While Thunder general manager Sam Presti covered a wide range of topics in his end-of-season exit interview, he spent more time defending Shai Gilgeous-Alexander than he did on any other subject, according to Joe Mussatto of The Oklahoman, who notes that Presti strongly pushed back on the notion – pushed in some corners of social media – that flopping and grifting are crucial to his star player’s success.
“Relative to Shai and the narrative on that, he’s playing against six people,” Presti said. “He’s got five defenders, and the sixth defender is social media.”
Presti also took issue with how coaches used their post-game media availability to try to influence referees and push narratives.
“The post-game press conference has turned into the bully pulpit to create competitive advantage,” he said. “It used to be you’d get up there, you’d talk about your own team. Now everyone gets up there and they talk about the officials and they discredit the other team.”
We have more from around the Northwest Division:
- The Nuggets have struggled to maintain their Western Conference dominance since winning the championship in 2023. They haven’t made it back to the conference finals, and injuries have been a recurring issue. At a certain point, the health problems constantly holding the team back become more than just bad luck, Mark Kiszla of the Denver Gazette argues, citing Robert Weissfeld, a medical researcher who focuses on injury recovery and kinesiology. “Following trauma, which includes injury, pain and other kinds of stress, some muscles become chronically weak, perhaps as a way to protect the (affected) area from further stress,” Weissfeld said. “The problem is not in the muscles themselves, which are generally healthy. The deficit is the signals reaching the muscles from the brain. Like turning on a light with its dimmer switch set too low, the muscles receive insufficient current to activate them normally.” Weissfeld believes that correcting muscle function could help oft-injured players like Aaron Gordon get back on solid ground.
- As Karl-Anthony Towns has helped lead the Knicks to a 2-1 lead in the NBA Finals, it’s fair to wonder if the Timberwolves made a mistake trading the talented big man, Chris Hine writes for the Star Tribune. The goal of the deal was to maximize the team’s flexibility around cornerstone Anthony Edwards on an increasingly expensive roster following the trade for Rudy Gobert. If they hadn’t moved Towns, Naz Reid would likely no longer be on the roster, Hine says. However, Towns has also shown his value against a player like Victor Wembanyama, whose Spurs appear to have overtaken the Wolves in the Western Conference’s pecking order. Hine concludes that the Gobert trade is likely the move most responsible for Towns’ eventual departure, and he remains unconvinced that ownership would have paid the luxury bills required to keep the frontcourt duo together alongside Edwards.
- The Timberwolves recently unveiled their new uniforms and courts for the 2026/27 season. The choices made reflect a decision from new owners Alex Rodriguez and Marc Lore to pay fan service and give Minnesotans the nostalgia they had been clamoring for, writes Jon Krawczynski of The Athletic. “The team is the fans’ team,” Rodriguez said. “This is what the fans wanted.” The uniforms pay tribute to the heyday of Kevin Garnett’s time with the team, an aesthetic that is now considered iconic to the franchise. “We were very thoughtful and diligent throughout the entire process to make sure that we did hit those marks and it was representative of the past, but really drove something new toward the future,” said chief marketing officer Mike Grahl.

The Gobert trade wasn’t very good I agree. Trading KAT was reasonable though. KAT is a native New Yorker who is very passionate about his family, all of whom still lives in New York. That guy wasn’t gonna be nearly as happy or motivated with any team outside of New York.
That is a very good point…
Outside of NY I doubt we see the level of buy in he has had until game 3 when the old KAT returned…
But that could also be the physicality of the playoffs… Which the Hawks, 76ers and Cavs did not bring…
Presti is making a good point about coaches taking the fine to influence the whistle…
It has been that way for over a decade and is the part of the sport that needs the most attention…
The human error element of the referees… Which also includes the errors that gambling brings with bribery…