LeBron James Makes Season Debut On Tuesday

Nov. 18: James will make his season debut tonight against the Jazz, McMenamin tweets.


Nov. 16: Lakers superstar LeBron James has been recalled from his G League assignment with South Bay and will be a full participant in Monday’s practice, according to Shams Charania of ESPN, who says the NBA’s all-time leading scorer is nearing his season debut (Twitter link).

James went through at least two practices with the Lakers’ NBAGL affiliate over the past handful of days, including doing contact five-on-five work, and reportedly showed no ill effects afterward.

This will be James’ first practice with the Lakers in 2025/26, tweets Dan Woike of The Athletic.

Charania reported about a month ago that James was targeting a mid-November return from the nerve issue — sciatica on his right side — that has caused him to miss training camp, the preseason, and the first 14 games of the season. Charania’s ESPN colleague Dave McMenamin recently wrote that James could make his season debut this week, possibly on Tuesday vs. Utah.

When he suits up, James will set a record by playing in his 23rd NBA season.

The Lakers have gotten off to a strong start to the season in James’ absence, currently holding a 10-4 record.

James, who extended his own NBA record by making his 21st consecutive All-NBA team in 2024/25, could see that streak come to an end in ’25/26 due to the 65-game rule. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Kobe Bryant and Tim Duncan hold a three-way tie for the second-most All-NBA appearances with 15 apiece.

The 40-year-old forward, who also made his record-extending 21st straight All-Star appearance in ’24/25, remained highly productive last season, averaging 24.4 points, 8.2 assists, 7.8 rebounds and 1.0 steal in 70 games (34.9 minutes per contest). His shooting slash line was .513/.376/.782.

However, James’ ’24/25 season ended in disappointing fashion as the Lakers were ousted by Minnesota in the first round of the playoffs and he suffered an MCL sprain late in the final game.

James opted into his $52.6MM player option over the summer. He holds a no-trade clause and will be an unrestricted free agent in 2026.

Nets Notes: Claxton, Saraf, Draft, Schedule

Nets defensive stopper Nic Claxton blocked a season-high four shots in a win over Washington on Sunday. Claxton failed to record a block in his first four appearances but has at least one in each of his last nine games.

“Just getting back to myself,” Claxton said, per Dan Martin of The New York Post. “I started the season off [and] I wasn’t getting any blocks. But the timing is slowly coming back, so I’ve been feeling good on the defensive side of the ball with where I’m where they want me.”

Claxton is in the second year of a four-year, $97MM contract.

Here’s more on the Nets:

  • Rookie guard Ben Saraf suffered a left ankle sprain while playing for the G League’s Long Island Nets on Saturday, C.J. Holmes of the New York Daily News reports. Brooklyn announced on Monday that Saraf will be reevaluated in 10 days. Saraf began the season as the NBA team’s starting point guard but the 26th pick in the draft struggled mightily on offense, shooting 21.7% from the field in his first five games. He fell out of the rotation from that point, leading to the G League assignment.
  • With three supposed franchise-altering talents — Cameron Boozer, Darryn Peterson and AJ Dybantsa — in next season’s draft, there’s plenty of incentive for the Nets to remain in tank mode this season. However, several other teams are in same boat, Brian Lewis of the New York Post notes, and even though Brooklyn only has two wins so far, there are three other teams with worse records.
  • The Nets won’t step out of the Eastern Conference for the remainder of the month. Their next game against a Western Conference opponent comes on Dec. 4 against Utah.
  • Michael Porter Jr. has responded to the call of handling more offensive responsibilities. Get the details here.

USA Basketball Announces Roster For World Cup Qualifiers

USA Basketball has announced its 12-man roster for a pair of upcoming World Cup qualifying games against Nicaragua. Those games will take place in Managua, Nicaragua on November 28 and in College Park, Georgia on December 1, with Team USA deploying the following squad:

The roster, which is coached by former Rockets head coach Stephen Silas, is made up of current free agents or G League players, with no active NBA players taking part. However, seven of the 12 Team USA members have previous NBA experience — Craig (458 regular season games) and Knight (451 games) have spent the most time in the league.

Unlike Knight, who has been out of the NBA since the 2021/22 season, Craig played for the Bulls and Celtics in ’24/25 and is one of a handful of players who was in the league within the past year. That group also includes Edwards, who made 40 appearances last season for the Mavericks, and Beauchamp, a former first-round pick who played in 35 games for three NBA teams in ’24/25.

Smart and Hinton have previously suited up for the U.S. national team — Smart won bronze with Team USA at this year’s AmeriCup, while Hinton was a member of the U.S. team for a pair of qualifying windows in 2023 (for the World Cup) and 2024 (for the AmeriCup).

This is the first of six windows of qualifying games for the 2027 FIBA World Cup, which will tip off on August 27, 2027. Team USA will also compete in qualifiers next February/March, July, August/September, and November/December, with the final qualifying window opening in Feb. 2027.

The actual World Cup roster is unlikely to feature any of the players in this 12-man group, since the U.S. typically sends a more star-studded squad to the event itself, which takes place during the NBA offseason. However, the qualifying games give some less-heralded players the opportunity to represent their home country and to help Team USA clinch its spot in the World Cup.

Kings’ Keegan Murray Expected To Make Season Debut Thursday

November 18: Murray is expected to make his season debut on Thursday vs. the Grizzlies, according to Anderson.


November 17: The Kings are optimistic that fourth-year forward Keegan Murray could make his season debut on Thursday in Memphis or on Saturday in Denver, reports Jason Anderson of The Sacramento Bee.

Murray was assigned to the G League on Monday to practice with the Stockton Kings. The 25-year-old has been cleared for 5-on-5 contact drills and is expected to join the NBA team on Wednesday in Oklahoma City, a source tells Anderson.

It has been five weeks since Murray underwent surgery to repair a torn ulnar collateral ligament in his left thumb, an injury he sustained in a preseason game. At the time, the Kings said he would be reevaluated in four-to-six weeks; this is the first real update since then.

The fourth overall pick in the 2022 draft, Murray signed a five-year, $140MM rookie scale extension a few days after he underwent surgery. While some people around the league were reportedly surprised at how lucrative the deal was, cap expert Yossi Gozlan viewed it as “sensible” and Sam Amick of The Athletic recently reported that rival teams value Murray as well.

As Anderson observes, the Kings have struggled mightily without their best defender, while Murray’s absence exposed a glaring lack of forward depth on the roster. Sacramento is currently just 3-11, which is the second-worst record in the Western Conference.

And-Ones: LeBron, Curry, Team USA, 2026 Draft, Beverley, More

Asked by Steve Nash on the Mind the Game podcast about the possibility of suiting up for Team USA at the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles, LeBron James made it clear that’s not in his plans, while Stephen Curry indicated he’s a long shot too, per Anthony Slater of ESPN.

“You already know my answer,” James said. “I will be watching it.”

“God willing, I still have the choice and physical option where I could impact the team,” Curry said. “Never say never, but I highly doubt it. Highly doubt it.”

James and Curry teamed up for Team USA at the Olympics for the first time in 2024, defeating the hosts (France) in Paris in the gold medal game after pulling off a dramatic come-from-behind win in the semifinal against Serbia.

“We can’t top what we just did,” James said. “How we gonna top those last two games?”

We have more odds and ends from around the basketball world:

  • Kansas guard Darryn Peterson is the first player off the board in the first 2026 mock draft published by Jeremy Woo of ESPN. Woo has BYU’s AJ Dybantsa at No. 2, Duke’s Cameron Boozer at No. 3, and Tennessee’s Nate Ament at No. 4, with UNC’s Caleb Wilson rounding out the top five.
  • More details have emerged related to Patrick Beverley‘s arrest for assault, with TMZ reporting that the former NBA guard is accused of punching his sister in the eye and choking her for between 20 and 30 seconds. Beverley, who has been out of the NBA since the 2023/24 season, was arrested on Friday and was charged with assault of a family/household member.
  • After parting ways with the Brisbane Bullets earlier this season for personal reasons, former NBA guard Javon Freeman-Liberty reengaged with the team last week and has now re-signed with the Bullets for the rest of the 2025/26 season, reports Olgun Uluc of ESPN (Twitter links). Freeman-Liberty, a former DePaul standout, appeared in 22 NBA regular season games for Toronto in 2023/24.
  • While the Mavericks had hoped to acquire Dennis Smith Jr.‘s G League returning rights, the Wisconsin Herd – the Bucks‘ affiliate – still holds those rights and is hopeful of having Smith join them soon, league sources tell Marc Stein (Twitter link).

Giannis Antetokounmpo To Miss 1-2 Weeks With Groin Strain

November 18: Antetokounmpo’s MRI “went pretty well,” according to Rivers, who said during an appearance on Courtside with Gale Klappa podcast that the Bucks star will “probably” miss two weeks (Twitter audio link via Nehm).

ESPN’s Shams Charania tweets that it’s a “low-grade” strain for Antetokounmpo and is expected to sideline him for a week or two.


November 17: Bucks superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo sustained a left groin strain in the second quarter of Monday’s game in Cleveland and will not return for the second half, the team announced (Twitter link via Eric Nehm of The Athletic).

Antetokounmpo appeared to suffer the injury on a drive to the basket, according to Nehm, who tweets that the Greek forward hobbled back down the court on defense, committed a foul, and then checked himself out of the game and walked to the locker room. Harris Stavrou of SPORT24 has a partial video of the incident (Twitter link).

Antetokounmpo will undergo an MRI on Tuesday, according to head coach Doc Rivers (Twitter links courtesy of Nehm).

We won’t know anything until tomorrow. Didn’t look great, I can tell you that,” Rivers said. “ … He grabbed (his groin), I want to say in the first quarter and I asked him then. He said it was fine. Then I think he grabbed it again and he said it was fine. And then the third time, you know, is when it happened. But I think it happened earlier, in my opinion.”

Backup big man Jericho Sims started the second half with Antetokounmpo unavailable, Nehm adds (via Twitter).

A two-time MVP who has finished no worse than fourth in voting for the award in each of the past seven years, Antetokounmpo was off to arguably the best start of his decorated career in 2025/26 prior to the injury, averaging 32.6 points, 11.3 rebounds, 7.1 assists and 1.3 blocks through 12 games (33.4 minutes per contest).

The 30-year-old entered Monday’s game on the injury report with a probable tag due to an unrelated issue with his left knee (patellar tendinopathy) before being upgraded to available. Rivers said last week that injury isn’t considered serious.

While it’s unclear how much time Antetokounmpo will miss as a result of the groin injury, it’s probably not a great sign that it was quickly diagnosed as a strain. Even relatively mild groin strains often cause multi-week absences and are notoriously difficult to recover from.

Sims and Bobby Portis are the most obvious candidates for more minutes with Antetokounmpo out for a yet-to-be-determined amount of time. Myles Turner figures to take on an expanded offensive role as well.

Spurs’ Castle Out At Least 1-2 Weeks With Hip Injury

After undergoing an MRI on Monday, Spurs guard Stephon Castle has been diagnosed with a left hip flexor strain, the team announced today in a press release. The injury occurred during Sunday’s game against Sacramento.

The Spurs’ announcement simply states that updates on Castle will be provided “as appropriate,” but ESPN’s Shams Charania reports (via Twitter) that the reigning Rookie of the Year will be reevaluated in one-to-two weeks. That means Castle will be sidelined for upcoming matchups with Memphis (Tuesday), Atlanta (Thursday), and Phoenix (Sunday) and could miss additional time beyond that.

Castle, 21, had gotten off to a strong start this fall in his second NBA season, averaging 18.4 points, 7.8 assists, 6.3 rebounds, and 1.8 steals per game on 50.3% shooting in his first 12 games before getting injured in his 13th outing.

The Spurs will now be without three of their top four scorers, as Castle joins Victor Wembanyama (calf strain) and Dylan Harper (calf strain) on the inactive list. According to the team, point guard Jordan McLaughlin is also expected to miss some time, having been diagnosed with a right hamstring strain after undergoing an MRI on Monday. He sustained the injury during a workout.

While there were questions in the offseason about the Spurs’ logjam at point guard, the team’s depth will come in handy in the near future. Even with Castle, Harper, and McLaughlin on the shelf, San Antonio should get star-level production at the position as long as De’Aaron Fox stays healthy.

Fox’s season debut was delayed due to a hamstring injury, but he has started each of the club’s past five contests and appears to be rounding into form — he has averaged 26.0 points and 10.5 assists in his past two games.

Kevin Love Discusses Trade To Utah, Role With Jazz

After joining the Heat during the 2022/23 season, veteran big man Kevin Love didn’t expect to be on the move again. Love tells D.J. Siddiqi of ESportsInsider.com that he and his family “laid down roots” in Miami and that the trade sending him to Utah during the 2025 offseason was “definitely unexpected.”

“(The Heat) got better (in the trade); they got Norman Powell,” Love said. “They got better. But yeah, it still stung in the few weeks after the facts. I’ve seen all this before. It doesn’t make it any easier.”

Love, who turned 37 this year, was considered unlikely to stick with the rebuilding Jazz for long. Reporting in early September indicated that the expectation around the NBA was that he’d be traded or bought out before the regular season tipped off.

However, Love tells Siddiqi that the organization has been “amazing” to him and that it has been a “truly great experience” to be part of the Jazz so far. That doesn’t necessarily mean that the 18-year veteran will finish the season in Utah, but he’s in no hurry to part ways with his new team.

Love has had a role both on and off the court in Utah so far, appearing in seven of the past eight games and averaging 14.0 minutes per night off the bench while also providing veteran leadership on a young roster.

Walker Kessler going down has provided me more minutes, at least in the near future, in the last several games,” Love said, referring to Kessler’s season-ending shoulder surgery. “But again, even if I’m not playing, I think my role — it’s great to have a role in my 18th season — is being able to be that veteran leader, a sound voice, somebody that preaches and acts on accountability and just continues to show what professionalism looks like every single day.

“… I think that that is extremely important, especially with a young team. I think sometimes people can maybe overvalue a veteran in a locker room, but I do believe that the Jazz honor that, and they’re appreciative of it as well. It makes me want to lean in even more and be the vet that, honestly, I never had.”

Love is in the final season of a contract that can’t be extended, so he’ll reach unrestricted free agency next summer if he’s not waived or bought out before then. He’s not sure how much longer he’ll continue playing, suggesting that he’s taking things on a “year-by-year” basis going forward, but he didn’t close the door on the idea of pursuing a reunion with the Cavaliers before he calls it a career.

“I don’t want to make any assumptions — they’ve been so good to me here already with Utah, and if this is it, then I’m very happy with that,” Love told Siddiqi. “Obviously, Cleveland is a near and dear place to me. But regardless if that happened or not, I’m always going to go back to Cleveland. They were so good to me for my eight-and-a-half seasons there, and continue to be.”

Cavs Fined $100K For Violating Player Participation Policy

The Cavaliers have been fined $100K for violating the NBA’s player participation policy, the league announced today in a press release (Twitter link).

The violation took place on November 12, last Wednesday, when the Cavaliers sat both Donovan Mitchell and Evan Mobley for rest purposes during the first game of a back-to-back set. The Cavs played in Miami that night before heading home to host the Raptors on Thursday.

The NBA’s player participation policy was modified ahead of the 2023/24 season in an effort to reduce instances of teams holding out star players during the regular season. Under the policy, the NBA defines a star as a player who has made an All-Star or All-NBA team within the past three seasons. Both Mitchell and Mobley meet that criteria.

Although teams are permitted to rest those star players under certain circumstances, an investigation is automatically triggered any time a team rests more than one healthy star in the same game. Cleveland likely would have avoided a fine if they had held out Mitchell on Wednesday and Mobley on Thursday, or vice versa.

A team violating the player participation policy for the first time is fined $100K. A second violation would cost the Cavs $250K.

Western Notes: LeBron, Vincent, Draymond, Kuminga, Holiday, More

After participating in this morning’s shootaround, Gabe Vincent (left ankle sprain) has been upgraded to available for the first time since October 26, while LeBron James (sciatica) is being considered a game-time decision when the Lakers host the Jazz on Tuesday night, tweets Dan Woike of The Athletic.

James, who practiced with the Lakers on Monday, said his lungs felt “like a newborn baby” and that he was still working on getting his conditioning and his voice back to normal, writes Khobi Price of The Southern California News Group.

“I got to get my lungs back up to a grown man,” James said. “My voice is already gone. One day back, barking out calls and assignments and stuff, getting my voice working again. Be a lot of tea and rest (on Monday night).”

James’ record-setting 23rd NBA season has been delayed by sciatica on his right side, which forced him to miss the start of a season for the first time in his career. The 40-year-old told reporters, including Broderick Turner of The Los Angeles Times, that he also dealt with sciatica two years ago, referring to it as “not fun.”

“If you ever had it, you go about it and you wake up one day and you hope that when you step down from the bed that you don’t feel it,” LeBron said. “You go to bed at night, and you hope that when you’re in the bed that you don’t feel it. So I’ve been doing pretty good with it as of late. There’s a lot of exercises and a lot of mobility things and a lot of things you can do to help it. So I’m just keeping a positive mindset.”

James will go through his normal pregame routine in the hopes of playing on Tuesday, per Shams Charania of ESPN (Twitter video link).

Here’s more from around the Western Conference:

  • Warriors forward Draymond Green wasn’t fined for his face-to-face altercation with a fan who was heckling him in New Orleans on Sunday (Twitter video link), but the NBA did issue a warning over the incident, a source tells Charania (Twitter link). “He just kept calling me a woman,” Green said of the fan after the game, per Nick Friedell of The Athletic. “It was a good joke at first but you can’t keep calling me a woman. I got four kids, one on the way; you can’t keep calling me a woman. He got quiet, though. So, it was fine.” The fan told The Associated Press that he was chanting “Angel Reese” at Green after the Warriors veteran rebounded several of his own missed shots.
  • Warriors forward Jonathan Kuminga (bilateral patellar tendonitis) will miss a third consecutive game on Tuesday when the team faces the Magic in Orlando, tweets Anthony Slater of ESPN. Reporting last week indicated that there are no structural concerns with Kuminga’s knees and that the forward’s absence should be “relatively short-term.”
  • Trail Blazers guard Jrue Holiday missed Sunday’s game – a loss to Dallas – and is listed as doubtful to play on Tuesday vs. Phoenix due to right calf soreness (Twitter link). As Sean Highkin of the Rose Garden Report (subscription required) writes, Holiday’s absence on Sunday was especially impactful because so many of Portland’s other point guards are sidelined due to injuries too. “Jrue is our core,” Blazers forward Deni Avdija said. “I feel like he does everything on the floor. He puts us in our positions. He’s a real true point guard and a leader. When he’s out of the game, it’s definitely felt.”
  • Jahmai Mashack‘s new two-way contract with the Grizzlies is for two years, while Jamaree Bouyea‘s two-way deal with the Suns is for the rest of the season, Hoops Rumors has confirmed. Bouyea was ineligible for a two-year contract because this will be his fourth season in the NBA.