Anthony Davis Day-To-Day With Left Ankle Sprain
Lakers star Anthony Davis sprained his left ankle in the first quarter of Wednesday’s game in Golden State. After initially being deemed questionable to return, he was later ruled out, the team announced (Twitter links via Dave McMenamin of ESPN).
Davis, who has a history of foot injuries and has been dealing with plantar fasciitis in his left foot for several weeks, per Jovan Buha of The Athletic, simply took an awkward step and had his ankle roll (YouTube link). There was no contact on the play.
While it’s never a great sign when a player is unable to return after suffering an injury, this one doesn’t sound very serious. Davis was able to walk without additional support following the ankle sprain and is considered day-to-day going forward, according to ESPN’s McMenamin, who reports (via Twitter) that the nine-time All-Star will be reevaluated prior to Saturday’s game vs. Sacramento.
Davis, who was initially listed as questionable due to a left shoulder contusion before suiting up, has often been derided for missing games throughout his career. However, he has been pretty durable the past two seasons, appearing in 76 games in 2023/24 and only missing one full game to this point in ’24/25.
Guard D’Angelo Russell, who is dealing with a sprained left thumb, wound up missing the game. He was also questionable before being ruled out.
With Davis out and multiple other frontcourt members (Jarred Vanderbilt, Christian Wood, Jaxson Hayes) sidelined with their own respective injuries, head coach JJ Redick opted to go small, with LeBron James shifting up to center. Christian Koloko, who is on a two-way deal, also played nine minutes in the middle.
Nets Notes: Claxton, Thomas, Williams, Clowney
Nic Claxton cashed in as a free agent last summer, re-signing with the Nets on a four-year, $97MM+ contract. However, he isn’t meeting his own expectations thus far in 2024/25, and Brian Lewis of The New York Post (subscriber link) argues Brooklyn’s starting center isn’t living up to the team’s investment, either.
“I’m not pleased with nothing, honestly,” Claxton said. “I need to be better, more consistent.
“Everywhere: rebounding, free throws, protecting the rim, more blocks. I need to do everything better. Be more aggressive on offense. Everything.”
Claxton’s numbers are down across the board in 2024/25, with the 25-year-old averaging 9.3 points, 7.0 rebounds, 2.0 assists, and 1.3 blocks per game while shooting 59.4% from the floor in 23 appearances (24.8 MPG). Last season, he averaged 11.8 PPG, 9.9 RPG, 2.1 APG and 2.1 BPG while shooting 62.9% from the field in 71 games (29.8 MPG).
In fairness, Claxton has also dealt with injuries, having missed all of preseason action with a hamstring injury and then dealing with a lower back strain which required him to receive an epidural injection. But the Nets have been more effective when he isn’t playing, which certainly isn’t what they were hoping for after giving him a big contract.
Here’s more from Brooklyn:
- Cam Thomas (left hamstring strain), who played 5-on-5 on Monday, will be sidelined again on Thursday, Lewis writes for The New York Post. The Nets are eager to get their leading scorer back in the lineup — their offense has sputtered in the month he’s been out, Lewis notes. “It’ll be nice when we get Cam Thomas back just to have some … a real half-court bucket, half-court scorer,” Claxton said. “That’ll be good. We’re missing him right now a lot.”
- Ziaire Williams (left knee sprain) is also nearing a return, but he’ll miss at least one more game, having been ruled out of Thursday’s matchup in Milwaukee, Lewis adds. Both Thomas and Williams will be restricted free agents next offseason if they’re tendered qualifying offers.
- Noah Clowney has been playing some of his best basketball of the season after a “desultory effort” vs. Cleveland on Dec. 16 saw the second-year big man foul out with two points, two rebounds and two turnovers in 17 minutes, according to Lewis. Clowney credited an attitude adjustment for his improved play. “My main goal since the Cleveland game has been to be better energy-wise for my team,” Clowney said. “A lot of body language issues I had, and I’m trying to be an energy-giver. I feel like — I was told — [there’s] no neutral energy. It’s either bad or good. So try to give good energy. So that’s been my main goal, as far as how I play. [You] make shots sometimes, you don’t make shots sometimes. Do what you can on the defensive end. Just try to control what you can.”
Luka Doncic Out Indefinitely After Suffering Left Calf Strain
6:32pm: The Mavericks are anticipating that Doncic will be sidelined for an “extended period of time,” report Shams Charnia and Tim MacMahon of ESPN (Twitter link). According to ESPN, Doncic left the arena on crutches. He’s expected to undergo an MRI on Thursday to determine the severity of the injury.
4:09pm: Mavericks star Luka Doncic experienced a left calf strain late in the second quarter of Wednesday’s loss to Minnesota and was ruled out for the remainder of the contest, the team announced (via Twitter).
“It’s fine,” Doncic said. “Just trying to get through it. But today, it felt fine. After the first quarter (of Monday’s game), it felt better. Just getting warm. It felt fine. Will get through it.”
The 25-year-old was initially listed as probable with the heel issue before being upgraded to available for today’s game.
Doncic appeared to suffer the injury when he drove into the lane while being defended by Jaden McDaniels (Twitter video links). There was no contact to his left leg on the play. He was able to limp off the court on his own, albeit slowly, after the Mavs called a timeout.
As Tim Bontemps of ESPN tweets, Doncic has already missed eight games this season, so an extended absence would jeopardize his chances at earning All-NBA or MVP honors due to the 65-game rule. The Slovenian superstar has a history of calf injuries and has typically missed multiple weeks in those instances, notes Brad Townsend of The Dallas Morning News (Twitter link).
While it’s obviously unfortunate that Doncic was injured, even if he does end up missing too many games to qualify for major postseason awards, it won’t impact him much financially, as he already met the criteria for a super-max extension by making All-NBA teams each of the past two seasons, tweets ESPN’s Bobby Marks.
Doncic, who has been named to the All-NBA First Team for five consecutive seasons, will officially become eligible for the Designated Veteran contract extension in the summer of 2025, after he completes his seventh season.
Through 21 games this season, Doncic was averaging 28.8 points, 8.5 rebounds, 8.1 assists and a career-high 2.0 steals in 36.6 minutes per contest, with a shooting line of .462/.348/.766.
With Doncic out for an unknown amount of time, Quentin Grimes and Spencer Dinwiddie are among the Mavericks who could receive more playing time and touches.
Eastern Notes: Merrill, Bulls, Butler, Heat
Fifth-year guard Sam Merrill snapped out of his season-long shooting slump on Monday as the Cavaliers defeated Utah, writes Chris Fedor of Cleveland.com (subscription required).
Merrill, who grew up a Jazz fan in Bountiful, Utah, near Salt Lake City, notched a season-high 20 points in the 11-point victory, going 6-of-11 from three-point range while also chipping in four assists and three steals in 24 minutes.
A former second-round pick (No. 60 overall in 2020), Merrill has been a rotation mainstay in 2024/25 despite the slump, averaging a career-high 19.9 minutes per contest through 26 games. The 28-year-old has improved defensively and still draws attention with his outside shooting — he’s at 38.4% for his career from beyond the arc, though he has only made 34.0% this season.
Merrill will be an unrestricted free agent next summer if he doesn’t sign a veteran extension, which he’s eligible for through June 30.
Here’s more from around the Eastern Conference:
- The Bulls have been prominently mentioned in trade rumors this season, but have yet to make a deal. Joe Cowley of The Chicago Sun-Times takes stock of where things currently stand for veterans Zach LaVine, Nikola Vucevic and Lonzo Ball, writing that the Bulls would prefer to make moves “sooner rather than later” with the trade deadline set for Feb. 6.
- Star forward Jimmy Butler, who prefers a trade out of Miami but hasn’t formally requested to be dealt, is doubtful for Thursday’s contest in Orlando with what the Heat are calling “return to competition; reconditioning,” tweets Barry Jackson of The Miami Herald. A person with knowledge of the situation insisted to Jackson that Butler has been “genuinely sick” of late, causing him to miss most of the past three games, and that his absences have nothing to do with a potential trade. According to Anthony Chiang of The Miami Herald (Twitter link), Butler didn’t travel with the Heat to Orlando, but there’s still a chance he could make the short flight north if he’s feeling better.
- Although Shams Charania of ESPN reported that multiple teams have been in touch with the Heat to express interest in Butler, it’s unclear if Miami has actually received a formal trade offer, according to Jackson and Chiang. Neither the Heat nor Butler’s camp have denied that he’s unhappy, but he’s also not “simmering with rage” about the situation, as Jackson puts it (Twitter link).
Fischer’s Latest: C. Johnson, Kumza, Kings, Little, NBA Cup
NBA executives who gathered for the G League Showcase in Orlando are curious to see how apron restrictions will affect this year’s trade market, Jake Fischer writes in his latest Substack column (subscription required). Fischer states that there are fewer movable contracts than in past seasons, and teams will have to become more creative to get deals done. He adds that front offices will be “counting tens of thousands of dollars in wiggle room” as they try to stay below the aprons.
Fischer cites complications that could affect deals involving Nets forward Cameron Johnson and Wizards forward Kyle Kuzma, who are both rumored to be on the trade market. Johnson is making $22.5MM this season, but he also has $4.5MM in various incentives that bring his “apron salary” to $27MM. They include bonuses for playing at least 42 games, reaching the playoffs, scoring at least 15 points per game, and having a true shooting percentage better than 60%. There are five other bonuses, all of which figure into Johnson’s price for any team that acquires him.
Kuzma is in a similar situation, Fischer notes, with a $23.5MM salary and an extra $3MM in unlikely bonuses. His contract also includes a 15% trade kicker, and Fischer states that his apron salary would increase by another $2MM if he were to be traded today.
There’s more from Fischer:
- Teams around the league are keeping a close watch on the Kings, who have dropped into 12th place in the West with four straight losses. That slump, combined with last week’s meeting on De’Aaron Fox‘s future involving his agent and team officials, has “raised expectations” that Sacramento will be active ahead of the February 6 trade deadline, according to Fischer.
- Fischer hears that Sioux Falls forward Nassir Little has gotten the attention of several NBA teams with his play at the G League Showcase and during the early part of the season. Little, 24, appeared in 45 games with Phoenix last season, but was limited by numerous injuries. He was a first-round pick by Portland in 2019 and could provide immediate, low-cost help for any team with a roster opening. Sources tell Fischer that Little chose the G League over a chance to play in Europe because he believed it gave him a better path back to the NBA. “He’s one of the better game-ready call-up guys,” a scout told Fischer.
- Several teams have discovered there are benefits to losing group play games in the NBA Cup, Fischer adds. In addition to often getting easier matchups in the two games that are added to the schedule, teams that didn’t advance to Las Vegas enjoyed a longer break and were able to work in additional practice time.
Rockets Notes: Thompson, Eason, Whitmore, VanVleet
Amen Thompson‘s value to the Rockets goes beyond his statistics and his intense defensive presence, writes Jonathan Feigen of The Houston Chronicle. Thompson is officially listed as a small forward, but he seems to fit in well wherever the team needs him. He replaced Dillon Brooks in the starting lineup in Monday’s win at Charlotte, and Feigen points out that he also filled in when center Alperen Sengun was injured last season and when point guard Fred VanVleet has missed time.
“He can play every position on the court,” VanVleet said. “He’s a Swiss Army knife. He can play one through five. He can screen-and-roll. He’s shooting the three now. He can score. He can guard. He’s just a plug-able guy. You can put him anywhere on the court and be successful. He stepped right in for D.B. and we didn’t lose a step.”
Outside shooting was the main concern about Thompson heading into the 2023 draft, but he shown some progress in that area, improving from 13.8% from beyond the arc as a rookie to 29.7% so far this season. The rest of his game is solid and he has been especially effective as a starter, averaging 18 points and nine rebounds while shooting 53.3% from the floor in the three games he has started this year. Feigen notes that the Rockets are scoring 127 points per 100 possessions with him in that role, which would give them the most productive offense in the league.
“You can put him on a bunch of different people, switched and made it tough on (LaMelo) Ball early,” coach Ime Udoka said. “I think it was a whole team effort when you hold a team to 31 in the first half. Amen kind of spearheaded that. On both sides of the ball. He can guard one through five. We’re comfortable with that. Then, offensively, he’s played on ball at times as a backup point guard, or on the wing, and at the four last year. We can plug him into all those situations on both sides. It’s a luxury for sure.”
There’s more from Houston:
- Tari Eason has missed three straight games due to left lower leg injury management, but the Rockets don’t believe it’s a long-term concern, Feigen adds in a separate story. Eason is a valuable member of the bench unit, leading all NBA reserves in steals and ranking fourth in blocks. “He had some soreness come up in the same leg,” Udoka said. “So, just wanted to give him some days. Obviously, we had the time off (after) the in-season tournament. I think at times, being a little bit stagnant is worse than actually playing, and it stiffened up a little bit.”
- Cam Whitmore wasn’t discouraged after being sent to the G League early in the season, according to Danielle Lerner of The Houston Chronicle. The second-year forward has been getting an opportunity with the Rockets since being recalled recently, scoring 11 points in 14 minutes on Sunday and 17 points in 27 minutes on Monday. “To go kill ’em,” he said of his approach to the G League. “Whatever’s in front of me, I’m gonna be lights out. I’m on assignment, so I’m just gonna go down there, I’m gonna keep grinding every day, keep getting better — better human being and a better basketball player.”
- Kelly Iko of The Athletic examines VanVleet’s prolonged shooting slump to determine why the veteran guard has been missing shots that he typically makes. A career 37.5% three-point shooter entering this season, VanVleet has connected on just 29.8% of his tries from beyond the arc through 27 games.
Knicks Notes: Towns, Brunson, Shamet, Sims
Karl-Anthony Towns has played on Christmas Day before, but this year’s game is special because it’s at Madison Square Garden, writes Zach Braziller of The New York Post. Towns, who grew up in the New York area, was always far from home in his previous Christmas contests, but an offseason trade to the Knicks has him playing in front of family members and friends.
“It’s my first one home,” he said. “I never got to do that. So this is going to be fun, to be able to do it in front of your family. It’s crazy for me growing up in this area and to be watching the Knicks always play on Christmas Day, watching [Carmelo Anthony] go crazy on Christmas Day. And now to be in a position where I get to have my name in the history of Knicks players to play on Christmas, it’s a huge honor.”
Braziller notes that Christmas Day games have been a tradition for the Knicks dating back to 1947, and today’s contest marks their 12th one in the past 15 years. Although some NBA players would prefer to be off for the holiday, Towns considers it an honor to be included.
“I like playing basketball. It’s a great Christmas present for me,” he said. “I get to go out there and lace the shoes up and play. So I’m excited.”
There’s more from New York:
- Offseason trades for Towns and Mikal Bridges have made the Knicks less reliant on Jalen Brunson to carry the offense, Braziller adds in a separate story. The latest example came Monday when they comfortably beat Toronto despite an off night from Brunson, who was limited to 12 points while shooting 4-of-13 from the field and 0-of-5 from beyond the arc. Brunson is taking 4.4 fewer shots per game than he did last season, but his shooting percentages and assist rate have improved. “I think it’s going to open it up for him even more,” Bridges said. “When you have to respect everybody, you can’t help as much. You don’t help, it’s going to be tough to guard him. Just trying to keep teams honest, so they have to play straight up, and that’s when JB will be in kill mode.”
- Landry Shamet only played one minute in his first game back with the Knicks, but Ian Begley of SNY states in a mailbag column that he’s likely to get a chance to earn a spot in the rotation. Begley points out that the team has one of the lowest-scoring bench units in the league and suggests that Shamet may be able to ease the burden on the starting guards and wings.
- The Knicks were asking for at least two second-round picks in return for backup center Jericho Sims when teams inquired about him during the offseason, Begley adds. Sims may be expendable once Mitchell Robinson returns from offseason ankle surgery.
What Each NBA Team Can, Can’t Do On The Trade Market
The NBA’s current Collective Bargaining Agreement went into effect at the start of the 2023/24 season, but not all of the new rules and restrictions in that agreement were implemented immediately. Many of them were introduced when the ’24/25 league year began, which means that this is the first season the new CBA is really showing its teeth.
With so many new rules in place, it’s worth taking a closer look at exactly how each team will be affected as they pursue trades this season. In the space below, we’re examining what every club can and can’t do on the trade market ahead of the February 6 deadline.
Within each section, we’re sorting teams by their total apron salary (as of Dec. 25), from highest to lowest.
Let’s dive in…
Teams operating above the second tax apron:
- Phoenix Suns
- Minnesota Timberwolves
- Boston Celtics
- Milwaukee Bucks
Teams whose total salaries exceed the second tax apron of $188,931,000 don’t face any sort of hard cap, but their trade options are limited. Here are the restrictions they face:
❌ Not permitted to aggregate two or more player salaries for matching purposes.
❌ Not permitted to use an outgoing player’s salary for matching purposes to take back more than 100% of his salary.
❌ Not permitted to use a traded player exception that was generated during the 2023/24 regular season.
❌ Not permitted to use a traded player exception that was generated using a signed-and-traded player.
❌ Not permitted to use the bi-annual exception or mid-level exception to acquire a player via trade.
❌ Not permitted to send out cash in a trade.
The first two rules here explain why, when we talk about the reported mutual interest between Jimmy Butler and the Suns, we say that Phoenix could only acquire Butler by trading Kevin Durant, Devin Booker, or Bradley Beal. The Suns can’t aggregate two or more players salaries to match Butler’s $48.8MM cap hit, and Durant, Booker, and Beal are the only three players on their roster whose salaries are higher than Butler’s.
The third and fourth rules listed here both apply to the Timberwolves. They created a $4MM trade exception at last season’s trade deadline when they sent out Troy Brown and generated an $8.78MM TPE during the summer when they signed-and-traded Kyle Anderson to Golden State. They’re not permitted to use either.
Here are a few things that second-apron teams can do on the trade market:
✅ Acquire a player using the minimum salary exception.
✅ Acquire a player using a traded player exception created during the 2024 offseason or earlier in the 2024/25 regular season (as long as it wasn’t created using a signed-and-traded player).
✅ Send out multiple players in the same trade (as long as their salaries aren’t aggregated).
✅ Trade draft picks up to seven years out (2031).
The rule prohibiting second-apron teams from taking back more salary than they send out only applies when the outgoing player salary is being used for matching purposes. That means any club is allowed to acquire a player who is on a one- or two-year minimum-salary contract using the minimum salary exception.
The minimum salary exception allowance can be used on its own or as part of a larger deal. For instance, if the Suns were to send Beal ($50.2MM) to Miami in exchange for Butler ($48.8MM) and Alec Burks (who is on a minimum-salary contract with a cap hit of $2.1MM), they’d technically be taking back more total salary than they’re sending out. However, because only Beal’s salary would be used to match Butler’s, with Burks acquired “separately” using the minimum salary exception, the swap would be legal.
Circling back to the Timberwolves’ traded player exceptions, while we’ve already mentioned a couple trade exceptions that they can’t use, they do have TPEs worth $2.5MM and $4.7MM created in this year’s Wendell Moore and Karl-Anthony Towns deals that they can use, since they were created since the offseason began in non-sign-and-trade moves.
The fourth item here serves as a reminder that the rule freezing a second-apron team’s first-round draft pick seven years out won’t go into effect until the 2025 offseason. So these teams are still permitted to trade their 2031 first-rounders this season — the Wolves have already done so, but the other three haven’t.
Teams operating between the first and second aprons:
- Los Angeles Lakers
- New York Knicks *
- Miami Heat
- Denver Nuggets *
- Philadelphia 76ers
(* Teams marked with an asterisk are hard-capped at the second apron.)
In addition to doing everything that second-apron teams can do on the trade market, teams operating above the first apron ($178,814,000) and below the second apron can also do the following:
✅ Aggregate two or more player salaries for matching purposes.
✅ Send out cash in a trade.
✅ Use a traded player exception that was generated using a signed-and-traded player.
However, the following restrictions remain in place for teams operating over the first apron:
❌ Not permitted to use an outgoing player’s salary (or two or more aggregated player salaries) for matching purposes to take back more than 100% of that salary.
❌ Not permitted to use a traded player exception that was generated during the 2023/24 regular season.
❌ Not permitted to use the bi-annual exception or mid-level exception to acquire a player via trade.
It’s important to note that if a team aggregates salaries, sends out cash, or uses a TPE generated via a sign-and-trade, that club becomes hard-capped at the second apron for the remainder of the league year. That’s already the case for the Knicks, who aggregated salaries in both the Mikal Bridges and Towns blockbusters.
The Nuggets are also hard-capped at the second apron, though that was the result of a move in free agency, not on the trade market — they used the taxpayer mid-level exception to sign Dario Saric.
While the other three teams in this group don’t currently face a hard cap, it’s something they’ll have to keep in mind as they navigate the trade market. For example, the Lakers are operating just $30K below the second apron, so if they aggregate salaries in a deal before the Feb. 6 deadline, they’ll face a second-apron hard cap for the rest of the season, which will significantly limit their ability to make additional moves (unless they shed some salary in the trade that hard-caps them).
Teams operating over the salary cap and below the first apron:
- Golden State Warriors *
- Dallas Mavericks *
- New Orleans Pelicans *
- Cleveland Cavaliers
- Los Angeles Clippers *
— Luxury tax line — - Indiana Pacers
- Atlanta Hawks *
- Brooklyn Nets *
- Sacramento Kings *
- Memphis Grizzlies *
- Portland Trail Blazers
- Chicago Bulls *
- Toronto Raptors *
- Washington Wizards *
- Houston Rockets *
- Oklahoma City Thunder *
- Charlotte Hornets *
- San Antonio Spurs
- Orlando Magic
- Utah Jazz *
(* Teams marked with an asterisk are hard-capped at the first apron.)
While these teams all technically fall into the same category, there are some major differences among their respective situations. The Jazz, for instance, are narrowly above the salary cap and have more than $27MM breathing room below the luxury tax line, giving them significantly more flexibility than a team like the Hawks, who are hovering about $1.3MM below the tax line and $5.4MM from the first apron.
Those teams right below the tax, like the Pacers, Hawks, and Nets, will have to be careful about adding extra salary, since they’ll have no desire to become taxpayers. Teams right up against first-apron hard caps like the Warriors and Mavericks will also be limited in their ability to take on extra salary, even if they wouldn’t mind doing so.
Generally speaking, however, these are the actions that teams in this group are allowed to take on the trade market:
✅ Everything that first-apron teams are allowed to do.
✅ Use one or more outgoing salaries up to $7,500,000 to take back up to 200% of that salary (plus $250K) via matching.
✅ Use one or more outgoing salaries between $7,500,001 and $29,000,000 to take back up to that salary plus $7.5MM via matching.
✅ Use one or more outgoing salaries worth above $29,000,000 to take back up to 125% of that salary (plus $250K) via matching.
✅ Use a traded player exception that was generated within the past year (with a $250K allowance above the TPE amount).
✅ Use the bi-annual exception or mid-level exception to acquire a player via trade.
Again, a team’s ability to take advantage of each of these rules varies depending on that club’s specific position relative to the first apron.
For example, while these salary-matching rules suggest the Warriors would be permitted to take back up to nearly $33.8MM in return for Andrew Wiggins‘ outgoing salary (approximately $26.3MM), they’re only about $330K away from their first-apron hard cap, which they’re not allowed to exceed. So without a move that sheds salary, Golden State can’t take back more than about $26.6MM for Wiggins.
On the other hand, a team like the Jazz, with so much space to operate below the first apron, would have no problem taking back up to approximately $34.1MM in incoming salary in exchange for John Collins‘ $26.6MM outgoing amount.
Teams operating below the salary cap:
- Detroit Pistons
The Pistons, who are currently sitting about $14MM below the salary cap, are the only NBA team that still has cap room available.
Because they’re below the cap, the Pistons don’t have the mid-level exception, bi-annual exception, or any traded player exceptions available, so they can’t acquire players using any of those paths. However, they can do the following:
✅ Acquire incoming salary up to the salary cap ($140,588,000), plus $250K.
✅ Use the room exception to acquire a player via trade.
Although the Pistons only have about $14MM in room, they could acquire a player earning more than that amount if they send out a player as part of the transaction. For example, if they were to trade Tim Hardaway Jr., who has a cap hit of about $16.2MM, they could take back a player earning a little over $30MM, since the swap would still leave them at the salary cap cutoff.
However, Detroit isn’t permitted to combine its cap room and its room exception — cap space and the room exception operate separately, so the remaining room could be used to acquire a $14MM player and the room exception could be used to take on a player earning nearly $8MM, but they couldn’t be paired to acquire a player earning $22MM.
Community Shootaround: Christmas Day Games
Merry Christmas from the Hoops Rumors staff!
As usual, the NBA has a five-game slate on tap for Christmas Day, with many of the league’s top teams and biggest stars in action on December 25. Here’s today’s schedule:
- 11:00 am CT: San Antonio Spurs (15-14) at New York Knicks (19-10)
- 1:30 pm CT: Minnesota Timberwolves (14-14) at Dallas Mavericks (19-10)
- 4:00 pm CT: Philadelphia 76ers (10-17) at Boston Celtics (22-7)
- 7:00 pm CT: Los Angeles Lakers (16-13) at Golden State Warriors (15-13)
- 9:30 pm CT: Denver Nuggets (16-11) at Phoenix Suns (14-14)
While the goal on Christmas Day is generally to showcase some of the day’s biggest stars and best teams, this year’s schedule is a little lacking in the latter.
Despite featuring seven teams from the Western Conference, today’s slate of games doesn’t include any of the West’s top three seeds, the Thunder, Rockets, and Grizzlies. While Houston and Memphis weren’t necessarily expected to be this good, Oklahoma City’s absence is conspicuous, given that the Thunder were the No. 1 seed in the West last season.
Over in the East, we’ve got the No. 2 and 3 seeds in action today, but the NBA’s best team, the 26-4 Cavaliers, won’t be part of the Christmas Day slate. Instead, the third Eastern club is the 12th-seeded Sixers, who have been plagued by injuries but at least will have their big three available on Wednesday — Tyrese Maxey and Paul George aren’t on the injury report, and Joel Embiid is listed as available.
Despite the absence of so many top teams, each matchup still has something going for it, with plenty of star power on display.
The afternoon will feature rising phenom Victor Wembanyama visiting Madison Square Garden and the streaking Knicks, who have won four games in a row; a rematch of last year’s Western Conference Finals between the Timberwolves and Mavericks, who should have star guards Kyrie Irving (available) and Luka Doncic (probable) active today; and those aforementioned three Sixers stars going up against the defending champions in Boston.
The first evening contest between the Lakers and Warriors pits the No. 7 seed in the West against No. 8, but it also could be one of the last few times that NBA legends LeBron James and Stephen Curry face one another. James is considered questionable due to left foot injury management, but I’d be shocked if he didn’t play. A couple more would-be Western contenders who have had up-and-down starts will wrap up the day when the Nuggets visit Phoenix in a game that will feature a pair of former MVPs in Nikola Jokic and Kevin Durant.
We want to know what you think. Are there any teams you wish were or weren’t part of today’s schedule? Which of these five games are you most looking forward to? Which five teams are you picking to win this year’s Christmas Day matchups?
Head to the comment section below to weigh in, and feel free to use it as an open thread to discuss today’s games.
Jimmy Butler Prefers Trade Out Of Miami
Heat forward Jimmy Butler would prefer to be traded ahead of the February 6 deadline rather than sticking with Miami for the full season, reports Shams Charania of ESPN.
Charania clarifies that Butler has not formally asked the Heat to trade him, but he’s “believed to be ready for his exit” from the franchise.
Butler has been the subject of trade rumors in recent weeks, with Charania first reporting on December 10 that the Heat were open to listening to offers on the six-time All-Star.
Charania stated at the time that the Mavericks, Rockets, and Warriors were a few of the teams that would appeal to Butler in the event of a trade, then added the Suns to that list the following day. Phoenix and Golden State are believed to be his top choices from among that group, Charania said today on NBA Countdown (Twitter video link).
Multiple teams have been in touch with the Heat within the past couple weeks to express interest in Butler, but Miami isn’t showing urgency in those discussions, sources tell ESPN.
Reporting in the wake of Miami’s elimination from the 2024 playoffs indicated that Butler would be seeking a maximum-salary extension during the offseason. Asked about that possibility during his end-of-season press conference in the spring, president of basketball operations Pat Riley expressed reluctance to make that sort of financial investment in a player “unless you have someone who is going to be available every night,” a reference to Butler’s injury issues in recent seasons.
Butler subsequently decided to remain with the Heat without an extension rather than pushing for an offseason trade. However, he has been unhappy about not being extended, according to Anthony Chiang and Barry Jackson of The Miami Herald.
Following the publication of today’s ESPN report, reporters in Miami – including Chiang and Jackson – have cited sources who confirm Butler hasn’t demanded a trade. According to The Herald, Butler would play out the season with Miami if that’s what the team decides, but would be fine with a change of scenery as well.
The 35-year-old is earning $48.8MM this season and holds a $52.4MM player option for the 2025/26 season. Multiple reports have indicated he intends to turn down that option to become a free agent, whether or not he’s traded this season. Butler doesn’t have to make a decision on that option until late June though, so it’s possible he’ll use that stance for leverage purposes and opt in or sign an extension later in the season if he ends up in a situation he likes.
Marc Stein and others have reported that the Heat believe they’d be in a good position with Butler next summer, since the rebuilding Nets are the only team projected to have maximum-salary cap room. Chiang and Jackson reiterated that point today, writing that Miami is “not at all concerned” about losing the former Marquette standout for nothing in free agency. Still, Charania says both the Heat and Butler seem willing to move on from one another.
Butler’s relationship with the Heat has become “somewhat strained,” per Chiang and Jackson, who hear from a source that the 14-year veteran was disappointed the team didn’t publicly deny Charania’s Dec. 10 report that Miami was open to moving him. Butler was also the only Heat player not to attend a Christmas party at Riley’s house, though he has missed the party in the past, so that’s not necessarily meaningful, according to Chiang and Jackson (Twitter link).
The Herald duo hears from a source that Butler was “caught off guard” when Riley scolded him at his spring press conference for Butler’s claim that the Celtics and Knicks would “be at home” if he had been able to play in the postseason.
“If you’re not on the court playing against Boston or on the court playing against the New York Knicks, you should keep your mouth shut on the criticism of those teams,” Riley said at the time.
While the relationship between player and team isn’t as strong as it once was, Butler hasn’t been disruptive at all this season like he was in 2018 when he requested a trade out of Minnesota, according to The Herald.
Butler is averaging 18.5 points, 5.8 rebounds, and 4.9 assists in 31.4 minutes per game across 20 outings so far this season, with a .552/.357/.782 shooting line. His season-long averages have been hurt to some extent by the fact that he was only able to play seven minutes in a pair of games that he left due to injuries.
Butler’s $48.8MM salary will complicate some teams’ ability to acquire him via trade. The Mavericks and Suns fall into that group and appear not to have enough assets to entice Miami, per Chiang and Jackson. The Rockets, meanwhile, have told people they’re not interested in pursuing Butler, a source tells The Herald.
