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  • Bucks keep Giannis Antetokounmpo at NBA trade deadline, expected to field offers again this offseason

    Giannis Antetokounmpo is officially staying with the Milwaukee Bucks — at least for the remainder of the season.

    ESPN’s Shams Charania reported hours ahead of Thursday’s NBA trade deadline that the Bucks would not be trading Antetokounmpo and focus on other deals. Now that the 3 p.m. ET trade deadline has passed, it makes that official.

    Antetokounmpo himself confirmed he’d remain in Milwaukee after the deadline, sharing a clip from “The Wolf of Wall Street” on his Instagram account, in which actor Leonardo DiCaprio emphatically announces, “I’m not leaving.”

    Milwaukee is still expected to field offers for Antetokounmpo in the offseason, when teams have more clarity on their draft pick compensation and the market potentially widens as some contenders fall short in the playoffs.

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    “They were never serious,” one team executive told Jake Fischer regarding an Antetokounmpo deal.

    The passing of the NBA trade deadline now officially ends months of speculation that the two-time MVP and franchise stalwart wouldn’t finish the season with the Bucks team that drafted him. The Bucks are in the midst of a losing season and are not on pace to make the playoffs.

    Antetokounmpo has twice missed time this season with significant calf injuries. He sustained his second injury on Jan. 23 in a 102-100 loss to the Denver Nuggets. Antetokounmpo said after that game that he expected to miss 4-6 weeks with the injury, and head coach Doc Rivers said there’s no timetable for his return. It’s unclear if or when he’ll be able to return this season to the Bucks, who would benefit by improving their odds for the draft lottery.

    Speculation of Antetokounmpo eventually leaving the Bucks started before the season began. As the losses piled up, so did the tension in Milwaukee. After home fans booed the Bucks during a blowout loss to the Timberwolves on Jan 13, Antetokounmpo pointed two thumbs down and booed them back. He played four more games for the Bucks after that incident.

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    Yet, the franchise isn’t quite ready to end its most successful era since Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Oscar Robertson led Milwaukee to two Finals appearances and an NBA championship in the early 1970s.

    The Bucks selected Antetokounmpo with the No. 15 pick in the 2013 NBA Draft as a raw, high-upside prospect with an enormous physical tool set. He’s delivered on that upside and more.

    Antetokounmpo spent his rookie season developing off the bench as a 19-year-old before joining the starting lineup full time in his second NBA season. He made his first All-Star team in his fourth season in Milwaukee and has been an All-Star in eight seasons since as a dominant two-way force.

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    Antetokounmpo won the first of his two consecutive NBA MVP awards after the 2018-19 season. He also won Defensive Player of the Year alongside his second MVP award the following season.

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    In 2020-21, Antetokounmpo completed his NBA resumé. Playing alongside Khris Middleton and Jrue Holiday, Antetokounmpo led the Bucks to the franchise’s second NBA championship. The only major accomplishment now missing from his career as a pro is entry into the Hall of Fame, which is a certainty as soon as he’s put on the ballot.

    But he likely won’t complete his career having played for just the Bucks. Milwaukee didn’t maintain its contender status after winning the 2021 championship and hasn’t advanced past the second round of the playoffs since. It’s suffered first-round playoff exits in each of the past three postseasons.

    Middleton and Holiday are both gone, and Milwaukee’s attempts to rebuild another contender around Antetokounmpo fizzled with Damian Lillard’s Achilles tendon tear last season.

    The Bucks exceeded expectations early this season with a 6-3 start. They have since faded out of playoff contention with a losing record. A full-blown rebuild, however, will have to wait until the offseason.

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    Antetokounmpo is playing on a three-year, $186 million contract extension he signed in 2023 in the aftermath of Milwaukee’s trade to acquire Lillard. That extension includes a player option for the 2027-28 season.

    According to ESPN, Antetokounmpo is eligible for a four-year, $275 million extension in October if he stays with Milwaukee. If he’s traded during the offseason, he would need to wait six months from the trade date to sign an extension.

  • Four Verts, Super Bowl edition: Patriots need boost from key trio, while Sam Darnold is a clean performance from eternity

    All roads lead here: to Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif. and Super Bowl LX. The Seattle Seahawks enter as the favorite, but there are paths to a New England Patriots victory, which we’ll hit in this Super Bowl edition of the Four Verts column. There’s a lot at stake Sunday. Let’s go over some of the biggest storylines.

    Patriots’ offense appears to be outmanned again

    New England’s offense has faced some of the toughest defenses the NFL has to offer en route to a Super Bowl berth. In fact, they’ve gotten completely dominated by the Chargers, Texans and Broncos defenses, riding a handful of drives, a defensive touchdown and the help of an overwhelmed backup quarterback in the snow. That’s not to say they don’t deserve to be here. Every team that can weather the storm of attrition to get to this point deserves the ability to play in this game.

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    Drake Maye is as good as any player who will play Sunday. The second-year quarterback has earned his stamp as an MVP finalist considering he has done an Atlas-level carrying of the offense this season. The Patriots barely had success in the rain against the Texans and their only touchdown drive against the Broncos came on a short field following a baffling decision by Jarrett Stidham to throw the ball backward for a fumble.

    Seattle will be New England’s toughest cohesive test yet, barring an explosion from Maye and the supporting cast around him. The Rams pushed the Seahawks to the brink in the NFC championship game, but Puka Nacua, Davante Adams and Sean McVay aren’t walking through that door for the Patriots’ offense. It’s largely going to be up to Maye and a shaky offensive line to stay afloat against a truly dominant defense this season.

    Points will be difficult to come by. Maye will have his moments, but when looking at the non-quarterback players on this offense against the Seahawks’ defense, it’s hard not to see how they don’t get stuffed into a locker for the fourth consecutive game. It’s not unreasonable that the Patriots struggled mightily against the defenses they’ve faced this postseason, but they’ll need a little more help to get a win in what should be a clean weather environment.

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    New England needs star defensive trio to dominate

    The Patriots are underdogs in the Super Bowl for good reason. When stacking the rosters of the two teams, it’s clear which one recently picked in the top five of the NFL Draft two straight years, and which one has been a fringe playoff team that reached its final form this past offseason. However, the Patriots aren’t a team that’s completely bereft of talent, and they have a few high-level players who can turn the tide for them if they can play to the best of their abilities. In that respect, cornerback Christian Gonzalez and defensive tackles Milton Williams and Christian Barmore are going to be the lynchpins here.

    [Get more Patriots news: New England team feed]

    The good thing about these players is they play positions of value and all of them can really impact the game with high-level performances, particularly their duo on the interior. There is no better way to shut down Seattle’s offense and make life difficult for the Seahawks than to have immediate disruption on the front lines with Barmore and Williams. Seattle’s interior offensive line is one of the weaker parts of its offense. This soft spot gives those two Patriots a prime opportunity to take over the game and provide some relief to their own offense.

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    Specifically, Seattle’s duo of Jalen Sundell and Anthony Bradford will need help against the Patriots’ defensive tackle duo. There’s also a level of natural symbiosis between defensive line play and secondary play where Barmore and Williams taking advantage of this matchup will actually make things easier for Gonzalez, the third member of this defensive trio that New England needs to play well. Pressure forces bad plays and Gonzalez already showed his ability to make plays on the ball by closing out the Broncos’ offense in the AFC championship game with an interception.

    Christian Barmore (90) and Milton Williams are one of the few clear advantages on paper personnel-wise for the Patriots in Super Bowl LX. (Photo by Andy Lyons/Getty Images)

    Christian Barmore (90) and Milton Williams are one of the few clear advantages on paper personnel-wise for the Patriots in Super Bowl LX. (Photo by Andy Lyons/Getty Images)

    (Andy Lyons via Getty Images)

    Gonzalez will have his hands full with a matchup against Jaxson Smith-Njigba, who is arguably the best wide receiver in the NFL right now. If he can win just a couple of those battles while Barmore and Williams take advantage of their talent advantage in the trenches, there’s a chance for the Patriots to win.

    Those three need to play up to their Pro Bowl billings, because overall this Patriots roster appears to be completely outmatched. If they can do that, New England has a puncher’s chance. Sam Darnold is prone to lapses that lead to turnovers, even though he hasn’t done that yet in the postseason. Getting the ball back to Maye and the offense will be imperative, but that’s easier said than done.

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    Sam Darnold needs to make it just one more game

    One more game, Sam. Just one more.

    While the Seahawks’ offense was flustered over the second half of the season, Sam Darnold has played really clean football through these playoffs. If he can make it one more game without tanking himself and having a classic Darnold implosion, Seattle should cruise to a Super Bowl victory and he can change the narrative on himself. Darnold has become one of the most fascinating quarterbacks in the league because the great heights that he is capable of reaching have not always been attainable for him, mostly due to his own mistakes. So far in the playoffs, he’s been able to avoid them. One more game will cap off the most important three-game run in his career where he’s been able to do one thing everyone has consistently been clamoring for him to do: just play clean!

    Darnold has always been one of the more physically gifted quarterbacks in the league. I can say this from personal experience as someone who spent time covering him when he was a member of the New York Jets a few years ago. He often had practices where he looked like the best QB in the league. And then would follow those practices up with some of the sloppiest stuff you will ever see. There’s a reason why he’s on his fifth team and it’s not because of his general ability. It just hasn’t been clean enough.

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    Seattle hasn’t asked Darnold to do a high volume of passing through two playoff games, but he’s worked well with what he’s been asked to do. He’s thrown the ball 53 times for 470 yards, four touchdowns and nearly a 70% completion rate. He’s got a passer rating of 122.4 and the only real blemish has been the five sacks on such a small number of dropbacks. However, the most important number for Darnold: zero turnovers.

    Darnold has fumbled once, but was able to recover it. That works in the one-game sample sizes of single-elimination playoffs. He needs to do it just one more time. That seems feasible considering what he’s done so far, but there is also the permanent aura of the unknown with Darnold where the bottom could fall out at any time. He has so much to gain from this if he can make it one more game without the intrusive thoughts popping in his head as he’s scanning the Patriots’ coverages.

    Forging new destinies is the theme of Super Bowl LX

    There are plenty of established figures in this game between the coaching staffs and the players who can begin to cement and individualize their legacies in this Super Bowl. This game has an extra weight added to it in terms of reputational benefit (or loss) with a win (or loss). With a victory, history and narratives can be forgiven, or forgotten. These are some of the most compelling storylines the Super Bowl generates and with two new(ish) teams in the Super Bowl, it feels like more is on the line than recent years.

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    Sam Darnold feels like the obvious, biggest benefactor with a Super Bowl win, as long as he plays cleanly. His career has been mired by puzzlingly bad play, especially considering he has great physical skills and is capable of stringing together great play. However, the ruts are real and they still show up occasionally even though Seattle has won in the rough moments. If Darnold can get through one more game without turning the ball over, paired with a win, he can rewrite the narrative on what people think about him. There’s no better time to cap off what could be the best three-game run of his career.

    Josh McDaniels and Mike Vrabel can write new stories for themselves with a win, considering their previous stops did not end in the most flattering manners. While Vrabel bounced back from how his tenure in Tennessee ended, it’s not like it was completely nonsensical for Tennessee to move on from him. The Titans were stuck in the mud following two middling seasons and never really rebounded from the losses of wide receiver A.J. Brown and offensive coordinator Arthur Smith. Moving onto then-rookie quarterback Will Levis was not a fruitful endeavor and the Titans’ offense was so bad that the team decided to move in a different direction from Vrabel. That turned out to be a bad decision, considering Brian Callahan lasted only 23 games as head coach, but it was an understandable move at the time.

    McDaniels’ firing from the Raiders requires less explanation; they were awful and so was he. However, he can begin to rebuild the narrative around his career if he can provide answers for the Patriots’ offense to survive a raucous, physical Seattle defense. McDaniels can prove to himself and everyone that he can reach the mountaintop of success without the titanic shadows of Bill Belichick and Tom Brady hovering over him.

    Patriots quarterback Drake Maye and Seahawks head coach Mike Macdonald are new enough here where they shouldn’t be dinged too much with a loss, but they can hit the ground running on their respective careers with a Super Bowl victory in each of their respective second seasons. History can be made and rewritten with a Lombardi Trophy — at least until there’s a shaky 2026 season that turns up the heat on the hot take machine and makes everyone forget, because that’s just what we do now.

  • NBA trade deadline 2026: Biggest winners and losers, featuring the Bucks, Cavs and Warriors

    It would’ve been unfair to expect the 2026 NBA trade deadline to match its predecessor in sheer tonnage of stunnage; “Luka Dončić got traded out of nowhere in the middle of the night” is a pretty tough act to follow, after all. But despite pundits and observers continuing to wonder aloud about whether the ongoing ripple effects of the 2023 collective bargaining agreement, and the myriad challenges facing high-spending teams trying to navigate the strictures of the first and second aprons, the days leading up to Thursday afternoon’s deadline featured a flurry of movement.

    It turns out that, in an environment in which 20 teams participate in the postseason, NBA decision-makers found plenty of ways to hustle and flow within the CBA’s confines. It turns out there were still plenty of front offices committed to trying to add talent for the stretch run. And, of course, it turns out there were plenty of others eager to balance their ledgers and bolster their draft-pick war chests in the hope that tomorrow they’ll find better things.

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    [Check out the NBA trade tracker for full details on every move]

    The result was a breathtaking sprint through the approach to Thursday’s 3 p.m. ET buzzer. And as the pencils-down buzzer drew nearer, the rumors rolled in and the deals got done, I sat here, like Frank T.J. Mackey, quietly judging them.

    What follows are my first-draft-of-history impressions of which teams scored and which ones stumbled in this season’s grand NBA roster reshuffling. There will likely be more winners than losers because, between you and me, the world’s tough enough right now, man. Might as well find a scrap or two of joy where you can, you feel me?

    We begin with the biggest move of the week — the one that wasn’t made.

    (Mallory Bielecki/Yahoo Sports Illustration)

    (Mallory Bielecki/Yahoo Sports Illustration)

    Winner: Milwaukee Bucks

    At the risk of oversimplifying things: The only reasons to trade Giannis Antetokounmpo were if the two-time MVP absolutely, positively demanded in no uncertain terms that he be dealt by Thursday afternoon, or if another team absolutely, positively bowled Milwaukee over with a Godfather offer too good to refuse.

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    For all the reporting about Giannis’ representatives communicating in one oblique form or another to the Bucks that the time had come for them to consider unwinding their 13-year relationship in pursuit of a respectful and mutually beneficial conscious uncoupling, or whatever the hell the language was, it appears he never actually said, “I want you to trade me.” (In fact, Antetokounmpo went out of his way on Tuesday to reach out to Bucks beat reporters Jim Owczarski of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and Eric Nehm of The Athletic and tell them that, deep down, in his heart of hearts, he wanted to stay in Milwaukee, win another championship in Milwaukee, and retire a Buck.)

    And for all the reporting about the teams most interested in his services, none of them actually had that kind of offer.

    The Warriors could sell their post-Stephen Curry draft future, the big-ass salaries of an injured Jimmy Butler and an aging Draymond Green, and a bunch of young players who’ve never looked capable of making Joe Lacob’s purported second timeline viable. The Timberwolves and Knicks never had the draft capital to make a serious push, would’ve had to trade multiple core rotation pieces to try to find it, and never got there. And if the Heat’s best offer was, as Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald proposed, Tyler Herro, Kel’el Ware, another young player or two, Terry Rozier’s expiring contract, two first-round picks and two or three swaps … well, you can hardly blame the Bucks for not believing that would set them up for a quick bounce-back to perennial postseason pushes. (It hasn’t worked out all that hot for Miami, after all.)

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    So the Bucks went through the process, put prospective suitors through their paces, got the lay of the land, found the market wanting … and decided not to take a bad deal just for the sake of content creation, knowing that, when the season ends in just a few short months, plenty more teams will have more draft picks, more financial flexibility and, potentially, more motivation to pony up their best offers after suffering postseason disappointment.

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    Maybe Jon Horst was never really all that motivated to move. I don’t blame him. Giannis is one of the three or four best players in the world. He’s arguably the most important player in franchise history. Maybe, after years of moves aimed at trying to put together championship-caliber teams around him, the Bucks as presently constituted don’t have much of a future. But I’m not convinced that any of the offers available to them before Thursday would’ve dramatically improved their future outlook, either, and I don’t think sacrificing one of your saints just to turn the page makes sense — as a way to use assets, as a business strategy in your market, as a risk of karmic affront to the basketball gods, or in any other context.

    Deciding to walk away from the table on Thursday doesn’t solve the Bucks’ problems. But it didn’t compound them by guaranteeing that the next time Giannis Antetokounmpo takes the court, he does so in another jersey. And that ain’t nothing.

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    The Most Stressed Out Winner Imaginable: Jon Horst

    OK, Mr. General Manager. (“Well, ‘manager.’ We would just say ‘manager.’”) You successfully avoided taking a step off the curb and getting hit by a bus. Now, you get to:

    • Luck into a top-five pick in what evaluators say has a chance to be a generationally great top of the 2026 NBA Draft;

    • Either nail that pick to give Giannis an instant-impact contributor/future superstar to play next to or auction it off to the highest bidder in exchange for multiple high-quality players and more future draft capital;

    • Use the multiple first-round picks that you’ll be able to deal come the end of this league year and whatever other assets aren’t nailed down to drastically improve his supporting cast and the Bucks’ overall talent level;

    • Present Giannis with the four-year, $275 million maximum-salaried contract extension for which he becomes eligible on Oct. 1;

    • Hope you’ve done enough to once again secure his signature on it;

    • If you haven’t, begin sifting through a whole new round of offers, and start the process all over again.

    Good luck! Enjoy!

    Winner: Teams That Will Have More Draft Picks Available This Summer

    I’m not saying I’m dialing up those Lakers Photoshops yet. I’m just monitoring the situation.

    A bowling-ball-shouldered giant future Hall of Famer no longer sees a championship future with the team he’s been with since he was a teenager; he doesn’t want people to be mad at him for saying so and trying to get himself to a place where he does see said future; everything gets awkward; he doesn’t actually wind up moving at the deadline.

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    History doesn’t repeat itself, but it rhymes.

    Loser: All of Us Who Waited Breathlessly, Following the Second-by-Second IV Drip of Sourced Scuttlebutt About Giannis’ Future, Expecting a Resolution by Thursday, Only to Be Told to Put Our Phones Down and Go Home to Our Families

    Oh, well. Maybe we’ll learn our lesson next time …

    Loser: All of Us Who Are About to Do All of That Again All Summer

    … but probably not.

    Winner: James Harden

    Harden went into the week on a team that, while one of the hottest in the NBA, still projects as a play-in team in the Western Conference, likely drawing dead in the first round of the playoffs (if the Clippers even made it that far); with just $13.3 million of his contract for next season guaranteed; and with an uncertain path to a lucrative multi-year extension that would carry him past his 38th birthday. He exits the week as the starting point guard for a team projected to have home-court advantage in Round 1 in the East (and that now ranks as a favorite to win the weaker conference), and with (it is heavily assumed due to his willingness to waive his implied no-trade clause and most of his $2.3 million trade kicker) a pathway to said lucrative multi-year extension.

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    Harden might not have infinite wiggles. But this week proved definitively that, even after doing this a half-dozen times, the Beard remains inarguably wiggly.

    Winner: Donovan Mitchell — Mover, Shaker and Weight-Throwing Motivator

    On Tuesday, I theorized the Cavs’ sudden interest in Harden stemmed from a sudden awareness of the precarity of their position with Mitchell, who is eligible for a contract extension this summer, holds a $53.8 million player option for 2027-28, and could intimate an interest in declining both to threaten an exit from Cleveland if he didn’t feel Koby Altman and Co. were doing everything they could to maximize his chances of winning a championship.

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    On Wednesday, Jason Lloyd and Joe Vardon of The Athletic reported that I was barking up the right tree …

    The Cavs began the year as the favorites to win the Eastern Conference, but the season has not gone according to plan. They were also feeling the pressure from their best player, Donovan Mitchell, to make changes ahead of Thursday’s trade deadline under the threat of a contract extension he may or may not sign […]

    Three league sources said Mitchell, who has one guaranteed season left on his three-year, $150 million deal and a player option for 2027-28, conveyed, either personally or through his representatives, that he did not think the organization should stand pat for the rest of this season and wait for potential moves in the summer.

    … a notion Jake Fischer echoed with some supporting reporting:

    “People don’t realize the Cavs are in the same position with Donovan as the Bucks are with Giannis,” one veteran front office executive told The Stein Line. […]

    Rest assured, then, that the Cavaliers don’t make the Darius Garland-for-James Harden swap without Mitchell’s blessing.

    “If Don wants it, [it’s happening],” said one league source with knowledge of the Cavaliers’ inner-workings.

    Mitchell wanted Harden. He got him.

    “We both know that it’s going to be an adjustment,” Mitchell told Tony Jones of The Athletic on Wednesday. “But we’re excited. I’m excited about what he can do for me as a player, and I’m excited about what he can do for our team as a whole. We want the same thing. We both want a championship.”

    Whether they’ll be able to reach that lofty goal remains in doubt. What’s now beyond doubt, though: The Cavs are no longer a team built around a “core four,” a confederacy of All-Star equals. They’re Mitchell’s team. They’ll go as he goes — as far as he can take them on the court, and where he insists they move off it.

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    Loser: The Reputation of Darius Garland’s Feet

    Wait. That sounds gross. This one’s dumb. Dump it. Trash it.

    Let’s try again:

    Loser: Collective Confidence in Darius Garland’s Health

    On its face, trading a 26-year-old two-time All-Star for a 36-year-old making the same amount of money sounds nuts. There’s a reason why teams don’t typically trade up in age by a full decade; it’s because older guys are less likely to remain healthy and productive than younger guys. In this case, though, the Cavs eagerly signed up for the older dude.

    Maybe there’s nothing to that beyond the reported fact that Mitchell had grown weary of the state of play in Cleveland and that Altman saw an opportunity to upgrade at the position and improve the Cavs’ present-tense chances even if it meant reducing their long-term odds. But — and you’ll have to pardon my Windy fingers here — it feels at least notable that the team that drafted Garland and has employed him since 2019, who would know better than anybody exactly what’s in the medical file regarding the issues with the big toes in both of his feet that hobbled him last postseason and have cost him 26 games and counting this season, decided to move on from him … right before he becomes eligible for a contract extension this summer.

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    The NBA is an increasingly unforgiving place for small guards, even under the best of circumstances, and the way Garland’s exit from Cleveland unfolded invites at least some skepticism that he’s going to be operating under the best of circumstances. Here’s hoping such skepticism is unfounded; I’m a huge fan of Garland’s game, and he has a huge opportunity to become the cornerstone of the next era of Clippers basketball. I’m just saying: Let’s keep an eye on how long it takes him to come back, what he looks like when he does, and how those wheels fare as he moves into what should be his prime.

    Winner (Kinda?): Jonathan Kuminga

    He finally got traded! Steve Kerr doesn’t have him to kick around anymore! Now it’s time for him to get all those minutes, touches and scoring opportunities as a starting wing and top offensive option on the …

    [checks notes]

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    … Atlanta Hawks, who have All-Star triple-double machine Jalen Johnson at power forward, former No. 1 pick Zaccharie Risacher at small forward, and Most Improved Player candidate Nickeil Alexander-Walker and defensive demon Dyson Daniels at the guard spots?

    Hmm. Well, at least the drive to the arena will look different.

    Loser: Everyone Who Had to Write Multiple Columns and Devote Multiple Podcast Segments to The Jonathan Kuminga Saga

    It’s me. Hi. I’m the problem; it’s me.

    Loser: Golden State Warriors

    After Jimmy Butler went down, Antetokounmpo was the only move on the board that seemed like it could’ve meaningfully revitalized their chances of competing for an NBA championship. When it became clear to the Warriors that Milwaukee wasn’t going to open that particular door, they pivoted to Atlanta, shipping out Kuminga and Buddy Hield in exchange for Kristaps Porziņģis — who seems like an ideal shot-blocking stretch-5 to put next to Draymond Green, except for the fact that he’s spent much of the last year battling illness, has missed 35 games this season, and hasn’t suited up in nearly a month.

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    If Porziņģis is actually able to play down the stretch, he could really help. More likely, though, Golden State’s deadline business amounts to turning Kuminga and Hield into one larger expiring contract, moving Trayce Jackson-Davis for a second-round pick, getting a little bit of breathing room under the second apron, and … that’s about it. Not exactly the most inspiring transaction cycle for a team led by an about-to-be-38-year-old legend still throwing lightning bolts and playing at an All-NBA level. So it goes.

    Winner: Ending Your Years-long Skulking at the Bottom of the Standings in Pursuit of Good, Old-Fashioned Decency

    Hey there, Washington Wizards and Utah Jazz!

    I wouldn’t say I’m convinced that dealing for Trae Young and Anthony Davis will suddenly send Washington skyrocketing into contention for home-court advantage in the Eastern Conference next season. (I’m definitely reluctant to give the Wiz a big thumbs up for their opportunistic buy-low moves until and unless I know they haven’t undone that good work by spending like $90 million a season for their new veterans.) I’m more bullish on the prospect of Utah pairing Jaren Jackson Jr. with Lauri Markkanen and a re-signed Walker Kessler in a supersized frontcourt that, flanked by Keyonte George and Ace Bailey, is bursting at the seams with positional size and offensive skill. (Though, for what it’s worth, JJJ certainly has his skeptics.)

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    In general, though, while I don’t begrudge going-nowhere teams deciding that the best option available to them is a managed retreat, teardown and long rebuild, I also support teams that have been terrible forever trying, at long last, to be good. (I’m a little traditional that way.) Since moving Mitchell and Rudy Gobert, the Jazz have been functionally irrelevant to the broader NBA discourse; the Wizards have labored in that condition for most of the last several decades. I’m not saying they should start printing the Game 3 playoff programs just yet; I just respect the swing.

    Winner: Getting Your Work Done Early, Like a Respectable Deep Seal in the Post (Shouts Out to Thomas Bryant)

    Heading into the season, a handful of teams projected to have boatloads of cap space in the summer of 2026. But with the 2026 free agency class heavy on expensive vets on the wrong side of 30, and with cap-space-flush teams like Washington and Utah unlikely to win battles for the affection of sought-after targets against bigger markets and better teams, those teams instead opted for what’s increasingly being called “pre-agency.”

    The Wizards swooping in on Young and Davis; the Jazz snagging JJJ.; the Wolves (not a cap-space-flush team, but still qualifying!) dealing for Ayo Dosunmu (whom Minnesota likely wouldn’t have been able to sign this offseason). All of these deals allowed teams to bring in players that they might not have had access to come the summer, giving them both a few-months head-start in getting them acclimated to a new structure and, crucially, gaining control over the players’ valuable Bird rights. Making those deals now ensures that those teams don’t wind up scrambling to throw good money after bad later, and affords them a leg up on the arduous process of sketching out a vision for what comes next so that you can hit the ground running next season. Procrastination: so last year.

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    Winner, Passive Income/Compound Interest Division: Oklahoma City Thunder

    The defending NBA champions entered deadline week holding three first-round picks in the 2026 NBA Draft — belonging to the Clippers (from the 2019 Paul George/Shai Gilgeous-Alexander trade), the 76ers (from the 2020 Al Horford trade) and the Rockets (from the 2019 Chris Paul/Russell Westbrook trade) — with a top-eight-protected potential fourth coming from the Jazz (from the 2021 Derrick Favors salary dump). But with 15 guaranteed salaries on the books for next year, and with injured recent first-rounders Nikola Topić and Thomas Sorber in line to enter the fold, they don’t really have any place to put all those dudes. Champagne problems for an organization still learning how to open Champagne bottles.

    So the Thunder took one of those firsts, plus three second-round picks from their cache of future assets, and turned them into Jared McCain — a player whose struggles in his first 30-odd games after returning from a torn meniscus in his left knee landed him on the outskirts of Nick Nurse’s rotation, but who’s begun to come on of late, knocking down 15 of his last 26 3-pointers in a Sixers uniform.

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    Oklahoma City — currently sitting atop the West at 40-12, with the NBA’s best defense and a top-four offense — doesn’t exactly need a whole hell of a lot to feel confident in its chances of vying for a second NBA championship. But for a team that ranks 15th in 3-point makes, 16th in 3-point attempts, 15th in 3-point accuracy and 18th in the share of its shots that come from long range, an active and accurate movement shooter — 38.1% from deep on more than 10 attempts per 100 possessions thus far in his career — who can give Mark Daigneault someone else who can create with the ball in his hands in the second unit feels like a worthwhile addition to the portfolio. Particularly when it comes at the fairly negligible cost of never-quite-developed/surplus-to-requirements fourth-year big Ousmane Dieng (later re-routed to the Bucks) and what’s likely to be a mid-20s pick that the Thunder would have a hard time rostering next season.

    It seems like a pretty reasonable bet that a steady diet of opportunities in what’s proven to be an awfully good developmental system in Oklahoma City could help McCain recover the form that had him looking like the Rookie of the Year favorite before his injury last season. That would make him awfully useful, not only for this year’s title defense, but also over the next several seasons of his cost-controlled rookie-scale contract — especially for a Thunder team that’s about to get extremely expensive.

    With extensions for Gilgeous-Alexander, Jalen Williams and Chet Holmgren kicking in, the Thunder are about to face a salary crunch that will likely lead to some tough decisions on perimeter players like Luguentz Dort, Aaron Wiggins and Isaiah Joe — another former Sixer sharpshooter who wound up carving out a role for himself in OKC. McCain might be next in line.

    And, by the way? With the Clippers shedding two of their three best players and the Jazz adding a two-time All-Star before the deadline, Oklahoma City’s odds of landing a pair of mid-lottery picks look to have increased. It’s pretty cool when, without you doing anything, your money keeps making money. (Shouts out to Benny in “In the Heights.”)

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    Winner: Indiana Pacers

    In what’s largely been a miserable season in Indianapolis, Kevin Pritchard and Co. had one very important goal: to find a new starting center capable of replacing Myles Turner as a viable long-term answer at the position in time for Tyrese Haliburton’s return next season. And about 45 minutes before the final buzzer, they went out and got the best one on the market.

    Indiana had been linked with Ivica Zubac for weeks. And while the price was fairly steep — the Pacers’ unprotected 2029 first-round pick, plus an interestingly protected 2026 first (Indiana keeps it if it’s 1-4 or 10-30; the Clips get it if it lands 5-9) that converts to an unprotected 2031 first if it doesn’t convey this year, plus a Dallas 2028 second-rounder, talented swingman Bennedict Mathurin and reserve center Isaiah Jackson — the return is worth it.

    The 7-foot, 240-pound Zubac is absolutely rock-solid. He was an All-Defensive Second Team selection last season who perennially ranks near the top of the NBA in defensive field-goal percentage allowed at the rim, and should provide a high-level organizing principle for a Pacers defense that ranks 21st in points allowed per possession this season without Turner. He’s a monster on the glass who’s in the top 10 in both offensive and defensive rebounding rate this season.

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    He’s a sure-handed finisher on the interior who’s made more than 60% of his shots for seven straight seasons, a capable dribble handoff hub when stationed at the elbows, and a physical screener who demands help defenders’ attention when he rolls to the rim; it’s easy to imagine him replicating the pick-and-roll rhythm he found with James Harden as soon as he gets a few reps with Haliburton, one of the few players on the planet arguably as adept as Harden at facilitating in the two-man game.

    Zubac also fits the Pacers’ timeline like a glove. He turns 29 next month, and he’s making less than 13% of the salary cap (an absolute steal) on the extension he signed in L.A. in the summer of 2024 that runs through 2028, which lines him up with Haliburton, Pascal Siakam, Andrew Nembhard, Obi Toppin, Aaron Nesmith and T.J. McConnell — a.k.a., the core of the team that just went to Game 7 of the NBA Finals.

    If you’re forced to have a gap year, all you can do is try to make it a productive one. Landing Zubac makes this one a smashing success for Indiana, and puts the Pacers in position to return to contention atop the Eastern Conference as soon as next season.

    And if the Pacers land one of those top four picks in June’s draft … oh, man.

    Loser: Miami Heat

    You already knew the Heat were the hardest-working, best-conditioned, most professional, unselfish, toughest, meanest, nastiest team in the NBA. On Thursday, though, they added another title:

    Without landing Giannis to vault them into the upper reaches of the Eastern hierarchy or taking a moderately smaller swing for Ja Morant, the Heat wound up sitting out the trade deadline entirely. No infusion of talent; no shuffling the deck; no breath of fresh air for a team that’s gone 14-18 with a bottom-10 offense and a negative point differential since the start of December.

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    Maybe a healthy return from Herro, who’s played only 11 games this season while battling ankle and toe injuries, functions as that jolt, and maybe Erik Spoelstra’s able to find just enough offensive juice to allow his Bam Adebayo-led top-five defense to grind the gears of higher-seeded opponents come April and May. Without having landed any reinforcements, though, maybe by the time spring rolls around, the Heat will wind up doing what they did on Thursday: sitting out, and watching everybody else get active.

    Loser: Sacramento Kings

    [sigh]

    OK. You know what? That’s on me.

    After weeks and weeks of reports and rumors about all the myriad players Scott Perry would look to move as he set about overhauling the league’s least cohesive or coherent roster — an accumulation of aggregation that led me to consider Sacramento one of the more interesting teams to keep an eye on at this deadline — the sum total of the Kings’ activity was to use Keon Ellis (a player that half the league was reportedly interested in employing, and in whom the Kings themselves evidently had little interest) to dump the rest of the three-year, $44.4 million contract of Dennis Schröder (which the Kings gave him seven months ago) for the right to pay De’Andre Hunter (who has graded out above replacement level twice in a seven-year career) $48.2 million over the next two seasons.

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    That’s it. That’s all.

    The Kings, by the way, are an NBA-worst 12-40, sitting in the bottom four in both offensive and defensive efficiency. And once Zach LaVine picks up his $49 million player option for next season — which, given the lack of interest in him on the market this year, seems like a pretty safe bet — they will have nearly $200 million committed for next season, leaving them barely under the luxury tax line with nine players under contract. Hallelujah; holy s***; where’s the Tylenol?

    Winner: Cleveland Cavaliers

    Well, the second part of Tom’s big plan didn’t come to fruition, but the Cavs should still feel pretty damn good about where they stand after the deadline.

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    Cleveland exits the deadline with Harden, a pretty significant upgrade over the current, injury-inflected version of Garland; Schröder, another credible ball-handler and ball-pressuring defensive irritant with a ton of experience who gave great minutes to Detroit last postseason; and Ellis, who was a bona fide game-changer in Sacramento when he had the opportunity to play off a primary creator in De’Aaron Fox, and whose game should play up now that he’s being stationed next to Mitchell and Harden. And by moving off Lonzo Ball, they opened up a roster spot to be able to convert Nae’Qwan Tomlin from a two-way contract to a standard deal, ensuring that Kenny Atkinson will be able to keep the long, super-active second-year wing in his rotation through the rest of the regular season and into the playoffs.

    The Cavs still have plenty of work to do: figuring out the ball-handling, playmaking timeshare between Harden and Mitchell; getting big men Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen reps and rhythm with a new primary pick-and-roll playmaker; finding the most synergistic lineup combinations with three new pieces coming in; etc. All told, though, they look deeper, more talented and more dangerous now than they did on Monday — a team better positioned to make the deep playoff run that has eluded them, and, in the process, to convince Mitchell that the grass wouldn’t be greener somewhere else.

    Winner (I think): Los Angeles Clippers

    When the Clips were 6-21 on Dec. 19, plenty of smart people wondered whether they’d pull the plug, strip the remnants of the Kawhi/PG-era roster down to the studs, and set about the difficult business of rebuilding when you don’t control your own first-round draft picks until 2030.

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    When the Clips then promptly won 16 of their next 19 games — a run so stunningly prolific that it resulted in a man literally eating his own words — you wondered whether they’d go the other way, rebuffing interest from would-be suitors and instead considering adding talent to potentially propel them further up the Western standings.

    In the end, though — and likely spurred on by Harden’s insistence on finding new digs — Lawrence Frank acted as if he was at the controls of a team that had largely run its course and needed to start planting seeds for a new tomorrow. (Sorry.)

    Out goes Harden, replaced by Garland, an All-Star point guard a decade his junior. Out goes Zubac, returning a package headlined by Mathurin — a legit 23-year-old, 6-5 scorer who still needs to iron out some of the wrinkles in his game and enters restricted free agency this summer — and two potentially very valuable Pacers draft picks to start restocking the draft cupboard. You’d imagine youngsters Kobe Sanders, Jordan Miller and Yanic Konan Niederhauser will get plenty of opportunities down the stretch, as what began the season as the league’s oldest team now starts to look toward the future.

    Kawhi stays put for now, but with Garland and Isaiah Jackson now the only non-rookie-scale money on the books beyond 2027, the Clips still have a ton of financial flexibility with which to hit the reset button in two years’ time. It’s something of a whimper of an end to an era that began with a literal earthquake. But maybe that’s better than continuing to chase an outcome that was no longer in the cards.

    Loser: The League’s View of Ja Morant

    After weeks of welcoming offers for Morant, the Grizzlies ultimately hung onto him on Thursday. As beat reporter Damichael Cole of the Memphis Commercial Appeal put it, the Grizzlies “held firm on their price” — a price that, according to Yahoo Sports national NBA reporter Kelly Iko, executives around the league had largely expected would drop after Memphis moved Jackson, its second trade of a foundational star for draft capital since the end of last season. (The Grizzlies made another pick-focused deal on Thursday, taking little-used veteran Eric Gordon off Philly’s hands in exchange for a second-rounder.)

    Maybe that was the right call. In the last six games he’s actually played — a half-dozen appearances since Christmas, which, granted, not exactly the most ringing endorsement — Morant has averaged 23.5 points and 9.3 assists in 29.2 minutes per game, driving to the basket 17.5 times per game, shooting 53.7% from the field (including 74.2% in the restricted area), 38.9% from 3-point land and 84.2% from the free-throw line on more than six attempts per game, and the Grizzlies have won his minutes. That version of Ja — one that can still get downhill, can finish on the interior, can get to the line and act as an offensive engine — is one that has value.

    Maybe Zach Kleiman sees a scenario in which Morant returns to the floor after his sprained elbow heals up, puts together a string of healthy and impressive performances, and offers the league enough evidence that he hasn’t lost his All-Star/All-NBA fastball — that he’s still got enough left in the tank to be worth betting on. Maybe that’s enough to bring in some more significant offers come the offseason, enabling Morant to pursue a fresh start elsewhere and allowing Memphis to recoup something approaching value for the beleaguered face of their franchise.

    Maybe, though, the lack of aggressive offers over the last month is an indication that Morant’s last three years — the suspensions, the injuries, the seemingly constant internecine drama, the inconsistent production and on-court decline — have left an awfully sour taste in an awful lot of mouths. At 26 years old, the NBA at large seems to be more or less out on Ja Morant. Here’s hoping he gives the league a reason to change that point of view.

    You win some, you lose some: New York Knicks

    Give Leon Rose credit for this much: When he makes a mistake, he moves quickly to try to correct it.

    When the Knicks signed Guerschon Yabusele this summer, it looked like a coup. The 29-year-old big man was coming off an excellent run for the French national team at the 2024 Summer Olympics and a strong season for the Philadelphia 76ers, and seemed like a quality complementary power forward/center to play alongside and behind Karl-Anthony Towns and Mitchell Robinson under new head coach Mike Brown. The theory never panned out in reality, though, as Yabusele’s shooting, defensive work and overall two-way production cratered. With the Knicks getting outscored by 3.4 points per 100 possessions in his minutes, Yabusele quickly found himself out of Brown’s rotation — a $5.5 million salary slot largely gone to seed.

    So, with the Knicks passing on a Giannis pursuit and suddenly scorching after having left their post-NBA Cup slump behind, Rose set about Ctrl+Z’ing the error. Step 1: Work with Yabusele on waiving the player option for the second year of his contract, turning him into an expiring — and, thus, much more movable — contract. Step 2: Move said amended contract to Chicago, in exchange for wing Dalen Terry. Step 3: Re-route Terry (along with a pair of second-round picks) to New Orleans for Jose Alvarado — whom the Knicks had reportedly been after for weeks.

    The 27-year-old Alvarado gives Brown a veteran backup point guard to pair with second-year man Tyler Kolek off the bench — an undersized option at 6-foot-even, yes, but one who plays aggressive, disruptive, opportunistic point-of-attack defense the full length of the court. He was born in Brooklyn, he played high school ball in Queens, and he plays with his hair on fire 100% of the time. If all he does is throw his body around and get a few steals and deflections here and there, the fans at Madison Square Garden will love him; if he can make his 3s, he’ll become a folk hero faster than you can say, “Yes, I can shoot.” Alvarado also makes $1 million less than Yabusele this year, giving the Knicks another $1 million in breathing room under the second apron, which will allow them to be able to add a player in the buyout market.

    It was a tidy bit of business for Rose, replacing a player who didn’t fit New York’s style or needs with one who did while saving money and opening up more options to tinker on the edges of the roster before the start of the playoffs. But just as the vibes were threatening to get a little too immaculate …

    … Fred Katz and James L. Edwards III of The Athletic reported that reserve guard Miles McBride needs core muscle surgery, which will put him on the shelf for quite a while. How long? Maybe right up until the start of the playoffs, according to Jeff Stotts of In Street Clothes:

    That’s a pretty significant bummer, considering McBride — averaging 12.9 points in 28 minutes per game, shooting 42% from 3-point range on nearly seven attempts a night, all career highs — has been one of New York’s best players this season, according to multiple advanced metrics. But if McBride’s able to make it back for the postseason, the Yabusele-for-Alvarado swap, combined with the recent uptick in form across the roster, and especially on the defensive end, could give the Knicks everything they need to go toe-to-toe with anyone they’ll face in the Eastern Conference playoffs.

    Winner: Minnesota Timberwolves

    In the grand scheme of things, Tim Connelly’s decision on the night of the 2024 NBA Draft to trade an unprotected 2031 first-round pick and a 2030 pick swap to the Spurs for the right to draft Rob Dillingham now looks pretty disastrous. In the here-and-now, though, Thursday’s reversal of course — moving Dillingham, who’s underwhelmed through two pro seasons, along with fellow former draftee Leonard Miller and four second-round picks, to the Bulls for Ayo Dosunmu — seems like a perfect fit to fortify the Wolves’ biggest weakness as they seek a third straight trip to the Western Conference finals.

    All season long, Minnesota has seemed a guard short — the natural consequences of both letting Nickeil Alexander-Walker go to Atlanta in favor of re-signing big men Julius Randle and Naz Reid and 19 years in the NBA catching up to Mike Conley Jr. Enter Dosunmu, a tough, physical, 6-4 combo guard with a 6-8 wingspan who can check scorers at either backcourt spot, get to and finish at the rim, serve as a complementary ball-handler, and knock down triples at a 45% clip.

    He’s a better all-around player than Bones Hyland, who’s been serving as Minnesota’s main source of reserve backcourt punch. He should fit neatly next to either Anthony Edwards or Donte DiVincenzo. In a season where the likes of Dillingham, Terrence Shannon Jr. and Jaylen Clark have been hit-or-miss, he adds another bona fide two-way option for Chris Finch to turn to in the crucible of a playoff series. And while Dosunmu is ticketed for free agency this summer, the Wolves now hold his Bird rights, allowing them to go over the cap to retain him.

    This, it’s fair to say, is not exactly the headline-making haul that Connelly had in mind when he entered deadline week. But with Giannis off the board, he still found a way to make the Wolves better, tougher and deeper — a team other Western powers won’t be eager to face, and maybe one capable of making it even further than its predecessors. (Now go bring Conley back, after his trade to the Bulls, re-trade to the Hornets and subsequent waiving makes him eligible to return to the team that just employed him, and the vibes will be all the way right.)

    No longer will Arturas Karnišovas sit idly by and allow pundits to jest and jape in his general direction for his lack of trade-deadline activity. After three years without a single transaction, last year he sent Zach LaVine to Sacramento. And this year, he went berserk, making seven deals.

    Seven! That’s so many! Arguably too many!

    After all the wheeling and dealing was done, Chicago had bought in bulk on two commodities: small guards and second-round picks. Like, so many second-round picks:

    And in the course of bidding farewell to longtime center Nikola Vučević (on his way to be a Sort Of Al Horford in Boston), Dosunmu, Kevin Huerter and Coby White (a UNC product who I bet will look pretty good in Charlotte), they wound up bringing back Dillingham, Anfernee Simons, Jaden Ivey and Collin Sexton, to add to a backcourt mix that already featured Josh Giddey (who has played only four games since New Year’s Eve with a hamstring strain) and Tre Jones. Yabusele and ex-Suns reserve Nick Richards will join Jalen Smith, Matas Buzelis and Patrick Williams in the frontcourt mix.

    Isaac Okoro’s in the mix. Mac McClung, now, too.

    That is … not a very good team. Which, maybe, is the point.

    Chicago currently sits 10th in the East, in its ancestral homeland of the play-in tournament, but just one game up on the red-hot Hornets … to whom they just traded a pretty good player in White, who ought to fit very neatly into their high-octane offensive system. If the Hornets pass the Bulls, and if the Bulls sink a little deeper into the lottery, it could improve their chances of rising in the first round of the draft.

    They don’t have a prayer of catching the likes of the Kings, Pelicans, Pacers, Nets, Wizards and Jazz, and really improving their odds. But every little bit of hurt helps; a version of the Bulls that feeds a ton of minutes to Ivey and Dillingham, allowing them to play through mistakes and see what they can do, could wind up paying dividends for Chicago on multiple levels.

    Just so long as nobody calls it a rebuild. We’re not using that word, OK? That word is off-limits.

    And failing that … well, at least they added some second-rounders instead of selling them. That’s something, right?

    Low-key Winner: Charlotte Hornets

    The Hornets have been pretty awesome for the past month, as the core of LaMelo Ball, Brandon Miller and Kon Knueppel has really taken off. I thought they did nicely to balance fostering that growth and continuing to think about the big picture. They moved Sexton to Chicago for White — a move that could make them better right now — and Mason Plumlee to Oklahoma City for Ousmane Dieng (later re-routed to the Bucks) while also adding four future second-round picks to their coffers. They also rented out their financial flexibility to take Tyus Jones off Orlando’s hands and turn him into a flyer on ex-Spur and Wizard Malaki Branham, and picked up $3.5 million in cash for taking big man Xavier Tillman Sr. to help the Celtics duck under the luxury tax.

    None of that’s going to change the balance of power in the East or anything. But for years, Charlotte just kind of meandered through the wilderness in the lower reaches of the conference, doing stuff that didn’t necessarily seem to cohere to any particular long-term vision or cohesive plan. That’s changed under new ownership and management; for the past couple of seasons, the Hornets have just kept stringing together solid move after solid move, putting them in position to overhaul their roster, return to competitive play, and still have plenty of flexibility and assets to give them the chance to make even more tweaks and additions down the road. Three cheers for mature, functional leadership!

  • Super Bowl 2026: Picks, predictions for Patriots-Seahawks, including winner, MVP and Bad Bunny halftime show

    The entire 2025 NFL season boils down to Sunday. Super Bowl LX at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California will pit the AFC champion New England Patriots against the NFC champion Seattle Seahawks.

    Six of our eight NFL experts are siding with one team in particular to win, though all but two think it’ll be a one-score game. Two separate players also got two of our staff’s votes for MVP.

    We also had some fun with prop bets involving Bad Bunny’s halftime performance, special teams and one of the internet’s favorite outcomes.

    Check out our picks below. What are yours?

    (Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports)

    (Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports)

    (Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports)

    (Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports)

  • Former, current Patriots players disgusted by Tom Brady’s neutral stance on Super Bowl 2026

    While Tom Brady is on the record as not having a “dog in the fight” for Super Bowl LX, which pits the Seattle Seahawks against his old team, the New England Patriots, his former teammate has “a big-ass dog” in that fight.

    That former teammate is Tedy Bruschi, who won three Super Bowls with Brady as a linebacker, where he joined current Patriots head coach Mike Vrabel in the second level of a relentless New England defense.

    “I mean, the last couple weeks on ‘Sunday NFL Countdown,’ I’d just be like ‘put my pick up guys. You know who I’m picking. Put my pick up. Because there’s no other way I’m going.’ I’ve loved the way this team has played. I’ve loved the way they win.”

    Bruschi eventually added: “Whatever game they’re in, they know how to win.”

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    He isn’t the only former Patriots player who’s reacted strongly to Brady’s impartial approach to the big game.

    Vince Wilfork, a two-time Super Bowl champion who starred at defensive tackle for New England from 2004-2014, called Brady’s neutrality “bullcrap” during his visit with WEEI.

    “All that political — this ain’t political. It ain’t political, what it is. Raiders ain’t in it,” Wilfork said, alluding to the fact that Brady is as a minority owner of the Las Vegas Raiders.

    “Say what it is, what you see.”

    One of the WEEI hosts argued that if Brady wants to be a “Patriot for life,” he should be rooting for them in Super Bowl LX.

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    Wilfork chimed back in.

    “At the end of the day, if you a Patriot for life, you know what it is,” he said. “Don’t give me that political bullcrap. … If you don’t think we gonna win, just pick Seattle then. Don’t straddle the fence.”

    Former cornerback Asante Samuel also won two Super Bowls with the Patriots, and took to X on Wednesday to say that he’s “highly disappointed” in Brady.

    Actually, he said a lot more, too.

    In a string of posts, Samuel questioned Brady’s support of not only Vrabel but also Patriots quarterback Drake Maye, called the seven-time Super Bowl champ “Flaw A** Brady” and challenged Brady to respond.

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    Former tight end Rob Gronkowski took a more lighthearted approach to the conversation, as he’s wont to do. Gronkowski won four Super Bowls with Brady: three in New England and one with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

    “I’m rooting for the Patriots,” Gronkowski said during an appearance on “Up & Adams.”

    “What’s great about the Patriots being in the Super Bowl is that it shows — it’s bringing back just how dominant the Patriots are.”

    He elaborated: “There’s a lot of fans out there that are mad that the Patriots are back in the Super Bowl, which is great for us because that brings back they’re mad because of how many times we won with our dynasty that we are a part of.”

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    [Get more Patriots news: New England team feed]

    That dynasty featured six Super Bowl titles over two decades, during which Brady and then-Patriots head coach Bill Belichick dominated the NFL.

    So why won’t Brady root for the Patriots on Sunday?

    “I don’t know. I’m not Tom. I haven’t talked to him yet since the Patriots have been in the Super Bowl,” Gronkowski said. “He probably wants to be the quarterback. He’s that competitive. He probably wants to be the guy in the Super Bowl right now.”

    As for a player who’s part of this year’s Super Bowl, Patriots linebacker Robert Spillane said Thursday that it makes him “sick” hearing that Brady doesn’t have a dog in the fight, as reported by MassLive’s Karen Guregian.

    Brady made that comment on Monday during an appearance on the “Let’s Go!” podcast Monday.

    “Look, I don’t have a dog in the fight in this one,” he said. “May the best team win. And in terms of the Patriots, this is a new chapter in New England. And I’m glad everyone has embraced the Mike Vrabel regime, all the amazing players that have worked so hard to get their club to this position.

    “We did it for 20 years. There was a little bit of a hiatus in there, but the Patriots are back, and it’s a very exciting time for everyone in New England.”

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    Before that, Brady, 48, talked about how he’s in a “different phase” of his life, where he roots for people and wants to sit back as a fan of the game, enjoy the moment and watch the players decide the outcome.

    As a color commentator for Fox Sports, Brady is now trained to view the sport through an objective lens. That said, he isn’t on the call for Super Bowl LX. NBC has the broadcast this time.

    It’s worth noting, though, that despite the Raiders not being anywhere close to the big game, they are reportedly set to hire Seahawks offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak as their next head coach.

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    Maybe that’s a factor in Brady’s stance on Sunday’s game, an outlook that’s increasingly unpopular in New England and among Patriots players, past and present.

  • Nets reportedly will waive Cam Thomas after trade deadline passes

    The Brooklyn Nets will reportedly waive guard Cam Thomas after the NBA trade deadline passed, according to ESPN Insider Shams Charania.

    Thomas did not depart with the team before Thursday’s game against the Orlando Magic, according to NBA insider Jake Fischer. He was ruled out for personal reasons.

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    Thomas has averaged 15.6 points, 3.1 assists and 1.9 rebounds on 39.9% shooting from the field. His role has also decreased under Nets head coach Jordi Fernandez. He started only eight games and averaged 24.3 minutes per game for the Nets this season.

    Last season, Thomas was limited to 25 games after nursing a hamstring injury. Thomas’ best season came in his third year, when he averaged 22.5 points, 3.2 rebounds and 2.9 assists per game.

    [Get more Nets news: Brooklyn team feed]

    This will allow Thomas to get a fresh start. The Nets drafted the 24-year-old guard in the first round in 2021. He spent his entire career with the team before Thursday’s move. Thomas joined the league from LSU as a confident microwave scorer off the bench. He played his rookie season with Kevin Durant, Kyrie Irving and James Harden.

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    Waiving Thomas should open up more minutes for rookie guards Egor Demin, Nolan Traore, Ben Saraf and Drake Powell on the 13-36 Nets. The Nets drafted Demin, Saraf and Traore in the first round of the 2025 NBA Draft. Demin leads the group. He is averaging 10.5 points, 3.3 assists and 3.1 rebounds.

    Traore has averaged 6 points, 2.9 assists and 1.4 rebounds. Saraf has averaged 4.6 points, 2.6 assists and 1.5 rebounds. Powell has averaged 6.1 points, 1.6 assists and 1.6 rebounds.

    The move will also open up a roster spot for the Nets after they acquired Josh Minott from the Boston Celtics, Hunter Tyson from the Denver Nuggets and Ochai Agbaji from the Toronto Raptors. The team also held on to Michael Porter Jr., who was in trade rumors before the deadline.

  • SEC says it distributed over $1 billion to its 16 members in 2024-25 fiscal year

    The SEC’s revenue distribution eclipsed $1 billion in 2024-25.

    The conference announced Thursday that $1.03 billion had been given out to its 16 teams over the fiscal year that ended on Aug. 31. Fourteen of the league’s 16 members received $72.4 million each, while Texas and Oklahoma — who played their first seasons in the SEC in 2024-25, each got just under $15 million combined from the College Football Playoff and bowl revenue alongside money from the NCAA.

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    The latest revenue distribution is a near-$19 million increase from the full member payouts in 2023-24.

    “The SEC’s annual revenue sharing allows member universities to support elite athletics programs, including sustained and meaningful investment in women’s and Olympic sports that enhances opportunities and strengthens resources, while advancing the academic and athletic aspirations of thousands of student-athletes,” SEC commissioner Greg Sankey said in a statement.

    “As college athletics continues to undergo significant change, SEC universities are well positioned to deliver new financial benefits for student-athletes while continuing to offer a transformative, life-changing college experience, including debt-free education and comprehensive support in coaching, training, academics, healthcare, mental wellness, nutrition, life skills, and post-eligibility medical coverage.”

    While the SEC is the first conference to announce that it has shared $1 billion with its members, the Big Ten will assuredly join that group when it releases its 2024-25 financial numbers. The Big Ten announced last spring that it had distributed over $900 million to its members.

    The stark revenue increase for the SEC — and the likely large increase for the Big Ten as well — is largely a product of the conference’s media rights deal with ESPN. ESPN and ABC took over the entirety of the SEC’s football and basketball telecasts in 2024-25 after the conference’s key football game of the week had been on CBS for decades. With the SEC on ESPN and ABC, the Big Ten has TV contracts with Fox, NBC and CBS.

  • When is the Patriots vs. Seahawks game? Super Bowl kickoff time, TV channel, how to watch and more

    The New England Patriots needed a few years to rebuild after the departure of Belichick and Brady, and boy have they ever. The AFC champions, led by quarterback Drake Maye, will face the Seattle Seahawks at Super Bowl LX. The two teams also met at the 2014 Super Bowl where the Pats defeated the Seahawks 28-24. This time around, with Sam Darnold leading the Seahawks offense, will things be different? We’ll find out when the teams meet at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, CA, on Sunday, February 8. The game is set to begin at 6:30 p.m. ET.

    The 2026 Super Bowl will be broadcast on NBC and will stream live on Peacock. And in case you haven’t heard, viewers will also be treated to a halftime performance from singer and rapper Bad Bunny, and there will be pre-game performances by Green Day, Charlie Puth, Brandi Carlile, and Coco Jones, too. Here’s everything you need to know to tune in to Super Bowl LX when it airs on Feb. 8.

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    When is the 2026 Super Bowl?

    The 2026 Super Bowl is set to begin at 6:30 p.m. ET/3:30 p.m. PT on Feb. 8, 2026.

    How to watch the Super Bowl:

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    Date: Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026

    Time: 6:30 p.m. ET

    TV channel: NBC, Telemundo

    Streaming: Peacock, DirecTV, NFL+ and more

    2026 Super Bowl game time

    The 2026 Super Bowl kicks off at 6:30 p.m. ET/3:30 p.m. PT on Feb. 8, 2026, but you can catch Green Day’s pre-show performance starting at 6 p.m. ET.

    2026 Super Bowl game channel

    The 2026 Super Bowl will air on NBC. A Spanish-language broadcast available on Telemundo.

    2026 Super Bowl teams:

    AFC champions the New England Patriots will play NFC champions the Seattle Seahawks at Super Bowl LX.

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    Where is the 2026 Super Bowl being played?

    The 2026 Super Bowl will be held at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, CA, home of the San Francisco 49ers.

    How to watch the 2026 Super Bowl without cable

    You can stream NBC and Telemundo on platforms like DirecTV and Hulu + Live TV, both of which are among Engadget’s choices for best streaming services for live TV. (Note that Fubo and NBC are currently in the midst of a contract dispute and NBC channels are not available on the platform.) The game will also be streaming on Peacock and on NFL+, though with an NFL+ subscription, you’re limited to watching the game on mobile devices.

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    Parks and Recreation and The Office, every Bravo show and much more.

    For $17 monthly you can upgrade to an ad-free subscription which includes live access to your local NBC affiliate (not just during designated sports and events) and the ability to download select titles to watch offline.

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    Who is performing at the 2026 Super Bowl halftime show?

    Puerto Rican superstar Bad Bunny will be headlining the 2026 Super Bowl halftime performance. You can expect that show to begin after the second quarter, likely between 8-8:30 p.m. ET. Green Day will also perform a pre-game show starting at 6 p.m. ET. Look out for pre-game performances from singer Charlie Puth, who is performing the National Anthem, Brandi Carlile, who is scheduled to sing “America The Beautiful,” and Grammy winner Coco Jones who will perform “Lift Every Voice and Sing.”

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    Where to buy tickets to the 2026 Super Bowl:

    Tickets to the 2026 Super Bowl are available on third-party resale platforms like StubHub and Gametime.

    Find tickets on Stubhub

    Find tickets on Gametime

    More ways to watch Super Bowl LX

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  • James Rodríguez to Minnesota United?! + Breaking down Fading USMNT Stars & What Went Wrong

    Subscribe to The Cooligans

    Is James Rodríguez really headed to Minnesota United? In one of the strangest transfer rumors we’ve ever seen, the Cooligans unpack how a global superstar could end up in MLS, what it would mean for Minnesota, and whether James still has enough left to move the needle in the league — or if this is destined to be pure chaos.

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    Next, we revisit the USMNT hype machine and ask some uncomfortable questions. Gio Reyna, Yunus Musah, Gianluca Busio, Jordan Morris — all players who once felt like sure things. So what happened? We break down why their trajectories have stalled, what went wrong at club level, and whether there’s still time for a second act.

    Finally, we react to the wildest stories from around world soccer. From Vinícius Jr.’s girlfriend revealing uncomfortable details involving Real Madrid, to Gabriel Barbosa’s tense encounter with fans, to Cristiano Ronaldo’s “missing” posters popping up in Saudi Arabia — it’s another reminder that no sport delivers chaos quite like football.

    Timestamps:

    (6:30) – James Rodriguez’s shock transfer to Minnesota United

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    (21:30) – USMNT rising stars that have now faded

    (49:30) – Vini Jr’s girlfriend’s weird ointment story

    (53:30) – Reacting to other news around the soccer world

    JAMES RODRIGUEZ

    JAMES RODRIGUEZ

    🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

    Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at yahoosports.tv

  • Super Bowl 2026: Patriots’ battered and bruised OL is in for its toughest test in a postseason full of them

    SAN FRANCISCO — There’s been an element of understandable apathy surrounding Super Bowl LX this weekend. Anyone who has been paying attention to the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks this postseason has seen the obvious: These teams are largely playing on two completely different planes of existence.

    The Seahawks pulled the 49ers’ pants over their heads in a dominating victory that felt like it was over from the first drive, then had a real heavyweight duel with the Rams in the NFC title game. On the other hand, the Patriots have fought through some grueling battles without the high-end flashes the Seahawks have shown.

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    And the Patriots have a key weakness in this game, same as it’s been all their other games: the offensive line.

    This isn’t to say that the Patriots have the worst offensive line in the league, because they certainly don’t. However, in a more amped setting like the playoffs, where the best teams are the only teams populating the schedule, New England’s line has been forced to play some of the best defenses in the league and largely has not fared well. Throughout their three playoff games, the Patriots have had only a 33% success rate on offense and Drake Maye has been sacked on 16.3% of his dropbacks. The flip side is that the defense has also taken advantage of poor weather conditions , but that likely won’t be the same environment Sunday.

    Patriots head coach Mike Vrabel noted Thursday that containing the Seahawks’ defensive line games (like stunts and twists) will be crucial in the Super Bowl.

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    “That will be a huge factor in the game,” he said.

    Vrabel also praised the development of rookies Will Campbell and Jared Wilson, who make up the left side of the Patriots’ line.

    “We never really looked at it as rookie players on the left side,” Vrabel said. “We talk about maturity.”

    New England has a chance in this game if Campbell, Wilson and the offensive line can play beyond its years and better than what it’s shown in the playoffs. The Patriots certainly don’t have the same level of talent up front as a team that’s usually in this circumstance — hell, even the Seahawks’ offensive line, which isn’t an elite unit, has at least three plus starters on it in Charles Cross, Grey Zabel and Abe Lucas. Up to this point, over 42% of the Patriots’ offensive plays have gone for negative yardage, and they have the worst mark for first downs per drive (1.14) among any team to play in the playoffs this year. The offensive line has been battered against some of the best defensive lines the league has to offer, and it’s hard to see how that changes this weekend against the vaunted Seahawks front.

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    The one thing that this offensive line has going for it is that Maye is one of the best athletes at quarterback in the league and has already shown that his athletic prowess can be the big difference for the Patriots in the Super Bowl.

    Maye has his o-line’s back too, especially Campbell, who he’s become close friends with this season.

    “He doesn’t take any crap, on or off the field,” Maye said.

    However, Campbell and the line still need to give Maye (and the running backs behind them) a chance to win this game. It really will come down to the Patriots’ ability up front to hold arguably the most cohesive front seven in the NFL at bay.

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    Hopefully they do, because it’s best if this Super Bowl doesn’t feed into the anti-hype that’s led the discourse for the game up to this point. New England’s front five needs to play uncharacteristically well against yet another defensive line that has far more talent than it does.

    If New England can pull that off, this Patriots team can be one of the more unlikely Super Bowl winners of this era.