EuroBasket Notes: Sengun, Vukcevic, Yabusele, Queta
Rockets center Alperen Sengun continued his impressive EuroBasket performance on Wednesday, outplaying Nikola Jokic in Turkey’s thrilling 95-90 win over Serbia, writes Semih Tuna of Eurohoops. Both teams came into the game undefeated, so the victory gave Turkey the No. 1 seed in Group A heading into the knockout round. It also made a statement for Sengun, who was facing Jokic for the first time in an international tournament and who had been dubbed “Baby Jokic” earlier in his career.
“I don’t think he would want that nickname,” teammate Shane Larkin said. “You can see the similarities with their games. Alperen has big aspirations. Alperen is a very confident kid. Alperen has a very high level of basketball skill and a very high level of talent. The sky is the limit for him. I don’t think he’s anywhere near his ceiling. I think he’s going to continue to evolve and get better and better.”
Sengun put up impressive numbers once again, finishing with 28 points on 10-of-17 shooting from the field, along with 13 rebounds and eight assists. Through five games, he’s tied for fifth in the tournament in scoring while ranking third in rebounds and assists and second in efficiency.
“In his younger years, his first year, his second year, you could call him ‘Baby Jokic’ just because their styles are very similar,” Larkin added. “He’s proving during this tournament that he’s ready to take that next step. Last year, he was an NBA All-Star, and I think he’s going to continue to grow and continue to be a better and better player. That nickname was suiting for him maybe a couple of years ago. But he’s much bigger and much better than he was when they gave him that nickname.”
There’s more from EuroBasket:
- Serbia played without Wizards center Tristan Vukcevic, but he’s expected to return for the knockout round, Tuna adds in a separate story. Serbia only had 10 players available due to the loss of Bogdan Bogdanovic with a hamstring injury. “Vukcevic couldn’t be on the roster in this situation, when the game is played with so much energy – everyone is really important,” coach Svetislav Pesic said. “He got a minor injury, nothing serious. He’ll be ready in 2–3 days.”
- Guerschon Yabusele credits a change in strategy for his 36-point outburst against Poland, per Eurohoops. After a 2-1 start, French coach Frederic Fauthoux focused on creating more shots for the Knicks‘ big man. “We had a conversation with the coach, with the players too, to try to get me involved in the game a little bit more,” Yabusele told reporters. “I know it is important for me to be aggressive the whole time, for the team and for myself. I was trying to find the rhythm and give the energy to the guys.”
- Portugal was able to advance to the next round despite the ejection of Neemias Queta in a narrow victory over Estonia, according to Edvinas Jablonskis of BasketNews. The Celtics center was tossed midway through the third quarter for picking up a second technical foul when officials decided his celebration after making a basket was excessive (Twitter video link).
Clippers Deny Circumventing Cap For Kawhi Leonard
Clippers wing Kawhi Leonard found himself the subject of unwanted scrutiny Wednesday, when it was reported by Pablo Torre on his “Pablo Torre Finds Out” podcast that the six-time All-Star had inked a $28MM endorsement deal for “tree brokerage” Aspiration, a former team sponsor that filed for bankruptcy earlier this year. L.A. owner Steve Ballmer invested $50MM into the company.
The 6’7″ swingman reportedly didn’t do any work for the allegedly phony tree-planting company, leading to speculation that the endorsement agreement was a route for Leonard to earn additional money on top of his NBA salary in a manner that would have helped L.A. circumvent the salary cap. Other involved celebrities, including movie stars Leonardo DiCaprio and Robert Downey Jr., apparently did perform actual work for Aspiration.
The NBA is now investigating the situation to determine if there was indeed any impropriety.
The Clippers initially released statements to Torre and then to The Los Angeles Times denying any wrongdoing. Now, the team has issued an extended denial, as Shams Charania of ESPN (Twitter link) relays.
“Neither the Clippers nor Steve Ballmer circumvented the salary cap,” the Clippers’ statement reads. “The notion that Steve invested in Aspiration in order to funnel money to Kawhi Leonard is absurd. Steve invested because Aspiration’s co-founders presented themselves as committed to doing right by their customers while protecting the environment.
“After a long campaign of market manipulation, which defrauded not only Steve but numerous other investors and sports teams, Aspiration filed for bankruptcy. Its co-founder, Joseph Sanberg, recently pleaded guilty to a $243 million fraud. Neither Steve nor the Clippers had knowledge of any improper activity by Aspiration or its co-founder until after the government initiated its investigation. Aspiration was a team sponsor for the 2021/22 and 2022/23 seasons before defaulting on its contract.
“There is nothing unusual or untoward about team sponsors doing endorsement deals with players on the same time. Neither Steve nor the Clippers organization had any oversight of Kawhi’s independent endorsement agreement with Aspiration. To say otherwise is flat-out wrong.”
“The Clippers take NBA compliance extremely seriously, fully respect the league’s rules, and welcome its investigation related to Aspiration. The Clippers will also continue to cooperate with law enforcement in its investigation into Aspiration’s blatantly fraudulent activity.”
Torre responded to the Clippers’ claims (via Twitter), standing by his reporting and challenging some of the language in the Clippers’ statement.
Heat Notes: Riley, EuroBasket, Fontecchio, Jovic, Ware
With Heat owner Micky Arison set to be inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame this weekend and team president Pat Riley among the prior honorees slated to present him, Riley reflected on his 30 years with the organization, per Anthony Chiang of The Miami Herald.
“Micky and I had that kind of relationship back and forth, but always positive about what we’re trying to do,” Riley said. “If he didn’t like something, he would tell me, ‘I don’t think we should go that way,’ and I wouldn’t go that way. If he said, ‘Go for it. Damn right, let’s go for it,’ we had the same mentality.
“But if you don’t take a risk — a big-three type risk [signing free agent All-Stars LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh in 2010], Lamar Odom type risk or Shaquille O’Neal type risk or Jimmy Butler type risk or whatever it is — then you’re too afraid and there’s a fear of failure there,” Riley continued. “So when you make a calculated risk, he has made a lot of them with me — some of them haven’t worked, some of them have worked big time.”
With Riley running its front office, Miami has made a total of seven NBA Finals, winning three championships.
There’s more out of Miami:
- While playing for their respective national teams at EuroBasket this year, Heat role players Nikola Jovic, Pelle Larsson and Simone Fontecchio are all showing out in larger roles than they’ve had in Miami so far. Still, Ira Winderman of The South Florida Sun Sentinel cautions that their production shouldn’t necessarily indicate that they’re capable of taking a leap with the Heat in 2025/26.
- There had been “strong rumbles” last month that the Heat were looking into trading Fontecchio, according to Marc Stein of The Stein Line (Substack link). Stein notes that this buzz happened before Miami traded Haywood Highsmith to Brooklyn. Now that the Heat find themselves below the league’s luxury tax following the Highsmith deal, there is likely little urgency to offload Fontecchio.
- With Jovic playing an outsized role for his native Serbia in EuroBasket, Barry Jackson of The Miami Herald considers whether Miami would be served better by starting the young forward in the frontcourt next to Bam Adebayo over center Kel’el Ware. Jackson notes that shifting Adebayo to the four spot while starting Ware at the five last year proved statistically more effective than keeping Adebayo at center and starting Jovic.
Nets Notes: Two-Way Spots, Sharpe, Porter
Even after signing E.J. Liddell to a two-way deal on Wednesday, the Nets still have one open two-way slot to fill. C.J. Holmes of The New York Daily News takes a look at three contenders for the role.
Holmes notes that 6’11” former CBA forward Fanbo Zeng, who reportedly agreed to a deal with Brooklyn in August, looks like a solid modern big man. He averaged 14.7 points, 4.6 rebounds and 1.6 blocks per game with the Beijing Ducks in the Chinese Basketball Association. Zeng also connected on 53% of his field goal attempts and 41% of his triple tries.
Undrafted former Alabama forward Grant Nelson underwhelmed while with the Nets’ Summer League squad, but his energetic play and diverse skill set on offense could give him an NBA-level ceiling.
Recently waived former Mavericks forward Olivier-Maxence Prosper, a first-round draft pick in 2023, is the kind of developmental project Brooklyn could explore too, Holmes adds.
There’s more out of Brooklyn:
- More details have come to light on re-signed Nets center Day’Ron Sharpe‘s new contract, per Michael Scotto of HoopsHype (Twitter link). According to Scotto, Sharpe’s agreement is actually worth $12.5MM across two seasons instead of the originally reported $12MM. It still includes as a second-year team option, as expected.
- Since being traded away from Denver earlier this summer, new Nets forward Michael Porter Jr. has been on a veritable tour of podcasts and live streams, sharing some controversial takes. Holmes opines that the 6’10” vet should consider curbing these public appearances. Porter is making $79.4MM across the last two years of his deal, and Holmes suggests that his continued appearances could affect his standing as a positive veteran influence for Brooklyn’s young roster — which includes five rookies.
- In case you missed it, the Nets remain the only NBA team with cap space available, which they could use in a variety of ways.
NBA Planning New Round-Robin All-Star Game Format
The NBA intends to implement a round-robin tournament format, with an international twist, for the 2026 All-Star game at the Clippers’ Intuit Dome home court on Feb. 15, 2026, reports Shams Charania of ESPN. The league has been nothing if not proactive in tinkering with the format of the competition in recent years, cycling through many different approaches to engage players and fans.
Sources tell Charania that this coming season’s round-robin competition is expected to involve a trio of eight-player teams: a pair of U.S.-born rosters and one squad made up of international players. They would play 12 minutes per quarter of action in a Ryder Cup-emulating setup.
The NBPA and the league received a “positive” reaction from the Competition Committee when they discussed the proposed format change on Wednesday, Charania notes. NBA executives, owners and players were all involved in talks.
For this past February’s All-Star game, the league attempted a four-team tournament format with three All-Star clubs and a fourth “rising star” team. Judging by the ratings, fans were relatively unmoved.
Rumors have abounded since the spring that the league would embrace more of an international flavor to the All-Star game’s format. The competition will be broadcast on NBC after the league’s longtime partnership with TNT ended this past season. The NBA All-Star game will take place while NBC is in the midst of airing the 2026 Olympics in Italy.
Roughly a quarter of current players were born outside the U.S., including all of the league’s Most Valuable Player winners since James Harden in 2017/18.
Central Notes: Beasley, Pistons, Cavaliers
Free agent former Pistons swingman Malik Beasley has touched back down in Detroit, reports Robert Snell of The Detroit News (subscriber link). After coughing up $38K in delinquent money owed, he has moved back into the apartment from which he was evicted last month.
According to Snell, the 6’4″ sharpshooter maintains interest in re-signing with the Pistons for the 2025/26 season. His free agency this summer has been marred by a federal gambling investigation. He is no longer considered a “target” in the probe, but he remains a possible “subject”, so he isn’t entirely in the clear.
Detroit could sign Beasley using his Non-Bird rights for as much as $7.2MM.
He enjoyed a terrific run during his inaugural season with the club, helping the Pistons notch a 44-38 record and return to the playoffs for the first time in six years.
While playing all 82 games for Detroit, mostly as a reserve, Beasley averaged 16.3 PPG, 2.6 RPG, 1.7 APG and 0.9 SPG in just 27.8 MPG. He also connected on 41.6% of his triple tries and finished second in Sixth Man of the Year voting.
There’s more out of the Central Division:
- With just one open standard roster spot left to potentially fill, the Pistons‘ personnel appears to be (mostly) pretty set for 2025/26. Omari Sankofa II of The Detroit Free Press (subscriber link) projects the club’s depth chart for the new year, including how he thinks the team will integrate new free agent wing signings Duncan Robinson and Caris LeVert.
- The Cavaliers will hold their training camp at IMG Academy in Bradenton, Florida for a second straight year, per Chris Fedor of Cleveland.com. “Returning to IMG Academy is a testament to the tremendous experience we had there last year,” team president Koby Altman said. “The overall engagement, both at the Bradenton facility and throughout the community, was an invaluable part of our preparations.” The Cavs’ camp will take place from September 30 to October 5.
- In case you missed it, Bulls center Nikola Vucevic announced his retirement from offseason competitions for the Montenegrin national team.
Nets Sign Liddell To Two-Way Contract, Finalize Sharpe Deal
The Nets have officially announced a pair of signings, adding free agent forward E.J. Liddell on a two-way contract and finalizing their previously reported deal with free agent big man Day’Ron Sharpe (Twitter links).
Liddell, 24, was the 41st overall pick in the 2022 draft but tore his ACL in the Summer League just a few weeks later, wiping out his rookie season. The 24-year-old has since appeared in just 20 total NBA games for the Pelicans and Bulls and has seen extremely limited playing time. In 76 total NBA minutes across the past two seasons, he has scored 25 points and grabbed 14 rebounds.
However, Liddell has been more productive in the NBA G League, including in 27 outings last season for the Windy City Bulls. He averaged 15.7 points, 6.6 rebounds, and 2.5 assists in 32.3 minutes per game for Chicago’s NBAGL affiliate, posting a shooting line of .472/.361/.661.
Despite technically having been in the NBA for three seasons, Liddell still has two years of two-way eligibility left, since he missed one of those three seasons in its entirety due to an injury. He and Tyson Etienne are Brooklyn’s current two-way players, leaving one slot still open.
Meanwhile, Sharpe’s two-year, $12MM agreement with the Nets was reported was back on June 30, before the free agent period officially opened. The club has been putting off completing that deal – and Ziaire Williams‘ similar two-year, $12MM pact – in order to keep its options open with its cap room.
Still, all indications were that at least one of those two contracts would have to be signed using cap space, since the Nets renounced both players and wouldn’t be able to fit both Sharpe and Williams into their $8.8MM room exception. With that in mind, officially re-signing Sharpe doesn’t significantly impact Brooklyn’s flexibility — the team should still have roughly $16MM in room available.
Portugal, Sweden Qualify For EuroBasket Knockout Round
The group-play stage of EuroBasket wrapped up for the teams in Group A and Group B on Wednesday. Those clubs concluded their initial five-game schedules as the two round-of-16 spots still up for grabs in Groups A and B were claimed by Portgual and Sweden, respectively.
Portugal eked out a 68-65 victory over Estonia in a win-or-go-home matchup in Group A, eliminating the Estonians. Point guard Rafael Lisboa (17 points, five assists) and Celtics big man Neemias Queta (15 points) led the way for Portugal, though Queta was ejected with 4:34 left in the third quarter after picking up his second technical foul, as Brian Robb of MassLive.com details. The Portuguese team lost its slim lead following Queta’s exit, but managed to pull back in front during a back-and-forth fourth quarter.
In Group B, Montenegro missed its chance to qualify for the round of 16 by falling to Great Britain, resulting in both teams finishing the group stage with an 1-4 record. Sweden, which lost a tight 74-71 contest to Lithuania on Wednesday, also went 1-4, but earned the tiebreaker over Montenegro and Great Britain by virtue of their point differential. Heat forward Pelle Larsson has been the standout for Sweden so far, averaging a team-high 19.8 points per game across four outings.
[RELATED: Nikola Vucevic Retires From Montenegrin National Team]
The final standings for Groups A and B are now set, which means the first four matchups in the single-elimination stage are set too. The top team in Group A will play the fourth-place team in Group B, the second-place Group A team faces the third-place Group B squad, and so on.
As a result of Turkey knocking off Serbia to claim the top spot in Group A, the round-of-16 matchups played on Saturday will be as follows:
- Turkey (A1) vs. Sweden (B4)
- Serbia (A2) vs. Finland (B3)
- Latvia (A3) vs. Lithuania (B2)
- Portugal (A4) vs. Germany (B1)
FIBA has announced Saturday tip-off times for all four matchups.
Groups C and D will wrap up their group-stage schedule on Thursday. Two spots in the round of 16 are still available in Group C, where only Greece (3-1) and Italy (3-1) have qualified so far. Spain (2-2) would advance with a win over Greece, while the winner of the Georgia (2-2) vs. Bosnia and Herzegovina (2-2) will also clinch a spot in the knockout round.
If Greece wins on Thursday, the Spaniards would need a Georgia victory in order to advance — in that scenario, both Spain and Bosnia and Herzeogvina would be 2-3, and Spain would hold the head-to-head tiebreaker. Georgia holds the tiebreaker edge over Spain.
All four teams who will advance out of Group D are already known: Israel (3-1), Poland (3-1), France (3-1), and Slovenia (2-2) have clinched their spots. However, seeding remains in flux, with Thursday’s Israel vs. Slovenia showdown looming as a crucial matchup.
Kawhi Leonard ‘No-Show’ Endorsement Deal May Have Violated Salary Cap Rules
2:54 pm: “We are aware of this morning’s media report regarding the L.A. Clippers and are commencing an investigation,” NBA spokesperson Mike Bass said in a statement, per Shams Charania of ESPN (Twitter link).
The Clippers, meanwhile, issued a longer statement to Steve Henson of The Los Angeles Times strongly denying that they engaged in any sort of cap circumvention.
“Neither Mr. Ballmer nor the Clippers circumvented the salary cap or engaged in any misconduct related to Aspiration,” the statement reads. “Any contrary assertion is provably false: The team ended its relationship with Aspiration years ago, during the 2022-23 season, when Aspiration defaulted on its obligations.
“Neither the Clippers nor Mr. Ballmer was aware of any improper activity by Aspiration or its co-founder until after the government instituted its investigation. The team and Mr. Ballmer stand ready to assist law enforcement in any way they can.”
Aspiration co-founder Joseph Sanberg pled guilty last month to two counts of wire fraud for a $248MM scheme to defraud lenders and investors.
8:01 am: A $28MM endorsement deal signed by Kawhi Leonard could land the Clippers in hot water with the league.
According to an investigation by Pablo Torre on his “Pablo Torre Finds Out” podcast, Leonard performed no work for an allegedly fraudulent tree-planting company funded by $50MM from Clippers owner Steve Ballmer.
The endorsement deal could be construed as a means to circumvent the salary cap, which would carry heavy penalties from the league.
After leading the Raptors to the 2019 championship, Leonard declined his player option and became an unrestricted free agent. Leonard chose to sign with the Clippers on a three-year, $103.1MM deal in July of that year. He has subsequently signed a pair of extensions with the franchise.
The “tree brokerage” company named Aspiration filed for bankruptcy in March 2025. Among the list of creditors is KL2 Aspire LLC with Leonard named as the manager or member. The company owed KL2 Aspire LLC $7MM.
Torre couldn’t find any evidence that Leonard actually performed any work for the company, unlike other celebrity endorsers. Torre interviewed seven former employees of the company, one of whom provided a document showing Leonard was to receive $7MM over four years in the marketing agreement, which began in 2022. According to a former Aspiration employee who worked in the finance department, Leonard “didn’t have to do anything.”
The Clippers denied any wrongdoing. The organization provided Torre with a statement that read, “Neither Mr. Ballmer nor the Clippers circumvented the salary cap or engaged in any misconduct related to Aspiration. Any contrary assertion is provably false.”
Back in 2000, the league and then-commissioner David Stern issued harsh penalties against the Timberwolves due to salary cap violations. Minnesota signed former No. 1 overall pick Joe Smith to a series of one-year contracts below market value with the promise of giving him a long-term deal that would pay him up to $86MM over seven seasons.
As Spotrac contributor Keith Smith notes (Twitter link), Smith’s contract was voided and the Timberwolves were fined $3.5MM and had five first-round picks forfeited (the team later recouped two of those picks). Owner Glen Taylor was suspended and general manager Kevin McHale was forced to take a leave of absence.
For what it’s worth, Stern had a reputation for handing out harsher discipline than current commissioner Adam Silver. In recent years, teams found to have engaged in free agent gun-jumping or tampering violations have typically been docked a single second-round pick. However, if an NBA investigation determines the Clippers were circumventing the cap via this agreement with Leonard, it seems safe to assume the penalty would be more significant than that.
Nikola Vucevic Retires From National Team
Bulls center Nikola Vucevic has announced his retirement from the Montenegrin national team, BasketNews.com relays.
Montenegro failed to advance in the EuroBasket tournament. Vucevic made his announcement after the team lost to Great Britain.
“It sucks for me to finish [my international career] this way. I would have loved to play more in Riga, but it is what it is,” Vucevic said. “I’d like to thank my teammates, coaches, and most importantly, the fans for everything they did throughout my career with the national team. It was an honor to play here, but that’s sports. I enjoyed playing here, but it’s time for a new generation to leave its mark.”
Vucevic made his first major national team appearance in 2011 at EuroBasket.
“There’s a lot of pride; we are a very small country. We don’t have a lot of players, and for us, every time we got into a big tournament, it was a huge success, and we always tried to do our best and represent our country the best way,” he said, per Aris Barkas of Eurohoops.net. “In some tournaments we did well, in some others we didn’t, and that’s how it goes.
“I am very proud that I had the chance to represent my country in all these tournaments, and very happy to play with all the guys I had. With some of them, we are close friends now, and that’s something that you have for the rest of your life. We are all very proud; we wish it could have ended differently, but that’s sports. Sometimes it’s great, sometimes it’s not.”
Vucevic, who turns 35 in October, is entering the final season of his three-year, $60MM contract with the Bulls.