Warriors head coach Steve Kerr admits that tanking is a major concern for the league, but he doesn’t have any simple solutions, Nick Friedell of The Athletic writes.
“Ironically, the last few years, it seems like it has not been at the forefront like it is this year because of the play-in (tournament),” Kerr said. “More teams felt like they were in it. This year, it’s pronounced just because of the circumstances and where a lot of teams are — injuries, starting rebuilds, that sort of thing. I know the league is really concerned about it, as they should be. It’s not good for the fans, for the league itself. They’re considering everything. It’s a really tough issue.”
Kerr also sees the issue from the perspective of teams jockeying for lottery positions, knowing that one of the top picks in the 2026 draft could be a franchise-altering player.
“The bottom line is you kinda have to get lucky in the lottery,” Kerr said. “It’s what makes this issue so tricky, is that great players — Steph (Curry) and Tim Duncan, Wemby (Victor Wembanyama) — they’re not only team-changing, but they’re franchise-changing, for even beyond the scope of those guys’ careers. And so there’s only a handful of players that can do that, that are that valuable. And so teams are all clamoring for them. Sometimes, you don’t know who they are. Steph was the seventh pick. Giannis (Antetokounmpo) was the (15th) pick. So it’s not always the first couple guys, but more often than not, the first pick has an opportunity to be that guy, and that’s what creates this issue.”
Here’s more from the Western Conference:
- Nuggets guard Christian Braun has appeared in four games since returning from a left ankle sprain. Braun missed nearly two months of action previously before an aborted attempt to come back last month from the same ailment. He played in only three January games before the ankle issue grounded him again and realizes now he wasn’t at full strength last month. “I think the biggest (factor) was, ‘Can I jump in the air?’” he told Bennett Durando of the Denver Post. “Obviously, they do all their tests (on an injury) and they do a really good job, but truthfully, I couldn’t jump. And if everybody has seen me play, I jump off my left leg a ton. So I’m just navigating, like, ‘Before I come back this next time, I need to make sure I can jump. I can run full speed and I can jump.’ It sounds really elementary and really basic, but that’s the truth. The explosion just wasn’t there.”
- Commissioner Adam Silver selected Brandon Ingram to replace Stephen Curry in the All-Star Game. Spurs forward Harrison Barnes felt teammates Stephon Castle and De’Aaron Fox were more worthy candidates. “We’re No. 2 in the West,” Barnes told Jeff McDonald of the San Antonio Express News. “Teams below us have two All-Stars. I don’t know a case where if you’re talking about having an impact on winning, either of them shouldn’t be selected and/or at least under consideration.”
- Blake Hinson‘s two-way contract with the Jazz is a two-year deal, per Spotrac contributor Keith Smith (Twitter link). The 26-year-old small forward is in the midst of a standout year in the G League, where he’s averaging 21.8 points and 5.8 rebounds with Portland’s affiliate, the Rip City Remix. Hinson signed his new contract on Monday.

Maybe everyone should just make the play in. Compete in a FA Cup style format, lols.
Or just do the draft behind closed doors and walk out with an envelope for each pick and tell everybody this is how it went down.
HB is 100% right. Castle being passed over is ridiculous
Well, if you compare him to Ingram statistically he comes up short. He’s played 9 fewer games, he’s 3rd on the Spurs in min/gm (30.4) and ppg 16.7) while Ingram is 2nd on the Raptors at 34.0 min/gm and leads them in ppg (22.0).
Ingram’s also a more efficient shooter on over 5 more FGA/gm. So what would make Castle a better choice?
Tanking is what it is. Sometimes you have to chase high picks. Why does it even matter? The warriors tanked once but Kerr would probably defend it. Then they made horrible picks (Wiseman) they could have had Ball. Then they made another horrible pick (Kuminga) they could have had Wagner. The warriors haven’t made any good 1st round picks since Curry and Thompson.
Warrior scouts wanted Wagner but the owner over ruled and wanted Kuminga. Same with Wiseman. Why MDJ doen’t let the owner make decsisions like Myer did. Moody and Podz were the recent picks that did work out.
It is kinda hard to win games when you lose your starting lineup for most of the season.
Funny how all 3 of their allstars and their #1 defensive player was out and its called tanking.
It seems people like to criticize without knowing all the facts.