Tag: NBA

  • Nuggets rule Aaron Gordon out of Game 3 against the Timberwolves with tightness in his calf

    Nuggets rule Aaron Gordon out of Game 3 against the Timberwolves with tightness in his calf

    Nuggets forward Aaron Gordon has been ruled out of Game 3 at Minnesota because of tightness in his left calf muscle.

    MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Denver Nuggets forward Aaron Gordon was ruled out of Game 3 of the first-round NBA playoff series at Minnesota on Thursday because of tightness in his left calf muscle.

    After initially listing Gordon as questionable to face the Timberwolves, the Nuggets downgraded the 12th-year veteran to doubtful before coach David Adelman declared him out before tipoff. Spencer Jones took Gordon’s place in the starting lineup, after totaling just 19 minutes over the first two games.

    “Obviously it’s a downer. But it’s over. He’s not playing, so the guys that are are prepared to win,” Adelman said.

    Gordon, who had 17 points in Game 1, felt the injury after scoring eight points in Denver’s Game 2 loss on Monday that allowed Minnesota to tie the series. The Nuggets have also been without forward Peyton Watson for the series because of a strained right hamstring.

     

  • Suns’ Devin Booker fined $35K for criticizing game officials

    NEW YORK — Phoenix Suns guard Devin Booker has been fined $35,000 for public criticism of the officiating, it was announced today by James Jones, Executive Vice President, Head of Basketball Operations.  Following an investigation including multiple interviews and video review, the league found no basis to any claim of bias or misconduct by game officials.

    Booker made his comments to the press following the Suns’ 120-107 loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder in Game 2 of their first-round playoff series on April 22 at Paycom Center.

    The NBA also determined that Booker’s technical foul at 2:05 in the third quarter was improperly assessed and it has therefore been rescinded.

  • Austin Reaves is upgraded to questionable for Lakers in first-round Game 3 against Rockets

    Austin Reaves is upgraded to questionable for Lakers in first-round Game 3 against Rockets

    Austin Reaves has been upgraded to questionable for Game 3 of the Lakers’ first-round playoff series against the Rockets.

    EL SEGUNDO, Calif. (AP) — Austin Reaves has been upgraded to questionable for Game 3 of the Los Angeles Lakers’ first-round playoff series against the Houston Rockets.

    The Lakers made the designation on their high-scoring guard Thursday while the team flew to Houston. Los Angeles has a surprising 2-0 series lead heading into Game 3 on Friday night despite playing without Luka Doncic and Reaves, its top two scorers.

    Reaves hasn’t played since he strained his oblique muscles and Doncic strained his hamstring in a game at Oklahoma City on April 2, but Reaves returned to on-court basketball activities over the past few days. Before the Lakers’ flight, coach JJ Redick said he had no update on the schedule for his injured starters’ return to play.

    Reaves averaged 23.3 points, 5.5 assists and 4.7 rebounds during an impressive regular season for the Lakers, although he played in only 51 games due to two lengthy injury absences. In his fifth season with Los Angeles, the former undrafted free agent cemented his status as a prolific secondary scorer and dependable offensive facilitator while the Lakers won 53 games and the Pacific Division.

    But Reaves and NBA scoring champion Doncic were both injured during the Lakers’ blowout loss to the Thunder three weeks ago.

    Doncic is still out for Game 3, but Redick said earlier this week that the Slovenian superstar is expected to begin initial on-court work soon. The Lakers haven’t publicly speculated on the date of either guard’s return.

    After losing three straight games following the injuries, the Lakers have regrouped and won five in a row. Los Angeles stunned the NBA by claiming the first two games of its first-round series at home over the Rockets, who were perceived as the strong favorites in the series due to the Lakers’ injury problems.

    The Lakers defeat the Rockets, 101-94, to take a 2-0 lead as the series heads to Houston.

    Although 41-year-old LeBron James is leading the way, Luke Kennard and Marcus Smart also have stepped up impressively in the absence of the Lakers’ starting backcourt. Kennard scored 27 points in Game 1 and 23 in Game 2, and Smart scored 25 points with five 3-pointers in Game 2 while leading Los Angeles’ impressive defensive effort against Kevin Durant, who managed only three points after halftime.

    Reaves will be eligible for a big new contract this summer if he declines his option for next season, as expected. Both Reaves and team officials have said they believe the guard will remain with the Lakers, his favorite team since childhood.

  • The Athletic: Scottie Barnes & Evan Mobley are already stars. But can they take the next step?

    The Athletic: Scottie Barnes & Evan Mobley are already stars. But can they take the next step?

    Round 1 foes Scottie Barnes and Evan Mobley can’t escape comparisons, or expectations.

    Editor’s Note: Read more NBA coverage from The Athletic here. The views on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the NBA or its teams. 

    ***

    TORONTO — It took LeVelle Moten only a few moments to understand Evan Mobley’s greatness. He just had to walk into Team USA’s training camp ahead of the 2019 Under-19 World Cup and watch Mobley work, even as he was coming back from a knee injury.

    “I said, ‘That’s what it had to look like when Wilt (Chamberlain) played,’” said Moten, an assistant coach on that team, recalling the camp in Colorado Springs, Colo. “That’s how dominant he was.”

    It took until the final game of the tournament for Moten to fully appreciate Scottie Barnes. Moten had put together the game plan, which included a note to not let Mali’s Abdoul Coulibaly go to his left. The starters didn’t follow instruction, so Barnes, who had offered to come off the bench in training camp, got the next crack at the assignment. Barnes immediately let Coulibaly go left, but knocked the ball out of bounds.

    “I yelled at Scottie, ‘Damn it, didn’t I say (to) make the boy go left?’” Moten recalled. “And Scottie said, ‘Coach, don’t even worry about it, because this MFer ain’t gonna score no more.’ And he was talking to me — but he was saying it right in the boy’s face.”

    The Americans ended up winning Barnes’ 29 minutes by 27 points in a 14-point win, securing the gold medal. Even on a team with the first five picks of the 2021 NBA Draft, plus Tyrese Haliburton, Mobley and Barnes’ gifts could not be hidden. It’s important to remember that, as they continue to nose in front of each other during their intertwined careers, including in the first-round series between their Cleveland Cavaliers and Toronto Raptors, these were hyped-up players who stood out on All-Star teams of their peers. That they exist on the periphery of the NBA’s power structure shows you how special you have to be to get to the inter sanctum of the league’s transactional machinations.

    Even in this series, they have not been the fulcrums, as Cleveland guards Donovan Mitchell (62 points, including 8 3s) and James Harden (50 points and 14 assists) have orchestrated a Cavaliers attack that the Raptors have been unable to stop. Most of Cleveland’s defensive attention, meanwhile, has gone toward slowing Brandon Ingram, not Barnes.

    But Mobley has been a key cog in the Cavaliers taking a 2-0 lead, with Game 3 going on Thursday in Toronto. When the Raptors benched starting big man Jakob Poeltl and went to a smaller, switch-heavy lineup in the second half of Game 2, Mobley dominated. He had 11 points in the third quarter alone, using his size advantage to neutralize the Raptors’ swarming, pesky defense. He’s averaging 21 points on 77.3 percent shooting through two games.

    Calf strains interrupted Mobley’s season a few times during the regular season, part of the reason the Cavaliers didn’t back up their 64-win season a year ago with another six-month waltz.

    “They say development is not linear. It just doesn’t keep going like this,” said Cavaliers coach Kenny Atkinson, miming an undeterred ascent with his arm, before Game 2. “It doesn’t. There are going to be some downs, and I think Evan has kind of got out of that dip and is trending back to improving before our eyes and at the right.”

    However, the Raptors didn’t wilt in Game 2, and Barnes was the main reason why. He had 17 points in the second half, and was in the middle of the Raptors finally able to push the pace in transition more frequently, a necessity if the Raptors are to make this a series. On a couple possessions, he went right into Mobley and fellow Cleveland big man Jarrett Allen, pushing them under the basket in the paint for buckets. That type of force is necessary for a limited offensive team.

    Both, though, have highlighted the promise that they have shown since they came into the league. Can they be the beating hearts of championship contenders? That’s a different question, one both franchises will have to grapple with on different timelines.

    Their careers, dating back to the draft in 2021, have lined up nicely. Mobley went third in the draft, while Barnes went fourth. Barnes edged out Mobley for Rookie of the Year in one of the closest votes for the award ever. And while Cade Cunningham has surpassed both as the guy from that draft who you’d build a team around, both are clearly good enough to be part of a solid franchise’s foundation. There are times when Barnes has seemed like the better player and others when Mobley has seemed like the bigger difference-maker, but neither has ever put the other way behind him.

    That’s the tricky part of all of this, though. Barnes came into the league as the guy surrounded by veterans, joining the Pascal Siakam/Fred VanVleet/OG Anunoby core. One by one, those players left, with the Raptors trying to rebuild more in Barnes’ image: frenetic and versatile.

    While Barnes’ journey to being “the guy” in Toronto has been awkward — he seemed to demur from the off-the-court aspects of the role to start, and his on-court attributes are certainly more Pippen than Jordan — his personality screams centerpiece.

    “Scottie was boisterous. He was talking. He had some of that leadership ability,” said Bruce Weber, the longtime college coach who was the head coach for that Under-19 team. “Sometimes, it had to be reeled in a bit, but you’d rather have that. I always talk about, ‘Do you want to deal with Tigger or Eeyore?’ You want Tigger on your team, because he has energy and is flying around. The successful guys have that energy. That’s why you knew he’d be pretty good.”

    As for Mobley?

    “You knew when Scottie came into the building,” Weber said. “Evan could sneak in, even at 6-10, 6-11. He could sneak in quietly, and you wouldn’t even know he’s there.”

    Perhaps because Mobley’s game was a bit more polished, the Cavaliers decided to accelerate their build right after his rookie year, trading for Mitchell. At times, Mobley has looked like the perfect emerging co-star for Mitchell, a big man who expanded his offensive game last year while winning Defensive Player of the Year.

    This season, there has been some disappointment with his development, especially as his shooting has fallen off from the previous two years. Cleveland is so committed to Mitchell now that if the Cavaliers fail to make it to the conference final, you wonder if they might become impatient with Mobley’s growth and move him for a player more obviously in his prime. There’s a guy who has spent his career in Wisconsin who could be available.

    That possibility, although probably slim, is more of a reflection of how precious Mitchell’s peak is to Cleveland than anything Mobley has or hasn’t done.

    “I think he develops every single year,” Barnes said of Mobley before the series started. “I think he’s grown more into his body. His physicality when he’s driving the ball, being able to create for himself, and defensively, he has all the intangibles. He has super long arms, athletic, he can switch one through five. He’s great.”

    Meanwhile, even though Barnes was already an All-Star in 2024, this was the year he blossomed. His defensive impact reached new heights and should earn him his first All-Defense spot — he finished fifth in Defensive Player of the Year voting. With the Raptors acquiring Brandon Ingram to take over the biggest share of the half-court offence that Barnes is not best suited to manage, his energy in pushing the pace, distributing the ball and playmaking on defence animated the Raptors’ surprise 46-win season.

    And yet, with Barnes at the middle of things, there will be questions. How do you build a team when your best player is not your most efficient or talented scorer? That becomes a geometry question, one the Raptors are not close to solving. It was exposed during this season, and continues to be in this series.

    “He’s a really good passer,” Atkinson said. “I think he’s the 96th percentile in potential assists. You’ve got to keep your eyes open. When he drives, he’s going to find shooters. I’m really impressed (by) the leap he took this year.”

    None of that is to suggest the Raptors will consider moving Barnes any time soon. More likely, transaction by transaction, they will attempt to get closer to a roster that makes sense around him, not that it will be easy because of the Raptors’ other financial commitments. The roster-building mistakes the Raptors have around him, especially the contract extension given to Poeltl before this season that doesn’t kick in until 2027-28, make it possible that the Raptors will get stuck in neutral before they can maximize Barnes’ skills. Those mistakes aren’t Barnes’ fault, but they speak to the trickiness of building around him.

    Cleveland’s relationship with Mobley is a little more in question only because of Mitchell’s presence and the increased stakes. Still, generally players who are as good as Mobley don’t go anywhere. The safe call is Mobley will be in Ohio for years to come.

    “I would like to say they surprised me, but neither of them has,” Moten said. “Evan is who I thought he would be. Scottie is who I thought he would be. I thought, before they were 28 years old, they would both be First Team All-NBA guys. And they’re certainly on the trajectory of doing that.”

    Perhaps. Both will turn just 25 this summer. In theory, they still have some evolution ahead of them. But in a league that is trending toward shorter competitive windows, teams won’t always have the time to see their young players’ futures out — even if those players are as good as Barnes or Mobley. Great young players have never had less time to reach their ceilings.

    ***

    Eric Koreen is a senior writer covering the Raptors and the NBA. Previously, he has written for the National Post, Canadian Press, Sportsnet and Complex.

  • Victor Wembanyama traveling with team for Game 3, but his status remains uncertain

    Victor Wembanyama traveling with team for Game 3, but his status remains uncertain

    Victor Wembanyama suffered a concussion during Game 2 of the Spurs-Blazers playoff series.

    SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Victor Wembanyama will travel with the San Antonio Spurs to Portland for games this weekend, even while continuing to complete the steps mandated by the league’s concussion protocol.

    That said, Spurs coach Mitch Johnson stopped short of saying Wembanyama will play. Wembanyama is “progressing,” Johnson said, but his status for Game 3 of the matchup remains uncertain.

    Wembanyama was at the team’s practice facility for a second consecutive day on Thursday, walking around in a black hoodie and gray sweatpants. He even got a few shots up, teammate Julian Champagnie said.

    “He was only around for a little bit this morning,” Spurs guard De’Aaron Fox said Thursday. “Obviously, we just want him to be healthy.”

    Wembanyama — the league’s first-ever unanimous Kia Defensive Player of the Year and one of three finalists for the Kia Most Valuable Player award — suffered the concussion in the Spurs’ Game 2 loss to Portland on Tuesday night, leaving the game in the second quarter.

    Game 3 of the series — tied at a game apiece — is Friday in Portland (10:30 p.m. ET, Prime Video), followed by Game 4 there on Sunday. The Spurs were flying to Portland on Thursday afternoon.

    There are very specific steps that players have to clear before being removed from the league’s concussion protocol. Players begin the return-to-play process with light exertion — such as riding a stationary bike, jogging, agility work and non-contact basketball drills — and each step is followed by another neurological examination.

    Wembanyama’s results will also be compared to his baseline neurological evaluation — which players undergo prior to each season — before doctors permit him to move forward in the return-to-play plan.

    “It’s pretty straightforward,” Johnson said. “Obviously, we hope he’ll be back at some point. But we’ll allow the protocol to play out. And again, there’s nothing more important than his health.”

    Any extended absence by Wembanyama would be a massive blow to San Antonio, which finished with the league’s second-best record behind the versatile 7-foot-4 center from France. They were 12-6 in the regular season without Wembanyama.

    Wembanyama averaged 25 points, 11.5 rebounds, 3.1 assists and a league-best 3.1 blocks per game this season. He was also with his teammates on Wednesday evening, when they all donned cowboy hats and surprised teammate Keldon Johnson after he was announced as the league’s Kia Sixth Man of the Year.

    “We know that he’s chomping at the bit to get back on the court and be with his guys,” Johnson said.

  • AJ Dybantsa announces he is entering 2026 NBA Draft

    AJ Dybantsa announces he is entering 2026 NBA Draft

    BYU standout AJ Dybantsa averaged 25.5 ppg last season.

    AJ Dybantsa has made it official: He’s entering the NBA draft.

    The BYU forward — widely expected to be a top candidate to be the No. 1 pick — made the announcement Thursday. Dybantsa led the nation by averaging 25.5 points per game in his lone college season, along with 6.8 rebounds and 3.7 assists per game.

    He’s the first player to have a season with all those averages and be named a consensus All-American since Larry Bird did it for Indiana State in 1978-79.

    “Now the work starts again, all over again,” Dybantsa said. “I’ve had a lot of NBA players tell me that it kind of restarts once you get there. I’m just looking forward to that next step, being a rookie and learning from all the vets.”

    Dybantsa made the announcement at the Davis School in his hometown of Brockton, Massachusetts — the home of boxing greats Rocky Marciano and Marvin Hagler, among others.

    “It’s the city of champions,” Dybantsa said. “I just want to be considered like one of those champions.”

    Dybantsa attended the Davis School until fifth grade and said he still values the lessons instilled in him there, including the importance of education. That’s part of the reason why, even though he’s going to the NBA, Dybantsa said he will simultaneously remain in school and continue working toward a mass communications degree at BYU.

    “My mom wanted me to stay in college to graduate,” Dybantsa said. “But I told my mother that I’m going to declare for the draft and also finish and get my degree online. I’ll probably finish within the next four years.”

    The NBA Draft Lottery 2026 will be held on Sunday, May 10 and air live on ABC at 3 p.m. ET. The first round of NBA Draft 2026 will take place on Tuesday, June 23, and the second round will take place on Wednesday, June 24.

    The Washington Wizards, Indiana Pacers and Brooklyn Nets all have a 14% chance of landing the No. 1 overall pick. When asked what team he would like to play for in the NBA, Dybantsa gave an immediate answer.

    “Whatever team drafts me, bro,” Dybantsa said.

    He’s not lacking for confidence and hopes to give another speech in Massachusetts — the home of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame — when his playing career is over.

    “The next speech — the next big, big speech — I should have is the Hall of Fame speech,” Dybantsa said. “So, we should be good.”

    Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

  • 3 things to watch in Knicks-Hawks Game 3

    Down 12 entering the 4th quarter, Atlanta goes on a tear to take down New York and shock the MSG crowd and tie the series.

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    Coming off a stunning, fourth-quarter comeback in Game 2 of their first-round series against the New York Knicks, the Atlanta Hawks are looking to maintain home-court advantage with the series moving to Atlanta.

    The Hawks won 14 of their last 15 regular-season games at State Farm Arena, but the one loss (Apr. 6) was to the Knicks, who won their first five road games (by a total of 10 points) in last year’s playoffs.

    Here are three things to watch with both teams looking to take a 2-1 series lead in Game 3 on Thursday (7 p.m. ET, Prime Video).


    1. Bench play

    Starters’ minutes are extended in the playoffs, but one big difference between the Knicks’ win in Game 1 and the Hawks’ win in Game 2 was how the teams performed with reserves on the floor …

    • In Game 1, the Knicks outscored the Hawks by six points in Jalen Brunson’s 11:36 on the bench.
    • In Game 2, they were outscored by four points in Brunson’s 11:53 on the bench.

    Karl-Anthony Towns was also on the bench for almost all (11:22) of that 11:53 that Brunson rested in Game 2, and the Knicks scored just 16 points on 23 offensive possessions in that time. His bench ranked third this season, which is a small sample size, but small sample sizes are all you get in the playoffs. Coach Mike Brown may choose to stagger (or extend) his All-Stars’ minutes a little more on Thursday.

    For the Hawks, Jonathan Kuminga is an X-factor. After a quiet night in Game 1, the 23-year-old played almost 35 minutes in Game 2, scoring 19 points and adding two steals and a block on defense. And he was on the floor instead of All-Defense candidate Dyson Daniels as the Hawks held the Knicks to just six points on nine clutch possessions.

    With backup center Jock Landale out, the Hawks may be undersized and outmanned at the five, but can play bigger at the other positions, especially with the Knicks using three small (and/or slight) guards – Jordan Clarkson, Miles McBride and Jose Alvarado – off the bench.


    2. Late-clock execution

    The Knicks had one of the best (and most-used) late-clock offenses in the league. They ranked second in effective field goal percentage (51.2%) in the last seven seconds of the shot clock and fourth in the percentage of their shots (22%) that came in the last seven seconds.

    It’s good to be good late in the clock, but it’s better not to have so many long possessions. Every team’s effective field goal percentage was much lower in the last seven seconds of the shot clock than it was otherwise.

    In this series, the Knicks have struggled late in the clock. They’re just 12-for-46 (including 4-for-16 from 3-point range) in the final seven seconds of the shot clock through Game 2. That’s an effective goal percentage of just 30.4%, compared to 63.8% through the first 17 seconds.

    Here was a critical possession late in Game 2 where the Knicks walked the ball up the floor and couldn’t get the ball to Towns in the post. So the ball remains 30 feet from the basket and ends up in the hands of Josh Hart with six seconds left on the clock …

    Knicks late-game possession in Game 2

    Hart has been a much-improved 3-point shooter this season, but his shooting a pull-up 3 with three seconds left on the clock is a pretty good result for the Hawks …

    Knicks late-game possession in Game 2

    The Hawks haven’t been as efficient early in the clock, but they’ve had to work late about half as often…

    Shooting in the last 7 seconds of the shot clock

    Team FGM FGA FG% 3PM eFG% %FGA
    New York 12 46 26.1% 4 30.4% 29%
    Atlanta 8 25 32.0% 2 36.0% 15%

    eFG% = (FGM + (0.5 * 3PM)) / FGA
    %FGA = Percentage of total FGA

    Credit the Hawks’ defense for some of the Knicks’ struggles late in the clock. Nickeil-Alexander Walker has had some timely stops against Brunson, and they’ve all been pretty disciplined when he gets into the paint, staying down on pump fakes and contesting his shots without fouling.

    The Knicks should still have better success late in the clock as the series continues. But they should also play with a bit more pace to avoid so many late-clock situations.


    3. Towns in the post

    The Knicks were trying to get the ball to Towns in the post against Kuminga in that possession illustrated above. But Kuminga denied the entry pass and the Knicks were left scrambling late in the clock.

    Onyeka Okongwu has been the Hawks player who has defended Towns the most, but he’s also been matched up with a lot of smaller Hawks. Sometimes it’s been Dyson Daniels, so Atlanta can switch the Brunson-Towns pick-and-roll.

    Towns has, at times, taken advantage of those mismatches on the glass. But according to tracking data, he’s had just four post-ups over the two games, the same number as Brunson.

    Okongwu forced him into a tough shot in the fourth quarter on Monday, but Towns’ other three post-ups were against Kuminga (who fouled him) and Mouhamed Gueye. Against Gueye, he made a short jump hook and missed a short turnaround.

    We could see the Knicks be a little quicker to get Towns the ball in the post when he’s matched up with a smaller defender in Game 3. And if he can take advantage of his size inside, that could open things up elsewhere on the floor.

    * * *

    John Schuhmann has covered the NBA for more than 20 years. You can e-mail him here, find his archive here and follow him on Bluesky.

  • Derrick White wins 2025-26 NBA Sportsmanship Award

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    • 2025-26 NBA Awards: Complete coverage
    • NBA Sportsmanship Award: All-Time Winners

    Boston Celtics guard Derrick White has been named the 2025-26 NBA Sportsmanship Award winner, earning the Joe Dumars Trophy.

    Presented annually since the 1995-96 season, the NBA Sportsmanship Award honors a player who best represents the ideals of sportsmanship on the court.  The trophy is named for Naismith Basketball Hall of Famer and two-time NBA champion Joe Dumars, who won the inaugural NBA Sportsmanship Award and played his entire 14-year career with the Detroit Pistons.

    Each NBA team nominated one of its players for the 2025-26 NBA Sportsmanship Award.  From the 30 team nominees, a panel of league executives selected six finalists (one from each NBA division).  Current NBA players then voted to select the winner from those finalists.  The complete voting results are available here.

    White has won the NBA Sportsmanship Award for the first time.  The Celtics have now had recipients in consecutive seasons after Jrue Holiday earned the honor last season.

    A nine-year NBA veteran, White is a two-time Kia NBA All-Defensive Team selection and an NBA champion with Boston (2023-24).  He also helped the Austin Spurs win the NBA G League championship during his rookie season with the San Antonio Spurs (2017-18).  White won a gold medal with the USA Men’s National Team at the 2024 Paris Olympics.

  • 3 things to watch in Cavaliers-Raptors Game 3

    3 things to watch in Cavaliers-Raptors Game 3

    The Cavaliers are way more dangerous when Evan Mobley is clicking on offense.

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    They beat Oklahoma City. And Detroit, too, meaning both top seeds left Toronto disappointed.

    And the Cleveland Cavaliers? The Cavs dropped not just one game, but two in Canada this season.

    Which means the Toronto Raptors proved they’re fully capable of holding firm on their home court against top competition and even better against the Cavs, their first-round playoff opponent.

    Now comes the tricky part — proving themselves all over again.

    Given that these are the playoffs and the Raptors find themselves trailing 2-0 in the best-of-seven, the margin for error is slim. Home court must be protected at all costs, or this series might be over in a matter of days.

    The Raptors are encouraged by how they battled throughout Game 1 after a lopsided loss in the opener, keeping the game suspenseful until the last few minutes.

    “Our team is so much better now than seven days ago,” said Raptors coach Darko Rajakovic. “We already got so much better. We’re going to continue getting better … we’re excited to come home, play in front of our fans, get the Jurassic Park going outside of the arena and fight back.”

    Still, it’s all hands on deck for the Raptors, especially those belonging to Brandon Ingram.

    Here’s what to watch for Game 3 in Toronto on Thursday (8 p.m. ET on Prime Video)


    1. Evan Mobley’s mindset

    Do the Cavs have a Big Three? That certainly was the case in Game 2 when James Harden and Donovan Mitchell were joined by a partner.

    The trick now for Mobley, not only Thursday but throughout this series, is to prove that 25-point (on 11-for-13 shooting) performance wasn’t just a temporary elevation for him.

    If so, this series could be a quick one. Mobley has the skills to impact both ends of the floor, although he mainly does so defensively. If his shots fall as they did in Game 2, then he’s doubly dangerous and the Cavs become very tough to defend.

    Look to see if Harden and Mitchell feed Mobley the ball early and often.

    That’ll be the indicator of whether they have belief in him. Harden’s willingness to pass is to be expected by now; making his teammates better was his priority since arriving at midseason. But if Mitchell also defers to Mobley at times, then that’s respect.

    Mobley must earn that attention, though. If he starts hot and is aggressive offensively and physically at both ends, the Raptors will be stretched defensively.


    Brandon Ingram’s rebound

    Nobody in these playoffs is having a tougher time reaching the level of his All-Star regular season than Ingram, whose scoring and efficiency are both down.

    It represents such an about-face for Toronto’s leading scorer, who played career-best basketball from last fall until now; he’s averaging almost 10 fewer points.

    This can change suddenly, of course. Ingram is too good a scorer, especially from pull-up mid-range, to stay down for very long. And he’ll get encouragement from the friendly crowd. He averaged 23 points and six rebounds at home this year

    The key for Ingram is to get good looks, and most of his Game 2 attempts weren’t forced; he had daylight. He just couldn’t connect on those. If it happens again, then Ingram could find himself battling twin forces — the Cavs’ defense and his confidence.

    “I’m confident I won’t miss all my shots and find a rhythm,” Ingram said. “But I’m also confident in our team. I don’t want to make this all about what I’m doing.”


    3. Toronto’s deep shooting

    The Raptors are next to last in 3-pointers made in the playoffs, just ahead of the Rockets, and that method of shooting has long been problematic. Toronto averaged 11 3s made per game all season; the only team to finish with 10 or fewer was Sacramento.

    Can the Raptors win a playoff series with such a de-emphasis on the shot, especially in today’s NBA, and particularly since they might miss Immanuel Quickley for a third straight game with injury?

    The biggest use for the 3-pointer is when a team is trying to rally late in the game. The Raptors must resort to other methods in that situation. Quickley is their best deep threat from a volume and efficiency standpoint, which is why his absence has been costly so far.

    Scottie Barnes, much like Ingram, doesn’t park himself behind the arc. Along with RJ Barrett, the Raptors’ three most capable scorers do much of their damage inside of 23 feet.

    This mindset and strategy might need to change somehow if Quickley doesn’t play and the Raptors are forced to adjust for their playoff lives.

    * * *

    Shaun Powell has covered the NBA since 1985. You can e-mail him at spowell@nba.com, find his archive here and follow him on X.

  • 3 things to watch in Timberwolves-Nuggets Game 3

    Anthony Edwards leads Minnesota to a hard-fought victory over Denver in Game 2, evening the first-round series at 1-1.

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    So now it’s 15-15. That’s the W-L breakdown over the past four seasons + postseasons in head-to-head meetings between Denver and Minnesota.

    But if we had our druthers, that would be the current record of the longest first-round mega-series in NBA history, a best-of-41 affair promising us lots more of what we’ve already seen from the Nuggets and Wolves since Saturday.

    The first two games have been full of highlights and talking points. Stars – Nikola Jokić, Jamal Murray, Anthony Edwards – have been stars.

    There have been plenty of scoring runs, an absurd number of 3-point and-1 plays, some compulsory postseason officiating criticism and as much entertainment as we’ve seen in any two or three of the other series combined.

    There’s no reason that it should change Thursday when they shift to Minneapolis for Game 3 (9:30 p.m. ET, Prime Video).

    Both teams are into their adjustments, confident they can zag to the other guys’ zigs.

    Here are three things to watch in Target Center’s latest taste of the thriving rivalry:


    1. Did McDaniels’ poke the bear or skin it?

    By tipoff, both teams will have had several opportunities to distance themselves from, shrug off, endorse or get worked into a lather over the post-Game 2 comments Monday night by Minnesota’s Jaden McDaniels. Now we get to see what their impact will be.

    In talking about the Wolves’ shift in offensive tactics that triggered their 119-114 victory, McDaniels shared that an obvious strategy was to drive the ball at a team full of “bad defenders.”

    “Go after Jokić, Jamal, all the bad defenders,” said McDaniels, who has credibility as one of the NBA’s top defensive players. “Tim Hardaway [Jr.]Cam JohnsonAaron Gordon, the whole team, just go at them. … Yeah, they’re all bad defenders.”

    There has been no matching salvo from the Denver side, with Gordon blowing off the potential war of words entirely. “Brother, I don’t care,” he told one reporter.

    But two things will have McDaniels’ remarks resonating in Game 3. First, there’s some truth in what he said. And second, these guys are all human and proud.

    Denver ranked 21st in defensive efficiency during the regular season, its 116 points per 100 possessions worse than every other playoff team. The Nuggets are vertically challenged, too, finishing 28th in blocked shots with no 7-footers and only backup center Jonas Valančiūas joins Jokić (both 6-foot-11) as a rotation Nugget taller than 6-8.

    “They don’t got people that can defend the rim,” McDaniels said. “We’re still more athletic than them and just got to be able to finish when we do.”

    Disparaging comments can work two ways. If the Wolves have their way, especially in the paint and in isolation, the Nuggets’ confidence could dwindle with their chances of recovery. If Denver stiffens and pays McDaniels’ back on the court, there could be some serious regrets in the Wolves’ locker room.


    2. Faster scoring start by the Joker

    It’s hard to take issue with Jokić’s familiar pattern of easing into games and putting a priority on getting his teammates going offensively. He’s a three-time Kia Most Valuable Player (and a finalist for the award again this year). His places in the Hall of Fame and the NBA’s Top 100 (assuming that tradition continues in 2047) are assured.

    But the disparity in the Denver marvel’s first- and second-half scoring performances through two games raises questions. Jokić’s combined first-half stats: 12 points on 5-for-10 shooting with no free throws in about 40 minutes. His second halves so far: 37 points on 14-for-29 shooting and 8-for-8 free throws in 41 minutes.

    A quicker scoring star by Jokić in Game 3 could have a couple of benefits. It could get Wolves center Rudy Gobert into foul trouble or at least out of the defensive groove he’s had so far in the series. And it relieves some pressure on Murray and their Nuggets teammates to carry the scoring load in a hostile road environment.

    Early and often is the way for Jokić to put up points in this one.


    3. Edwards’ and Gordon’s injuries worth monitoring

    It wouldn’t be late-season/early postseason NBA basketball without some injury concerns. This is the time of year players are most eager to play through assorted dings, and their bosses are most prone to sign off on it. Right now, the two most concerning health situations belong to Denver’s Aaron Gordon and Minnesota’s Anthony Edwards.

    Gordon has been playing through tightness in his left calf and was listed as probable heading toward Game 3. But he also took a shot in the back from Wolves power forward Julius Randle in Game 1, visibly grimacing as he got to his feet.

    Keep in mind, Gordon played in only 36 games during the season because of two separate strains of his right hamstring. His production through two games this week is down, from career numbers of 16.4 ppg on 49.7% shooting (38.9% on threes) to 12.5 ppg while shooting 42.1% (22.2%).

    Edwards missed 11 of 14 games at the end of the regular season with a sore right knee and is listed as questionable for the third straight game of this series. Don’t put much stock in that, then – he has averaged 39 minutes in two games, along with 26 points, 9.5 rebounds and 4.5 assists.

    Having anything less than full command of both legs, however, has shown up in Edwards’ accuracy. He has made only 38.6% of his 44 shots, including 5-for-20 from the arc.

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    Steve Aschburner has written about the NBA since 1980. You can e-mail him here, find his archive here and follow him on X.