Northwest Notes: SGA, Randle, Wolves, Blazers

While Shai Gilgeous-Alexander always thought he was capable of becoming “a really good player,” the Thunder guard admitted on Wednesday that he didn’t view himself as a potential MVP until several years into his NBA career, writes Anthony Slater of The Athletic. He first earned MVP votes in 2023, when he finished fifth, then was the runner-up to Nikola Jokic a year ago before flipping spots with the Nuggets star this spring and winning the award for the first time.

“I dreamt about (winning MVP) as a kid, but as a kid, it’s a fake dream,” Gilgeous-Alexander said. “As the days go on and you realize that you get closer to your dream, it’s hard to not freak out. It’s hard to not be a six-year-old kid again. I think that’s what’s allowed me to achieve it.”

Because he earned All-NBA honors in 2023 and 2024, Gilgeous-Alexander was already eligible to sign a four-year, super-max extension this offseason. That deal, which would begin in 2027/28, would be worth a projected $293.4MM based on annual 10% salary cap increases.

As a result of being named Most Valuable Player this season, Gilgeous-Alexander now has the option of waiting until the 2026 offseason and signing a five-year super-max deal at that time, as Bobby Marks of ESPN tweeted on Wednesday. That contract would look the same through the first four seasons but would include a fifth year worth a whopping $86.45MM, bringing the total value of the projected extension to nearly $380MM.

Here’s more from around the Northwest:

  • After averaging 27.0 points and 7.8 assists per game on 55.7% shooting in the Timberwolves‘ four wins vs. Golden State, Julius Randle had another big scoring night in Game 1 vs. Oklahoma City with a team-high 28 points. But his 13 field goal attempts were well below his postseason average and he was held to one assist while committing five turnovers. He also had just eight of his points in the second half as the Thunder pulled away with the game. “That’s on me, I got to get him the ball,” head coach Chris Finch said, per Dave McMenamin of ESPN. “I got to get him more involved to start the second half.”
  • While Randle and Anthony Edwards combined for 46 points on 14-of-27 shooting on Tuesday, the rest of the Timberwolves scored just 42 points and made 15-of-57 field goals (26.3%). Zach Kram of ESPN.com examines the challenges a strong Minnesota offense faces against the league’s best defense in this series, while Jon Krawczynski of The Athletic writes that the Wolves need more out of a second unit led by Naz Reid and Donte DiVincenzo. That duo combined to make just 4-of-25 shots in Game 1, including 3-of-19 three-pointers.
  • In a Substack article, Sean Highkin of the Rose Garden Report attempts to answer five questions related to the Trail Blazers‘ sale, including how long it will take, how much they’re worth, and how the process might affect the on-court product. Most importantly, Highkin writes, while it’s technically possible that a new owner could look to relocate the franchise, that’s a highly unlikely outcome — and one that the sellers don’t want.
  • The Trail Blazers‘ sale won’t affect Moda Center renovations that are already underway, including an upgraded videoboard, but additional major arena projects will likely be on hold until the sale is complete, says Aaron Fentress of The Oregonian.

Warriors’ Moses Moody Undergoes Thumb Surgery

Warriors guard Moses Moody underwent surgery on Wednesday to repair a torn ulnar collateral ligament (UCL) in his right thumb, the team announced in a press release (Twitter link). The procedure took place in Los Angeles.

According to the Warriors, the expectation is that Moody will make a full recovery prior to the start of training camp in the fall.

Moody, who will turn 23 next Saturday, averaged a career-high 9.8 points per game on .433/.374/.797 shooting in 74 outings for Golden State in 2024/25. His 34 starts and 22.3 minutes per game also represented career highs, as he established himself as a regular member of Steve Kerr‘s rotation during the second half of the season.

Moody started 30 consecutive games for the Warriors from February 13 to April 23 (Game 2 of the first round) before coming off the bench for the rest of the postseason.

The three-year, $37.5MM rookie scale extension that Moody signed with the Warriors last October will take effect this July once his rookie contract ends. He’ll earn a guaranteed $11.57MM salary on that new deal next season.

Nuggets To Retain David Adelman As Head Coach

The Nuggets have reached an agreement with David Adelman on a deal that will remove the interim tag from his title and make him the team’s permanent head coach, sources tell ESPN’s Shams Charania (Twitter link). Nuggets vice chairman Josh Kroenke confirmed the news at his end-of-season press conference on Thursday afternoon, per Bennett Durando of The Denver Post (Twitter link).

Adelman, who had been an assistant under Michael Malone, was promoted to the top job late in the season following Denver’s dismissal of Malone. The team was impressed with his work during the final week of the regular season and in the first two rounds of the playoffs and has opted to retain him rather than launching a full-fledged search for Malone’s replacement, Charania notes (via Twitter).

After spending nearly a decade as a high school coach from 2002-11, Adelman was hired by the Timberwolves in 2011 as a player development coach under his father Rick Adelman. The younger Adelman remained in Minnesota for five seasons, beyond his father’s retirement in 2014, then was hired by the Magic as an assistant for the 2016/17 season. He moved on to Denver a year later and had been an assistant on Malone’s staff for nearly eight full seasons before his promotion in April.

Adelman led the Nuggets to a 3-0 record to close the regular season, clinching a guaranteed playoff spot, then won his first postseason series as a head coach in a grueling seven-game matchup with the Clippers. Denver subsequently battled the 68-win Thunder to a Game 7 in the second round of the playoffs before being eliminated on Sunday.

Nuggets star Nikola Jokic became more vocal about instructing his teammates on the court after Malone was fired, leading to a perception that he was the one actually coaching the team. However, as Durando recently detailed in a Denver Post story, Adelman has, by all accounts, earned the respect of his players, who advocated for him to return next season. Adelman has said he encourages his players to communicate with each other and doesn’t care how it’s viewed by the public.

“More of it, please,” he said. “Not a bunch of guys going and sitting on the bench, waiting for me to tell them something. Talk to each other. We can figure it out as a group.”

Kroenke told reporters today that he was initially open to looking outside the organization for a new head coach, but really liked the way that Adelman connected to the Nuggets’ core players. Adelman will be given the opportunity to hire his own coaching staff, with many of Denver’s current assistants on expiring contracts, Kroenke added (Twitter links via Vinny Benedetto of The Denver Gazette).

The next step for Denver this offseason will be to sort out the front office situation, since general manager Calvin Booth was let go at the same time Malone was fired. While there have been rumblings that interim GM Ben Tenzer could hang onto the job, Kroenke said on Thursday that the team will take more time to make a final decision on that front.

Adelman is the third NBA head coach so far this offseason to have his interim tag removed and get the full-time job, joining Doug Christie of the Kings and Tuomas Iisalo of the Grizzlies. Mitch Johnson of the Spurs could also be included in that group, though his situation was a little different since Gregg Popovich was on a health-related leave of absence before deciding to call it a career after the season ended.


Arthur Hill contributed to this story.

NBA Announces 2024/25 All-Defensive Teams

The NBA has officially announced its All-Defensive teams for the 2024/25 season (Twitter links).

The teams are determined by a panel of 100 media members, with players receiving two points for a First Team vote and one point for a Second Team vote.

There were no unanimous First Team selections this year, but Defensive Player of the Year Evan Mobley came close, having been named to the First Team on 99 ballots (Twitter link). He was selected to the Second Team on the 100th ballot, for a total of 199 points.

The honorees are as follows, along with their point totals:

First Team

Second Team

The NBA adjusted the voting rules in 2023 to allow All-Defensive ballots to be positionless. Up until that point, each team consisted of two guards, two forwards, and a center.

Despite the lack of positional requirements, this year’s teams are reasonably well balanced — while Mobley, Green, Zubac, Jackson, and Gobert all serve as defensive anchors for their respective clubs, Mobley, Green, and Jackson spend much of their time on the court playing forward rather than center.

It’s the ninth time that Green has made an All-Defensive team and the eighth time that Gobert has earned the honor. Jackson and Mobley have each been recognized multiple times too — it’s the third time Jackson has made the cut and the second time for Mobley. However, Daniels, Dort, Thompson, Zubac, Williams, and Camara have never been named All-Defensive players before this season.

Among the other players who received votes, Knicks forward OG Anunoby came closest to cracking the top 10, having been named to the First Team on two ballots and the Second Team on 45 ballots for a total of 49 points. An additional 13 players received at least one vote, but none of them had more than 18 total points.

That group of players who missed the cut includes Heat big man Bam Adebayo, whose streak of five straight All-Defensive seasons has come to an end.

Players were required to meet the criteria of the 65-game rule in order to qualify for All-Defensive consideration. The full voting results can be viewed here (Twitter link).

As Bobby Marks of ESPN tweets, Dort has earned a $500K bonus for making the First Team this season. In addition to increasing his earnings for this season, that will bump Dort’s cap hit for 2025/26 from $17,722,222 to $18,222,222, since the bonus will now be considered likely to be earned next season.

Conversely, after missing out on All-Defensive spots this season, Derrick White and Jaden McDaniels will see their cap hits for next season reduced by $250K and $431K, respectively, Marks adds (Twitter link). Those bonuses, which had been considered likely after the duo earned All-Defensive nods in 2024, won’t be earned this season, which means the Celtics and Timberwolves will each receive a tax variance credit and both bonuses will be considered unlikely for 2025/26.

Aditya Mittal Joining Celtics’ New Ownership Group

Aditya Mittal is expected to be the second-largest stakeholder of the Celtics once the sale of the team to William Chisholm‘s group is completed, according to Scott Soshnick, Kurt Badenhausen, and Eben Novy-Williams of Sportico, who say Mittal could also become the team’s alternate governor in the future.

Mittal, the CEO of the steel giant ArcelorMittal and a member of one of India’s richest families, is investing roughly $1 billion in the Celtics, per Sportico.

Chisholm reached an agreement in March with the current Celtics ownership group to buy the team in two stages — his group is expected to assume 51% control of the organization this year and then buy out the remaining shares in 2028, with current governor Wyc Grousbeck remaining in that position for a few more years.

However, reporting in the wake of that agreement indicated that Chisholm’s bid – which initially valued the franchise at $6.1 billion (the valuation will reportedly increase to $7.3 billion for the second part of the sale) – was not yet fully financed. Subsequent reports have suggested that Chisholm’s bid is now fully financed and the sale is expected to close in the near future. Mittal’s investment helped close the funding gap, according to Sportico.

As Soshnick, Badenhausen, and Novy-Williams outline, Mittal is the son of Lakshmi Mittal, a Goldman Sachs board member since 2008 who is worth $23.9 billion, per Bloomberg. Goldman Sachs has served as the financial advisor for Chisholm’s group during the sale process.

In addition to Chisholm and Mittal, the new Celtics ownership group will include current minority stakeholder Robert Hale, Bruce A. Beal Jr., and private equity firm Sixth Street, as previously reported.

According to Sportico, Sixth Street is expected to own roughly 12.5% of the team once the sale is finalized. Earlier in the process, there were concerns about Sixth Street having committed more money to the bid than Chisholm, which wouldn’t be permitted, but that will no longer be the case once the deal is finalized. The majority stakeholder in an NBA franchise – Chisholm, in this case – must control at least 15% of the team.

Suns’ Micic Discusses Contract Situation, EuroBasket

Reporting from international outlets throughout the spring has linked NBA point guard Vasilije Micic to Hapoel Tel Aviv, with one April report indicating that Micic was on the verge of signing a $5MM contract with the Israeli club.

While it’s possible that deal will still come to fruition, Micic made it clear in a conversation with Meridian Sport that he hasn’t signed anything yet and suggested that his plans for the 2025/26 season remain up in the air, given that his contract with the Suns includes an $8.11MM team option.

“I really don’t know. The team still has an option on my contract. And that’s a serious clause in the NBA. All I know is that I want to play,” Micic said (hat tip to Johnny Askounis of Eurohoops). “There are plenty of rumors. I don’t pay attention. … If I haven’t signed anything, I have nothing to talk about. My contract officially runs until June 30. Before that, it’s all just talk. But I can’t believe in anything until I see something concrete.”

A EuroLeague champion in 2021 and 2022 and the MVP of Europe’s top league in 2021, Micic signed a three-year, $23.6MM contract with Oklahoma City during the 2023 offseason, nine years after he was selected with the No. 52 overall pick in the 2014 NBA draft. However, his stint in the NBA hasn’t gone as planned.

Micic has been traded twice since arriving stateside and has played a modest role for Oklahoma City, Charlotte, and Phoenix, averaging 6.8 points and 3.9 assists in 19.4 minutes per game across 101 outings in the past two seasons. He has made just 39.5% of his field goal attempts, including 31.5% of his three-pointers, and hasn’t been an asset on the defensive end of the court.

The cap-strapped Suns will probably have little incentive to exercise Micic’s $8.11MM option unless his salary is needed for trade purposes. Even in that scenario, there’s no guarantee the 31-year-old’s new team would retain him, so he’s a good bet to reach free agency at some point this offseason. And even if he doesn’t ultimately finalize a deal with Hapoel Tel Aviv, his desire for a significant role suggests a return to Europe is likely.

Wherever he ends up this fall, Micic figures to be playing overseas this summer. He told Meridian Sport that he “really” wants to represent Serbia in the 2025 EuroBasket tournament after helping his home country claim a bronze medal at the Paris Olympics a year ago.

“Last year was great for us,” Micic said. “… This year, we hope it’ll be even better. Someone’s always missing. If everyone shows up, it’ll be incredible, and hopefully even more successful.”

Lowe, Deng, Council Among Latest To Withdraw From NBA Draft

After testing the waters as an early entrant, sophomore guard Jaland Lowe has decided to withdraw from the 2025 NBA draft, he announced today on Instagram.

Lowe spent his first two college seasons at Pittsburgh and averaged 16.8 points, 5.5 assists, 4.2 rebounds, and 1.8 steals per game for the Panthers in 2024/25, though he struggled to score efficiently, making just 37.6% of his shots from the floor, including 26.6% of his three-pointers.

Lowe was invited to the G League Elite Camp in Chicago earlier this month, but wasn’t on ESPN’s list of top 100 prospects for 2025, so he would’ve had an uphill climb to be drafted this year. He’ll be transferring to Kentucky for his junior year as he looks to improve his stock.

A couple more prospects who are transferring to new schools have also decided to pull their names out of the 2025 draft pool, according to Jon Rothstein of CBS Sports (Twitter links). Rothstein reports that forward Jerry Deng and guard Melvin Council Jr. will retain their NCAA eligibility and continue their college careers.

Deng spent his freshman season at Hampton University before transferring to Florida State for his sophomore year. He’s on the move again and will play for N.C. State as a junior in 2025/26, Rothstein notes. Deng averaged 7.0 PPG and 1.9 RPG in a limited role for the Seminoles last season.

As for Council, he has one year of college eligibility remaining and will take advantage of it by transferring from St. Bonaventure to Kansas. In 34 games in 2024/25 for the Bonnies, Council averaged 14.6 PPG, 5.4 RPG, 4.1 APG, and 2.1 SPG in 37.1 MPG, with a shooting line of .435/.299/.819. He’ll be automatically draft-eligible in 2026.

The deadline for NCAA early entrants to withdraw from the draft and retain their college eligibility is May 28 at 11:59 pm Eastern time, so there will likely be many more decisions reported in the coming days. We’re tracking those decisions right here.

The NBA’s final draft withdrawal deadline is June 15, so international early entrants who don’t have to worry about losing their NCAA eligibility will make their decisions by that date.

And-Ones: Award Announcements, Laughlin, Playoff MVPs, More

After revealing this season’s Most Valuable Player on Wednesday, the NBA will wrap up its 2024/25 award announcements within the next two days.

According to the league (Twitter link), the two All-Defensive teams will be announced on Thursday at 2:00 pm Eastern time, while the three All-NBA teams will be unveiled at 7:00 pm ET on Friday during TNT’s pregame broadcast ahead of Game 2 of the Eastern Conference Finals.

The All-NBA teams, in particular, will be worth watching, since those results can have a major impact on player contracts going forward. Pistons guard Cade Cunningham is the key player to keep an eye on — assuming he makes one of the three All-NBA teams, Cunningham’s maximum-salary rookie scale extension will begin at 30% of next season’s cap instead of 25%.

Here are a few more odds and ends from around the basketball world:

  • Former Warriors assistant and current Pelicans coaches chief of staff James Laughlin is leaving New Orleans to take a job overseas as the new general manager of Napoli Basket in Italy, per Donatas Urbonas of BasketNews.com. According to Urbonas, Laughlin spent five years in Golden State and the past four with the Pelicans.
  • Chris Herring of ESPN updated his 2025 playoff MVP rankings ahead of the start of the second round, placing Knicks guard Jalen Brunson atop his list. With the conference finals underway, it’s unclear if Brunson would still claim that top spot — he scored 43 points on 15-of-25 shooting in New York’s Game 1 loss to Indiana on Wednesday, but also had more turnovers (seven) than assists (five) on the night.
  • With the NBA set to crown a seventh different champion in seven years, Colin Salao of Front Office Sports writes that the league has entered an era of unprecedented parity and wonders if super-teams have become a thing of the past.
  • Jonathan Wasserman of Bleacher Report shares his thoughts on the biggest winners at last week’s draft combine, singling out San Diego State’s Miles Byrd, Chinese big man Hansen Yang, and four other prospects.

Atlantic Notes: Nets, Knueppel, Raptors, Sixers, Porzingis

The Nets control a league-high five picks (all in the top 36) in the 2025 NBA draft, and general manager Sean Marks has an extensive history of making trades during or right around the draft. Those factors point toward Brooklyn being a team to watch on the trade market next month, says Brian Lewis of The New York Post (subscriber link).

According to Lewis, Marks has made a trade within two days of the draft in eight of the last nine years, and the “feeling in league circles” is that he’ll do so again this spring.

Assuming the Nets stay at No. 8, could Kon Knueppel be the choice in that spot? As Lewis writes in another subscriber-only story, Brooklyn is being connected to the Duke sharpshooter by many mock drafters, and some scouts view him as a strong value pick at that spot if he’s still available.

“Is he a really good player, and are you excited to have him on your squad? Yeah,” former Sixers scout Mike VandeGarde told Lewis. “But is he Luke Kennard? Is he Kyle Korver? Is he Gradey Dick? … Knueppel to me isn’t the best player on a playoff team, but I really like his game. And if I’m at eight, I’m looking at him.”

Here’s more from around the Atlantic:

  • With Pascal Siakam and T.J. McConnell playing important roles for Indiana in the Eastern Conference Finals and OG Anunoby logging big minutes for New York, Michael Grange of Sportsnet.ca revisits the Raptors‘ decision to trade away Siakam and Anunoby during the 2023/24 season, while Keith Pompey of The Philadelphia Inquirer considers whether the Sixers should regret letting McConnell get away in 2019.
  • Exploring potential options for the Sixers‘ No. 3 overall pick, Adam Aaronson of PhillyVoice enlists a series of fellow NBA reporters to help him evaluate hypothetical trades. Aaronson offers up proposals involving the Rockets, Hawks, Nets, Bulls, and Wizards and goes back and forth with writers who cover those teams to figure out if there’s a viable deal to be made.
  • After Celtics president of basketball operations Brad Stevens said in his end-of-season media session that big man Kristaps Porzingis is dealing with post-viral syndrome, Tess DeMeyer of The Athletic takes a closer look at what exactly that means. As DeMeyer explains, post-viral syndrome can make person feel drained and weak for days or months after experiencing a viral illness, and even someone in peak health can have a hard time moving past the symptoms. Stevens expressed optimism on Monday that Porzingis will be back to 100% by the start of next season.

CBA Observations: Kuminga, D. Robinson, Cavs, Frozen Picks

While the NBA's current Collective Bargaining Agreement technically went into effect in 2023, many of the rules affecting tax apron teams weren't fully implemented until 2024. As a result, last summer was a crash course for teams, fans, and reporters alike on those new rules, giving us our first look at the impact they'll have on team-building going forward.

With the 2024/25 season under our belts, we're better equipped entering the 2025 offseason to assess how those new rules - and some old ones - will affect teams' ability to make trades and sign free agents this summer. Still, I've seen some confusion and misrepresentation regarding a few specific rules as speculation about offseason roster moves begins to heat up this spring, so we'll use the space below today to provide clarity on some of those issues.

Let's dive in...


A potential Jonathan Kuminga sign-and-trade

With Warriors forward Jonathan Kuminga headed for restricted free agency this offseason after playing an inconsistent role in his fourth NBA season, there has been a good deal of speculation already about whether Golden State will attempt to recoup value for Kuminga via a sign-and-trade rather than simply re-signing him or matching a rival offer sheet.

I'm not here today to weigh the merits of one path vs. the other. I just want to examine what it would look like from a practical perspective if the Warriors do sign-and-trade Kuminga, since the base year compensation rule would come into play.

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