Knicks Notes: Bridges, Starters, Brunson, Clarkson

Veteran wing Mikal Bridges has played 625 consecutive games to open his NBA career, by far the longest active streak in the league and one of the longest in history. While the 29-year-old has publicly downplayed the importance of that streak, per Stefan Bondy of The New York Post (subscriber link), Bridges’ recent stretch of poor play and repeated fourth-quarter benchings led a reporter ask head coach Mike Brown whether it might be best for him to give Bridges a night off.

If our performance group says this guy needs a rest or that guy needs a game to get their body right, mind right, whatever it might be, 100 percent, I’ll give anybody a game,” Brown answered. “That’s something that’s done collectively. I’m not going to say, ‘You sit; you play; you sit; you play,’ because not everybody is the same. But we all have to play better than the way we’re playing right now, especially to start games.”

Bridges is averaging 6.5 points, 4.5 rebounds, 2.8 assists and 1.3 blocks on .320/.208/.667 shooting splits in just 26.0 minutes per game across his last six outings. For context, he played at least 31 minutes in 39 of his first 43 games this season; over his last 26 games, Bridges has played 30 or fewer minutes 16 times.

Bridges was benched in favor of Landry Shamet for the final seven minutes of Sunday’s comeback win over Golden State, Bondy writes, and even Jordan Clarkson has played more than him in two of the past three fourth quarters. Both of those players are on minimum-salary deals, while the Knicks gave Bridges a four-year, $150MM extension last offseason after trading five first-round picks to acquire him in the summer of 2024.

We all have to play better. It’s no secret Mikal has not shot the ball well,” Brown said. “But he’s given us life, at times.”

Here’s more on the Knicks:

  • In a related story, Bondy points out that Brown has been unhappy with the team’s poor starts in recent games, but the team’s coach isn’t ready to make a change to the starting lineup. New York trailed the injury-ravaged Warriors by 21 points in the first quarter before pulling out a three-point victory. “Right now I don’t feel the need to,” Brown said Sunday. “But like I said, if I felt the need to, I would. I don’t feel the need to right now.” Brown reiterated that his focus was more on the overall group rather than Bridges, Bondy notes, but didn’t rule out potential tweaks down the line. “It’s not too late to do anything. And if I feel the need, I will,” Brown said of a lineup change. “I’m not thinking that right now. I’m not concentrating on each individual because, like you said, we’ve started different people at different times.”
  • Star point guard Jalen Brunson has been listed as questionable for Tuesday’s matchup vs. Indiana because of right ankle injury management and a neck strain, as Bondy relays. New York has gone 1-4 without its captain and leading scorer this season, Bondy observes, but the Pacers might be without several key players and have lost 13 straight games, though they’ve played hard against the Knicks this season after eliminating in last year’s Eastern Conference final.
  • After Sunday’s game, in which the veteran guard had 14 points in 22 minutes, Clarkson discussed staying ready for his opportunity after being out of the rotation for most of the past several weeks, Bondy writes.”I’ve been doing the same thing my whole career in terms of my consistency of, coming to the gym, getting shots up, getting ready,” Clarkson said. “The work’s been solid and consistent, and I think I just hold my hat on that and let the cards fall where they may.”

Injury Notes: Edwards, Reid, Kawhi, Giannis, Harper, Kornet

Timberwolves guard Anthony Edwards has been ruled out of Tuesday’s game against Phoenix due to right knee soreness, the team announced (via Twitter). It’s an important matchup between the two Western Conference clubs, as Minnesota has a two-game lead over the Suns for the No. 6 seed — and a guaranteed playoff berth.

According to Jon Krawczynski of The Athletic (Twitter link), Edwards was “clearly laboring” during Sunday’s road loss in Oklahoma City. It will be the 11th missed game this season for Edwards, who has been named to the All-NBA Second Team each of the past two seasons.

Sixth Man of the Year contender Naz Reid is battling an injury as well. He’s listed as questionable to suit up because of a right shoulder contusion, per the Wolves.

We have more injury updates from around the NBA:

  • Clippers forward Kawhi Leonard has been downgraded from doubtful to out for Monday’s game vs. San Antonio, tweets Law Murray of The Athletic. The two-time NBA Finals MVP sprained his left ankle in the fourth quarter of Saturday’s win over Sacramento, which is why he won’t play tonight. As Murray notes (via Twitter), Leonard can only miss two more games after Monday to remain eligible for major postseason awards.
  • Giannis Antetokounmpo appeared to tweak his left knee after landing awkwardly following a dunk during Sunday’s win over Indiana. While the Bucks superstar is considered questionable for Tuesday’s contest vs. Cleveland, Antetokounmpo’s injury designation is still a left ankle sprain rather than anything to do with his knee, according to Eric Nehm of The Athletic (Twitter link). The 31-year-old forward downplayed the apparent knee issue after the game and said he didn’t plan to undergo imaging.
  • The Spurs will be without two key rotation members on Monday, with Dylan Harper (right calf contusion) and Luke Kornet (right knee soreness) both sidelined (Twitter link via Jared Weiss of The Athletic). It’s the second straight absence for Harper, the No. 2 overall pick in last year’s draft, and the first absence for Kornet since February 5. However, head coach Mitch Johnson is hopeful both players will be active on Tuesday at Sacramento, as Tom Orsborn of The San Antonio Express-News relays (via Twitter). “If not tomorrow, very, very soon,” Johnson said. “But I’m optimistic that they got a good chance to play tomorrow.

Mavs Notes: Flagg, Kyrie, Washington, Poulakidas

Kyrie Irving won’t play for the Mavericks this season as he continues his recovery from a torn ACL, but he has been a valuable mentor off the court to Cooper Flagg, the rookie forward said in an interview with ESPN’s Malika Andrews (YouTube link).

[Irving] was that top pick and was kind of thrown into the fire. He stepped in as a great vet for me and was there kind of giving me guidance,” Flagg said of Irving (hat tip to The Dallas Morning News). “There was definitely times where I was shaken up. I never lost that much in my life. Just to hear him say that and tell me that I’m doing everything I need to be doing, just to stay with it and stay positive, it definitely helped me out a lot.”

Here’s more on the Mavericks:

  • After the Cavaliers dominated the Mavericks in Dallas on Friday, the Mavs surprisingly returned the favor in Sunday’s rematch in Cleveland, writes Mike Curtis of The Dallas Morning News. Head coach Jason Kidd made an adjustment to the starting lineup, with P.J. Washington sliding up to center in a small-ball lineup in part because Daniel Gafford was out because of an illness. Washington had an excellent performance, becoming the third player in Mavs history to record at least 20 points, 10 rebounds (he had 11), five steals and a block in a game. “He’s willing to do whatever it takes out there and he’s so strong,” said Flagg, who had 27 points, 10 assists, six rebounds and two blocks. “It helps our coverages and flying around the court and speeding up on both sides of the floor. I thought that was huge for us…It just gave us a different look and different way to attack their bigs.
  • Washington explained why he thought the lineup change was so effective after the game, per Grant Afseth of DallasHoopsJournal.com. “I think I’m a mismatch. I can create for others, I can pass, I can set screens and pop. It’s not really what happens every day in the NBA — it’s a lot of rolling centers,” he said. “Me at the five popping opened up a lot of space on the floor for us to get some closeouts and ball reversals to get some good shots. I think it was good for us.” Kidd stuck with the same starting five for Monday’s back-to-back in New Orleans, Afseth tweets.
  • Two-way player John Poulakidas provided a spark off the bench in Sunday’s win, according to Curtis. The undrafted rookie out of Yale scored his first career points during the victory, finishing with 10, including eight in a span of 60 seconds late in the third quarter. “I’ve been dreaming about having this type of opportunity since I was very little and to be living it right now is just very surreal to me,” Poulakidas said. “I’m just trying to be grateful for every opportunity I get every single day.”

Cavs’ Jarrett Allen (Knee) Out At Least Three More Games

Starting center Jarrett Allen continues to deal with tendonitis in his right knee and will miss Cleveland’s upcoming three-game road trip, which begins on Tuesday in Milwaukee, the Cavaliers announced in a press release (Twitter link).

Allen suffered the injury in the second half of Cleveland’s win over Detroit on March 3. The 27-year-old big man, who has been sidelined for the past five games, will continue his treatment and rehabilitation program, per the team.

Allen is a critical member of the Cavs, averaging 15.3 points and 8.5 rebounds in 27.5 minutes per game so far this season. The team has a 33-18 record when he suits up in 2025/26, but has gone just 8-9 without him, including 2-3 over the last five games.

Cleveland also released status updates on backup guards Craig Porter Jr. and Tyrese Proctor.

Porter, who injured his left groin on Friday at Dallas, underwent an MRI, which confirmed a strain. The former Wichita State standout is expected to miss one-to-three weeks, according to the Cavaliers.

Like Allen, Proctor has been out for the last five games and will miss the upcoming road trip. The 49th overall pick in last year’s draft is battling a right quad strain.

The Cavs are currently 41-27, the No. 4 seed in the Eastern Conference.

Heat Notes: Powell, Herro, Bam, Mitchell, Jovic, Schedule

After missing the Heat‘s last seven games due to a right groin strain, All-Star wing Norman Powell suited up on Saturday’s four-point loss to Orlando, finishing with 21 points (on 7-of-15 shooting) and three assists in 31 minutes.

Powell’s return came with a twist, however, as he came off the bench for the first time in nearly two years, writes Anthony Chiang of The Miami Herald. The Heat won all seven of the games Powell missed and coaches told him they didn’t want to “mess the flow up.”

Tyler Herro, who had played well in place of Powell for the first five games of that winning streak, also returned to action on Saturday after missing two games with left quad soreness. He started at shooting guard alongside Davion Mitchell, Pelle Larsson, Bam Adebayo and Kel’el Ware.

Look, these are not easy decisions right now,” head coach Erik Spoelstra said of moving Powell to the bench. “He’s going to play a lot of minutes. Tyler is going to play a lot of minutes. Right now, we just need to focus on winning games and pouring into the team right now. We want to be healthy. We want our guys out there. We want our firepower. We want our options. With that comes some way of sacrifice.”

Backup guard Dru Smith received his fourth DNP-CD of the season with Powell and Herro active, Chiang notes.

Here’s more on the Heat:

  • Star big man Adebayo was not happy with the officiating crew following Saturday’s game, Chiang adds in the same story. With Miami down four and 36.6 seconds remaining, Larsson was called for five-second inbounding violation, which the team disagreed with. Then with 18.5 seconds left and Miami trailing by two, the Heat felt Orlando should have been called for the same violation, but the referees granted the Magic a timeout. “That altered the game,” Adebayo said of the five-second violation called on Larsson. “When you alter the game, you should have to, like, stand on that. Because when we mess up, when we make mistakes, when we miss stuff, all hell breaks loose on us. We got people blaming us for everything. And then on the other side, I felt like they had a five-second call that wasn’t called. That altered the game. So you see what I’m getting at? They affect the game in a way where sometimes it does have an effect, and they get to go home and sleep peacefully. And we’re up here talking about a call that you feel like should have been called or not called.” For what it’s worth, the last two minute report said both calls were correct.
  • Mitchell’s place in the starting lineup seems secure based on Spoelstra’s recent comments, according to Ira Winderman of The South Florida Sun Sentinel. The longtime coach referred to the 27-year-old point guard as “one of our most important guys” and an “elite on-ball defender.” He also complimented Mitchell’s offensive contributions, Winderman writes. “He’s, in many ways, the engine of when we run and we’re at our best and our pace,” Spoelstra said. “Oftentimes, it’s him that’s igniting it and pitching the ball ahead.”
  • Fourth-year forward Nikola Jovic, who has been sidelined for 11 consecutive games due to a lower back injury, has been upgraded to probable ahead of Tuesday’s matchup at Charlotte, per Chiang (Twitter link). Andrew Wiggins, who is dealing with sesamoiditis in his left big toe, will miss his sixth straight contest.
  • Miami’s recent upswing will be put to the test with a difficult schedule over the next six games, Chiang writes for The Herald. The Heat play at Charlotte, vs. the Lakers, at Houston, vs. San Antonio, and have a pair of road games in Cleveland during that stretch. “Everybody knows what time it is right now. You have to make moves,” Spoelstra said of the race to avoid the play-in tournament. “You have to do something. And we knew that coming out of All-Star break.”

Bulls Announce Injury Updates On Simons, Ivey

Anfernee Simons, who was scheduled to visit a hand specialist, was recently reevaluated. While the 26-year-old is “making progress” in his recovery from a left wrist fracture, his return isn’t imminent — he’ll be checked out again in 10 days, the Bulls announced in a press release (Twitter link).

Head coach Billy Donovan said Simons was able to take some shots during the Bulls’ shootaround last Tuesday. However, the 26-year-old was still experiencing pain at the time, particularly when catching and dribbling the ball.

Simons has missed Chicago’s last 10 games after he aggravated the fracture on February 21. The 6’3″ combo guard originally sustained the injury in training camp with Boston, but managed to play most of the season before re-injuring it three-plus weeks ago.

Based on today’s update, Simons will be out at least four more games. He’ll likely be reevaluated either before or after next Wednesday’s contest at Philadelphia.

The Bulls also issued an update on another injured guard, Jaden Ivey, who has been battling left knee soreness. According to the team, Ivey “continues to make progress” in his rehabilitation program and will be reevaluated in one week.

Ivey last played on February 11, Chicago’s final game before the All-Star break. He has missed the team’s last 12 contests and will be out at least three more, with another update likely to come next Monday, when the Bulls host Houston.

Ivey reportedly worked out with Chicago’s G League affiliate over the weekend. The Bulls have been focused on building strength back in his left knee, which he fractured on Jan. 1, 2025.

Simons will be an unrestricted free agent this summer, while Ivey will be a restricted free agent if the Bulls give him a qualifying offer.

Luka Doncic, Bam Adebayo Earn Player Of Week Honors

Lakers guard Luka Doncic and Heat big man Bam Adebayo have been named the Western and Eastern Conference Players of the Week, respectively, according to the league office (Twitter links). The awards cover games played from March 9-15.

Doncic led the Lakers to a 3-0 week by averaging 37.3 points, 11.0 assists and 10.3 rebounds per game. He came one assist away from registering three consecutive triple-doubles, had 51 points on Thursday vs. Chicago, and made a last-second basket to defeat Denver in overtime on Saturday.

The selection of Adebayo was a foregone conclusion after his historic 83-point game against the Wizards, which represented the second-highest single-game scoring output in NBA history. Overall, Adebayo averaged 41.3 points, 8.0 rebounds and 2.3 steals per contest last week as the Heat won two of three games.

Doncic became the second player to win a third Player of the Week award in 2025/26, joining Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. For Adebayo, it’s his second Player of the Week selection this season and the fourth of his career.

Devin Booker (Suns), DeMar DeRozan (Kings), Gilgeous-Alexander (Thunder), Kawhi Leonard (Clippers), Austin Reaves (Lakers) and Victor Wembanyama (Spurs) were the other nominees from the Western Conference. Paolo Banchero and Desmond Bane (Magic), Jalen Brunson (Knicks), Cade Cunningham and Jalen Duren (Pistons), Brandon Ingram (Raptors) and Jalen Johnson (Hawks) were the other nominees from the East.

Suns Notes: Ishbia Lawsuit, Schedule, Raptors Loss, Gillespie

The dispute between Suns owner Mat Ishbia and two minority owners is headed to binding mediation, according to The Athletic’s Mike Vorkunov, citing a document filed Monday in Delaware state court.

The involved parties have asked the judge overseeing their case to approve an order that will allow them to resolve their case via mediation. They have made an agreement  “to participate in a confidential binding mediation process, which upon completion will result in the dismissal of the action.”

Andy Kohlberg and Scott Seldin, longtime Suns and Phoenix Mercury minority owners, filed a lawsuit against Ishbia last August, accusing him of lacking transparency in how he ran the organization and of using the franchises as his own “piggy bank.” Ishbia countersued in October, claiming Kohlberg and Seldin were looking to use their legal action to gain a large buyout of their stakes in the teams at an “extortionate” cost.

Here’s more on the Suns:

  • With 15 games remaining, Phoenix (39-28) has the third-toughest remaining schedule, Duane Rankin of the Arizona Republic points out. That will complicate its efforts of getting out of the play-in tournament and garnering a top-six seed. The Suns are currently seventh in the West and will complete a rugged six-game road trip with games against Boston, Minnesota and San Antonio over the next four nights. “Every game is super important,”guard Collin Gillespie said. “We’ve got to take it one game at a time. Can’t have mental lapses or the little details slip, and we know we’re fighting for something every game. Every time we step on the floor, it’s an important game. We can’t let these opportunities slip, especially in the West.”
  • The Suns did let one slip away on Friday, falling to Toronto. That ended a four-game winning streak. “Last game, we had some slip-ups we can definitely control on the defensive end,” forward Royce O’Neale told Rankin. “Communicate a little better. Feel like our communication got to be on point, especially going into these last couple of games of the road trip.”
  • Three games after he scored 24 points against Charlotte, Gillespie laid a goose egg against the Raptors. He only attempted three shots in 26 minutes. He also had just four points in 28 minutes against Indiana on Thursday. Gillespie said he has to keep working at getting open looks. “Find those opportunities, hunting threes,” Gillespie told Rankin. “Being ready to catch-and-shoot knowing that those guys are back. More on-ball stuff might not be available as much, but being ready to catch-and-shoot off the ball.” Gillespie is one of the league’s biggest bargains. He signed a one-year, minimum deal last summer and is averaging 13.2 points per game. He’ll be an unrestricted free agent this summer.

Warriors Notes: Curry, Kerr, Schedule, Yurtseven, Richard

Stephen Curry has been out since January 3o due to a knee injury, but Warriors head coach Steve Kerr remains confident his star guard will return before the end of the season, Kevin Borba of NBC Sports Bay Area relays.

“Well, we expect him back,” Kerr said to NBC’s Bob Costas during the broadcast of the Warriors-Knicks contest on Sunday. “He’s trending in the right direction. It’s been a tricky injury. I think he’ll be back for sure. We just don’t know if it’s going to be a week or two or whatever. It’s a day-to-day process.”

Curry has been working out and will be reevaluated on March 21. He’ll miss at least the next three games.

Here’s more on the Warriors:

  • Despite an injury-marred season, Curry isn’t seriously considering the idea of retiring in the near future, Nick Friedell of The Athletic relays. Curry made his comments during an interview with The Athletic’s Marcus Thompson II. “I think your body is the first point of information,” he said. “Just what it takes to get ready for a game is a lot different now than it was a decade ago. When I’m out there on the court right now, I still get lost in the fun. It’s still my happy place. All the work is worth it because I get to go out there and hoop at the highest level. The competition, the camaraderie, the chasing something that matters — that still gets me going. And I don’t see that stopping anytime soon.”
  • Kerr has called for shortening the regular season numerous times and he was at it again this weekend, according to SNY’s Ian Begley (Twitter link). “I’m well aware fewer games would mean less revenue which means everybody takes a pay cut and I’m willing to stick my neck out and say I’m all for that because I think the quality of the product is the most important thing,” he said. “So I don’t say these things flippantly. I say these things because I mean them.” Kerr would like to see the schedule reduced by 10 games. “We have incredible people in this league and great fans. I just want to make sure we give our fans the very, very best product we can and try to satisfy all of our corporate partners,” Kerr said. “And I just think there’s probably a way to do that without just completely — I don’t know, ignoring some of the obvious (schedule-related injury) issues we’ve established.”
  • Big man Omer Yurtseven says the NBA game is much more free-flowing than in the European leagues due to the layout of the court and rules preventing defenders from hanging out in the paint. “In Europe, it’s much more chaotic,” Yurtseven said, per Eurohoops.net. “They will just shrink, be able to recover it back, because the three-point line is closer, because there is no three-second rule in defense. Those kinds of things affect everything.” Yurtseven, signed to a 10-day contract over the weekend, went scoreless in 13 minutes in a three-point loss to the Knicks but did pull down four rebounds.
  • Kerr was mad at himself for lambasting rookie Will Richard during Sunday’s nationally televised game. Kerr ripped Richard for committing a silly turnover in the second quarter. “I kind of regret losing my composure a little bit there,” Kerr said, per Monte Poole of NBC Sports Bay Area. “It’s my job to keep the guys going, especially when we’re without so many players.”