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Sabrina Ionescu latest pro athlete to be victimized by burglars

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Sabrina Ionescu and her husband NFL offensive lineman Hroniss Grasu have become the latest pro athletes to be victimized by burglars. Their Los Angeles home was entered and more than $60,000 in handbags were stolen.

According to NBC Los Angeles:

Police responded to the professional athletes’ home at about 8 p.m. A security alarm was activated when someone broke a glass sliding window at the rear of the residence. Two thieves in ski masks broke into the house and stole several handbags worth more than $60,000, authorities said.

The suspects then escaped by car, their direction unknown. Ionescu and Grasu were not home at the time, police said. No arrests have been made in the robbery, and an investigation is ongoing.

Ionescu is the latest pro athlete to be victimized. A number of professional athletes have faced similar incidents recently, including Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes and tight end Travis Kelce, Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow, then Dallas Mavericks guard Luka Doncic and Oklahoma City Thunder MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.

Last month, the home of Cleveland Browns rookie quarterback Shedeur Sanders’ home was burglarized while he was making his NFL debut against the Baltimore Ravens.

Indeed, the last December, the FBI sent a warning to professional leagues noting that there are organized gangs targeting athletes. Then in February, seven Chilean men are facing federal charges in Florida related to a series of high-profile “crime tourism” burglaries of six professional athletes’ homes — including Mahomes, Kelce and Burrow — between October and December.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nyliberty...test-pro-athlete-to-be-victimized-by-burglars
 
RUMOR ROUND-UP: No action yet, just speculation

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The first two milestones of trade season have passed. Monday was the first day that the 82 players signed in the summer could be dealt, bringing to 90% the percentage of players in the league trade pool. Then Tuesday was the last day a team could trade for player knowing they could turn him around at the deadline.

So for the next six weeks or so, from now until February 5 at 3:00 p.m. ET, it’s trade rumor season. As any NBA pundit can tell you from experience, the percentage of rumors that actually become real trades is very low and most trades take place just prior to the deadline. Nothing focuses the mind like a deadline. Indeed, trade machines were created because there’s a market for them.

At the moment, most of the traction around the Brooklyn Nets concern two, maybe three players. Michael Porter Jr. and Cam Thomas top the list with some but rumors about Nic Claxton as well.

Erik Slater reported Wednesday that the Nets are open to taking calls on MPJ. Evan Sidery thinks the Pistons might be a landing spot to watch for him and Brian Lewis and Jake Fischer again note that Thomas’s market is bare … and everyone is reporting the Nets are trolling the league for more salary dumps if they can get Brooklyn more draft assets or a good young player.

MPJ and Thomas of course are on different ends of value. Porter is having his best season ever and at 27 is entering the prime of his career. The 24-year-old sharpshooter, on the other hand, seems to have few fans around the league and now has lost 70 games to hamstring strains over the past two seasons to four separate but recurring incidents: 53 games total last season and now 17 this one. It shouldn’t be surprising that Sean Marks & co. are taking calls on any of their 17 rostered players. They’re in a deep rebuild. As for Thomas, it seems like he may have played his last game in black-and-white. There’s at this point no date for his return and Jordi Fernandez pointedly said earlier this week that if he does return, he’ll likely have a different and probably lesser role.

Deals involving either would be tricky.

One reason that is that the Nets want to stay above the salary floor and avoid the sanctions applied to any team whose payroll dips 10% below the salary cap or $139.2 million. The Nets payroll is now at $139.4 million, meaning their cushion is tiny and they’d have to find a way to replace all that salary. Finding $6.0 million, Thomas salary, wouldn’t be that difficult, but Porter earns $38.1 million. The Nets would have a single business day to get back under the floor.

Thomas is in a bad place. He exercised his qualifying offer and passed on offers of $9.5 million plus incentives over one year and $30 million over two with the second year a team option. He’d have veto power over any trade but would lose his Bird Rights with his new team, limiting his earning power going forward.

Moving Claxton’s $25.4 million would also require tackling the salary floor issue, but while there have been recurring rumors of this team or that being interested in him, there hasn’t been a lot suggesting the Nets are interested in moving him. That obviously could change.

Of course, the big debate about whether to deal him or MPJ for more first round picks centers on whether trading them would salvage the tank and retain their chances of getting one of the top three picks in the 2026 Draft: Darry Peterson, the 6’5” Kansas guard, A.J. Dybantsa, the 6’9” BYU forward or Cam Boozer, the 6’10” Duke big. They’re all currently seen as franchise-changers, each better than Cooper Flagg! While the top of the draft is filled with other solid prospects, those three are seen as being a class of their own.

On the other side of the debate are those who abhor the tank or simply believe that the 27-year-old Porter and/0r the 26-year-old Claxton are young enough to be part of a Nets rebuild framework going forward. Moreover, there’s no guarantee that no matter where the Net finish they’ll wind up with one of the top three or four picks — Caleb Wilson, the 6’10” North Carolina small forward would be a solid consolation prize. With the sixth worst record, they have a nine percent chance at the overall No. 1 and a 37.5% at walking away with a top four pick six months from now.

Zach Harper of the Athletic thinks that the tank is unlikely to be affected that much by rumored trades.

“Nets don’t necessarily have to worry too much about lottery odds,” he wrote this week. “Things should correct themselves naturally with battles for the bottom of the cellar. But New Orleans and Indiana are worse than people thought they’d be. That has to have Brooklyn sweat it out.”

That said, insiders tell NetsDaily that there’s is no indication that Brooklyn is going to stray from its plan — abandon the “probabilities” of tanking in pursuit of a top pick. After all, Joe Tsai told a Los Angeles tech summit in September “We have one pick in 2026, and we hope to get a good pick. So you can predict what kind of strategy we will use for this season. But we have a very young team.”

Whatever the Nets plan, they should be well-prepared. They already command:

  • 32 draft picks — 13 first rounders, all but one unprotected and 10 of which are tradeable; two unprotected first round swaps; 19 second rounders, all of which are tradeable;
  • $15.3 million in salary cap space most in the NBA. They’re also $48.7 million below the luxury tax threshold, $55.8 million below the first apron and $67.7 million below the second;
  • $8.8 million MLE which can be used if Nets go over cap.
  • Two non-guaranteed contracts in Tyrese Martin and Jalen Wilson which can be waived by January 7;
  • Two players with team options in Zaire Williams and Day’Ron Sharpe;
  • Veteran wings on reasonable contracts in Haywood Highsmith and to a lesser degree, Terance Mann’
  • An open two-way roster spot likely to be filled in next two weeks.

But Michael Porter Jr. is their biggest trade asset if they chose to make big moves. He is not just averaging 25.6 points on 50/40/81 shooting splits along with 7.5 rebounds and 3.4 assists. He’s assumed the role of leader on the league’s youngest roster. A few days ago, Fernandez suggested that Porter, who he knows well from working with him in Denver, is likely to get ever better across the board.

“I think that’s very important because Mike’s 27. It’s not like we’re just developing the young guys. If they don’t get better, it’s on us as coaches. I think Mike, from the defense. the rebounding, his stance, his physicality, and then offense, finishing his cuts, letting it fly, I think he’s shot more 3s than he’s ever shot per game. Obviously, it’s a different role, but he has to do that for the team because he’s so good and creates attention that helps our offensive rebounding, it helps his teammates, so all of those things are important.”

That doesn’t sound like the head coach wants to lose his star.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-rumors/103218/rumor-round-up-no-action-yet-just-speculation
 
Nets vs. Heat preview: Rested and ready

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After a nice four-day rest, the Nets are returning to action after their 127-82 victory over the Milwaukee Bucks, tied for the biggest win in franchise history. What made the victory so great, besides four of the beloved Flatbush 5 getting some significant NBA minutes, was the fact that all but three players reached double digits in scoring. Even though Brooklyn, as an organization, is clearly focused on getting the best pick in the May lottery, the players and coaches are not. So, it’s moments like this that keep you going.

Tonight, the Nets will take on the Miami Heat, who have been struggling to say the very least. With a five game losing streak, the Heat will look to bounce back in the winning column despite being without some key players on the roster.

Where to Watch

Check out the action at 7:30 PM and the YES Network, as well as streaming on the Gotham Sports App. For the out-of-towners, the game will be on NBA League Pass

Injury Report

Nolan Traore, Ben Saraf, E.J. Liddell, and Tyson Etienne will be reporting to Long Island. They’ll be traveling to Orlando for the G League Winter Showcase where they open up vs. the Mexico City Capitanes on Saturday. Cam Thomas (left hamstring) remains out and Haywood Highsmith, who will be facing his former team, is recovering from right knee surgery. No timetable for either player’s return.

For Miami, Tyler Herro (toe), Pelle Larson (ankle), and Nikola Jovic (elbow) will be out. Norman Powell (calf) is questionable. Terry Rozier remains suspended following his arrest in the NBA gambling scandal two months ago.

The Game

The Miami Heat have been through so much as an organization of late. The Terry Rozier gambling investigation not only is among the leading stories in the NBA, but in all of sports. His status remains uncertain both from a legal and basketball standpoint. Also, after returning to action in late November, Tyler Herro injured his toe, which led him to miss even more action.

“I just got to rest it and calm it down until I get back to normal,” Herro said Wednesday. “I’m going on the trip, so I’m hopeful that I’ll be back at some point on the trip, if not, then hopefully the week at home.”

To make matters even worse, the franchise’s greatest player was on video criticizing the team’s effort during the NBA Cup…

Dwyane Wade calls out the Heats lack of effort in the NBA cup vs Magic 👀

“I was pissed off watching the effort that night, I didn’t like it. I’m yelling at the TV ‘YALL DONT WANT TO GO TO VEGAS?’ I need better effort. I’m used to Miami Heat team having resilience, that’s who we… pic.twitter.com/zBGzIo6vNX

— Heat Central (@HeatCulture13) December 16, 2025

So, it is possible the Nets can use their momentum from the victory against the Bucks as well as four wins in the last six to their advantage.

Nic Claxton will have his hands full with Bam Adebayo. He is currently averaging 19 points and nine rebounds on almost 50% shooting overall. Egor Demin will also have his hands full with Davion Mitchell, whose nickname (Off-Night) is well deserved as he can lock up any offensive player at the guard position. Good test for the young fella. Michael Porter Jr. will have to be the main catalyst offensively. We all know he can score, but if he facilitates and gets his teammates involved, the Nets should have a great chance of adding their recent success.

Player To Watch: Jaime Jaquez Jr.

Jaime Jaquez Jr. is quietly having the best year of his career. With averages of 15.4 points, 5.8 rebounds, and 5.0 assists on 51% shooting, Jaquez Jr. is on pace to be considered for both the MIP and Sixth Man Award. The UCLA product has done a great job in steeping in for the Heat while their main scorer is on the bench.

Despite the Heat’s funk, Jaquez remains upbeat but is dismissing speculation about the two awards.

“It’s kinda hard, everybody’s on social media. So, of course, you see it. But I try not to pay attention. My focus right now is on the team,” Jaquez said told TMZ three days ago. “I think when you win, good things happen for individuals. Focusing on winning is the most important part for me.”

Can he carry the load without so many teammates. At this point, he’ll have to. Miami has no choice.

From the Vault

It’s been a rough week for the world with the murders of Rob Reiner and his wife Michele Singer Reiner in Los Angeles, two students at Brown University in Providence and 15 Australian Jews celebrating Chanukah in Sydney. Tragedy was also barely avoided not far from Barclays Center Sunday when six teenagers were injured in a mass shooting outside the Burbuja Events venue in the Cypress Hills neighborhood of Brooklyn. The victims, all between the ages of 15 and 17, sustained non-life-threatening injuries and are in stable condition.

Suffice it to say that sports can be a tonic, but it can’t be a remedy unless its values go beyond the court or the field. The world is the world and it’s up to everyone to make it better. Reiner was someone who understood that. Here’s a story from on his love of baseball and how every summer he would visit different MLB stadium.

More reading: Hot Hot Hoops, SB Nation NBA, New York Post, New York Daily News, Clutch Points, Nets Wire, Steve’s Newsletter, City of Nets


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-game-previews/103231/nets-vs-heat-preview-rested-and-ready
 
Brooklyn Nets drop sludge-fest to Miami Heat, 106-95

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Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images

It’s become old news: The Brooklyn Nets of today are not nearly as helpless as the black-and-white outfit that both began the season 0-7 and were somehow less competitive than their record suggested.

Since then, they are 7-11 with a -1.2 net rating, not to mention 6-3 against below .500 opponents. Since the beginning of November, they’ve won Michael Porter Jr.‘s minutes outright; July’s full-time podcaster is December’s All-Star candidate. How strongly you feel the Nets should tank — *ahem* maximize their NBA Draft Lottery odds — will inform how excited you are about this development, but there is one aspect of Brooklyn’s recent success we can all celebrate: If they keep playing this well, the discussion will be moot.

Meanwhile, the Miami Heat entered Barclays Center on Thursday night having lost five straight games, a span in which Erik Spoelstra’s funky, screen-less offense has been the league’s worst. “Earlier in the season, we were able to get whatever we wanted because they didn’t know our offense, our system,” said a drearily honest Norman Powell earlier this week.

On paper, a pretty fair fight, especially with Miami’s Tyler Herro ruled out due to a toe injury. Aside from the continued absences of Cam Thomas and Haywood Highsmith, the Nets were perfectly healthy. That is, until Drake Powell sprained his right ankle three minutes after checking in on Thursday night…

Breaking 🚨

Drake Powell helped to the locker room after turning his ankle. #Netsworld pic.twitter.com/JifScCVM6U

— NetsKingdom 👑🗽 (@NetsKingdomAJ) December 19, 2025

That’s the same ankle Powell sprained twice to open this season. He was ruled out for the night immediately after exiting the contest, and the Nets had no further updates postgame. The Nets later had another injury scare when Noah Clowney knocked knees with Simone Fontecchio and exited the game in the second quarter, though he was available to start the second half.

While it wasn’t the prettiest display of basketball, it ultimately was a fair fight. The Heat jumped out to an early 11-point lead as Jordi Fernández sighed and clacked his teeth as his team’s lack of effort, but that was the worst things got. Brooklyn trailed by just three after the first quarter, and five at halftime after Norman Powell hit a 45-foot H-O-R-S-E shot…

NORMAN POWELL FROM HALF COURT pic.twitter.com/qPcIStnpT9

— Heat Clips 🎬 (@MiamiClip) December 19, 2025

Aside from Powell, who scored a team-high 24 points on the night, nobody on either side could find his outside shot. That includes Michael Porter Jr., who didn’t get it going until semi-garbage time. Overall, MPJ needed 24 shots to get to his 28 points; given the way he’s shot the rock to begin the season, it’s tough for him to take a truly bad shot, but he did his damndest on Thursday.

Not that he was entirely misguided. As a team, Brooklyn shot a disgusting 11-of-49 from three, or 22.4%, in increasingly desperate need of a jumpstart as the game dredged on. Still, they stayed in the game thanks to similar inaccuracy on the other side and by Nic Claxton’s 16/12/8/2/3 on 8-of-9 shooting. Over the last few years, Clax and Bam Adebayo have honed if not quite a heated rivalry, then a platonic annoyance with each other. Clax won the first round of 2025-26, as Bam scored just eight points of 4-of-13 shooting with five fouls, watching the end of the game from the bench.

Turns out, Miami didn’t need him! Their other big, the demonically long and springy Kel’el Ware, put up a 22-and-12 double-double along with four blocks. With the Nets struggling from outside, Ware dominating the inside was enough to hand Brooklyn their lowest point total of the season. By the end of the night, the Nets were so sick of Ware that Terance Mann hit him with a flagrant foul that spelled the end of a half-hearted comeback attempt…

Terrance Mann with a hard foul on ware pic.twitter.com/3x53UNCjSz

— Heat Clips 🎬 (@MiamiClip) December 19, 2025

With Ben Saraf and Nolan Traore on G League assignment and Powell an early exit, the only rookies that could have saved the day were Egor Dëmin and Danny Wolf. Both had their moments, both had their missteps. Wolf played nearly 20 minutes, posting 9/5/2 with three turnovers, including a couple eyesores after Fernández said “the assist-turnover ratio is something that he has to do better [in],” pregame.

Egor Dëmin, despite constant harassment from Davion Mitchell, got up 18 shot-attempts, tying his career-high. He made just five of them, hoisting some 3-point attempts that were only a notch less desperate than a prayer, though you can’t have trial-and-error without the error. Dëmin did provide the last gasp of hope for Brooklyn, cutting the deficit to four with five minutes left, ultimately ensuring this would count as a “clutch-time” loss…

let it fly, @whoisegor3 🎯 pic.twitter.com/tqgOA7g76K

— Brooklyn Nets (@BrooklynNets) December 19, 2025

Miami didn’t need their innovative offense the shred Brooklyn’s defense on Thursday, they just needed to contain Michael Porter Jr. and watch Noah Clowney have his worst offensive game of the year, as the third-year Net shot 2-of-13 from the floor and 0-of-9 from three.

Fernández was not upset with his team’s effort after the game: “Little mistakes that you can correct, and shots going in or not — I’m happy with the looks that we had that didn’t go in. So sometimes, a little bit of that is the difference, right? Like, they’re a good running team, and we did a better job in the second half, holding them to four fast-break points instead of, I thought it was 13 in the first … I’m very proud of them, you know, how the team fought and competed all the way through.”

Alas, Fernández was less happy with the officials, who awarded Brooklyn just 11 free-throws, including just one solitary attempt in the first half: “I thought for the most part, they called a good football game out there, because it was not basketball.”

Brooklyn didn’t do anything that objectionable on Thursday night, instead just a victim to one of those nights that an 82-game NBA season will often produce. But that didn’t make it any less ugly, and Brooklyn falls to 1-15 against teams .500 or better. The Nets are much improved, far from pathetic … but world-beaters, they are not.

Final Score: Miami Heat 106, Brooklyn Nets 95

Milestone Report​


Nic Claxton was the lone bright spot from Thursday’s loss, as evidenced by these stats from Nets PR.

  • Claxton finished the night with 16 points (8-9 FG), 12 rebounds, eight assists, three blocks and two steals. It was the third time a player has reached such minimums in franchise history, joining Kenyon Martin (3/5/01) and Derrick Coleman (1/3/92).
  • Clax has five games this season with at least 10/10/6. He had two such games through the first six seasons of his career.

Injury Update​


As mentioned, Jordi Fernández did not have an update on Drake Powell after the game, who missed five of Brooklyn’s first eight games with the same right ankle sprain (and received a DNP in another).

However, in pregame, Fernández did provide an update on Haywood Highsmith: “Right now he’s on the court with coaches. He hasn’t gotten to five-on-five yet, or contact, per se. So when he is taking these next steps, we’ll let you guys know. But he’s done a good job. And the most important thing to me is his veteran leadership, and how important he is to the rest of the group, especially the young guys.”

Well…not that much of an update.

Next Up​

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Miami was the first of three straight Eastern Conference opponents for the Nets, all with a winning record. Next up is the Toronto Raptors, once again at home. Tip-off is scheduled for Sunday evening at 6:00 p.m. ET.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-scor...s-heat-106-95-michael-porter-jr-norman-powell
 
Danny Wolf diplomatic in discussing ‘Jewish Jokic’ nickname

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Draymond Green was lamenting how pundits and fans are attaching one descriptor or another to players who like Nikola Jokic are mutli-talented seven-footers or near seven-footers. It’s silly, he said.

“We got the Jewish Joker, now. We got the Baby Joker [Alpern Sengun, Derik Queen]. Enough, man,” said Green oh his podcast last week. He could have also added the Chinese Jokic, Hansen Yang, to his list. “I have to f–king guard Joker. You mean to tell me everyone’s just Joker? F–k out of here. No disrespect to Danny Wolf; I haven’t played against him. But enough of comparing everybody to Joker.”

Wolf, the Nets point center, doesn’t really disagree, but in comments to both Erik Slater and Brian Lewis, he said he’s flattered by the description.

“I don’t know the number, but a lot of my friends and family sent me that clip. Yeah, it was definitely pretty funny,” Wolf told The Post. “I didn’t really react much to it. I don’t have too much of an opinion. I mean, being compared to the greatest player in the world right now obviously is cool.

“But there’s obviously this trend of slapping the term Jokic on younger bigs who can pass and play-make. But in all honesty, I don’t really play that much like him. Obviously, I’m a bigger guy with a different, unique kind of game. I don’t really have too many thoughts on [Green,] but yeah, it was definitely an interesting clip.”

Wolf noted to Slater that he plays a “unique game” not unlike the Denver Nuggets center but different…

“It’s a compliment to be compared to, in my opinion, the greatest player in the world right now.”

Danny Wolf speaks on his Jewish Joker nickname and Draymond Green’s strong opinion about it. pic.twitter.com/1vLa9iuisK

— Erik Slater (@erikslater_) December 18, 2025

“It’s kind of an easy thing to slap on young bigs who can kinda pass the ball because Jokic in our day and age is the prime example of that,” the 21-year-old Michigan and Yale product told Slater. “Obviously, I’ve only been in the league a little bit but but I play a unique game. Definitely, there are some things to it that aren’t as normal in the NBA so to speak and obviously it’s a compliment to be compared to, in my opinion, but I think my game is different than his.”

“I don’t have too much of a comment on it but it’s definitely a complement.”

Of course, Wolf is nowhere near Jokic’s production, but the 27th pick last June — 14 places ahead where Jokic was taken in the 2014 NBA Draft (famously during a Taco Bell commercial.) has bloomed of late, as Lewis noted.

Wolf went into Thursday first among qualified rookies in Net Rating (+8.3), and second in plus/minus (+2.8 per game), behind only the Sixers’ VJ Edgecombe.

And as far as questions about hiding him on defense? He was third in the NBA in Defensive Rating (98.5), and his Defensive Field Goal Percentage of 40 percent led all rookies who’d faced over 30 shots.

The one-time member of Israel’s junior national team admitted to Lewis that he carries a chip on his shoulder about those doubts.

“There were a lot of questions from teams and front offices as to who I could guard. I took that as a chip on my shoulder to prove that I can more than guard in this league,” Wolf said. “But it’s a work in progress, and I need to continue to get quicker and stronger.

“Over the summer, I just really repped out my shot, and I knew in pre-draft and my workouts I was shooting the crap out of the ball. … And I’ve been in an organization that wants to shoot 3s. The coaches trust me shooting, my teammates trust me, so whenever I’m open I’m gonna let it fly.”


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-news/103247/danny-wolf-diplomatic-in-discussing-jewish-jokic-nickname
 
How NBA All-Star voting works in 2025 — and where Nets fit in

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NBA All-Star voting has changed over time, but this season’s process looks quite similar to last year’s.

How All-Star Starters Are Picked


The starters for the NBA All-Star Game are chosen through a hybrid voting system designed to mix public opinion with inside perspectives:

  • Fans: 50% of the vote
  • NBA players: 25%
  • Media panel: 25%

Each group submits ballots, and the votes are combined to determine the starters at each spot. The players with the highest cumulative votes become All-Star starters.

Fans can vote once per day during the voting window, which opened on Wednesday and runs through Jan 14.

How Reserves Are Selected


Once the starters are locked in, a different group decides the next wave of All-Stars: the NBA head coaches.

Coaches vote for the All-Star reserves, typically seven players from each conference, but they cannot vote for their own players.

What’s Different This Year


A few changes this season are worth noting:

No positional requirements for voting:
In previous years, the starters had to fit specific position slots (two guards, three frontcourt players). This year, ballots are positionless, meaning fans and others can vote for any five players regardless of traditional spots.

New game format (USA vs. World):
Besides the voting itself, the All-Star Weekend format has changed. Instead of the traditional East vs. West exhibition, this year’s All-Star event will feature two U.S. teams and one World team in a round-robin tournament followed by a championship game.

Brooklyn’s only All-Star case​


This season, the Nets’ only All-Star contender is their leading scorer, forward Michael Porter Jr., who ranks 14th in the NBA at 25.7 points per game while shooting 49.3% from the field. He is also averaging 7.3 rebounds and 3.2 assists per game.

In a recent article by the New York Post’s Brian Lewis, Porter Jr. explained what an All-Star selection would mean to him.

“It definitely would be a dream come true,” Porter Jr. said. “It was in my mind as a kid to make the NBA, but not only be in the NBA, but be one of the best players in the NBA. And an All-Star selection shows that progress.”

While it has always been a goal, Porter Jr. made it clear that winning remains his priority.

“But it’s definitely not what I’m thinking of,” he said. “I’ve always tried to be more process-oriented and do the right things day to day, game to game, and let the results take care of itself. I feel like when people start focusing and reaching really hard for a result, that’s when it can evade them. If I make it, cool. If not, I’m going on vacation. So I’m not really tripping either way.”

Of course, making the All-Star team won’t be easy when your team has the sixth worst record in the league.

Might anyone get some votes? Nic Claxton is having the best season of his career. He’s averaging 13.5 points on 56.4% shooting overall an has upped his free throw percentage from 51.3% last season to nearly 70% so far this season. He’s also averaging 7.8 rebounds and 4.5 assists.

Where to vote? Right here!

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-news...ar-voting-works-in-2025-and-where-nets-fit-in
 
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