Saints to win Super Bowl 60 at 300-1 odds (Caesars)

    Bet wins: $300,000

    • $7,000 on Minnesota Vikings to win Super Bowl 60 at 30-1 odds (Caesars)

    Bet wins: $210,000

    • $1,000 on Browns to win Super Bowl 60 at 200-1 odds (Caesars)

    Bet wins: $200,000

  • James Harden-Darius Garland trade: Is the Cavaliers’ big swing all about Donovan Mitchell?

    Surprising though it was to see the headline hit late Monday night, it seems pretty easy to sketch out the reasons why the Los Angeles Clippers and James Harden are heading for Splitsville.

    Look at Harden — still producing like an All-Star in Year 17, but about to reach age 37 with only a partially guaranteed player option for next season to bank on — and you see a man seeking longer-term security. Look at L.A.’s books, which feature just one player (Ivica Zubac) with a non-rookie-scale salary guaranteed past the end of next season, and you see a team likely unwilling to grant that kind of multi-year re-up as it prepares to clear the decks in search of a fresh start come the summer of 2027. When the parties involved want to move in different directions, well, then, the party’s over; that’s not too hard to understand.

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    [NBA trade deadline: The latest rumblings around the league]

    It’s the other side of the reported potential transaction, though, that feels a bit more curious. Why would the Cleveland Cavaliers — who, ICYMI, have won eight of 10 and 13 of their last 18 to move into a tie for fourth place in the East, just two games behind the Knicks and Celtics for the No. 2 spot behind Detroit — suddenly be so keen to take a massive swing for Harden, one of the league’s highest-usage and most ball-dominant players … to put next to their own high-usage, ball-dominant offensive supernova, Donovan Mitchell … while reportedly sacrificing Darius Garland, a two-time All-Star who’s more than a decade Harden’s junior, in the process?

    You can make a reasonable player-for-player case. While Garland’s a more accurate shooter, Harden’s been a more valuable player overall over the last five seasons — a more efficient scorer, thanks to a higher volume of both 3-point attempts and trips to the free-throw line, who’s also posted a better assist-to-turnover ratio and a rebound rate twice as high as Garland’s.

    The gap has widened considerably this season. Harden’s averaging more than 25 points and eight assists per game at the helm of a near-top-10 Clippers offense, stirring the drink as the Clips have set about pulling off the dramatic in-season turnaround that’s gotten them back in play-in position. Garland, on the other hand, has seen his shooting efficiency dip, his turnover rate rise, and his overall impact wane from last season’s All-Star bounce-back due in large part to persistent issues with the big toes on both of his feet that have cost him 25 games this season — and counting.

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    The counter to that case: OK, maybe Harden, even at 36, is a better player right now. But Garland’s 10 years younger, under contract for two more seasons, and more neatly fits the multi-year timetable the Cavs have been operating under since putting together the “core four” of Mitchell, Garland, Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen. Why unnecessarily accelerate that timetable by trading up in age by a decade for a player who might not even be on your team two years from now?

    One potential answer: Maybe the Cavs feel like it’s actually very necessary to accelerate that timetable …

    … and, in fact, have already started operating that way.

    Maybe you’re willing to trade up 10 years in age in a Garland-for-Harden deal — one in which Cleveland is also reportedly sending out a second-round pick — and you’re checking around on the possibility of offloading Allen’s three-year, $90.7 million contract extension (which hasn’t even kicked in yet), and you’re in on Giannis Antetokounmpo and Anthony Davis and now Harden because you’ve decided your runway isn’t as long as you thought it was. Maybe you’ve decided you can’t wait around for your “core four” to get healthy and coalesce.

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    And maybe you’ve made those decisions because you feel like you need to maximize the window you have with Mitchell — which, with him holding a $53.8 million player option for the 2027-28 season, might only be open for two more years if you don’t take concerted action to make sure he wants to stick around.

    Step No. 1 in that process? Do everything in your power to put together a roster that can get out of the second round of the playoffs — something Mitchell, for all the individual success he’s experienced on the way to six All-Star selections and two All-NBA nods, has yet to do in eight pro seasons. (And while you’re certainly within your rights to wonder whether James Harden is the man for that particular job, it seems notable that, according to Marc Stein and Jake Fischer, it’s “believed that [Mitchell] would welcome the addition of an experienced ball-handler like Harden to ease some of the playmaking burden he has shouldered this season.”)

    As generally successful as the Cavs have been of late — three straight playoff trips, the league’s fourth-highest winning percentage since the start of the 2022-23 season, the first postseason series wins the franchise had managed without LeBron James since 1993 — this era still bears the stain of disappointment, and the weight of unmet expectations. The Round 1 bullying by the Knicks in 2023; the summary second-round dismissal by the Celtics in 2024; buckling before the team-of-destiny Pacers last spring; now, going from preseason favorites to make the NBA Finals to scraping just to get out of the play-in mix: it’s all left a thick, acrid aftertaste.

    There were, if not excuses, then at least explanations for those disappointments — chiefly that the Cavs have routinely not had a full complement of healthy bodies available. (This year’s model has lost more player games to injury than all but five teams, according to Spotrac, with expected starting small forward Max Strus still yet to suit up after offseason foot surgery.)

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    That’s the rub, though: The “core four” have played just 161 minutes together over 13 games this season, and ESPN’s Brian Windhorst reported Tuesday that, while Garland “is making progress” and could return soon from his latest toe sprain, there is also “some concern about whether [his foot] injuries could be a longer-term issue.” Maybe those concerns informed Cleveland’s first move of this transaction cycle: this past weekend’s deal shipping out small forward De’Andre Hunter for a pair of guards, Keon Ellis and Dennis Schröder. And maybe that’s not all they’ve informed.

    While Danny Cunningham of The Inside Shot reported Tuesday that Cleveland’s decision-makers “still believe in their core group of players and are more likely to make a smaller move on the margin,” rumblings persisted that the Cavs were “looking around to see if they can do more” before Thursday’s 3 p.m. ET deadline, with an eye toward shedding more salary to get under the second apron, unlocking the opportunity to aggregate salaries in trades in pursuit of some more aggressive moves. Setting the table to go after Harden and Giannis — and, potentially, another pretty big name around Northeast Ohio — would certainly qualify as “more aggressive.”

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    Since trading for Mitchell before the 2022-23 season, the Cavs have angled themselves toward an aspirational future — one in which Garland firmly establishes himself as a perennial All-Star, Mobley’s offensive game catches up to his Defensive Player of the Year work, Allen connects the dots on both ends, and Mitchell shines as the kind of star capable of being the preeminent offensive force in whatever seven-game series he enters. After years of that bitter aftertaste, though, and sitting at 30-21, you can understand why the Cavs might feel pressure to make decisions based not on what they might be, but on what they are: a team with one bona fide All-NBA-caliber offensive player — one who’s eligible for a contract extension this summer, and who could become the belle of the 2027 free agency ball if he doesn’t sign it — and a whole lot of questions to answer beyond that.

  • Clippers-Cavaliers trade grades: Who won the James Harden deal?

    The Los Angeles Clippers and Cleveland Cavaliers wasted no time after the initial James Harden trade reports came to light and have come to an agreement to ship the former MVP to Ohio for Darius Garland and a second-round selection.

    It’s a deal that certainly wasn’t expected after Cleveland’s previous season in which the Cavs were one of the league’s top teams.

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    This season they’ve failed to duplicate that success, and now they’ve pivoted to Harden as Garland struggled to stay healthy.

    So, let’s get into some trade grades.

    [Subscribe to Yahoo Sports NBA on YouTube]

    Los Angeles Clippers: A

    Garland may have struggled to stay healthy this season, but he’s 10 years younger than Harden and provides the Clippers with some long-term upside that Harden does not.

    This could be the first step for the Clippers to get younger and focus more on the next decade.

    The 6-foot-2 Garland is a formidable passer and pull-up scorer, and could easily find himself back in the All-Star conversation in the coming years when his health returns.

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    Of course, it’s concerning the Clippers are seemingly wasting possibly the best season of Kawhi Leonard’s career with this new path forward.

    Cleveland Cavaliers: B- (but with potential for more)

    There’s a caveat to this grade.

    First off, the Cavs need to go for the whole thing immediately. Not next year. Not in 2028. Now. Right now. Harden, technically, helps with that, and if the Cavs make a strong Finals push with Harden as their lead guard, then this grade improves.

    If not, the team is looking at a situation in which Harden can leave this summer, and he turns 37 before the start of next season.

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    Make no mistake: This is a HUGE gamble for the Cavaliers, as relinquishing Garland and potentially losing Harden means the clock will likely start to tick on a possible Donovan Mitchell trade request.

    It cannot be overstated how much rides on this season’s success, so while I respect them for the gamble, this could go south — and quite dramatically.

  • Lakers reportedly not expected to trade LeBron James prior to NBA trade deadline

    LeBron James apparently is not on the move.

    The Los Angeles Lakers aren’t expected to trade James ahead of Thursday’s NBA trade deadline, ESPN’s Dave McMenamin reports. The news broke as James and the Lakers faced the Nets in Brooklyn on Tuesday night, a game they won 125-109.

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    It’s unclear from the report if it’s the Lakers or James or both who have decided to move forward together. James has a no-trade clause and could veto a trade to any team.

    Asked in January if he wanted to finish the season with the Lakers, James responded: “I’m good. … Everybody’s crazy.”

    Teams including the Cleveland Cavaliers, New York Knicks and Golden State Warriors all reportedly had interest in pursuing James. The Cavaliers reportedly acquired James Harden from the Clippers in exchange for Darius Garland earlier Tuesday.

    But the Cavaliers and others will apparently have to look elsewhere than James in an effort to upgrade their rosters.

    LeBron James will reportedly finish the season with the Lakers.

    LeBron James will reportedly finish the season with the Lakers.

    (ASSOCIATED PRESS)

    News that James is expected to remain a Laker arrived as Austin Reaves returned to the lineup against Brooklyn from a calf injury that sidelined him for 19 games. He scored 15 points on 3 of 9 shooting in just over 20 minutes of action. Reaves is having a breakout season and was integral in a 15-4 start that had the Lakers near the top of the Western Conference.

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    [More Lakers news: Los Angeles team feed]

    With Reaves back, the Lakers now have their Big 3 of James, Reaves and Luka Dončić healthy amid a season in which each has faced extended injury absences. The Lakers have remained competitive in the West despite those injuries with a 29-19 record prior to Tuesday’s win. It makes sense that they’d like to play this season out with their current core intact.

    But the roster as constructed has glaring defensive deficiencies that project to thwart any realistic hopes of the Lakers competing for an NBA championship. Dončić, Reaves and James at 41 years old are all below-average defenders, and the Lakers entered Tuesday night ranked 25th in the league in defensive rating.

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    They’re not likely to get past Western Conference contenders like the Oklahoma City Thunder, Denver Nuggets and San Antonio Spurs playing that kind of defense. It also appears unlikely that they’d be able to acquire a difference-making defender ahead of Thursday’s deadline if they’re not willing to part with James or another significant roster piece.

  • Clippers, Cavaliers swap James Harden, Darius Garland: Here’s what it means for fantasy basketball

    The Clippers and Cavaliers just pulled off a blockbuster, near straight-up trade: James Harden is heading to Cleveland while Darius Garland lands in Los Angeles. The move is a massive shake-up for fantasy basketball managers with either guard rostered, and the implications ripple through both rotations.

    Let’s break down who wins, who loses and who (if anyone) should be grabbed off waivers right now.

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    James Harden to Cleveland — Say what?!

    Harden joins forces with Donovan Mitchell in the Eastern Conference, hoping to make one last quest for a championship and a big payday. Harden probably cares about the bag more than a trophy, but that’s a debate for another day.

    Harden’s role as a primary facilitator won’t change with the Cavs. However, we could see him relinquish some ball-handling responsibilities to Mitchell, as the latter is more than capable of initiating offense. Still, with a healthy Evan Mobley (potentially), Jarrett Allen and a far deeper roster, I don’t think Harden’s assist rate will dip much from what we’ve seen this year. Harden should remain a top-15 asset in fantasy across formats, even though the usage may not be in abundance as it was in L.A. The scoring, however, is likely to drop off from 25 per game because he won’t have to take as many shots when the roster is at full strength. Short term, though, he’s getting buckets. Fantasy managers should hold.

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    Darius Garland to L.A. — Buy-low window still cracked?

    Garland’s nagging toe injury isn’t a great look at the moment, but the silver lining is that when he’s ready to return, he’ll command a higher usage rate than in Cleveland. It’s literally Kawhi Leonard, Garland and Ivica Zubac, so that’s a better situation for his scoring prospects, with some expected decline in his assist rate. Garland is a winner here, landing on a Clippers team that desperately needs a primary ball handler and scorer to help them stay in the hunt for the postseason.

    When healthy, he’s a 20-4-6 guy who can get hot from 3 and is a top-50 player. Now he’s getting out of Cleveland, where he shared a backcourt with Mitchell, and into a situation where he has more runway.

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    Who Else Benefits?

    There’s no clear waiver wire pickup, but that doesn’t mean there isn’t fallout. Let’s look at Cleveland first.

    Fantasy impact for Cavs

    Donovan Mitchell: Already Cleveland’s leading scorer, and that won’t change with Harden in the building. Although his 5.8 assists could trickle down, now he’s getting even more usage with Garland gone. Mitchell’s usage rate was already elite, but removing another ball-dominant guard from the equation means more shots, more assists, more everything. If you’ve got him, you’re eating well. If you don’t, he’s untradeable at this point.

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    Jarrett Allen: I love this for Allen because he has the potential to be a great pick-and-roll counterpart with Harden. Harden makes bigs better — look at Zu, Embiid, Capela — the list goes on. I’d be buying shares of Allen after this deal.

    Evan Mobley: Unchanged. His fantasy value is secure as Harden will likely get him easier looks around the rim and put him in the optimal spots to maximize his efficiency. The stocks and rebounds are where Mobley helps fantasy managers most outside of his scoring.

    Fantasy impact for Clippers

    Kawhi Leonard: Kawhi’s usage is about to skyrocket. With Harden gone and Garland not the volume scorer Harden was, Kawhi becomes the clear-cut No. 1 option for LAC again. He’s been great all year, and now he’ll be shouldering a lot more since Garland isn’t ready to play as of Wednesday.

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    Ivica Zubac: I’m a bit concerned that Garland, while an effective point guard, might take some time to get acclimated. Fortunately, there are a ton of opportunities and shots to go around. Zu’s been having a down year, but some new energy could ignite more production offensively from Zu.

  • How the Cavaliers can get James Harden and Giannis Antetokounmpo … and LeBron James

    Imagine this scene:

    LeBron James and his son Bronny, in Cavs uniforms, capping off a historic farewell tour with another championship in Cleveland. As they tackle each other in euphoria, James Harden peers over at Giannis Antetokounmpo, both also wearing wine-and-gold, and laughs maniacally at the craziness of it all. Harden finally earns his championship — and ruins the chances of his former team, the Oklahoma City Thunder, at a three-peat in the process. (Yes, I’m projecting the Thunder win it all this year.)

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    That’s the storybook ending for LeBron’s 24-year career. Walking off as a champion — something Michael Jordan once had, but gave it up with a last-ditch run with the Washington Wizards.

    And believe it or not, it can be done. Especially since the Eastern Conference is wide open.

    On Tuesday night, Harden was reportedly traded to the Cavaliers. And it’s possible Antetokounmpo (and, in time, LeBron and Bronny, too) could join him in Ohio soon.

    Here’s how it all would go down.

    Trade 1: James Harden for Darius Garland

    On Monday night, kicking off trade deadline week, Yahoo Sports’ Kelly Iko broke the news that the LA Clippers and Cleveland Cavaliers were engaged in James Harden trade talks. According to Iko, the Cavs were leading the chase for Harden’s services at the deadline.

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    The Harden news may have blindsided some considering the Clippers have pulled off one of the greatest in-season turnarounds in NBA history, going 16-3 at one point after starting the season 6-21. But for anyone who has been paying attention to Harden’s career-long pattern of asking out, it was only a matter of time before Harden and the Clippers headed for a divorce.

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    When Harden arrived in ClipperLand in 2023, my first reaction was: Great, so where’s he going next? Sure enough, less than three years later, amid a team resurgence for the ages, the NBA’s most mercurial star was suddenly sitting out games for “personal reasons” and, voila, trade talks emerged.

    On Tuesday night, the trade happened. There didn’t appear to be a formal trade request, but we can read the tea leaves here. Harden sought long-term assurances and wasn’t getting that from the Clippers. His co-star, Kawhi Leonard, is at the heart of an NBA investigation into Steve Ballmer and the Clippers front office for cap circumvention allegations regarding an apparent no-show contract for Leonard. Recently, Leonard and Harden were noticeably left off the All-Star team despite more-than-worthy campaigns and the Clippers hosting the All-Star Game at the Intuit Dome. (Leonard was named as a replacement.) That’s a lot of bad vibes.

    (Henry Russell/Yahoo Sports Illustration)

    (Henry Russell/Yahoo Sports Illustration)

    The Cavs reportedly held interest because of Darius Garland’s injury woes and the need to keep Donovan Mitchell happy amid a pressure-packed, underwhelming season. Harden has been playing brilliantly this season and, perhaps more importantly, his contract almost perfectly aligned with Garland’s salary of $39 million this season, making a one-for-one swap possible under the CBA rules. Key to all of this is the Cavs are a second-apron team and therefore cannot aggregate contracts to make a deal work.

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    So that’s the first deal: Harden for Garland straight up. As I suspected, the Clippers are also receiving Cleveland’s 2026 second-round pick for taking on another year of Garland’s contract, even if he is just 26 years old. The Clippers get a much younger two-time All-Star guard who is entering his prime, but they’ve notably kept their 2027-28 books completely clean for a potential massive free agency pursuit. Acquiring Garland would be a minor departure from that strategy.

    Trade 2: Giannis and Thanasis Antetokounmpo for Evan Mobley and picks

    I mentioned earlier the Cavs are operating as a second-apron team, which complicates any Giannis trade talks for Cleveland. They can’t aggregate salaries unless they dump about $14 million worth of salary to a third party. Enter the Brooklyn Nets who, according to Spotrac salary data, have juuuuuust enough space to grease the wheels for Milwaukee and Cleveland to consummate a deal. Assist point to my pal Kevin Pelton, who proposed the general framework.

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    So the trade: Cleveland receives Giannis and Thanasis Antetokounmpo; Milwaukee nets Evan Mobley, Lonzo Ball and a 2031 first-round pick from Cleveland, and Tyrese Martin from Brooklyn; Brooklyn absorbs Max Strus’ contract and earns the right to swap first-round picks with Cleveland in 2028, 2030 and 2032.

    The Cavs need Harden to make Giannis feel comfortable that they’re championship-ready enough for him to commit to a long-term extension when he’s eligible for a four-year, $275 million pact this upcoming October. With Garland sidelined, I’m not sure the Cavs had enough to get that critical sign-off from Antetokounmpo. Last thing the Cavs want is to give up Mobley only for Antetokounmpo to walk in the summer of 2027.

    Would a starting five of Harden, Mitchell, Jaylon Tyson, Antetokounmpo and Jarrett Allen win a title? Maybe. But they could use a star small forward to complete the set.

    What’s that? Is that The King’s music!?

    Move 3: LeBron James signs in free agency with Cavs

    LeBron James is a $52.6 million expiring contract this season and has veto power on any trade. It’s possible he engineers a deal (again, he has to sign off on a trade for it to go through) to Cleveland to set up his last hurrah next season back home, but doing so would probably gut the Cavs’ depth ahead of a championship pursuit.

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    Instead, James could slow his roll and wait until this summer to head back to Cleveland when he could sign a Dirk-esque contract with the Cavs. Why would he take a discount if he’s still playing at an All-Star level? It would serve as something of a compromise so the Cavs would trade for son Bronny, who is due a guaranteed $2.3 million next season.

    The Cavs could head into next season with a starting lineup of Mitchell, Harden, James, Antetokounmpo and Allen with Tyson, Dennis Schröder, Keon Ellis (eligible for extension), Bronny James and Sam Merrill anchoring the second unit. Maybe bring back Kevin Love for the double farewell tour? Can we get J.R. Smith off the golf course and in Cleveland again?

    The backdrop of all of these Cavs blockbuster deals is fortifying a long-term commitment from Mitchell, who can walk as a free agent in the summer of 2027. He holds a player option for $53.8 million during a summer in which the Knicks, Lakers and Clippers could carve out the requisite cap space to hit the Donovan dance floor.

    Moving past the current star-studded core that has underwhelmed in the playoffs would certainly be a risk, but bringing three former MVPs into the fold would represent the kind of massive swing that might inspire Mitchell’s confidence that Cleveland is his home. Sure, the Cavs would be banking on three players on the wrong side of 30 (and the wrong side of 40 in LeBron’s case), but it’s not like the youthful core in Cleveland has been cutting it in the playoffs.

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    If the Harden-Giannis-LeBron Plan is truly the goal, it would make a lot of sense why Klutch Sports has been attempting to represent Giannis, according to TrueHoop’s Henry Abbott last week. Having Giannis as a client wouldn’t just be a boon for Rich Paul when Antetokounmpo comes up for a massive extension, but it would also serve as an information pipeline to assure everyone is on the same page in Cleveland.

    Would the blockbuster deals be enough to win James a fifth championship and ride into the sunset as a champion? Perhaps. If you thought the 2016 championship in Cleveland couldn’t be topped, I present to you the James retirement plan with Harden finally earning his ring and Giannis winning his second.