Spurs Notes: Castle, Fox, Wemby, Rotation
After making just 5-of-14 field goal attempts and committing four turnovers in the Spurs‘ Game 2 loss last Friday, guard Stephon Castle bounced back on Monday, scoring 23 points on 8-of-14 shooting while turning the ball over just twice. He also helped the seal the victory in the game’s final moments by knocking down a key three-pointer with just under two minutes remaining in the fourth quarter, then hitting a pair of free throws with seven seconds left to extend San Antonio’s lead to four.
As Tom Orsborn of The San Antonio Express-News writes, Castle is hardly an elder statesman at 21 years old, but star big man Victor Wembanyama said the guard “might be the most mature player on our team,” pointing out that the former NCAA champion is no stranger to high-pressure situations.
“He’s been in big games before the NBA,” Wembanyama said. “He’s shown over and over again that he’s capable and that we are right to put our trust in him.”
Spurs guard De’Aaron Fox actually received the inbounds pass from Castle with the Spurs up by two points and 9.4 seconds left on the clock, but the veteran quickly tossed the ball back to his second-year teammate before the Knicks could intentionally foul him (video link). The play reflected Fox’s complete trust in Castle’s ability to rise to the moment and make the free throws necessary to secure the win.
“His personality, his demeanor, that’s the way he is,” Fox said. “He’s kind of always cool. That’s just being young. But his game is definitely mature beyond his years. He was big for us. He hit a big three toward the end of the shot clock. Knocks down two big free throws for us. He’s guarding his tail off the entire game.”
We have more on the Spurs, who will be looking to even the NBA Finals at two games apiece on Wednesday:
- Fox had his second rough game of the series — late in the fourth quarter, his 3-of-13 shooting line was identical to the mark he posted in Game 1. However, Fox made his 14th shot of the night, converting a mid-range jumper to put the Spurs up by five points with 12 seconds left. “De’Aaron’s been one of the best closer in this league for the last, I don’t know what it is, five to seven years,” head coach Mitch Johnson said, per Orsborn. “He’s been a great closer for us. We trust him with the basketball in his hands.”
- Between Wembanyama’s big Game 3 performance – including 32 points, eight rebounds, and six assists – and a perception that he’s been getting away with missed fouls, the 22-year-old has become the newest villain at Madison Square Garden, writes Marcus Thompson II of The Athletic. “I guess,” Wembanyama said with a smile when asked if being New York’s newest villain is “the ultimate compliment” (Twitter video link). After a brief pause, he added, “I’m nowhere near Trae Young level though.”
- Zach Kram of ESPN takes a look at the key players from Game 3 and the lessons learned from the Spurs’ first win of the series, noting that the club closed with a three-guard lineup, as Dylan Harper took Julian Champagnie‘s place with the rest of the starters. Veteran forward Harrison Barnes was also out of the rotation on Monday, earning his first DNP-CD of the postseason, Kram observes.
Sixers Notes: Gansey, Embiid, Nelson, More
After taking over as the club’s new president of basketball operations, Mike Gansey acknowledged at his introductory press conference on Monday that the Sixers aren’t a “championship caliber team” at the moment, writes Dan Gelston of The Associated Press.
Gansey didn’t offer many hints at the roster moves he envisions this offseason, telling reporters that he “just got here,” and he was evasive when asked about his plans for oft-injured star Joel Embiid, who still has three years and $188MM left on his maximum-salary contract.
“With him and the roster we have, that’s who we have,” Gansey said. “We’ve got to get those guys on the floor. We’ve got to create an identity. Just get them to play basketball.”
While Philadelphia has been hampered in recent years by the inconsistent availability of Embiid and his fellow maximum-salary star Paul George, Sixers executive Bob Myers pointed out that there’s no reason at this point to believe either player will get a late start to the 2026/27 season.
“The good news is this,” said Myers, who holds the title “president of sports” for the Sixers’ ownership group. “There’s no scheduled surgeries this summer. There’s no injury going into the offseason. In the past, there has been that. This is an opportunity to get better, not to play catch-up for Joel, but to actually get better and build on last year. And with that, the hope’s that he can be on the floor a lot more.”
We have more on the Sixers:
- Gansey referred to having Myers in the organization as a “cheat code” as he prepares to run a front office for the first time, per Gelston. The former Cavaliers executive also said that he was in favor of keeping head coach Nick Nurse on the job and added that keeping Jameer Nelson in the front office as his executive VP of basketball operations was a “bit of a sticking point.”
- Nelson also spoke at Monday’s presser about his new role, as Gina Mizell of The Philadelphia Inquirer relays. The former NBA point guard said he has received interest in recent years from other teams looking to hire him away from Philadelphia, but he wants to be “part of the solution here” and feels “responsibility to help this organization move forward.” Nelson, a native of nearby Chester, Pennsylvania, expressed gratitude for having gotten this opportunity with his hometown team. “Six years ago, when I started (with the Sixers), I had no idea where this journey would take me,” he said. “Credit to the organization for believing in me … To do it for the home team gives me goosebumps, to be honest with you. I think it’s one of the things that people take for granted: when you can actually help out an organization but, more importantly, do it at home.”
- In a pair of stories for PhillyVoice.com, Adam Aaronson puts together a couple hypothetical trade scenarios that he thinks might work for the Sixers this offseason and considers whether the sacrifices necessary to free up the full non-taxpayer mid-level exception this summer would be worth it.
- In case you missed, the 76ers are the most recent team we looked at in our Offseason Preview series.
Knicks’ Mike Brown Calls Out Officiating After Game 3 Loss
After his team suffered a 115-111 loss at Madison Square Garden on Monday to cut its lead in the NBA Finals to 2-1, Knicks head coach Mike Brown expressed displeasure during his post-game press conference about the free throw disparity between the two teams.
The Spurs attempted 32 total free throws to the Knicks’ 22. In the second half, the gap was even more pronounced, with San Antonio going to the line 24 times while New York was awarded just eight free throws.
“I never thought I’d be in the NBA Finals and see a team get 24 free throw attempts in the second half to another team’s eight,” Brown said (Twitter video link via Michael Scotto of HoopsHype). “I don’t think I complain much about officials or the fairness when it comes to the free throw attempts. San Antonio is a great team. It’s going to lower our odds big time if we play Game 4 and in the second half they get 24 free throw attempts to our eight. Maybe we were fouling, but they fouled too.”
As Vincent Goodwill of ESPN observes, Brown brought up the officiating multiple times while speaking to reporters after the game. Presumably, the Knicks’ coach believes that making it part of the conversation about the game could result in a more favorable whistle on Wednesday in Game 4.
“I talked to [the officials]. They outshot us 14-3 in the third quarter from the free throw line. I talked to them, and they said, ‘Well, this is a foul, this is a foul,'” Brown said. “That’s the question I had with them is, ‘You’re right. Maybe we did foul. But they fouled, too.'”
Although Brown griped about the officiating, his players weren’t inclined to blame the referees for the loss. Knicks guard Landry Shamet suggested that the Spurs were the more physical and assertive team, while forward Josh Hart said San Antonio came out of the gates with “a sense of urgency and a sense of desperation.”
Stars Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns, meanwhile, said the Knicks’ turnovers were a bigger problem than how the game was called. New York committed 13 turnovers that led to 21 points while San Antonio turned the ball over just eight times, leading to seven points.
“I think we turned the ball over a lot, first and foremost, and also we were fouling a lot and put them at the line about 30 times,” Brunson said, per Goodwill. “With our live ball turnovers, got them out in transition.”
“(The officiating) didn’t cost us the game,” Towns added, according to Brian Mahoney of The Associated Press. “Turned the ball over. Didn’t execute. Didn’t do what got us 13 straight wins in a row. That’s how you lose a game.”
Eastern Notes: Rajakovic, Webster, Wizards, Toppin, Sixers
After the Raptors promoted and extended general manager Bobby Webster, an extension for Darko Rajakovic is “in the works,” multiple sources told Michael Grange of Sportsnet.ca, though a timeline for the head coach’s new deal has not yet been established. Rajakovic is entering the final season of his current contract.
Grange reported about a month ago that Webster and Rajakovic were expected to receive extensions after Toronto made the playoffs for the first time in four years. Webster said the team was prioritizing continuity and off-court chemistry after he and a few other front office members signed new deals.
“We don’t make it through the past few years if there’s not a ton of stability, and I think the best part, and everyone can appreciate this, is if you like the people you work with from a professional standpoint, great,” Webster said. “But if you also like them from a personal standpoint, and you want to come in every day, and travel around the world, and take red eye (flights), and be up late, and get up early in the morning, it matters who you work with on a professional level, but on a personal level it’s just great to have to same crew here.”
Webster’s new contract covers five seasons, beginning with 2026/27, league sources told Grange.
Here’s more from around the Eastern Conference:
- Yossi Gozlan of The Third Apron (Substack link) previews the Wizards‘ offseason, noting that rather than operating with cap room this summer, the team instead decided to use its financial flexibility to make two major in-season additions by trading for Trae Young and Anthony Davis in separate deals. After landing the No. 1 overall pick in the draft lottery, Washington currently projects to be about $11MM below the luxury tax line, though that figure is tentative, since it accounts for Young’s $49MM player option, which he could decline in favor of a longer-term deal, Gozlan writes.
- Obi Toppin‘s season was marred by a serious foot injury, but the Pacers forward was healthy and productive over the final few months of 2025/26, writes Tony East of Circle City Spin. Toppin’s play late in the season should be encouraging for Indiana, which is looking to be in the contention mix again next season after an injury-plagued ’25/26.
- Which prospect will the Sixers select with the 22nd overall pick? Adam Aaronson of PhillyVoice rounds up mock drafts from Yahoo Sports, Bleacher Report and CBS Sports. All three outlets have Philadelphia adding a frontcourt player. For what it’s worth, both CBS Sports and the latest mock from The Athletic have the 76ers taking Arizona forward Koa Peat.
2026 NBA Offseason Preview: Philadelphia 76ers
After Denver and Phoenix broke up their respective maximum-salary trios during the 2025 offseason, the Sixers entered the 2025/26 season as just one of two teams carrying three players on max deals.
The other one of those two clubs, the Cavaliers, had the NBA's highest payroll and entered the fall with championship expectations after winning 64 games in '24/25. But the expectations for the 76ers, who were coming off a miserable 24-58 campaign, were far more modest.
Two of Philadelphia's veteran stars, Joel Embiid and Paul George, combined to make 60 total appearances in 2024/25 and then underwent knee surgeries last April and July, respectively. With that duo projected to earn well over half of the Sixers' payroll in '25/26 ($107MM of roughly $195MM) and no guarantee they'd be 100% healthy - or available at all - for a significant chunk of the season, there was a predictable lack of enthusiasm for the Sixers, who were widely forecast to be no better than a .500 team.
With that context in mind, it's fair to call the 2025/26 season a success for Philadelphia. Although those two vets were frequently inactive again, Embiid doubled his games played total from 19 to 38 and was far more effective when he suited up than he was in '24/25. George, meanwhile, appeared in just 37 games, but his longest absence (25 games) was due to a suspension, not an injury. And upon returning from that suspension for violating the league's anti-drug policy, he looked as healthy and productive as he had at any time since arriving in Philadelphia.
Even more encouraging was the play of the Sixers' backcourt, led by Tyrese Maxey. Philadelphia's third star emerged as easily the most valuable player of the trio, setting new career highs in several statistical categories, including points per game (28.3), while leading the NBA in minutes per game (38.0). He earned his second All-Star berth and first All-NBA nod, establishing himself as the 76ers' clear franchise centerpiece going forward.
Joining Maxey as a long-term building block was his new backcourt partner VJ Edgecombe, the third overall pick in the 2025 draft. Philadelphia was fortunate to get the opportunity to draft Edgecombe at all, as the team entered last year's lottery with only a 64% chance of keeping its top-six protected pick. The Sixers ended up not just retaining their first-rounder, but moving up into the top three.
The club made the most of its good fortune by nailing that pick. Edgecombe was overlooked to some extent while former Duke teammates Cooper Flagg and Kon Knueppel battled for Rookie of the Year, but he would have had a strong case for the award in many other seasons after averaging 16.0 PPG, 5.6 RPG, and 4.2 APG over the course of 75 starts.
With Maxey and Edgecombe leading the way and Embiid and George providing stop-and-start contributions, the Sixers won 45 regular season games, claimed the No. 7 seed with a play-in win, and upset the No. 2 Celtics in the first round of the playoffs before running into a buzzsaw of a Knicks team in round two.
While it was a pretty positive outcome given the preseason expectations, it wasn't enough to save Daryl Morey's president of basketball operations job. The long-term contracts he gave Embiid and George during the 2024 offseason haven't aged well, and he seemingly made another misstep at this year's deadline by trading Jared McCain to Oklahoma City for this year's No. 22 pick and a handful of future second-rounders.
McCain had battled health issues during his first year-and-a-half in the league, and his path to a starting role in Philadelphia was blocked by Maxey and Edgecombe. Still, it wasn't a great look for the Sixers when the 2024 first-rounder immediately began to thrive for the defending champion Thunder. The trade on its own could still be justified, particularly if ownership wanted to get out of luxury tax territory, but Morey exacerbated the issue by speaking after the trade deadline about "selling high" on McCain. That's the kind of quote that could be thrown back in his face for the next 10 years, depending on how the guard's career plays out.
After scouring the market for Morey's replacement, the Sixers landed on veteran Cavaliers executive Mike Gansey, hiring him as their new president of basketball operations. Gansey is well-respected around the league and had long been viewed as a candidate to run his own front office. He'll get a helping hand from former Warriors general manager Bob Myers, who works for the Sixers' ownership group as its "president of sports" and is expected to be involved in major personnel decisions.
The 76ers have a pair of valuable foundational pieces and believe they have the right basketball operations team in place to build a winner around Maxey and Edgecombe. Still, it remains to be seen just how much the new decision-makers will be able to do with the roster in the short term.
The Sixers' Offseason Plans
Under the NBA's current tax apron system, it has become increasingly untenable for teams to carry three players on maximum-salary contracts, which is one reason why the aforementioned Nuggets and Suns broke up their "big threes" last offseason. The Sixers probably wouldn't mind following suit this summer, but Maxey certainly isn't going anywhere and Embiid and George didn't do enough in 2025/26 to fully restore their diminished appeal on the trade market.
Draft Rumors: Wizards, Dybantsa, Ament, Burries, Johnson, More
While the Wizards continue to evaluate their options with the first overall pick and have not yet decided who they’ll select, sources around the NBA continue to think BYU wing AJ Dybantsa is their “most likely target,” according to Sam Vecenie of The Athletic.
Regardless of where he ends up, Dybantsa believes his new team could make a quick rise up the standings, similar to what’s happened with the Spurs the past couple seasons, writes Brian Mahoney of The Associated Press.
“It won’t take that long, especially with my adaptability and my work ethic,” Dybantsa said Monday. “I think that will be, I’m not going to say easy, but pretty similar to what these guys do in terms of the forecast.”
Vecenie’s mock draft features several other bits of sourced intel and speculation. He writes that there’s a good deal of intrigue about what the Clippers (fifth) and Nets (sixth) will do right after the top four.
Both teams have been linked to the several guards projected to go in that range, Vecenie notes, and there have been rumors about both clubs exploring the possibility of moving down as well. Los Angeles and Brooklyn have also been connected to Michigan center Aday Mara, Vecenie adds, though it’s not clear if that would be in a trade-down scenario.
Here are a few more rumors ahead of the draft, which will take place June 23-24:
- Both Vecenie and Brett Siegel of ClutchPoints have heard rumblings about the Nets potentially being interested in Nate Ament. As Vecenie writes, last year’s draft showed that Brooklyn’s front office is less concerned with position and more interested in adding players it has highest on its board. With that in mind, Vecenie has the Nets selecting Darius Acuff, though Vecenie acknowledges that’s more based on him viewing the Arkansas star as the best available player at that spot rather than any inside knowledge of the way Brooklyn might be leaning.
- The Hawks (eighth) have explored trade-down scenarios, Vecenie writes, and while they could use a long-term replacement for Trae Young, Vecenie has them selecting Mara.
- Vecenie and Siegel both have the Mavericks taking Brayden Burries with the ninth pick. Siegel cites speculation that Burries’ agents at Klutch Sports are trying to angle their client to Dallas, while Vecenie says other lottery clubs are trying to figure out why the Arizona guard hasn’t worked out for many teams. Either way, Burries is expected to draw interest from teams trying to win next season, according to Vecenie, who hears the Mavericks are exploring a number of possibilities at No. 9.
- Vecenie has gotten the impression that Yaxel Lendeborg might fall out of the lottery, possibly because he’s the oldest player projected to go in that range. Siegel has heard similar speculation, writing that the Michigan forward’s floor appears to be either Oklahoma City (No. 17) or Charlotte (No. 18).
- On the other hand, both Vecenie and Siegel suggest Lendeborg’s teammate Morez Johnson is a player on the rise, with sources telling ClutchPoints some teams view the Wolverines forward/center as a lottery lock. Vecenie thinks Johnson is unlikely to fall past 15th, which is one spot outside of the lottery. For what it’s worth, both authors have the Hornets selecting Johnson 14th overall.
- Ament, Karim Lopez, Chris Cenac, Jayden Quaintance and Ebuka Okorie are among the prospects who appear to have a wide draft range, according to Vecenie. Lopez, for instance, could be in play anywhere from No. 11 to around No. 25.
Heat Announce New Local TV Broadcaster For 2026/27 Season
FanDuel Sports Network (Main Street Sports Group) is no longer broadcasting NBA games, leaving several teams looking for alternative options for local television rights. One of those clubs — the Heat — announced Monday that it has a new local TV home, writes Anthony Chiang of The Miami Herald.
According to Chiang, WPLG Local 10 will air all the team’s non-nationally televised games for free, over the air.
WPLG actually started its relationship with the Heat this past season, per Chiang, when Local 10 aired 12 simulcast games from FanDuel Sports Network. South Florida residents who don’t have access to WPLG can view the Heat’s games on the the TV station’s new streaming platform (Local 10 Plus Platinum), which is also free.
“The great thing about the relationship with WPLG is that what the fans will notice really won’t be that much of a change,” Heat executive vice president and chief marketing officer Michael McCullough said. “Our broadcast behind-the-scenes people are still the same. Our on-air talent is still the same. What we have now is a new relationship that allows more people to see our network quality broadcast and to hear that familiar call of Eric Reid and John Crotty for all games that are not being exclusively televised by a national broadcaster. So whatever the Heat fan has enjoyed for a number of years with our previous broadcast partner, they will get that and more with the relationship with WPLG.”
While the Heat are excited to expand their partnership with WPLG, McCullough confirmed the deal currently only covers the upcoming season, Chiang notes. The full broadcast schedule will be unveiled sometime after the NBA’s schedule is released in August.
The NBA has reportedly considered the idea of introducing its own streaming hub for local broadcasts, but that’s unlikely to come about until at least the 2027/28 season.
Draft Notes: Bulls, Cenac, Spurs, Mavericks, Hall
Houston big man Chris Cenac worked out for the Bulls on Monday, a source tells Joel Lorenzi of The Athletic (Twitter link). The 6’11” big man, who spent his freshman season with the Cougars before declaring for the 2026 draft as an early entrant, is ranked 21st on ESPN’s big board.
Donovan Atwell (Texas Tech), Tobe Awaka (Arizona), Josh Dix (Creighton), Nate Johnson (Kansas State) and Xaivian Lee (Florida) also participated in Monday’s workout with the Bulls, Lorenzi reports. Awaka (No. 49) is considered a potential second-round pick, while the other four players are projected to go undrafted.
Chicago controls the fourth, 15th, 38th and 56th picks.
Here are few more notes on June’s draft:
- The Spurs (20th, 35th, 42nd, 44th) also control four draft picks. Brett Siegel of ClutchPoints hears Cenac is a “real possibility” for San Antonio at No. 20, assuming he’s still available (Twitter link).
- The Mavericks conducted a pre-draft workout on Monday featuring Sam Alexis (Indiana), DJ Armstrong (UMBC), Quincy Ballard (Mississippi State), Kylan Boswell (Illinois), David Dixon (Duquesne) and Mark Mitchell (Missouri), reports Mike Curtis of The Dallas Morning News (via Twitter). Dallas currently has two first-round picks (ninth and 30th) and one second-rounder (48th). Boswell (55th on ESPN’s board) is considered the most likely player to be selected later this month.
- Former Virginia point guard Dallin Hall worked out for the Wizards last week and had a workout with the Magic on Sunday, agent Jake Cohen tells Jason Beede of The Orlando Sentinel (Twitter link). Hall, a senior this past season, spent three years at BYU prior to transferring to Virginia.
Pacific Notes: Kings, Acuff, Flemings, Kerr, Suns, Morant
The Kings control the seventh, 34th and 45th picks in the 2026 NBA draft. They’ve been active in working out prospects and that will continue on Tuesday morning, according to James Ham of The Kings Beat (Twitter link).
Sacramento will be hosting six players tomorrow: Tamin Lipsey (Iowa State), Ja’Kobi Gillespie (Tennessee), J’Vonne Hadley (Louisville), Jevon Porter (Missouri), Giovanni Emejuru (East Carolina) and Ernest Udeh (Miami). Gillespie is viewed as the top prospect among that group by some outlets, ranking No. 44 on ESPN’s big board.
Here’s more from around the Pacific:
- Several mock drafts last month had the Kings selecting Darius Acuff with the seventh overall pick, but that has changed of late, notes Jason Anderson of The Sacramento Bee. That’s not because the Kings aren’t interested in Acuff — the mocks have him coming off the board at No. 5 or No. 6. Instead, those mocks have the Kings drafting Kingston Flemings, another guard who’s a projected lottery pick. A current NBA agent and former scout who spoke to Anderson had Acuff ranked higher than Flemings, calling the latter a “10-year starter” but “not an All-Star.”
- Jerry Stackhouse spent the past two seasons as an assistant coach on Steve Kerr‘s staff before parting ways with the Warriors when his contract expired. He talked about what he learned from Kerr on FanDuel TV’s Run It Back Show (YouTube link), as Will Simonds of NBC Sports Bay Area relays. “I saw how how Steve, you know, he wants conversation,” Stackhouse said in part. “He wants to make sure that you understand — even the coaching staff — just constantly confirming with everybody to make sure that you know where you stand and and you know what we’re trying to get accomplished.”
- The Suns have no interest in trading for Ja Morant, a source reiterated to Gerald Bourguet of Suns After Dark (Twitter link). Bourguet reported about a month ago that Phoenix wasn’t intrigued by the possibility of acquiring Morant, but speculation about the possibility has persisted.
Thunder GM Talks Holmgren, Team Options, Draft, More
While Thunder big man Chet Holmgren drew plenty of criticism for his lackluster performance in the Western Conference finals, particularly the Game 7 loss in which he finished with just four points (on 1-of-2 shooting) and four rebounds in 33 minutes, general manager Sam Presti publicly backed the former No. 2 overall pick on Monday, writes Justin Martinez of The Oklahoman.
According to Presti, Holmgren’s “underdog” mentality will serve him well going forward.
“Chet’s one of our guys,” Presti said. “He’s been so impactful. He drives winning on so many different levels for us. We were sweeping our way to the Western Conference Finals primarily because of his efforts in the [Suns and Lakers] series. All that to say, he didn’t have a great series in the last series.
“… This is a guy who’s intrinsically motivated. He doesn’t need people questioning him or things on the internet to drive his improvement. The best example of that is we won the Finals last year, and he was dominant in Game 7 defensively and through a lot of the playoffs.
“I’m not really that concerned about him. The good thing is you get to confront those things again and continue to improve, and I’m confident that he’ll be ready to go.”
Here’s more from Presti’s end-of-season press conference:
- The Thunder project to be well over the second tax apron in 2026/27 if they exercise their team options on Isaiah Hartenstein, Luguentz Dort and Kenrich Williams. They could also be facing a roster crunch, with two first-round picks (Nos. 12 and 17) and one second-rounder (No. 37) on top of having most of the roster signed to guaranteed contracts for next season. However, Presti reiterated ownership is willing to spend to contend for championships if the front office deems it necessary, as Anthony Slater of ESPN relays. “Is it possible that we just pick up the options for everybody and roll into next season when we have a bigger financial jump for the team?” Presti said. “That’s certainly possible. … The process itself to get to those potential options, it could take a little while. I could see it going a little deeper into the summer than we’re used to.”
- Oklahoma City will explore a number of possibilities with those three selections in this month’s draft, Presti told reporters, including Martinez. “Everybody knows we try to move up every year,” Presti said. “We try to get a price for what it would take for us to move out entirely, and then we also have contingencies to move back in the draft. It’s all about creating value. That’s how we see each one of these picks. Sometimes, the best value is to take the best player on the board and figure it out later. … But we’ll look at all these different options.”
- Presti spoke highly of Thomas Sorber, the team’s 2025 first-round pick who tore his ACL this past September and missed his entire rookie season, Martinez writes. However, Presti doesn’t think Sorber will play in Summer League next month.
- The longtime executive also praised mid-season acquisition Jared McCain, Martinez adds. “I’ve always felt like he’s a guy that contributes to winning,” Presti said. ” … There aren’t many people that I would choose to try to assimilate into our particular team in the middle of the year. … But he had the right mindset to walk into a team like ours and in the right game. I think, going forward, there’s a more balanced player in there and not just a guy that’s going to come off and be able to hit shots like that. He really understands the game. He understands winning. He’ll put his body out there. I’m looking forward to a full summer with him, a full training camp and really seeing how he accents our full team.”
