Tag: trade saga

  • Clear No.1 plus shock riser nobody saw coming as contender falls from grace: NBA Power Rankings

    Clear No.1 plus shock riser nobody saw coming as contender falls from grace: NBA Power Rankings

    We’re six weeks into the NBA season in one of the most even title races in recent history… barring one clear standout.

    It’s come amid a host of big improvers in an exciting new era of stars, while several other sides have disappointed.

    Read on for the latest NBA Power Rankings. All records/numbers accurate as of Thursday night AEDT.

    Watch an average of 9 NBA Regular Season games per week LIVE on ESPN, available via Kayo. Join Kayo now and start streaming instantly >

    What are the Power Rankings? This is our attempt to rank every NBA team from best to worst. We take wins and losses into account, but also the quality of opposition faced and whether teams are likely to get healthier or improve going forward. It’s a little bit ‘who’s hot and who’s not’; part predictive, part analysis of what’s happened. If Team A is above Team B, we’d probably tip A to beat B at a neutral venue.

    Every NBA team analysed in our Power Rankings.Source: FOX SPORTS

    1. BOSTON CELTICS (14-4)

    Who else but? Continuing on from last campaign’s dominant regular season, the Celtics appear to have gotten even stronger with the additions of Kristaps Porzingis and Jrue Holiday. Integrating such key pieces to a rotation can take time for teams to adjust, but not Boston, having posted a top eight offensive rating and top three defensive rating. Still undefeated at home, the Celtics’ +9.6 point differential is the best in the league. Not only do they have top-line stars, most notably Jayson Tatum, who’s having another MVP-calibre season, but Joe Mazulla’s rotation is arguably the deepest and most talented in the NBA. It’ll help them mitigate injuries (provided they don’t come at the business end of the season). Can anyone stop them? The clear best team in the league right now.

    2. DENVER NUGGETS (13-6)

    The reigning champs have been in cruise control in the early parts of the season, while Jamal Murray has been limited to eight games due to a hamstring injury … yet they still sit second in the West standings at 13-6 and have a top 10 offensive and defensive rating. It included a particularly strong start to the season before the Nuggets hit a lean patch, dropping four of five games as their less experience and depth compared to last season showed. But a road win over the Clippers on the second half of a back-to-back without Murray, Nikola Jokic and Aaron Gordon displayed championship DNA at its finest and would build huge belief in the second unit and team as a whole. Jokic remains out-of-this-world good as the current frontrunner for the MVP in what’d be his third overall. Oh and they’re also the only other team still unbeaten at home.

    ‘Wait a minute!’ Smith blasts ‘idiots’ | 02:01

    3. MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES (13-4)

    One of the big surprise packages so far, Minnesota is emerging as a legitimate contender before our eyes. In fact, it’s the Wolves we thought we were getting last season after three-time Defensive Player of the Year winner Rudy Gobert joined the team, as his twin tower frontcourt pairing with Karl Anthony-Towns is starting to flourish. Sitting first in the West with the best defensive rating in the entire NBA – built around Gobert, and great size and flexibility that’s really troubled opposition – the Wolves have taken the leap into the top tier of teams. Then there’s the Anthony Edwards piece, with the star guard evolving into a MVP-level superstar that plays both ends of the floor and has a certain dog and killer instinct about him that reminds you of some of the game’s all-time greats.

    4. MILWAUKEE BUCKS (13-5)

    The new-look Bucks are starting to figure things out – and that’s a scary prospect for the rest of the NBA. After a slow start, Milwaukee has won eight of its last nine games and is beginning to live up to the hype after recruiting Damian Lillard to join forces with Giannis Antetokounmpo and create one of the most dominant one-two offensive punches in the NBA. Though the Bucks have the fourth-best offence in the league, there’s still issues at the other end of the floor, with a bottom 10 defensive rating. Brook Lopez is starting to rediscover his dominant defensive form from last season, but misses having Jrue Holiday out on the perimeter, while Khris Middleton is still ramping up to full health after off-season knee surgery. If they can make improvements on the defensive end to at least be middle of the road, the Nuggets showed last season you don’t necessarily need to have an elite defence to win it all. Could they simply score their way to a title?

    5. PHILADLEPHIA 76ERS (12-6)

    Couldn’t have navigated the James Harden trade saga much better. It was addition by subtraction for the Sixers, with Harden’s departure paving the way for Tyrese Maxey to evolve into a superstar – even if he’s cooled off from his epic early-season heights – while Joel Embiid continues to do Joel Embiid things. The star centre has also improved as a facilitator, averaging a career-best 6.6 assists per game. Philly also added a host of handy role players in the Harden trade plus assets it could use to recruit another star by the trade deadline. They sit top four in the East and have the second-best points differential (+8.7) in the NBA, having shown a ruthlessness to really crush teams. Nick Nurse’s team has the second-best offence – playing with more movement and freedom than last season – to go with a top 10 defence. A team with all the tools to make another deep playoff run.

    6. ORLANDO MAGIC (13-5)

    The other shock riser – and this one has been even more unexpected – including riding a current seven-game winning streak. Orlando was seen as a fun, budding team on the rise, but not many could’ve predicted Jamahl Mosley’s side would be this good, this fast. The Magic have the third-best record in the East and their improvement has largely come behind a more robust defence – currently the second-best in the league. They simply have guys who compete hard every game like Jalen Suggs and Cole Anthony, while Paolo Banchero has taken his game to new heights alongside co-star Franz Wagner, an elite running partner who’s still somehow underrated. Joe Ingles has also provide invaluable leadership and stability off the bench. The Magic, who’ve taken down arguably the best two teams in the NBA in Boston and Denver, have done all of this with Markelle Fultz missing most of the season with a knee injury!

    Booker torches the Garden with dagger 3 | 00:37

    7. PHOENIX SUNS (11-6)

    The Suns are coming. Despite Bradley Beal being restricted to three games due to a back issue and Devin Booker also battling injury, they’re still sitting in the upper echelon of the always competitive West. Kevin Durant has wound the clock back to look like… well, prime Kevin Durant, while Booker too has had some monster performances top really ascend his status to the top-line superstars. What’s also been encouraging is how recruits Eric Gordon and Grayson Allen have stepped up with more opportunities and Jusuf Nurkic might have found his perfect landing spot. It’s the defensive end of the floor where there’s still some issues, but sitting 11-6 despite their new big three having never played together yet and there’s huge reason for optimism in the Valley of the Sun.

    Giddey starts for OKC amid investigation | 00:50

    8. OKLAHOMA CITY THUNDER (11-6)

    Another big improver and team that looks genuinely ready to contend, perhaps slightly ahead of its time. OKC is ranked top seven both offensively and defensively and doesn’t seem to fear anyone. The impact of former Pick 2 Chet Holmgren has been significant, with the gun big man emerging as the unlikely frontrunner for Rookie of the Year over Victor Wembanyama, while Shai Gilgeous-Alexander continues to be crazy good to back up his breakout 2022/23 season. Mark Daigneault is generally getting better production across the board from the likes of Jalen Williams and Isaiah Joe, allowing him to be more flexible with his line-ups. The hovering allegations about Josh Giddey have been the only real downside amid an indifferent start to the season for the Aussie, but there’s so much to like about what the Thunder are doing. And all of this with a mountain of draft picks at their disposal to upgrade the roster when they see fit. Look out.

    9. DALLAS MAVERICKS (11-6)

    The forgotten contender in the arms race following last season’s big disappointment, even after they acquired Kyrie Irving. But Luka Doncic looks like a man on a mission – with a better roster around him including a barrage of three-point shooters. It’s the offensive end of the floor where Dallas has really excelled – boasting the No.3 offensive rating – while they do have a ways to improve defensively to be taken more seriously as a legit contender. But the Doncic-Irving duo has proven to be a real handful, plus in Dereck Lively II the Mavericks have a promising big man for the first time in several years. It’d be nice to see more consistency from Josh Green, though the Aussie remains an important member of the rotation and has had some bright moments.

    Kings topple Warriors for Group C throne | 00:57

    10. SACRAMENTO KINGS (10-7)

    The beam is starting to come alight. After a 2-4 start to the campaign where the Kings looked like a big regression contender, they’ve rediscovered their spark, going 8-2 over their last 10 games including 4-2 over a recent road trip. The offence from last season is starting to come back too, led by De’Aaron Fox amid a spectacular start to the season from the star guard, who’s averaged a career-best 3.1 three-pointers per game. And Mike Brown’s team has improved at the other end of the floor to become middle-of-the-road defensively. Keegan Murray hasn’t quite taken the second-year leap in what could really propel the Kings to another level, which might be more likely to come in the forward’s third season.

    11. LA LAKERS (11-8)

    It’s been an up and down start to the season for the Lakers — and perhaps they’re ultimately not the contenders we thought they were amid a host of other Western Conference sides improving. While it’s still early days, LA has had issues at both ends of the floor — mainly the offensive end (ranked bottom three in three-point shooting) — as Darvin Ham works through finding his best line-ups after a few off-season changes to the roster. They’ve also been affected by injury and have struggled on the road (3-6). Beyond Anthony Davis and LeBron James, who’s still freakishly good at near age 39, there’s a lack of other consistent production, even if D’Angelo Russell has bounced back from a disappointing playoff series, while Austin Reaves hasn’t had the breakout season come expected in year three and has been moved to the bench.

    LeBron suffers WORST loss in NBA career | 00:51

    12. CLEVELAND CAVALIERS (10-8)

    The Cavs have overcome a slow start to the season to get on a roll in recent times, having won six of their last eight games. We frankly haven’t seen Cleveland at full strength enough yet this season to get a real grasp of where this team is at – a team that finished top four in the East last season. The core remains as talented as some of the top sides and the addition of Max Strus has been a big win to add much-needed three-point shooting on the wing. The Caves don’t really want for anything, though there’s question marks of whether the Even Mobley-Jarrett Allen frontcourt is viable long-term given the spacing issues. It comes in an important juncture and season at large for the franchise as it’ll be hoping to convince Donovan Mitchell to stick around long-term, in one of the potential trade narratives to keep an eye on.

    13. NEW YORK KNICKS (10-7)

    When it’s all clicking for the Knicks, they’re a strong unit. Jalen Brunson proved last season was no aberration, backing up his breakout campaign to again lead this team, while Julius Randle and RJ Barrett haven’t been quite as consistent even though the latter has shown an improved three-point stroke. New York does have a top-five ranked defence and the 11th-best offence, but Tom Thibodeau’s squad has struggled against the best teams in the league. From that perspective, how far can a Brunson-Randle-Barrett trio go — even with an improved roster around them? Might be one big move away from seriously contending.

    Knicks stun Heat with comeback in NY | 01:16

    14. INDIANA PACERS (9-7)

    With Tyrese Haliburton in this kind of form, anything might be possible. Haliburton is putting together an All-NBA level season, averaging stupidly good numbers across the board (25.9 points on 51 per cent shooting, 3.8 triples and 11.9 assists per game). It’s been key to the team’s promising 9-7 start to the season, with claim to the league’s No.1 offensive rating while averaging 127 points per game. It’s completely opened the Pacers up defensively though …and where’s Haliburton’s help coming from? Myles Turner’s minutes are down, while Rick Carlisle seemingly can’t decide if he wants to develop Benedict Mathurin as a starter or just play veteran sharpshooter Buddy Hield heavy minutes, with the latter more of a win-now move. Bruce Brown has been a handy addition, but he’s more a role player than anything. Another team to watch ahead of the trade deadline.

    15. MIAMI HEAT (10-8)

    Another team that’s hard to figure out, albeit hampered by injuries, As if coming off an NBA Finals appearance as the eighth seed didn’t already make it tricky enough! The Heat have at least navigated the majority of the opening weeks without star guard Tyler Herro, who looked set for a huge breakout season as Miami’s leading scorer, and they’ve clearly missed his offence. The good has been good — including a seven-game winning streak and Bam Adebayo rolling in a career-best season to take on the mantle as Miami’s alpha. But the bad has been bad — opening the campaign 1-4 and currently in the midst of a three-game losing streak, while there’s question marks of the team’s depth.

    16. NEW ORLEANS PELICANS (10-9)

    One of the biggest enigmas in the NBA … are still an enigma? There’s been some good and some bad — including a five-game losing streak — and they’ve all-round just been an average side. It’s a somewhat disappointing return for a franchise that spent parts of last season as the No.1 seed in the West and could be so much more with Zion Williamson. But the former No.1 pick hasn’t yet lived up to expectations and has appeared frustrated at times with how the team is going and his role. Frankly, we haven’t seen Williamson, Brandon Ingram and CJ McCollum on the court together enough to get a proper gauge of how good they can be. McCollum’s lung injury did open the door for Dyson Daniels to play more minutes though and show a glimpse of the Aussie young gun’s promising future.

    17. LA CLIPPERS (8-9)

    Still adjusting to life with James Harden, the Clippers might’ve worked things out. After starting the Harden era 0-5, Tyronn Lue’s side has since won five of its last seven games as it starts to move up the West standings. There were always to be growing pains with Harden and a need to fine-tune rotations, which has ultimately seen Russell Westbrook move to the bench. Well, over their last six games, the Clippers have the best defensive rating in the league, while Harden is coming off his best game yet as a Clipper with a season-high 26 points, five triples and five steals. Paul George’s hot start to the season hasn’t been talked about enough too amid the team’s struggles.

    18. GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS (8-10)

    It’s hard to know what to make of Golden State at times and how much we judge Steve Kerr’s team on reputation. Some predicted the addition of Chris Paul would take the Warriors to the next level, but right now they’re sitting just inside the Play-In qualification. It’s been the same story as last season — they rely too much on Steph Curry, Klay Thompson has been inconsistent and unreliable, Draymond Green has been engulfed in drama and the young players haven’t stepped up (but haven’t necessarily had opportunities to). Andrew Wiggins has meanwhile fallen off a cliff to leave a big scoring void, but Kerr doesn’t quite seem prepared yet to pass the baton to the next crop. They’ve gone 2-8 in their last 10 games and Paul has already suffered his first injury setback of the season.

    Curry tops Wemby in battle of the stars | 01:11

    19. HOUSTON ROCKETS (8-8)

    Ime Uodka has done some sort of job in his first 16 games as Rockets coach. A team considered a potential improver looks like a genuine playoff team. It’s been a bit of a seesaw — with revolving winning and losing streaks — but this team is highly disciplined defensively, helped by the addition of Dillon Brooks, is deep and has beaten reigning champion Denver twice. Having an established point guard in Fred VanVleet has provided more overall structure and Alpereen Sengun looks like a mini Jokic in a brilliant breakout season from the 21-year old centre. And to think the Rockets tried — and failed — to land Brook Lopez in the off-season in what would’ve almost certainly prevented Sengun from doing what he’s doing now. A really impressive start in H-Town in a big tick overall. Now just to replicate their home form (8-1) on the road (0-7) — and more Jock Landale too please!

    20. ATLANTA HAWKS (8-9)

    One thing you can count on with Atlanta — it’s going to score in bunches. The Hawks have the No. 5 offensive rating this season while averaging 122.5 points per game — trailing only Indiana — driven by Trae Young and Dejounte Murray. Jalen Johnson’s emergence has offset John Collins’ departure, and so the forward’s injury leaves a big hole in Quin Snyder’s streamlined rotation — that has featured Patty Mills for all of five total minutes this season. After a promising start to the season, the Hawks have gone 2-5 over their last seven games, so they have a few things to figure out ahead of tough upcoming schedule including playing Milwaukee, Philadelphia and Denver in their next five games. Clint Capela and Onyeka Okongwu remain locked in a minutes split at centre, but you sense it’s only a matter of time before Okongwu is given full rein.

    21. BROOKLYN NETS (9-8)

    The Nets have managed to keep their head above water despite battling a host of injuries to the likes of Ben Simmons, Nic Claxton, Cameron Johnson and Cam Thomas. Considering the amount of changes to the line-up, Brooklyn would be happy to currently be sitting ninth in the East including currently riding a three-game winning streak. The team has also had the sixth-toughest schedule in the league, according to ESPN’s Basketball Power Index, while Mikal Bridges hasn’t quite had the breakout season some anticipated yet. With all that in mind, there’s a fair bit of upside when — or if — the Nets get fully healthy.

    22. TORONTO RAPTORS (9-10)

    Offence has been the main concern for the Raptors — in particular their bottom-five ranked three-point shooting. As good as Scottie Barnes has been in a breakout season from the forward, it’s hard to get a grasp of this team’s identity. One game it’s Barnes leading the charge, the next it’s Pascal Siakam, while OG Anunoby has struggled amongst it all and Jakob Poeltl has been used sparingly despite costing the team a first-round pick and getting a juicy contract extension. Could they be sellers at the deadline? Dennis Schroder has at least enjoyed a strong season as the team’s new point guard to get back to some of his best form of years past.

    23. UTAH JAZZ (6-12)

    Lauri Markkanen is doing everything he can, but fair to say this season hasn’t started nearly well as last for the young Jazz. You could see it going either way in Utah — but it’s been tough goings for Will Hardy and company. After struggling in the opening games before getting injured, Walker Kessler now finds himself coming off the bench, though that should change soon, while Keyonte George has moved into the starting line-up in Hardy’s bid for more playmaking and movement in that opening five. The Jazz however still have major issues at both ends of the floor, and at some stage, they’ll need to commit to a path of either competing for the playoffs or rebuilding, as right now it feels like they’re trying do both but failing to achieve anything.

    24. CHARLOTTE HORNETS (5-11)

    Just when the Hornets were starting to turn their season around, the near worst possible thing happened – LaMelo Ball suffered another setback to his troublesome ankle that required surgery earlier this year. At full strength, Charlotte has a solid roster that could contend for the playoffs, but it hasn’t had all its key pieces on the floor together at once, with Ball central to everything. Controversial forward Miles Bridges has taken no time to get up to speed since returning from suspension, and now he and Terry Rozier in particular will need to take on a much bigger load with the Hornets’ franchise superstar sidelined for the next several weeks.

    25. CHICAGO BULLS (5-14)

    If it wasn’t already clear, it’s time to blow it up. Things are a mess for the Bulls right now — a team built to win now is a ways off and is sitting all the way down as the Eastern Conference 13th seed amid a five-game losing streak — including dropping eight of their last nine. If Chicago’s situation doesn’t improve, which, right now, it’s hard to see how it does, expect one — or both — of Zach LaVine and DeMar DeRozan to be wearing a different jersey by the trade deadline. At least then Chicago can start building with a new nucleus, because the current one is stuck in NBA purgatory — where no team wants to be.

    26. PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS (5-12)

    Going according to script after the Damian Lillard trade as the Blazers prioritise developing their emerging crop of youngsters including Shaedon Sharpe and Scoot Henderson, who should eventually take over the starting point guard job. Portland recently snapped an eight-game losing streak, with its offence the key area letting it down. Anfernee Simons having only played one game due to a thumb injury clearly hasn’t helped. Elsewhere, Aussie duo Matisse Thybulle and Duop Reath are getting more opportunities in the rotation to show their worth, with the former’s defensive prowess again proving valuable.

    27. MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES (4-13)

    When is Ja Morant free to return again? It’s the question the Grizzlies would be repeatedly asking themselves amid a grim 4-13 start to the season as perhaps the most disappointing team. Because sure, having no Morant for over a quarter of the season is significant, but the Grizzlies have looked like a lottery team without him. It includes the Griz being ranked dead last in three-point shooting with the second-worst rated offence. Unlike Desmond Bane, Jaren Jackson Jr. has struggled to step up with extra offensive opportunities. And as if it couldn’t get any worse, Marcus Smart is now sidelined for the next several weeks after suffering a nasty ankle injury. They did finally end their 0-8 winless drought at home — the last team to do so — after beating Utah on Thursday.

    28. SAN ANTONIO SPURS (3-14)

    The Spurs are probably lucky they’re not even lower (not that there’s much scope). But it’s been the very definition of growing pains and teething issues for the rebuilding team in welcoming Victor Wembanyama into its young core despite the No.1 pick’s sensational start to his career. San Antonio is in the midst of a 12-game losing streak to sit dead last in the West, while its -12.9 point difference is the worst in the NBA. Maybe expectations were simply set too high amid the hype around ‘Wemby’ — but just because they’re not playing well doesn’t mean their future isn’t bright. The Spurs are simply in experiment and trial and error mode — so even a Play-In appearance feels unlikely right now. Devin Vassell missing five games due to an adductor injury hasn’t helped their cause.

    Spurs fall short despite Wemby heroics | 00:51

    29. WASHINGTON WIZARDS (3-15)

    Not that the Wizards were expected to be any good this season, but it’s probably been even worse than imagined, with Kyle Kuzma the sole shining light. It took for Washington to play the Pistons to end a nine-game losing streak and pick up its fifth overall win nearing the quarter-way mark of the season. Jordan Poole and Tyus Jones have underwhelmed, though neither have played big minutes amid some curious rotation decisions from Wes Unseld Jr. Ranked bottom 10 at both ends of the floor, the Wizards are officially in all-out tank mode and could be sellers ahead of the trade deadline.

    30. DETROIT PISTONS (2-16)

    Perhaps the most alarming thing is that the Pistons started the season 2-1 and looked like a sneaky improver! Well, they’ve since lost 15 on the trot to hold the worst record in the NBA, with the eighth-worst defence and fourth-west offence. This is a team some thought could start climbing the standings after spending years going to the draft. But Detroit is still behind newer rebuilding teams like Portland, San Antonio and Washington, while Monty Williams can barely figure out his rotation and which players will help take this franchise forward. Having Cade Cunningham back has been important and rookie Ausar Thompson and second-year centre Jalen Duren have both impressed, but it looks set to be another long season in the Motor City — even if Bojan Bogdanovic’s imminent return will help.

    Source link

  • Four burning questions after blockbuster Harden trade as Clippers face terrifying reality

    Four burning questions after blockbuster Harden trade as Clippers face terrifying reality

    The drawn out James Harden saga has reached its conclusion, with the 10-time All-Star guard traded from Philadelphia to the LA Clippers for an assortment of players and picks.

    It ends a standoff dating back to June when Harden first asked to be traded amid friction with Sixers president Daryl Morey including the 34-year old calling Morey a “liar.”

    “The war is over,” one source close to the situation told Yahoo Sports.

    Watch an average of 9 NBA Regular Season games per week LIVE on ESPN, available via Kayo. Join Kayo now and start streaming instantly >

    Harden has been traded to the Clippers (Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images)Source: AFP

    So what does it all mean for Harden, the two teams involved and NBA at large? Does it influence the championship race?

    Right now there’s more questions than anything in one of the more intriguing NBA trade narratives in recent history.

    Foxsports.com.au runs through the big questions that need answering in the fallout from the blockbuster move.

    COULD PHILLY HAVE GOTTEN MORE?

    In short, probably not, especially considering the Sixers essentially came away better from this deal than Portland did for Jrue Holiday.

    Talks that have been on and off since July, Philly ultimately received Marcus Morris, Nic Batum, Robert Covington and KJ Martin, a 2028 unprotected first-round pick, two-second round picks and a pick swap all tied to the Clippers and a 2026 protected first-round pick tied to OKC (worst of the Thunder’s three first-rounders).

    The Thunder’s contribution netted them a 2027 first-round pick swap with the Clippers.

    Confused yet?

    Some might look at this deal on the surface and think the Sixers got unders for Harden, largely due to the fact that they didn’t get any significant player back in the package.

    After all, we’re talking about a former MVP winner and multi-time All-Star, All-NBA player and scoring champion who featured in the NBA’s top 75 players of all-time.

    Yet seemingly, there’s no obvious name that can come across and help the Sixers win now – and a team that’s priority is to do so.

    The Sixers’ had reportedly longed for Terance Mann, who’s frankly far from star status, to be included in the deal, though the Clippers weren’t willing to oblige in a showing of how much Harden’s value has diminished.

    The Sixers were keen on Clipper Terrance Mann (Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images)Source: AFP

    “From everything that I’ve been told, this was not a package trade that Daryl Morey wanted. This was a trade that was made essentially by the Philadelphia 76ers ownership. They had told Daryl Morey to get a deal done now!,” senior NBA reporter Vince Goodwill said on the Ball Don’t Lie podcast.

    The reality was that the Clippers were never going to get anything more than role players and picks for Harden.

    For one, Harden has in recent years built a reputation of quitting on his teams, with the Clippers set to be his fourth side in as many seasons. He wanted out of both Brooklyn and Philadelphia after short stints at both stops.

    There’s also at times been questions of Harden’s professionalism as a difficult personality for teams to manage. In a similar vein to Kyrie Irving (though to a lesser degree), there’s the added off-court drama and thus baggage that comes with Harden.

    On court, he’s a ball dominant player that demands a big role on a team to be effective. At age 34, he really only fits in certain situations, and going through ever team in the league and there’s not many obvious landing spots.

    He clearly doesn’t make sense for a rebuilding team, and those in contention either essentially don’t need a player like Harden to mess with their chemistry or are already settled in the backcourt.

    Clippers smash the Spurs in L.A. | 00:48

    There’s also his shortcomings in the playoffs over the years, where, despite having a 85-75 record in the post-season, Harden has never played in the NBA Finals.

    All these factors surrounding a veteran player in his twilight years on a maximum $35 million expiring deal, which essentially makes him a one-season rental, and it’s understandable why it was largely the Clippers in the conversation (who themselves don’t make total sense).

    So while only time will tell what happens from here, the Sixers seemingly did the best they could out of an ugly situation.

    WHAT’S NEXT FOR THE SIXERS?

    It leads to the next point – can Philadelphia, as constructed, contend for the title? Or could they look to make further moves?

    This of course was a Philly team that finished third in the East last season with 54 wins and was considered one of the prime contenders despite falling considerably short in the playoffs.

    While it seemingly came out of nowhere, some reports have stated the Sixers felt pressed to finally pull the trigger on a Harden trade after the team’s hot start to the season under the lead of breakout superstar Tyrese Maxey, who was named Eastern Conference Player of the Week and the franchise has gone all in on.

    There’s very much a new big two in Philadelphia in Maxey and Joel Embiid.

    It could be argued this bought Philly more time with Harden to ensure it made the right trade, but it also created a greater urgency for the team to avoid anything that could tamper with its promising 2-1 start, with Harden the elephant in the room as he neared a return to the court.

    Harden was essentially a black hole in their roster until that happened, and regardless, there needed to be a resolution at some stage for the best of all parties (remind you of a recent similar situation?).

    Embiid and Maxey are Philadelphia’s new big two (Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images/AFP)Source: AFP

    And yes, the Sixers didn’t get anything star player in return, but bring in pieces that can help them around periphery and round out Nick Nurse’s rotation.

    “This is all about Philly in my mind. Philadelphia got better. Did they getter to the point where they’re looking Boston and Milwaukee in the eye? Probably not, they’re probably on that next tier. But to me, this is the third best team in the Eastern Conference,” former NBA player Tim Legler said on ESPN.

    “Because of Joel Embiid and we are finally getting a taste of the ceiling of Tyrese Maxey. If you’re not watching Tyrese Maxey every night and thinking you are watching a star payer in the making, then you don’t really know the game, because that’s what he is.

    “There’s another element to this. James Harden was a guy that dramatically affected Joel Embiid’s demeanour, body language and frustration … the black cloud has been lifted from the Sixers organisation and they’re moving forward with Tyrese Maxey and Joel Embiid.

    “You’ve added supplemental parts that fit that roster better, I love this for Philly.”

    Giving Maxey a proper runway to continue his ascension and keeping Embiid happy – and committed to the team – are clearly the two biggest priorities for the Sixers. They simply couldn’t to waste a season of reigning MVP Embiid in his prime.

    They’ve likely achieved both those things and slightly improved with veteran role players plus picks to potentially use to target another star.

    Indeed, Philadelphia will reportedly try and flip the picks to build a contender around Maxey and Embiid – or as ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowki put it, go “star hunting” with their collection of assets – holding the type of capital Boston used to land Jrue Holiday.

    According to Sports Illustrated, the Sixers could target Chicago Bulls’ Zach LaVine and Toronto Raptors’ OG Anunoby, though neither – nor is any other big name – currently considered to be on the trade table.

    Also now with a host of expiring contracts – including all the players they acquired from the Clippers – the Sixers could have the most cap space of any team in the league next off-season.

    Philly could have as much as $55.6 million in cap space in 2024, though it comes with an expiration date given Maxey is due for a max contract that would see his $13 million cap hold push out to around $40 million.

    That comes ahead of a free agency class that will feature the likes of Pascal Siakam, Anunoby, Klay Thompson and DeMar DeRozan, while Kawhi Leonard, Paul George and Jrue Holday could also join that list.

    The timing of Maxey signing his deal could therefore be important if the Sixers do indeed try and land a big free agent.

    ARE CLIPPERS LEGIT CONTENDERS … OR IS THIS A LOOMING DISASTER?

    You can be glass half full or half empty on where this leaves the Clippers.

    On one side of things, you have to appreciate the team’s willingness to improve by putting another star next to Kawhi Leonard and Paul George given the team is very much in a win-now window.

    The Clippers went all in on this roster and hold little draft capital as a result, so why not swing for the fences?

    We’ve frankly rarely even seen this team healthy including in the playoffs, so the possibility of Leonard and George staying fit when it matters and Harden coming into that mix is appealing.

    Beyond their two superstars, the Clippers have long lacked other notable contributors in the Leonard-George era, with the approach of building the team out with depth largely not working.

    So while Harden mightn’t be the most obvious fit given he’s a third ball dominant star, the Clippers did need more useful and reliable pieces and their current squad likely wasn’t going to contend with the likes of Denver, Phoenix and the Lakers.

    For all the negative commentary surrounding Harden, he ranks top 50 in all-time winning percentage at 65.10 per cent (651-349), having averaged 24.7 points, 5.6 rebounds and seven assists across his career.

    He’s also consistently led his teams to deep enough playoff runs, even if they’ve never really challenged.

    Can the Clippers contend in the West (Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images/AFP)Source: AFP

    “The Clippers never appeared to waver much in their position either. Los Angeles wanted Harden. It wanted a creator and connective passer who could give Leonard and George their greatest chance to compete for a title since the duo teamed up in July 2019,” Yahoo Sports’ Jake Fischer.

    “The front office wanted a clear ceiling-raiser and a pure talent play, no matter the cost on the cap sheet, which holds the upside necessary to battle Nikola Jokić or Phoenix’s three-headed monster or anyone else.

    “It’s a pure zig from last season’s build, when the Clippers went in on depth and saw their 2022-23 effort pale in comparison to the true titans of the Western Conference.”

    Then there’s the viewpoint of: how is this going to work!? It’s almost like something straight out of a movie.

    The Clippers already have an ageing core of Leonard (32 years old), George (33) and Russell Westbrook (34) and have added the 34-year old Harden into the mix.

    Some thought they’d be best served cutting bait and trading Leonard and George while they could get something in return, but they’ve instead gone in the complete opposite direction.

    Again, adding a third superstar who requires the ball is also a peculiar move given the team was already loaded with guards and wings, so the dynamic of this team is a little confusing.

    Plus what does this mean for Westbrook who’d taken over as the starting point guard in the second half of last season?

    The Clippers are of course opening their new area in 2024, so there would’ve been commercial motivation to selling something sexy to fans.

    But there is a scenario where all four of their stars – Leonard, George, Harden and Westbrook – leave for nothing next off-season given they’re all eligible to become free agents.

    Leonard, George and Westbrook all have player options for the 2024/25 season they could yet opt into, while Harden will definitely be a free agent – with the quartet combing for $137 million (AUD $216m) in salary.

    That’d nothing short of a disaster for a team that already has one of, if not the, worst future draft hand of any in the NBA.

    WHY DID OKC GET INVOLVED?

    Just like how the Clippers didn’t want to give up Mann, the Sixers were adamant on getting another first-round pick in the deal.

    But it wasn’t going to come from the Clippers, so a third party had to get involved … enter OKC.

    As part of the trade, the Thunder will give up the worst of their three first-round picks in 2026 – their own, the Clippers’ or Houston’s.

    In return, the Thunder have the right to swap first rounders with the Clippers in 2027.

    So if you’re a Thunder fan, you’d be cheering loudly for a Clippers self destruction (as if getting Shai Gilgeous-Alexander from them wasn’t enough).

    As Thunder beat writer Brandon Rahbar noted on X, the team’s core (if still intact) of Gilgeous-Alexander, Josh Giddey, Chet Holmgren and Jalen Williams would by then all be entering their primes, while the Clippers’ current stars would be in their late 30s.

    Indeed, that pick swap could be anything in another shrewd play from Thunder general manager Sam Presti amid the team’s already unprecedented collection of draft selections.

    Of course, there’s a scenario where all the Clippers stars re-sign on mega extensions this off-season and they’re a force in the coming years and thus that pick swap having little pay off.

    But it’s the possibly of opening up a big win down the road – for very little cost – that is the clever stroke of genius here. It’s a luxury OKC, armed with a war chest of draft picks, could afford.

    “Very few NBA teams are willing to give away the certainty of a first-round pick for the mystery of a swap four years down the line. The Thunder have so many picks that they can afford to take such chances. It might not pay off, but imagine how terrifying it will be for the league if a Thunder team at the absolute peak of its powers in 2027 is able to add another top draft pick,” CBS Sports’ Sam Quinn wrote.

    “That is the flexibility Presti has given himself by accumulating all of these picks. Many of them will amount to little, but when weaponised properly, they can be used to do effectively anything. They can get him players. They can get him cap relief. And now, as we‘re seeing, they can even get him better picks down the line as well.”

    Source link

  • James Harden told to skip road trip after suddenly returning to 76ers with bags packed

    James Harden told to skip road trip after suddenly returning to 76ers with bags packed

    The James Harden soap opera has taken another twist.

    After skipping practices last week amid a trade demand, the star guard returned to the 76ers practice facility Thursday [AEDT], according to multiple reports.

    However, despite the 34-year-old showing up with his bags packed, the 76ers asked him not to travel for the team’s season-opening road trip to Milwaukee and Toronto, The Athletic’s Shams Charania reported.

    ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski reported the Sixers’ plan is for Harden to work out at the practice facility to get ready for games when the team returns home.

    Watch an average of 9 NBA Regular Season games per week LIVE on ESPN, available via Kayo. Join Kayo now and start streaming instantly >

    James Harden likely to miss 76ers opener | 00:48

    The Sixers start a five-game homestand Monday [AEDT] against the Trail Blazers, with their fourth game of the season not until next Friday [AEDT] against the Raptors.

    Harden exercised a $35.6 million option for this season, with the expectation that he would be traded. He has reportedly wanted to go to the Clippers.

    In August, Harden blasted 76ers president Daryl Morey, whom Harden worked with in Houston.

    “Daryl Morey is a liar and I will never be a part of an organisation that he’s a part of,” Harden said during an event in China.

    For the time being, however, it appears Harden will indeed remain with the 76ers.

    The 10-time All-Star averaged 21 points, 10.7 assists and 6.1 rebounds in 58 regular-season games last year with Philadelphia, who was bounced in the second round of the playoffs.

    Harden forced his way off the Rockets in 2021, getting traded to the Nets to form a Big 3 with Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving.

    A year later, Harden pushed for another trade and ended up with the 76ers, who dealt Ben Simmons to Brooklyn.

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

    Source link

  • Why trade saga will drag on as Harden declares he will play for 76ers but ‘lost trust’ in key figure

    Why trade saga will drag on as Harden declares he will play for 76ers but ‘lost trust’ in key figure

    Philadelphia 76ers star guard James Harden said his relationship with Sixers executive Daryl Morey cannot be repaired but he plans to play for the NBA club this coming season.

    The 34-year-old American, a three-time NBA scoring champion who led the league in assists last season, saw his relationship with team president of basketball operations Morey sour after he opted into a $35.6 million contract for the 2023-24 season.

    Harden made that decision expecting that he would be traded to the Los Angeles Clippers as he had requested but no deal materialized.

    Watch every game of the NBL season with ESPN on Kayo Sports. Join Kayo now and start streaming instantly >

    Big Ben deep in his bag once again! | 00:39

    “This is not even about this situation. This is in life,” Harden said in his first comments since rejoining the 76ers last week.

    “When you lose trust in someone, it’s like a marriage. You lose trust in someone. Know what I mean? It’s pretty simple.”

    Harden, the 2018 NBA Most Valuable Player and a 2012 Olympic gold medalist, was obtained by Morey from Oklahoma City 11 years ago when Morey was with the Houston Rockets.

    Morey departed the Rockets in 2020 for the 76ers and in January 2021 Harden was traded to the Brooklyn Nets, where he stayed for just over a year before being traded to the 76ers, reuniting him with Morey.

    “When I got traded here my whole thing is I wanted to retire a Sixer,” Harden said.

    “And the front office didn’t have that in their future plans.”

    Harden said that after years of good communication with the “front office,” there was only silence after the Sixers lost to Boston in last season’s Eastern Conference playoff semi-finals.

    “There was no communication once we lost,” he said.

    Harden called Morey a “liar” last August at an event in China and vowed not to be part of any organisation with him.

    James Harden said he will never play for the Philadelphia 76ers again while Daryl Morey remains the team’s general manager. (Photo by Tim Nwachukwu / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / AFP)Source: AFP

    But Harden says now he’s ready to play for the 76ers alongside NBA MVP Joel Embiid as the club tries to capture a championship.

    “I come in here today and work my butt off, do the things that are necessary as a professional, do what I’ve been doing for 15 years,” said Harden.

    “I can control what I can control. I take it one day at a time and focus on each day as a new day. My plan is to play basketball, yes, for sure.”

    For the time being that will be with the 76ers. NBA insider Adrian Wojnarowski said in a recent appearance on ESPN’s ‘NBA Today’ that a trade is not imminent.

    “The asking price this time of year for the players you might like to get to replace James Harden is going to be really high,” he said.

    “So there’s not great motivation in Philadelphia to think that a deal with the Clippers now gets them the best value they can get, the best player who might be available later in the year. And that’s why this may play out over time, especially if the Clippers are not going to up their offer and include a Terance Mann in the deal, who has been off the table in these talks so far. “[And the Clippers are] saying, ‘Listen, we’re not giving you two future first-round picks for a player in James Harden who might just be a one-year rental for us.’

    “But you’re the Clippers and you go, ‘We know we’ve made the best offer for James Harden. There’s not a great James Harden market out there.’

    “So that’s why this thing may be slow going well into the season.”

    Simmons FIRES for Nets in preseason game | 00:46

    Harden, a 10-time NBA All-Star, has averaged 24.7 points, 7.0 assists, 5.6 rebounds and 1.5 steals a game during his 14 NBA seasons.

    Harden played in the 2012 NBA Finals for Oklahoma City, when the Thunder lost to Miami and was voted the NBA Sixth Man of the Year as the league’s top reserve.

    He hasn’t made it back to the NBA Finals, losing twice with Houston to Golden State in the Western Conference finals. His teams lost in the Eastern Conference semi-finals the past three seasons.

    Source link

  • ’Dark horse’ team that could help Lillard trade; contenders linked to sharpshooter: NBA Rumour Mill

    ’Dark horse’ team that could help Lillard trade; contenders linked to sharpshooter: NBA Rumour Mill

    Portland Trail Blazers training camp begins on October 3 and for the time being all attention remains squarely fixated on the future of superstar point guard Damian Lillard.

    Lillard, who is still owed $216 million guaranteed over four years, requested a trade from Portland back in July after 11 seasons with the franchise.

    While the seven-time All-Star is not expected to hold out or be a no-show for training camp, Blazers coach Chauncey Billups admitted the situation is “unsettling” in an interview with NBA.com.

    The Heat have been linked to Lillard as his preferred trade partner, although there have long been doubts that Miami has the kind of package to entice Portland in a straight two-way deal.

    Watch every game of the NBL season with ESPN on Kayo Sports. Join Kayo now and start streaming instantly >

    When will Damian Lillard be traded? Steph Chambers/Getty Images/AFPSource: AFP

    In that sense, Portland has been said to be exploring potential multi-team deals and those talks have continued recently according to ESPN insider Adrian Wojnarowski.

    “Portland is trying to put together a number of multi-team scenarios to see what they can get the assets back in a trade for Damian Lillard,” Wojnarowski said this week.

    “They have been aggressive here in the last weeks… only because the league started up again. Labor Day comes, teams are engaging again. I do think they’re engaging. The question is do they find a deal in the next couple of weeks or do they have to bring Lillard back to camp?”

    That is consistent with reporting from Aaron Fentress of The Oregonian, who said there “hasn’t been great traction” between the Blazers and other teams on a potential trade.

    USA lose bronze medal match in OT | 00:57

    “They are talking to other teams in terms of trying to find another team who might give them an offer for Lillard, two other teams who might get involved might have nothing to do with Miami in a trade,” Fentress said on the Blazer Focused podcast.

    “And maybe Lillard goes to one of those teams that’s out there. I’m told that there’s not great traction in these areas, that they’re really not being wowed by anything that’s substantial.”

    According to Phoenix sports insider and radio broadcaster John Gambadoro, there could be a resolution to the trade saga very soon though.

    “Damian Lillard is going to get traded very soon… I’m expecting a Damian Lillard trade imminently,” Gambadoro said on Arizona Sports Radio.

    “I would even say probably within the next 24 hours, I am expecting from what I’m hearing, a Damian Lillard trade.”

    Any potential Lillard trade could also have a flow-on effect on the future of Suns big man Deandre Ayton, according to Gambadoro.

    Gambadoro took to X, formerly known as Twitter, to clear up speculation surrounding Ayton’s future at Phoenix.

    “Let me address some of the Deandre Ayton rumours. The Suns have not been willing to move DA all summer because they think he fits well and there were no offers that would change that. If Nurkic was on the table I would be surprised if the Suns didn’t look into it because an argument could be made that is an upgrade for Phx,” wrote Gambadoro.

    “This would be contingent on Dame being moved. Portland has previously shown no interest in DA but that was with Dame staying. If they do not have Dame on the roster they could very well want a young 25-year old to build around Vogel needs a defensive minded Center to build his defence around and Nurkic does fit that Mold. This would be contingent on a Lillard trade and I do expect that to happen very, very soon.”

    Germany win first ever World Cup title! | 01:19

    It comes amid a report from Gerald Bourguet of PHNX Sports, claiming Phoenix has been described as a “dark horse” team to help facilitate a Lillard trade.

    “While the Suns lack the assets and/or contracts to trade for Lillard or Harden themselves, one source referred to the Suns as a “mystery team” in regards to their potential involvement. Another called them a “dark horse” to help facilitate a deal as an additional party,” wrote Bourguet.

    “Talks are heating up around the league with teams like Portland, Miami, Philadelphia, Chicago and Toronto all very active right now. The Suns could be the mystery team needed to get some of these deals done per my conversations.”

    ESPN insider Brian Windhorst said on Behind The Play that Portland is “trying” to strike a deal and that there has been more movement on the Blazers’ front in the past week or so.

    “There is attempts to make something happen,” he said.

    “I think they’re making an attempt to try to resolve this before training camp. They may get there, they may not. To me the unknown really is where Scoot Henderson is on [this], I’ve said I’m interested in hearing what he says from day one.”

    CONTENDERS LINKED TO HIELD AFTER EXTENSION TALKS WITH PACERS STALL

    Elsewhere, in a more recent trade development, the Indiana Pacers are looking to move Buddy Hield after extension talks between the two parties stalled.

    That is according to a report from The Athletic’s Shams Charania, who claimed there have been talks about an extension to Hield’s $19.3 million contract for this season.

    “But it’s believed their proposal did not make the seven-year guard feel desired,” league sources told Charania.

    While any potential trade is only in its early stage at this point, Hield would be a valuable addition to any contending team after shooting 42.5 per cent from downtown last season.

    As Charania explained on ‘The Rally’, it is not just a case of Hield not getting the kind of extension he believes he deserves, with the 30-year-old also looking at a lesser role in the team.

    “I think you look at any contending team,” Charania said when asked which franchises could show interest in Hield.

    “The Lakers were long rumoured for Buddy Hield but you look at teams like Dallas, Philly, Milwaukee. Those are the types of teams that could definitely use a shooter like Buddy Hield and I think they’ve had a level of interest in him over the last several months. When you look at the Pacers’ roster… Kevin Pritchard said in April, ‘We might want to extend Buddy Hield’. He was really non-committal but a lot of it came down to role.

    “They have Ben Mathurin, who they drafted last year in the lottery. He’s going to have a bigger role this year, might even begin the year starting and really become a full-time starter. “Andrew Nembhard, he had a great rookie year as well. He’s due for a bigger role in the line-up as well, so Buddy Hield is likely looking at a reserve role and we’ll see how that takes place and how impacts him, his role and his value. I think that’s why it’s likely going to go into the season in terms of Buddy Hield and his future in Indiana.”

    Source link

  • ‘He felt betrayed’: Full extent of James Harden’s Sixers spat and trade saga laid bare

    ‘He felt betrayed’: Full extent of James Harden’s Sixers spat and trade saga laid bare

    James Harden’s issues in Philadelphia aren’t limited only to Daryl Morey.

    The disgruntled Sixers point guard — whose rift with the team’s president of basketball operations has played out amid a summer standoff — had regular flare-ups with former head coach Doc Rivers and frustrated his locker room by choosing the nightlife over travelling with the team last season, according to ESPN’s Ramona Shelburne.

    The report mentioned one particular instance when Rivers, who was fired after the Sixers’ second round playoff ouster to Celtics, went off on Harden for taking the final three shots in regulation in a double-overtime loss to the Rockets in mid-December.

    FIBA Basketball World Cup | Watch the Quarter Finals, Semi Finals and Final FREE & LIVE with ESPN on Kayo Freebies. Join Freebies now, no credit card required >

    There is drama in Philadelphia. Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images/AFPSource: AFP

    It came up in a postgame film session in which Harden explained he could not get the ball to superstar Joel Embiid, who was having a big night.

    To which he said he couldn’t get the ball to Embiid, according to ESPN.

    The disagreement fractured the relationship between star and coach and the two butted heads throughout the season.

    In a separate situation reported by ESPN, Rivers called out Harden in a team meeting for travelling separately so he could stay for the nightlife following back-to-back losses to the Heat and Celtics.

    The report mentioned that Harden had permission from the front office to travel separately.

    The Sixers dismissed Rivers after a disastrous 112-88 loss at Boston in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference semifinals in May.

    It was widely reported afterwards that Harden no longer wanted to play for Rivers, but new issues arose over how much the 76ers were willing to pay Harden.

    Doc Rivers, former head coach of the Philadelphia 76ers. (Photo by Tim Nwachukwu / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / AFP)Source: AFP

    As things grew tense behind-the-scenes in Philadelphia, the rift became apparent when Harden decided to pick up his $35.6 million player option before the June 30 deadline and ask for a trade.

    According to the report, the 76ers were shocked over Harden’s decision that was brought on by Morey ignoring calls from the star’s representatives.

    As for what played into it?

    Morey reportedly was ignoring calls from Harden’s representatives.

    “James felt like Daryl was ghosting him,” one source close to Harden told ESPN. “He felt betrayed.”

    The Sixers reportedly emphasised to Harden and his representatives that they intended to re-sign him.

    “James takes things very personally,” another source close to Harden told ESPN. “When he feels like he’s been wronged, he can be very stubborn.”

    During a radio interview with 97.5 The Fanatic in July, Morey said “we’d all be thrilled” if Harden rescinded his trade request.

    That came before the Sixers ended trade talks with the Clippers — one of Harden’s desired destinations.

    However, Harden wasn’t on the same page.

    Canada & Germany stay alive in World Cup | 00:54

    The next month, he publicly blasted Morey, calling him a “liar” during a press event with Adidas in China.

    “Let me say that again: Daryl Morey is a liar and I will never be a part of an organisation that he’s a part of,” Harden said on the microphone.

    Harden was fined $100,000 by the NBA because his public comments indicated “that he would not perform the services called for under his player contract unless traded to another team.”

    The NBPA later stated it intended to file a grievance on Harden’s behalf.

    As part of the NBA probe into his “liar” comment, Harden told league investigators he was referring to a promise Morey made him that the Sixers would trade him “quickly” following his decision to opt in on his contract in 2023-24, according to The Athletic’s Shams Charania.

    What is unclear is whether Harden will join the Sixers when training camp starts at the end of the month.

    “The situation with James Harden is unfortunate,” Sixers majority owner Josh Harris told ESPN. “I want this to work out for all sides, including James.

    “But we have to keep our eye on the big picture, which is that we’re still a contending team and most teams in the NBA would change places with us in five minutes.”

    Joel Embiid and James Harden. Adam Glanzman/Getty Images/AFPSource: AFP

    Embiid has assured the Sixers that he has no problem waiting out the current drama with Harden, according to ESPN, and even invited the guard to his wedding in July.

    Both Embiid and fellow guard Tyrese Maxey reportedly have been in touch with Harden throughout the off-season.

    Sixers Media Day is scheduled for Oct. 2, which gives both sides plenty of time to find a solution.

    Philadelphia begins its 2023-24 season on Oct. 26 when it visits the Milwaukee Bucks.

    Whether Harden is wearing a Sixers uniform that night remains to be seen.

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

    Source link