Blazers’ Shaedon Sharpe Could Make Season Debut Thursday

Trail Blazers guard Shaedon Sharpe, who has been shelved all season with a labral tear in his left shoulder, has had his status upgraded to questionable prior to Portland’s Thursday matchup against the Spurs, reports Sean Highkin of The Rose Garden Report (Twitter link).

The intriguing third-year swingman could make his season debut in San Antonio.

At 3-5, the Trail Blazers have managed to be a bit more chippy and competitive without Sharpe than fans or pundits initially anticipated.

Head coach Chauncey Billups has opted to start reserve wing Toumani Camara at small forward, while shifting nominal starting three Deni Avdija to Sharpe’s shooting guard spot.

Camara’s emergence as a two-way weapon has been a positive development in Portland. He was selected with the No. 52 pick in the 2023 draft, but even as a rookie began to assert himself defensively. This year, he’s been demonstrating an impressive shooting touch. Across his eight games as a starter thus far, the 6’8″ second-year pro is averaging 9.8 points on .460/.481/.636 shooting splits, along with 4.5 rebounds and 2.6 assists per night.

Sharpe, a lottery pick in 2022, averaged an impressive 15.9 PPG while slashing .406/.333/.824 in his 32 healthy games last season. He also notched 5.0 RPG, 2.9 APG and 0.9 SPG. He seems destined to take over the starting two-guard slot for the Trail Blazers whenever he does return, but it remains to be seen whether Avdija or Camara will be Billups’ long-term solution at small forward.

Joel Embiid To Make Season Debut Tuesday

Sixers All-Star center Joel Embiid is set to return to the floor for Philadelphia next Tuesday against the Knicks, per Shams Charania of ESPN (Twitter video link).

Embiid, who had been out all year while managing a knee injury, will serve a three-game suspension handed down after he shoved a reporter, then make his season debut once the suspension is up.

“Joel Embiid is ready,” Charania told Malika Andrews on “NBA Today.” “Sources tell me he will make his season debut next Tuesday at home against the Knicks in the Sixers’ NBA Cup opener. He’ll serve his three-day suspension tonight against the Clippers, Friday against the Lakers, Sunday at home against the Hornets, and then the attention can finally be on basketball for Joel Embiid.”

“We know how great he is when he’s on the court, former league MVP,” Charania continued. “(Sixers head coach) Nick Nurse said it the other day: they need him to re-focus everything about this season on the court, and to play the game of basketball.”

The seven-footer, a seven-time All-Star and five-time All-NBA honoree, won league MVP honors in 2023. Last year, Embiid was healthy for just 39 contests. In those games, he averaged 34.7 points on .529/.388/.883 shooting splits. He also pulled down 11.0 rebounds, handed out 5.6 dimes, blocked 1.7 shots, and had 1.2 steals per night.

Without Embiid, Philadelphia has won just one game. The team is currently 1-5 on the young season.

Magic Notes: Carter, Bitadze, Anthony Black

Magic starting center Wendell Carter Jr. has suffered a left foot plantar fascia strain and is out for the immediate future, per Jason Beede of The Orlando Sentinel (Twitter link). Carter missed Monday’s game in Oklahoma City and has also been ruled out for Wednesday’s matchup with the Pacers.

Beede adds that, after missing four games with a left foot tendon strain of his own, reserve center Goga Bitadze made his return to the hardwood on Monday, starting in Carter’s place. Bitadze notched 11 points, nine boards, four dimes, a block, and a steal in his first game back.

“He was fantastic,” head coach Jamahl Mosley said. “His ability to come off of not playing so many games, to give us a presence at the rim, defensively in the pick-and-roll he was great. He did a good job play-making.”

Bitadze started 33 games in the Carter’s stead last year when the Magic’s top center went down with an injury.

There’s more out of Orlando:

  • In a conversation with Spencer Davies of Responsible Gambler, second-year guard Anthony Black reflected on his expanding role with the Magic. “It definitely feels like a little bit of progress but just trying to get in a rhythm, get a feel for it and just do what the team needs me to do for real as the season goes,” Black said. “It’s slowing down game-by-game. I think there’s still another level to which it can kinda slow down for me, so I guess right now we’re just gonna keep trying to take it day by day and see. Let it slow down as it slows down, really. Just keep playing.”
  • During last year’s hard-fought, seven-game first round playoff series loss to the Cavaliers, Black played some mop-up duty in Games 3 and 4. He otherwise was not a part of Mosley’s rotations, including in Game 7. “It was tough, but I wanted my team to win,” Black said. “I was watching the game as a fan, hoping we won the game. Just tried to do that and say things as I saw from the bench… I learned a lot just about the game, the flow, the importance of each possession. Just how important it is to win.” So far this fall, the second-year guard is averaging 24.6 minutes per game.
  • In case you missed it, former Magic point guard D.J. Augustin recently announced his retirement following a 15-year career.

Pacific Notes: Draymond, Fox, Okogie, Durant

Warriors star forward Draymond Green, an eight-time All-Defensive Teamer, is hoping to get back into All-Defensive and Defensive Player of the Year consideration this season, he said in a conversation with former Warriors point guard Baron Davis on Green’s podcast, “The Draymond Green Show” (YouTube video link). Green, considered one of the best defenders of his generation, has only won the Defensive Player of the Year once, in 2017.

“That’s my goal, you know, just going through this offseason and then seeing my name not on an All-Defensive team last year,” Green said. “I know I wasn’t eligible because of the games I missed, but it still pissed me off. I want to keep building on what I hope ultimately becomes a Hall of Fame career. The more accolades, the better.”

The 34-year-old has been available for all six of the 5-1 Warriors’ games this season. He’s averaging 7.3 points on .438/.467/.643 shooting splits, along with 5.2 rebounds and 4.2 assists per night.

“I’m not seven feet, so I have to use positioning and my brain to be great,” Green added. “This year, that’s one of my goals: to get back in the Defensive Player of the Year race, get back on All-Defense First Team, and just keep running that up.”

There’s more out of the Pacific Division:

  • Kings All-Star point guard De’Aaron Fox has played all of his regular season games this year with a dislocated pinkie finger on his left (shooting) hand, reports Chris Biderman of The Sacramento Bee. For now, his pinkie has been taped to his ring finger. Fox revealed that he suffered the injury in training camp. Imaging indicated that there’s no break, but it has yet to fully heal. “(It’s) probably a ligament,” Fox told Biderman. He plans to play through it rather than undergo a surgery, which he said would sideline him for about a month.
  • Suns reserve wing Josh Okogie has been on the shelf for the first five games of Phoenix’s season with a strained hamstring. He revealed to reporters on Saturday that he has been cleared to return, per Duane Rankin of The Arizona Republic (Twitter link). “I run very hard and I run very fast,” Okogie said of his playing style being a potential impediment to a quicker return. “So just being able to make sure my hamstring could take that. Not only to take it but sustain it.”
  • After being criticized for his leadership by ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith on the network’s “First Take” program, Suns All-Star forward Kevin Durant took umbrage with the assessment, per Doug Haller of The Athletic. “Yeah, Stephen A., I don’t understand how people even listen to Stephen A.,” Durant told Haller. “I’ve been in the league for 18 years. I’ve never seen Stephen A. at a practice, or a film session, or a shootaround. I’ve never seen him anywhere but on TV talking s–t about players and holding them to standards that he don’t even hold himself to or other people to. He’s a clown to me. He’s always been a clown. You can write that, too.” Phoenix seems to be responding well to Durant’s leadership this year. The club is off to an encouraging 5-1 start.

New York Notes: Brunson, Towns, Anunoby, Claxton, Nets

Knicks All-Stars Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns have benefited greatly from being coaches’ sons, writes Steven Popper of Newsday.

Brunson’s father, former nine-year NBA point guard Rick Brunson, is currently an assistant coach guiding his son in New York.

“I think when you’re the son of a coach, regardless of what level, I think you’re consistently talking about what you can do to be better,” Brunson said. “For the most part, at least from my experience, I don’t think there’s any trick to it. It’s just that you’re in this constant mode of learning. Since you have that since you’re a kid, you learn more, you understand more. I don’t know. It’s just more of a natural feel.”

Towns’ father, Karl Towns Sr., was a standout player at Monmouth University before becoming a coach at Piscataway Technical High School.

“I think it’s just a credit to my father,” Towns said. “He was a high school coach, a damn good one, too, in Jersey, Piscataway. Just being with him every single day, just watching him coach and just garnering IQ every single day, learning the right way to play the game of basketball, ways you could help your team win, and the way he taught me. So that’s a shoutout to my father for being the man who taught me the game of basketball at this level.”

There’s more out of the Big Apple:

  • Knicks forward OG Anunoby has been an absolutely critical defensive contributor for New York this season, writes Stefan Bondy of The New York Post. According to Bondy, Anunoby seems to be channeling the defensive versatility of an All-Star former Tom Thibodeau charge, Luol Deng. “Each player is unique, and there are things about him that are so unique and different: His size, his strength, his speed, his anticipation, his ability to read and to see things ahead,” Thibodeau said. “And he knows how to read plays. If someone is loose with the ball, he’s very active with his hands. Disruptive off the ball but also very good on the ball, and he’s super long. So he can fly by you and he can come back into the play and still impact the shot.”
  • Nets center Nic Claxton has been grappling with a minutes restriction all year as he deals with a lingering hamstring issue. That appears likely to change sooner rather than later, writes Brian Lewis of The New York Post. “Right now, we just want to see him play consistently every game but also play more minutes,” head coach Jordi Fernandez said. “It’s going to happen. Obviously, I’m not going to tell when at the end of the day, but [everyone] will see it.”
  • Surprisingly, the Nets have gotten off to a solid 3-3 start this season. Lewis writes in another piece that a lot of this early success is a credit to Brooklyn’s clutch fourth-quarter defense. “We’re not there yet,” Fernandez said modestly of the club’s defensive growth. “It’s in process. We know that all these high-level defensive teams, playoff teams — Orlando, Celtics, Minnesota — they’re very good in pressuring the ball and very physical. It’s a process. It’s not like in one day, you’ll become those type of teams. You have to go through it. But yeah, we have to do better at the rim.”

Dejounte Murray Breaks Hand In Pelicans Debut

OCTOBER 24: Imaging has indeed revealed that Murray broke his left hand, sources tell Charania. He now faces a lengthy recovery before he can play his second game for the Pelicans.


OCTOBER 23: The Pelicans are concerned that combo guard Dejounte Murray may have fractured his left hand during his New Orleans regular season debut on Wednesday, sources inform Shams Charania of ESPN (Twitter link).

The 6’5″ vet was acquired in a blockbuster trade with the Hawks this summer that saw New Orleans give up multiple role players and draft picks. In the Pelicans’ 123-111 victory over the Bulls, Murray scored 14 points on 4-of-15 shooting from the floor and 6-of-7 shooting from the charity stripe. He also handed out 10 assists and pulled down eight boards.

New Orleans won 49 contests last season, but was quickly swept out of the playoffs by the Thunder in the first round in the spring. In making a play for Murray, team president David Griffin opted to load up on two-way backcourt talent. Should the injury be a break, that move could come back to bite the Pelicans during the regular season.

A former All-Star and All-Defensive player with the Spurs, Murray struggled to find his footing during his two seasons in Atlanta, playing alongside another ball-dominant guard in All-Star Trae Young.

While plying his trade for the Hawks, Murray averaged 21.5 points, 6.3 assists, 5.3 rebounds and 1.5 steals per game on .462/.355/.810 shooting splits. The team, however, made the playoffs only once during his tenure.

New Orleans represented a far more balanced squad for Murray, perhaps his best chance yet to make at least the second round of the playoffs. With his health now a long-term concern this year, the Pelicans’ fate is suddenly far more tenuous in what figures to be a competitive Western Conference race.

Lakers Notes: LeBron, Bronny, Redick, Davis

Lakers All-NBA forward LeBron James and his son, rookie guard Bronny James, made league history on Tuesday. When the duo suited up together in L.A.’s 110-103 victory over the visiting Timberwolves, they become the first father-son NBA tandem to do so, writes Dave McMenamin of ESPN.

“That moment, us being at the scorer’s table together and checking in together, something I will never forget,” LeBron said during a postgame presser. “No matter how old I get, no matter how my memory may fade as I get older or whatever, I will never forget that moment.”

“I tried not to focus on everything that was going on around me and tried to focus on going in as a rookie and not trying to mess up,” Bronny said. “But yeah, I totally did feel the energy, and I appreciate the Laker Nation for showing the support for me and my dad.”

There’s more out of Los Angeles:

  • The Lakers appear to have wholly bought into first-year head coach JJ Redick‘s methods, writes Jovan Buha of The Athletic. “The game plan, the schemes that he had on both ends of the floor, he trusts us,” All-Star Los Angeles center Anthony Davis said. “We trust him, as far as what he teaches us, what he wants us to do on the floor on both ends and it’s our job to go execute it. I think we were very prepared tonight.”
  • After a 15-year pro playing career and a successful broadcasting run, Redicks restlessness as a basketball brain eventually compelled him to try out coaching for size, as he told Dan Woike of The Los Angeles Times. “At some point, you just kinda have to listen to your soul and not be afraid of the consequences of whatever happens afterwards,” Redick told Woike of his decision to pursue the Lakers’ coaching gig. “Whatever I envisioned in my previous life, that’s gone. This is who I am now. I’m a coach. And so I don’t feel like tonight is at all about me. It’s about our team.”
  • After being hired by the Lakers this summer, Redick pledged that he would run his offense through Davis. As Broderick Turner of The Los Angeles Times writes, many of the nine-time All-Star’s teammates looked to feed him early and often in Tuesday’s opener. “He is the main focal point for us offensively and defensively,” LeBron said of Davis. “We got to make sure we continue to give him the ball. I think the coaching staff and JJ , they do a great job of always putting him in positions where he can be the recipient of the offense.” The 6’10” big man scored 36 points on 11-of-23 shooting from the floor and 13-of-15 shooting from the foul line in his season debut, while also pulling down 16 boards.

And-Ones: International Players, Salaries, Petrusev, 2025 RFAs

The NBA’s 30 opening night rosters boast 125 internationally-born players, which ties a league record, per an NBA press release. Those 125 players hail from 43 different nations, which also ties a league record. Canada leads the way among those 43 nations for the 11th straight year, with 21 NBA players. France, Australia, Germany and Serbia round out the top-five most-represented international countries in the NBA, with 14, 13, eight and six players, respectively.

The Thunder and Pelicans have seven international players apiece, the most such tally this year.

The three most recent league Most Valuable Players are all international stars: three-time MVP Nikola Jokic, 2023 winner Joel Embiid, and two-time MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo. Last year’s runner-up to Jokic for MVP honors was Canadian point guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. Slovenian-born guard Luka Doncic is a five-time All-NBA First Teamer, while three-time All-Star center Domantas Sabonis is Lithuanian.

There’s more from around the basketball world:

  • With the NBA’s 2024/25 season tipping off this week, Keith Smith of Spotrac takes a look at where all 30 NBA clubs stand relative to this year’s salary cap and luxury tax aprons, ranging from the Suns ($31.5MM over the second apron) to the Pistons ($10.2MM under the cap).
  • While it didn’t happen when originally reported in September, NBA center/forward Filip Petrusev is now returning to Serbian club KK Crvena Zvezda, on a loan out from current club Olympiacos BC, Crvena Zvezda has announced (Twitter link). In a statement, agent Misko Raznatovic thanked Olympiacos and its owners for their flexibility with Petrusev, who sought a more significant role (via Twitter). The 6’11” big man was selected with the No. 50 pick in 2021. He didn’t play in the NBA until 2023/24, which he split between Philadelphia and the Kings before being waived and returning to Europe.
  • Not every talented young player entering the final year of a rookie scale contract agreed to an extension with his team by the October 21 deadline. Accordingly, Eric Pincus of Bleacher Report previews the 2025 restricted free agent class, with Warriors forward Jonathan Kuminga topping Pincus’ list of the best RFAs hitting the market next summer.

Mavericks Exercise 2025/26 Options On Lively, Prosper

The Mavericks have exercised the third-year rookie scale team options on center Dereck Lively and combo forward Olivier-Maxence Prosper, Dallas revealed (Twitter link).

The two players now have guaranteed contracts through at least the next two seasons, with Lively assured of earning $5.25MM in ’25/26 while Prosper will make $3MM.

[RELATED: Decisions On 2025/26 Rookie Scale Team Options]

Though both were first-round draft picks last summer, there was a significant difference between the roles the two rookies played on the Finals-bound Mavericks in 2023/24.

A 7’1″ big man out of Duke, Lively was the No. 12 overall pick and played regular minutes in the Mavs’ frontcourt from day one. Though he didn’t close the year as the team’s starting five, he made 42 regular season starts and was arguably just as important as veteran Daniel Gafford.

Both Gafford and Lively are athletic, rim-rolling big men with high motors who became easy lob partners for All-Star guards Luka Doncic and Kyrie Irving. Across 55 regular season bouts as a rookie, Lively averaged 8.8 points on 74.7% shooting from the field, plus 6.9 rebounds, 1.4 blocks, and 1.1 assists per night. He contributed 7.9 PPG, 7.4 RPG, and 1.0 BPG off the bench in 21 playoff games.

Prosper was drafted with the No. 24 pick out of Marquette, but didn’t emerge as a rotation piece for Dallas in his first year. The 6’8″ forward appeared in just 40 contests for the Mavericks, averaging 3.0 points and 2.0 rebounds in 8.4 minutes per game.

Central Notes: Lillard, Nembhard, Thompson

Bucks All-Star point guard Damian Lillard is gearing up for his second season in Milwaukee, writes Eric Nehm of The Athletic. The 6’2″ vet had a disappointing start to his tenure with the team in 2023/24.

The 34-year-old, on the cusp of his 13th season officially tipping off Wednesday, reflected on his reputation around the league and spoke about how winning a title alongside All-NBA Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo could affect his legacy.

“You would think if I won it, there would be nothing that they could say, but I think people know how f—ing good I am,” Lillard said. “People know — at least the people who know what they’re watching — or I wouldn’t have been on the 75th anniversary team. If you’re talking about fans and people that are on TV just randomly saying their opinion, it’s like, ‘All right.’”

There’s more out of the Central Division:

  • Versatile Pacers combo guard Andrew Nembhard, who signed an extension with the team this offseason, has been happy to slot in as an jack-of-all-trades role player in Indiana, toggling between the bench and the starting lineup throughout his two seasons thus far, writes Dustin Dopirak of The Indianapolis Star (subscriber link). “He’s our Swiss Army knife. He can play point guard when Ty [Tyrese Haliburton] is getting pressured,” reserve guard T.J. McConnell said. “He can be the two. He can even be the three and he can guard any position. He’s been incredible and he continues to get better.”
  • Second-year Pistons wing Ausar Thompson has been ruled out for the club’s 2024/25 regular season opener Wednesday night as he continues his comeback from a blood clot that ended his rookie season prematurely, per Omari Sankofa II of The Detroit Free Press (Twitter link). Detroit is still waiting for official clearance from the league regarding when Thompson will be permitted to return to action, Sankofa tweets. The 6’7″ swingman appeared in 63 contests for Detroit, averaging 8.8 points, 6.4 rebounds and 1.9 assists per game.
  • In case you missed it, the Bulls opted not to sign newly acquired point guard Josh Giddey to a contract extension in time for the preseason deadline. He will become a restricted free agent next summer.