Central Notes: Ivey, Thompson, Middleton, Haliburton
Jaden Ivey is eligible for a rookie scale extension after this season and the Pistons guard has bounced back from a subpar sophomore campaign. With Cade Cunningham sidelined by a hip injury, Ivey scored the game-winner against Toronto on Monday. He finished with 25 points and eight assists and is now averaging 18.4 points, 4.7 rebounds and 4.4 assists per game on the season.
“(Ivey) played a complete basketball game (Monday),” Pistons coach J.B. Bickerstaff said, per Hunter Patterson of The Athletic. “He’s good enough to do it again and again. He’s just got to trust it like he does and keep putting the confidence in the work that he’s put in.
“… For me, it wasn’t just that last shot. He was phenomenal to start the game and for all of his minutes, setting the tone and attacking when he needed to be aggressive. But I thought he did an unbelievable job of playing the complete floor (Monday), making sure his teammates were involved, getting us organized. Just from a point guard perspective, that was a huge step for JI.”
We have more from the Central Division:
- Pistons second-year forward Ausar Thompson made his season debut on Monday. He was medically cleared to play this month after his rookie campaign was cut short by blood clotting issues. He had five points, four assists and three rebounds. “I was able to play free,” Thompson said. “I’ve done a lot of conditioning over the past eight months. It was just, first game in eight months. 260-something days. Just don’t know what to expect. And first time playing with a new coach. My guys had my back, they showed me what to do out there. Just played basketball.”
- Khris Middleton, who has yet to make his season debut for the Bucks, participated in full 5-on-5 scrimmages on Monday, ESPN’s Shams Charania reports (video link). Middleton, who is recovering from an ankle injury, been cleared medically to play and the club is hopeful he’ll return to action shortly after Thanksgiving.
- Pacers guard Tyrese Haliburton made nine 3-pointers on Monday and has now knocked down 18-of-39 attempts in his last three games, breaking out of a perimeter slump. Even with the recent surge, he’s only made 32.9% of his long-range attempts this season. “I think my individual performance and how I view that, I mean, if we’re winning, I really don’t care. I’ve been frustrated with myself because I feel like the games we’ve been losing, if I was myself, then we would be winning. I care more about us winning than what my numbers are looking like necessarily. But obviously, it feels good to see the ball go in,” he told Dustin Dopirak of the Indianapolis Star.
Trail Blazers’ Thybulle, Clingan Sidelined Multiple Weeks
Trail Blazers wing Matisse Thybulle suffered a right ankle sprain while ramping up in an effort to return to the court. He’s now expected to miss an additional three-to-six weeks, the team announced in a press release.
Thybulle underwent an MRI which confirmed a Grade 2 sprain of the ankle. He has yet to make his season debut due to a right knee injury that cropped up during training camp.
Thybulle, who was acquired by the Blazers in a trade at the 2023 deadline, appeared in 65 games in his first full season in Portland in 2023/24, making 19 starts and averaging 22.9 minutes per night. He holds an $11.55MM option on his contract for next season.
Rookie center Donovan Clingan received additional imaging on the left knee which revealed a Grade 2 MCL sprain. Clingan will be reevaluated in two weeks, according to the Blazers.
The lottery pick has appeared in 17 games, including six starts, averaging 5.8 points, 6.7 rebounds and 2.2 blocks. He was injured during the Blazers’ game against Houston on Saturday.
Additionally, veteran center Robert Williams has been placed in the NBA’s concussion protocol. Williams left Monday night’s game at Memphis and did not return for the second half. Williams has appeared in seven games since rehabbing from knee surgery.
And-Ones: D-Lo, Lithuania, 2025 Draft, Awards, Fall
Lakers point guard D’Angelo Russell recently confirmed rumors that he’d have interest in playing for the Lithuanian national team. Addressing those reports on Tuesday, however, the Lithuanian Basketball Federation announced that it doesn’t intend to initiate the naturalization process for Russell, citing both legal and basketball reasons.
Russell’s wife is of Lithuanian descent, but today’s statement from the Lithuanian Basketball Federation indicated that there are no grounds for Russell himself, as a foreigner, to be granted citizenship by exception, which can only be approved by the President of Lithuania.
As BasketNews.com notes, Lithuanian Basketball Federation president Mindaugas Balciunas added that national team head coach Rimas Kurtinaitis and general manager Linas Kleiza, “aim to achieve success using our own talent pool.” The naturalized slot on the club’s roster is currently held by Ignas Brazdeikis, who was born in Lithuania but moved to North America as a child, represented Canada in youth international competitions, and had his Lithuanian citizenship restored in 2021.
Here are more odds and ends from around the basketball world:
- Looking ahead to the 2025 NBA draft, Jonathan Givony of ESPN identifies 10 international prospects worth knowing, starting with French point guard Nolan Traore, a projected top-10 pick, and Spanish wing Hugo Gonzalez, a lottery candidate. Israeli guard Ben Saraf, French forward Noa Essengue, and Croatian forward Michael Ruzic are among the other candidates to be first-round picks, according to Givony.
- Also at ESPN.com, Tim Bontemps shares his top takeaways from the first month of the 2024/25 NBA season, noting how important depth has been for many of this fall’s top teams, and ESPN’s NBA insiders make their early award picks, selecting Nikola Jokic (MVP), Jared McCain (Rookie of the Year), and Payton Pritchard (Sixth Man of the Year) as a few of their first-month winners.
- Former NBA big man Tacko Fall has officially finalized a two-year deal with the New Zealand Breakers that will run through the 2025/26 season, per the team. A previous report indicated that Fall would join the Breakers to replace Freddie Gillespie, who left Australia’s National Basketball League to play in the EuroLeague.
Central Notes: Ball, Connaughton, Trent, Strus
Bulls guard Lonzo Ball, out since October 28 due to a sprained right wrist, is targeting Wednesday’s contest in Orlando for his return to action, sources tell Shams Charania and Ramona Shelburne of ESPN. It’s the second game of a back-to-back set for the Bulls, who are in Washington on Tuesday.
According to Charania and Shelburne, Ball went through an extensive workout in front of Bulls coaches on Saturday and had another workout on Tuesday.
Ball made his long-awaited return from multiple knee surgeries at the start of the 2024/25 campaign, playing in a regular season game last month for the first time since January 2022. However, he was on the court for just three games before going down with a new injury affecting his wrist.
The good news for Ball and the Bulls is that his surgically repaired knee seemed to be holding up well during his first few outings. Although the 27-year-old’s early-season numbers (4.7 points, 3.7 assists, and 2.7 rebounds in 15.7 minutes per game on 35.7% shooting) didn’t jump off the page, the team had a +20.3 net rating in his 47 minutes of action.
We have more from around the Central:
- After averaging 17.6 minutes per game and appearing in each of the Bucks‘ first 13 games this season, Pat Connaughton has been a DNP-CD in the past four, all Milwaukee victories. Head coach Doc Rivers said the decision to demote Connaughton, who was averaging 4.9 points per game on 35.5% shooting, is “not that deep,” according to Eric Nehm of The Athletic. “It’s just that, right now, there’s guys that are playing well,” Connaughton said. “And what I love about Pat is that he’s been a pro, he’s staying ready. It’s as deep as that.”
- Gary Trent Jr., who accepted a one-year, minimum-salary contract with the Bucks in the hopes of rebuilding his value ahead of 2025 free agency, got off to a slow start as the team’s starting shooting guard, but has thrived since being moved to a reserve role, making 57.9% of his three-point attempts and scoring double-digit points in six straight games. Milwaukee is 7-3 with Trent coming off the bench, which may help increase his stock more than starting would have, as Jim Owczarski of The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel writes. “If he plays on a winning team he can make a lot more,” Rivers said.
- Within a mailbag for Cleveland.com (subscriber-only link), Chris Fedor checks in on where things stand for Cavaliers wing Max Strus in his recovery from a sprained ankle. According to Fedor, Strus has started doing on-court work, but remains limited to “light movement and shooting in non-contact 1-on-0 settings.” Fedor expects Strus to be on a minutes restriction and to come off the bench when he first returns, but notes that he could eventually reclaim his starting spot, given that Cleveland is eager to see what he looks like in Kenny Atkinson‘s new up-tempo system.
Atlantic Notes: George, Embiid, Anunoby, Boucher
Sixers stars Paul George (left knee bone bruise) and Joel Embiid (left knee injury management) will remain out for the team’s game on Wednesday vs. Houston, as Keith Pompey of The Philadelphia Inquirer relays (Twitter link).
While George was a partial participant in Tuesday’s practice, Embiid, Kyle Lowry (right hip strain), and Caleb Martin (low back soreness) didn’t take part at all. Lowry will join Embiid and George as unavailable for Wednesday’s contest; Martin will be listed as questionable to suit up.
George told reporters, including Pompey (Twitter link), that he hopes to return within the next week. After hosting the Rockets on Wednesday, the 76ers will head out on a brief two-game road trip to Detroit on Saturday and Charlotte on Tuesday before returning home next Wednesday to face Orlando. Based on George’s comments, it sounds like he’ll try to make it back for one of those back-to-back games next Tuesday and Wednesday.
A return timeline for Embiid remains unclear.
Here’s more from around the Atlantic:
- The Sixers signed Embiid to a three-year, maximum-salary extension this past offseason that will keep him under contract through at least 2028, with a 2028/29 player option projected to be worth north of $69MM. The move was viewed by the 76ers at the time as a “no-brainer,” writes Keith Pompey of The Philadelphia Inquirer, but given the way this season has played out so far, it’s fair to wonder if the club will come to regret that investment, Pompey acknowledges.
- On Saturday, OG Anunoby scored 27 points, his highest total since joining the Knicks nearly a year ago. On Monday, he dwarfed that total by pouring in a career-high 40 points in a win over Denver. “I’ve never been on a team like this before,” Anunoby said after New York scored 145 points and tied a franchise record with 45 assists, per Peter Botte of The New York Post. “… It’s cool to score 40 points, but it’s better to win. What did we win by, 20-something? I’m happier about that.” Anunoby spoke earlier this month about wanting to be known as a standout “two-way player” rather than just a defender. His recent performances have certainly helped make that case.
- Within a grab-bag article about various Raptors-related topics, Eric Koreen of The Athletic considers whether big man Chris Boucher will have any value as an in-season trade chip. Boucher is averaging 11.2 points per game, the second-best mark of his career, and the team is 4.4 points per 100 possessions better when he’s on the court. Koreen suggests that Boucher, who is earning $10.81MM on an expiring contract, could potentially bring back a second-round pick or two, along with matching salary.
Hawks Fined $100K For Player Participation Policy Violation
The Hawks have been fined $100K by the NBA for violating the league’s player participation policy, the league announced in a press release (Twitter link).
According to the announcement, the fine is related to Trae Young missing Atlanta’s NBA Cup game on November 12 against Boston. It was the only game he has missed so far this season — he was listed as out due to right Achilles tendinitis.
The league conducted an investigation into Young’s absence and determined, following a review by an independent physician, that the Hawks guard could have played in the game under the policy’s medical standard. As a result, Atlanta was deemed to have violated the policy, resulting in a $100K penalty for a first-time offense.
As Brad Rowland of Locked on Hawks explains (via Twitter), Young’s injury is real, but he has been dealing with it for much of the season and the NBA determined that he could have played through it on Nov. 12 after having two days off. It probably didn’t help the Hawks’ case, Rowland notes, that Young wasn’t listed on the injury report for Atlanta’s next game.
We discussed the player participation policy at length earlier today in the latest entry in the Hoops Rumors glossary. The policy, which was introduced at the start of the 2023/24 season, is intended to promote player participation in regular season games.
As we detailed in that article, a league investigation is triggered when a player considered a “star” misses a nationally televised or NBA Cup game without an approved reason. Young is one of 49 players across the league who currently meet the “star” criteria because he has made an All-Star or All-NBA team within the past three seasons.
The player participation policy calls for a $100K fine for the first violation and a $250K fine for the second infraction, so the Hawks would face a more substantial penalty if they run afoul of the policy again this season.
Kings’ Mike Brown Fined $35K By NBA
Kings head coach Mike Brown has been fined to the tune of $35K for “aggressively pursuing a game official during live play,” the NBA announced today in a press release (Twitter link).
The incident took place in the second quarter of Sacramento’s loss to Brooklyn on Sunday (Twitter video link).
Brown was upset after no foul was called on Nets guard Ben Simmons, who contested a fast-break layup attempt by Colby Jones and sent the Kings guard to the floor (video link via NBA.com). The miss, which was ruled a clean block by Simmons despite apparent contact, led to a Brooklyn three-pointer on the other end of the court.
Brown, who followed referee Scott Twardoski up the court after the Nets’ make, berating him for the non-call, was charged with a technical foul for his outburst.
This is hardly a first-time offense for Brown. The Kings’ head coach was also fined $25K by the NBA in December 2022 for “aggressively pursuing and directing profane language” toward a game official and was hit with a $50K fine in January 2024 for “aggressively pursuing” a referee and then criticizing the officiating in his post-game media session.
Hoops Rumors Chat Transcript: 11/26/2024
Hoops Rumors hosted a live chat today at 11 a.m. Central time (noon Eastern). Click here to read the transcript.
We’ll be back to our normal schedule after the Thanksgiving holiday, with our Front Office subscriber chats resuming next Tuesday and Luke Adams’ weekly chats returning next Thursday.
Hoops Rumors Glossary: Player Participation Policy
After previously implementing a “player resting policy” in 2017 in an attempt to reduce instances of teams holding healthy players out of games – particularly nationally televised games and road contests – the NBA modified those rules ahead of the 2023/24 season, introducing a new set of guidelines known as the Player Participation Policy.
The stated aim of the policy is to promote player participation over the course of the NBA’s 82-game regular season. It specifically focuses on players considered “stars,” defined by the policy as players who have made an All-Star team or an All-NBA team in any of the three prior seasons (or during the current season, once the All-Star Game has passed).
Unless a team has an approved reason for a star player not participating in a game, that team will be considered in potential violation of the player participation policy in the following scenarios:
- If a team rests a star player in a game that is nationally televised or in an in-season tournament (NBA Cup) game.
- If a team rests more than one star in the same game.
- If a team repeatedly rests a star in road games instead of home games (teams must maintain a balance between one-game absences occurring on the road or at home, with the preference being for rest days to occur in home games).
- If a team shuts down a healthy star for an extended period of time (e.g. if a tanking team stops playing one if its star players down the stretch).
- If a star who is being rested is not on the bench and visible to fans.
An automatic NBA investigation is triggered in the event that a star player who is not injured misses a nationally televised or NBA Cup game or if multiple non-injured star players miss the same game. An investigation is also triggered if a player, agent, or team representative – such as the general manager or head coach – makes a statement that contradicts the player’s listing on the injury report.
The league can also open an investigation at its own discretion in other instances. For example, if a star player is continually held out of road games instead of home games or begins to play a “materially reduced role,” the NBA could look into the matter.
A team found to have violated the player participation policy is subject to a fine. The amounts of those fines are as follows:
- First violation: $100K
- Second violation: $250K
- Subsequent violations: $1MM more than the previous penalty (ie. $1.25MM for the third violation, $2.25MM for the fourth violation, and so on)
If the star player has a legitimate reason for being held out of action, the team won’t be penalized for violating the player participation policy. Of course, injuries are the most common reason why players miss games, but there are other exceptions the NBA allows.
For instance, a team is permitted to hold a star player out of one game in each of its back-to-back sets due to age (for a player who is 35 or older as of opening night), career workload (for a player who has logged either 34,000+ career regular season and playoff minutes or appeared in 1,000 career regular season and playoff games), or injury history (evaluated by the league on a case-by-case basis).
If one of the two games in a back-to-back set is nationally televised or is an NBA Cup game, a player who receives league approval to sit out one end of the back-to-back must play in that one. If both games meet that criteria, or if neither game does, it doesn’t matter which one the player misses.
Additionally, if a team has two stars who have been approved to sit out one end of back-to-backs, they can’t both miss the same game — one star must appear in the first one, while the other plays in the second.
Under the player participation policy, the NBA allows a star player to be held out of a game for personal reasons, such as the birth of a child or a death in the family, or in “rare and unusual circumstances,” which must be approved by the league office. The league also affords teams some end-of-season leeway. For example, a star player could be rested for the final game of the regular season if his team has already clinched a specific playoff seed.
A team may be investigated for one possible violation of the NBA’s player participation policy and end up being fined for a different violation. That occurred when the league looked into the Sixers’ decision to sit Joel Embiid for a nationally televised game near the start of the 2024/25 season.
Although the team had insisted Embiid experienced no setbacks after suiting up for the Olympics, the NBA found the big man had a legitimate knee injury and fined Philadelphia $100K for inconsistent statements about Embiid’s health that misrepresented his condition.
The NBA advises teams to “err on the side of over-communicating” with the league office to ensure they’re complying with the player participation policy, which means contacting the league ahead of time to explain a star player’s potential absence instead of waiting until after the NBA launches an investigation.
The list of stars affected by the player participation policy during the 2024/25 season can be found right here.
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. Information from ESPN’s Bobby Marks was used to confirm details in this post.
Michael Malone Rips Nuggets’ Effort Following Blowout Loss
The Nuggets lost at home for the second time in four days on Monday, falling by a score of 145-118 to the Knicks. Asked by a reporter during his post-game media session if he was prepared to “flush” the game and move on, head coach Michael Malone strongly pushed back on that idea (Twitter video link via DNVR Sports).
“F–k that, no, no, no. We’re not flushing,” Malone said. “You don’t flush when you get embarrassed. You don’t flush when you gave up 145 points. You don’t flush when you didn’t play hard, didn’t play with effort, didn’t play with physicality. I’m not flushing anything.”
Malone praised Russell Westbrook, who scored a team-high 27 points, for his willingness to be “vocal” on and off the court, but said he’d like to see more of that sort of leadership from players who have been cornerstones in Denver for years.
“I need Nikola Jokic, I need Jamal Murray,” Malone said. “I need guys that have been here in that starting lineup to be vocal.”
The Nuggets have been without starting forward Aaron Gordon since November 4 due to a calf injury, and Jokic and Murray have each missed a few games, but Malone doesn’t view that as an excuse for a modest 9-7 record and what he views as an inconsistent compete level so far this season.
“Regardless of who’s in (and) who’s out, who do we want to be as a team?” Malone said. “Leadership would be great. toughness would be great. Physicality would be great. Playing like you actually care would be great. We didn’t do that tonight.
“… We’re just fooling ourselves,” Malone added later. “Yes, (the Knicks) are a good team, but if that’s the effort we’re going to give forth, we won’t even be close to being a playoff team.”
Jokic agreed with Malone’s assessment, telling reporters that the Nuggets needed “a good punch in the face just to wake up” and said the players “collectively need to do a better job” (link via ESPN.com). Murray agreed that it was on the players, not the coaches, to figure things out and wondered if staying in Los Angeles overnight after Saturday’s win vs. the Lakers might’ve played a part in the team’s sluggishness on Monday.
“It’s a long season. Guys have lives outside of basketball,” Murray said (Twitter video link via Harrison Wind of DNVR Sports). “We just beat L.A. in L.A. We’ve got some guys who live in L.A., so (we) stayed in L.A. I don’t think the focus was there from everybody, and that’s what happens when you don’t have the focus.”
The Nuggets are currently tied with the Suns for the seventh-best record in a crowded Western Conference and sit just one game ahead of the No. 11 Timberwolves.
