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The Knicks are coming off an exhilarating win against the Spurs to clinch the NBA Cup, but their focus still remains on the NBA Finals. With an expensive roster and few trade chips outside of their core players, it’s unclear how or if team president Leon Rose will go about addressing any weaknesses he feels exist on the roster, but at the moment, the front office is happy with how the team is playing, according to SNY’s Ian Begley.
“As we sit here today, the Knicks are not in a rush to make a huge deal,” Begley said (video link).
He reiterated previous speculation that the Knicks would be interested in making an offer for Pelicans guard Jose Alvarado if New Orleans makes him available. He adds that New York would likely be one of a number of teams interested in Dennis Schroder if the Kings decide to move him, but notes that Schroder’s larger contract and league status could make the logistics of a deal more complicated.
He also cites several big men the Knicks could pursue as backup insurance for the often-injured Mitchell Robinson, noting that the team has shown interest in Sixers’ backup Andre Drummond in the past.
We have more from the Knicks:
- Jalen Brunson was named MVP of the NBA Cup tournament, joining LeBron James and Giannis Antetokounmpo as the first three to win the award, writes Steve Popper for Newsday (subscriber link). Brunson took the opportunity to display his leadership and team-forward mindset. “Can I say something?” Brunson said. “OG Anunoby, Tyler Kolek, Jordan Clarkson, Mitchell Robinson, they played their [butts] off tonight. Without them, we don’t win this. We got down 10, whatever it was and we found a way to win. That’s it. That’s going to be our motto going forward. We’re going to find a way.” Head coach Mike Brown offered high praise for his star point guard’s approach. “He’s an unbelievable competitor, but an unbelievable teammate,” Brown said. “I’ve been around those guys. You’re talking about Tim Duncan, Steph Curry, those guys, [De’Aaron Fox, James]. Those guys all mention their teammates because bang, bang, bang, they know this is a team sport at the end of the day.“
- Part of what made the Knicks’ defeat of the Spurs so exciting is the proof of concept it showed of Rose’s main focus this offseason: adding depth that could help swing a game when things got tight, writes Kristian Winfield of the New York Daily News. It was losing to the Pacers team that New York will face on Thursday that prompted the directive to create a bench unit that could survive for stretches, and even without Miles McBride and Landry Shamet, the Knicks showed on Tuesday that their bench could do just that. Jordan Clarkson and Tyler Kolek combined for 29 points on 5-12 shooting from three, and Mitchell Robinson contributed 10 offensive rebounds and two blocks while bothering Victor Wembanyama on drives multiple times. By following the lessons taken from the Pacers, Winfield writes, the Knicks have managed to level up last year’s Eastern Conference Finalist squad.
- The Knicks have chosen not to raise a banner for their tournament win, but what they’re taking home is far more valuable, writes Mike Vaccaro of the New York Post. That is the statement to a national audience that they belong in the conversation for true title contenders this season. The Knicks beat the team that handed the Thunder their second loss of the season, and according to Vaccaro, people are noticing.
The Lakers are tied for the fourth-best record in the league, but head coach JJ Redick isn’t satisfied, demanding that the team lock in more on defense, writes Dave McMenamin for ESPN. Luka Doncic took those words to heart and says he’s committed to leading the way.
“We talked about a lot, not just that, but [Redick] was right,” Doncic said. “You got to get a little bit more, especially from the star players. So that’s on us. That’s on me. And we just got to give more, especially at the start the game. We got to start the game better.”
The Lakers have the NBA’s 20th-best defense entering Wednesday’s game while ranking 23rd in opponent fast-break points and 28th in opponent three-point percentage. According to McMenamin, with the time off afforded to the Lakers as a result of the NBA Cup schedule, the coaching staff walked the team through specific examples of where it’s lacking and what it needs to do better.
McMenamin adds that Sunday’s win against the Suns was the Lakers’ first contest following the edict issued by the coaches, and the results were on display during an eight-minute stretch of the third quarter in which Phoenix was held scoreless.
“We should be like that,” Doncic said. “Like JJ said, ‘We told on ourselves’ and we should look at that clip. Phoenix is one of the most physical teams in the NBA, so we did a pretty good job there.”
We have more from the Lakers:
- Deandre Ayton has been ruled out for Thursday’s game against the Jazz with left elbow soreness, per Law Murray of The Athletic (Twitter link). Ayton played a key role in Sunday’s win against the Suns, scoring 20 points on 11 shots and adding 13 rebounds and two steals. Austin Reaves remains out with the left calf strain that sidelined him on Sunday, while Gabe Vincent is questionable due to back soreness.
- Dalton Knecht was assigned to the South Bay Lakers G League team on Monday to get some playing time while the team was on its short break. It was his first time being sent to the G League, according to Khobi Price of the Orange County Register, who notes that Knecht has only played 56 minutes over the last month. “He’s gonna get opportunities on this team,” Redick said. “He’s already had some opportunities. He’s played well in some. He’s gonna help us at some point. But right now, he needs to play, and he needs to have fun playing.” Knecht responded by posting 30 points with six made three-pointers in his South Bay debut (Twitter video link).
- Jarred Vanderbilt rejoined the Lakers’ rotation for the first time in more than a month on Sunday and quickly made himself a critical part of the win, writes Dan Woike for The Athletic. The 6’8″ forward had six offensive rebounds in 15 minutes and added a three-pointer, a block, and two steals. It was only Vanderbilt’s second game since mid-November, but he took the demotion in stride. “It’s a long season. It’s still early, so I know whether guys getting injured or something like that, the opportunity (was) gonna come back around,” Vanderbilt said. “And the biggest thing is being ready for it mentally. And obviously doing your part on the court and, showing up to practice and being a good teammate and stuff like that, but yeah, my main thing was just staying ready. ‘Cause I knew eventually, at some point, opportunity was gonna come and I wanted to be ready for it.“
The Celtics have been one of the surprise stories of the 2025/26 season, boasting the 10th-best record in the league through their first 26 games despite seeing superstar forward Jayson Tatum tear his Achilles in last season’s playoffs and then losing most of their big man rotation in free agency and trades.
That success has given team president Brad Stevens more flexibility as he considers whether to push chips in or accumulate more assets at the trade deadline, Jay King writes for The Athletic.
“We will not put a ceiling on this group,” Stevens said. “If it makes sense for us to look for things that can help us, we certainly will. But it all has to be within good deals, and it all has to be within the ultimate goal, which is the North Star of retooling so we’re in a position to compete for what we want to compete for (a championship).”
King notes that Boston is currently around $12.1MM over the luxury tax line, so a move to shed salary could help the team’s financial situation. However, the Celtics have won 15 of their last 23 games, fueled in large part by Jaylen Brown, who is sixth in the league in scoring at 29.3 points per game, and may find themselves too good to compete for a high draft pick.
“I think everybody, or a lot of teams, are really still very much in, ‘Let’s see how everything looks as time goes on,'” Stevens said. “Everybody’s a work in progress. What’s the difference between third and ninth in the East right now? There’s hardly anything, right? And I think that we’re all still trying to figure out who we are and what we can be.”
Stevens declined to specify what areas he could target via trade, but King speculates that a move to shore up the frontcourt would make the most sense. Anfernee Simons, on an expiring $27.7MM contract, stands out as a trade candidate should the team seek to improve its roster.
One detail that will likely play a determining role in how the Celtics proceed this season is Tatum’s status as he looks to return from an Achilles tear that has kept him off the court since May.
Tatum has reportedly looked better than expected during his rehabilitation, but there are still no concrete expectations.
“We’re not putting a timeline on it as we haven’t the whole time,” Stevens said. “One of the things that everybody can see (is) that we didn’t apply for a (disabled player exception) this year, which was a conscious decision for a lot of reasons. But the reality is he’s not going to be back until he’s 110 percent healthy and he feels good about it.
“… Obviously, he’s itching to play. Obviously he hates watching. But he’s also very cognizant of the need to meet every threshold and why there are those things that are put in place. … There’s the strength thresholds he has to meet. And then, after that, several weeks of progressions, right, from the standpoint of scripted against small groups, scripted against bigger groups, scripted in 5-on-5, unscripted random, all the way up through those. But it’s a long progression, and it’s almost like, once you hit the strength, then you do your thresholds of a progression of play, and then you’re also reconditioning to play real minutes, whatever that looks like.”
Alex Sarr is expected to make his return on Thursday against the Spurs from the adductor injury that has kept him sidelined for the month of December. The Wizards released their injury report (via Twitter), which didn’t include either Sarr or Bilal Coulibaly, who has missed the last four games with an oblique injury.
Sarr has played in 16 of the Wizards’ 24 games this season, averaging 19.1 points, 8.6 rebounds, and 3.3 assists in just 29.7 minutes per night. He also has managed to raise his field goal percentage from 39.4% in his rookie season to 51.5% as a second-year big man.
Coulibaly’s season has been derailed multiple times due to injuries. He has only managed to suit up for 12 contests and struggled in that time to find his rhythm offensively, averaging 8.8 points in 27.2 minutes per game while posting career lows in field goal percentage (37.4%) and three-point percentage (26.8%).
Still, the return of the two young Frenchmen will undoubtedly come as a relief to the Wizards, who boast the worst defensive rating in the league by a wide margin. Sarr and Coulibaly are averaging a combined 3.0 blocks and 2.1 steals per game this season and are expected to serve as the backbone of the team’s defensive structure. The two have played just eight games together this fall.
The Wizards’ injury report notes that Malaki Branham is questionable with a right thumb sprain, while Khris Middleton (right knee contusion) and Corey Kispert (right thumb distal phalanx fracture) remain out.
After starting the season on a five-game win streak, the Bulls have cooled off significantly and enter Wednesday’s contest against the Cavaliers having lost eight of their last nine games. Notably, the one win in that span, a 129-126 victory over the Hornets, was punctuated by starting center Nikola Vucevic being benched for the final 19 minutes of play in favor of Zach Collins and Jalen Smith.
According to Julia Poe of the Chicago Tribune, that decision only underscored one of the prevailing questions of the season: what the 35-year-old Vucevic is doing with this young Bulls team that favors a fast and frenetic style, as opposed to his slower, more deliberate pace.
“Those questions do creep into your mind and you think about it and you get caught into it, especially when things are not going well,” Vucevic said. “I think it’s natural, it’s human nature, but you just have to find a way to limit it as much as possible.”
The Bulls still need Vucevic, Poe writes, but that win over Charlotte could help them picture a world in which the team’s longtime center isn’t starting anymore. However, according to coach Billy Donovan, there are no changes on the immediate horizon.
“I wouldn’t want to take one game and sit there and say, ‘OK, after one game, we’re going to change everything,’” Donovan said. “I don’t think that would be fair.”
As Poe notes in a separate article, Donovan returned to his usual big man rotation down the stretch of Chicago’s next game, a 114-104 loss to the Pelicans, keeping Vucevic on the floor while Collins and Smith were limited to 12 and 13 minutes, respectively.
We have more on the Bulls:
- Matas Buzelis has been tasked primarily with guarding bigger forwards for the first part of the season, but Donovan’s willingness to utilize two-big lineups could result in the second-year forward defending more on the perimeter in games to come, writes Kyle Williams of the Chicago Sun-Times. “I think Matas has the foot speed and length to be able to do that,” Donovan said. “Certain guys will be a little bit more dynamic and [a] little bit more challenging, but I feel pretty confident with his foot speed and his length that he can guard multiple positions.” Williams notes that, according to Donovan, any defensive change along those lines wouldn’t impact how Buzelis is used offensively.
- Despite public assurances from VP of basketball operations Arturas Karnisovas that the Bulls plan to keep Coby White, there are questions within the organization around whether the team will be willing to pay the guard when he hits unrestricted free agency next summer, Poe writes in a trade-season-centered article. If Chicago isn’t planning on signing White to a deal similar to the one Josh Giddey got last summer, the best move would be to shop him now, Poe opines. The Bulls under Karnisovas have been tentative when it comes to in-season deals, Poe adds, but failing to improve the roster either in the short or long term would be a major misstep by the front office.
- After deciding to run it back this fall after a strong 20-game finish to last season, the Bulls should view their more recent 5-15 stretch as evidence to tank, suggests Joe Cowley of the Chicago Sun-Times. According to Cowley, given that the Bulls don’t have a “real” All-Star and aren’t considered a desirable free agent landing spot, a full tank is needed ahead of the loaded 2026 draft. Otherwise, Cowley says, the team will once again end up in a worst-of-all-worlds middle zone.
Billionaire executive Laurene Powell Jobs is selling her stake in Monumental Sports & Entertainment, the Wizards‘ parent company, according to Scott Soshnick and Eben Novy-Williams of Sportico.
Powell Jobs, the widow of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, has deals in place with two separate buyers. One is Qatar Investment Authority (QIA), a Qatari sovereign wealth fund, while the other is Arctos Partners, a private equity firm.
It’s unclear what percentage of Monumental Sports & Entertainment each of those two buyers will take on in their respective transactions, per Soshnick and Novy-Williams. Powell Jobs reportedly assumed control of about 20% of the company when she bought in back in 2017, but she sold part of her stake in 2022.
According to Sportico, the enterprise is being valued at $7.2 billion in the sale. To be clear, that valuation doesn’t just apply to the Wizards, but to the entirety of Monumental Sports & Entertainment’s holdings — the company also controls the NHL’s Washington Capitals and the WNBA’s Washington Mystics, as well as Capital One Arena and Monumental Sports Network.
When Sportico published its latest NBA franchise valuations in October, the Wizards came in at $4.78 billion, making the NBA franchise the most valuable asset in Monumental’s portfolio.
QIA previously bought a 5% stake in Monumental in 2023, according to Soshnick and Novy-Williams, who note that the deal made the group the first sovereign wealth fund to directly invest in a major U.S. sports team. Arctos, meanwhile, has stakes in several franchises across U.S. sports, including the Warriors.
Ted Leonsis remains the controlling owner of Monumental and the Wizards. Other minority shareholders, per Sportico, include billionaire Jeffrey Skoll entrepreneur, BET co-founder Sheila Johnson and Washington Nationals owner Mark Lerner.
Hawks guard Trae Young has been listed as questionable for Thursday’s game in Charlotte, according to the team (Twitter link), and has a chance to play for the first time since October 29.
Young went down with a right knee injury in Atlanta’s fifth game of the regular season and was later diagnosed with a sprained MCL. He has been sidelined for 22 contests since then and will no longer be eligible for end-of-season awards, including All-NBA, since he won’t be able to meet the 65-game threshold.
In his four full games prior to the injury, Young averaged 20.8 points and 9.5 assists per contest, but was struggling with his shot, knocking down just 36.4% of his field goal attempts, including 5-of-26 three-pointers (19.2%).
The Hawks have been playing pretty well despite missing their top offensive play-maker. Following a 1-3 start, Atlanta has won 14 of 23 games and now holds a 15-12 record. Jalen Johnson, Nickeil Alexander-Walker, and Vit Krejci are among the players who have taken on additional ball-handling responsibilities with Young unavailable.
Young practiced with the College Park Skyhawks (Atlanta’s G League affiliate) on Tuesday and with the Hawks on Wednesday, an indication that his return was close. If he’s not cleared to play on Thursday vs. the Hornets, his next opportunity will be on Friday when the Hawks return home to host San Antonio.
There has been some recent trade speculation about Young, who could become a free agent next summer if he declines his 2026/27 option worth nearly $49MM, but ESPN’s Shams Charania recently reported that the Hawks are hopeful the guard’s return will “elevate” a team that has held its own without him.
With several players missing due to injuries and both of their centers on the sidelines after having fouled out, the Nuggets relied on their depth to secure a 128-125 overtime win over Houston on Monday. Bruce Brown, Tim Hardaway Jr., and second-year forward Spencer Jones joined Jamal Murray and Cameron Johnson in Denver’s closing lineup.
“This is why they brought all of us in this summer, right?” Brown said after the victory, according to Bennett Durando of The Denver Post (subscription required). “For this exact situation. People go down. You never really have a season when everyone is just fully healthy for 82 games.”
Brown and Hardaway, who both rank among the Nuggets’ top six players in total minutes so far this season, signed minimum-salary contracts with the team as free agents over the summer. The other major offseason depth addition was center Jonas Valanciunas, who fouled out on Monday but has been an important rotation piece in his role as Nikola Jokic‘s backup this fall, Durando writes in another Denver Post story.
As Durando observes, Valanciunas has already appeared in more games (25) than the player for whom he was traded (Dario Saric) played last season (16). And while he’s only averaging 12.8 minutes per game, the veteran big man has made the most of his limited role, with 8.4 points and 4.6 rebounds per night. The Nuggets are still being outscored with Jokic off the floor, but their net rating when the three-time MVP is on the bench (-1.2) is the best it has been since 2020/21 by a significant margin.
Here’s more on the Nuggets:
- With Aaron Gordon and Christian Braun out, the Nuggets haven’t missed a beat offensively, largely due to the way that role players like Jones and Peyton Watson have stepped up, Durando writes for The Denver Post. Watson has averaged 14.2 points per game on .529/.429/.694 shooting as a starter, while Jones has put up 8.2 PPG on .564/.448/.583 shooting in that role. The Nuggets’ lineup with those two alongside Jokic, Murray, and Johnson has a +19.4 net rating and a staggering 136.9 offensive rating in 143 minutes. “I did not expect us to score the ball like we have,” head coach David Adelman admitted. Both Watson and Jones will be eligible for restricted free agency at season’s end.
- Watson exited Monday’s game due to what the team referred to as a right trunk contusion. “It was bone on bone,” Adelman said after the win (Twitter link via Durando). “… It could be totally fine tomorrow. But it hurt him. It was one of those stingers that he just couldn’t get himself warmed up again. … Nothing long-term as far as I understand. Just probably a bone bruise.” Watson told Vinny Benedetto of The Denver Gazette (Twitter link) on Tuesday that he was kneed in between the hip and rib areas and that it hurts to do things like laugh and cough, but he has no structural damage.
- Nuggets wing Julian Strawther was available to play on Monday after being inactive for 12 consecutive games due to a back injury (Twitter link via Benedetto). However, he was a DNP-CD. Strawther has averaged just 7.9 minutes per game in nine outings so far this season after playing 21.3 MPG in 65 games in 2024/25.
After losing 22 of their first 25 games, the Pelicans are 2-0 since Jordan Poole returned from a quad strain. Poole, whose 18-game injury absence was the longest of his NBA career, admitted it was difficult to be patient during his recovery and rehab process, per Rod Walker of NOLA.com (subscription required).
“It’s one of those things where no matter what I did or no matter what treatment or recovery work that I did, the injury itself just needed time,” Poole said. “I was basically doing 24 hours around the clock of treatment and recovery trying to make the most of the opportunity of having time off. But also pushing myself that when I come back, I’m able to make an impact.”
Poole came off the bench last Thursday vs. Portland and on Sunday in Chicago, but he was an important contributor in both games, scoring a total of 38 points and handing out seven assists. New Orleans outscored the Trail Blazers and Bulls by 19 points in his 53 minutes on the court.
Pelicans interim head coach James Borrego referred to Poole as a “savvy scorer” and lauded him for his ability to keep “constant pressure” on opposing defenses.
“I think just his overall impact on the game is tremendous,” Borrego said. “He can go on a big run by himself. He can turn a two-point game into a six-point or eight-point game quickly on both ends of the floor. He’s coming with the right mentality. He’s not trying to force it. He’s trying to play within our system and be a team guy and that’s what we need.”
We have more from around the Southwest Division:
- No. 1 overall pick Cooper Flagg continues to look more comfortable in his first NBA season, writes Christian Clark of The Athletic. On Monday, the Mavericks forward became the first 18-year-old in league history to score at least 40 points in a game, as he racked up 42 points, seven rebounds, and six assists in an overtime loss to Utah. Flagg will celebrate his 19th birthday this Sunday.
- Spurs big man Victor Wembanyama was playing with a heavy heart on Tuesday in the NBA Cup final vs. New York. As Tom Orsborn of The San Antonio Express-News (subscription required) writes, Wembanyama’s grandmother passed away on Tuesday morning. The 21-year-old told reporters during his post-game media session that he “just lost somebody today” and – after taking two questions – made an early exit alongside a team staffer.
- Could a deep run in the NBA Cup be a precursor to a deep run in the playoffs? Given that the Pacers made a conference finals and then an NBA Finals after losing the 2023 NBA Cup and the Thunder won a title after finishing as the runner-up in the 2024 Cup, Kevin Pelton of ESPN considers whether postseason success could be around the corner for the Spurs.
- For their part, the Spurs are looking forward to building on the experience of playing higher-stakes games early in the season, as Michael C. Wright of ESPN relays. “Sky is the limit,” rookie guard Dylan Harper said. “It’s our second game (with a healthy roster). It’s nothing to overreact about. We have won a lot of close games in the Cup or in the season in general. To be on this side is definitely a good learning experience. It teaches us a lot about ourselves, and it’s good that we have a whole lot of room to grow knowing what we have done up to this point.”