After going 46-118 over the past two seasons, the Nets have some incentive to take a step forward in 2026/27. They won’t control their own first-rounder in the 2027 draft, so another year spent near the bottom of the standings won’t necessarily net them a lottery pick. Still, general manager Sean Marks was somewhat evasive when asked on Monday just how aggressively the Nets will try to accelerate their rebuild this offseason, writes Brian Lewis of The New York Post.
“It depends a little on what becomes available. You just never know,” Marks said. “We’ve put this Nets team and franchise in a place to be able to be opportunistic. Does that fit our timeline? Does this particular trade work for us right now?
“You can always add talent, but does that talent fit our approach and for the development of these young guys, fit in with the group we have? So, those are discussions I look forward to having with (head coach) Jordi (Fernandez) and the rest of the coaching staff, front office, mostly (team owner) Joe (Tsai) — when we want to add and how we want to add.”
Besides considering how vigorously to pursue outside talent, the Nets will also face a major decision on their leading scorer, with Michael Porter Jr. eligible for a contract extension as he enters the final year of his current deal. Porter will earn $40.8MM next season and would be come an unrestricted free agent in July 2027 if he’s not extended before then.
“This summer there’s going to be a lot of those discussions, whether it’s with Michael, there’s a variety of decisions we have to make with a variety of our players on the team,” Marks said, according to C.J. Holmes of The New York Daily News (subscription required). “But in terms of a long-term build, short-term build, I think we’ve positioned ourselves over the last year or two to maintain flexibility and have optionality.”
Here are a few more notes on the Nets as their offseason gets underway:
- Speaking on Monday to reporters, including Holmes, Porter suggested he enjoyed his first year in Brooklyn despite the team’s poor record and would be very open to extending his stay with the Nets. “If it was up to me, I would love to sign an extension with this franchise,” he said. “I would love to spend many, many years in Brooklyn and make this my home and build and watch this franchise take off. … I think as a team we can really have something to build off of.”
- Nets forward Noah Clowney, who will be eligible for a rookie scale extension beginning in July, said on Monday that he felt like his third NBA season was a mixed bag, as Lewis relays. The 21-year-old set new career highs with 12.3 points and 4.1 rebounds per game but believes he’s capable of more defensively. “I progressed this year, maybe not as much as I wanted to, which I thought I would have,” Clowney said. “But I got better at some different things, and I got more experience. So I’m gonna take that for what it is. I got a lot better at getting to the rim. (My handle) can get a lot better, and that would prevent my turnovers. … Defensively, it’s just always been consistency. I can do it at times, and other times I just don’t.”
- The deal that sent Josh Minott from Boston to Brooklyn in February was essentially a salary dump from the Celtics’ perspective, but the fourth-year forward finished the season strong with the Nets, averaging 10.8 PPG on .491/.395/.800 shooting in 16 games despite battling an ankle injury. Could Minott, whose deal includes a $2.6MM team option for 2026/27, be part of the club’s young core going forward? “I think he’s the best young prospect on the Nets,” a league source told Lewis (subscription required). “He’s probably better than any of their first-round picks, and he’s damn near the same age.”
- After finishing with the NBA’s third-worst record, the Nets will enter the draft lottery tied for the best odds at the No. 1 pick (14.1%), but their single most likely draft slot is No. 6 (26.0%), as Lewis outlines.

“You can always add talent, but does that talent fit our approach and for the development of these young guys, fit in with the group we have? So, those are discussions I look forward to having with (head coach) Jordi (Fernandez) and the rest of the coaching staff, front office, mostly (team owner) Joe (Tsai) — when we want to add and how we want to add.”
This says to me. We don’t know WTF we are doing. Nets don’t have a core. Basically throwing darts and seeing what sticks. All their talent is too young to predict who is staying. What they need to do is trade tor a young vet. Or sign a FA young vet to build around. Porter and Claxton are nice talents. But too old for this rebuild. Silver should give them 1st pick. NYC is a good place for AJ. He can be major there and for NBA.
How are they too old for this rebuild in their mid to late 20s?