Wembanyama Suffers Concussion After Banging Chin In Game 2
9:54pm: Wembanyama has a concussion and will undergo further testing on Wednesday, Charania tweets. Wembanyama must now have at least 48 hours of inactivity and recovery, then hit several benchmarks while being symptom-free before he is cleared to play.
8:18pm: Spurs star center Victor Wembanyama was ruled out for the remainder of Game 2 of his team’s game against the Trail Blazers on Tuesday after he entered concussion protocol. The team made the announcement during the second quarter, ESPN’s Shams Charania tweets.
Wembanyama was injured when he stumbled while driving toward the basket and banged his chin against the floor (Twitter video link).
The big man had five points, four rebounds, a block and an assist in 12 minutes before suffering the injury. He collected his Defensive Player of the Year award prior to the game but the mood among the team and home crowd changed dramatically after Wembanyama fell in the lane and headed to the locker room.
With Wembanyama now in concussion protocol, the No. 2 seeded Spurs suddenly look much more vulnerable. They won Game 1 111-98 behind his 36-point eruption.
Wembanyama will have to meet certain benchmarks and exhibit that he’s symptom-free before clearing the concussion protocol. Until he can return, Luke Kornet will play a more prominent role and another veteran big man, Kelly Olynyk, could also see his minutes spike.
Kevin Durant Cleared To Play Game 2
Kevin Durant will play in Game 2 of the Rockets’ series against the Lakers on Tuesday night, ESPN’s Shams Charania reports.
Houston’s star forward missed Game 1 due to a knee tendon bruise after suffering the injury in practice last week. Rockets coach Ime Udoka said during his pregame press conference that Durant, who tested out the knee during pregame warmups, wouldn’t be on a minutes restriction if he plays.
“The pain tolerance is one thing, but actually moving and feeling comfortable doing all the movements is going to be the biggest thing,” Udoka said after the team’s practice this week.
The Lakers, who are operating without Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves, collected a 107-98 Game 1 victory as the Rockets struggled offensively without Durant. The 16-time All-Star averaged 26.0 points per game this season in 78 outings this season and has averaged 29.3 PPG in 170 career playoff contests.
He’ll match up against LeBron James for the first time since the 2018 NBA Finals, when Durant played for Golden State and James led Cleveland.
Central Notes: Duren, Rivers, Donovan, Bulls
Jalen Duren has carefully studied the replay of the Pistons’ Game 1 loss to No. 8 seed Orlando. Duren has taken heavy criticism for only contributing eight points on four shot attempts and seven rebounds in the 112-101 defeat.
“For me, just being more aggressive, finding my spots and attacking more; I think I could have done a better job of that,” Duren said after Tuesday’s practice, per Coty Davis of the Detroit News. “I just spent time watching the film over, and, over, and over again, seeing where I wasn’t most effective at and just trying to capitalize on that next game.”
The All-Star center acknowledged that the Magic had an effective strategy to neutralize him. The Pistons will have to develop some counters for Game 2 on Wednesday.
“They just had a good game plan, packing the paint. Anytime I had catches deep, they collapsed on me,” Duren said. “They were coming from everywhere. I did not get as many shot attempts (four) as I should have. There were times when I did catch myself one-on-one, and I’ve seen those moments before, and I want to get more of those opportunities. But for the most part, they were collapsing from anywhere.”
Here’s more from the Central Division:
- Doc Rivers’ stint with the Bucks is over and he insists it was “100%” his decision and not management’s edict. “It wasn’t a hard decision. It’s probably on your mind your last couple years,” Rivers said to Andscape’s Marc J. Spears. “It had nothing to do with the season or anything like that. There’s times where you feel like you’ve had your run. I still love it. I still love coaching. But I don’t ever want my job to become work. I guess that is the best way of saying that. It’s more of a labor of love. So, I just felt like it was time. It was not like some lightning strike or something like that. I told ownership that a while ago.”
- The Bulls are also seeking a new coach after parting ways with Billy Donovan on Tuesday. According to ESPN’s Shams Charania (video link), Donovan was offered the opportunity to not only remain as Chicago’s coach but also a front office job as an alternative. He chose instead to walk away. “They offered him any amount of years that he wanted to stay as coach, any type of extension he wanted, even a high-ranking managerial role,” Charania said. “But Billy Donovan wanted to keep coaching and he actually had an option in his contract for next season and he decided to decline it and step down as head coach.”
- The Bulls currently hold the ninth and 15th overall picks in this year’s draft with hope of moving up from No. 9 during the draft lottery. The way it shakes out and the choices that they make will have a cascading effect on the roster, Joe Cowley of the Chicago Sun-Times writes. Players such as Anfernee Simons, Leonard Miller, Zach Collins and Nick Richards could be impacted by which rookies the Bulls select this June.
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander Named Clutch Player Of Year
Thunder guard and reigning Most Valuable Player Shai Gilgeous-Alexander has added another accolade to his collection, having earned the league’s Clutch Player of the Year Award, according to the NBA league office (Twitter link).
Gilgeous-Alexander scored a league-leading 175 points on 51.5% shooting from the field in 125.1 clutch minutes played this season. He also led the league with 52 made field goals in the clutch. He played 52.3 fewer minutes in clutch situations than Nuggets guard Jamal Murray, who ranked second in the NBA with 166 total points.
Gilgeous-Alexander led the NBA with 16 go-ahead field goals in the final five minutes of the fourth quarter or overtime this season, including a game-winning step-back three-pointer versus Denver on March 9. The Thunder posted a 124.5 offensive rating and 23.8 net rating during clutch time, both second-best in the NBA. Oklahoma City went 24-10 in clutch games this season.
Per the NBA’s “clutch” tracking data, Gilgeous-Alexander’s average of 6.5 points in the clutch is the best in the NBA among those who played more than one clutch game, according to The Athletic’s Joel Lorenzi.
Murray and Timberwolves guard Anthony Edwards were the other finalists, but Gilgeous-Alexander was the runaway winner, gaining 96 of a possible 100 first-place votes from a media panel. Murray edged out Edwards for second place — while the Wolves star showed up on more total ballots, Murray held the edge in second-place votes and was the runner-up by a single voting point.
A total of 10 players received votes. The full results can be found here.
This is the fourth season that the league has given out a Clutch Player of the Year award. Knicks guard Jalen Brunson won it last season and finished fifth in this year’s vote.
Latest On Lakers’ Austin Reaves, Luka Doncic
Austin Reaves (left oblique strain) will remain on the inactive list for Game 2 of the Lakers‘ first-round series against Houston on Tuesday night, but there’s still a chance that he’ll be able to suit up later in the series, ESPN’s Shams Charania said during an appearance on NBA Today (Twitter video link).
“The sense around the Lakers is that Austin Reaves is actually the one that’s further along than Luka Doncic in their respective rehab processes,” Charania said. “I am told Austin Reaves has started one-on-one on-court work. The next step for him is to continue to go through the progressions of three-on-three, five-on-five.
“Remember, early April, he had a four-to-six week timetable. So theoretically that puts him on track (to return) late in this series (or) potentially early in the next series.”
The prognosis isn’t quite as positive for Doncic, who is dealing with a left hamstring strain. According to Charania, the Lakers aren’t expecting the perennial MVP candidate to return to action during the first round.
A recovery timeline for Doncic was never specified, but he has dealt with some left hamstring issues in the past and suffered a Grade 2 strain this time around, so the Lakers will be careful not to rush him back before he’s ready. His injury typically requires a recovery period of at least four weeks — and sometimes more than that.
The Lakers’ ability to extend or win the series without their two star guards is an open question, but the team took care of business at home in Game 1 on Saturday, registering a 107-98 win as Luke Kennard led the way with a team-high 27 points.
LeBron James (13 assists) and Marcus Smart (eight assists) took on additional play-making duties in Game 1 for the Lakers, who benefited from the fact that Kevin Durant was sidelined with an injury of his own. Durant is listed as questionable to play in Game 2 on Tuesday and doesn’t seem likely to be at 100% if he suits up.
Blazers’ Dundon Reportedly Unfazed By Criticism Over Spending Cuts
It has been less than a month since Tom Dundon officially took over as the Trail Blazers‘ controlling owner, but several reports in recent weeks have suggested he’s taking a penny-pinching approach to the role.
The Blazers were reportedly the only team not to bring their two-way players on the road for their first-round series; they have begun requiring support staffers to check out of their hotel rooms early in order to avoid incurring late check-out fees; and they reportedly want to pay their next permanent head coach a bargain-basement rate.
Bill Oram of The Oregonian (subscriber link) shares a few more details on the cost-cutting measures happening in Portland, writing that the team reduced the number of people in its traveling party for last week’s play-in game in Phoenix and the first-round series in San Antonio, leaving behind its digital reporter and award-winning team photographer, among others. The Blazers also haven’t sent a scout to the Timberwolves/Nuggets games despite the fact that they would face the winner of that series if they upset San Antonio, Oram adds.
According to Jason Quick of The Athletic, interim head coach Tiago Splitter expressed frustration to a confidant last Tuesday when the team’s masseuse, having had to leave her hotel room to avoid a late check-out fee, had nowhere to provide players with treatment ahead of that night’s play-in game in Phoenix.
As Quick explains, all the changes stem from an edict that Dundon gave to Blazers management when he assumed control of the franchise.
“The directive was, ‘Why are we wasting money? Let’s think about this prudently,'” a team source told Quick. “Essentially he was saying, ‘Let’s make things like (the traveling party) be about who needed to be there, not it-would-be-nice-if-they-come.'”
According to Quick and Oram, the Blazers spent lavishly on various non-essential perks under the former ownership of the late Paul Allen, who was one of the richest men in the world. While it may be true that the organization became a “bloated enterprise” under Allen, it seems as if Dundon is determined to over-correct in the other direction, Oram writes, making the team the NBA’s “most spendthrift organization.”
“I think (Dundon) thinks this is just the beginning,” a team source told The Athletic. “I think he thinks this is just what taking over franchises is, where you have to change things. He said he went through a lot of rough times (with the NHL’s Carolina Hurricanes) … but ultimately all people care about now is winning. So what I think is accurate is him being cheap as it relates to stuff that in his mind does not impact player performance.”
Both Quick and Oram agree that Dundon has a reputation for cutting costs in other areas so that he can invest more money in players and the on-court product, with Quick suggesting that the new Blazers owner is prepared to go into luxury tax territory next season if it’s necessary to land an impact player.
However, Oram questions whether on-court and off-court spending can really be siloed off from one another, observing that spending reductions in one area will be felt in another, including the locker room. And while he may be more willing to spend on talent, Dundon runs the risk of alienating top players, coaches, and other personnel if he isn’t willing to invest in his team’s infrastructure, one league source points out to Quick.
“He’s already established that he’s very cheap,” that source said. “And I know he doesn’t love Oregon, and is concerned that it is a state that can’t draw free agents. Well, with all due respect, you’re not helping the cause of drawing free agents when you treat everyone like s–t there.”
Multiple sources who spoke to Quick pushed back on a recent report stating that Dundon only wants to pay his head coach a salary in the $1-1.5MM range, with one team source stating that’s “just not true” and that the new owner is focused on finding the “best person” for the job. Still, it remains to be seen whether the Blazers will be willing to pay the going rate for that “best” candidate.
Oram (Twitter links) hears that the team isn’t solely shopping in the bargain aisle and did want to touch base with Michael Malone but would have been looking to pay him about half of what he eventually got from UNC.
According to Oram, Malone declined to talk to the Blazers because their job isn’t technically even open at this point. Splitter has done an admirable job filling in for Chauncey Billups after Billups’ October arrest, and while a team source insists that Splitter will be the “leading candidate” in the search, Dundon has cast a wide net in searching for potential alternatives, according to Quick, who names Josh Schertz (St. Louis University), Ben McCollum (Iowa), and Tom Thibodeau as coaches the Blazers have reached out to, though he notes that Thibodeau is no longer a candidate.
Those leaks have put Splitter in an awkward position as he attempts to lead the Blazers to their first playoff series victory since 2019.
“The amount of disrespect (toward Splitter) that’s going on is beyond description,” one league source told The Athletic. “It’s like, every day a new name is coming up. It’s the most vicious thing I’ve encountered in 30-plus years.”
“This is what Tom is good at — talking to 100 people and getting data,” a Blazers source said to Quick. “What he is learning quickly is that unlike hockey — where nobody cares — in basketball if you talk to 100 people, 70 will tell people.”
As bad as the PR around Dundon has been so far, several of his longtime associates tell Marc Stein of The Stein Line (Substack link) that the public criticism won’t faze him at all. Quick has heard a similar sentiment from his own sources.
“I ought to tell you, I don’t think he gives a rat’s ass what is said about him,” a league source told The Athletic. “Most owners care. They insulate themselves because they care very much about their image and profile. He doesn’t give a f–k. He doesn’t even flinch with this stuff.”
“His heart is in the right place,” a team source insisted to Quick. “He is going to build this thing into a winner, I know it. And I know three years from now, or five years from now, people are going to love it. But over the next 12 months, they are going to hate it.”
Warriors Rumors: Kerr, Melton, Stars, Post, Horford
The “general belief” both within the organization and around the NBA is that Warriors head coach Steve Kerr is more likely to step down from his current position than to sign a new contract to remain in Golden State, according to Monte Poole of NBC Sports Bay Area. Poole reports that Kerr will meet with team owner Joe Lacob and general manager Mike Dunleavy Jr. to discuss his future and that the expectation is his decision will come in a matter of days, rather than weeks.
While it sounds like Kerr is leaning toward ending his run with the Warriors, he has left the door open to returning. For that to happen, Poole suggests the veteran coach would need to have “renewed faith in his role as the franchise shifts toward the future.” Kerr’s decision won’t be based on money, Poole adds.
“They could offer Steve $25 million a year and I doubt that alone would make a difference,” one league source told NBC Sports Bay Area.
Here’s more on the Warriors:
- According to Nick Friedell and Marcus Thompson II of The Athletic, Golden State was operating for most of the season as if it would be tough to bring back De’Anthony Melton, since he seemed likely to decline his $3.5MM player option in favor of a much more lucrative offer that the Warriors wouldn’t be able to match using the guard’s Non-Bird rights. However, an up-and-down finish to the season may hurt Melton’s market and make a return to Golden State more viable. For his part, the 27-year-old said on Monday that he’d “most definitely” like to stay with the Warriors but that he’ll “leave that type of stuff up to my agent and upstairs,” per Dalton Johnson of NBC Sports Bay Area.
- Although the Warriors reportedly offered several future first-round picks for Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo prior to February’s trade deadline, one team source who spoke to Friedell and Thompson said the front office isn’t planning on giving up several future assets to load up on veterans for 2026/27. Noting that Golden State was the most aggressive suitor for Clippers forward Kawhi Leonard prior to the deadline, Marc Stein of The Stein Line (Substack link) posits that the team may be less inclined to pursue a veteran star like Giannis or Kawhi this offseason if Kerr doesn’t return.
- A restricted free agent this summer, Quinten Post said on Monday that he hopes to remain with the Warriors, per Friedell (Twitter link). Post, who is recovering from a foot injury, added that he thinks he’s about two weeks away from resuming on-court work and hopes to play for the Dutch national team this summer.
- Warriors big man Al Horford explained in greater detail on Monday why he left Boston last summer to sign with Golden State. Brian Robb of MassLive has the story and the quotes from Horford, who holds a $6MM player option for ’26/27.
Jazz Announce 2026 Salt Lake City Summer League Details
The Salt Lake City Summer League will be back for an 11th year this July, the Jazz announced today in a press release. Games will be played on July 4, 6, and 7 at the Jon M. Huntsman Center on the University of Utah’s campus, since the Jazz’s own arena, the Delta Center, will be closed for renovations.
The four-team, six-game event will feature three of the same clubs as it did in 2025, with the Thunder and Grizzlies returning to Utah along with the Jazz. They’ll be joined this time around by the Hawks rather than the Sixers.
The Salt Lake City Summer League takes place annually before the Las Vegas Summer League, which features all 30 teams and will run from July 9-19 this year. While the Utah event is typically overshadowed by the Vegas games that follow, it represents the first professional showcase for a handful of NBA rookies.
Even though Oklahoma City and Atlanta made the playoffs this season, both teams control other clubs’ lottery picks and possess multiple first-rounders in the 2026 draft. That means as many as four ’26 lottery picks and seven total first-rounders could be in action at the SLC Summer League this July.
Wolves/Nuggets Notes: McDaniels, Gobert, Edwards, THJ
The Nuggets and Timberwolves are meeting in the playoffs for the third time in the past four years and the two Northwest clubs have developed one of the NBA’s best rivalries during that time. After Minnesota evened up their first-round series on Monday by stealing Game 2 in Denver, Timberwolves forward Jaden McDaniels added more fuel to that fire when he was asked about his team’s offensive game plan.
“Go at (Nikola) Jokic, Jamal (Murray), all the bad defenders,” McDaniels said (Twitter video link via Chris Hine of The Star Tribune). “Tim Hardaway, Cam Johnson, Aaron Gordon, their whole team.”
Asked to clarify whether he was referring to all of those players as bad defenders, McDaniels doubled down.
“Yeah, they’re all bad defenders,” he responded.
The Nuggets had the league’s best offensive rating during the regular season but ranked just 21st in defensive rating, behind sub-.500 teams like Dallas and Golden State. After holding the Wolves to 105 points in Game 1, Denver surrendered 119 in Monday’s loss. We’ll see if McDaniels’ bulletin-board material provides the Nuggets with a spark for Game 3 back in Minnesota.
Here’s more on the two division rivals and their best-of-seven series:
- Timberwolves center Rudy Gobert, a four-time Defensive Player of the Year, wasn’t thrilled about not being a finalist for the award this year. Gobert, who finished fourth in DPOY voting, used the perceived snub as motivation in Game 2, holding Jokic to 1-of-8 shooting while he was guarding him, per Anthony Slater of ESPN. After the game, Gobert suggested with his tongue in cheek that he got “lucky” since only a “top-three defender” could’ve slowed down the Nuggets star like that. “Not the first time I’ve gotten disrespected,” Gobert added. “Probably not the last. If you want to disrespect greatness, take it for granted, whatever, soon they’ll realize the impact.”
- The 40 minutes that Anthony Edwards played in Game 2 represented his highest single-game total in over three months, but he grimaced and grabbed at his sore right knee a few times in the second half of the game, Slater notes. Still, Edwards downplayed the issue after the win and suggested he didn’t score his 30 points very efficiently. “I missed 15 shots tonight, two free throws,” he said after going 10-of-25 from the floor. “I’ll be better.”
- Jason Quick of The Athletic profiles Hardaway, who signed with the Nuggets on a one-year, minimum-salary contract and has been an invaluable jack-of-all-trades as the team dealt with a series of injuries to starters and other rotation players throughout the season. Nuggets executive VP of player personnel Jon Wallace referred to the veteran swingman as having “immense value for us,” and head coach David Adelman agreed. “Beyond what I expected,” Adelman said of Hardaway. “He is one of the main, main reasons why we survived this season. The guy won us games. Flat out. Just really, really impactful.”
Potential Lottery Pick Thomas Haugh Returning To Gators
Junior forward Thomas Haugh was viewed as a potential 2026 lottery pick, but he has decided to put off going pro for another year. He tells Shams Charania, Jeff Borzello, and Jeremy Woo of ESPN (Twitter link) that he’ll return to Florida for his senior year.
A 6’9″ forward, Haugh won a national championship with the Gators as a sophomore in 2025, but primarily came off the bench for that title team. He enjoyed a breakout year in 2025/26, starting all 34 games he played and averaging 17.1 points, 6.1 rebounds, 2.1 assists, 1.1 steals, and 1.0 block in 33.3 minutes per contest.
Haugh was a consensus second-team All-American as a junior and was ranked 13th on ESPN’s big board of 2026 prospects before deciding not to enter the draft. Woo has described him as a tough, high-effort player with good size and an improving outside shot who could’ve been ready to play a rotation role at the NBA level immediately.
Instead, Haugh will use his final year of NCAA eligibility and look to win another championship with the Gators, who appear well positioned to enter next season as the top-ranked team in the country after being upset in the second round of this year’s NCAA tournament. As Charania observes, the senior forward could also be in the mix for 2027 Player of the Year honors if he continues to improve.
“Most guys in my position in the draft, it would be a no-brainer to go to the NBA,” Haugh told ESPN. “It’s not just the NIL. It’s a chance to play with my boys. To play for coach (Todd) Golden. To go to the school I love to play for. It was definitely a tougher decision than last year, but it was best for my career and future.”
While Haugh downplayed the NIL factor, Woo and Borzello indicate that he projects to “easily” earn more with the Gators than he would in the NBA in 2026/27 if he were drafted in the middle of the first round.
Haugh’s frontcourt teammate Alex Condon previously announced that he’ll be returning to the Gators as well. Another member of 2025’s championship team, center Rueben Chinyelu, announced on Monday (via Instagram) that he’ll enter the 2026 NBA draft but will leave the door open to the possibility of playing one more college season by maintaining his NCAA eligibility.
