After winning 26 games a year ago, the Nets will enter the final weekend of the 2025/26 season with a 20-60 record, their worst mark in a decade. All of that losing has taken a mental toll, starting center Nic Claxton admits, but the 26-year-old is trying to find the silver linings in a challenging year and is hoping better things are in store for the team beginning in ’26/27, per Brian Lewis of the New York Post.

“You can’t let it affect your preparation and your mindset. Even this year I struggled with that some. Going into games you have to go in with the mindset, ‘OK, we’re going to win this game,'” Claxton said. “But as far as wins and losses, I get what (head coach) Jordi (Fernandez) is saying. It doesn’t always come with the scoreboard. It can be seeing our rookies go out and spread their wings and gain confidence. … It can be me maturing and finding that peace within myself no matter what’s going on out there on the court. … Then next year hopefully we get some more actual wins.”

Claxton, who has averaged 11.7 points, 6.9 rebounds, and a career-high 3.7 assists in 27.8 minutes per game across 69 outings this season, has missed the past three games due to a right fifth finger sprain and may not play again this spring. Although he underwent an MRI on that finger this week, the big man is optimistic that the injury won’t require surgery, Lewis tweets.

“No, I don’t think so,” Claxton said. “Give it some time to rest. I think it’ll heal up. Not trying to have any procedures.”

Here are a few more notes on the Nets:

  • Fernandez’s career winning percentage as a head coach has dropped to .284 (46-116) as a result of Brooklyn’s poor season, but he said this week that he appreciates the trust the organization has placed in him and that holding one of the NBA’s 30 head coaching job is “very special” for him. “This job means a lot to me and my family,” Fernandez said, per C.J. Holmes of The New York Daily News, adding that Brooklyn is “home for us and will be home forever.” The second-year coach is hopeful he’ll get the opportunity to lead the team out of its rebuild and back towards contention. “My goal is not just to keep it but help the organization with the plan that we have and build success and sustain it,” he said. “Good things are going to happen in the long run.”
  • The Nets weren’t among the teams pursuing Giannis Antetokounmpo ahead of February’s trade deadline, but they may be in better position to explore a trade for the Bucks star this summer, Lewis writes for the New York Post. Brooklyn’s front office has long viewed Antetokounmpo as its “white whale,” says Lewis, and the team wants to become more competitive beginning in 2026/27. “They’ll make calls (on the biggest stars),” one source told The Post. “They’ve made calls in the past.”
  • The draft lottery reform measures the NBA is considering implementing may benefit the Nets, who have stockpiled a surplus of future first-round picks to supplement their own selections, but the concepts reported so far look like shortsighted solutions that will have problematic unintended consequences, Lewis argues in another story for the Post.
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