Tag: Massachusetts

  • NBA Free Agency LIVE 2024: OKC make big swing; Klay set to move as rumours swirl Aussie could be traded

    NBA Free Agency LIVE 2024: OKC make big swing; Klay set to move as rumours swirl Aussie could be traded

    The NBA’s free agency window has opened and already a number of contenders have reportedly made big swings.

    James Harden is returning to the Clippers while Los Angeles also strengthened its roster by securing Mavericks wing Derrick Jones Jr.

    Dallas, meanwhile, picked up forward Naji Marshall while the Spurs added veteran point guard Chris Paul.

    The Magic also made a major move, landing championship-winning guard Kentavious Caldwell-Pope.

    But the biggest story broke in the early hours of the morning (US time) after Paul George’s move to Philadelphia was revealed.

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    Elsewhere, Klay Thompson is also set to leave Golden State and is not short of suitors, with the Sixers, Lakers, Nuggets, Magic and Clippers all reported to have shown interest.

    The Mavericks, however, are said to be the leading contender and it could mean Australian Josh Green is on the verge of being traded to the Warriors.

    Follow along in our live blog below for the latest updates as the free agency window opens!

    There is also a full list down the bottom of every deal as it happens.

    Lakers select… Bronny! Joins dad in LA | 01:48

    KLAY THOMPSON

    It looks like the end of an era for Thompson.

    The Athletic’s Shams Charania reported on Sunday that there has virtually been no talks between Thompson and the Warriors in recent weeks and that the sharpshooter is “determined to find a new home”.

    Charania wrote that according to team and league scores, “Thompson and the Warriors have had close to no communication since the negotiating period opened for incumbent free agents nearly two weeks ago and no offer has been made”.

    “Warriors, after other business, have wanted to circle back and negotiate with Thompson. But he isn’t expected to be there waiting as a willing secondary priority in their summer plan, with his side feeling that the Warriors’ interest in a reunion has been disingenuous,” he added.

    With that in mind, who shapes as the likely candidates to land Thompson?

    Well, the Magic and Nuggets had been linked to him but it seems like the Mavericks and Lakers are at the top of the list.

    ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski also reported that Thompson plans to have discussions with the Clippers and 76ers.

    Stein reported that “barring an 11th-hour resuscitation of Thompson’s relationship with the Warriors”, Dallas and L.A. “projected to be the two teams at the forefront of Thompson’s thinking”.

    Stein wrote that LeBron James could be willing to take a paycut if what Chris Haynes described as one of the “right targets” was happy to take the Lakers’ $13 million midlevel exception.

    In spite of that, league sources told Stein “there will be strong mutual interest between Thompson and the Mavericks”, with Dallas expected to free up enough money to make a competitive offer after trading Tim Hardaway Jr. to Detroit.

    The Mavericks may have to offload Australian Josh Green for salary matching purposes in the event of a sign-and-trade with Golden State.

    That would elevate Quentin Grimes into a more prominent role after the Mavericks traded for him as part of the Hardaway Jr. deal.

    If Green was dealt he would become the third Australian to be traded this summer after Dyson Daniels was moved to Atlanta and Josh Giddey was sent to Chicago.

    The Mavericks had hoped to keep Derrick Jones Jr. too but he plans to sign a three-year, $30 million deal with the Clippers according to Shams Charania.

    Klay Thompson has several suitors. Ezra Shaw/Getty Images/AFPSource: AFP

    THUNDER ARE MAKING MOVES

    The Oklahoma City Thunder were one of the biggest risers last season, finishing the regular season as the top seed in the West before coming up short in the conference semi-finals.

    Only a few weeks have passed since the end of the season and already Thunder general manager Sam Presti has made it clear the team is not playing around.

    Instead, Oklahoma City has made aggressive moves to put itself in an even stronger position to contend in what once again shapes to be an extremely competitive Western Conference.

    First, the Thunder traded Josh Giddey for Alex Caruso and then in free agency added free agent big man Isaiah Hartenstein on a three-year, $87 million deal according to multiple reports.

    OKC didn’t stop there though, re-signing key role players Isaiah Joe and Aaron Wiggins on shrewd deals to complete what looks like one of the deepest rosters in the NBA next season.

    Joe extended on a four-year, $48 million deal while Wiggins is coming back on a five-year, $47 million contract.

    RUSSELL WESTBROOK

    While Westbrook picked up his $4 million player option with the Clippers, it appears he is poised for a sign-and-trade as opposed to staying put in Los Angeles.

    And the Nuggets look the likely landing spot for him.

    Jake Fischer of Yahoo Sports reported Westbrook was a potential target for the $5.2 million taxpayer midlevel exception and the Nuggets are said to be looking to part ways with Zeke Nnaji in under to get under the second tax apron and open up their MLE.

    The Athletic’s Shams Charania reported Denver “has shown a level of interest” in Westbrook, who the Clippers are said to be “actively working on trades to move”.

    OTHER SITUATIONS TO WATCH

    * Chicago took a big step towards a rebuild, or at least a re-tooling of sorts, by trading Alex Caruso for Josh Giddey. So, what does that mean for DeMar DeRozan, the team’s top scorer and free agent, who turns 35 in August?

    * LeBron James has opted out of his deal with the Lakers, declining a $51.4 million player option, but is expected to agree to a new contract that could create financial flexibility to help the team target more players to bring to L.A.

    * Tyrese Maxey is tipped to sign a five-year extension worth in excess of $200 million as Philadelphia looks to go all-in this summer.

    * The Orlando Magic are declining Joe Ingles’ $11 million team option according to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski, but both sides are expected to continue dialogue in free agency next week, opening the door for the Australian to potentially return.

    EVERY REPORTED DEAL SO FAR

    * Paul George has agreed on a four-year, $212 million deal with the Philadelphia 76ers, per ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski

    * Chris Paul has agreed on a one-year, $11 million-plus deal with the San Antonio Spurs, per ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski

    * Derrick Jones Jr. plans to sign a three-year, $30 million deal with the Los Angeles Clippers, per Shams Charania

    * Isaiah Hartenstein plans to sign a three-year, $87 million deal with the Thunder, per Shams Charania

    * Jonas Valanciunas has agreed to a three-year, $30 million deal with the Washington Wizards, per ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski

    * Naji Marshall has agreed on a three-year, $27 million deal with the Dallas Mavericks, per ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski

    * Isaiah Joe has extended on a four-year, $48 million deal with the Thunder, per Shams Charania

    * Aaron Wiggins has agreed to a five-year, $47 million contract with Oklahoma City, per Shams Charania

    * Tobias Harris has signed with the Detroit Pistons on a two-year, $52 million deal, per ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski

    * Kelly Oubre Jr. has agreed on a two-year, $16.3 million deal to stay with the Philadelphia 76ers, per ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski

    * Kentavious Caldwell-Pope set to sign a three-year, $66 million deal with the Magic, per ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski

    * Andre Drummond to return to Sixers on a two-year deal worth around $10 million, per Shams Charania

    * James Harden to re-sign with Clippers on a two-year, $70 million deal, according to Shams Charania

    * Kevin Porter Jr. has signed a two-year minimum contract with the Clippers, per Law Murray

    * Obi Toppin extends with Pacers on a four-year, $60 million contract, per Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN

    * Kevin Love staying with the Heat on a two-year deal worth over $8 million, per Shams Charania

    * Luke Kornet is returning to Boston on a one-year deal, per Jared Weiss

    * OG Anunoby staying put in New York on a five-year, $212.5 million contract, per Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN

    * Neemias Queta is remaining in Boston on a multi-year deal, per Shams Charania

    * Eric Gordon has agreed to a deal with the 76ers, per Shams Charania

    * Mason Plumlee has agreed on a one-year deal with the Phoenix Suns, per Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN

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  • ‘All hell is going to break loose’: Chaos tipped for NBA Draft as eyes on rising Aussie — LIVE

    ‘All hell is going to break loose’: Chaos tipped for NBA Draft as eyes on rising Aussie — LIVE

    The 2024 NBA Draft is here and while there isn’t a jaw-dropping prospect like Victor Wembanyama in this year’s class, that doesn’t mean it won’t be intriguing.

    In fact, there is an argument that the first round in particular could be must-watch television given the fact there is so much uncertainty surrounding how teams value certain players.

    The Ringer’s Bill Simmons said in his draft preview podcast that he feels like “teams are going to draft by need and all hell is going to break loose”.

    “Nobody really knows what is going to happen, even one day out,” replied Kevin O’Connor, who produces The Ringer’s annual mock draft and big board.

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    HUGE Furphy dunk gets scouts salivating | 00:26

    That is what you get when there is a lack of top-end talent in a draft class, although there seems to be some clarity around which players will be taken with the first two picks.

    At this stage the Atlanta Hawks are expecting to draft Zaccharie Risacher, a 3-and-D wing out of r JL Bourg in the Betclic Elite League in France.

    Fellow Frenchman and NBL Next Star Alex Sarr, who played for the Perth Wildcats, is tipped to be taken second by the Washington Wizards after declining a pre-draft workout with the Hawks.

    The Houston Rockets hold the third overall pick and that is where things are expected to get really interesting.

    The Rockets already have an established young core to build around and are instead set to approach this year’s draft as an opportunity to further consolidate their position in the Western Conference with win-now moves.

    With that in mind, ESPN insider Jonathan Givony reported that “a lot of NBA teams think there will be a trade at number 3”.

    “They’re pointing at teams like Memphis, OKC or Portland as possible options to trade up to 3 with Donovan Clingan in mind,” he added.

    MORE NBA DRAFT CONTENT

    ULTIMATE GUIDE: Everything you need to know ahead of the NBA Draft

    FEATURE: Inside Australian prospect’s rapid rise

    The Grizzlies, who are picking at ninth overall, shape as the most likely trade-up candidate given they have a glaring need at centre after trading away Steven Adams to Houston last season.

    Clingan is also not expected to be on the board when the Grizzlies pick, should they stay pat.

    Outside of those three, G-League Ignite’s Matas Buzelis and Kentucky guard Reed Sheppard, who is the best shooter in this year’s class, are also projected as possible top-five picks.

    Both players responded to the talk that the 2024 class is one of the weakest in recent memory in the lead-up to Thursday’s first round.

    “How do they know? How do they know what we’re going to be? That’s the question,” Buzelis said.

    “They can say what they want, but how do they know what we’re going to be at the end?”

    “At the end of the day, people say what they say, I’m not going to let what they say bother me,” Sheppard added.

    “I know how good all these guys are in this draft class, growing up with them and playing against them. I think this whole draft class is really good. Everyone’s kind of excited to prove [the detractors wrong].

    “… This draft class is really good, and everyone in here is really good at basketball. There’s going to be a lot of people surprised.”

    MORE NBA DRAFT CONTENT

    BRONNY JAMES: Why he is a draft prospect like no other

    SPECIAL SARR: How NBL Next Star could make draft history

    Boomers start Olympics selection camp | 01:18

    For Australian NBA fans there will be added motivation to tune into the first round, with it likely that Victorian Johnny Furphy will have his name called at some point.

    According to ESPN, Furphy has been generating interest as high as ninth overall but has been routinely mocked to Orlando at No.18, where he could team up with fellow Australian Joe Ingles.

    Elsewhere, there is also plenty of intrigue surrounding where LeBron James’ son Bronny could land.

    He worked out with Phoenix, who is picking at No.22, before the draft but is expected to go in the second round given he is a few years away from being ready to produce at the NBA level.

    WHEN IS THE DRAFT?

    The first round of the NBA Draft takes place on Thursday June 27 and the second round will occur on Friday June 28.

    WHERE IS THE DRAFT?

    This year’s NBA Draft takes place at two different locations.

    The first round will occur at the Barclays Center, the home of the Brooklyn Nets.

    ESPN’s Seaport Studios in New York City will play host to the second round.

    WHAT TIME IS THE NBA DRAFT?

    Coverage of the 2024 NBA Draft kicks off at 9:30am AEST, with the first round to commence at 10am on Thursday.

    The second round takes place at 6am AEST on Friday.

    NBA DRAFT FIRST ROUND ORDER

    1. Atlanta

    2. Washington

    3. Houston (from Brooklyn)

    4. San Antonio

    5. Detroit

    6. Charlotte

    7. Portland

    8. San Antonio (from Toronto)

    9. Memphis

    10. Utah

    11. Chicago

    12. Oklahoma City (from Houston)

    13. Sacramento

    14. Portland (from Golden State via Boston and Memphis)

    15. Miami

    16. Philadelphia

    17. Los Angeles Lakers

    18. Orlando

    19. Toronto (from Indiana)

    20. Cleveland

    21. New Orleans (from Milwaukee)

    22. Phoenix

    23. Milwaukee (from New Orleans)

    24. New York (from Dallas)

    25. New York

    26. Washington (from LA Clippers via Dallas and Oklahoma City)

    27. Minnesota

    28. Denver

    29. Utah (from Oklahoma City via Toronto and Indiana)

    30. Boston

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  • Mystery at the top could spark chaotic NBA draft as intrigue surrounds rising Aussie: Ultimate Guide

    Mystery at the top could spark chaotic NBA draft as intrigue surrounds rising Aussie: Ultimate Guide

    The 2024 NBA Draft has almost arrived and there’s plenty of intrigue as to how it will shake out.

    Unlike last year with Victor Wembanyama, there isn’t exactly a clear consensus as to who will go first, although two names are firming as the likeliest candidates.

    There’s also an Aussie flavour to the draft, with Victorian teenager Johnny Furphy a strong chance to be picked in the first round.

    And what about Bronny James, LeBron’s son?

    Here is everything you need to know about the draft ahead of Thursday’s first round!

    WHO COULD GO FIRST?

    Well, it looks like there are two leading candidates at this stage — and maybe a third depending who ends up picking at first overall.

    The Atlanta Hawks lucked into the No.1 pick after having just three per cent odds of winning the NBA Draft lottery, having finished 10th in the Eastern Conference with a record of 36-46.

    With the Hawks expected to explore potential trades this summer to break up Trae Young and Dejounte Murray, there is an extra level of intrigue as to how they could value the No.1 pick.

    French star Zaccharie Risacher is the name generating plenty of buzz at the top of the draft at the moment, although UConn center Donovan Clingan is an outside chance of also being taken by Atlanta.

    Zaccharie Risacher is considered a potential number one selection. (Photo by Ian LANGSDON / AFP)Source: AFP

    NBL Next Stars big man Alex Sarr was the consensus No.1 pick earlier in the month but is yet to have an in-person workout with the Hawks, casting doubt over his potential to go top of the draft.

    There could be a scenario where his name is the first called though, with NBA insider Marc Stein reporting this week that there are “rumbles” San Antonio has interest in jumping out from No.4 to No.1.

    Overall, this year’s draft class lacks the clear top-end talent of years’ past, which in some ways makes it more interesting given it is harder to predict who could go where while it also opens the door for more trades and movement depending on how teams value certain prospects.

    AUSSIE IN DRAFT

    There was the potential three Australians could be taken in this year’s draft before Tyrese Proctor and Alex Toohey committed to Duke and the Sydney Kings respectively.

    It leaves Johnny Furphy as the sole Australian who is set to become Australia’s next NBA player, with the 19-year-old rapidly rising up draft boards after a breakout season with the Kansas Jayhawks.

    Furphy wasn’t even supposed to be playing college basketball, having initially planned to spend another year developing his game at the Centre of Excellence before a standout showing at the NBA Academy Games in Atlanta in July last year suddenly saw interest in the Australian explode.

    Johnny Furphy in action for Kansas.Source: Supplied

    Furphy capitalised on the attention, deciding to join the Jayhawks where he initially settled into a rotation role off the bench before seeing regular starting minutes down the stretch as he established himself as a first-round talent.

    According to ESPN, Furphy is generating interest as early in the draft as Memphis at ninth overall. He is expected to go in the back half of the first round and has received an invite to the NBA Draft green room, which is generally a good sign of a prospect’s chances of going in the first round.

    BRONNY JAMES

    Most mock drafts have Bronny going to the Lakers at 55th overall and some experts even believe the 19-year-old should’ve gone back to college basketball, spending another year to refine his game.

    But Bronny has declared for the NBA Draft and, as LeBron’s son, he has quickly become the most talked about second-round prospect in history.

    Bronny put up underwhelming numbers in his one season with USC, averaging 4.8 points, 2.8 rebounds, 2.1 assists and 0.8 steals while shooting 36.6 per cent from the field and 26.7 per cent from deep.

    He also shot just 19.6 per cent on catch-and-shoot threes, according to Synergy Sports.

    To put those numbers in context, Bronny averaged only 19.3 minutes and started just six games for the Trojans.

    He also missed the opening month’s action after suffering a cardiac arrest during a pre-season practice.

    Bronny James in action for USC. (Photo by David Becker / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / AFP)Source: AFP

    With that in mind there were concerns Bronny may not be able to return to the court, although he was later medically cleared to play and now, be drafted into the NBA.
    Bronny has only worked out with the Lakers and Suns, with his agent Rich Paul being incredibly specific when it comes to the teams he wants his client to be involved with.

    Again, this is rare for a second-round talent to be that selective, although Paul insists it is nothing unusual, telling ESPN it is “nothing new” for him to “find a team that values your guy and try to push him to get there”.

    The Lakers are picking at 17th and 55th overall with the Suns at No. 22 while Paul also mentioned Dallas (No.58), Minnesota (No.27 and 37) and Toronto (No.19 and 31) as other teams that have shown interest in Bronny.

    The Mavericks and Timberwolves don’t make much sense as potential landing spots for Bronny though given he is so much of a project and won’t produce right away.

    Although Paul said Bronny won’t be signing two-way contracts, which allow NBA teams to move developmental players between the NBA and G-League.

    WHY NBA MADE DRASTIC CHANGE TO DRAFT NIGHT

    Another interesting element of this year’s draft is that for the first time ever, the event spans two days.

    Unsurprisingly, the first round will take place on the first day and the second round on the second.

    But why did the NBA decide to alter its draft format?

    Well, the belief is that by holding the event over two days it allows the respective front offices more time to make decisions and potentially allow for further trades between teams.

    In previous years the draft had happened all at once, leaving teams with little time to manouevre when it comes to floating trades with opposition teams or working out who to draft.

    Additionally the decision to push the second round back by a day adds more of a spotlight to the talent given they’d typically be buried late in the broadcast.

    How could we forget when Nikola Jokic was drafted with the 41st pick in 2014 during a Taco Bell commercial?

    Time will tell whether this change does indeed spark more transactions between teams, but at least they have proven themselves willing to change.

    WHEN IS THE DRAFT?

    The first round of the NBA Draft takes place on Thursday June 27 and the second round will occur on Friday June 28.

    WHERE IS THE DRAFT?

    This year’s NBA Draft takes place at two different locations.

    The first round will occur at the Barclays Center, the home of the Brooklyn Nets.

    ESPN’s Seaport Studios in New York City will play host to the second round.

    HOW TO WATCH THE NBA DRAFT IN AUSTRALIA

    Aussie basketball fans can catch every moment from the NBA Draft on ESPN via Kayo Sports.

    New to Kayo? Start Your Free Trial Today >

    WHAT TIME IS THE NBA DRAFT?

    Coverage of the 2024 NBA Draft kicks off at 9:30am AEST, with the first round to commence at 10am on Thursday.

    The second round takes place at 6am AEST on Friday.

    WHO IS THE BETTING FAVOURITE?

    According to Sportsbet, Zaccharie Risacher is a $1.40 favourite to get picked first, while Donovan Clingan is the next-best option at $3.40.

    Alexandre Sarr is the third favourite at $7 but from there the prices balloon out with Stephon Castle at $46.

    Safe to say, it would be a spectacular shock if Risacher, Clingan or Sarr aren’t picked first.

    NBA DRAFT FIRST ROUND ORDER

    1. Atlanta

    2. Washington

    3. Houston (from Brooklyn)

    4. San Antonio

    5. Detroit

    6. Charlotte

    7. Portland

    8. San Antonio (from Toronto)

    9. Memphis

    10. Utah

    11. Chicago

    12. Oklahoma City (from Houston)

    13. Sacramento

    14. Portland (from Golden State via Boston and Memphis)

    15. Miami

    16. Philadelphia

    17. Los Angeles Lakers

    18. Orlando

    19. Toronto (from Indiana)

    20. Cleveland

    21. New Orleans (from Milwaukee)

    22. Phoenix

    23. Milwaukee (from New Orleans)

    24. New York (from Dallas)

    25. New York

    26. Washington (from LA Clippers via Dallas and Oklahoma City)

    27. Minnesota

    28. Denver

    29. Utah (from Oklahoma City via Toronto and Indiana)

    30. Boston

    NBA DRAFT SECOND ROUND ORDER

    31. Toronto (from Detroit via New York and LA Clippers)

    32. Utah (from Washington via Detroit and Brooklyn)

    33. Milwaukee (from Portland via Sacramento)

    34. Portland (from Charlotte via Denver, Oklahoma City and New Orleans)

    35. San Antonio

    36. Indiana (from Toronto via Philadelphia, LA Clippers and Memphis)

    37. Minnesota (from Memphis via Los Angeles Lakers, Washington and Oklahoma City)

    38. New York (from Utah)

    39. Memphis (from Brooklyn via Houston)

    40. Portland (from Atlanta)

    41. Philadelphia (from Chicago via Boston, San Antonio and New Orleans)

    42. Charlotte (from Houston via Oklahoma City)

    43. Miami

    44. Houston (from Golden State via Atlanta)

    45. Sacramento

    46. LA Clippers (from Indiana via Memphis and Milwaukee)

    47. Orlando

    48. San Antonio (from Los Angeles Lakers via Memphis)

    — Philadelphia (forfeited)

    49. Indiana (from Cleveland)

    50. Indiana (from New Orleans)

    51. Washington (from Phoenix)

    52. Golden State (from Milwaukee via Indiana)

    53. Detroit (from New York via Philadelphia and Charlotte)

    54. Boston (from Dallas via Sacramento)

    55. Los Angeles Lakers (from LA Clippers)

    56. Denver (from Minnesota via Oklahoma City)

    57. Memphis (from Oklahoma City via Houston and Atlanta)

    — Phoenix (from Denver via Orlando; forfeited by Phoenix)

    58. Dallas (from Boston via Charlotte)

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  • Oklahoma City Thunder trades Josh Giddey to Chicago Bulls in stunning NBA move

    Oklahoma City Thunder trades Josh Giddey to Chicago Bulls in stunning NBA move

    Australian basketball star Josh Giddey has been traded from the Oklahoma City Thunder to the Chicago Bulls.

    ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski first reported the bombshell deal on Friday morning (AEST), with Giddey traded to the Bulls in exchange for two-time All-Defensive guard Alex Caruso.

    Andrew Schlecht, who covers the Thunder for The Athletic, confirmed later in the morning that the trade involved no picks and is just a straight player swap.

    ‘This is no indictment on Josh’ | 06:21

    Giddey was drafted by OKC with the No. 6 overall pick in the 2021 NBA Draft. He’s coming off his least productive season in year three, struggling to evolve with the rest of the No. 1 seeded Thunder’s budding core.

    His scoring dropped from 16.6 points per game to 12.3 points in a career-best 80 games.

    It included Giddey’s role gradually declining throughout the campaign, eventually coming off the bench in the 2024 playoffs and averaging 18 minutes.

    The 21-year old this off-season is eligible to sign a max contract extension from his base rookie deal.

    Wojnarowski later wrote that the Bulls were “determined” to find a playmaker to replace the oft-injured Lonzo Ball and saw “All-Star potential” in Giddey that had not yet been realised given the playmaking around him in Oklahoma City.

    “Giddey was the sixth overall pick in the 2021 NBA draft and developed into one of the league’s most creative young playmakers,” added the ESPN insider.

    “The Bulls will offer him an opportunity to have the ball in his hands and more freedom to pass and score. Chicago needed an engine for its offence, and the Bulls land that with Giddey.”

    The trade is the latest development in what Giddey described as a “rollercoaster” third year in the league in his end-of-season exit interview.

    Giddey came under the microscope, not only for his on-court performances, but also for allegations of an inappropriate relationship with an underage girl.

    Newport Beach police announced in January they had been “unable to corroborate any criminal activity” by Giddey and would not pursue charges while the NBA also later closed its investigation into the Australian guard in May.

    Speaking to reporters at his exit interview, Giddey reflected on being benched for the first time in his career in Oklahoma City’s playoffs series against Dallas, admitting while it was a “bitter pill to swallow” it was the right call by coach Mark Daigneault.

    Josh Giddey has been traded. Mike Mulholland/Getty Images/AFPSource: AFP

    “Coach did what he thought was best for the team and to be honest, I probably agree with him,” Giddey said.

    “As hard as it is for a player to sit there and say, ‘I should be on the bench’, at the time Caso [Cason Wallace], Isaiah [Joe], Wigs [Aaron Wiggins], these guys were probably better in this series for Dallas.

    “It’s a tough pill to swallow but for a 21-year-old to go through this now it’s probably a good thing and I just don’t want to feel this feeling again. It’ll make me a lot better and stronger as a player to never let something like this happen again.”

    It obviously won’t now, with Giddey set to feature as a key building block for a Chicago team that has been in the playoff picture for a few years now but never really taken the next step towards competing for a title.

    It will be interesting to see what the Bulls do next, particularly when it comes to Zach LaVine’s contract, with the Giddey move potentially suggesting they are investing in the future and willing to undergo a re-tooling of sorts.

    That would be Giddey’s best path to more time with the ball in his hands given it will be hard for him to become a full-time point guard with LaVine and DeMar DeRozan on the roster.

    NBC Sports Chicago’s K.C. Johnson reported before the Giddey news that Bulls executive vice president of basketball operations Artūras Karnišovas has “floated as many as 15 proposals” around LaVine, indicating more changes are on the card.

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  • Los Angeles Lakers hiring JJ Redick as new head coach after Dan Hurley flirtation

    Los Angeles Lakers hiring JJ Redick as new head coach after Dan Hurley flirtation

    The Lakers are taking a big swing with their new head coach.

    After a dramatic coaching search, the Lakers struck a four-year deal with JJ Redick on Thursday, according to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski.

    The 39-year-old will make roughly AU$12 million per season, according to The Athletic.

    Redick co-hosts the Mind the Game podcast with Lakers star LeBron James, who can become a free agent this summer.

    Redick, who has no coaching experience, most recently was an analyst for ESPN and called the NBA Finals with Mike Breen and Doris Burke.

    Lakers general manager Rob Pelinka offered Redick the job on Thursday after being sold on his “ability to connect with players and his basketball IQ,” according to ESPN.

    The Lakers offered UConn coach Dan Hurley a six-year, $105 million contract, but Hurley opted to remain in Storrs to chase an NCAA championship three-peat.

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    ESPN broadcasters JJ Redick, Doris Burke, and Mike Breen. Photo by Elsa/Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

    Redick retired from playing three years ago after 15 NBA seasons and was known as a sharpshooter, finishing with a career 41.5 shooting percentage from 3-point range.

    The former Duke star, whom the Magic selected No. 11 overall in the 2006 NBA Draft, played parts of seven seasons in Orlando and later played for the Bucks, Clippers, 76ers, Pelicans and Mavericks, averaging 12.8 points per game in his career.

    He averaged a career-high 18.1 points per game with the 76ers during the 2018-19 season.

    Redick was linked to the Lakers job ever since the team fired Darvin Ham on May 3 after a first-round playoff loss to the Nuggets in five games and first spoke to Pelinka at the NBA draft combine last month.

    James, 39, holds a player option for the 2024/25 season and has yet to officially make a decision on his future, though his pal Redick becoming the Lakers’ coach ostensibly increases the likelihood he’ll stay.

    Anthony Davis remains a top star when healthy, and he managed to play a career-high 76 games this past season, though injuries will remain a concern as the 31-year-old gets older.

    The Lakers also met with Pelicans assistant James Borrego before settling on Redick.

    This article originally appeared on the New York Post and was reproduced with permission

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  • ‘Insulting’: LeBron’s agent shuts down blockbuster move as NBA draft rumours swirl

    ‘Insulting’: LeBron’s agent shuts down blockbuster move as NBA draft rumours swirl

    With his free agency potentially looming, LeBron James is no longer married to the idea of playing with his son Bronny, his agent said on Thursday.

    In February 2022, James said he “would do whatever it takes” to play with his eldest son, who entered the 2024 NBA Draft after one season at USC, but things have changed since, according to Klutch Sports’ Rich Paul.

    “LeBron is off this idea of having to play with Bronny,” Paul told ESPN on Thursday.

    “If he does, he does. But if he doesn’t, he doesn’t. There’s no deal made that it’s guaranteed that if the Lakers draft Bronny at 55, he [LeBron] will re-sign. If that was the case, I would force them to take him at 17. We don’t need leverage. The Lakers can draft Bronny and LeBron doesn’t re-sign.”

    ‘We share this s*** together!’ | 00:54

    The Lakers enter the two-day draft with the No. 17 pick in the first round — generally thought to be a reach for Bronny — and No. 55 in the second.

    The Ringer’s Bill Simmons mentioned on his podcast earlier this week that there had been “a lot of Phoenix buzz” surrounding the elder James, who can opt out of his Lakers deal before June 30 to enter free agency.

    “[Klutch Sports] seem really confident that he is getting drafted in the first round,” Simmons said.

    “And if you’re Mat Ishbia and the draft sucks, and it’s like let’s get Bronny, and they’re telling us that if we take Bronny, there’s a chance that we can get LeBron too, you have to think about it.

    “I don’t know how many more years LeBron has left, it’s one it’s two, it’s three; whatever he was an All-NBA guy last year… you’ve gotta explore it”

    However, Paul also clarified the position from their side.

    “LeBron is also not going to Phoenix for a minimum deal,” the agent said. “We can squash that now.”

    Since the Suns can’t pay him the $100-plus million contract the Lakers can, the only way it would work is via sign-and-trade, although the new collective bargaining agreement makes that extremely challenging.

    Paul confirmed Phoenix’s interest in Bronny at 22nd overall but said they are not interested in such a move for James as the Suns are “severely limited in the type of contract they can offer”, describing the prospect of a minimum contract as “insulting” in an appearance on ESPN’s ‘NBA Today’.

    Bronny had rejected workouts with multiple teams — only doing so for the Suns and Lakers — which Paul said was strategic as he tries to get his client to his preferred destination.

    “This is nothing new,” Paul said.

    “The goal is to find a team that values your guy and try to push him to get there. It’s important to understand the context and realise that this has always been the strategy with many of my clients throughout the years, especially those in need of development like Bronny. My stuff is by design.”

    Buzzer beater puts Mavs on the brink | 00:38

    That hasn’t stopped interest from other teams, Paul said.

    “There are other teams that love Bronny. For example, Minnesota, Dallas, Toronto. If it’s not the Lakers, it will be someone else,” Paul explained.

    “Minnesota would love to get Bronny in, but I don’t know who their owner is going to be. [Mavericks GM] Nico Harrison is like an uncle to Bronny. If the Lakers don’t take him at 55, Dallas would take him at 58 and give him a guaranteed deal. Masai [Ujiri, Raptors president,] loves him. They could take him without even seeing him at 31. Workouts aren’t everything for these teams.”

    This article first appeared on The New York Postand was reproduced with permission.

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  • Pistons sack coach after woeful NBA season as record-breaking move blows up in their face

    Pistons sack coach after woeful NBA season as record-breaking move blows up in their face

    The Detroit Pistons fired head coach Monty Williams after a losing NBA season that featured a 28-game losing streak and just 14 victories.

    “Decisions like these are difficult to make, and I want to thank Monty for his hard work and dedication,” Pistons owner Tom Gores said in a statement.

    “Coaching has many dynamic challenges that emerge during a season and Monty always handled those with grace. However, after reviewing our performance carefully and assessing our current position as an organisation, we will chart a new course moving forward.”

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    ‘We share this s*** together!’ | 00:54

    The Pistons’ 28-game mid-season skid was the longest single-season losing streak in NBA history.

    They finished in last place in the Eastern Conference with a league-worst 14-68 record.

    Williams, a former coach of the New Orleans Pelicans and Phoenix Suns, departs a year after inking a six-year contract worth a reported $78.5 million ($A118m) — the largest coaching deal in NBA history.

    ESPN reported the Pistons would “absorb” the $65 million ($A98m) remaining on his contract.

    Gores had brought Williams, the 2022 NBA Coach of the Year in Phoenix, to Detroit hoping he could revive a young roster sparked by Croatian forward Bojan Bogdanovic.

    But in his first term the Pistons were even worse than their 17-65 record in 2022-23, after which Dwane Casey stepped down as coach.

    “We are unwavering in our commitment to bring a championship-caliber team to Detroit,” Gores said, promising the team would be “diligent and swift” in their search for a new coach.

    The Pistons have the fifth overall pick in next week’s NBA draft.

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  • The Boston Celtics were told to ‘break them up’. Instead, their superstar duo put a myth ‘to rest’

    The Boston Celtics were told to ‘break them up’. Instead, their superstar duo put a myth ‘to rest’

    Winning an NBA championship can change everything.

    For Denver last season, its inaugural title vaulted the already highly-regarded Nikola Jokic into elite company while it perhaps did even more for Jamal Murray, who feared a torn ACL made him “damaged goods”.

    The year prior it was Golden State and a dynasty reborn. Revived, not just by the superstar trio that had been there all along, but the emergence of new talent too.

    And in 2021, the Milwaukee Bucks won their first-ever NBA title, led by one man — Giannis Antetokounmpo — who proved in an era of superteams that you can do it the hard way.

    For Boston, while the 4-1 series win over Dallas capped off one of the most dominant seasons in NBA history, it all starts and finishes with two players.

    Buzzer beater puts Mavs on the brink | 00:38

    Because as much as this is a different Celtics team to the one that has come up short in the past few seasons, Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum have been the two constants in this era of Boston basketball.

    On Tuesday when Brown was crowned Finals MVP after a dominant five-game stretch which saw him average 20.8 points, 5.4 rebounds, 5.0 assists and play elite defence, he was a hero.

    But eight years ago when he was first introduced to the city of Boston, drafted by the Celtics with the third overall pick, the reception could not have been more different.

    “That’s probably the worst one [reaction] I’ve gotten,” Celtics co-owner Wyc Grousbeck said at the time, with many in the crowd at Boston’s draft party at TD Garden booing the pick.

    And that was just the start for Brown, who told reporters ahead of Game 4 against Dallas that when “you get scrutinised enough for a large part of your career, it becomes normal”.

    “It’s kind of been that my whole career in a sense,” Brown added.

    “Just being booed when you were drafted to saying you were overpaid, saying you were overpaid again. It’s been that the whole journey for me.

    “It just becomes another headline.”

    Jaylen Brown poses with Commissioner Adam Silver after being drafted third overall by the Boston Celtics in the first round of the 2016 NBA Draft. (Photo by Mike Stobe/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    The headlines were there every time the Celtics couldn’t get over the hump, with talking heads debating that Brown and Tatum needed to be broken up — that Boston couldn’t be a genuine championship contender until one of the two emerged as the clear best player.

    But sometimes there doesn’t need to be a clear best player, a true No. 1 option, for a team to win a championship.

    Sometimes, more important than having that one player capable of putting the team on his back is having that one player who is capable of doing that but instead finds other ways to make an impact.

    That was the case with Tatum in this year’s Finals series. The buckets weren’t always falling. But even if Tatum is a great scorer, the Celtics needed more than just that anyway if they were to win the championship.

    They needed Tatum the playmaker and the five-time All-Star provided that, dishing out 12 assists in Boston’s Game 2 — just one short of his postseason record — and 11 in Game 5.

    While Tatum’s first instinct has often been to take the shot, even if it wasn’t a great look, it was proof of his growth and maturity as a player and a leader that he understood in a team loaded with scoring options, he didn’t need to be that guy.

    That guy that other people have long told him he needed to be.

    “Think so?” Tatum said, smirking, when a reporter said he had probably been the “most scrutinised” player during this year’s playoffs.

    With time and experience, Tatum has come of age. Brown too.

    No.18! Boston crowned champs again! | 01:59

    They have been on this journey together, even before Tatum got drafted to Boston in what was only Brown’s second year with the franchise.

    Brown remembers a phone call from former Celtics executive Danny Ainge. He was in Spain. Málaga or Cordoba, to be specific.

    “One of the two,” Brown said, adding it was around 4am.

    “Don’t ask me why I was up. But Danny calls me, and he asked me, how do you feel about Jayson Tatum?

    “I remember I played with him at camps, Top 100 camp. He was my roommate at the KD Elite Camp. We played on the same team in so many different [teams] — the Under Armour All-American game, we were roommates again.

    “So it was like, I had a lot of experience with him. I played with him on the same team and there was a lot of respect. I said, I think it’s a great choice.

    “Fast forward from there, we’ve been winning ever since.”

    Jaylen Brown has come a long way. Elsa/Getty Images/AFPSource: AFP

    Although it was the periods where they weren’t winning that were the most important in putting Brown on the path to hoisting the Larry O’Brien and Bill Russell trophies.

    First came the series against Golden State, who ended up going on to win the championship in 2022. But not before stealing Game 4 in Boston, after the Celtics had a chance to go up 3-1 in the series.

    Then Boston went down in a seven-game series against Miami, who had to fight its way through the play-in tournament to even book a spot in the postseason in the first place.

    Brown had eight turnovers and went 8-for-23 from the floor in Game 7 and looking back on that 103-84 loss in Boston, he described it as “embarrassing”. Embarrassing but motivating.

    “I mean, last year, just falling short on your home floor, it definitely hurt. It was embarrassing, in my opinion,” Brown said.

    “I felt like the team was relying on me. JT [Tatum] got hurt in Game 7 and I dropped the ball. To me, it was embarrassing. It drove me all summer, drove me crazy.

    “In moments of embarrassment, in moments of coming up short, falling short is where the most growth takes place.”

    Holiday stars as Boston down Mavs | 02:17

    That growth has been most apparent on the defensive side of the floor, setting a goal to make the first team All-Defense and while that didn’t end up happening there was little doubting Brown took serious strides this season to improve his defensive versatility and all-round application.

    It showed in the games where it mattered most.

    But as much as Brown is right to point out that “experience is the best teacher”, he also made a concerted effort to stress this is a “new team” to the one that had fallen short in the past.

    “All year long we’ve been hearing about the Celtics are the past, for the last six to eight months, that’s all we’ve been hearing is all the different shortcomings we’ve had in the past,” he said.

    The criticism was valid. The Celtics had tripped up at the final hurdle in recent years. There were genuine concerns about how Boston would fare in clutch situations.

    Tatum and Brown have been playing together for the Celtics since 2017. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    But that was the old Celtics. A team that didn’t have an elite two-way player in Jrue Holiday, or a disruptive big man like Kristaps Porzingis, who changed the complexion of the series in the first two games.

    They didn’t have this version of Derrick White either, with ESPN insider Adrian Wojnarowski reporting on Friday he is a “prominent replacement candidate” for Team USA in the upcoming Olympics should Kawhi Leonard be unavailable due to his knee injury.

    Wojnarowski added that extending White is a “priority” for the Celtics this summer, with the guard eligible for a contract extension worth $126 million over four years and otherwise set for free agency in 2025 if the two parties can’t come to an agreement.

    Tatum, meanwhile, is also eligible for a supermax, five-year extension this summer worth around $315 million which would see him pass teammate Brown for the league’s richest contract.

    Jrue Holiday was a smart addition. Adam Glanzman/Getty Images/AFPSource: AFP

    More than anything though, like the Nuggets of last season, this is a star-studded Celtics team that plays ego-free basketball.

    That selfless playing style lends itself to elite ball movement that allows its role players to shine, with Xavier Tillman even splashing a 3-pointer — his first of the playoffs — in Game 3.

    “I think that’s why the transition for me was really easy,” Tillman, who was traded to Boston earlier this season, said.

    “Knowing that Jrue Holiday was an All-Star last year and he’s playing the role that he’s playing now and he’s not complaining. He’s working hard, he’s dedicating himself to the team day in and day out.

    “It makes it a lot easier for a guy like myself to come in every day with that same attitude of wanting to better myself so I’m ready when I’m needed.”

    The same goes for Porzingis, who was given the nickname of ‘The Unicorn’ by Kevin Durant back in 2016 and bounced around from New York to Dallas and then Washington before finding his home in Boston.

    Kristaps Porzingis was a force on both ends (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    “He’s seen a lot, he’s seen it all,” Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla said.

    “He’s seen success. He’s seen tough times. He knows what the league is all about. I think at this point in his career, winning is the most important thing.”

    Boston did plenty of that during the regular season, finishing 64-18 to post its first 60-win campaign since 2008-09.

    There was no guarantee everything would come together when it mattered most, having benefited from a relatively soft route to the Finals against teams without superstar names.

    But when one of the Celtics’ own superstars went down and they travelled to Dallas for Game 3 with Porzingis unavailable, Boston still found a way to get the job done.

    That, as it has all season long, started with being selfless and willing to sacrifice.

    “I know sometimes talent doesn’t always mesh together. This does,” Holiday said.

    “You saw it during the regular season. You’ve seen it throughout the playoffs, how any given night everybody is just unselfish.

    “I feel like we sacrifice for each other. That’s kind of what makes it go.”

    And that started with Tatum and Brown.

    Celtics president Brad Stevens was told to break them up. Told that their skillsets overlapped too much, as if having two explosive, skilled and young wing players in the modern NBA was a bad thing.

    “Give Brad Stevens a tonne of credit,” Doris Burke said after Boston’s Game 5 victory.

    “Because how many years was it relentless? Break them up. They can’t play together. They can’t get over the mountaintop because their skillsets cross over too much.

    “That is laid to rest.”

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  • Celtics superstar Jaylen Brown named 2024 Finals MVP

    Celtics superstar Jaylen Brown named 2024 Finals MVP

    The Boston Celtics have secured a record 18th NBA title, winning the Finals series 4-1 over the Dallas Mavericks and star guard Jaylen Brown was named the Finals MVP.

    “It was a full team effort,” Brown said as he accepted the Finals MVP trophy named for Celtics legend Bill Russell.

    The 27-year-old averaged 20.8 points, 5.4 rebounds and 5.0 assists in five Finals games and delivered a strong defensive effort against Dallas star Luka Doncic, the regular-season scoring leader.

    “I share this with my brothers and my partner in crime Jayson Tatum — he was with me the whole way so we share this together,” Brown said.

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    No.18! Boston crowned champs again! | 01:59

    The Celtics claimed their first title since 2008. They had reached the finals in 2022 only to come up short against the Golden State Warriors and last season they agonizingly failed to get back to the championship series, falling to the Miami Heat in the Eastern Conference finals.

    On a mission this season, the Celtics won a league-leading 64 regular-season games.

    They swept the Indiana Pacers in the Eastern Conference finals — Brown earning MVP honors in that series, too.

    Brown, in the first year of a mammoth five-year, $286 million contract extension with the Celtics, earned his third All-Star nod, but it was Tatum, not Brown, most often pointed to as the team’s top star.

    Snubbed for All-NBA honors and by selectors for the US Olympic basketball team for Paris, Brown now has the honor he really craved — an NBA title — and the Finals MVP to go with it.

    Brown, who was taken third overall in the 2016 draft, shared a long, heartfelt embrace with Tatum as the final moments of the 106-88 clinching victory ticked off.

    Brown said he’d left doubts from previous playoff misses go this season. “I never hung my head,” he said.

    Re-live the announcement of the 2024 Finals MVP in our blog below!

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  • NBA Finals Game 5 LIVE: Mavs’ Australian duo making shots early but Celtics lead after first quarter

    NBA Finals Game 5 LIVE: Mavs’ Australian duo making shots early but Celtics lead after first quarter

    The Boston Celtics lead the Dallas Mavericks 28-18 after the first quarter in Game 5 of the NBA Finals as they look to seal the series and championship.

    Neither team shot the ball particularly well to open the game, although the Mavericks in particular were struggling to get anything going early as they missed seven of their first eight shots.

    Fortunately for them, Boston wasn’t particularly efficient either but Jrue Holiday was feasting in the paint with the Celtics’ first three field goals before Al Horford drained a 3-pointer for a 9-2 lead.

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    Celtics hold off Mavs to take 3-0 lead | 02:41

    Doncic, having started the game by missing a few deep 3-point attempts, was more aggressive out of the timeout as he drove towards the rim and drew a foul for the and-1 to reduce Boston’s buffer to 9-5.

    The Celtics were quickly able to extend that back out to 13-5 before Josh Green made back-to-back 3-pointers as Doncic continued to work his way into the paint, kicking it out on both occasions to the Australian who made Boston pay for its drop coverage.

    Fellow Australian Dante Exum also drained a 3-pointer late which had Dallas trailing 19-18 but a sloppy end to the period saw Boston go on a 9-0 run to finish the quarter on top 28-18.

    The Celtics received a boost before Tuesday’s game, with coach Joe Mazzulla announcing that Kristaps Porzingis was fit to play.

    “He’s available. Expect to see him tonight,” Mazzulla said shortly before tip-off.

    Porzingis has not played since suffering a lower leg injury in game two earlier in the best-of-seven series.

    The 28-year-old only returned from a month-long injury layoff with a right calf strain at the start of the finals.

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