Much has been made — and rightfully so — of what’s currently wrong with the NBA’s on-court product. The schemes are too predictable. The players are too soft. The coaches are only hired so that they can later be fired.
The Lakers aim to capitalize on their home-court advantage against the struggling Hornets, while top teams like Cleveland continue to dominate.
Jason Logan's NBA player props for January 9 is targeting Donovan Mitchell, Lauri Markkanen, and the returning Paolo Banchero.
A team like the Charlotte Hornets loom large over the next month as they await to help facilitate other trades for future draft capital.
The Suns star was recently taken out of the starting lineup and moved to the bench. Should he be traded, here are three ideal landing spots.
Even as the Raptors raced to the bottom of the standings to start the year, with Scottie Barnes and Immanuel Quickley out of the lineups for large portions of the season, they managed to stay in games into the fourth quarter — an overtime loss in Boston,
Trae Young took two dribbles, elevated and flicked his wrists, heaving a shot from 50 feet just before the buzzer sounded, watching it slide down the net to lead the Atlanta Hawks to a stunning win over the Utah Jazz.
The Miami Heat face challenges as Jimmy Butler's trade offers 'stink,' creating uncertainty and tension amid the ongoing drama.
Currently, the Jazz are 9-25, which would give them the fifth-best lottery odds. Truthfully, that might be their ceiling. The Washington Wizards, Charlotte Hornets and Toronto Raptors are all worse teams than Utah. The New Orleans Pelicans have a worse record than the Jazz, but they can become better if they return to full health.
The Indiana Pacers see more zone defenses than almost any team in the NBA this season. Why is that the case, and what does it reveal about the team?
While they are angling to get a top pick in the 2025 NBA Draft, the Jazz also want that player to arrive at a stable, improving environment.
MIAMI (AP) — Pat Riley turns 80 in a couple of months. The Miami Heat president has not revealed any retirement timetable. He still wears impeccable suits, shakes hands with as firm of a grip as anyone, knows all eyes are on him when he walks into just about any room.