Alex Sarr To Miss Two Weeks With Hamstring Strain

Alex Sarr has suffered a hamstring strain that will sideline him for roughly two weeks, the Wizards announced (via Twitter). That means Sarr won’t be available for Friday’s Rising Stars game at All-Star Weekend.

Sarr was held out of Wednesday’s loss at Cleveland with hamstring tightness. He also didn’t play last Saturday at Brooklyn.

The 20-year-old big man is having a productive second NBA season, averaging 17.2 points, 7.8 rebounds and 2.0 blocks in 41 games. He has established himself as a foundation piece in Washington after being selected with the second pick in the 2024 draft and finishing fourth in last year’s Rookie of the Year race.

Because Sarr’s injury occurred just before the All-Star break, he’ll have a full week to rest before the Wizards play again. Their next game is February 19 at home against Indiana.

Washington will be focused more on maximizing the value of its draft pick rather than trying to win over the next two months, so there’s no incentive to bring back Sarr before he’s fully recovered. The Wizards hold the league’s second-worst record at 14-39 heading into the break, and their first-round pick is top-eight protected.

Tristan Vukcevic also missed Wednesday’s game with an illness, so Washington used an extremely small starting lineup with no real center. Anthony Davis, who was acquired at last week’s deadline, also didn’t play amid conflicting reports on whether he will be held out for the rest of the season.

Sarr marks the second significant loss for the Rising Stars game in the past 24 hours. The Mavericks announced Wednesday that Cooper Flagg will have to miss the game due to a left midfoot sprain.

Nigel Hayes-Davis Signing With Panathinaikos

After spending half the season in the NBA, Nigel Hayes-Davis has returned to Europe, agreeing to sign with Panathinaikos, writes Johnny Askouinis of Eurohoops. Owner Dimitris Giannakopoulos confirmed the deal on social media and stated that Hayes-Davis’ new contract will run through 2028.

The Greek team won the bidding war for Hayes-Davis after reportedly having its offer turned down early in the process. Hapoel Tel Aviv and Fenerbahce in Istanbul were the other top contenders.

The deal has a total value of $10MM, club sources tell Askounis, which will make Hayes-Davis the third-highest-paid player in Europe. He trails only Hapoel’s Vasilije Micic and new teammate Kendrick Nunn, two other former NBA players.

Hayes-Davis, a 31-year-old small forward, was a star in Europe for seven years, earning Final Four MVP honors last spring while helping Fenerbahce capture the EuroLeague championship. He saw brief action with the Lakers, Raptors and Kings early in his career after going undrafted out of Wisconsin, but only appeared in nine total games before deciding to head overseas in 2018.

Hayes-Davis returned to the NBA in July, signing a one-year, minimum-salary contract with Phoenix, but he only averaged 7.2 minutes per night in 27 games. He became a free agent after being traded to Milwaukee at last week’s deadline and waived a day later.

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Northwest Notes: Jones, Johnson, Nuggets, Dosunmu

It’s widely expected that the Nuggets will sign two-way player Spencer Jones to a standard contract once he clears concussion protocol, but there are still hurdles to clear before the move is completed. According to head coach David Adelman, the team and Jones have not yet come to terms on a deal, though that shouldn’t give fans any cause for alarm.

The negotiation that’s going on there obviously is being slow-played because of (Jones’) concussion,” Adelman said (Twitter video link via DNVR Sports). “The negotiation, I’ve been updated by (vice president of basketball operations Ben Tenzer) and (executive vice president of player personnel Jon Wallace), but it’s slow-moving right now. But the concussion thing is real, we’ll probably have more information after the break. Right now, I think it’s just, let’s get him right and then let Ben and Jon and his agency and his people talk.”

Jones has already reached his 50-game limit with the Nuggets as a two-way player, so getting a deal done will be a top priority as the team moves forward into the final stretch of the season.

We have more from around the Northwest Division:

  • The Nuggets have been dealing with injuries all season, and this most recent stretch of games is no exception. That’s why Cameron Johnson‘s return to play is timely, Bennett Durando writes for the Denver Post. Johnson suited up last Saturday against the Bulls in his first action since December 23, scoring 14 points on 6-of-9 shooting. With Peyton Watson sidelined for at least a month, Aaron Gordon out for multiple weeks with a hamstring strain, and Jones in concussion protocol, Denver’s depth at forward has grown very thin heading into the All-Star break. Johnson feels good physically about his return. “It’s been a lot of time spent trying to get conditioning back up to where it is, and we track a lot of stuff over the course of (the recovery) to be able to come back and play in the mid to high 20s minutes, instead of having to be a lot lower,” the veteran wing said. “Obviously, with any situation, you come back and just try to feel your best. Sometimes, it’s not all the way 100. But I feel good enough to definitely go out there and compete.”
  • After converting Jones, the Nuggets will have one more 15-man roster spot to fill, which they will look to do on the buyout market. Durando examines 10 options that could fit Denver’s needs. Lonzo Ball, Tyus Jones, and Chris Paul are all guards Durando thinks could help stabilize the Nuggets’ backcourt depth if they become available, while Khris Middleton, Kyle Anderson, Chris Boucher, Haywood Highsmith, Kevin Love, and Georges Niang could all be useful wings and bigs, especially given the team’s injuries. Durando notes that Love has an existing relationship with Adelman, as they were together in Minnesota in the early 2010s. The team has previously been reported to have some level of interest in Ball.
  • The Timberwolves‘ move to trade for soon-to-be restricted free agent Ayo Dosunmu at the trade deadline filled an immediate need, but the team is hoping that the deal yields returns that last much longer than this season, writes the AP’s Tyler Mason. “We’re certainly hopeful it’s a long-term match,” said team president Tim Connelly.He wasn’t just identified for the next 30-plus games. He was identified because we think he’s a guy that could be a huge part of our core.”
  • Jon Krawczynski of The Athletic writes that the Timberwolves‘ pivot to Dosunmu came when it was clear that the Bucks were not reciprocating trade talks for Giannis Antetokounmpo in meaningful ways, and that pulling off the smaller deal helped ease the new ownership’s mind when it came to not wanting to break up the core of Jaden McDaniels, Anthony Edwards, and Naz Reid. Krawczynski also writes that Nickeil Alexander-Walker‘s success with the Wolves is a helpful blueprint for Dosunmu and the style he will need to play to help elevate the team in similar ways. Dosunmu, for his part, is ready to compete at a higher level. “I want to be labeled as a guy who plays in the playoffs, a guy who’s a winning player, a guy who does whatever it takes to help the team win,” he said. “So now that I have the opportunity, don’t take it for granted.”

Mavs Owners Have No Plans To Sell

While rumors circulated this week that there was an investor group interested in teaming up with Mavericks minority shareholder Mark Cuban to buy the franchise back from its new owners, it appears that any such efforts may be futile.

Marc Stein of The Stein Line reports (via Twitter) that the Dumont and Adelson families, led by Mavs governor Patrick Dumont, have no intentions of selling the team.

The Dumont and Adelson families remain fully committed to the Dallas Mavericks’ franchise and to the Dallas community,” Stein’s source close to the Dumont family says (Twitter link). “They remain focused on building a championship organization for the long term.”

Since Monday’s report, Cuban expressed skepticism to Brad Townsend of the Dallas Morning News that the current ownership group would be interested in selling the Mavs after having just bought the team in 2023, though he did confirm that he’s been approached by parties interested in making an attempt.

“I have been contacted by multiple groups and individuals who have interest in buying the Mavs,” Cuban told Townsend. “[But] I don’t know who the report was talking about. … I get asked fairly often if I would be part of a group if they could buy the team. I tell them all the same thing: I don’t see them selling

Townsend confirms Stein’s reporting and notes that the new ownership group has until December 2027 to buy out all but 7% of Cuban’s stake in the team. The Dumont/Adelson group does plan to at least buy some part of Cuban’s remaining 27% stake, Townsend writes, adding that he believes that Dumont is planning to be with the Mavericks for the long term.

Cooper Flagg Diagnosed With Foot Sprain

Cooper Flagg has been diagnosed with a left midfoot sprain, the Mavericks announced (Twitter link). Flagg injured the foot in Tuesday’s game against the Suns and underwent an MRI, which revealed the sprain.

The team notes that Flagg will miss Thursday’s matchup against the Lakers as well as Friday’s Castrol Rising Stars game in All-Star weekend.

Tim MacMahon of ESPN reports (via Twitter) that Flagg is not expected to miss additional time following the All-Star break.

The star rookie has played in 49 of the Mavericks’ 53 games this season, averaging 20.4 points along with 6.6 rebounds and 4.1 assists in 34.1 minutes per game.

Knicks Notes: 15th Man, Anunoby, Diawara, Alvarado, Clarkson

At the trade deadline, the Knicks were able to free up enough room below their second-apron hard cap to sign another player to the roster immediately rather than having to wait until late in the season to do so.

While they’re prohibited from adding a free agent whose pre-waiver salary was $14.1MM or higher, the Knicks can bring in anyone waived by March 1 and still have them be playoff-eligible. With that in mind, The Athletic’s James L. Edwards III breaks down five potential Knicks targets on the buyout market, singling out Chris Boucher, Marvin Bagley III, Haywood Highsmith, Drew Eubanks, and Mason Plumlee.

Edwards views third-string center as one of the remaining holes on the roster, hence the ample big man representation on his list. He also notes that the team could try to add another wing who can guard ball-handlers. Highsmith is one such name, as is Jeremy Sochan, whom he mentions as another player to keep an eye on — his article was published before news broke that the Spurs were waiving Sochan.

Given rumors that the Knicks had checked in on potential deals involving Sochan before the trade deadline, it stands to reason that the versatile defender, who is significantly younger than anyone on Edwards’ list, could be of interest to the team that is thin on bench forwards with size.

We have more on the Knicks:

  • OG Anunoby is missing his fourth straight game tonight with a toenail avulsion on his right foot, and head coach Mike Brown says there’s no clear timeline for his return, per Edwards (via Twitter). Anunoby is considered day-to-day as a result of the injury. The Knicks are 1-2 during his absence heading into Wednesday’s game against the Sixers, having been blown out by the Pistons on Friday and then losing to the Pacers in overtime on Tuesday.
  • One player benefiting from the absence of Anunoby is the Knicks’ lone rookie, Mohamed Diawara. While the 51st pick in the 2025 draft has been impressing offensively, he showed out defensively in Boston on Sunday and turned some heads while doing so, writes Steve Popper of Newsday. In that game, he guarded both Payton Pritchard and Jaylen Brown equally well and was rewarded by the team by being named the defensive player of the game, a tradition the Knicks have started under Brown. “It was tough because they’re both great players, but I was ready to take the challenge to guard them,” Diawara said. “And I was happy the coaches put me on them because that means they think I’m a great defender, and I appreciate it.” Brown noted that it’s the little things Diawara has shown the willingness to do, such as diving on the floor, making the right pass, and defending hard, that have impressed him the most. 
  • Jose Alvarado called his first game for the Knicks in Madison Square Garden “one for the books,” Dan Martin writes for the New York Post. “Playing for the Knicks is a huge thing, but I’m literally a kid from the same streets the fans are, and to be part of everything here, it’s a blessing,” the newly acquired point guard said. “It’s something I had to get used to and to get it out of the way, let’s get the ball rolling.” It wasn’t Alvarado’s best performance, as he finished with four points and five assists in 18 minutes as the Knicks lost to Indiana, but he believes it helped him calm the nerves related to his much-anticipated homecoming. “I was nervous today, for sure,” he said. “There was a lot going on. I was glad I got it out the way. I can’t wait to come back and get better and win some games here.
  • Jordan Clarkson, who spoke recently about adjusting to his diminished role with the Knicks, took to social media to vent some of those frustrations, Stefan Bondy writes for the Post. “Stop saying my minutes, I never had minutes,” Clarkson wrote in response to someone posting a question about how Collin Sexton would look with Clarkson’s playing time. Clarkson is playing the fewest minutes of his career and has struggled to find consistency, especially with his outside shot.

Joel Embiid To Be Reevaluated After All-Star Break

Joel Embiid will miss Wednesday’s game against the Knicks, the second contest in a row that the Sixers‘ big man is sitting due to right knee soreness, the team announced today (Twitter video link via Kyle Neubeck of PHLY Sports).

According to the Sixers, Embiid will be reevaluated following All-Star weekend, which will give him a week to recuperate and hopefully get back to full strength (Twitter link via Marc Stein of the Stein Line).

Neubeck notes that the team doesn’t sound overly concerned about the knee at this point, a sentiment The Athletic’s Tony Jones echoes, calling the move a precautionary one (Twitter link).

It’s bothering him enough that he’s not playing,” said coach Nick Nurse. “I think it is improving a little bit, it’s just not quite there to get out there tonight.”

After it was unclear how much Embiid would be able to play coming into the season, the former MVP has managed to put together a strong season for the 30-23 Sixers. He has averaged 26.6 points, 7.6 rebounds, and 1.1 blocks in 31 games this season while playing 31.4 minutes per night, all of which are improvements from his output over 19 games last year.

In Monday’s loss to the Trail Blazers, Andre Drummond assumed command of the starting spot in Embiid’s place, recording 11 points, seven rebounds, five assists, and two blocks, while Adem Bona took the backup center minutes. Jones notes that Bona will start tonight against the Knicks (Twitter link).

Jakob Poeltl To Return Wednesday

Raptors center Jakob Poeltl will return to the court tonight in his first action since December 21 as the team faces off against the Pistons, Sportsnet’s Blake Murphy notes (via Twitter).

Head coach Darko Rajakovic indicated that Poeltl will be on some form of minutes restriction, though it’s not clear what his limit will be. Toronto has prioritized caution with the back issues that have limited the Austrian big man to just 21 games this season; according to Murphy, Poeltl’s main goal is simply to be loose out there and try to play without thinking about the injury.

The lingering back strain has made it difficult for Poeltl to get a rhythm during the time he’s been on the court. He is playing his fewest minutes since the 2019/20 season and scoring at his lowest rate since 2021/22, though he’s managed to be efficient in his time, posting a career-high 69.1% true shooting percentage.

Rookie big man Collin Murray-Boyles and Sandro Mamukelashvili have split much of the starting center responsibilities in Poeltl’s absence, with Mamukelashvili starting 11 games and Murray-Boyles starting 19, including the last 15 games that he’s suited up for.

Murray-Boyles will miss tonight’s game with a thumb injury, and it’s unconfirmed whether Poeltl will step straight back into the starting lineup.

While returning against the East-leading Pistons is no easy feat, Poeltl will not have to go against Detroit’s physical center tandem of Jalen Duren and Isaiah Stewart, as both will be serving the first games of their respective suspensions for their involvement in Monday’s brawl against the Hornets.

Atlantic Notes: Embiid, Grimes, Ingram, Sharpe

Sixers center Joel Embiid will miss the team’s final game before the All-Star break, as first reported by ESPN’s Tim Bontemps (Twitter link). Embiid has been ruled out for Wednesday’s matchup with New York due to right knee injury management.

Embiid said he felt some soreness in that knee after Philadelphia’s win in Phoenix on Saturday, then sat out Monday’s loss in Portland. Although that soreness has decreased in recent days, per Bontemps, the 76ers will play it safe with the former MVP —  he’ll continue to receive treatment in the coming days and will be reevaluated after the All-Star break (Twitter link).

We have more from across the Atlantic:

  • While Quentin Grimes probably would’ve preferred to secure a lucrative long-term deal in restricted free agency last summer, accepting his one-year qualifying offer gave the Sixers guard a de facto no-trade clause this season, which he appreciated at the trade deadline. “That made it a little easier to go to bed at night and knowing that I’m not going to wake up and find out that I’m somewhere that I don’t want to be,” Grimes told Mark Medina of EssentiallySports. “That was a good thing about it, for sure. It eased my mind a little bit. I’m knowing that my agent can call me and relay a proposal from another team that I have to give an OK toward, so it was a little bit of a win-win for me.”
  • Brandon Ingram‘s All-Star berth is a major win for the Raptors, who faced criticism last season for trading for and extending a player who had battled injuries during his last few years in New Orleans, writes Michael Grange of Sportsnet.ca. Ingram has led Toronto in scoring while appearing in 52 of 54 games so far. “I think that from the moment he came to our team, the amount of work and preparation (he put in), he had a really hard summer with lot of recovery, lot of like, boring exercises and stuff to get him healthy, to get him on the floor,” head coach Darko Rajakovic said. “And that he has (missed just two games) is just testament to all the amount of work that he put in.”
  • Day’Ron Sharpe has the highest net rating among Nets regulars and ranks among the NBA’s top 10 in offensive rebounds and steals per 100 possessions, writes Brian Lewis of The New York Post (subscription required). While Brooklyn holds a $6.5MM option on Sharpe for 2026/27, Lewis suggests it might make sense for the team to try to work out a longer-term deal with the 24-year-old center. That would require the Nets to turn down the option and make Sharpe an unrestricted free agent, but the two sides would have a window to negotiate a new contract before the team officially makes a decision on the option.