Pistons Notes: Thompson, Holland, Cunningham, Huerter
The Pistons, who hold the top seed in the Eastern Conference, lost their second straight game on Thursday at San Antonio. They also lost their best perimeter defensive player — third-year wing Ausar Thompson — to a right ankle sprain just two minutes into the contest, writes Michael C. Wright of ESPN.com.
“Ausar obviously means a lot to us,” head coach J.B. Bickerstaff said. “What we were able to do defensively, what he does defensively, the impact he has, obviously, you miss. We just had to figure out a way collectively to pick it up.”
Thompson has already been ruled out of Saturday’s contest vs. Brooklyn, tweets Hunter Patterson of The Athletic. The 23-year-old will be eligible for a rookie scale extension this summer.
Here’s more from Detroit:
- Second-year forward Ron Holland was also forced out of Thursday’s game after sustaining a left eye injury, the team announced (via Twitter). “He got hit in the eye and it was blurred vision. I didn’t want to put him out there, didn’t feel comfortable putting him back in the game if he couldn’t see straight out of that eye,” Bickerstaff said (Twitter link via Patterson). However, Holland should be ready to go on Saturday, as he’s not listed on tomorrow’s injury report, Patterson tweets.
- Guard Cade Cunningham (left quad contusion) is questionable to suit up against the Nets, while center Jalen Duren is probable because of low back spasms, as Patterson relays (via Twitter).
- Veteran guard Kevin Huerter showed on Thursday why the Pistons traded for him last month, writes Omari Sankofa II of The Detroit Free Press (subscriber link). Huerter had been out of the team’s rotation of late, receiving a DNP-CD in six of his last seven games heading into Thursday, but he capitalized on his opportunity with Thompson out, contributing seven points (on 3-of-4 shooting), five rebounds, two assists and a steal. He was plus-15 in 17 minutes in the 15-point loss to the Spurs. “It’s different, it’s for sure different,” Huerter said of his role. “I think I also know at this point how to be a pro, how to keep myself ready, staying in the gym. It’s my job to be there and try to learn this offense, figure out our identity on the defensive side of the ball and watch film when I can. But obviously keep myself in shape and sharp as much as I can and control the things I can control.“
Kings Notes: Monk, Achiuwa, Westbrook, Christie
Speaking to Sean Cunningham of KCRA News after Thursday’s loss to New Orleans (Twitter video link), Kings guard Malik Monk admitted 2025/26 has been “probably the craziest year of my career.” Like several veterans on the roster, Monk’s name came up in several trade rumors leading up to last month’s deadline, but he ultimately stayed put.
“It’s up and down,” Monk said. “And of course we losing games too so that makes it even worse.”
When asked if the tumultuous nature of the season has prepared him for “almost anything at this point,” Monk heartily agreed.
“Hell yeah,” Monk said. “It can’t get no worse than this. … It can prepare you for anything. The young guys are learning a lot, the vets are trying to teach them.”
Monk told Cunningham he had a simple individual goal for the remainder of the season.
“Get through healthy,” Monk said. “Just get through this s–t, man. Get to the summer time.”
Here’s more from Sacramento:
- The play of forward/center Precious Achiuwa has been a bright spot for a Kings team which has the worst record (14-50) in the NBA, writes Jason Anderson of The Sacramento Bee. The former first-round pick, who signed with Sacramento in early November after being waived by the Heat prior to the start of ’25/26, tied his career highs with 29 points and five assists on Thursday while also contributing 12 rebounds. Achiuwa, a six-year veteran, has played some of the best basketball of his career over the past eight games. “There’s a level of energy that he brings, and when he does that on a consistent basis, he changes a lot of different things,” head coach Doug Christie said. “He’s a grown man, rebounds, driving, running the floor, his physicality on defense. Maybe the biggest thing was I didn’t really realize was how versatile he is defensively. He’s guarded point guards, but he can also guard (centers).”
- Point guard Russell Westbrook fired back at media members for their criticism of the team following Thursday’s loss, as Cunningham of KCRA News relays (Twitter video link). Westbrook declined to go into specifics and said he wasn’t upset about criticism of him personally, but rather his teammates and the organization at large.
- At his own post-game press conference, Christie said he didn’t pay attention to media coverage of the team, preferring to focus on his doing his job and not external distractions (Twitter video link via Cunningham). Christie said the team was understandably frustrated with its results this season. “We’re all frustrated,” he said. “We want to win games. There’s just the short stints where you drop the rope. You don’t box out. You allow second-chance points. You close out with your hand down.”
Suns’ Dillon Brooks Arrested On Suspicion Of DUI
3:25 pm: According to John Gambadoro of Arizona Sports 98.7 (Twitter link), Brooks’ arrest was related to cannabis and not alcohol. The nine-year veteran was released without being charged, Gambadoro adds.
11:13 am: Suns forward Dillon Brooks was pulled over for traffic violations at about 1:00 am in Scottsdale, Arizona on Friday morning and was charged about a half-hour later on suspicion of driving under the influence, according to local police. TMZ first broke the news that Brooks had been arrested on DUI charges, while The Arizona Republic provided additional details.
According to the two outlets, Brooks was transported to Scottsdale City jail and was booked and released from custody around 3:30 am. The 30-year-old was “respectful and cooperative” throughout the process, per TMZ.
“We are aware of the situation involving Dillon Brooks and are gathering more information,” the Suns said in a statement, according to the Arizona Republic. “We have no further comment at this time.”
DUI cases can result in suspensions, but the NBA typically doesn’t make a ruling until after the case concludes. The league’s decision would depend in part on whether the prosecutor’s office files charges, as well as Brooks’ plea in that scenario.
Brooks had been enjoying a career year in his first season in Phoenix after being traded from the Rockets to the Suns in the Kevin Durant blockbuster last summer. He has averaged 20.9 points, 3.7 rebounds, and 1.8 assists in 30.6 minutes per night on .440/.343/.856 shooting, and led the upstart Suns to a 30-20 record in the 50 games he played.
However, Brooks fractured his left hand last month and required surgery to repair the break. He was ruled out for four-to-six weeks at the time and likely won’t return until late in the season.
Adam Silver: ‘Substantial Changes’ Coming To Deter Tanking
Addressing the issue of tanking during a panel appearance at the Sloan Sports Analytics Conference in Boston, NBA commissioner Adam Silver reiterated that the league intends to adjust its rules in a major way ahead of the 2026/27 season, per Mike Vorkunov of The Athletic.
“We are going to make substantial changes for next year,” Silver said. “I think where I’m on the fence — on one extreme, you could completely divorce the draft from teams’ records. Just argue we could take all 30 teams regardless of the outcome, that would completely disincentivize tanking. You could win the finals, you know, and get the first pick. But then there’s gradations of that.”
Despite teasing a complete overhaul of the NBA’s draft lottery system, Silver admitted that the rule changes likely won’t be quite that significant.
“Not to exactly forecast where we’re going, but I think I’m sort — I am an incrementalist,” he said. “I think we got to be a little bit careful, you know, about how huge a change we make at once. I’m not ruling anything out, but I am paying attention to that. And then there’s something significantly more than, I would say, just tinkering with the existing system.”
As reported last month, some of the ideas that the NBA has discussed to discourage tanking are as follows:
- Restricting teams from including protections between top-four and top-14-plus on traded first-round picks.
- Prohibiting teams from having top-four picks in consecutive years and/or after consecutive bottom-three finishes.
- Barring teams from selecting in the top four if they make the conference finals the previous year.
- Freezing lottery odds at the trade deadline or an unspecified “later date.”
- Flattened odds for all lottery teams.
- Lottery odds being allocated based on two-year records.
- Lottery extended to include all eight play-in teams (instead of the four who don’t make the playoffs).
[RELATED: Silver Discusses Tanking With General Managers During Video Call]
That second-last item – basing the odds for lottery teams on their records over the last two seasons – was one Silver cited on Friday, noting that the WNBA uses it. He also noted that he’s hesitant to punish teams in the midst of “legitimate rebuilds” who are “genuinely trying to win games” with young rosters, but suggested that tanking this season ahead of a strong 2026 draft has gone well beyond that.
“It’s a little bit of a perfect storm this season, that you have a perceived, very deep draft,” the commissioner said. “Again, I say ‘perceived’ because scouts’ predictions are wrong. But there’s a sense that you have four players in particular, maybe five, who are true game-changers. You add to that a forecast that the next two years’ drafts won’t be as good, and you create enormous incentive for teams to tank.”
Warriors Notes: Curry, Green, Porzingis, Kawhi, Moody
The Warriors entered Thursday’s game in Houston having gone 23-16 with Stephen Curry available and just 8-14 in games he has missed. However, the shorthanded club, playing without Curry for a 12th straight game due to his knee injury, pulled out a surprising overtime win over the Rockets, as ESPN’s Anthony Slater writes, after the two-time MVP texted Draymond Green some words of encouragement before the game.
“Keep going,” Curry told his teammate, according to Green. “I know it’s tough, but promise you, I’m coming back.”
Head coach Steve Kerr referred to it as the “best game of the season” for Brandin Podziemski, who scored a team-high 26 points and grabbed five offensive rebounds in 40 minutes of action, and said Golden State got a “vintage” performance from Green. Two-way player LJ Cryer, who had played eight total minutes in three games and had been out for several weeks due to a hamstring injury, also came up big with 12 points in 20 minutes off the bench, Nick Friedell of The Athletic notes.
While Curry’s return still isn’t imminent and there’s no specific timeline for when he’ll be back, Green said he knows the star guard is doing everything he can to play again in the coming weeks.
“My confidence level is high, ultimately, because I know (Curry)’s going to put in all the work and do everything he can to get back,” Green said. “If his body allows him to get back, I know he will come back. He’s not wanting to just shut it down. For us, just got to stay afloat. Nobody’s expecting us to go on a 10-game win streak, but you just got to stay afloat. Tonight’s a big step towards that.”
We have more on the Warriors:
- Kristaps Porzingis has been able to do more on the court in recent days and the Warriors are hopeful that will trend will continue, Friedell writes for The Athletic. Porzingis is on Golden State’s three-game road trip and told The Athletic he’s feeling better after missing the last six games due to an illness, but Kerr was noncommittal on a timeline for the big man. “He’s gonna get a workout today, and we’ll just take it day by day from there,” Kerr said. ESPN’s Slater and Ramona Shelburne took a more in-depth look at the “mysterious” illness that has affected Porzingis over the past year and limited him to one appearance since the Warriors acquired him from Atlanta last month.
- Within that story on Porzingis, Slater and Shelburne cite league sources who say the Warriors were among the teams to inquire on Clippers forward Kawhi Leonard prior to last month’s deadline. Leonard ultimately stayed in Los Angeles even though L.A. traded James Harden and Ivica Zubac.
- Fifth-year Warriors wing Moses Moody sat out on Thursday due to a right wrist sprain, but he shouldn’t require an extended absence. Kerr referred to Moody last night as day-to-day, tweets Slater.
- During a radio appearance this week on 95.7 The Game, Kerr responded to criticism about the way the Warriors have developed young players in recent years, as Florito Maniego of NBC Sports Bay Area relays. “I think we’ve really addressed that over the last four or five years,” Kerr said. “We felt like there were some improvements we could make, and we changed some things organizationally. We brought in a couple of people to put them in charge of player development. I think we’ve done a pretty good job with that over the last few years. … I think part of the frustration of our fans probably stems from the fact that we have the three lottery picks coming at a time when we were winning a championship. And it’s just hard to play 19-year-olds on championship teams. The development that comes is going to be different than it would come on a team that’s in the lottery, where you just put a guy out there for 35 minutes and let him make his mistakes.”
UNC’s Caleb Wilson Undergoes Season-Ending Thumb Surgery
Caleb Wilson‘s freshman season has come to a premature end, according to Shams Charania of ESPN, who reports (via Twitter) that the UNC forward broke his right thumb during a non-contact drill in Thursday’s practice and has undergone surgery to repair the fracture.
Confirming the news, the school said in a press release that the injury occurred on a dunk.
Although Wilson may have played his last game as a Tar Heel, he’s expected to cleared for basketball activities during the pre-draft process, Charania reports.
Wilson has had an outstanding season at UNC, averaging 19.8 points, 9.4 rebounds, 2.7 assists, 1.5 steals, and 1.4 blocks in 31.3 minutes per game across 24 outings. The 6’10” forward has widely been viewed by draft experts as a top-five pick in the 2026 NBA draft, frequently ranking behind only Darryn Peterson, AJ Dybantsa, and Cameron Boozer on big boards.
Unfortunately, the second half of Wilson’s freshman year has been marred by health issues. He fractured his left hand last month and had been sidelined since February 10 — he was recently cleared for individual workouts and had hoped to return at some point in March before he sustained his latest injury.
Assuming Wilson has fully recovered by the draft, the thumb injury is unlikely to have much of an impact on his stock, so he should still be one of the first few players off the board this June.
Raptors 905 Claim Markelle Fultz
Toronto’s G League affiliate – the Raptors 905 – has claimed guard Markelle Fultz off the waiver wire after the former No. 1 overall pick signed an NBAGL contract, as Michael Grange of Sportsnet tweets.
Fultz, who was selected with the first pick in the 2017 NBA draft, had his career derailed by injuries and has played in just 255 regular season games across eight seasons for the Sixers, Magic, and Kings. He made 21 appearances for Sacramento in 2024/25, averaging 2.9 points and 1.3 assists in 8.8 minutes per contest.
Shoulder issues affected Fultz’s shooting motion early in his professional career, which is one reason why he has struggled to establish himself as an NBA regular. After making 41.3% of his three-point shots during his lone college season at Washington, the 27-year-old has converted just 83-of-296 attempts (28.0%) at the NBA level.
For now, Fultz figures to simply provide reinforcements for a Raptors 905 team that saw its depth decimated by NBA call-ups in the past week as Julian Reese, Olivier Sarr, and David Roddy all signed two-way contracts with rival NBA organizations.
Still, Fultz’s play for the 905 is worth monitoring, according to Grange, who reports at Sportsnet.ca that Toronto would like to add a guard with NBA experience to fill its open 15th roster spot, if possible. Lester Quinones is another player who has been on the Raptors’ radar, Grange adds.
Toronto is operating nearly $900K below the luxury tax line and could sign a player to a rest-of-season contract at any time without going into tax territory. However, Immanuel Quickley would receive a $500K bonus if the team makes the Eastern Conference Finals this spring, per Blake Murphy of Sportsnet.ca, so the Raptors will likely wait until mid-March to add a 15th man in order to avoid a scenario in which getting to the third round of the playoffs makes them a taxpayer.
If they don’t end up finding a veteran guard they like to fill their open roster spot, promoting one of their two-way players would be a backup option for the Raptors, Grange writes.
Jayson Tatum Will Make Season Debut On Friday
March 6: Tatum has been upgraded to available for Friday’s game vs. Dallas and will be active for the first time since last year’s playoffs, the team confirmed (Twitter link).
March 5: Celtics forward Jayson Tatum will return from his Achilles tear this season and could make his 2025/26 debut on Friday vs. the Mavericks in Boston, reports Shams Charania of ESPN (Twitter link).
Tatum has officially been listed by the team as questionable to suit up for Friday’s matchup with Dallas (Twitter link). According to Charania (Twitter link), the six-time All-Star is “ready to go” and the expectation is that he’ll be able to play tomorrow, but he and the team will finalize that decision within the next day or so.
Tatum ruptured his right Achilles tendon in Game 4 of the Celtics’ second-round playoff series against the Knicks last May and underwent surgery to repair the injury the following day. He was one of three Eastern Conference stars to tear his Achilles during the 2025 postseason, along with Damian Lillard and Tyrese Haliburton.
Lillard, who is nearly eight years older than Tatum, and Haliburton, whose injury occurred about six weeks after Tatum’s, were both ruled out for the 2025/26 season relatively early. However, the Celtics never made a similar announcement about their star forward, and he made it clear early in his recovery process that he hoped to beat the typical timeline and make it back before the end of ’25/26.
Tatum repeatedly stressed that he wouldn’t return unless he felt like he was 100% healthy and was both physically and mentally ready, but his return began to look increasingly likely as he started taking part in 5-on-5 scrimmages with the Celtics and their G League affiliate this winter.
If Tatum is activated on Friday, he’ll be back on the court less than 10 months – 298 days, to be exact – since he sustained his Achilles injury. He’ll certainly be on a strict minutes restriction and likely won’t play in back-to-backs as he ramps up his workload and prepares for the postseason.
Making his return in a home game has long been a priority for Tatum, as Adam Himmelsbach of The Boston Globe observes (subscription required).
“I know one thing,” Tatum said last September. “My first game back will be at home. It will be in TD Garden. It probably will be emotional, but it’s something I’m looking forward to, just running through that tunnel and being on the court again with all of our fans and sharing that moment with them.”
Following Tatum’s injury and a series of cost-cutting offseason moves that saw the Celtics part with key players like Jrue Holiday, Kristaps Porzingis, Al Horford, and Luke Kornet, there was a sense that 2025/26 could be a “gap year” in Boston, with the team taking a step back from title contention before reloading for ’26/27.
But the Celtics have thrived even without their perennial leading scorer, posting a 41-21 record through three-quarters of the season. They hold the No. 2 seed in the Eastern Conference and have the league’s second-best offensive rating, along with the seventh-best defensive rating.
Tatum made four consecutive All-NBA first teams from 2022-25 and averaged 27.7 points, 8.4 rebounds, and 5.0 assists per game during that stretch. This season, it’s been fellow wing Jaylen Brown who has been the team’s go-to option on offense, with career-high averages of 28.9 points and 5.0 assists per game.
Reintegrating Tatum into the lineup following Brown’s emergence will be one of the challenges the Celtics face during the final few weeks of the regular season. Tatum admitted in January that the risk of upsetting Boston’s chemistry was a factor he considered as he weighed whether to return this season, but he later expressed confidence that he and the team will make it work.
“I know what I bring to the table and bring to the team, but I’m also aware that these guys have been playing extremely well,” he said, per Himmelsbach. “And not to say that I would come and mess it up or anything like that. It was just kind of being vulnerable, I guess, for a moment, and talking from that perspective.”
Sixers Rule Out Joel Embiid For Another Week
Sixers center Joel Embiid, who has missed the past three games due to a strained right oblique, will likely miss at least four more contests as a result of the injury, as Adam Aaronson of PhillyVoice relays.
According to Aaronson, the 76ers announced today that Embiid didn’t participate in Friday’s practice and has yet to do any on-court work following his latest injury. The plan is for him to be reevaluated in about one week, which would mean he’ll be out for games on Saturday in Atlanta, Monday in Cleveland, and Tuesday vs. Memphis — and probably Thursday in Detroit too.
Embiid has been limited to 33 games this season due to various ailments affecting his knee, ankle, shin, and oblique. While he hasn’t recaptured his old MVP form in the games he has played, he has looked better than he did last season, averaging 26.6 points, 7.5 rebounds, and 3.9 assists in 31.2 minutes per night, with a .495/.318/.858 shooting line.
Philadelphia offered a couple more injury updates on Friday, per Aaronson, announcing that forward Kelly Oubre Jr. is expected to return to action on Saturday after missing two games due to an illness and indicating that rookie guard VJ Edgecombe didn’t practice on Friday.
Edgecombe exited Tuesday’s game vs. San Antonio early due to a lumbar contusion and sat out on Wednesday vs. Utah. While the team hasn’t clarified his status for Saturday’s contest, the fact that he didn’t take part in Friday’s practice probably doesn’t bode well for his availability.
And-Ones: Beasley, FIBA, 2026 Draft, More
A federal judge in New York has found former NBA sharpshooter Malik Beasley liable for $1MM in damages (plus interest) to be paid to Hazan Sports Management, the agency that previously represented him, according to David Purdum of ESPN.
The agency filed a lawsuit earlier this year seeking $2.25MM in damages and legal fees for breach of contract. Hazan Sports alleged in that suit that Beasley left the agency in February 2025 without paying back a $650K marketing advance.
Judge Jeannette A. Vargas wrote in her ruling that “no objections have been filed and no request for an extension of time to object has been made” by Beasley. According to Purdum, the suit doesn’t list an attorney for Beasley.
Beasley finished second in Sixth Man of the Year voting in 2024/25 and appeared poised to land a lucrative multiyear deal in free agency. However, his contract negotiations ended when word broke that federal investigators and the NBA were investigating him due to possible connection to illegal betting activity. The veteran wing signed last month with Cangrejeros de Santurce, a Puerto Rican team owned by Bad Bunny, as he awaits clarity on his NBA future.
We have more odds and ends from around the basketball world:
- FIBA has reached an agreement on a broadcasting deal with TNT Sports that will give the network the rights to several international basketball competitions, including the 2026 women’s World Cup in Germany and the 2027 men’s World Cup in Qatar, according to a press release.
- In his latest preview of the 2026 NBA draft, Jeremy Woo of ESPN.com explores one big question facing each of the top nine prospects on his board, including how real Kingston Flemings‘ shooting improvements are and whether Tennessee’s Nate Ament can make a leap as a shot creator.
- ESPN’s Tim Bontemps shares his “all-contract team” for the 2025/26 season, building the best possible 15-man roster without exceeding the salary cap and without selecting any players on maximum-salary, minimum-salary, or rookie scale contracts. Knicks guard Jalen Brunson, Trail Blazers forward Deni Avdija, and Hawks forward Jalen Johnson are among Bontemps’ headliners.
- One month removed from this year’s trade deadline, Dan Devine of Yahoo Sports checks in on the early returns of some of February’s biggest deals, noting that Cavaliers guard James Harden, Thunder guard Jared McCain, Hawks forward Jonathan Kuminga, and Timberwolves guard Ayo Dosunmu are some of the players off to strong starts with their new teams.
