L.A. Notes: Bamba, Clippers, Knecht, Vanderbilt
Clippers reserve center Mohamed Bamba is excited about his first two healthy bouts of the 2024/25 season, writes Janis Carr of The Orange County Register. Those games were also his first two with L.A. after the former lottery pick inked a one-year minimum deal this summer.
Bamba’s first outing for the Clippers on Sunday was fairly strong. In a win against Utah, Bamba played for 15 minutes, scoring nine points on 4-of-8 shooting from the floor and one made free throw, while also chipping in eight boards.
“It was really good,” Bamba said regarding the game. “I told myself out there today it wasn’t going to be a matter of making shots or scoring. It was going to be just trying to get extra possessions and things of that nature.”
Bamba scored three points in his encore performance on Monday. The big man missed the first month of the season with a chronic knee injury. He played through the ailment during his 2023/24 run with the Sixers, but the Clippers opted instead to sideline him for a month.
“It was annoying but it’s not one specific injury,” Bamba said. “I kept getting this pocket of fluid in my knee and it was frustrating because we couldn’t figure out why it was happening. Now, though, we have a plan to manage it moving forward.”
There’s more out of Los Angeles:
- In a crowded West, the Clippers are seeking to thread the needle of competing while also developing their young players, according to Law Murray of The Athletic. L.A. is currently 8-7 on the year, and in the midst of a game on Wednesday. With All-Star forward Kawhi Leonard hurt indefinitely, Murray notes that fans are wondering why the Clippers are still leaning so heavily on veteran guards James Harden and Norman Powell, both on the wrong side of 30, and not giving opportunities to intriguing youngsters Jordan Miller, Kobe Brown, and Bones Hyland.
- Lakers head coach JJ Redick has indicated that rookie wing Dalton Knecht has earned legitimate rotation minutes going forward – as well as the trust of coaches and teammates – thanks to his recent scoring output, per The Athletic’s Jovan Buha (Twitter link). Through his first 14 games, the Tennessee alum is averaging 11.3 points per contest on .523/.464/.923 shooting splits. With forward Rui Hachimura hurt, Knecht has started Los Angeles’ last three games. Across those starts, he averaged 26.0 PPG on .636/.615/.857 shooting.
- Lakers reserve forward Jarred Vanderbilt‘s recovery from surgery on both feet in May has been slower than Los Angeles had anticipated it would be, per Khobi Price of The Orange County Register. The 6’8″ vet is expected to keep rehabilitating for at least two more weeks, at which time his progress will be reassessed. Price notes that Vanderbilt hasn’t played for L.A. since incurring a right mid-foot injury in February. The 25-year-old is in just the first season of a four-year, $48MM extension deal he inked during the 2023 offseason.
Atlantic Notes: Maxey, Brown, Tatum, Knicks, Barnes
Sixers All-Star point guard Tyrese Maxey explained his thinking behind some of the comments he made during a team meeting on Monday, writes Tony Jones of The Athletic. Philadelphia had fallen to a 2-11 record after losing to the Heat and former Sixers star small forward Jimmy Butler.
Maxey reportedly called out All-NBA Philadelphia center Joel Embiid for tardiness issues and occasional unexcused absences.
“I wanted to speak up,” Maxey said. “I felt the need to do that because I wanted to share that we are better than what we have shown on the floor. There was a lot said, but it is what it is. We said what we had to say and we have to figure out a way to move on to the rest of the season. Everyone understands what’s at stake. Everyone is feeling the hurt.”
Despite an awful start to their season, the Sixers reportedly have no plans to fire either head coach Nick Nurse or general manager Daryl Morey.
Maxey, who had missed Philadelphia’s last six games, suited up alongside fellow All-Stars Embiid and Paul George for the first time this season against Memphis on Wednesday.
There’s more out of the Atlantic Division:
- On Tuesday, Celtics All-Stars Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum helped Boston to end the Cavaliers‘ 15-game winning streak to open the year with beefed-up, physical defense, writes Jay King of The Athletic. “I thought both of them handled the pressure and the physicality well,” head coach Joe Mazzulla said. “We played a little bit slower, but it was more important to get to the proper spacing. It was more important to get our drive-and-kick reads. And they did a great balance of handling the pressure, driving to attack, driving to get to the free-throw line, driving to find guys.” By dropping Cleveland’s record to 15-1, the reigning champs in Boston proved that they remains the class of the conference until further notice, opines Jared Weiss of The Athletic.
- The Knicks are finally starting to mesh after a shaky start to the season, writes Ian Begley of SNY.tv. New York is currently riding high on a three-game win streak. “Just gelling, continuity, getting more acclimated with each other,” new trade acquisition Karl-Anthony Towns said of the club’s improvement. “Just understanding what everyone’s going to do and how they’re going to cut and just building trust with each other.”
- Begley also notes that Knicks head coach Tom Thibodeau continues to reiterate how much he liked the fit of free agent guard Landry Shamet with New York. Shamet, signed to a training camp deal, was cut after suffering a shoulder injury during the preseason. He has been rehabilitating while with New York’s Westchester NBAGL affiliate. Begley anticipates that, should Shamet recover this season, he will have a home with the Knicks.
- Raptors All-Star forward Scottie Barnes was cleared to fully participate in practice Wednesday for the first time since suffering an orbital bone fracture last month. Michael Grange of Sportsnet.ca notes that Barnes’ eventual return could give Toronto a sense of what it has in its present core. The team’s intended starting five of Barnes, Gradey Dick, Immanuel Quickley, RJ Barrett, and Jakob Poeltl has not logged a single minute together yet this season. Grange notes that Barnes will be on a minutes restriction and will don protective goggles when he does return. “We all know how to play with each other,” Barnes said. “We had some reps at it, but we couldn’t get that many due to some injuries. But now we all know how to fit in with each other, play with each other, get each other going, and we know what we all like. We’ve been at it for a little while. We’ll get things going with time.”
De’Anthony Melton To Undergo Season-Ending ACL Surgery
After completing further testing on his injured left ACL, the Warriors have determined that guard De’Anthony Melton will require season-ending surgery, the team has announced (Twitter link).
The ailment had previously been diagnosed as a sprain, though the fact that it requires surgical treatment suggests it may be more significant.
Melton signed a one-year contract worth the Warriors’ full $12.8MM mid-level exception this past offseason. He will be a free agent again in the summer of 2025, having played all of six games for a surging Golden State squad.
As Bobby Marks of ESPN (Twitter link) notes, Golden State can apply for a disabled player exception, which would be worth half of Melton’s salary (approximately $6.4MM). But because the Warriors are just $534K below their hard cap at the first tax apron, they would have to move off some salary to actually use a potential DPE.
The 6’2″ USC alum could potentially also be used as an expiring matching contract on the trade market, should the Warriors look to acquire a win-now roster addition to capitalize on their strong start to the season.
Melton averaged 10.3 points, 3.3 rebounds and 2.8 assists in 20.2 minutes per game across those six matchups, posting a shooting line of .407/.371/.625.
At 10-3, the Warriors are currently the No. 1 seed in a crowded Western Conference. Melton, when healthy, had served as a core component of that early success. As The Athletic’s Anthony Slater notes (via Twitter), Golden State head coach Steve Kerr had anointed Melton as his preferred starting shooting guard next to All-NBA point guard Stephen Curry.
Lindy Waters III earned the starting two guard nod in Golden State’s most recent game, a 102-99 loss to the Clippers. Kerr could also explore elevating another recent free agent acquisition, microwave scorer Buddy Hield, or 2024 All-Rookie guard Brandin Podziemski.
Isaiah Hartenstein To Make Thunder Debut Wednesday
Thunder center Isaiah Hartenstein is set to play his first regular season game for his new team on Wednesday against the Trail Blazers, per Rylan Stiles of Sports Illustrated.
Hartenstein had previously been upgraded to questionable for Wednesday’s contest after missing the first 15 games of the season.
Following a breakout year on a 50-win Knicks team in 2023/24, Hartenstein inked a three-season, $87MM deal with Oklahoma City over the summer. The seven-foot vet fractured his hand during the club’s preseason and has been on the shelf for the past five weeks.
Hartenstein’s comeback arrives not a moment too soon. Starting center Chet Holmgren has missed the last six contests with a hip fracture, while reserve big man Jaylin Williams has been sidelined due to a hamstring strain.
In the absence of his top three centers, head coach Mark Daigneault had been starting 6’5″ forward Jalen Williams at the five.
Stiles tweets that Hartenstein will come off the bench in his Thunder debut, while Williams will remain the club’s starting center against Portland.
Hartenstein, 26, emerged as a critical two-way interior force on the upstart Knicks last year. Across 75 healthy regular season contests (49 starts), he averaged 7.8 points, 8.3 rebounds, 2.5 assists, 1.2 steals and 1.1 blocks a night. He proved even more invaluable during the playoffs, as many of his regular season rotation comrades fell by the wayside due to injuries.
Khris Middleton Medically Cleared To Return For Bucks
Three-time Bucks All-Star forward Khris Middleton has been given the medical green light to return to action for Milwaukee, sources inform Shams Charania of ESPN.
The 6’7″ Texas A&M product has missed all of the 5-9 Bucks’ games this season while recuperating from offseason surgeries to both ankles. Charania reports that the 33-year-old continues to work his way towards a return, but does not yet feel physically ready to make his season debut.
Middleton’s extended recovery was not expected to last this long into Milwaukee’s season. Taurean Prince, who signed a minimum-salary contract as a free agent in July, has started for Middleton this year, though he is not a willing scorer at Middleton’s level. Across his 14 healthy games for his new team, Prince is averaging 8.9 points on .484/.527/1.000 shooting splits, along with 5.1 rebounds and 2.1 assists per game.
“He’s looked good,” said Bucks head coach Doc Rivers of Middleton. “He’s working his butt off. Listen, I think he’s close. And he’s just going to keep working. This is the best I’ve seen him, I will say that.”
According to Charania, Milwaukee wants Middleton to take part in 5-on-5 scrimmages with teammates prior to his on-court comeback in a game setting. The Bucks are reportedly waiting on Middleton to let them know when he feels ready.
Middleton was a critical component to the team’s 2021 NBA championship run. His perimeter defense and jump shooting fit perfectly alongside All-NBA Bucks superstar forward Giannis Antetokounmpo and then-All-Defensive teammates Jrue Holiday and Brook Lopez. In addition to his NBA title, Middleton subsequently won an Olympic gold medal alongside Holiday that same summer.
Middleton has not quite been the same since the 2021/22 season. He has missed an average of 44 games across the past two seasons due to various ailments. When he has played, he has lacked the same lateral quickness that made him such a tenacious defender. His minutes have also been more limited in the interest of maintaining his health.
In his last two seasons, Middleton has averaged 15.1 points, 4.5 rebounds, 5.1 assists and 0.8 steals per game — all far cries from his numbers during his final All-Star season, 2021/22. He logged averages of 20.1 points, 5.4 rebounds, 5.4 assists and 1.2 steals per night that season, with .443/.373/.890 shooting splits.
Milwaukee next hosts the 6-9 Bulls on Wednesday.
Jazz To Waive Jason Preston
The Jazz will waive two-way player Jason Preston, sources tell Michael Scotto of HoopsHype (Twitter link).
Utah had to make a move to open up a two-way roster spot after it was reported earlier today that the team would ink free agent rookie swingman David Jones to a two-way deal. Scotto notes that Preston has been sidelined due to a calf strain.
A 6’4″ point guard, Preston was initially selected with the No. 33 pick in 2021 out of Ohio University and began his NBA career with the Clippers. He missed his entire rookie season with a right foot injury and was cut ahead of the 2023/24 season after appearing in 14 NBA games in ’22/23.
Preston began last season with the Memphis Hustle, the Grizzlies’ G League squad, then caught on with the Jazz in January on a two-way deal. He spent the rest of the season shuttling between the NBA roster and the Salt Lake City Stars, Utah’s NBAGL affiliate.
Across 21 career NBA contests with the Clippers and Jazz, Preston has averaged 2.5 points, 2.0 assists and 1.9 rebounds per game.
In 52 G League regular season games with the Ontario Clippers, Hustle and Stars, Preston holds averages of 16.5 PPG, 8.6 APG, 7.7 RPG, and 1.2 SPG on .490/.406/.862 shooting. He recorded 10 triple-doubles with the Hustle and Stars last year, Scotto notes.
According to Tony Jones of The Athletic (Twitter link), it is anticipated that Preston will remain in Salt Lake City during his rehab from the calf strain. Utah is said to like Preston and has interest in potentially bringing him back in some capacity when he recuperates.
Florida Notes: Highsmith, Rozier, Magic, Carter
Heat forward Haywood Highsmith is embracing his role as a utility player for Miami, writes Anthony Chiang of The Miami Herald.
Highsmith has been elevated in the club’s hierarchy thanks in part to the free agent exit of now-Sixers wing Caleb Martin this summer. After Martin’s departure, the Heat pivoted to re-signing their other top free agent, Highsmith, on a two-year, $10.8MM deal.
“I can’t say enough about H,” head coach Erik Spoelstra said. “But the tough thing about this league is you have somebody like H, who has really played at an exceptionally high level in that role as a defender, as an impact role player that fills in all the intangibles for your team. But if he’s not scoring big numbers, nobody is really going to pay attention, nobody is going to notice, nobody is going to write articles about him.”
Playing mostly off the Heat’s bench, the 6’7″ swingman is averaging a career-high 8.6 points on .625/.417/.636 shooting splits, along with 3.0 rebounds and 1.7 steals per night.
There’s more out of the Sunshine State:
- Heat starting point guard Terry Rozier has struggled mightily thus far this season. Ira Winderman of The South Florida Sun-Sentinel wonders if a transition to Miami’s bench would put him in a better position to be effective. The 30-year-old is averaging 13.3 points per game on .385/.358/.880 shooting splits, his lowest output since 2018/19.
- Even without All-Star power forward Paolo Banchero, the Magic posted a 5-0 record during a recent homestand. Jason Beede of The Orlando Sentinel unpacks what went right during that undefeated run, singling out frontcourt standouts Franz Wagner and Moritz Wagner, the club’s defense, and its ability to clean the glass.
- Magic head coach Jamahl Mosley stated on Sunday that starting center Wendell Carter, who’s been out for the past seven games with left foot plantar fasciitis, continues to improve. “He’s doing better,” Mosley said after today’s practice, Beede reports (Twitter link). In his six healthy games this season, the 25-year-old is averaging 8.3 points, 8.8 rebounds, 2.2 assists and 1.3 steals per bout.
Texas Notes: Mavericks, Smith, Sengun, Jones
The Mavericks’ 110-93 victory over the Spurs on Saturday ended a four-game losing streak, which included an 0-3 road trip. At 6-7, Dallas is still struggling to find consistency just a few months after making a run to the 2024 Finals, writes Joe Vardon of The Athletic.
“(The players) have things that go on outside of the arena, and that’s always monitored (but) those things aren’t shared publicly,” head coach Jason Kidd said prior to the victory over San Antonio. “This has been an emotional week, starting in Denver, having an opportunity to win there and just the buildup of the game against Golden State with Klay (Thompson). We could be a little bit more concerned of not just the buildup, but what the effects are.”
As Eddie Sefko of Mavs.com notes, Dallas has been getting the best efforts from the opposition, night after night. New additions to the club are a bit perplexed by the club’s lack of a clutch gene this season.
“We’re still trying to figure it out,” small forward Naji Marshall said. “Stuff happens. Obviously it didn’t go in our direction, all we can do is get better from here. It’s still early in the season… We’re just having a rough patch right now, but we’ll definitely get through it.”
There’s more out of the Lone Star State:
- 2022 lottery Rockets lottery pick Jabari Smith Jr. enjoyed something of a breakout performance in a 125-104 NBA Cup victory over the Clippers on Friday, writes Jonathan Feigen of The Houston Chronicle. The 6’11” big man, who had averaged 10.5 points per game on 38.1% shooting in his first 12 games (all starts), scored 28 points on 11-of-17 shooting from the field and grabbed 11 rebounds.
- Fourth-year Rockets center Alperen Sengun continues to develop his game after signing a five-year, $185MM extension with the team last month, Feigen writes in another piece. Sengun notched his first triple-double of the season in Houston’s victory over the Clippers on Friday. His defensive growth has been a primary focus. “I do (a) good job,” Sengun said. “I do my best on defense, trying to help my teammates. Everybody is trying their best on defense. I’m just trying to help them more.” On Houston’s third-ranked defense, opposing players are connecting on a scant 42.9% of their looks when being guarded by Sengun. Head coach Ime Udoka singled out and praised the big man’s rim protection acumen.
- After a 12-game absence, Spurs reserve guard Tre Jones came back from an ankle injury in the team’s loss to the Mavericks on Saturday, notes Jeff Macdonald of The San Antonio Express-News. The 6’1″ Duke product scored three points on 1-of-5 shooting from the field, while also contributing four dimes and three boards.
LaMelo Ball Fined $100K For Postgame Comment
Hornets All-Star point guard LaMelo Ball has been fined $100K for issuing a derogatory slur during a televised postgame interview, the NBA has announced in a statement (Twitter link).
Ball was speaking after a heroic 15-point fourth quarter individual effort helped Charlotte secure a 115-114 victory over the reeling Bucks on Saturday (video link).
Across his 12 healthy contests, the 6’7″ pro is averaging a career-best 29.6 points per game on .440/.364/.875 shooting to go along with 6.3 assists, 5.3 rebounds and 1.3 steals per night.
The 23-year-old made just 7-of-20 shots from the field in Saturday’s victory, but compensated with a steady diet of free throws. He shot an immaculate 11-of-11 from the charity stripe and finished with a game-high 26 points. Ball also chipped in nine rebounds and six assists.
Charlotte has gotten off to a steady 5-7 start, good for the East’s No. 8 seed, under new head coach Charles Lee, who won a championship with the Celtics last year under Joe Mazzulla. Next up for the Hornets is a road date with the undefeated (14-0) Cavaliers on Sunday.
Celtics Notes: Season, Sale, Scheierman, Tatum
Despite missing starting center Kristaps Porzingis so far this fall and also having All-Star wing Jaylen Brown unavailable for multiple games, the 7-2 Celtics have picked up right where they left off after winning a title last season.
Tim Bontemps of ESPN even sees similarities between this year’s loaded Celtics squad and the 73-win Warriors of 2015/16, noting that Boston is similarly deep in its roster construction and three-point heavy in its shot diet — the C’s are also looking to quiet critics who may have thought their first championship was a bit of fluke.
All-NBA Celtics forward Jayson Tatum, for one, is aiming to win multiple titles during his tenure in Boston. The Warriors won four championships with their core of Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and Draymond Green. Thompson departed the team this summer to join the Mavericks.
“It was never just about trying to just win one,” Tatum said. “All the guys I looked up to growing up won at least one championship. Now it’s just a conversation of, ‘How great are you trying to be?'”
Could this Celtics club win 73 or even 74 games this season? Odds seem slight, given this extended Porzingis absence.
There’s more out of Boston:
- On the heels of his second title with the franchise, Celtics owner Wyc Grousbeck made the surprise announcement that he was looking to sell his controlling interest in the team. Mike Vorkunov of The Athletic observes that this impending potential sale represents part of a growing trend. Several longtime owners have cashed out while team valuations have soared over the past few years. “Most owners that have been in for a while in any of the sports leagues are sort of asset rich and cash poor,” an investor observed. “Most of the long-term standing owners, I think, if you ask them, I think in their wildest dreams, they could never have imagined that these teams would become these mini-Disneys as I call them, or these phenomenal entities that have tremendous economic capacity.”
- Celtics rookie swingman Baylor Scheierman has been assigned to the club’s G League affiliate, the Maine Celtics, with the NBAGL season slated to tip off soon, writes Brian Robb of MassLive. Scheierman had been competing for rotation minutes during the team’s preseason, but was ultimately pushed out by Jordan Walsh for the opportunity. Scheierman has instead suited up for just three NBA games, logging 18 total minutes, and should have an opportunity for more reps in Maine.
- Celtics All-Star Jayson Tatum‘s father, Justin Tatum, recently reflected on his son’s underwhelming gold medal run with Team USA this summer, per Marc J. Spears of Andscape. Tatum was a DNP-CD in multiple games and was up and down when he did play. “He wasn’t in the room pouting or throwing chairs around or it was a topic of conversation at dinner,” Justin, currently the head coach of the NBL’s Illawarra Hawks in Australia, said. “He said he could’ve stayed with his family, stayed home or done this… But he was happy to be out there winning the gold.”