Tag: Minnesota

  • Move to ‘unlock’ Giddey’s ‘full potential’; big question to decide Simmons’ future: Aussies in the NBA

    Move to ‘unlock’ Giddey’s ‘full potential’; big question to decide Simmons’ future: Aussies in the NBA

    The NBA offseason is in full swing now and there have been a number of Australians in the headlines, with Josh Giddey traded to Chicago early in the piece while Josh Green was the latest countryman to land on a new team.

    With all of that in mind, foxsports.com.au has you covered with all the latest news on every Australian in the NBA and what is in store for those who will be wearing new colours.

    JOSH GIDDEY (Chicago Bulls)

    Starting with the biggest name of the lot because for the last three years, Giddey had been one of the faces of the Oklahoma City rebuild.

    But, as has been well-established by this point, he was forced into a role that didn’t play into his strengths as the talented Thunder roster rose to new heights in the 2023-24 season.

    That is all old news though. So, what is new for Giddey in Chicago?

    Well, for starters he won’t be coming off the bench given what the 21-year-old said at his introductory press conference for the Bulls.

    Giddey opens up on trade to Bulls | 01:12

    “I just said to him at this point in my career, I’m 21 years old, it wasn’t something that I was overly eager to do,” Giddey said of his chat with Thunder GM Sam Presti.

    You would suspect Giddey wouldn’t be eager to do that at the Bulls either, especially when you consider he would have been a lot closer to contending for a title at Oklahoma City.

    At this stage it looks like Giddey will be starting in the backcourt alongside Coby White, who is a nice fit alongside the Australian after shooting 38 per cent from deep on seven attempts per game last season.

    Ayo Dosunmu, Chicago’s young guard who emerged down the stretch, looks more likely to settle into a bench rotation role.

    Elsewhere, DeMar DeRozan’s departure for Sacramento will only further open up more opportunities for this to be Giddey’s team.

    That is true to a degree, of course, given the Bulls won’t want to just give Giddey the keys entirely considering how much White showed in a prominent role last season.

    But it will still be a much better set-up for Giddey in terms of getting his hands on the ball more while the Bulls won’t be expected to compete for a playoff berth either, meaning there should be less pressure and hence more chances for Giddey to make — and learn from — mistakes.

    Gaze: Bulls a ‘better fit’ for Giddey | 00:59

    “It was going to be hard to tap into my full potential, in my opinion, on a team like [Oklahoma City] with so many talented guys who needed the ball in their hands, who were great with the ball in their hands,” Giddey said.

    “A change of scenery was going to maybe unlock more of that for me. Being able to make the game easy for everybody, being able to get guys involved, distribute the ball and get other players confident around me is the thing I pride myself on doing.

    “And it’s hard to do that in a role when the ball isn’t in your hands a lot. … That’s probably the big thing coming in here. I want to be the pass-first point guard I am.”

    Bulls fans will get a look at the pass-first point guard in Giddey at this year’s Olympics after the 21-year-old thrived in a similar role at the FIBA World Cup.

    The big question for the Bulls as a whole is what happens with Zach LaVine, who is due to make $43 million next season, $46 million in 2025-26 and has a $49 million player option for 2026-27.

    At this stage, the Bulls are still looking to offload him but may find it hard to get the kind of return they are after given LaVine’s contract and the fact they have so little leverage in negotiations.

    JOSH GREEN (Charlotte Hornets)

    As will be consistent with all the younger Australian players moved this offseason, this trade takes Green further away from competing for a title but will ultimately help his development.

    At Dallas, Green was restricted to a rotation role where he was more of a 3-and-D guy than anything else, complementing Luka Doncic and Kyrie Irving.

    There were times that Green excelled in that role, most notably in Game 5 of the NBA Finals when he made four 3-pointers on his way to 14 points off the bench in a loss to the Celtics.

    But for the most part Green’s form would fluctuate depending on how he was shooting the ball.

    Josh Green was traded to Charlotte. (Photo by Graham Denholm/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    What didn’t falter though was the energy and hustle Green offered on both ends of the floor and he will be an important player in setting the tone and culture for a Charlotte team that is still in the early stages of forming its own identity.

    Green has an opportunity to start at the two for the Hornets but either way he will see more minutes than he did at the Mavericks and have more freedom, like Giddey, to make mistakes and learn from them.

    At Dallas, if Green made too many missteps he risked having his minutes squeezed in the rotation for a team that has title aspirations.

    It is easy to forget Green is still only 23 years old and he has previously shown his potential when operating as the primary ballhandler in games without Doncic or Irving.

    He may not have as many wins on the board in Charlotte but don’t be surprised if Green emerges as a breakout player of sorts with the added responsibility.

    DYSON DANIELS (Atlanta Hawks)

    Likewise, Daniels is another player who will benefit from getting a fresh start in the upcoming season.

    New Orleans traded Daniels as part of a move that saw the Pelicans land Dejounte Murray and it is expected to be just the start of more major changes at Atlanta, who may be heading towards a rebuild of sorts.

    With that in mind, Daniels also has a legitimate chance to see playing time — at least more than he was getting at New Orleans, another Western Conference contender on the rise.

    In fact, there is every chance he could share the backcourt with Trae Young, should he stay at the Hawks, given the Australian’s elite defence would be the perfect match alongside him.

    Dyson Daniels will have more opportunities with the Hawks. (Photo by Graham Denholm/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Daniels’ point of attack defence in particular will keep him on the court, while any growth on the offensive side of the ball will determine just how high his ceiling is.

    The young guard out of Bendigo looked hesitant and lacked confidence at times when playing for the Pelicans, whether it was with his shot or driving to the rim.

    If Daniels can overcome that mental battle and develop his perimeter shooting, he could end up being a key piece of Atlanta’s future but at least his defence gives him a solid floor and an asset the Hawks desperately need right now as constructed.

    JOE INGLES (Minnesota Timberwolves)

    It wasn’t supposed to be like this for Ingles, who told reporters after Australia’s second warm-up game against China that he hoped he would be a one-team player in his NBA career.

    “The crazy thing is I only wanted to play for one. I really just wanted to play for one,” Ingles said, per ESPN.

    Instead Ingles played eight seasons at Utah until he tore his ACL and was traded to Portland, where he remained sidelined by injury and didn’t see a single minute on the court before becoming a free agent.

    The veteran wing then secured a one-year contract with the Bucks, only to then agree to another short-term deal with the Magic the following season and now Minnesota is the next stop for the Boomers legend.

    Although Ingles revealed he could have easily already been on the Timberwolves this time last year.

    “They actually tried to get me last year as well,” Ingles said.

    Ingles landed at Orlando instead, where he was the oldest player in a young roster that exceeded expectations and will likely continue to rise up the Eastern Conference standings.

    Ingles signs one-year deal with Wolves | 00:39

    But unlike Giddey, Green and Daniels, Ingles is heading to a team that is a genuine title contender next year.

    The Timberwolves knocked off defending champions Denver in this past season’s playoffs before going down to the Dallas Mavericks in the Western Conference semi-finals.

    In Minnesota, Ingles will reunite with former Jazz teammates Mike Conley and Rudy Gobert.

    He will also team up with one of the league’s most rapidly ascending superstars — and best trash talkers — in Anthony Edwards.

    “He’s good,” Ingles said of Edwards’ trash talk.

    “I’ll save it for someone else. (But) it’s exciting. It’s obviously a really good team. Western Conference finals this year. Just going in there fully understanding the role they have for me. Trying to help Rudy, trying to help Ant, trying to help all these guys get better and hopefully go further.”

    Ingles described it as a “basketball opportunity that was too good to give up”.

    Realistically, the 36-year-old will slot into a similar bench role to Kyle Anderson, who signed a three-year contract with Golden State.

    He can still shoot the ball and is a valuable veteran locker room presence while his familiarity with Conley and Gobert is obviously also a plus.

    JOHNNY FURPHY (Indiana Pacers)

    From an Australian veteran to the country’s newest NBA export.

    Furphy was projected as a mid-to-late first round pick but was instead made to wait until the early stages of the second round for his name to be called.

    The Indiana Pacers traded up to land the Victorian, who Pacers coach Rick Carlisle told ‘The Wake Up Call’ on 107.5 The Fan was actually the 14th-ranked prospect on their big board.

    “He is a guy that our scouts had as the No. 14 player in the entire draft, and we got him at 35, so we feel pretty fortunate there,” Carlisle said.

    At19 years old, Furphy offers plenty of upside with his combination of shooting, athleticism and length at 6-foot-9.

    Johnny Furphy during his time at the Kansas Jayhawks. (Photo by Chris Gardner/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    But Furphy is very much a developmental player who still needs to add plenty of weight to his frame to be able to handle the physicality of the NBA.

    That is something both Furphy and Chad Buchanan are aware of though, with the Indiana general manager telling reporters the team believes the former Kansas wing has “a lot of room to grow”.

    “Both his body physically and his game,” Buchanan said.

    “He’s obviously very young in age, but we liked a lot of things about him that felt like aligned with who we are as an organisation and how we play.”

    Specifically, Indiana likes to push the pace and that is a stylistic fit for Furphy, who had highlight finishes in transition during his time at Basketball Australia’s Centre of Excellence.

    The way Furphy moves, or more accurately, glides down the court also makes him an ideal piece for the high-tempo offence Indiana runs.

    “I think the Pacers run a super exciting play style. Their team dynamic is something I can envision myself fitting in really well,” Furphy said in his introductory press conference.

    “Just how fast they play. How different players impact the game. I can kind of envision myself doing that.”

    Pacers nab exciting Aussie with pick 35 | 01:48

    Furphy, who said slipping out of the first round of the draft is “definitely a motivation” for him moving forward, will likely struggle to find playing time early in his Pacers career and Buchanan hinted at as much.

    “The reality is our roster is in a situation where it’s going to be tough for a young guy to come in and play,” the Pacers GM said.

    “We have a lot of good young players already on the roster. We have a lot of established roles already. We feel like we’re willing to be a little bit more patient with a young player like Johnny.”

    But that is honestly for the best since Furphy was viewed as more of a high-upside project player heading into the draft, so the Pacers are taking the right approach with him.

    One of the key focuses for Furphy will be developing his game off the ball as it is his best chance of seeing playing time on an Indiana team that is not short of playmaking options.

    “That’s something I’ve had to do my whole life,” Furphy said.

    “Playing with a lot of different teams, learning how to play without the ball in my hands. That’s something I feel like I do really well.

    “Being able to impact the game without the ball. Playing in transition, rebounding, cutting. That’s something I can see myself doing.”

    BEN SIMMONS (Brooklyn Nets)

    It all comes down to this for Simmons. A contract year and potentially the season that will decide if he still has a career in the NBA.

    After multiple injury setbacks and false starts, could this finally be the season when Simmons puts it all together and shows glimpses of the talent that made him a three-time All-Star?

    If it is another disappointing season for Simmons, the Nets will likely just count down the days until his $40.3 million contract expires because it is hard to see any team being incentivised enough to take on his salary without a sudden turnaround in form.

    Of course, on the flip side, the best case scenario for the Nets is that Simmons does start to show signs of improvement — or at least enough to increase his trade value.

    Ben Simmons is on an expiring contract. Sarah Stier/Getty Images/AFPSource: AFP

    The worst case scenario is that Simmons is playing poorly, stays on the roster and walks in free agency next summer.

    But at least they’d be rid of his salary at that point as the Nets play towards the future.

    If anything, trading Mikal Bridges should theoretically give Brooklyn the chance to feature Simmons more in the offence, if that is still a feasible plan at this stage of his career.

    Should Simmons return to health and remind everyone of his potential when running the offence, maybe a team could come to the negotiating table?

    PATTY MILLS (Miami Heat)

    Mills is a free agent and while he would obviously welcome the chance to return to Miami, the ball is in the Heat’s court.

    Although the fact Milwaukee added Delon Wright in free agency would only increase the veteran guard’s chances of scoring another contract.

    If Mills is offered the chance to re-sign with Miami it would be on a one-year, veteran-minimum deal where he would be a depth piece more than anything.

    DANTE EXUM (Dallas Mavericks)

    With Green out of the picture, it leaves Exum with even more responsibility should Doncic or Irving go down injured as the team’s next best option at point guard.

    Otherwise, Exum will remain locked into a key rotation role for the Mavericks given his energy on both ends along with his playmaking and distributing chops.

    Outside of Exum, 22-year-old guard Jaden Hardy also stands to benefit from Green’s move while the Mavericks also traded for Quentin Grimes, who will help fill the void left by the Sydney native.

    JOCK LANDALE (Houston Rockets)

    It looks at this stage like Landale’s $8 million salary with the Rockets for next season has been fully guaranteed, although it is hard to see the Australian having a prominent role given he is now behind Alperen Sengun and Steven Adams.

    Regardless, Landale’s salary could be used in a future trade alongside Houston’s growing draft capital should the Rockets decide to make a big, all-in move.

    For now, Landale will be a frontcourt depth piece and may see some minutes in the rotation after proving himself down the stretch for Houston as he finished the season strong.

    Landale averaged 8.8 points and 4.1 rebounds in his final two months for the Rockets after an injury to Sengun saw him take on greater responsibility in the Houston frontcourt.

    MATISSE THYBULLE and DUOP REATH (Portland Trail Blazers)

    Not much is expected to change for Thybulle and Reath, who will likely both settle into rotation roles off the bench for a Trail Blazers team that is still in the early stages of a rebuild.

    The only real notable addition Portland made this offseason via free agency or trade was Deni Avdija while Jerami Grant and Anfernee Simons are staying put for the time being despite speculation they could be on the move.

    Elsewhere, the Trail Blazers added Donovan Clingan in the draft, which specifically will make it harder for Reath to see significant minutes in a crowded big man rotation which includes Deandre Ayton and Robert Williams III.

    JAYLIN GALLOWAY (Milwaukee Bucks)

    Galloway is currently signed on a two-way contract for next season and will feature for Milwaukee’s G League affiliate, the Wisconsin Herd.

    In the meantime, Galloway will be in action for the Bucks at the NBA Summer League again, where he will play alongside NBL Next Star AJ Johnson, who Milwaukee drafted in the first round this year.

    AUSTRALIANS AT THE NBA SUMMER LEAGUE

    The NBA’s Summer League is also already underway as rookies, second-year players and some NBL-rostered Australian talent will be looking to make an impression.

    Melbourne United’s Jack White impressed enough at the Summer League back in 2022 to earn a contract with the eventual NBA champions, the Denver Nuggets.

    Here are a few names to look out for at this year’s edition:

    – Luke Travers (Cleveland Cavaliers)

    – Josh Bannan (Los Angeles Clippers)

    – Tyler Robertson (Washington Wizards)

    – Jo Lual-Acuil Jr (Sacramento Kings)

    – Sam Froling (Indiana Pacers)

    – Alex Ducas (Oklahoma City Thunder)

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  • Aussie back into NBA title mix with $4.9m reunion after third move in three seasons

    Aussie back into NBA title mix with $4.9m reunion after third move in three seasons

    Joe Ingles is reportedly on the move.

    The Australian free agent has agreed to a one-year, AU$4.9 million deal with the Minnesota Timberwolves, according to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski.

    Ingles, who will turn 37 later this year, averaged 4.4 points, 3.0 assists, and 2.1 rebounds in 17.2 minutes across 68 appearances off the bench for the Orlando Magic during the 2023/24 season, becoming an unrestricted free agent after the franchise declined his $16 million option.

    Following an eight-year tenure with the Utah Jazz, the veteran forward has represented the Milwaukee Bucks and Magic over the last two seasons, while his 11th NBA campaign looks set to be in Minnesota, where he will reunite with former Utah teammates Rudy Gobert and Mike Conley.

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    Joe Ingles of the Australian Boomers. Photo by Kelly Defina/Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

    The move means Ingles will again be in the NBA championship fight, after the Timberwolves made the Western Conference finals this past season.

    Ingles boasts a career three-point record of 41 per cent, which among NBA players with more than 2500 attempts over the past decade is bettered only by JJ Redick (42.9 per cent), Steph Curry (42.1 per cent) and Klay Thompson (41.4 per cent).

    He is seeking to represent Australia at the upcoming Paris Olympics, where he’ll be looking to secure another medal for the Boomers.

    The Boomers squad will be confirmed on Thursday night after their second warm-up game against China.

    Ingles is the fourth Australian to move this summer, with Dyson Daniels dealt to Atlanta, Josh Giddey to Chicago and Josh Green traded to Charlotte.

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  • NBA Draft LIVE: All eyes on sliding Australian Johnny Furphy … and Bronny James

    NBA Draft LIVE: All eyes on sliding Australian Johnny Furphy … and Bronny James

    The second round of the 2024 NBA Draft gets underway at 6am AEST on Friday morning and all eyes are on when Australian prospect Johnny Furphy has his name called.

    ESPN ranked Furphy as its 18th overall ranked player in this year’s class but he isn’t expected to have to wait much longer in the second round, with the 19-year-old expected to be taken early.

    Toronto, Utah and Milwaukee are the first three teams on the board and there is also the possibility another team could trade up to take Furphy, surprised that he is still available given the Kansas wing was projected as a mid-to-late first-round pick.

    Watch Live Coverage of The 2024 NBA Draft with ESPN on Kayo Sports. Fri 6am AEST. New to Kayo? Start Your Free Trial Today >

    Sarr projected to go 2nd in NBA Draft | 00:49

    MORE NBA DRAFT NEWS

    ROUND ONE WRAP: Aussie’s slide; emotional steal as OKC draft Giddey replacement

    TALKING POINTS: Lakers’ ‘extraordinary’ coup; why Aussie blow isn’t what it seems

    Duke forward Kyle Filipowski was the only other surprise name to slide out of the first round, having also received an invite to the green room ahead of Thursday’s Barclays Center event.

    While the invite is no guarantee a prospect will be selected, 23 of 25 players in the green room were selected in the opening round, with Furphy and Filipowski the only ones to miss out.

    Elsewhere, later in the draft attention will turn to whether LeBron James’ son Bronny is drafted, with the Lakers selecting at 55th overall.

    Phoenix was the only other team to work out Bronny ahead of the draft but the Suns traded back and selected Ryan Dunn at No.28, leaving the Lakers as the likely landing spot for the USC guard.

    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. New York (from Phoenix via Washington)

    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. Phoenix (from Minnesota via Oklahoma City and Denver)

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

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

    58. Dallas (from Boston via Charlotte)

    LIVE BLOG:

    Follow the latest news and every pick from the NBA Draft below! Can’t see the blog? Click here!

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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.

    Watch Live Coverage of The 2024 NBA Draft with ESPN on Kayo Sports. Thu 9:30am / Fri 6am AEST. New to Kayo? Start Your Free Trial Today >

    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

    LIVE BLOG:

    Follow the latest news and every pick from the NBA Draft below! Can’t see the blog? Click here!

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  • The ‘coming out party’ and ‘F-U’ dunk behind Australian Johnny Furphy’s ‘meteoric’ NBA Draft rise

    The ‘coming out party’ and ‘F-U’ dunk behind Australian Johnny Furphy’s ‘meteoric’ NBA Draft rise

    When Ash Arnott first laid eyes on Johnny Furphy, the then-14-year-old looked more likely to have a future as the frontman for Australian indie rock band Ocean Alley than as a player in the NBA.

    “A little surfer boy,” as Arnott described it to foxsports.com.au, with the blonde hair to match.

    Although Arnott, now assistant coach of the men’s program at Basketball Australia’s Centre of Excellence (CoE), saw more than just those long locks.

    He saw a light frame but one with plenty of room to grow, knowing Johnny’s brother Joe had started out at a similar height before growing five or six inches one summer.

    He also noticed the way Furphy moved. It was and still is “different”, as Robbie McKinlay, the head coach at the CoE, put it.

    Watch Live Coverage of The 2024 NBA Draft with ESPN on Kayo Sports. Thu 9:30am / Fri 6am AEST. New to Kayo? Start Your Free Trial Today >

    Johnny Furphy playing junior basketball for Collingwood. Picture: SuppliedSource: Supplied

    “The way I sort of describe it is he kind of glides,” McKinlay told foxsports.com.au.

    All of this is to say that Arnott saw something in Furphy. He wasn’t entirely sure where it would take him or what he would become, but he always knew this kid “had a chance”.

    A chance to play college basketball for the Kansas Jayhawks and then go declare for the NBA Draft after his freshman year?

    “I’d be lying. I can’t predict that,” Arnott said.

    “But my job back then was to try and identify players to see who could maybe take the next step and be a pro. That’s the idea through Basketball Victoria and Basketball Australia, to identify kids that you think can go on and be professional basketballers, and knowing that he was going to be tall and a long athlete, I always had that belief that this kid could be good.

    “He’s gone way past what my beliefs were when I saw him.”

    Which says a lot given how much Arnott believed in Furphy, not just in that first time he saw him back in 2018 but throughout his time at the CoE, where he and other staff would tell Furphy “you are where you’re supposed to be”.

    Furphy wasn’t supposed to be here, preparing to attend Thursday’s first round of the draft in the green room, where the top prospects in each year’s class wait to hear their name called.

    ULTIMATE GUIDE: Everything you need to know ahead of the 2024 NBA Draft

    Furphy could be drafted in the first round. Chris Gardner/Getty Images/AFPSource: AFP

    Last year, 24 of the 25 players invited to the green room were selected in the opening round, with ESPN reporting Furphy is drawing “strong interest” from as high as Memphis at ninth overall.

    Just over a year ago the prospect of Furphy declaring for the draft, let alone going in the first round, was the furthest thing from his mind.

    In fact, the prospect of even playing college basketball wasn’t really on his radar. He had just one college scholarship offer and was already planning on spending another year at the CoE.

    So, how did Furphy go from a relative unknown to a potential lottery pick in this week’s draft?

    It all starts in the unlikeliest of places.

    Well, if you asked Arnott he would probably push back on describing it as unlikely. Because, as he pointed out, “this is the small world” of Australian basketball after all.

    ‘WHO’S THAT KID?’: HOW FURPHY WENT FROM UNKNOWN TO ON THE RISE

    The story of Furphy’s rise starts, not on a basketball court, but at the AUSVEG Convention in Adelaide.

    Arnott’s parents were vegetable farmers and Richard Furphy, Johnny’s father, was at the Convention as part of his work. They also happened to be seated at the same table.

    So, they got to talking and naturally, as is the case with all parents, the topic of their kids eventually came up.

    It turned out Joe, the Furphy’s eldest son, was also a talented basketball player and the family were trying to get him to college. It also turned out Ash Arnott wasn’t a new name for them.

    Arnott was an assistant coach with the Basketball Victoria State Development Program at the time and, being the “small world of basketball” as he would say, they already knew of him.

    So, Arnott agreed to catch up with Joe and Richard one day at a cafe near Waverley Park, where the Hawthorn Hawks train, and also began the process of reaching out to some colleges.

    Then he learned about Johnny.

    Johnny and brother Joe while playing Big V basketball. Picture: SuppliedSource: Supplied

    “So I made an effort to go out and watch him,” Arnott said.

    “Straight away I was saying to Richard, ‘Mate I love his frame’, you can see he’s the baby of the family and the way he moves you can see he’s skilled but he was just so lightly built.”

    Still, again, Arnott saw something in Furphy. So, he talked to Michael Czepil, Basketball Victoria’s Metropolitan High Performance Coach, convinced there was a “hooper there”.

    Furphy made Southern Cross Challenge teams, would regularly be picked for the State Development Program and was part of the Under 18 state team as an emergency player.

    But it wasn’t until 2022 that he made his first state team and even still, it was as part of the second team at the Under 20 National Championships up in Mackay.

    That happened to be the first time McKinlay, head coach at the CoE, saw Furphy and he also liked what he was seeing.

    “Hey mate, do you know Johnny Furphy?,” he asked Arnott around halfway into his first game.

    “Yes I do. I know him very, very well,” Arnott replied, adding: “You like him, don’t you?”

    Intriguing was the word McKinlay used, according to Arnott.

    Marty Clarke, technical director at the NBA’s Global Academy, also got his first look at Furphy in Mackay.

    “I just said, ‘Who’s that kid? I hadn’t seen or heard of him’, and I know most of the guys around that level because generally you’ve seen them at 16s and you’ve seen them at 18,” Clarke told foxsports.com.au.

    “He just looked different. He ran up and down the floor effortlessly, and that was the first thing I would have said, ‘Oh, that guy runs really well’. And then he shot it and the shot looked nice.

    “He played really hard, attacked the rim off the dribble, attacked the rim on rebounding. He tried to play defence, and I was like, ‘Oh this kid is pretty good, who is he?’.”

    Furphy impressed enough to score a scholarship at the Centre of Excellence. Picture: SuppliedSource: Supplied

    There were some things Furphy had to work on. His handle “wasn’t great” while he “didn’t go side to side all that well” either.

    “But they were all things you can work on,” Clarke added, and the way Furphy handled himself on the court suggested he was a kid that was ready to learn too.

    His high “wasn’t too high” and his low “wasn’t too low”, as Clarke put it, while McKinlay said Furphy was “steady the whole time”.

    “And that’s when the whole entire staff started to get this interest in Johnny,” Arnott added.

    From there, Furphy was invited to play in the NBL1 Wildcard series in Perth as part of a CoE squad which included Alex Toohey, Ben Henshall, Alex Condon and Tyrese Proctor.

    “If you saw him in his first couple of games there to where he is now you just would laugh,” Arnott said, thinking back to the moment Furphy first joined the team for breakfast in Western Australia and was asking him if he could get a coffee.

    “Because none of our kids would ever do that,” Arnott laughed.

    “They were still drinking hot chocolates and just getting their bacon and eggs and I was like, ‘coffee Robbie’ and just jokingly said, ‘coffee Johnny’ and he goes, ‘Yeah mate can I get a latte please’.

    “And I look back at Robbie like, ‘Oh my God’, because that was just the type of kid he was. He beat his own drum, he was comfortable in his own skin and not in a bad way.”

    Because as Arnott got to know this “skinny little kid from Clifton Hill” more and got to “peel the layers back”, he found out a morning coffee wasn’t just a morning coffee for Furphy.

    It was “something special for him”, something he and his dad Richard would always share at the Victorian markets. Just one, small glimpse into the person behind the player.

    The player that scored 12 points in his first game at the Wildcard series to go with just as many rebounds and five steals in a 46-point win against the Rockingham Flames.

    Halfway through that game, McKinlay was already convinced.

    Boomers start Olympics selection camp | 01:18

    “This is a kid we need to bring into the CoE,” he said, and it was a process made easier by the fact Proctor was leaving the program for Duke, opening up a scholarship for Furphy.

    Although Furphy’s move to Canberra was far from straight-forward, starting with the fact he was halfway through Year 12 and as a result had to finish his final year of high school online.

    Then there were the shin splints which, while not serious, did “sort of restrict what he could do straight away” according to McKinlay.

    And you can add in a broken wrist too, which Furphy suffered in a March 2023 game while playing in the CoE’s 110-37 win over the Penrith Panthers in the NBL1 East.

    But in between those setbacks, Furphy was starting to show signs and playing high-level basketball along the way, first during a joint trip with the NBA Global Academy to Spain in October 2022 and then in January the following year at the North East Prep School Invitational in Providence, where he was named to the All-Tournament Team.

    Still, at that point he only had one college scholarship offer from Sacramento State. By the end of July that had all changed after Furphy turned heads at the NBA Academy Games.

    Suddenly he was one of the most sought-after recruits in college basketball, with around 30 high major offers from programs including Kansas, Gonzaga, Providence and North Carolina according to McKinlay.

    “That first game Robbie and I kind of looked at each other,” Arnott said, “and we were like, ‘This is the coming out party. This is the Johnny that we were waiting for’.”

    THE WAKE-UP CALL AND ‘F-U’ DUNK IN FURPHY’S ‘COMING OUT PARTY’

    Although at one point during a game against NBA Academy Select Red, the Johnny they had been waiting for had gone missing again.

    “We were sort of just running up and down,” McKinlay said.

    Going through the motions. So, he called a timeout and pulled Furphy to the side.

    “And I said, ‘Hey Johnny, you’re wasting my time, you’re wasting all the college coaches’ time, you’re wasting your time. What’s going on?”.

    McKinlay knew how important a tournament like this could be for Furphy’s career. How important it had already been for Alex Toohey, who committed to Gonzaga but ended up playing in the NBL as part of its Next Stars program after breaking out at the Academy Games the year prior.

    It is why he got on a call with Furphy and his parents before the trip to Atlanta, telling them: “Listen. These Academy Games, this thing’s going to blow up in a good way”.

    “Now, to the level it did, I didn’t forecast that,” McKinlay added.

    Gaze: Bulls a ‘better fit’ for Giddey | 00:59

    But he knew there was at least the opportunity for Furphy to make a name for himself, especially with multiple high-major coaches and NBA scouts watching on.

    Furphy assured McKinlay that he was fine, telling his coach: “Nah, I’m good”.

    “OK. Well, do something,” replied McKinlay.

    He did something alright. A play or two later, Furphy got the ball on the left baseline and ripped it to the middle for a monster dunk that brought the entire CoE bench to its feet.

    The opposing coach called a timeout and McKinlay grabbed Furphy once more.

    “That was an F-U dunk, wasn’t it?” he said, to which Furphy innocently replied: “What do you mean by that?”.

    “Well,” McKinlay responded, “I got on you and you were sort of just saying, ‘Hey go sit down and shut the you know what up’.”

    “No it wasn’t that,” Furphy told his coach, with a “little cheeky smile” as he went to the bench.

    It was one of many highlight plays Furphy had in the tournament, including another big dunk against one of the African NBA Academy teams, as he went on to average 14.8 points, 7.5 rebounds, 1.3 assists and 1.8 steals a game to start what Clarke described as a “meteoric rise”.

    “He exploded at that tournament,” added Shawn King, who coached Furphy in the Under 18s at Hawthorn and then in 2022 when he played for Melbourne University in the Big V.

    “I always thought he would be like a D1 player. But he kind of just took it to a whole other level.

    “You could see glimpses of the NBA. I thought he could be an NBA kid. But obviously I didn’t think it would happen this quick.”

    Arnott, meanwhile, said Furphy’s success at the tournament and the interest that followed gave rise to a “new Johnny”.

    “He had this swagger about him,” the CoE assistant coach said.

    “He knew that he was at the level and he was ready for this next step in his career and you see the last couple of games he played with the CoE in the [NBL1] East. He was dominant.”

    Furphy was just as impressive at the Sportradar Showdown in Las Vegas later that month and with interest quickly skyrocketing, then came another sit-down with his parents and McKinlay. Because as much as he had planned to stay at the CoE for another year, McKinlay was right. It had blown up in a good way.

    Fortunately, McKinlay had the expertise of Clarke and others at the NBA Academy, including Greg Colucci and Brian Cardinal, to lean on as they mapped out Furphy’s next steps.

    “He was going to stay (at the CoE) an extra 12 months,” McKinlay said.

    “We just sort of sat down and said, ‘Why would you want to stay now when you’ve got these schools that want you now’.

    “The one luxury he did have was because it was so late in the piece most of the rosters were set and so I said, ‘You’re going in to fill a need… you may commit and stay for an extra 12 months, but that roster with the transfer portal could be a completely new roster’.

    “The family decided they wanted to head off straight away and it happened at light speed. And next thing you know, he was at the University of Kansas.”

    THE MOMENT FURPHY PROVED HE WAS READY FOR COLLEGE BASKETBALL

    As fast as it all happened, Furphy still had plenty of catching up to do when he arrived in Kansas, having missed summer workouts and the Jayhawks’ exhibition game against the Bahamas National Team.

    It was always going to take time for him to adjust to the physicality and speed of college basketball and the fact he arrived not as prepared as the other freshmen on the roster, through no fault of his own, only should have made it even harder for Furphy to earn playing time.

    The emphasis there being on should have, because if there is anything to take away from Furphy’s rapid rise, it is the fact that he continued to exceed expectations.

    “What Johnny did is he got himself right physically,” McKinlay said.

    “He jumped straight into the playbook. I know they’ve got over 100 plays in that playbook. He made sure he didn’t give the coaching staff a reason to not play him and I thought he did a good job with that.”

    Furphy quickly learned the playbook. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Furphy started out the season as a rotation option for Kansas coach Bill Self off the bench but ended up starting 19 of 33 games as a freshman, finishing 14 of them in double figures.

    His shooting efficiency dipped down the stretch as he was forced into a more prominent role, which in turn led to more attention for the Australian from the opposition.

    But as a whole Furphy was highly productive once given a starting role, going 12-for-22 from downtown during one four-game stretch of the season as he rocketed up draft boards.

    For King, Furphy’s former coach at Hawthorn and Melbourne University, his breakout season with the Jayhawks wasn’t a surprise.

    “Once he feels comfortable in his situation he gets better and better and I think you saw that at Kansas this year where he didn’t quite have the rhythm and then all of a sudden he found it and he’s like, ‘I can do this’ and then he was playing at a different level,” King said.

    McKinlay, meanwhile, actually got to meet up with Furphy in early December and watch him play 14 minutes off the bench in Kansas’ 69-65 win over UConn.

    “He hit two big threes in that game in that environment,” McKinlay said.

    “And it was like, ‘OK. If this doesn’t rattle you here in this one, then you’re fine’.”

    McKinlay also got to watch one practice session where he said Furphy, still only relatively new to the team, was already “telling some of the older guys where they needed to be”.

    Furphy had a prominent role in his freshman season. (Photo by John E. Moore III/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    “I was like, ‘OK. He’s fine. He’s ready to go’. The big environment didn’t bother him,” McKinlay added.

    “He’s got a self-confidence that, it’s hard to crack that thing. He’s got a belief in himself and his ability.”

    A belief that meant when McKinlay was once talking to his dad Richard, who asked Johnny if he thought he was going to make the NBA, the 19-year-old was quick to reply.

    “Yeah absolutely,” McKinlay said, recalling that conversation early in Furphy’s time at Kansas.

    “That sort of surprised his dad a little bit, that he had that confidence. He definitely showed that in the second half of the season for Kansas.”

    McKinlay had a lot of scouts reach out to him about Furphy and he told them all the same thing: the ball doesn’t stick with Johnny.

    “His quick decision-making is going to help him in the NBA,” McKinlay said.

    “I think NBA players are going to enjoy playing with him because they know if he doesn’t have his shot then he’s going to move that thing on quick or he’s going to cut to the right space or whatever it is.

    “He’s just got to continue to work, get stronger physically, so when he does drive the ball he doesn’t get bumped off his line. I think once he gets that down then, he’s going to be one hell of a player.”

    Furphy is rocketing up draft boards. (Photo by Jay Biggerstaff/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    ESPN’s Jonathan Givony and Jeremy Woo have Furphy going to the Magic at 18th overall in their latest mock draft, adding he is receiving “strong interest, starting with Memphis at No. 9, extending throughout the teens and ending with Cleveland at No. 20”.

    Sam Vecenie of The Athletic also has mocked Furphy to Orlando, while The Ringer has him at No.24 to the Knicks, CBS Sports has him at No.20 to Cleveland and it is No.27 to Minnesota for Bleacher Report.

    Either way, most experts seem to agree that Furphy, while raw, has the right combination of size, shooting and athleticism that makes him an intriguing upside swing in this year’s draft.

    But as the bright lights of the NBA await, Furphy still hasn’t forgotten where he came from.

    Which is why when he and his family received an invite to the green room, Furphy had two more familiar faces he wanted to be alongside when his name was called.

    REFLECTING ON HOW FAR FURPHY HAS COME… AND HOW FAR HE WILL GO

    McKinlay was “speechless” when, “completely out of the blue”, he got a text message from Furphy inviting him to the draft, which will be held at Barclays Center in New York.

    He didn’t just invite him though. Furphy also offered to pay to bring McKinlay over too.

    “That’s something that I didn’t expect but it just speaks volume to him as an individual, how he was brought up in his family,” McKinlay said.

    “He’s just a phenomenal kid… he knows where he’s come from and people that have played a small part in it.”

    King received the same offer, as did Arnott. Unfortunately he’s in Turkey as assistant coach of the Crocs squad representing Australia in the FIBA Under-17 Basketball World Cup and can’t make it.

    Three of Furphy’s former CoE teammates from the Academy Games — Dash Daniels, Nash Walker and Sa Pilimai — are part of that Crocs squad and even from afar, and at 3am local time when the draft will start in Istanbul, Arnott will be watching.

    Watching and then thinking about just how far that “little surfer boy” has come and how far he has to go, still only 19 years old and hopefully with a long NBA career ahead of him.

    But as much as Johnny Furphy’s story is about how much things have changed over the past two years, it is also just as much about what has stayed the same.

    Because in many ways he is still that little surfer boy who didn’t make a state team until 2022 and yet “never said one negative word” according to Arnott, choosing grace and gratitude — thankful to even have the opportunity to try out.

    Furphy was always thankful for opportunities.Source: FOX SPORTS

    “A big part of that is just hanging in there,” Clarke, the technical director at the NBA Global Academy, said.

    “If you hang in there and do the work and keep believing, there’s a chance you’re going to get where you want to get to. If you get all disappointed early on because you don’t make a team or you don’t get as many shots as you want to get or you’re not playing as much, then you give yourself no chance, absolutely no chance.

    “I think the thing for Johnny is he just hung in there, hung in there long enough until he was ready and an opportunity came along and then he made the most of his opportunity.”

    There are many lessons to be learned from Furphy’s success but that in particular, the ability to stick it out and keep showing up, is the part Arnott holds onto as he ushers in the next generation of Australian basketball talent in his role as assistant coach at the CoE.

    “Not getting too high and not getting too low, but continuing to work and showing up, that was one of his greatest assets,” Arnott said.

    “A lot of these new athletes coming through want everything now and I understand, you want every opportunity that comes your way, but the most important skill these days is to be able to turn up every day and be available and work on your game and that’s something that I think sometimes gets missed.

    “Everyone wants to talk about Johnny’s athleticism, his skill. The skill part came from his ability to work on his game constantly.”

    Connected to that is the fact everyone has their own pathway. Furphy took the college route. Dyson Daniels went through G-League Ignite. Josh Giddey was an NBL Next Star.

    They all went on different journeys and yet it led to the same place. It started in the same place too, in the same locker rooms where McKinlay said the next Johnny Furphy may be sitting right now.

    “What we tried to let the kids know is [that] Johnny was here 12 months ago,” he said.

    “He was in this locker room sitting where you guys are. So while we sometimes think the NBA is so far away, in actual fact, it might be 12 months away, so you better get yourself ready now for what may come.

    “Just because you didn’t make that first team you thought you should have made, if you keep working then good things can definitely happen. Johnny is the poster boy for that right now and there’ll be another Johnny Furphy, who knows when?”

    But even if there is another player like Johnny Furphy, there won’t be another Johnny Furphy the person. McKinlay said he doesn’t know anyone who doesn’t like him.

    In fact, Furphy was his son’s favourite player during his time at the CoE. McKinlay isn’t sure why his son, who was five years old at the time, gravitated towards Furphy in particular.

    But every time McKinlay talked to his son on the phone after a game, he always asked the same question: Where’s Johnny?

    Furphy is reaching new heights. Jay Biggerstaff/Getty Images/AFPSource: AFP

    There were plenty of other great players on the roster at the time, including Toohey, Condon and Henshall, who were part of a 2004 age group that McKinlay described as “special”.

    “I think there’s a lot of future Boomers in that crop of 2004 players,” he added.

    Furphy was included in the Boomers’ extended squad for the upcoming Paris Olympics before being cut when a revised squad was later announced, although the fact he was in the mix in the first place speaks to just how highly-regarded the 19-year-old already is.

    Again, remember this was a kid who didn’t make his first state team until the Under 20s and even still, it was with the B team.

    This was also a kid who, after being told by Arnott early at the Academy Games that a high major Division I school had interest in him, couldn’t hide his excitement.

    Because if there is one thing Arnott will take away from his time with Furphy, it is joy.

    “To see the smile on his face,” Arnott said, “and [him] being like, ‘No way. Oh my God’, and just to remember that he was still an 18-year-old kid.

    “To see that pure joy in him and then once he’d really taken off and started playing this great style of basketball, sitting back and just being like, ‘This kid is going to be special’.”

    And while Arnott won’t have be there in person on Thursday, instead sitting in a hotel room in Instanbul over 8,000 kilometres away, he had a first-hand look at all the key moments leading up to it.

    “I guess just having a front row seat to it, not necessarily being a part of it, but just having a front row seat to how special he was becoming, I think that’s the best memory,” Arnott said.

    “And I’m most thankful for just being a part of it, having that front row seat. Nothing better than that.”

    So, which team will take Furphy? Catch live coverage of the 2024 NBA Draft with ESPN on Kayo Sports. Thu 9:30am / Fri 6am AEST. New to Kayo? Start Your Free Trial Today >

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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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  • NBA insider floats potential Giddey trade; Bronny move that Lakers won’t make: Rumour Mill

    NBA insider floats potential Giddey trade; Bronny move that Lakers won’t make: Rumour Mill

    NBA insider Bobby Marks has floated a hypothetical trade for Australian Josh Giddey as the Oklahoma City guard faces an uncertain future heading into the offseason.

    Marks, who spent 20 years working in the NBA and currently works as ESPN’s Front Office Insider, suggested a deal with the Utah Jazz — one of the more logical suitors for Giddey.

    Although there were no players outside of Giddey involved in Marks’ hypothetical trade.

    Instead, his trade saw Giddey sent to Utah in exchange for the Jazz’s 10th pick in this year’s draft and their 2025 first round-pick, via the Minnesota Timberwolves, which is top-14 protected.

    Get on Board the NBA Finals | Dallas Mavericks v Boston Celtics | Every game of the NBA Finals LIVE on ESPN, available via Kayo. New to Kayo? Start Your Free Trial Today >

    Could Josh Giddey be moved this offseason? (Photo by Dustin Satloff/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    The Athletic’s Sam Vecenie discussed Giddey’s potential trade value on the latest episode of his Game Theory Podcast, casting doubt over whether the Australian would net a future first.

    “I am sure [Oklahoma City’s] goal will be to move him for a future first,” he said.

    “But I don’t know how amenable teams will be … I think it will be a heavily protected future first if they were to move him.

    “They are not extending him this summer, there is just no way.”

    Vecenie suggested a deal with Washington, which would see Giddey link up with former Oklahoma City executive and now Wizards general manager Will Dawkins, in exchange for the Wizards’ No. 26 pick and a future second-rounder.

    Giddey, who was benched for the first time in his career and generally saw limited minutes in the series against Dallas, is eligible for a rookie-scale contract extension.

    The Thunder could see plenty of value keeping Giddey around given his performance the series prior against the Pelicans, while the 21-year-old obviously offers OKC a great contingency plan should either Shai Gilgeous-Alexander or Jalen Williams go down.

    But Gilgeous-Alexander is set for a supermax extension in the 2025 offseason while Williams and Chet Holmgren will soon be eligible for rookie extensions of their own.

    In other news, the Thunder may not be able to pay what Giddey’s management is after, although there is no concrete reporting at this stage as to what that figure may be.

    Celtics sweep Pacers to reach NBA Finals | 01:17

    SIXERS’ BIGGEST THREAT IN FREE AGENCY BID FOR PAUL GEORGE

    Elsewhere, while Philadelphia has been heavily linked to Paul George ahead of free agency this summer, it seems like they have some serious competition in the Eastern Conference.

    NBA insider Marc Stein reported on his Substack that Orlando “continues to be mentioned by various league observers as a natural suitor” for not only George but also Klay Thompson.

    The Los Angeles Clippers are keen to re-sign George in free agency but Stein wrote that they have “made it clear by letting negotiations drag out to this point that they want to do it at their price”.

    The Sixers are definitely a threat given they have nearly $65 million in cap space this offseason, which is more than enough to absorb George’s $49.4 million max salary next year.

    The Magic, meanwhile, are in a similar situation where they should have around $55 million in cap space — again, enough to take on George should the Clippers not give him what he wants.

    There is plenty of interest in Paul George. Harry How/Getty Images/AFPSource: AFP

    BRONNY NO LONGER A GUARANTEED TICKET TO LANDING LEBRON

    It looks like Bronny James won’t be making a Lakers debut just yet.

    Earlier this month, his dad, Los Angeles star LeBron James, said that playing together was “not a priority” after he had previously stated an interest in doing so.

    According to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski on a recent episode of The Woj Pod that NBA teams no longer see Bronny as a ticket to securing LeBron.

    Wojnarowski then shared that the Lakers were no longer considering Bronny as their first-round pick.

    “The Lakers, to my understanding, they’re not considering Bronny James at No. 17,” Wojnarowski said.

    “There’s no reason to take him at 17. If you wanted to take him earlier than 55, you could move up some places, but you are just giving away value.”

    Where will Bronny land? (Photo by David Becker/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Bronny is coming off a less-than-stand-out first season at USC after his freshman year was delayed due to heart surgery after suffering cardiac arrest during a USC practice over the summer.

    He averaged 4.8 points, 2.8 rebounds and 2.1 assists in 25 games for the Trojans, making six starts.

    LeBron has spoken of the possibility of playing with his son for quite some time, but Wojnarowski said in early May that the family’s new goal is to find the young James the right developmental program.

    Bronny could still go back to college, as he retained his eligibility — and entered the transfer portal — when he declared for the NBA draft.

    ESPN recently predicted the younger James will get picked by the Warriors at No. 52 overall in a mock draft.

    Luka SHREDS mother f***er Wolves fan | 00:39

    “That’s the priority for them as a family. What’s best for Bronny James? If it ends up them together, that would be great, but I don’t get a sense it’s playing much of any role in LeBron James’ decision on next season,” Wojnarowski said on ESPN’s “NBA Today” last month.

    LeBron still has the chance to opt out of his deal with the Lakers and has not shared definitive plans for what he plans to do next.

    “I’ve seen, heard a lot of reports about my future. I said it last night and I’ll say it again,” James posted on X at the end of April.

    “I do not know yet as I’m only thinking about spending time with my family & friends! When I know after speaking with the fam, my counsel as well as my representation about it then you guys will know.”

    New York Post

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  • Returning star Porzingis explodes as Celtics make early NBA Finals statement against Mavericks

    Returning star Porzingis explodes as Celtics make early NBA Finals statement against Mavericks

    A first-quarter explosion from the returning Kristaps Porzingis has inspired the Boston Celtics to a dominant 107-89 win over the Dallas Mavericks in Game 1 of the NBA Finals.

    Porzingis, who had missed 10 playoff games with a calf injury and last played on April 29, showed no signs of rust as he scored 18 points in the opening quarter alone.

    The Celtics big man only scored another two points in the game but set the tone early on both ends as Boston opened up a 37-20 first quarter lead — the largest in NBA Finals history.

    All five of Boston’s starters finished in double figures, with Jaylen Brown scoring a team-high 22 points while also making a big impact on the defensive end with three blocks and just as many steals.

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    Celtics sweep Pacers to reach NBA Finals | 01:17

    Luka Doncic, meanwhile, had a game-high 30 points for Dallas to go with 10 rebounds but only had one assist as the Mavericks struggled to get anything from their bench.

    Australian Josh Green was scoreless in 16 minutes before garbage time, when both teams cleared their benches as Dante Exum got a run for Dallas.

    There wasn’t much separating the two teams early, with the Mavericks leading 13-12 after five minutes as the Celtics called the first timeout of the game.

    Boston was able to generate plenty of open looks and also crashed the glass to create opportunities for second-chance points but couldn’t get the shots to fall consistently.

    That changed as Porzingis, returning from injury off the bench, made an immediate impact on both ends to spark a stunning 25-7 Celtics run to close out the quarter.

    Porzingis finished the quarter with 11 points, three rebounds and three blocks.

    “He’s doing it all,” Mike Breen declared in commentary, as Porzingis drained one from deep and then blocked a Kyrie Irving shot on the other end that resulted in a Sam Houser 3-pointer.

    Porzingis was also making life hard for Green in the first quarter, scoring over the Australian and then blocking a dunk attempt from him soon after.

    It was a remarkable return for Porzingis and he didn’t show any signs of slowing down in the second quarter as the 7-footer hit back-to-back buckets to put Boston ahead 48-27 and force Dallas into a quick timeout.

    Porzingis hardly looked like someone who hadn’t played in the NBA in over a month, confidently launching a shot from 30 feet over Doncic to put Boston ahead 63-37.

    The Mavericks closed out the second quarter on a 5-0 run but the Celtics still had a 63-42 lead heading into halftime on the back of 18 points from Porzingis.

    Boston shot 11 3-pointers in the opening half compared to just three for Dallas, who had Doncic on 17 points but not much else from the rest of its starters.

    The Celtics looked comfortable until a fast start to the third quarter from Doncic on the offensive end and better application in defence from Dallas saw the Mavericks out-score Boston 22-8 to open the period.

    That cut Boston’s lead to 72-64, with a nervous energy hanging over the previously raucous TD Garden crowd.

    But a few turnovers from Dallas and hustle plays from Boston helped re-establish a comfortable buffer for the Eastern Conference champions.

    The Celtics cruised to victory. (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Porzingis, for example, missed an open 3-pointer but then cut to the basket for his first points of the quarter after Jayson Tatum secured the offensive rebound.

    Jaylen Brown, meanwhile, then blocked Derrick Jones Jr. on a dunk attempt before Tatum drained a 3-pointer soon after to push the lead out to 80-64.

    The blocks kept coming from Brown and the 3-pointers kept coming too, with the Celtics putting out any chance of a Mavericks comeback to lead 86-66 entering the final quarter.

    The Mavericks needed a fast start in the fourth to be any hope of a comeback but didn’t get it as active hands from Derrick White led to an easy bucket and had Boston ahead 92-71.

    Dallas didn’t get any closer from that point, although the Mavericks can take some confidence from the fact the Celtics dropped home games in their series against Miami and Cleveland.

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  • The $932m reality facing NBA powerhouse… and why another failure could be catastrophic

    The $932m reality facing NBA powerhouse… and why another failure could be catastrophic

    The NBA Finals are not unfamiliar territory for the Boston Celtics.

    If anything, it should feel like home given they were here just two seasons ago.

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    And when they haven’t made it to the final hurdle, the Celtics have made the Eastern Conference finals six times since the 2016/17 season, winning it twice.

    But winning it all? That is unfamiliar territory given the franchise has not won the Larry O’Brien trophy since 2008.

    Yet they now have another chance to end the wait as a Finals series against the tricky Dallas Mavericks looms.

    However, there’s a sense that if the Celtics can’t get over the hump now, when will they?

    With extra firepower brought in through two major trades and a superstar handed a big contract, there can be no complaints about the roster.

    Couple that with a dominant record in the regular season and a soft playoff run, it’s now-or-never territory for the Celtics.

    It’s very much now-or-never for the Celtics when it comes to winning a championship. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    MORE COVERAGE

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    WHY ‘EASIEST PATH TO FINALS’ COULD COME BACK TO BITE

    Over the past eight seasons, Boston have been one of the most successful teams in the NBA.

    A powerhouse of their conference, the Celtics are an easy tip for pundits when it comes to predicting who will finish towards the top in the East.

    Once again Boston dominated their conference rivals as a 64-18 regular season record secured the No. 1 seed.

    It was the Celtics’ best regular season since 2007/08, the same season they last won a championship.

    Boston continued their dominance into the playoffs and go into the Finals having won 12 and lost twice across the first round, conference semi-finals and finals.

    With an overall record of 76-20 across the regular season and playoffs, the Celtics are the first team with two or fewer losses in a single postseason going into the NBA Finals since the Cavaliers and Warriors back in 2016/17.

    Not only that, Boston are just the fifth team in the last 25 years to go into the NBA Finals with 20 losses or fewer.

    Safe to say, this is a historically dominant Celtics team.

    But dig a little deeper into their playoffs run this postseason and you wonder if this team is actually as good as the record suggests.

    Boston have steamrolled their playoff opponents. (Photo by Adam Glanzman/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    In the first round, Boston faced the Miami Heat who were without their superstar Jimmy Butler for the entire series.

    Without Butler, the Heat had little hope and were soundly beaten in the series 4-1 as the Celtics progressed to a conference semi-finals series against the Cleveland Cavaliers.

    Unfortunately for the Cavaliers, their hopes were dealt a fatal blow when star man Donovan Mitchell suffered a series-ending calf injury in Game Three.

    Cleveland was also without centre Jarrett Allen for the entire series due to a rib injury.

    The Celtics had little trouble eliminating the Cavaliers 4-1 to seal a spot in the conference finals for the third-straight year, where they would take on surprise package Indiana.

    Sadly for the Pacers, the loss of All-Star Tyrese Haliburton for Game Three and Game Four left them with a mountain too high to climb as the Celtics secured a series sweep.

    Granted, Boston can only face whoever they’re up against.

    But it can’t stop pundits from noting they’ve had an absurdly soft run into the NBA Finals.

    “If it’s not the easiest path to the finals, it’s got to be top three or top four,” ESPN senior NBA writer Zach Lowe said on Get Up.

    Tatum enjoyed sweeping the Pacers in the Eastern Conference finals. (Photo by Justin Casterline/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    “The Celtics have effectively gotten a bye to the NBA Finals. That might be unprecedented. There has not been a moment of real stress in these finals.”

    Lowe conceded there was little the Celtics could do in regards to the seeds shaking out the way they did and have “nothing to apologise for”.

    The fact Boston has enjoyed a stress-free run to the finals also had Miami Heat legend Udonis Haslem fearful of what could happen should results go against them early in the series against Dallas.

    “You definitely want to be battle tested, you want to build confidence, you want to build grit,” Haslem said.

    “You want to understand you can win games in the mud, you can win games when your best players aren’t playing well, you can win games when shots aren’t falling.

    “You want to know that you can win games in all shapes, forms and fashion.”

    It’s not impossible, but it’s highly unlikely the Celtics will enjoy a run to the finals as easy as this one ever again.

    A failure to capitalise on it would be an unmitigated disaster.

    The Celtics haven’t been properly tested in the playoffs. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    DESPITE STAR DUO’S ARRIVAL AND $455M DEAL, CELTICS ROSTER STILL UNDER ‘LITTLE BIT OF SUSPICION’

    The Celtics’ remarkable postseason runs since the 2016/17 have coincided with the franchise drafting Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum.

    Brown and Tatum were selected by the Celtics in the 2016 and 2017 Draft respectively and, as a duo, have steered the franchise to the Eastern Conference finals in five of the seven seasons they’ve played together.

    But, for whatever reason, they could never clear the final hurdle and convert their dominance into championships.

    Having fallen short on several occasions, Boston decided this would be the season they go all-in on building a championship-winning roster.

    Last June, the Celtics traded away star guard Marcus Smart, Danilo Gallinari, Mike Muscala and the 35th overall pick to secure Kristaps Porzingis from the Wizards along with a future first round pick and the Grizzlies’ 2023 pick in a three-team trade.

    Porzingis, a towering centre and forward, was coming off one of the best seasons in his career having racked up career-highs in points (23.2), assists (2.7) and steals (0.9).

    Boston weren’t done with their roster moves, adding Jrue Holiday from Portland in return for Malcolm Brogdon, Robert Williams, a 2024 first round pick and a 2029 unprotected first round pick.

    In Holiday, the Celtics acquired a five-time All-Defensive selection and slotted right into the starting point guard which Smart had occupied for several years before his trade to Memphis.

    Holiday also brought championship experience having won the Larry O’Brien Trophy with the Milwaukee Bucks in 2021.

    Jrue Holiday’s addition has been a welcome one for Boston. (Photo by Justin Casterline/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Aside from bringing in new faces, the Celtics moved to extend Brown on a five-year supermax extension worth up to an eye-watering $AUD455 million last July.

    Tatum is also eligible for a supermax deal worth $477 million in this coming off-season. That’s a whopping $932 million tied up in two players.

    Having added Holiday and Porzingis to the roster alongside Brown and Tatum, the Celtics really couldn’t have asked for much more in terms of the firepower needed to win a first championship in 16 years.

    And if Tatum can’t deliver, would the Celtics still be inclined to tie him down to that supermax deal having failed to get over that final hurdle so many times before?

    The Ringer’s senior NBA writer Howard Beck believes the Celtics’ roster is in the best possible shape to break the championship drought, but Brown and Tatum cannot afford to slip up.

    “That Tatum and Brown tandem has been incredible at their best,” Beck said on The Rich Eisen Show.

    “But they have these glitches at times. Sometimes it’s a quarter, sometimes it’s a game, sometimes it’s a series.

    Brown was signed to a big extension last July. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    “And I think everybody looks at them with admiration for their talent and everything that they’ve done but with a little bit of suspicion because they have these untimely pratfalls.

    “Now they’re a little bit older, they’re a little more experienced, a little deeper and better built.

    “If they have Porzingis, they will be in much better shape to win a championship than they were two years ago.”

    With an improved roster compared to the one that took on the Warriors in the 2021/22 Finals series, the Celtics cannot use the excuse of not having the cattle needed to get over the final hurdle.

    They’ve also enjoyed an extraordinarily easy playoffs run, although Boston can only beat what’s in front of them.

    It’s created the perfect storm for the Celtics to win their first championship since 2007/08.

    But it’s also why this team is under immense pressure to deliver and a failure to do so could result in some major consequences.

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  • How ‘high risk’ trade gamble and shameless $750k move sparked stunning NBA Finals charge

    How ‘high risk’ trade gamble and shameless $750k move sparked stunning NBA Finals charge

    It is funny how quickly things can change.

    Just over a year ago, the Mavericks were being investigated by the NBA after intentionally tanking to miss the NBA playoffs.

    The 115-112 loss to Chicago guaranteed Dallas had no hope of appearing in the play-in tournament, where it could have tried to go on an unlikely run to the NBA Finals.

    Instead, despite making a move for superstar guard Kyrie Irving at the trade deadline, the Mavericks made a clear concession that the team — as constructed in that moment — was not good enough to win a title.

    So, Dallas lost. But in reality, the Mavericks won in a big way.

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    Doncic x Gafford combo sink Timberwolves | 01:00

    By throwing away the game against the Bulls, Dallas improved its chances of keeping its first-round pick in that year’s draft.

    Quickly for context, in case you have forgotten by now, the Mavericks still owed a first-round pick to the New York Knicks as part of the trade for Kristaps Porzingis in 2019 at that point.

    But if the draft lottery handed them a top-10 selection, they wouldn’t have to give it up. A lower finish in the overall standings, of course, gave them better odds of drawing a top-10 pick.

    The Mavericks were fined $750,000 after that league investigation was completed but it mattered little as they drew the No.10 pick, later trading back on draft day to select rookie big man Dereck Lively II at 12th overall.

    The same Lively II who has been a rookie revelation this season, exceeding everyone’s expectations — including his own — and developing an immediate connection with Luka Doncic.

    The same Luka Doncic who, according to ESPN’s Tim MacMahon, had “publicly and privately expressed extreme frustration” during the 2022-23 season.

    Team sources told ESPN at the time a “fear” existed that Doncic “could consider requesting a trade as soon as the summer of 2024 if Dallas doesn’t make significant progress by then”.

    Again, it is funny how quickly things can change.

    Luka Doncic is through to the NBA Finals. David Berding/Getty Images/AFPSource: AFP

    Now Dallas is just four games away from lifting the Larry O’Brien Trophy.

    Doncic, meanwhile, is on the verge of joining the likes of Nikola Jokic and Giannis Antetokounmpo as recent NBA champions who could have so easily become the latest superstars to force their way out as part of the league’s player empowerment era.

    Instead they stayed patient. Instead, they trusted their front offices to do right by them.

    Now both have rings to show for it. Soon, Doncic could too.

    “He’d like to be here the whole time,” Mavericks co-owner Cuban told ESPN at the time.

    “But we’ve got to earn that.”

    Dallas did just that at this year’s trade deadline, making a pair of strategic moves to build around Doncic, having already put the perfect co-star next to him in Irving.

    But not everyone believed Irving was the ideal fit, with one ESPN writer giving the trade a ‘D’ grade — and Irving hasn’t forgotten it.

    The Luka Doncic, Kyrie Irving partnership has paid off. Stephen Maturen/Getty Images/AFPSource: AFP

    There has been plenty written about the eight-time All-Star over the years and with time, Irving has found his own way of dealing with that reality.

    “All the stories and narratives are going to exist forever,” he told reporters after Dallas clinched its NBA Finals berth.

    “I’m sure I’ll hear it until I retire. But again, this is what comes with this industry.”

    It doesn’t mean Irving isn’t allowed to have a little bit of fun with it though. He has a folder in his phone, exclusively for memes — and there is one that is particularly satisfying to look back at.

    “ESPN gave us a grade D for the trade of me coming here,” Irving said after a 109-95 win over Atlanta, which secured Dallas’ spot in the playoffs.

    “I think us clinching a playoff spot and putting ourselves in a great position definitely answers some of those questions that were asked last season by some of the naysayers and all of that stuff.”

    Some of the naysayers pointed to on-court concerns, questioning whether Irving and Doncic would be just the latest example of two ball-dominant superstars failing to co-exist.

    Most, however, were more worried by the off-court distractions, cautious to completely buy into the idea of an Irving and Doncic backcourt given the way things ended in Boston and Brooklyn.

    And there was a chance things could end even more abruptly in Dallas given Irving was a chance of becoming an unrestricted free agent after just a few months with the Mavericks.

    In other words, Dallas were gambling on giving up Spencer Dinwiddie, Dorian Finney-Smith and an unprotected 2029 first-round pick for a short-term rental.

    Trading for Kyrie Irving was a risk. David Berding/Getty Images/AFPSource: AFP

    “This is a pretty high risk move for Dallas,” Trey Kerby said on the ‘No Dunks’ podcast for The Athletic at the time.

    “The Mavs could either have four seasons of the best backcourt in the league. Kyrie Irving and Luka Doncic. Are you kidding? That’s incredible.

    “Or they could have six months of that, flame out in the playoffs and then Kyrie goes to the Lakers.

    “Or they could completely alienate their star who is supposed to be the saviour of the franchise after Dirk Nowitzki left by bringing in a combustible second star who may not totally want to be there long-term, leaving Luka even more barren and alone in Dallas.

    “All three of those are really on the table here for Dallas.”

    Fortunately for Dallas, it ended up being the first option as Irving re-signed on a three-year, $126 million deal and formed what Stan Van Gundy described as “arguably the best offensive backcourt in the history of the NBA”.

    Irving has been the perfect sidekick, if that is even the right word for what he has been doing these playoffs, averaging 22.8 points, 3.9 rebounds and 5.2 assists while shooting 42.1 per cent from deep.

    He has been playing the best postseason defence in his career too and that has been bringing the best out of Doncic, who has also been much-improved on that side of the floor.

    Doncic stars as Mavs go 3-0 over Wolves | 00:50

    “Those two worked at it,” Mavericks coach Jason Kidd said.

    “It just didn’t happen overnight. That’s a beautiful thing. It’s alright to be wrong. We’re not always right. But it’s a beautiful combination.

    “Those two play off each other. You can see that they care about one another. They’re in competition with each other on who’s playing the best defence and that’s kind of cool to see because when you used to look at Kai and Luka, a lot of times we’re not known for our defensive guys but they’re competing.”

    More than anything though, even if it is a simplistic way of looking at it, the most important thing is that, finally, Irving is just playing basketball.

    And that hasn’t always been a guarantee with Irving, who was both a walking human highlight reel on the court and walking human headline off it during his time at Brooklyn.

    In his final season, it was the refusal to get vaccinated for Covid-19, which saw him miss two-thirds of the season, and the promotion of a video that shared anti-Semitic views.

    Even on the court Irving wasn’t a stranger to drama, stomping on the Celtics logo in his second game back at TD Garden and flipping off fans who yelled explicit chants at him.

    “Kyrie Irving has been great. He came to Dallas and there’s no drama there. We haven’t heard anything out of him,” Dan Patrick said this week on his show.

    “And that’s good, because we do just want to see him play basketball. The other stuff, the off-the-court stuff, if he revisits that when he’s done, great.

    “I like to see a player who has that much talent to be back on the big stage again, and he’s been through an awful lot. But at 32, all the sudden you look around and go ‘this isn’t going to last much longer, how do I want to be remembered?’

    “Does he care about how he wants to be remembered? But when he does play, when he wants to play, he’s remarkable. Was Dallas desperate? Maybe.

    “But Mark Cuban was not afraid to take a chance. Kyrie had to respect Luka, had to respect Jason Kidd. He had to be willing to be a great team player and realise that you’re not going to be the guy.

    “He had to be a bit submissive to Luka, because it’s Luka’s team. And Kyrie has done a wonderful job.”

    Luka Doncic and Kyrie Irving have brought out the best in each other. (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    A frank Irving admitted he “wasn’t my best self” during his time at Boston, but equally told reporters this week there could have been “a little bit more grace extended my way”.

    “Especially with what I was dealing with during that time as a human being,” he added.

    It also seems like Irving has come to terms with the fact that no matter what he does and no matter what he says, people are always going to have opinions on him — another sign of the 32-year-old’s growth since his Boston days.

    “When you’re in a professional environment such as this and you can only be judged by your on-court performances and what people say off the court, and they don’t know who you are, I think that’s a little unfair,” Irving said.

    “But that’s the life we live in and life is just not fair all the time. I just stopped being a kid towards this industry and just grew up and grew wings. I just developed a mentality to be able to brush off a lot of that stuff.”

    Celtics sweep Pacers to reach NBA Finals | 01:17

    Of course, as much as Irving has obviously helped lift the ceiling of this team, any discussion on Dallas’ charge to the NBA Finals has to involve the moves it made around the margins.

    Starting with the trade deadline acquisitions of Daniel Gafford and P.J. Washington, who bolstered the Mavericks’ frontcourt after an underwhelming start to the season.

    It can be easy to forget that Dallas had a 29-23 record before the deadline, ranking just 22nd in defensive rating, 12th in offence and 17th in net rating.

    A lot of that came back to Irving and Doncic not being healthy, missing 22 and eight games respectively.

    But either way, provided the superstar duo were on the court when it mattered most, it was still clear that the Mavericks needed more — especially on the defensive end.

    Adding Washington gave Dallas a disruptive defender and extra scoring option, with the former Hornet coming up clutch in the playoffs with a number of big-time shots in big-time moments.

    P.J. Washington has been a welcome addition. (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Gafford, meanwhile, eased the pressure on rookie Lively II to perform right away while his effective rim protection proved particularly important against the Minnesota frontcourt.

    Beyond Gafford and Washington, Derrick Jones Jr. has proven a shrewd free agency pick-up after Dallas signed him to a veteran’s minimum one-year deal in the summer.

    Even coach Kidd, meanwhile, deserves plenty of credit after being questioned for his rotations in the regular season before finding a formula that helped Dallas to a 22-9 record after the trade deadline and, now, an NBA finals appearance.

    Of course, it goes without saying that the Mavericks wouldn’t be in this position without Doncic, who ranks first for points, rebounds, assists, steals, field goals, 3-pointers and free throws this playoffs.

    DOMINANT DONCIC (Playoffs)

    Points: 489 (1st)

    Rebounds: 164 (1st)

    Assists: 150 (1st)

    Steals: 28 (1st)

    FG: 166 (1st)

    3-pt FG: 57 (1st)

    FT: 100 (1st)

    But everyone already knew Doncic was good. He was never the one holding this team back. In fact, the conversation was always about how the Mavericks were holding him back.

    Now, nothing is holding Doncic and Dallas back from winning the team’s first championship in 13 years and like reigning champions Denver, there is something to be said about the way the Mavericks patiently waited, knowing with the right pieces, they could reach this point.

    It took a bit of time for the Doncic-Irving backcourt combination to flourish too but now, as Gafford put it after Dallas’ series-sealing win over Minnesota, we are witnessing “greatness”.

    “In all honesty, I’d say it’s the patience when it comes to just being around each other,” Gafford said.

    “When I was first seeing the trade when Kyrie got here, they said, ‘Oh, him and Luka is not going to work’. They’re working pretty good together right now, if I do say so myself.

    “So whoever said that, they obviously need to go get their eyes checked. Just watching it, to me, it’s just greatness.”



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