Knicks Notes: Hart, Brunson, Bridges, Robinson, Alvarado

Knicks forward Josh Hart was on the bench for much of the fourth quarter and overtime in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals on Tuesday as the team completed a historic 22-point comeback with Landry Shamet taking his place on the floor. The Knicks were outscored by 23 points when Hart was on the court in Game 1, and he made just 1-of-5 three-point tries.

It initially looked like Thursday might be another rough night for Hart, who missed his first three outside shots in the Game 2 as the Cavaliers‘ defense let him have open looks. But by the end of the night, Hart had emerged as the Knicks’ leading scorer and most effective all-around player, writes Fiifi Frimpong of The New York Daily News (subscription required). He racked up 26 points, seven assists, and a pair of steals while knocking down 5-of-11 total three-pointers in the 109-93 victory.

“Those first three, they felt good,” Hart said after the game. “Kind of frustrated with it. I’ve been putting in the reps with (assistant coaches Kwadzo Ahelegbe) and Peter Patton and I was frustrated at first. I’m just like, ‘It is not translating right now.’ And then I knew I had to just keep shooting and if I did that, I’ll be good.”

Speaking to reporters, head coach Mike Brown said he never considered going away from Hart as he struggled early in Game 2. As James L. Edwards III of The Athletic relays, Brown explained that the versatile forward is “so impactful as a connector” that he can have an impact on winning even when his shot isn’t falling.

“It’s easy for me to say because I have the utmost confidence in the world in him,” Brown said, per Stefan Bondy of The New York Post (subscription required). “He’s a gamer. When you have guys who are gamers, they do stuff that people don’t think they can do. And he knows the work he puts in. We know the work he puts in. His confidence is not going to waver. He’s going to put confidence in himself to take the next one and make the next one.”

Here’s more on the Knicks, who will head to Cleveland with a 2-0 lead in the Eastern finals:

  • After playing hero in Game 1 by scoring 16 fourth-quarter points, Jalen Brunson had the ball forced out of hands on Thursday by the Cavaliers, who were determined not to let the star point guard beat them in Game 2, notes Zach Braziller of The New York Post. Brunson had no problem adjusting, setting a new career playoff high by handing out 14 assists. “It just shows that he plays the right way,” teammate Mikal Bridges said. “If you’re not going to send a double-team, I think it’s an advantage for him. If you send a double-team, he’s going to read and react and find the open guy. Ever since I’ve known him, he plays the right way. Kudos to him, how he works, and his understanding of the game. If you’re going to come (double-team him), he’s going to make you pay and that’s what makes him great.”
  • Speaking of Bridges, he continues to be everything the Knicks hoped for when they gave up five first-round picks to acquire him and signed him to a $150MM extension, says Howie Kussoy of The New York Post. Bridges has been the Knicks’ primary defender on James Harden and has scored 37 points on 16-of-23 shooting (69.6%) through the first two games of the series. “He’s an amazing player,” Knicks forward OG Anunoby said. “He’s been his whole career. I’m not surprised at all. This is Mikal. He’s a great player.”
  • While it hasn’t prevented the Knicks from building a 2-0 lead in the series, Mitchell Robinson‘s poor free throw shooting remains a concern for the team, as Jared Schwartz of The New York Post observes. After making 2-of-8 shots from the line in Game 1, Robinson missed all four of his attempts in Game 2, resulting in Brown playing him just three minutes in the second half.
  • Trade deadline acquisition Jose Alvarado has averaged just 7.5 minutes per night through the first two games vs. Cleveland, but he’s having a real impact on the team even when he’s not on the court, according to the Knicks’ head coach. “We actually pointed it out to our group in practice,” Brown said on Thursday, per Schwartz. “You watch the film, he’s uplifting the entire team when he’s on the bench. He’s always talking in a positive way. He’s showing our young guys that you can impact the game if you’re present, because Jose’s always present. You’re using your voice and your energy, guys feel that on the floor. Jose’s been phenomenal.”

Mavericks Notes: Kidd, Sweeney, Coaching Search, Barlowe

On Tuesday, the Mavericks announced that the team and head coach Jason Kidd had mutually agreed to part ways. On Thursday morning, Kidd issued a statement thanking the organization with which he spent the last five seasons (Twitter link).

I want to sincerely thank the Mavericks organization, the players, coaches, staff, front office, ownership, and every employee behind the scenes who put their heart into this team every single day. It has been an honor to work alongside so many incredible people,” he said. “To the players, thank you for your trust, your commitment, and the battles we went through together. I am proud of what we built, the relationships formed, and the way you competed night in and night out.”

He finished by thanking the fan base and the city of Dallas.

The Hall of Fame point guard finished his time in Dallas with a 205-205 record, falling to .500 overall during the last two seasons as the Mavs were beset injuries as well as the trade of Luka Doncic. Under Kidd, the team advanced to the 2024 NBA Finals as well as the 2022 Western Conference Finals.

We have more notes from the Mavs:

  • Spurs associate head coach Sean Sweeney is expected to draw significant interest from the Mavs as they seek Kidd’s successor, per ClutchPoints’ Brett Siegel (Twitter link). Sweeney, long considered a head coaching candidate, has been an assistant in the league since 2013 and spent four years in Dallas before being hired by San Antonio in 2025. He has also been connected to the coaching searches in Chicago and Orlando this spring.
  • New Mavs president Masai Ujiri has said that he plans to cast a wide net as the team seeks a new head coach. One possible target is Duke coach Jon Scheyer — Siegel reports that Dallas is expected to reach out to Scheyer, though he’s considered to be committed to his current position with the Blue Devils. Jared Dudley (Nuggets), Micah Nori (Timberwolves), Frank Vogel (Mavericks), and current coaching free agents like Tom Thibodeau and Donovan are some other potential candidates to keep an eye on for the Mavs, Mike Curtis speculates for the Dallas Morning News.
  • As part of the organizational shake-up that comes with new leadership, Rafael Barlowe is no longer with the team after nearly a year of serving as an international scout for the team, Barlowe confirmed on Twitter. Prior to his time in Dallas, Barlowe scouted the draft for the website NBABigBoard.com.

Micah Nori Among Finalists For Blazers’ Coaching Job

The Trail Blazers‘ coaching search appears to be progressing toward a resolution.

On the heels of reports that interim head coach Tiago Splitter and lead Clippers assistant Jeff Van Gundy are considered finalists for the job, a third name has been added to the mix, with Marc Stein of The Stein Line stating that Timberwolves assistant Micah Nori is another finalist (Twitter link).

The Blazers’ interest in the Wolves’ assistant was already known. However, there have been rumors that Portland is looking at upwards of 20 or 30 candidates, so it was unclear until now whether Nori was viewed as a serious contender for the position.

Nori has been an assistant coach since 2009, when he was hired by Toronto. After a four-year stint with the Raptors from 2009-13, he also spent time as an assistant with the Kings (2013-15), Nuggets (2015-18), and Pistons (2018-21).

Nori, Chris Finch’s lead assistant in Minnesota, has been with the Wolves since 2021 and has become an increasingly popular name in coaching searches over recent years. This spring, he has been linked to the Bulls’ open position and there has been speculation he might become a candidate for the vacancy in Dallas as well.

Northwest Notes: Boozer, Lillard, Blazers Decisions, Hartenstein

Projected top-three draft pick Cameron Boozer has clear familial ties to the Jazz, who hold the second pick in the 2026 draft. His father, Carlos Boozer, spent six seasons in Utah, including his two All-Star years, and works with the team to this day in their scouting department.

Cameron was born in Salt Lake City, though he moved away before his fourth birthday, and he says that his conversations with his dad about following in his footsteps generally had more to do with Chicago than his hometown, Kevin Reynolds writes for the Salt Lake Tribune.

When it comes to the young power forward’s potential on-court fit with Utah, though, there are clear questions, as the Jazz already boast one of the larger frontcourts in the league, led by Lauri Markkanen, Jaren Jackson Jr., and Walker Kessler. Boozer could fit in nicely as a big off the bench who can play alongside any of those other big men and focus on his play-making, which was a strength in college.

While Boozer views himself as the top talent in the draft, he said his focus is on getting to the place that will get the most out of him.

Whether it is one, two, three or four, I want the best fit,” Boozer said. “I mean, it would be nice to play for a city that my dad played for. Obviously, Chicago (picking fourth overall) is another great city.”

We have more from around the Northwest Division:

  • Damian Lillard‘s first season back with the Trail Blazers consisted of a three-point contest championship and a lot of mentoring from the bench. Next season, he is expected to return to the court, but not everyone is clear on what that will look like. “I don’t understand what he brings to the table, especially with [Jrue Holiday] and [Scoot Henderson] already on the roster,” one anonymous scout told Joe Freeman of Oregon Live. “You could say he brings shooting. Well, yeah, but how did he get his shots? With the ball in his hands. It didn’t work in Milwaukee. If he’s dominating the ball, is [Shaedon Sharpe] developing? Is Scoot developing?” Lillard, for his part, says that his time watching from the bench helped him understand exactly those questions: “I  got an opportunity to learn my teammates. I’m going to be playing with these guys, and just seeing what might set them off, seeing what they’re doing when they play well, seeing where they might struggle, seeing where our team struggles, ways that I think we could improve.
  • The Trail Blazers have plenty of roster decisions to make this summer, starting with what to do with Henderson. Unless the former third overall pick is included in a deal for a star player, it would behoove the team to try to work out a reasonable contract extension with him, Sean Highkin writes in a player movement prediction article for the Rose Garden Report (subscriber link), citing Sharpe’s four-year, $90MM extension from last summer as a reasonable starting place for Henderson. Vit Krejci and Sidy Cissoko are strong candidates to stick around, while players like Robert Williams III and Matisse Thybulle are worth hanging onto but could also be more valued by other teams.
  • Isaiah Hartenstein only played 12 minutes in the Thunder‘s Game 1 loss to the Spurs. Prior to Game 2, coach Mark Daigneault pulled the German big man aside and told him that he “didn’t feel great” about giving him so few minutes, Jenni Carlson writes for The Oklahoman. Hartenstein was unbothered, saying he’d do whatever was needed. In Game 2, what was needed was to take the lion’s share of minutes against Spurs star Victor Wembanyama. “The other night, [Wemby] just had way too much of the restricted (area), but if you zoom out, they turned the ball over a ton, we gave up 101 points in regulation,” Daigneault said. “The quality of shots were what we would want, other than his stuff at the rim.
  • Putting wings on Wembanyama in Game 1 created a shot diet in the paint that the Thunder coach felt was too sustainable, which is why he turned to Hartenstein to add physicality and size as a rim protector. In addition to helping hold the French superstar to just four rim attempts (compared to 17 in Game 1), Hartenstein added eight offensive rebounds and made sure Wembanyama felt him every time down the floor. “I thought he just did a good job of being physical, making him work all game,” Alex Caruso said. “Which ended up being beneficial for him on the glass late in the game. He cleaned that up offensively and defensively for us.”

Tiago Splitter A Finalist For Blazers’ Coaching Job

Despite initial reports indicating that interim head coach Tiago Splitter was unlikely to be retained by the Trail Blazers as they mount a comprehensive search for their head coach of the future, it appears the Brazilian incumbent has a genuine shot at the job. After Jake Fischer reported on Tuesday that Splitter was still a candidate for the position, Marc Stein of The Stein Line says (via Twitter) that he’s considered a finalist.

Splitter took over unexpectedly just one game into the season after Chauncey Billups was arrested as part of a federal probe into illegal gambling operations. He led Portland to a 42-39 finish, achieving both the team’s best regular season record and first playoff berth since the 2020/21 season.

Despite missing Damian Lillard for the entire season and expected starting point guard Scoot Henderson for the first 52 games of the year, the Blazers found success as a defensive-minded group built around first-time All-Star Deni Avdija‘s consistent rim pressure and play-making.

The Bulls have been rumored to have interest in interviewing Splitter for their head coach opening, but there was an expectation that they might be denied permission to speak to him if the Blazers are still seriously him for their own vacancy.

It was reported earlier that the team has also reached out to the Clippers for permission to interview Jeff Van Gundy, who is considered another finalist for the job.

Spurs’ Fox, Harper Listed As Questionable For Game 3

The Spurs are hoping to enter a pivotal Game 3 with a healthy roster, but it’s unclear what their backcourt rotation will look like as starting point guard De’Aaron Fox is listed as questionable with a right ankle sprain while rookie Dylan Harper, who has been starting in Fox’s place, is listed as questionable with right adductor soreness, per Marc Stein of The Stein Line (Twitter link).

After averaging 17.7 points and 5.0 assists in the Spurs’ six-game series win over the Timberwolves, Fox has missed the first two games of the series due to a right high ankle sprain. He was listed as questionable coming into Game 2, but ruled out prior to tip-off.

Harper has averaged 14.4 points and 1.5 steals in 26.8 minutes per game throughout his rookie season playoff run, and those numbers rose to 18.0 PPG, 4.5 APG, and 3.5 SPG in the two games he started for Fox against the Thunder. However, Harper exited Game 2 early with a leg injury after coming down awkwardly in the third quarter and was scheduled for an MRI on Thursday.

Short on guards, the Spurs turned to 30-year-old backup Jordan McLaughlin, who had played just 24 minutes in the playoffs prior to Game 2. He logged seven minutes, scoring six points on a pair of threes. If neither Fox nor Harper are able to go in Game 3, McLaughlin might be tasked with more backup guard minutes.

We have to continue to trust our depth and guys have to step up and when their names call and answer the bell,” head coach Mitch Johnson said, per Jeff McDonald of the San Antonio Express-News.

Thunder star wing Jalen Williams is also listed as questionable and is considered day-to-day due to a left hamstring injury moving forward.

Game 3 will tip off at 7:30 Central on Friday.

Trail Blazers Request Permission To Interview Jeff Van Gundy

As the Trail Blazers continue their search for a new head coach, one notable candidate is reportedly receiving serious consideration. The Blazers have requested permission from the Clippers to interview assistant coach Jeff Van Gundy, according to NBA insider Chris Haynes, who reports (via Twitter) that Van Gundy has emerged as a finalist for the job.

Van Gundy has been the lead assistant with the Clippers for the past two seasons and has extensive head coaching experience, initially with the Knicks (1995-2001) and then the Rockets (2003-07). He compiled a 430-318 record (.575) with those two teams and made a trip to the 1999 NBA Finals with the Knicks. Only five current coaches have more career playoff wins than Van Gundy: Erik Spoelstra, Steve Kerr, Rick Carlisle, Mike Brown, and Tyronn Lue.

Prior to joining the Clippers, Van Gundy spent 16 years as a broadcaster with ESPN, often alongside Mark Jackson, whom Van Gundy coached as an assistant with the Knicks and in Jackson’s final season with the Rockets.

While Tiago Splitter served as the team’s interim head coach following the arrest of Chauncey Billups as part of a federal investigation into illegal gambling, reports have indicated that new owner Tom Dundon‘s preference was to go in a different, possibly cheaper, direction.

Timberwolves’ assistant Micah Nori is one of several coaches who have also been identified as potential candidates for the position.

Thunder Notes: Caruso, Gilgeous-Alexander, McCain, Accountability

The Thunder boast a two-time MVP guard, an All-Star big man, and an All-NBA wing, but through two games of the Western Conference Finals, 32-year-old backup guard Alex Caruso has been the key to unlocking the team’s potential on both ends of the court, Kelly Iko writes for Yahoo Sports.

A year after showing his versatility by defending Nikola Jokic in the playoffs, Caruso has been tasked, at times, with guarding Spurs star Victor Wembanyama. Even more importantly, he has shown no fear in attacking the first-ever unanimous Defensive Player of the Year on offense, even as some of his teammates shied away from the large barrier Wembanyama represents.

He’s got an unbelievable focus and is a monster competitor,” said coach Mark Daigneault said of Caruso. “It seems like the bigger the moment, the bigger the game, the more he wants to compete in it. And he’ll fail and not blink, and he’ll be aggressive in the next possession, next game and he was huge again tonight. His minutes were massive for us.”

With Jalen Williams limited by injuries and Ajay Mitchell and Chet Holmgren working themselves into a rhythm, Caruso has stepped up offensively. Through two games, he is the series’ third-leading scorer behind the two teams’ respective MVP finalists, averaging 24.0 points per contest while hitting 11 of his 18 threes.

Caruso’s ability to guard up in the lineup also has downstream effects on the Thunder’s offense, as they are able to play more guards alongside him, thereby injecting much-needed shooting and ball-handling as the team searches for creases in San Antonio’s imposing defense.

His leadership is over the roof, honestly, especially on the [defensive] end of the floor,” Luguentz Dort said. “He communicates a lot. He’s really smart as a player and watches a lot of basketball as well. So he knows a lot of plays and the tricks we need to get stops defensively. Able to read the game well and he’s been amazing.”

Whether he can keep up the hot shooting remains to be seen, but with Williams being listed as day-to-day after leaving Game 2 early with a hamstring injury and Mitchell also suffering an injury scare, Caruso’s responsibilities are unlikely to decrease as the series progresses.

We have more from the Thunder:

  • After an uncharacteristically quiet performance in the Game 1 loss, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander put together the kind of MVP performance fans have come to expect from him in Game 2, Joel Lorenzi writes for The Athletic. “I guess I just have sucked when I get too long of a break,” he said. “I don’t think it’s anything other than that. I don’t know. I guess I gotta do a better job with my breaks, especially during the playoffs.” Instead of playing into the Spurs’ coverages, Gilgeous-Alexander found ways to get to his spots and stopped letting Stephon Castle‘s rugged defense get to him. “We just had no choice but to play to our strengths,” he said, “or else.”
  • If you just looked at the efficiency, it would be easy to miss Jared McCain‘s impact on Game 2, Lorenzi writes. Although McCain made just 4-of-14 shots from the floor, his energy and hustle were clearly infectious as he played his way to 12 points, six rebounds, and two steals in 26 minutes. This is nothing unusual for a player who has quickly ingratiated himself with his Thunder teammates due to his outsized personality, Marc J. Spears writes for Andscape. “The first week or two that he was here felt like he had been here the whole season,” Dort said of McCain. “That is the type of guy he is. That is the type of locker room we have. Really funny and really loud, and he blended in with everyone really quick.” It’s not just about his off-court personality, though. “That translates to his game as well,” Caruso added. “He is constantly moving on offense, which is manipulating the defense. He’s starting to pick up some of our other principles. He picked up a big offensive rebound tonight.”
  • The Thunder have built a juggernaut based on the principles of precision, attention to detail, and accountability, writes Dan Woike of The Athletic. On a roster as loaded with NBA-level talent as Oklahoma City’s, players have had to find roles they can thrive in, even if that feels like a sacrifice. Cason Wallace is a good example of that trait: there are 20 players from the 2023 draft class that are averaging more points per game than the former 10th overall pick, but those guys aren’t playing critical minutes in the Western Conference finals, as he is. Even when Wallace isn’t on the floor, though, he knows what is expected of him. “Honestly, you just go out there and be who you are,” the defensive-minded point guard said. “If it’s your night then, you know, it’s your night, and we’re all gonna be excited, and we’re all gonna put our best foot forward. But when it’s somebody else’s night, we also understand that and we cheer them on.”
  • While that sounds good in theory, Daigneault and the players know that it’s one thing for players to talk about accountability, but quite another to buy into it. “There’s a collective understanding of where the bar is,” Holmgren said, per Woike. “And it’s human nature is to be imperfect. Nobody’s gonna be perfect. I might shoot a shot where it’s ‘S–t, I ain’t shot one in a while.’ Human nature is ‘OK, let me get one up’ … But there’s an understanding that there’s human nature, that nobody’s gonna be perfect. But there’s also an understanding if somebody sees you drifting, hey, we’re gonna pull you back in.”

Jalen Williams Day-To-Day With Hamstring Injury

Jalen Williams is day-to-day with a left hamstring injury and will be reevaluated by the Thunder one game at a time, Shams Charania reports for ESPN (via Twitter).

This is the second time in the last month that Williams has dealt with a left hamstring issue, and his return will be largely dependent on how the injury responds to treatment. The previous injury caused him to miss approximately three weeks, including the entire second-round series against the Lakers.

Williams returned from that injury for a brutally taxing double-overtime Game 1 against the Spurs, in which he played over 37 minutes and scored 26 points while often taking the Victor Wembanyama defensive assignment.

Whether or not that game took a toll, the All-NBA wing left Game 2 after just seven minutes to receive treatment on the leg and was later ruled out for the rest of the night. It was subsequently reported that he would undergo an MRI, as would Spurs guard Dylan Harper, who also left the game early.

While Charania’s update doesn’t offer any sort of concrete return timeline for Williams, it may be an encouraging sign that he’s being considered day-to-day rather than week-to-week, as was the case after he sustained his previous hamstring injury.

Game 3 will take place on Friday in San Antonio, with Game 4 to follow on Sunday.

Early NBA Salary Guarantee Dates For 2026/27

An NBA player who has a non-guaranteed salary for a given season will, by default, receive his full guarantee if he remains under contract through January 7 of that league year. Because the league-wide salary guarantee date is January 10, a player must clear waivers before that date if a team wants to avoid being on the hook for his full salary.

However, a number of players who have non-guaranteed or partially guaranteed contracts for 2026/27 have earlier trigger dates. Those players will receive either their full guarantee or a partial guarantee on certain dates before January 7, assuming they’re not waived.

These dates are fairly malleable — if a player and team reach an agreement, a salary guarantee deadline can be pushed back.

For example, if a player’s contract calls for him to receive his full guarantee on June 27, his team could ask him to move that date to the first or second week of July to get a better sense of what will happen in free agency before making a final decision. The player doesn’t have to agree, but it might be in his best interest to push back his guarantee date rather than simply being waived.

Those agreements between a player and team aren’t always reported right away, so our list of early salary guarantee dates is a tentative one. If a player’s salary guarantee date passes without him being waived, our assumption is that he received his guarantee, but it’s possible he and his team negotiated a new guarantee date that simply hasn’t been made public yet. We’ll update the info below as necessary in the coming months.

Here are the early salary guarantee dates for 2026/27:

(Note: More players, including some whose team options are exercised, will likely be added to this list as the offseason progresses.)


June 25

  • Buddy Hield (Hawks): Partial guarantee ($3,000,000) increases to full guarantee ($9,658,536).

June 28

  • Jonathan Isaac (Magic): Partial guarantee ($8,000,000) increases to full guarantee ($14,500,000).
  • Dru Smith (Heat): Non-guaranteed salary ($2,584,539) becomes fully guaranteed.

June 29

  • Bronny James (Lakers): Partial guarantee ($1,258,873) increases to full guarantee ($2,296,271).

June 30

  • Jamison Battle (Raptors): Non-guaranteed salary ($2,296,271) becomes fully guaranteed.
  • Cam Christie (Clippers): Non-guaranteed salary ($2,296,271) becomes fully guaranteed.
  • Kris Dunn (Clippers): Non-guaranteed salary ($5,684,800) becomes fully guaranteed.
    • Dunn’s salary can also become fully guaranteed if he makes an All-Defensive team.
  • Kyle Filipowski (Jazz): Non-guaranteed salary ($3,000,000) becomes fully guaranteed.
  • Kam Jones (Pacers): Partial guarantee ($1,075,459) increases to full guarantee ($2,150,917).
  • Ajay Mitchell (Thunder): Partial guarantee ($1,500,000) increases to full guarantee ($2,850,000).
  • Svi Mykhailiuk (Jazz): Non-guaranteed salary ($3,850,000) becomes fully guaranteed.

July 3

  • Scotty Pippen Jr. (Grizzlies): Partial guarantee ($350,000) increases to full guarantee ($2,461,462).

July 4

  • Pete Nance (Bucks): Non-guaranteed salary ($2,497,812) becomes fully guaranteed.

July 7

  • Adem Bona (Sixers): Non-guaranteed salary ($2,296,271) becomes fully guaranteed.

July 8

  • Jonas Valanciunas (Nuggets): Partial guarantee ($2,000,000) increases to full guarantee ($10,000,000).

July 15

  • Sidy Cissoko (Trail Blazers): Non-guaranteed salary ($2,497,812) becomes fully guaranteed.
  • Quenton Jackson (Pacers): Partial guarantee ($250,000) increases to full guarantee ($2,584,539).

August 1

  • Vit Krejci (Trail Blazers): Non-guaranteed salary ($2,667,944) becomes partially guaranteed ($250,000).

First day of NBA regular season

  • Oso Ighodaro (Suns): Partial guarantee ($250,000) increases to $500,000.
  • Jaylen Wells (Grizzlies): Partial guarantee ($300,000) increases to full guarantee ($2,296,271).

First day of team’s regular season

  • Moussa Diabate (Hornets): Non-guaranteed salary ($2,461,462) becomes partially guaranteed ($250,000).
  • Vit Krejci (Trail Blazers): Partial guarantee ($250,000) increases to full guarantee ($2,667,944).