Edey Undergoes Ankle Surgery, Out At Least Four Months

Grizzlies center Zach Edey will likely miss some regular season games at the start of 2025/26. He underwent surgery on Tuesday to address the laxity in his left ankle and re-stabilize it, according to a team press release (Twitter link).

Edey will be reevaluated in four months and is expected to make a full recovery, the release adds. The four-month gap before reevaluation means that Edey will not be ready to participate at the start of training camp and will require an extended rehab period.

Edey reinjured his left ankle during a workout last week. It was reported at the time that Edey would likely miss some regular season games and Tuesday’s press release essentially confirms that.

“After consulting with the Grizzlies and multiple specialists, we decided this is the best approach for Zach long-term as it gets him back to 100% with no limitations,” Edey’s agent, Mark Bartelstein of Priority Sports, told ESPN’s Sham Charania last week. “He will make a full recovery and be back better than ever.”

Edey dealt with left ankle soreness throughout his rookie season after a stellar college career at Purdue. The No. 9 pick in last year’s draft started 55 of the 66 games he played while averaging 9.2 points, 8.3 rebounds and 1.3 blocks in 21.5 minutes per night and posting .580/.346/.709 shooting numbers.

Edey was a first-team All-Rookie selection and finished fifth in the Rookie of the Year balloting.

His injury could impact the way the Grizzlies approach the offseason. Two of the club’s other frontcourt players are headed to free agency — Santi Aldama (restricted) and Marvin Bagley III (unrestricted).

Western Notes: Kidd, Blazers, Kings, Nelson, Nuggets

Letting Jason Kidd go to the Knicks would be a terrible outcome for the Mavericks, according to Tim Cowlishaw of the Dallas Morning News. There’s reportedly mutual interest between Kidd and the Knicks.

Under Kidd, Dallas has won five playoff series in four seasons. Cowlishaw also notes that Kyrie Irving likes Kidd and believes in him. In Cowlishaw’s viewpoint, the only way general manager Nico Harrison‘s vision for the current group will work is dependent on Anthony Davis staying healthy and Irving getting healthy and remaining happy. If Cooper Flagg then plays up to his draft status, the Mavs have a chance to secure a title in 2026/27 before the window of opportunity runs out for their aging stars.

Here’s more from the Western Conference:

  • Arthur Kaluma (Texas), Gabe Madsen (Utah), Chibuzo Agbo (USC), Alex Toohey (Sydney Kings), Jahmai Mashack (Tennessee) and Dylan Cardwell (Auburn) worked out for the Trail Blazers on Tuesday, Sean Highkin of The Rose Garden Report tweets. Toohey is the biggest name in the group, as the Australian forward is ranked No. 36 on ESPN’s Best Available list.
  • Jeremy Roach (Baylor), Caleb Love (Arizona), Jaxson Robinson (Kentucky), John Tonje (Wisconsin), Great Osobor (Washington), CJ Huntley (Appalachian State) will work out for the Kings on Wednesday, Jason Anderson of the Sacramento Bee tweets. That group is headed by Tonje (19.6 PPG with the Badgers last season), a high-scoring guard who is ranked No. 42 by ESPN.
  • Grant Nelson (Alabama) is expected to reschedule a workout with the Jazz, Brian Lewis of the New York Post tweets. Nelson, who worked out for the Nets on Tuesday, is currently rated 65th by ESPN.
  • Though the Nuggets took the Thunder to a Game 7 in these playoffs, they can’t afford to run it back with the same group, Sean Keeler of the Denver Post opines. The bench is in serious need of upgrades, Keeler argues, as the Nuggets basically went six deep this season and that forced the starters to empty their tanks.

Second-Round Prospect Malique Lewis Withdraws From Draft

International prospect Malique Lewis will withdraw from the draft and return to play for the South East Melbourne Phoenix as part of Australia’s NBL Next Stars program, ESPN’s Jonathan Givony tweets.

Lewis was considered a potential second-round pick. He was ranked No. 67 overall on ESPN’s Best Available list.

A native of Trinidad & Tobago, Lewis is a 6’8” wing with a 7’1” wingspan. He’ll try to improve his draft stock for 2026 in the Next Stars program.

The 20-year-old Lewis moved to Spain as a 16-year-old to play for Fuenlabrada in the Liga ACB for two seasons. He joined the Mexico City Capitanes of the NBA G League for the 2023/24 season, where he played in 50 games and averaged 8.3 points and 5.8 rebounds.

Lewis signed with South East Melbourne last summer and averaged 6.8 points, 4.1 rebounds and 1.0 assists per game last season.

NBA Invites 13 Prospects To Draft Green Room

A total of 13 draft-eligible players have been invited to the NBA’s green room for the 2025 draft so far, according to Jonathan Givony of ESPN.

Those players are as follows, sorted by their rank on ESPN’s big board:

  1. Cooper Flagg (Duke)
  2. Dylan Harper (Rutgers)
  3. Ace Bailey (Rutgers)
  4. V.J. Edgecombe (Baylor)
  5. Tre Johnson (Texas)
  6. Khaman Maluach (Duke)
  7. Jeremiah Fears (Oklahoma)
  8. Kon Knueppel (Duke)
  9. Kasparas Jakucionis (Illinois)
  10. Egor Demin (BYU)
  11. Carter Bryant (Arizona)
  12. Derik Queen (Maryland)
  13. Asa Newell (Georgia)

As Givony observes, 12 of the top 13 players on ESPN’s board have received invitations so far, with the only exception being French forward Noa Essengue, who comes in at No. 9. The 18-year-old is still playing in Germany for Ratiopharm Ulm as the team vies for a spot in the Basketball Bundesliga Finals.

Essengue’s season could be over as soon as later this week, in which case he’d have no problem attending the draft and would likely get a green room invite. However, it’s also possible his season might extend beyond June 25 (day one of the draft) if Ulm makes the BBL Finals and the series requires the maximum five games — in that scenario, Game 5 would be played on June 26.

Another 11 green room invitations are expected to be sent out to prospects prior to the draft, a source tells Givony. The players invited to the green room can usually feel pretty confident about their chances to be first-round picks, since the league only decides who to invite after asking teams to vote on the 25 prospects they expect to come off the board first.

Still, there are occasionally instances in which players in the green room slip further than expected. Last season, Givony notes, Kyle Filipowski and Johnny Furphy received green room invites but weren’t selected until the second round, which was held a day later for the first time.

Coaching Notes: Blazers, Herscu, Suns, Carroll, Silas, Fizdale, Tibaldi

The Rip City Remix – Portland’s G League affiliate – has announced that Jonah Herscu will be the team’s new head coach for the 2025/26 season, confirming the news in a press release after it was first reported by Sean Highkin of Rose Garden Report (Twitter link).

Herscu has spent the past three season as an assistant for the Trail Blazers on Chauncey Billups‘ staff and coached Portland’s Summer League teams in 2023 and 2024. He previously worked for the Kings and Lakers.

Herscu will replace Sergi Oliva, Portland’s assistant general manager, who coached the Remix for one year in 2023/24 in an effort to implement new developmental strategies for the organization. Oliva’s stint in that role was always expected to last for just one season.

According to today’s announcement, Eli Kell-Abrams will also be moving from the Blazers to the Remix and will be Herscu’s lead assistant after spending the past two seasons as Portland’s head video coordinator.

Here are a few more coaching-related updates from around the NBA:

  • After Jake Fischer reported last week that DeMarre Carroll was viewed as a candidate to join the Suns as an assistant on Jordan Ott‘s staff, John Gambadoro of Arizona Spots 98.7 (Twitter link) confirms that plan remains on track. Gambadoro, who says Carroll will likely be the “No. 3” assistant in Phoenix, notes the former NBA forward played in Brooklyn when Ott was on the staff and has since coached with him in Los Angeles and Cleveland.
  • Gambadoro also says he expects Phoenix to hire a former NBA head coach as Ott’s lead assistant. Stephen Silas is believed to be under consideration, while David Fizdale and the Suns appear likely to part ways, per Gambadoro (Twitter links).
  • Bryan Tibaldi, who has spent the past several years with the Cavaliers, has been hired as an assistant coach by the Providence Friars, per a press release from the school. Tibaldi was an assistant under Kenny Atkinson last season after serving as a player development/video assistant from 2021-24.

Pacers Notes: Haliburton, Game 3, Turner

Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton walked out of his post-game press conference on Sunday with a noticeable limp, but he took part in practice on Tuesday and wasn’t limited at all, tweets Jamal Collier of ESPN. Speaking to the media after practice, Haliburton suggested he has no major health concerns.

“I’m fine. Really just a lower leg thing. I’ll leave it at that,” Haliburton said, per Scott Agness of Fieldhouse Files (Twitter link). “I don’t think there’s anything more to elaborate. I feel fine and I’ll be ready to go for Game 3.”

Haliburton has made 50% of his shots from the field through two games against Oklahoma City and knocked down a game-winner in Game 1, but has been limited to a relatively modest 15.5 points on 13.0 attempts per night and hasn’t gone to the free throw line at all. He has also turned the ball over eight times in two games against Oklahoma City’s top-ranked defense after averaging 1.9 turnovers per game in the first three rounds of the playoffs.

Here’s more on Haliburton and the Pacers:

  • Haliburton had just three points at the half in Game 2 after scoring six first-half points in Game 1. He said on Sunday night that he and the Pacers need to figure out how to get off to faster starts going forward. “They got a lot of different guys who can guard the ball, fly around,” he said, according to Collier. “… I just got to figure out how to be better earlier in games. Kudos to them, they’re a great defensive team. But [I will] watch the film, see where I can get better.”
  • Center Myles Turner is optimistic about Indiana’s ability to further unlock Haliburton, even against a tough Thunder defense, per Collier. “With Tyrese, there’s plenty of formulas to get him going,” Turner said. “There are things we went over in our game plan that we didn’t execute well enough (in Game 2). We’ll get them in the paint. We have been one of the better teams scoring in the paint all year and we have to establish that early. We only had four or six points in the paint in the first half, and that’s not Pacers basketball.”
  • James Boyd of The Athletic takes a look at the ups and downs that Haliburton has experienced on and off the court since being traded from Sacramento to Indiana and considers what it would mean for him and the city if the Pacers can win a title this year.
  • In the wake of reports linking multiple Eastern Conference rivals to Turner, Dustin Dopirak of The Indianapolis Star (subscription required) examines what it might cost the Pacers to re-sign their starting center in free agency this summer, as well as the ripple effect it might have on upcoming decisions on players like Bennedict Mathurin and Jarace Walker. Although the Pacers seem intent on keeping as much of their rotation together as possible going forward, reserve forward Obi Toppin may be viewed as a “luxury item” if the team brings back Turner on a deal in the range of $30MM per year and wants to shed a bit of long-term salary, Dopirak notes.

Trade Rumors: Giannis, Durant, Spurs, Garland

The trade market for Bucks star Giannis Antetokounmpo continues to be nonexistent, ESPN’s Brian Windhorst said on Tuesday during an appearance on Get Up (YouTube link). As Windhorst explained, despite rampant speculation about the possibility of the two-time MVP being traded this offseason, there has still been no indication that either Antetokounmpo or the Bucks are preparing for that scenario.

“Giannis Antetokounmpo has gone overseas to travel with his family. He has made no trade request to the Bucks. He has made no trade hint to the Bucks,” Windhorst said. “The Bucks are proceeding with their offseason as if Giannis is going to be with them, and there’s no significant trade talks right now. The plan is for Giannis Antetokounmpo to be a Buck.

“Now, he can change all that with a simple request, but that request has not happened and it’s not clear it’s going to happen anytime soon.”

Windhorst’s reporting lines up with what we’ve heard recently from Jake Fischer of The Stein Line and Brian Lewis of The New York Post. Both Fischer and Lewis indicated there’s increased skepticism among league sources that Antetokounmpo will end up on the trade block in the coming weeks.

It’s still not a sure thing that Antetokounmpo will open next season in Milwaukee, since trade requests often don’t come this early in the offseason. When Giannis’ current teammate Damian Lillard asked out of Portland in 2023, for example, it happened on July 1.

Still, I wouldn’t necessarily expect Antetokounmpo to wait that long to make a final decision — the further we get into June without a trade request, the better the Bucks have to feel about the odds of it not happening at all this summer.

Here are a few more trade-related notes and rumors from around the NBA:

Hoops Rumors Front Office Subscriber Chat Transcript: 6/10/2025

Hoops Rumors’ Arthur Hill held a live chat today exclusively for Trade Rumors Front Office subscribers. Topics included whether Jason Kidd might leave Dallas for the Knicks, the Bulls’ chances to land Jonathan Kuminga, the effects of Darius Garland‘s surgery on the trade market, Tom Thibodeau’s next team and more!

Hoops Rumors’ Arthur Hill held a live chat today exclusively for Trade Rumors Front Office subscribers. Topics included whether Jason Kidd might leave Dallas for the Knicks, the Bulls' chances to land Jonathan Kuminga, the effects of Darius Garland's surgery on the trade market, Tom Thibodeau's next team and more!

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Jaylen Nowell Joining Chinese Team

Jaylen Nowell is heading to China, according to Emiliano Carchia of Sportando, who reports that the free agent guard has signed with the Shanxi Loongs. Nowell republished a social media post announcing the news on his Instagram account.

A second-round pick in the 2019 draft, Nowell spent his first four NBA seasons in Minnesota, where he played a regular rotation role and averaged 9.1 points in 17.0 minutes per game on .447/.322/.798 shooting across 184 outings.

However, Nowell wasn’t retained by the Timberwolves during the 2023 offseason and has bounced around the NBA and the G League since then, spending time with the Grizzlies, Pistons, and Pelicans, as well as the Stockton Kings and Capital City Go-Go. He has put up big numbers at the NBAGL level, including averaging 24.7 PPG with a .527/.479/.900 shooting line this past season for the Go-Go, but has seen action in just 21 total NBA games since departing Minnesota.

Nowell, who will turn 26 next month, was on an NBA roster as recently as February, when he signed a 10-day contract with the Wizards, but he didn’t play at all during that brief stint with the club.

Shanxi featured multiple former NBA players this past season, with Brandon Goodwin and Hamidou Diallo leading the club in scoring while Harry Giles also played a modest role. The Loongs ranked second among 20 Chinese Basketball Association teams in the regular season standings with a 34-12 record, but fell in the playoff semifinals to the Beijing Ducks.

Kings Reportedly Have Interest In Darius Garland

The Kings, who are in the market for a point guard after trading De’Aaron Fox to San Antonio in February, have interest in Darius Garland and consider the Cavaliers guard a possible trade target, league sources tell Grant Afseth of RG.org.

Following the deadline deal that sent Fox to the Spurs, the Kings leaned more heavily on shooting guards and forwards like Zach LaVine, DeMar DeRozan, and Malik Monk for ball-handling responsibilities, with reserve point guards like Devin Carter and Markelle Fultz playing limited roles.

Bolstering the point guard spot will be a priority for Sacramento this offseason, as new head of basketball operations Scott Perry acknowledged earlier this spring. Tyus Jones is among the free agents believed to be on the Kings’ radar, but the trade market would give the front office more avenues to acquire an impact player at the position.

Multiple reports since the Cavs’ season ended have indicated that Cleveland appears to be more willing than in the past to entertain the idea of trading Garland this offseason. However, the 25-year-old underwent toe surgery on Monday and is expected to miss some time at the start of next season.

For the Cavs, finding a Garland trade that improves their roster – or at least doesn’t hurt it – while creating a more favorable cap situation going forward was always going to be difficult. His recovery from surgery will make that task even more challenging, since potential trade partners are unlikely to value him quite as highly until he’s back to 100%.

League sources tell RG.org that the Kings and Hawks have also had a conversation about what a Trae Young trade might look like, but those talks didn’t advance. Afseth describes the discussions as “due diligence” from Atlanta’s side and suggests that Perry wasn’t especially enthusiastic about the construct of the deal.

While Young has some fans in Sacramento’s front office, Afseth writes, the team is thought to prefer Garland over the Hawks star, at least prior to Garland’s surgery.