Community Shootaround: Which Coaching Job Is Most Appealing?

As our head coaching search tracker shows, a total of six teams have initiated head coaching searches so far this offseason. Milwaukee hired Taylor Jenkins, New Orleans hired Jamahl Mosley, and the searches in Chicago, Dallas, Orlando, and Portland are ongoing.

Jenkins had widely been considered one of the top candidates among coaching free agents and the Bucks moved quickly to get him locked up to a lucrative, long-term deal, but the appeal of that job is somewhat debatable, given the uncertainty surrounding Giannis Antetokounmpo‘s future in Milwaukee.

While an Antetokounmpo trade should return a handful of valuable assets, including draft picks and/or young players, the Bucks are missing several of their own future picks, don’t have a ton of young talent around Antetokounmpo, and will be hamstrung to some extent by the sizable cap hits created as a result of waiving and stretching Damian Lillard‘s contract a year ago.

The Pelicans, meanwhile, are coming off 21- and 26-win seasons, but they have a promising young core featuring Derik Queen, Jeremiah Fears, Trey Murphy III, Herbert Jones, and Yves Missi. The team doesn’t have a first-round pick this year and whether or not Zion Williamson is still a long-term cornerstone in New Orleans remains to be seen. But Williamson doesn’t appear to be going anywhere for the time being, so Mosley will be tasked with figuring out how to best utilize him and Queen together.

The Bulls appear headed for a rebuild after trading away several veterans at the deadline, with a few others on track for free agency this offseason. The new head coach in Chicago likely won’t be under any pressure to contend right away, but he’ll be responsible for developing youngsters like Matas Buzelis, Noa Essengue, and this year’s No. 4 overall pick.

The Mavericks, meanwhile, will give their new head coach the opportunity to shape Rookie of the Year Cooper Flagg into a superstar, though the roster around him is still somewhat up in the air. It’s unclear whether the new-look front office led by Masai Ujiri and Mike Schmitz will want to keep this group mostly intact or if they envision major changes. Kyrie Irving‘s future is the biggest question mark as he returns from a torn ACL.

More than any other team in this group, the Magic will have lofty short-term expectations for their head coach after Mosley failed to get the team beyond the first round during his five-year tenure. Orlando projects to have one of the NBA’s most expensive rosters next season and will be in win-now mode with a talented group led by Franz Wagner, Paolo Banchero, Desmond Bane, and Jalen Suggs.

New Trail Blazers owner Tom Dundon has made waves this spring as a result of the cost-cutting measures he has instituted within the organization, and there have been rumors that he won’t be willing to pay a substantial salary for a head coach. While there has been some push-back on those reports, Portland’s list of candidates includes a few little-known assistants we haven’t seen linked to any other jobs. If one of those candidates is hired, it’s safe to assume he wouldn’t be in position to command a lucrative deal.

Putting aside the issue of pay, the Blazers’ job should hold some appeal. The team appears to be on the rise, with Deni Avdija, Shaedon Sharpe, Donovan Clingan, and Toumani Camara among the young players who helped lead Portland to a playoff berth this spring, and Damian Lillard set to return from his torn Achilles in the fall.

We want to know what you think. Which of these six head coaching jobs – including the two that have already been filled – look like the most and least appealing?

Head to the comment section below to weigh in with your thoughts!

Spurs Notes: Barnes, Wembanyama, Fox, Backcourt

While most of the Spurs‘ key players have never played this deep into the postseason, veteran forward Harrison Barnes has appeared in 85 playoff games and found himself in a situation during Golden State’s 2015 championship run that’s similar to the one San Antonio is currently facing.

The Warriors trailed LeBron James and the Cavaliers 2-1 in the 2015 NBA Finals and came back to win the series, with their young star Stephen Curry leading the way. Can Victor Wembanyama and the Spurs, down 2-1 against the defending champion Thunder, pull off a similar feat in this year’s Western Conference finals?

“It’s a matter of saying, ‘Look, however many games the series goes, are we going to play to our standard when we look back at those games?'” Barnes told Jared Weiss of The Athletic. “The last few games, can we have said that? No. And so going into this next game, what is it going to take for us to do that?”

Here’s more on the Spurs ahead of a critical Game 4:

  • Wembanyama averaged just over 29 minutes per game during the regular season and just shy of 33 minutes per game in the first two rounds of the playoffs (not counting the two games he left early due to an injury or suspension). Through the first three games of the third round vs. Oklahoma City, he has played 41.7 MPG and the Spurs have outscored the Thunder by 21 points during his time on the floor. Although San Antonio has been outscored by 38 points when Wemby hasn’t been on the court, further increasing the big man’s playing time isn’t a viable strategy, according to head coach Mitch Johnson. “The idea is there,” Johnson said with a smile, per Raul Dominguez of The Associated Press. “But, yeah, I think as we’ve seen it, him fresh or somewhat fresh is still the best. … We don’t want to sacrifice our style of play and the identity that we’ve been building since October.”
  • In an interesting story for ESPN, Baxter Holmes explores how difficult it is to quantify the fear that Wembanyama’s interior presence instills in opponents and how many plays he prevents from ever happening. “Everyone likes pointing out the videos where guys drive into the paint and then just dribble it out,” an Eastern Conference analytics staffer said. “I think it’s even more than that. I think it’s whether they drive in the first place. They’ve got a menu in their head of, ‘This is what I can do in this possession,’ and driving to the rim is just not on the menu.”
  • While De’Aaron Fox will be active for Game 4 on Sunday, it’s obvious he’ll be playing through pain, tweets Tom Orsborn of The San Antonio Express-News. “I’m the same as I was before the series started, but I’m able to play,” said the Spurs guard, who missed the first two games of the Western finals due to a high ankle sprain. “… I don’t feel great, but I’m able to play.”
  • While there are questions outside the organization about Fox’s long-term fit in San Antonio due to his maximum-salary contract and the presence of rising stars Stephon Castle and Dylan Harper, neither the Spurs nor Fox’s camp appear concerned about the issue, writes Sam Amick of The Athletic. As Amick points out, this is the same organization that managed Manu Ginobili coming off the bench for a significant portion of his Hall-of-Fame career.

Hoops Rumors Glossary: Cap Holds

The Pistons have just shy of $110MM in guaranteed money committed to player salaries for 2026/27. However, even though next season’s salary cap is expected to come in at $165MM, Detroit won’t begin the 2026 offseason with $55MM in cap room to spend.

In fact, the Pistons technically won’t open the new league year with any cap space at all. Each of Detroit’s own free agents will be assigned a free agent amount – or “cap hold” – until the player signs a new contract or the Pistons renounce his rights.

The general purpose of a cap hold is to prevent teams from using room under the cap to sign free agents before using Bird rights to re-sign their own free agents. If a team wants to take advantage of its cap space, it can renounce the rights to its own free agents, eliminating those cap holds. However, doing so means the team will no longer hold any form of Bird rights for those players — if the team wants to re-sign those free agents, it would have to use its cap room or another kind of cap exception.

The following criteria are used for determining the amount of a free agent’s cap hold:

  • First-round pick coming off rookie contract: 300% of the player’s previous salary if prior salary was below league average; 250% of previous salary if prior salary was above league average.
  • Bird player: 190% of previous salary (if below league average) or 150% (if above average).
  • Early Bird player: 130% of previous salary.
  • Non-Bird player: 120% of previous salary.
  • Minimum-salary player: Two-year veteran’s minimum salary, unless the free agent only has one year of experience, in which case it’s the one-year veteran’s minimum.
  • Two-way player: One-year veteran’s minimum salary.

A cap hold for a restricted free agent can vary based on his contract status. A restricted free agent’s cap hold is either his free agent amount as determined by the criteria mentioned above or the amount of his qualifying offer, whichever is greater.

No cap hold can exceed the maximum salary for which a player can sign. For example, the cap hold for a Bird player earning more than the NBA average is 150% of his previous salary, as noted above. But for a Bird player like Lakers forward LeBron James, whose cap charge this season was $52,627,153, 150% of his previous salary would be nearly $79MM, far beyond his projected maximum salary.

Instead, James’ cap hold would be equivalent to the maximum salary for a player with at least 10 years of NBA experience. Based on a projected cap of $165MM, that figure works out to $57,750,000. If the Lakers want to re-sign LeBron using his Bird rights, that cap hold would remain on their books until his new deal is official and his new first-year salary replaces the hold.

One unusual case involves players on rookie contracts whose third- or fourth-year options are declined. The amount of their declined option becomes their cap hold, and if the player’s team wants to re-sign him, his starting salary can’t exceed that amount.

For instance, the Magic declined Jett Howard‘s 2026/27 fourth-year option last fall. Because Howard’s rookie scale option was turned down, Orlando won’t be able to offer him a starting salary this offseason worth more than $7,337,938, the amount of that option. That figure is also his cap hold.

That rule is in place so a team can’t circumvent the rookie scale and decline its option in an effort to give the player a higher salary. It applies even if the player is traded after his option is declined, but only to the club the player is part of at season’s end.

Kobe Brown is a prime example. The Clippers declined his $4,792,058 team option for 2026/27 last fall, then traded him to the Pacers during the season. Indiana is now prohibited from offering Brown more than $4,792,058 as free agent and will carry that cap hold for him until he’s renounced or signs elsewhere. But any other team, including the Clippers, could offer him a salary exceeding that figure.

If a team holds the rights to fewer than 12 players, cap holds worth the rookie minimum salary are assigned to fill out the roster. So, even if a front office chooses to renounce its rights to all of its free agents and doesn’t have any players under contract, the team wouldn’t be able to fully clear its cap.

An incomplete roster charge in 2026/27 projects to be worth $1,358,084, meaning a team without any guaranteed salary or any other cap holds on its books would have closer to $149MM in cap room than $165MM due to its 12 rookie minimum holds.

A player who has been selected in the draft but has not yet officially signed his rookie contract only has a cap hold if he was a first-round selection. A cap hold for a first-round pick is equivalent to 120% of his rookie scale amount, based on his draft position. An unsigned second-round pick doesn’t have a cap hold.

Cap holds aren’t removed from a team’s books until the player signs a new contract or has his rights renounced by the club. For example, the Warriors are still carrying cap holds on their books for retired players like Matt Barnes and David West, who never signed new contracts since playing for Golden State nearly a decade ago.

Keeping those cap holds gives teams some degree of cushion to help them remain above the cap and take advantage of their full arsenal of mid-level, bi-annual, and trade exceptions, among other advantages afforded capped-out teams. If and when the Warriors want to maximize their cap room, they’ll renounce Barnes and West. But they’ve remained over the cap – and haven’t needed to remove those holds – since those players became free agents in 2017 and 2018, respectively.


Note: This is a Hoops Rumors Glossary entry. Our glossary posts will explain specific rules relating to trades, free agency, or other aspects of the NBA’s Collective Bargaining Agreement. Larry Coon’s Salary Cap FAQ was used in the creation of this post.

Earlier versions of this post were published in previous years by Luke Adams and Chuck Myron.

Knicks Notes: Bridges, Shamet, Anunoby, Towns

The Knicks‘ decision to give up five first-round picks in a trade for Mikal Bridges has been relitigated frequently over the past couple years, but it’s time to “let that argument die,” according to James L. Edwards III of The Athletic, who contends that the veteran forward is showing in this postseason why the team was right to pay the price it took to acquire him.

After scoring 22 points on 11-of-15 shooting on Saturday, Bridges has now compiled 59 points with a ridiculous .711/.500/1.000 shooting line through three games vs. Cleveland while serving as the primary defender on James Harden. The 29-year-old hasn’t put up the scoring numbers in New York that he did in Brooklyn, but that’s because the Knicks haven’t asked him to be that kind of go-to-offensive option, Edwards says, pointing out that Bridges has excelled in the role the team wants him to play.

“The expectations don’t matter,” Knicks forward Josh Hart said in reference to Bridges. “That’s for y’all to talk about. There’s nothing he can do about it. He didn’t call (Knicks president) Leon (Rose) and say, ‘Yo, this is the trade package!’ He got put into this situation, and he hit the ground running. We wouldn’t be in this situation without him. Look, how many games has he won for us because he got a stop down the stretch? He’s won games in every single way for us. That’s why we wanted him. That’s why he’s here.”

We have more on the Knicks:

  • After being out of the rotation early in the postseason, veteran wing Landry Shamet continues to solidify his spot among Mike Brown‘s regulars. On Saturday, Shamet logged a playoff-high 28 minutes and scored 14 points, knocking down a trio of fourth quarter three-pointers that helped seal the victory, writes Jared Schwartz of The New York Post. “Landry was huge,” Brown said after the victory. “And then on the other end of the floor, he’s gotta match up with a guy like Donovan Mitchell, who is a tough cover for anybody. You’re not gonna stop him, but you gotta work your tail off. Landry’s trying to work.”
  • OG Anunoby was up and down in his first two games back from the hamstring injury that sidelined him in the second round, but he looked back to his usual self in Game 3, according to Zach Braziller of The New York Post. Anunoby scored 21 points on 6-of-10 shooting to go along with seven rebounds and four assists. “Each day I started feeling better and better. We have a great medical staff,” Anunoby said. “Getting stronger each day. Great team, great coaches. It’s been very collaborative.”
  • While the Cavaliers defended against it in the first two games of the series, the Knicks turned back to Karl-Anthony Towns as their offensive facilitator in Game 3 and he responded by handing out more assists (seven) than he totaled in Games 1 and 2 (six), Braziller notes in another Post story. “KAT, he was our hub offensively: seven assists, zero turnovers,” Brown said. “He was really good for us offensively and defensively with three steals.”

Cavs Have Shown No Interest In Trading Mobley For Giannis

After losing Game 3 of the Eastern Conference finals to New York on Saturday, the Cavaliers are one game away from being eliminated from the playoffs and having to answer some difficult questions about their roster, which was the NBA’s most expensive in 2025/26.

Those questions will involve Donovan Mitchell, who will be extension-eligible this offseason as he enters the final guaranteed season of his current contract, and James Harden, who holds a player option for 2026/27 but is reportedly considered likely to negotiate a multiyear deal with Cleveland.

They’ll also likely involve the frontcourt duo of Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen, who will get more expensive than ever next season as Allen’s new three-year, $90MM+ extension takes effect. Mobley and Allen will earn a combined $78.1MM in ’26/27 and that figure will continue to increase over the following two years.

Could a Giannis Antetokounmpo pursuit be part of the Cavaliers’ offseason plans? Jake Fischer reported earlier this month that people around the league viewed Cleveland as a possible landing spot for the Bucks star if the Cavs experienced a disappointing playoff run.

According to Fischer, when the Cavs and Bucks talked about Antetokounmpo prior to February’s trade deadline, Milwaukee asked for Mobley and all of Cleveland’s available draft capital. ESPN’s Ramona Shelburne, meanwhile, previously reported that when the Bucks discussed Giannis at the deadline, they were more interested in packages that would net them a young cornerstone like Mobley than ones heavy on draft picks.

However, two league sources tell Joe Vardon of The Athletic that the Cavaliers have conveyed no interest to this point in a trade involving Mobley and Antetokounmpo.

While Mobley still hasn’t shown he’s capable of consistently providing the sort of elite offensive production that made Antetokounmpo a two-time MVP, the Cavaliers big man is a former Defensive Player of the Year who is nearly seven years younger than Giannis and has a slightly more team-friendly cap hit. He’s also under contract through 2030, whereas Antetokounmpo could opt for free agency as soon as 2027.

Still, given the Cavaliers’ position relative to the tax and aprons, it will be extremely difficult for the club to make meaningful upgrades this summer without a move that involves at least one of their four highest-paid players (Mobley, Mitchell, Harden, and Allen). And unless they’re able to achieve a feat that no team in NBA history has accomplished by coming back from a 3-0 deficit, they’ll fall short of the NBA Finals, which would signal that upgrades are necessary to seriously contend for a championship.

That doesn’t necessarily mean the Cavs will rethink their stance on trading Mobley for Antetokounmpo in the coming weeks, but it could make them even more open to major roster changes than they were at the deadline, when they swapped Darius Garland for Harden.

Southeast Notes: JVG, Magic, Peterson, Wizards, Hawks

After Jake Fischer and Marc Stein previously reported that Jeff Van Gundy is among the head coaching candidates on the Magic‘s radar, Stein confirms that the Clippers assistant has interviewed for the Orlando job (Substack link).

There hasn’t been a ton of chatter about the Magic’s head coaching vacancy so far, which could mean the team is still early in its search process or that it’s just keeping things close to the vest. Former Bulls coach Billy Donovan has been identified as a potential frontrunner and Spurs associate head coach Sean Sweeney is considered likely to interview, but those two and Van Gundy are the only candidates that have been legitimately connected to the position.

There had been speculation that former Lakers coach Darvin Ham could emerge as an option for the Magic, but a Saturday report indicated that he’ll be remaining with the Bucks as an assistant under new head coach Taylor Jenkins.

Here’s more from around the Southeast:

  • While hiring a new head coach is the first item on the Magic‘s offseason to-do list, it will be a busy summer in Orlando, where the club will have to determine how to manage an increasingly expensive roster, writes Yossi Gozlan of The Third Apron (Substack link). Gozlan explores the Magic’s potential paths to cap relief using Jonathan Isaac and his partially guaranteed contract and considers other ways the team might shed salary while also examining how a rookie scale extension for Anthony Black would impact the club’s financial situation going forward.
  • AJ Dybantsa is widely viewed as the favorite to be the No. 1 pick in next month’s draft, but Kansas guard Darryn Peterson is also a legitimate contender. With that in mind, Chase Hughes of the Monumental Sports Network evaluates Peterson’s potential fit with the Wizards, exploring whether he’s more of a point guard or shooting guard and considering whether it even matters.
  • As discouraging as it was at the time, the beat-down that the Hawks received at the hands of New York during the last three games of the Eastern Conference quarterfinals, when they were outscored by 32 points per contest, doesn’t look as bad as it once did, writes Lauren L. Williams of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (subscription required). The Knicks have gone 7-0 since that series and their only two losses of the playoffs came against Atlanta. The Hawks still have plenty of work to do on their roster, Williams acknowledges, but they might not be quite as far away from contention as that first-round loss made it seem.

Heat Notes: Adebayo, Ware, Ellington

Heat big man Bam Adebayo has been named the NBA’s Social Justice Champion for the 2025/26 season and will receive the Kareem Abdul-Jabbar trophy, the league announced on Friday evening.

Adebayo, who was also named to the All-Defensive second team on Friday, was one of five finalists for the Social Justice Champion award, which recognizes a player who promotes social justice and advances Abdul-Jabbar’s mission to “engage, empower and drive equality for communities that have been historically disadvantaged and under-resourced.” It includes a $100K charitable donation, which will go to the Bam, Books & Brotherhood Foundation.

“I accept this award not just for myself, but for every voice that has gone unheard and every person working behind the scenes to create a more just and compassionate world,” Adebayo said in a statement put out by the Heat.

We have more on the Heat:

  • Adebayo was named to the All-Defensive second team for four straight years from 2020-23 and made the first team in 2024 before being shut out in 2025. He was happy to be recognized again this spring, as Ira Winderman of The South Florida Sun Sentinel relays (subscription required). “It’s great to be back on the list, obviously,” Adebayo said. “You know, I feel like I do first-team things every year, but we can take what we can get. Good to be back. I feel like I got snubbed a couple times. But, like I said, it’s good to be recognized for all the hard work that I put in.” Head coach Erik Spoelstra referred to Adebayo as a “unicorn” who can defend “any scheme in this league” and switch onto any position from one through five.
  • Asked about Kel’el Ware‘s long-term upside, one scout who spoke to Winderman (subscription required) offered veterans like Brook Lopez, Myles Turner, and Kristaps Porzingis as comparables, referring to the young center as a possible future All-Star. “What Ware has on all of (those veterans) is his athleticism,” the scout said. “But skill-wise, of what those players can contribute nightly, there are similarities. Ware also is a lob threat, which is similar to Porzingis.” While the Heat won’t be actively looking to move Ware this offseason, the 22-year-old isn’t expected to be off-limits in an offer for Giannis Antetokounmpo, Winderman adds.
  • Former NBA sharpshooter Wayne Ellington, currently an assistant Spoelstra’s staff, will coach the Heat’s Summer League team this July, tweets Winderman. Ellington has been a player development coach in Miami since 2023.
  • In case you missed it, the Heat granted the Bulls permission to interview veteran assistant Chris Quinn for their head coaching vacancy.

Pacific Notes: Pelinka, Kings Workouts, Suns Workouts, Butler

The playoff sweep by Oklahoma City convinced the Lakers that they need to add more talent and depth to their roster, Benjamin Royer of The Orange County Register writes in a subscriber-only piece. General manager Rob Pelinka was especially struck by the development of Ajay Mitchell, a second-round pick in 2024 who started his career on a two-way contract and averaged 22.5 PPG in the series against L.A.

“There’s ways to add to your roster if you commit to doing the hard work and commit to the process of adding the right pieces,” Pelinka said at his end-of-season press conference last week. “We’ll be doing that through the draft and free agency and through trades. We’ve got to find a way to have a roster that will compete with any team in the NBA.”

Pelinka added that the Lakers, who hold the 25th pick this year, plan to bring in more than 20 players for pre-draft workouts with an emphasis on finding more depth, athleticism and youth. He stated that competitiveness and basketball IQ will also be prioritized, noting that player development has become more important than ever with the current salary structure.

There’s more from the Pacific Division:

Southwest Notes: Coward, Mosley, M. Brown, Mavericks

Cedric Coward was among the biggest surprises in a talented rookie class, earning First-Team All-Rookie honors after being selected with the 11th pick in last year’s draft. In an interview with Mark Medina of R.org, the Grizzlies forward spoke about the constant need to improve, which is why he’ll be returning to the Las Vegas Summer League in July.

“One, I want to keep growing my game,” Coward said. “Two, I want to let the team know that no matter what I got to do, whether it’s play in Summer League or in training camp, I’m going to be there to do it. It’s something that they wanted me to do. It’s something that I didn’t have any problem doing. For me, it allows me to maximize my game, too, and work on things that I didn’t do as much this past season. I’ve been working on that this summer. Also, I’m trying to win. It’s the competitiveness.”

Coward addresses several topics in the interview, including his encounters with veterans on other teams, the recent death of teammate Brandon Clarke and the public perception of Ja Morant. Coward calls Morant “one of the best people that I know personally” and says he provided a lot of help with making the adjustment to the NBA.

“He showed me different things in the game that I can take advantage of that can help him,” Coward said. “He provides the most gravity on the court when he’s playing. So for me, it’s about being in the right spots offensively and defensively. I remember one day, I grabbed the ball and they took it out and passed to me. I looked for him. He came up to me and said, ‘Why don’t you dribble the ball up?’ I was like, ‘Yeah, I got you.’ It’s certain things like that where he’s making sure he can make the game easier on both of us. At the end of the day, if we’re successful, then we can help the team be successful. Then if the team is successful, we win games.”

There’s more from the Southwest Division:

  • In becoming the Pelicansnew head coach, Jamahl Mosley accepted the same challenge he took on five years ago in Orlando, Rod Walker of NOLA writes in a subscriber-only piece. The Magic were coming off a 21-win season when they hired Mosley, and he built them into a consistent playoff team by placing a strong emphasis on defense. New Orleans has won 21 and 26 games the past two years and is hoping for the same type of transformation.
  • Louisville guard Mikel Brown Jr. has a combination of size and talent that appeals to new team president Masai Ujiri, making him a possibility when the Mavericks pick at No. 9, suggests James Piercey of Dallas Hoops Journal (subscription required). Piercey notes that Ujiri has emphasized length and defense with his previous teams, sparking speculation about Brown, who is 6’5″ with a 6’7.5″ wingspan.
  • Christian Clark of The Athletic looks at five potential candidates in the Mavericks‘ coaching search, starting with Spurs associate head coach Sean Sweeney. Considered one of the NBA’s top assistants, Sweeney spent four years on Jason Kidd‘s staff in Dallas before leaving for San Antonio last summer. Clark also examines the cases for Timberwolves assistant Micah Nori, Duke head coach John Scheyer, Trail Blazers interim head coach Tiago Splitter and South Carolina women’s coach Dawn Staley.

Knicks Notes: Robinson, Towns, Bridges, Pre-Draft Workout

Knicks center Mitchell Robinson announced Saturday that he’ll be staying away from social media due to concerns about his mental health, writes Jared Schwartz of The New York Post. Robinson informed his followers on Snapchat a few hours before the start of Game 3.

“I’m deleting all apps for a little while until I can get back to myself,” he wrote. “I had a very upsetting experience a few days ago. I’m not gonna go into detail about it, just gonna focus on the playoffs and myself. I know some of you have called and texted and it popped up green. That’s because I got a new [phone] number. My mental health is not the best right now but I am fighting to get back on track while playing on the biggest stage in the world in the Eastern Conference finals.” 

Schwartz states that Robinson went public regarding his mental health issues after being ejected from Game 6 of the first-round series against Atlanta for fighting with Dyson Daniels. Robinson posted on Facebook that he was “just lost in the world at the moment,” and he sent out another Facebook message on Thursday saying he would be deleting all his social media accounts.

“Last post before I delete this app,” Robinson wrote. “I finally have changed my number for many reason [sic]…as I fight through and keep fighting in this playoffs run my focus have to go to another level. This is the start of a new chapter in my life. Love and will miss y’all…. Mitch out.” 

There’s more on the Knicks:

  • LeBron James has been impressed by New York’s recent run of playoff dominance, Schwartz adds in another story. Speaking on his Mind the Game podcast (Twitter link), the Lakers star raved about the Knicks’ newfound versatility on offense. “The defense can’t just key on a couple of actions anymore. I thought over the last couple of years with New York, you kind of got a good rhythm of how they were gonna play. The ball was gonna end up in a certain way every single time,” James said, referring to heavy reliance on Jalen Brunson isolations and pick-and rolls. James explained that running the offense through Karl-Anthony Towns has opened up opportunities for everyone on the court.
  • Cleveland has adjusted to limit the effectiveness of Towns’ passing, but the Knicks have found other ways to win and that versatility could lead to a championship, Kristian Winfield of The New York Daily News suggests in a subscriber-only story. Brunson carried the scoring load with 38 points in Game 1, and Josh Hart launched a three-point barrage in Game 2. “That’s the blessing of our group,” Towns said after Saturday’s shootaround. “We have multiple ways and systems that we can utilize to help us get the win. I’ve been happy because we’ve continued to win.”
  • Prior to Game 3, coach Mike Brown talked to reporters about Mikal Bridges‘ value, per Ian Begley of SNY.tv (Twitter link). “It starts with (owner) Mr. (James) Dolan because he’s willing to spend money,” Brown said. “… From there you talk about (team president) Leon Rose and his group, they identified Mikal as a two-way player and they went and got him.” 
  • Miami’s Tre Donaldson is the latest draft prospect to work out for the Knicks, Begley adds (Twitter link). The senior guard averaged 16.4 points and 5.7 assists per game for the Hurricanes this season.