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Long Island Nets schedule four ‘Home’ games in Montreal for 2025-26

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The Long Island Nets have officially announced their home schedule for the upcoming season, a total of 24 home games. And of those 24, four will be played in Montreal where Long Island played six last season at Place Bell in suburban Laval as the Brooklyn Sports and Entertainment tries to build a fan base among French Canadians and their partner, CH Groupe, seeks to show the NBA that Canada’s second largest city can support an expansion team.

While last year was deemed an experiment by BSE Global officials, fans in Canada’s were left wondering at the end of last season if they’d seen the end of the partnership with Canada’s Groupe CH, parent of the Montreal Canadians hockey club and the city’s leading sports group.

Now, with the second year of cooperation, the experiment has become a feature of the Quebec’s winter sports scene.

“We are thrilled to return to Laval this season and continue the momentum from last year,” said Morgan Taylor, Head of Business Operations for the Long Island Nets and New York Liberty. “The passion and support we’ve seen from Canadian basketball fans has been incredible and it’s clear there’s a strong appetite for professional basketball in Quebec. Our partnership not only expands the G League’s presence in a new market, but also creates meaningful opportunities for players, coaches, and fans to connect through the game as basketball’s global appeal continues to grow.”

Despite the success last season, it was uncertain until now whether there would be a second season north of the border.

Indeed, when NetsDaily last had the chance to speak with Taylor, she was hopeful that their partnership would continue into this season but not yet committed.

“Our on-court play has been exciting,” she said after the first set of games at the 10,000-capacity Place Bell. “Our four games we had in Montreal were all close, and it’s been fun. How do we follow it up? We’re still evaluating our partnership and seeing what it looks like year-over-year and what it looks like next year,” said Taylor.

The data accumulated over the full six games showed things worked out well.

  • The series drew nearly 40,000 fans — an average of 6,600 with the first game against the Raptors 905 setting a new home attendance record, with 7,700 people in attendance in Laval.
  • Long Island also hosted local basketball clinics in the Montreal metro area with their full team in attendance.
  • The Nets sold specialized “Les Nets” merchandise which sold out during first two games.

Taylor also told ND that making the city of Montreal the “Nets home” was a major theme by “I think the biggest thing was looking at changing our name,” she added. “The G-League has unique opportunities for teams to kind of take on a new identity. So, we took on Montreal and the culture and turned our name into ‘Les Nets’ for the stint of six games.” The marketing effort was steered by Ron Goldenberg, Brooklyn’s VP of International Marketing & Innovation and a Montreal native

She also noted that the Nets organization learned from dealing with the Canadiens and Groupe CH.

“They are a temple in the sports industry, and it’s been great,” said Taylor. “The partnership and synergies between BSEG Global and Groupe CH, you can tell they’re a lot from a business standpoint. We both own multiple venues and multiple teams. So, they were excited about bringing basketball to Montreal, and it’s great that we were able to help support them with that.”

Montreal, the ninth most populous city in North America is viewed as a second-tier expansion candidate, along with Vancouver and Mexico City. Las Vegas and Seattle are viewed as the top candidates whenever the league decides to expand beyond the current 30 teams. Groupe CH is viewed as the NBA’s most likely partner in Montreal should that take place.

Long Island’s first two home games at the Place Bell in Laval, QC, Canada, will take place on Thursday, January 8th, and Friday, January 9th. Both games will be played against the Wisconsin Herd. Their final two games will take place on Sunday, February 8th, and Tuesday, February 10th, as they square off with the Noblesville Boom, the new Pacers affiliate.

The initiative is a testament to how extensive Brooklyn Sports & Entertainment international marketing operation has become. According to NBA data, the Brooklyn Nets are the third most popular NBA team in both France and China. It’s not much of a stretch to think that the French-speaking Canada could be an attractive region to mine for the Nets. Joe Tsai is a Canadian citizen, having spent part of his childhood in Vancouver, and until recently, Jordi Fernandez was the head coach of Team Canada.

For a long time, the NBA teams have had very limited horizons for their G League affiliates. They’ve been about development on the basketball side and experimenting with rules like Elam Ending, and other in-game innovations. Brooklyn has taken it further. They are now using their G League team in an attempt to open up international horizons for the big club.

“The G-League is at the forefront for being the testing ground of the NBA,” Taylor told ND. “And for the sports industry as a whole. So, to play a part in that has been tremendous.”

The announcement also included news of Opening Night, at Nassau Coliseum: November 7 vs. Capital City Go-Go and other key dates.

The NBA G League schedule includes two parts – a 14-game Tip-Off Tournament and a 36-game regular season. After all 31 NBA G League teams play regionally during the Tip-Off Tournament, records will reset for the start of the 36-game regular season, which begins at the NBA G League Winter Showcase.

Long Island will celebrate its 10th season in the NBA G League this year. The schedule will include seven games that will be played on Friday, Saturday or Sunday. The LI Nets’ home schedule is highlighted by one morning contest, the team’s annual Education Day on Tuesday, December 9, versus College Park, and three afternoon contests at the Coliseum.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/longislan...games-in-montreal-for-2025-26-g-league-season
 
New York Liberty score tough victory over Seattle Storm

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Steph Chambers/Getty Images

Sabrina Ionescu was out yet again on Friday night, the final game of the New York Liberty’s last West Coast trip of the regular season. The Liberty needed a win for the sake of a win. “We’re kind of running out of opportunities for growth at this point. We need to just actually be better,” said Breanna Stewart after an uninspiring loss in Phoenix, but before another uninspiring loss against Golden State.

The Seattle Storm, 5-2 in their last seven games and coming off three days of rest at home, needed a win to clinch playoff position.

Early on, the Liberty exceeded their energy. The talent was not failing to work hard. Breanna Stewart and Leonie Fiebich played nearly the whole first quarter, which New York won 22-14. Fiebich sprinted out of the gates, firing and making all three of her 3-pointers to score a quick 11 points, playing with the aggression Head Coach Sandy Brondello has openly pined for since the German’s arrival in New York…

Leonie Fiebich really feeling it early, 3/3 from deep and hunting her shot pic.twitter.com/0KrWVAG7eW

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) September 6, 2025

Stewie and Fiebich headed to the bench with just ticks left in the first quarter; Seattle tied it up before the 7-minute mark of the second.

Jonquel Jones was never really in this one. On one of her only post-up possessions of the game, she got blocked and chose to complain to the nearest referee while the ball bounced near, but not on, the sideline, allowing Seattle to retrieve it. Jones then picked up three quick fouls, which sent her to the bench for most of the first half. Upon returning in the third quarter, she fouled again, sending her to the bench. What’d she do to begin the fourth quarter? Reader, you already know.

Though there shouldn’t be such a drop-off with a reserve unit led by Jonquel Jones, she was not solely at fault for the Liberty’s second quarter struggles. Rebekah Gardner got the start in Ionescu’s place on Friday, perhaps an overdue stamp of faith from Brondello, only for Gardner to play some of her worst ball of the season. Emma Meesseman shot 4-of-6 to score nine efficient points, but spent her first few minutes on the court getting roasted on switches.

It was no one player’s fault, but a collective malaise. The bad feelings were back. Even Stewie and Fiebich checking back into the game couldn’t fix it; Seattle scored 28 points in the paint before halftime, taking an eight-point lead into the break. Pregame, Natasha Cloud told the New York Post’s Madeline Kenney, “I just want to see us fight and act like we want to f*****g win.”

It appeared that desire would last for one measly quarter…

again, just not enough talking

look at Stewie/Leo as Eli rolls to the rim pic.twitter.com/RsuwF5PXwA

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) September 6, 2025

Seattle went up nine early in the third, Jones picked up her aforementioned fourth foul, and it seemed the Liberty were headed for another bland loss. Finally, mercifully, they found dug deep within themselves and came up with gold.

Kennedy Burke had her first capital-M Moment in a while, scoring eight of her 13 points in the late stages of the third quarter, all at the rim or at the line. She had to dig her points outta the mud, New York’s offense never capturing the flow state Liberty fans have gotten used to watching this championship-winning iteration of the team.

But the Liberty defense buckled down (and the Storm missed shots) to the point of giving their offense some breathing room. They only forced nine turnovers on the night, but consistently bled Seattle’s shot-clock in the second half and finished possessions with such pristine box-outs that the broadcasters took notice. After surrendering 31 points in an abysmal second quarter, the Liberty allowed just 29 in the entire second half.

What was the big difference? “Just helping each other. Like, just being there for each other. And I feel like in the first half, we didn’t really congest the paint enough for them to make it hard for them to, like, go downhill and find easy passes. So we just made everything a little bit harder,” explained Leonie Fiebich.

Well that and Breanna Stewart reminding her the Seattle crowd what they were missing. She took over the whole game in the second half, bruising her way to the line for 14 free-throw attempts and stonewalling Nneka Ogwumike and others in increasingly disrespectful manner…

Breanna Stewart just went god mode on defense and the Libs are up eight: pic.twitter.com/Si09xfzdaL

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) September 6, 2025

Real face-of-the-franchise stuff, dominating in a game the team had to have not just because she is a preternatural talent, but because Stewie simply wants it more. And sometimes, there’s nothing you can do about it.

“I wanted to do whatever I could for the team. And you know, whether we make mistakes or not, having a turnover or missing a shot, really the ability to just get back on defense. Seattle’s a great team, and they play really well together, but we were trying to show a lot of congestion, so just helping my teammates wherever
I could,” which for Stewie, is everywhere.

Seattle’s lead was just one point at the start of the fourth, and by the time Stewie was feeling good enough to skip down the court and hit a pull-up three, they were down five…

stewie 3 and the 🤪 celly pic.twitter.com/2he2NcAtig

— ً ً (@STEWIESAURA) September 6, 2025

New York never pushed their lead to double-digits, but Seattle never tied it either. Neither team looked particularly ready to make a run to the WNBA Finals, but given how rocky their respective seasons have been, nobody particularly cared. Friday night was about getting a damn win, and behind Breanna Stewart, the Liberty pulled it off. She finished with a 24/7/4 and five blocks, but there is no quantifying how bright her guiding light is on a night like that.

Leonie Fiebich tied her career-high with 21 points, while Natasha Cloud hit a couple clutch jumpers in the third to put up 10/7/6/ while chipping in three blocks. She has her flaws, and Seattle was relentless in trying to exploit them, but nobody can accuse Cloud of not backing up her talk of wanting to show some fight.

That’s what the New York Liberty did on Friday night. Yes the Storm shot just 4-of-20 from deep, no that wasn’t quite a championship performance from the team looking to repeat. But a win is a win. Better take ‘em while you can.

“I’m just really happy with the team and the way that we just … changed the narrative a little bit.” — Breanna Stewart.

happy happy happy pic.twitter.com/4nhlWG3K8p

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) September 6, 2025

Final Score: New York Liberty 84, Seattle Storm 76

Next Up​

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The New York Liberty will fly back across the country and enjoy a couple of rest days before playing their final home game of the season, billed as Fan Appreciation Day. They’ll take on the Washington Mystics at 7:00 p.m. ET on Tuesday night.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nyliberty/98670/liberty-vs-storm-84-76-breanna-stewart-leonie-fiebich
 
As Macao games approach, Brooklyn Nets partner with big Chinese media company on dance team reality show

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The buildup to the NBA China Games is underway! The Nets will be leaving for Macao, China’s Las Vegas, shortly after their game with Hapoel Jerusalem at Barclays Center on October 4. Six days letter, they and the Suns will take the court at the already-sold out Venetian Resort, then follow up two days later with a second game. It’s a big deal for the NBA’s Chinese market and Joe Tsai not only because he’s the Brooklyn Nets governor, but Taobao, part of Alibaba —his day job, is presenting the games.

The banners and promotions are already up in the former Portuguese colony across the bay from Hong Kong…

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… the revised banners are up too after more than one revision since the Games were announced…

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The players are getting ready as well like Egor Demin who joined one of the country’s big social media sites, Douyin, the Chinese TikTok this week. China can be lucrative market, even for a rookie…

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And any day now, Fanbo Zeng, the Most Improved Player in the Chinese Basketball Association, will sign with Brooklyn.

Now comes word that China’s global multimedia company, Tencent, will be partnering with the Nets and specifically the Brooklynettes dance team on a six-episode reality series to pick the first-ever Brooklynettes China Dance Team, CheersNets, who will perform in Macao. Bringing another Brooklyn brand to China.

The reality series, which will likely be seen by tens of millions of Asian viewers, is being billed as a ”talent variety show” where eight Chinese dancers will be selected to join the Brooklynettes China Team.

The 45 contestants have already been chosen…

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… and begun practice:

Criscia Long, senior director of entertainment at BSE Global and the executive in charge of the Brooklynettes back in Brooklyn has been a big part of the process.

It shouldn’t be a surprise that the organization is being aggressive as the NBA returns to China for the first time since 2019 when a tweet promoting a free Hong Kong which caused an international incident.

Under both their Russian and Chinese owners, Brooklyn has invested heavily in international marketing which has led to a rapidly growing global fan base, with more than 53 million fans worldwide. They’re the third most popular team in both France and China, according to media metrics. The team recently reported that it leads the NBA in international engagement and views on social media. Overall, 70% of the team’s pages on Instagram and Facebook come from outside the country as well as 66% on TikTok. In China specifically, the Nets lead the NBA in engagement and views per video on Weibo, the big Chinese social media site.

Indeed this is the team’s 24th overseas trip and its third to China, both the most ever for an NBA club.

“This dance team audition show marks a brand-new exploration for Tencent Sports in the field of ‘sports entertainment’.” said Sway Huang, Sr. Director of Tencent Sports Content Center, said in a statement. “Tencent Sports is thrilled to partner with the Nets on this initiative. Leveraging our strengths in content production and media ecosystem, we aim to bring the authentic NBA arena culture to Chinese audiences in an engaging and localized format, creating a sports variety show where ‘competitive spirit meets mass entertainment’. “

CheersNets will premiere on September. 5 across Tencent platforms in China and chronicle the “highs and lows” of 45 hopefuls as they compete for a spot on the team. Said the Nets: “The contestants come from diverse backgrounds and are outstanding in their respective fields. Among them are film actresses, girl group reality show contestants, members of China university basketball league dance teams, social media influencers, well-known Sports TV hosts, and university teachers.”

The contestants will be judged based on their dance technique, musicality and familiarity with the Brooklynettes style of movement.

The final episode of CheersNets, featuring the selection of the eight dancers will air October 9, the night before the first Brooklyn-Phoenix game. While the Nets are in Macao, the Brooklynettes China Team will also engage in community outreach programs, workshops and more. The dance team will debut in October at a special event, alongside members of the basketball team.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-feat...nese-media-company-on-dance-team-reality-show
 
Scotto: Brooklyn Nets sign OKC’s Acie Law as top scout

One of the architects of the Thunder’s championship drive is joining the Nets


In another indication that the Brooklyn Nets are trying to emulate the Oklahoma City Thunder, Acie Law, who directed the Oklahoma City’s highly successful scouting program the last four years, is coming to Brooklyn to be the team’s director of player personnel, essentially the top scout, Mike Scotto reports…

The Brooklyn Nets will hire Acie Law as Director of Player Personnel, sources told @hoopshype. Law was Director of Amateur Scouting for the Oklahoma City Thunder since 2022 and won a championship with the team last season. Prior, he was a Sacramento Kings scout for four seasons. pic.twitter.com/r9Oaj5DZwy

— Michael Scotto (@MikeAScotto) September 5, 2025

Law is moving from one full draft palate to another in the move from OKC to Brooklyn. The Thunder currently have 27 picks over the next seven years: 12 firsts and 15 seconds, second most in the NBA, while Brooklyn has a league-leading 32: 13 first and 15 seconds, which gives him significant experience in the management of an NBA club’s scouting apparatus. Until the Nets surpassed them this year, the Thunder has long been the team with the most draft assets in the NBA. That of course was critical to the Thunder’s title run this year.

He and the Thunder has also great success along the way, taking Chet Holmgren and Jalen Williams. Holmgren was taken at No. 2 in 2022 while Williams, who was All-NBA this season, went at No. 12 in that same year. More recently, he took 6’6’ Serbian point guard Nikola Topic who had to sit out his rookie season last year but is viewed as a top young point guard prospect. He’s also viewed as one of Presti’s top front office aides.

In his four years at Sacramento, the Kings took Marvin Bagley III, Tyrese Haliburton, Davion Mitchell and Keegan Murray, among others.

As a player, Law spent time the Warriors (twice,) the Hawks, Bobcats, Bulls and Grizzlies in a four-year NBA career before heading overseas where he won two Euroleague titles and a Greek League championship, all with Olimpiacos.

The player personnel director title was left vacant last year. J.R. Holden was the last Nets executive to hold the title two years back.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-draf...brooklyn-nets-sign-okcs-acie-law-as-top-scout
 
NY Liberty vs. Seattle Storm preview: Late night showdown

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You never want to back in to the playoffs. When that happens, the team is in a slump and everything appears to be off. It makes for a frustrating journey and makes you feel as if your chances of postseason success are minimal. That’s where the New York Liberty find themselves right about now after losing to the Golden State Valkyries on Tuesday night in Balhalla. They’re officially back in the playoffs, but it sure as heck doesn’t feel like it.

The opponent tonight has been through some things. The Seattle Storm are still in the driver’s seat to make the playoffs, but they haven’t made it easy on themselves. They had a 17 point second half lead against the Los Angeles Sparks on Monday night, but let it slip on the way to an incredibly frustrating home loss.

Where to follow the game​


ION is the place to be. Up late again so we’re getting started after 10 PM.

Injuries​


The team hopes Sabrina Ionescu can return tonight from a nagging toe injury. Nyara Sabally suited up but didn’t play on Tuesday as she continues to make progress from a knee injury. Both are questionable.

All clear for the Storm.

The game​


Seattle won games one and two. This is the regular season series finale between the teams.

A quick note, I took a lil road trip and helped preview this game on Black Rosie Media! Give it a watch

With the Phoenix Mercury’s win last night against the Washington Mystics, they clinched homecourt advantage in the first round of the playoffs. The Liberty’s path to getting homecourt in the first round is shrinking by the day

For the Liberty, they’ve got to find their way back into the paint. New York is still near the top of the league in efficiency inside the restricted area, but unfortunately for them near the bottom in terms of attempts.

A lot of Seattle’s struggles can be seen through the play of Gabby Williams. Williams was having the best season of her WNBA career and was named to her first All-Star team. However, in her last 15 games, she’s only averaged a shade over 10 points a night on .399/.277/.857 shooting splits. The team doesn’t count on her for scoring, but need as much help as they can to secure their playoff spot.

Their offense DOES run through Nneka Ogwumike, and Madame President is having another stellar season. If everything holds to form, this will be her seventh consecutive season shooting above 50 percent from the field. Having a lead option that can get buckets everywhere on the court and is reliable every night takes the pressure off of her teammates and allows everyone else to have less of a burden.

New York’s Finals MVP will need to bounce back in a big way. Jonquel Jones is working her way back from a one game absence due to an illness, and she hopes to be more assertive tonight. JJ only attempted four field goals and was on the bench as the team made its comeback. The Liberty won’t be able to accomplish anything if she’s not at the peak of her powers, and a great game against Ogwumike and Ezi Magbegor would do wonders for her and the team’s confidence.

Player to watch: Dominique Malonga​


Seattle’s future has started to make an impact on its present. Taken second overall in this year’s Draft, Dominique Malonga has steadily gotten better the more minutes she has played this year. The last time Dom saw the Liberty, she put on a show in the second half at Barclays Center and started forcing her way into the rotation. Seattle has had a Rollercoaster of a season, but Malonga’s growth is a bright spot that should have everyone excited for many years to come.

Seattle’s past returns and is looking to build on a somewhat positive development. Breanna Stewart played 34 minutes on Tuesday and is seemingly clear of her minutes restriction. She also insisted her way to the rim and attempted 13 free throws, her third highest total of the season thus far. The Liberty need a but more from everybody, and that starts with Stewart. She should have a bit extra in the tank since she’s back in her old stomping grounds, and the Liberty hope that will be enough to bring a W back home to Brooklyn.

From the Vault​


Sue Bird is officially entering the Naismith Hall of Fame this weekend, so let’s salute the legend

And ones in the air for the Queen

More reading: Circling Seattle Sports, Tempestade Talk, Finishing Through Contact, Swish Appeal, Breakaway, SB Nation, Women’s Basketball Roundup, Gotta Get Up, The Strickland, The Local W, New York Daily News, No Cap Space, New York Post, The Athletic, NY Liberty Fan TV, Yahoo Sports, Gotta Get Up, Sports Illustrated, Fansided, Just Women’s Sports, Winsidr, Her Hoop Stats, CBS Sports, and The Next

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nyliberty...eattle-storm-preview-late-night-showdown-wnba
 
Ben Saraf Concludes Big Summer of Training Camps for Brooklyn Nets

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The Flatbush Five may be a few weeks away from pressuring ball handers and committing their share of three-point attempts to “Jordi ball,” but they’re already making an impact in the Brooklyn area and beyond.

This weekend, Ben Saraf, Brooklyn’s selection with pick No. 26 from the 2025 NBA Draft, hosted a youth basketball clinic in Canarsie, Brooklyn at the H.E.S. (Hebrew Educational Society) with sports marketing and event management brand Pro Athletes Direct. The camp open to hoopers aged 6-16 ran for three hours on Sunday morning. Aside from the opportunity to train with Saraf, campers also got photo opportunities with him and a t-shirt.

If you subscribe to the “Fall begins with football” ideology, then Saraf’s camp concluded a rather bountiful, basketball-filled summer for the area youth. Just last week, Tyson Etienne hosted his first ever camp on Long Island. He also made an appearance with Dariq Whitehead and Drew Timme at a camp at the Hellenic Classical Charter School in early August.

Back where it all started 🏠🏀

Tyson Etienne hosted his first-ever camp at Long Island Lutheran this weekend, passing on lessons that shaped his journey from LuHi to the pros. pic.twitter.com/7lDGVfMf8W

— Brooklyn Nets (@BrooklynNets) September 2, 2025

All five of Brooklyn rookies, including Egor Dëmin, Drake Powell, Nolan Traoré, Danny Wolf, and Saraf, also got together at another Brooklyn Basketball camp in July.


Outside the NYC area, Nic Claxton also hosted his fourth youth camp in his home town of Greenville, South Carolina earlier in August. His fellow tree-limbed teammate Noah Clowney also made an appearance. A few days later, Claxton’s high school jersey was retired.


Tyrese Martin also hosted his own hometown-area camp in Allentown, PA a few weeks before that. Terance Mann did the same in his hometown of Lowell, MA.

But while summer may be over, BSE’s concentration on the Brooklyn youth won’t. Also promised in fall is the opening of the organization’s youth hoops facility in the old Modell’s location across the street from the Barclays Center. The factility will include two full courts, a half court, auxiliary baskets, multi-purpose court flooring for other events, and shooting labs via Shoot360.

Practice in the Park is also just around the corner. More on that soon.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-news...ig-summer-of-training-camps-for-brooklyn-nets
 
The Brooklyn Podcast: Season 2 Reintroduction, Michael Porter Jr., more

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We’re a month out from Brooklyn Nets training camp. It’s a much different team than we had this time last year. Pooch and Collin are looking to do more with The Brooklyn podcast as well.

In this introduction to season two of the show, our topics include Michael Porter Jr.’s latest batch of off-color comments, what the NBA’s biggest problem is right now, our Barclays Center Mt. Rushmore, whether or not Uncut Gems is a “basketball movie,” and much more. It’s a different kind of episode where Pooch and Collin share some reflection as we gear up for the hoops soon to come!

Check out the latest episode on Apple or Spotify. Or watch the video below. Comments/reviews are always appreciated.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-podc...eason-2-reintroduction-michael-porter-jr-more
 
Liberty wrap up home schedule with 75-66 win over the Mystics

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David Dow/NBAE via Getty Images
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The goal when your playoff position is locked in is pretty simple. Make it out the game healthy and iron out the fine details. For the New York Liberty, they haven’t been fully healthy since the second game of the season Coming into this game, Head Coach Sandy Brondello has only seen 107 minutes of her Opening Day starting lineup. Against the Washington Mystics on Tuesday night, in New York’s final home game of the regular season, the injury report was bare. Full health.

“It’s a great, great day to be a Liberty fan…and coach,” said Brondello before the game. At practice on Monday, Brondello mentioned that the next two games would be important to see possible rotations and what can work depending on the matchup. Sandy tends to keep a tight playoff rotation, and for the first three quarters of tonight’s game, we might have gotten a sneak peek as to what the rotation will look like starting this Sunday evening.

Until garbage time, the Liberty went with an eight-man rotation, starting with Cloud-Ionescu-Fiebich-Stewart-Jones and bringing Kennedy Burke, Emma Meesseman, and Rebekah Gardner off the bench. Noticeably, Marine Johannès was absent.

Explained Brondello: “We think Bek’s been giving us some, obviously good energy minutes recently with her defensive intensity, but also her movement. I mean, she’s always going to cut and try and do the right things, but being aggressive, she has confidence in herself, as we do and her teammates do.”

The standout reserve, though, was undoubtedly Emma Meesseman. She was a frequent screening partner for Sabrina Ionescu up top, but also worked to find openings in Washington’s defense that led to quick-hitting buckets…

that being said, Emma has done a good job finding her spots in the O: pic.twitter.com/qAx2QsVjpM

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) September 9, 2025

Meesseman scored 19 points in just 20 minutes off the bench, so it was an even bigger surprise that that Brondello never turned to the three-big lineup, featuring Meesseman, Stewart, and Jones.

Postgame, the Liberty Head Coach downplayed that decision: “We map rotations out at the start of the game, I did have that planned, but we didn’t think it was the right time. We still had to find some more chemistry with our normal rotations, but it is something that we do want to look at in the next game.”

With one more game to go before the postseason starts, the Liberty have another chance to build chemistry and experiment with various combinations. Breanna Stewart mentioned in postgame that in addition to getting the win, the Liberty are “trying things, practicing things for the playoffs, seeing what works, what doesn’t, and just building that confidence going forward.”

Final score: New York Liberty 75, Washington Mystics 66

Full strength​

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We haven’t seen the Liberty at full strength since the second game of the season. Now that the group is at full capacity, they are hoping to rely on their time together to guide them through a difficult playoff journey.

“I think having a team that’s been through highs and lows together really helps,” Sabrina Ionescu said at practice on September 8. “This isn’t a super new team and I think that’s why we’ve been able to weather the storm. We all understand the circumstances that we went through this year. I think if we had our full roster and this was the year that we had, we wouldn’t be smiling as much as we are.

It’s sports. Things are gonna happen that are out of your control. It’s part of why when you do win, everything’s just that much sweeter because so many things have to right in order for you to win. And you know, this year I think we’ve just known we’ve been dealing with a lot of players coming in and out for a long period of time, and kind of crucial players to to our team. So many different starting lineups, so many different things that we’ve had to go through. And I think for us, it’s just knowing we were right where we want to be now. And I think it’s just focusing on the now, not worrying about all that stuff that is out of our control, and knowing it’ll make us better in the long run.”

Even amidst all the frustrations of the season, the Liberty have done well to stick together and maintain a sense of togetherness. As the intensity and pressure picks up, they will have to rely on that in order to make history.

Fan protests​


For the Liberty’s final home game of the season, the home team put on Fan Appreciation Night. However, with season-ticket price increases looming, not every fan felt incredibly appreciated. Madeline Kenney of the New York Post reported on a small but organized protest during the game, as a few colorful fans voiced their displeasure with the price increases…

More than a dozen fans sitting on or near courtside tonight are wearing these bright orange shirts to protest the Liberty’s skyrocketing ticket prices for the playoffs and next season. pic.twitter.com/n95w5SPqL7

— Madeline Kenney (@madkenney) September 10, 2025

As we’ve written about here at NetsDaily, as the Liberty have found more success, prices have risen alongside it. The Libs are the best show going at Barclays Center and have made it one of the most exciting events in professional sports. It’s a delicate balance to strike and the team has to be incredibly careful not to price out their most loyal and dedicated fans. As we head into 2026 and beyond, we’ll see what the team does to ensure they make the game accessible for everyone.

Next up​

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The New York Liberty will close out the 2025 regular season on the road, facing the Chicago Sky on Thursday night. Tip-off is scheduled for 8:00 p.m. ET.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nyliberty/98773/liberty-vs-mystics-75-66-emma-meesseman-sabrina-ionescu
 
NY Liberty vs. Washington Mystics preview: Home finale

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Back home and hopefully back to something resembling success. The New York Liberty closed out their three game western road trip with a win against the Seattle Storm on Friday night.

The opponent tonight is out of the playoff picture, but they’ve got an especially bright future ahead of them. The Washington Mystics closed out their home schedule with a tough loss to the Indiana Fever in Baltimore. I didn’t realize it until a moment ago, but the Mystics are on a nine game losing streak. Ouch.

Where to follow the game​


FOX 5 on TV. Liberty Live and FOX Local on streaming. League Pass for the out-of-towners. Tip after 7 PM.

Injuries​


For the first time since May 22, the injury report is completely empty.

Jacy Sheldon and Georgia Amoore are out.

The game​


New York won the first ,second, and third meetings. This is the last meeting between the two teams in 2025.

The whole team is back, and it’ll be interesting to see how the team manages rotations. At practice yesterday, Sandy Brondello mentioned that she wants to get the key players and lineups minutes while not overburdening them too much. The Liberty are officially locked into the five seed and will start the playoffs on the road this Sunday. In all likelihood, they will match up with the Phoenix Mercury and have started doing some early prep. As we draw closer to the postseason, we’ll have more on the first round matchup.

Having Sabrina Ionescu back will help the offense out a great deal. Sab gives spacing, another person that can drive to the rim, and another player that can coordinate the offense. We haven’t gotten to see the full starting five in a good while, so getting a chance to get real live reps on the court will be a godsend for this group.

On the other side, we’ll get to watch a stealth Rookie of the Year candidate. Sonia Citron has fit in perfectly on the Mystics as she was named to the All Star Team and has built a solid ROY case along the way

Sonia Citron: good at basketball. pic.twitter.com/k1Skzx5fqf

— MysticsMuse (@MysticsMusee) September 9, 2025

It’s a great start to what should be an incredibly promising career in the W.

It’s Fan Appreciation Night at the ‘clays!

One passion. One family. One Liberty.🗽 pic.twitter.com/BbC7XTEHNA

— New York Liberty (@nyliberty) September 9, 2025

Liberty fans have consistently brought the energy and passion to the arena every single night and have made it the best homecourt advantage in the WNBA. The champs will be on the road to start the playoffs, but they’ll be back home in front of the hometown audience sooner than we know it.

Player to watch: Shakira Austin​


The Mystics have an intriguing future, and Austin figures to be a key part of it. Austin forms the second half of a fun dynamic duo between her and Kiki Iriafen. Austin has had injury woes in her career, but has always battled back. She’s reached a career high in games played this season, and if she’s able to stay on the court, she’ll help the Mystics build their foundation as they work to get back into contention. As they enter the great unknown of the WNBA off-season, a core of herself, Citron, and Iriafen is a nice place to be.

It’s been a rough few games for Jonquel Jones. Foul trouble doomed her in Seattle and she was working her way back after being under the weather in Golden State. When JJ is on her game, she makes the Liberty impossible to handle on both sides of the ball. Leonie Fiebich spoke with us at practice yesterday and noted that the defense isn’t switching as much, which should help Jones out. JJ has had to take switches a lot, which has made things a bit easier for rollers diving to the rim. The goal for the week is staying healthy and getting enough reps in to be comfortable when the playoffs start.

From the Vault​


Amazingly, the MTV Video Music Awards were on Sunday night. It didn’t feel like a big deal, which is a byproduct of MTV’s declining influence in popular culture over the past few decades. It didn’t used to be like that, so let’s take you back to 9-9-99

More reading: Bullets Forever, Swish Appeal, Breakaway, SB Nation, Women’s Basketball Roundup, The Local W, New York Daily News, No Cap Space, New York Post, Newsday, The Athletic, NY Liberty Fan TV, Fansided, Just Women’s Sports, Winsidr, Her Hoop Stats, Yahoo Sports, ESPN, CBS Sports, and The Next

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/all-women...-mystics-preview-shakira-austin-jonquel-jones
 
Long Island Nets acquire Yuri Collins, G League top playmaker

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The Long Island Nets had a busy Tuesday, acquiring rights to two players in two separate trades, including Yuri Collins, the G League’s leader in assists last year.

With the NBA G League season quickly approaching, teams are beginning to take shape. While it’s still early, Long Island has made a few moves so far this offseason, including moving some big players’ returning rights, such as Kendall Brown. However, arguably the biggest return for Long Island came on Tuesday as they acquired returning player rights for Collins.

In the second of the two trades, the Long Island team acquired Collins from the Santa Cruz Warriors in exchange for a first-round pick and a second-round pick in the 2026 NBA G League Draft. This move could prove to be big this offseason for Long Island as they have picked up one of the best play makers in the entire NBA G League.

Collins, who stands at 6-foot, appeared in 49 games last season between the NBA G League Tip-Off Tournament and the regular season. He averaged 13.7 points, 3.5 rebounds, 10.2 assists, and 1.3 steals in 32.2 minutes per game. His 10.8 assists per game in the regular season alone led the NBA G League. He ranked third in the league in assists per game during the Tip-Off Tournament as well with 8.9.

Yuri Collins had one of the GREATEST passing seasons in G League history! 👏 #NBAAssistWeek

The 6’0” PG averaged a league-high 10.8 APG which was the G’s highest assist average since the 2009-10 season. Collins led the @gleaguewarriors to the postseason and earned his first NBA… pic.twitter.com/t7s554GAb6

— NBA G League (@nbagleague) August 20, 2025

Collins could be filling some big shoes left by Killian Hayes. Hayes quickly became one of the best playmakers for the Long Island last year, and Collins looks to continue that string. Similar to Hayes, Collins also earned an NBA G League call-up last season, signing a 10-day contract with the Golden State Warriors.

He appeared in two NBA games, averaging 1.0 points, 1.5 rebounds, 2.0 assists, and 1.0 steals in 8.0 minutes per contest. Despite the small sample size, this experience is more than valuable when joining a new G League team. Collins also played for the Phoenix Suns Summer League team. Collins played for Santa Cruz in the 2023-24 season as well, appearing in 50 games. Back then, he only averaged 5.4 points, 2.3 rebounds, and 4.7 assists in 22.2 minutes per game.

Before his time in the G League chasing his NBA dream, Collins played four years of college ball at Saint Louis University. He led the NCAA in total assists and assists per game in both his junior and senior seasons. He even earned an AP Honorable Mention All-American honors in his final season with the Billikens.

In the first trade of the day, Long Island acquired returning player rights for Malachi Smith from the Memphis Hustle, in exchange for their returning player rights for Jordan Minor and a first round pick in the 2026 NBA G League Draft.

Smith stands at 6-foot-4 and appeared in 46 NBA G League Tip-Off Tournament and regular season games for the Hustle. He averaged 11.4 points, 4.2 rebounds, and 3.1 assists in 25.3 minutes per game. He shot a respectable 50.1 percent from the field. This is a percentage that went up from the previous year (43.3%.)

Smith played college ball for Gonzaga for one year in 2022-23 when he teamed with Drew Timme, now with Brooklyn after spending most of last season in Long Island. In that one year, he earned West Coast Conference Sixth Man of the Year honors. He also played three years of college ball before that at the University of Tennessee Chattanooga (2020-22) and one season at Wright State (2018-19).

As for Minor, he developed quite well on Long Island, taking over where Timme left off when Timme got called up to the big club. Minor appeared in 42 NBA G League Tip-Off Tournament and regular season games for the Nets last season. He averaged 5.7 points and 3.4 rebounds in 12.3 minutes per contest. He made his presence felt on Long Island after having a successful tryout.

The Long Island roster is beginning to take shape. Some of the big club’s rookies, and players like Fanbo Zeng and Grant Nelson, could be placed in the G League for the time being. A big rookie who could see a lot of time on the G League club is Drake Powell, who will be recovering from a minor left knee injury.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/longislan...two-players-on-tuesday-including-yuri-collins
 
Jason Collins, New Jersey and Brooklyn Nets star, treated for brain cancer

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Jason Collins, whose defense helped the New Jersey Nets get to the NBA Finals twice then finished his career with the Brooklyn Nets after becoming the first active gay player in any of the four major sports to come out as gay, has been diagnosed with brain cancer and is undergoing treatment. according to a statement released on his behalf by the NBA Thursday. Collins is an NBA ambassador.

Former #Nets big man Jason Collins is being treated for a brain tumor. #nba 👇🏾 pic.twitter.com/jNZb33SPZz

— Brian Lewis (@NYPost_Lewis) September 11, 2025

Collins, now 46, came to the New Jersey Nets in a 2001 Draft night trade with the Houston Rockets along with Richard Jefferson and Brandon Armstrong. The Nets gave up Eddie Griffin. Two weeks later Rod Thorn traded Stephon Marbury for Jason Kidd, the move that doubled the team’s wins from 26 to 52 and catapulted them into the NBA Finals vs. the Los Angeles Lakers. The next year, they returned to the Finals but lost again, this time to the San Antonio Spurs. Collins first as a back-up, then as a starter, provided defense and toughness for New Jersey through 2008 when he was traded to the Memphis Grizzlies for Stromile Swift.

Overall, the Stanford graduate played 532 regular season games and 75 in the post-season for the Nets.

He subsequently played for the Minnesota Timberwolves, Atlanta Hawks, Boston Celtics and Washington Wizards before coming out in a Sports Illustrated profile in May 2013. In the cover story, Collins became the first active male athlete from one of the four major North American professional team sports to do so. Collins also said the murder of a young gay man, Matthew Shepard, in Wyoming in 1998 had led him to choose No. 98 for his jersey number, in Shepard’s honor. Collins called the number “a statement to myself, my family and my friends.”

The move won him wide approval for his courage. On February 23, 2014, Collins signed a 10-day contract to rejoin the Nets, by then in Brooklyn. Nets coach Jason Kidd, who became good friends with Collins in New Jersey had advocated for signing Collins and owner Mikhail Prokhorov okayed the move. Collins retired that year as a Net.

Over his 13-year career, Collins had career averages in the NBA of only 3.6 points, 3.7 rebounds, 0.5 blocks, and 41% shooting from the field. However, more than one member of the basketball analytics community valued his defense through measurements not typically found in a boxscore, as Wikipedia noted in summarizing his career.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-hist...d-brooklyn-nets-star-treated-for-brain-cancer
 
New York Liberty close regular season with win over Chicago Sky, 91-86

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The New York Liberty closed out the 2025 regular season with a ho-hum victory over the Chicago Sky. Their 44th and final game before the real test begins was one of the least eventful, least stressful games of the four-month tune-up. Sandy Brondello had her whole lineup, including mid-season arrival Emma Meesseman, available for just the second time in 2025, and nobody got hurt.

The Chicago Sky, with a seemingly inevitable Angel Reese trade request hanging over their dysfunctional operation, were ready for the offseason. The Liberty walked into about ten layups via a backdoor cut in the first half, exerting just a little bit more effort than they would in a pregame walk-through to take a 56-44 lead into the break.

New York did hold a 17-point lead at one point, but then, again, their opponent made a run as Breanna Stewart headed toward the bench. If there’s one shining positive from the Liberty’s uneven close to the season, it’s that Stewart has proven she is capable, post-injury, of forcing herself on every corner of the game for art least 30 minutes a night. Transition, help defense, even hitting a couple jumpers — she put up 24/6/3 in this one on a tidy 9-of-14 shooting.

But the Liberty are struggling when she heads to the bench, in no small part because Jonquel Jones has not played well since returning from her own injury post All-Star break. She’s still Jonquel Jones, shooting well above 40% from three at 6’6”, still drawing attention when she steps into the paint, still capable of putting up big numbers on any given night, and she’d be forgiven for toning down the effort in the final game of the regular season. Except, this wasn’t her toning it down; this is her new normal…

NYL will not repeat unless JJ finds a higher level than she's shown since returning from injury pic.twitter.com/4CbLbX3VGp

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) September 12, 2025

I love me some Jonquel Jones, but much of New York’s postseason fortune hinges on whether she’ll snap out of it, starting this weekend.

If not, Brondello may be forced into tough decisions between Emma Meesseman, who again looked great on Thursday, and Jones. At least for stretches. Or, she could just take take the fork in the road by playing a triple-big lineup, which she vowed to do against the Sky, and sure enough, the Aussie stayed true to her word.

We saw Stewie, Jones, and Meesseman share the court for nearly four minutes on Thursday, in which the Liberty outscored Chicago 10-8. (Izzy Harrison later replaced Jones in that lineup, with the idea of three bigs staying intact.)

“I think what worked is we gave each other space to operate, and that’s the most important thing,” said Stewart postgame. “You know, we tried it earlier on, it seemed like we were on top of each other, but now letting one action develop on one side and then moving to the second side.”

Brondello thought the lineup was “successful,” and now, it seems to be a playable card for her in New York’s first-round matchup against the Phoenix Mercury. The same cannot be said for Marine Johannès, who once again did not appear until garbage time, behind Meesseman, Kennedy Burke, and Rebekah Gardner as the favored reserves off the bench.

Gardner scored a season-high 15 points on a perfect 5-of-5 from the field to end her up-and-down season, which is ending with an undeniable ‘up’ after the veteran 2-guard nearly fell out of the lineup entirely in August. After watching the Liberty march to the title last season as she nursed an achilles injury, Gardner is set to be an active participant in their title defense.

She can’t wait: “I just use what I learned during that year, often. Even throughout the year, there’s been times where other, different players are out, and I’ve just tried to step up where I can and help the team where I can. So, I try to continue to do that. And looking back, I feel like it’s been great, but I’m looking forward to winning another championship.”

After Jones checked out midway through the third quarter, we headed steadily toward garbage time. The benches wrapped up the season, and even though Chicago’s bench thoroughly outplayed New York’s deep reserves, it was okay. Everybody was healthy, and Nyara Sabally even got to score a couple points…

Nyara Sabally with two buckets, on passes from Sabrina Ionescu, her first points in nearly two months! pic.twitter.com/3yZNDmQ0yb

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) September 12, 2025

What an odd regular season that was for New York. They didn’t have a championship hangover, but after steamrolling every competitor for the first three weeks of the season, their glorious victory tour, fresh off the first championship in the franchise’s 28-year history, never regained its footing. Even the wins were struggles, but the losses were aggravating. Emma Meesseman was not just a luxury, but a vital appendage.

The New York Liberty did not find a new identity this season, beyond that of a tired team capable of infrequent brilliance. Maybe they will be brilliant over the next month of playoff basketball and go back-to-back; watching the top eight players demolish a mopey Chicago Sky team in the first half is enough to make the heart flutter, to hope against hope.

All that is over now. It’s time for the playoffs. Given that the Liberty never truly built a rhythm this year, you wish the 2025 regular season could have lasted just a little longer. But it damn sure won’t be missed.

Final Score: New York Liberty 91, Chicago Sky 86

Next Up​

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The New York Liberty will take on the Phoenix Mercury in round one of the WNBA playoffs, a best-of-3 format traveling between cities for each game. The Mercury, as the #4 seed, will host the #5 seed Liberty on Sunday evening at 5:00 p.m. ET.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nyliberty/98853/liberty-vs-sky-91-86-breanna-stewart-angel-reese
 
NY Liberty vs. Chicago Sky preview: Regular season finale

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One more to go. The New York Liberty closed out the home portion of their schedule with a tidy 75-66 win over the Washington Mystics on Tuesday night.

The opponent tonight is trying to get to the offseason as quickly as possible. It’s been a rough season for the Chicago Sky and they took another blowout loss at the hands of the Las Vegas Aces on Tuesday night. One more to go.

Where to follow the game​


MY9 on TV. Liberty Live and FOX Local on streaming. League Pass for the out-of-towners. Tip after 8 PM.

Injuries​


All clear for the Liberty.

Ariel Atkins, Hailey Van Lith, and Courtney Vandersloot are out. Angel Reese and Elizabeth Williams.

The game​


New York won games one and two while Chicago took game three.

Y’all know the rules. Last game of the regular season with nothing to play for means you have one job and one job only: make it out of this contest healthy. Once this wraps, the Liberty have a date with the Phoenix Mercury in the first round of the playoffs starting on Sunday. We’ll find out the schedule once the other seeds are set in stone.

From when we last saw Angel Reese, things have fallen apart. She called out her organization (and by proxy her teammates) in the Chicago Tribune, got suspended for reaching the technical foul suspended, THEN got suspended by the team for those interview comments, and hasn’t played in a week with a reported back injury. This issue is far from over and will be a key discussion point throughout the off-season. I wrote about the issue at my newsletter (which you should subscribe to!), the Women’s Basketball Roundup:

When you’re a star basketball player, you eventually reach a point where you begin to assert yourself when it comes to how your team is built and try to direct the path the team is on. You’re set in your career, are fully confident and comfortable in your career, and want the organization to get its stuff together so it can compete for a championship…

This is another aspect of stardom that players like Reese must navigate. When you publicly challenge the course the organization is on, and intimate that the roster you’re on isn’t good enough, and have your words become the center of attention, you have to stand up and face the music.

Whether it’s from the press or your teammates, you’ve got to be able to have a conversation when your words reach people in the ways that Reese’s did and the meaning you had became lost in translation.

Relationships take a long time to build, but can be destroyed in a matter of seconds. We’ll see where things go from here.

For the Liberty, we’ll see how long they play their starters tonight. Sandy Brondello mentioned that she wants the group to get a few more reps in and some more minutes with lineups that could be part of the main playoff rotation. We’ve seen players like Breanna Stewart continue to shake off the rust following an injury absence, and the team will look for Sabrina Ionescu to knock some rust off as well.

Player to watch: Kamilla Cardoso​


As the Sky try to figure out what to do in the future, Cardoso should be someone that plays a big part in their plans. She and Reese have made for a solid frontcourt duo that has room to get better. Like Reese, Cardoso could stand to be a bit better inside the restricted area as she’s shooting under 60 percent from the field in that part of the court. She’ll likely play overseas during the off-season, so she’ll have some chances to add to her game and work on some other parts that need improvement.

Throughout the week, Natasha Cloud and Leonie Fiebich have talked about the group needing to be better on the glass. They’ve been better at it in the past two games, and the team’s increased focus on the boards should give Jonquel Jones some help on that end. JJ had a pretty solid night on Tuesday and the team did some less switching on defense against the Mystics. We’ll see what the Liberty work on tonight as they get one last tune-up in before the stakes get higher starting on Sunday night.

From the Vault​


September 11 is a very tough day for a lot of people here in New York and around the world. Hopefully, these moments provide a little bit of happiness and positivity on a sad day.

Peace and blessings to everyone out there.

More reading: Chicago Sun Times, Chicago Tribune, Swish Appeal, Breakaway, SB Nation, Women’s Basketball Roundup, The Local W, New York Daily News, Newsday, New York Post, NY Liberty Fan TV, No Cap Space, The Athletic, Fansided, Just Women’s Sports, Winsidr, Her Hoop Stats, Yahoo Sports, ESPN, CBS Sports, and The Next

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nyliberty...ky-wnba-preview-kamilla-cardoso-jonquel-jones
 
New York Liberty vs. Phoenix Mercury, series preview

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Christian Petersen/Getty Images

Just under one year ago, the New York Liberty prepared to take on the Las Vegas Aces in the second round of the WNBA Playoffs. It was a highly anticipated rematch of the 2023 Finals, and though the Liberty were rightfully favored, it was a clear slay-the-dragon situation for New York; to win a title, they’d have to overcome the big, bad Aces, who secured a repeat title at Barclays Center and rubbed salt in the wound afterwards.

Heading into the 2024 semifinals, I wrote a long preview, digging into the Las Vegas Aces and the specific challenges New York would be up against. What actions they’d have to defend, what matchups may look like, who to attack, that sort of thing.

On Sunday evening, the 2025 Liberty will begin their title defense against the Phoenix Mercury in what, on paper, figures to be the most exciting matchup of the first round. As the #5 seed, the Libs will begin on the road. They’re healthy for the first time since early June, before Emma Meesseman was even on the roster. Sandy Brondello only got two tune-up games with her full squad, and though we learned some valuable lessons — Rebekah Gardner has supplanted Marine Johannès in the playoff rotation, triple-big lineups are in fact an option — we don’t really know what we’re gonna get from the Liberty in the playoffs.

As a result, this series preview is a bit less about the Mercury and their ins and outs, but more of an internal assessment of New York. Back in early August, I did write a feature on the Mercury, and though it’s a bit outdated, it still provides an in-depth rundown of what to expect from the Alyssa Thomas-led squad.

On the other side, here are my main questions and concerns for the Liberty heading into the first round of the 2025 WNBA playoffs.

What version of Jonquel Jones shows up?​


In 22 games post All-Star break, Jonquel Jones is averaging 14/8/3 with just over a block per game on 50/42/82 shooting. In 2024, when she finished 10th in regular season MVP voting and then won Finals MVP, she averaged 14/9/3 with just over a block per game on 54/39/78 shooting splits.

The numbers don’t tell the full story: Having Jones in the lineup is much, much better than the alternative, but she hasn’t consistently brought it for a few weeks now. Against many regular-season opponents, just trotting out the best 3-point shooting center in the league with Stewie behind her on defense is good enough, but this…

NYL will not repeat unless JJ finds a higher level than she's shown since returning from injury pic.twitter.com/4CbLbX3VGp

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) September 12, 2025

…isn’t going to play in the postseason.

Against Phoenix, New York’s defensive matchups, to start, will probably look like this:

  • Sabrina Ionescu guarding Monique Akoa Makani
  • Natasha Cloud guarding Kahleah Copper
  • Leonie Fiebich guarding Satou Sabally
  • Breanna Stewart guarding Natasha Mack
  • Jones on Alyssa Thomas

Mack is an excellent role player; she’s near the top of the league in offensive rebounding percentage as well as block-rate. Everything you would want of your low-usage, paint-bound center. But Phoenix shoots the 3rd-most 3-pointers in the league, relying on Alyssa Thomas to create them via dribble-handoffs or driving and kicking. Mack will only play about half the game, but when she’s out there, she provides a critical help point near the rim.

Replace Kamilla Cardoso — guarding Mack in the dunker spot — with Breanna Stewart on a play like this and this layup attempt is getting set into the upper deck…

plays like this are exactly why I think Stewie will start on Mack, w/ JJ guarding Thomas: pic.twitter.com/NzO5tqaACT

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) September 12, 2025

The matchups aren’t ironclad, especially not if the Liberty do go triple-big for extended stretches, or when Mack sits for DeWanna Bonner or Kat Westbeld. Still, the Liberty will be asking a lot of Jonquel Jones, as they should.

On dribble-handoffs and screens, she’ll have to be up to touch, trying to take away clean 3-point looks and then recovering to Thomas on the roll. When Jones is right, she’s sliding her feet on the perimeter; when she’s not as engaged, she’s late to get out there. Not to mention, she’ll have to fight through screens, always a struggle for a player her size whether she’s locked in or not…

Triple-big against Phoenix’s offense​


Though Meesseman, Stewart, and Jones have shared the court for just 29 minutes this season, lighting up opponents in that small sample size, it’s a lineup Sandy Brondello has vowed to look into, at the very least.

Back in August, she said, “We’re figuring out what works, what a big lineup looks like, how we’re switching, integrating JJ in, and figuring all that out. Like, there’s so many variables. And this is kind of the time where you try and iron those things out and figure out what works.”

The Liberty never really got that time in 2025. Resorting to triple bigs may just be an effort to get New York’s best players on the floor as much as possible, and it presents fascinating matchup questions for both sides. I’d imagine Phoenix might try to downsize and space Emma off the floor, forcing her to guard a capable shooter, but that opens the door for her to go to work on the other end. Maybe Natasha Mack, with her athleticism and offensive rebounding ability, is enough of a matchup problem anyway.

I think it’d behoove the Liberty to force the issue early. Meesseman is a fantastic offensive talent; she’s posting a hilarious 65 TS% in her New York tenure thus far, and though the 3-point volume isn’t close to Kennedy Burke, for example, she can add some punch to any possession at any moment…

that being said, Emma has done a good job finding her spots in the O: pic.twitter.com/qAx2QsVjpM

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) September 9, 2025

For all the warranted discussion about Phoenix’s 3-point shooting and Alyssa Thomas’ ability to create open looks — she averaged 9.2 assists per game this season — they finished just 7th in offense this season. Even when Thomas, Satou Sabally, and Kahleah Copper all shared the court, they produced a nice but far-from-dominant 109 offensive rating.

Meesseman isn’t helpless on D; she can use her size near the rim and has good hands. This might be enough to survive against Phoenix, a team that hasn’t quite figured out what to do when their initial action doesn’t work. The Minnesota Lynx, on the other end, can seamlessly put Meesseman through multiple actions on and off the ball, and that’s a big part of they’re the scariest (duh) matchup for New York in these playoffs…

Minnesota's offense just so crisp, intentional. Emma Meesseman straight up switching onto Courtney is fine, if not ideal, but then having to defend splits vs. Kayla McBride…

the question of her defense in this matchup is fascinating: pic.twitter.com/DF4fOJAl81

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) August 19, 2025

Can the defense sustain?​


It’s not just about Jonquel Jones or Emma Meessmean. Since June 11th, following New York’s 9-0 start, they are eighth in defensive rating; the five teams below them all missed the playoffs. No one player or issue is to blame. Injuries weighed down the effort and energy on many nights, and with so many moving pieces, on the nights when New York could sustain attention to detail for much of the shot-clock, they either capped possessions by failing to secure the rebound or one crucial breakdown if their opponent could keep the ball moving.

This isn’t a new issue for the Liberty. As we’ve covered extensively, they toggle through coverages at a blitzing pace, and Stewie and Jones are free to spring traps or switches where they see fit. “Letting them play on feel,” as assistant coach Sonia Raman describes it.

But even in last year’s Finals against the Minnesota Lynx, coverage breakdowns almost cost them the title. We all remember the ticky-tack foul call that sent Breanna Stewart to the line for game tying free-throws at the end of regulation in Game 5, but that play happened with 5.2 seconds on the clock. After she drilled them, Kayla McBride missed an open three that would’ve given the Lynx the title after Stewie and Jones got caught up on a switch.

Throw in the chaos of the 2025 season, and those mistakes have been more frequent in 2025. I asked Leonie Fiebich if she feels Sandy Brondello & co. will have to simplify the defensive game-plans heading into this year’s playoffs, and though she initially responded “no,” Fiebich did admit there may be less toggling between coverages vs. Phoenix.

“I think it’s more, like, getting good at one or two things. Like, really good. For example, congesting the paint, just so nobody’s easily getting paint points. That’s just being on the same page honestly, and talking through it, sometimes our talk just goes out the window, and that makes it too hard.”

I keep coming back to this play against the Washington Mystics from Tuesday…

Fiebich indeed congees the paint against the drive middle, allowing Jonquel Jones to drop near the rim, and Stewie is ready to fly to Alysha Clark in the far corner. But the ball hits ex-Lib Stefanie Dolson on the pop. Sabrina Ionescu flies at Dolson from the near corner, but Cloud does the same thing, leading to an open corner three.

Who is at fault here? Is it supposed to be an x-out, with Cloud heading to the corner, or was Sabrina just supposed to play halfway between Dolson and Washington’s best shooter? Has the Liberty coaching staff — with all on their plate — covered this exact scenario?

A defensive rotation like this requires loud talk but also innate feel, built on reps. The Liberty are out of practice reps, and their talk comes and goes, especially after the initial action.

“When we’re scrambling, that’s when we’re at our best,” says Breanna Stewart of New York’s defense, and it’s true. They can be athletic, long, disruptive, and flat-out dangerous on defense. But when they’re not connected, a scramble is only dangerous to them. Before we know if they can stay on the same page for the entirety of their championship defense, they first have to do it against the Phoenix Mercury. That is their biggest battle in this series.

What will Natasha Cloud bring?​

The Liberty’s starting five finished the season with a +26.0 net rating, the highest by any lineup in the WNBA (min. 120 MP) since the 2019 Mystics, who went on to win the WNBA Championship.

— NYL Stats (@NYL_Stats) September 12, 2025

It feels wrong to question Natasha Cloud’s potential impact in this series given her recent playoff performances, given how successful New York’s starting lineup has been. And yet, nearly all of their minutes together came in that aforementioned 9-0 start.

But with New York unable to get as many stops these days, and with defense more attuned to this slightly different Liberty lineup, opponents are getting a bit more disrespectful with Cloud. Here’s a prime example…

Tash makes the three but this is how teams will guard her. Heavy nail help, then going way under: pic.twitter.com/cx1c5Qm0mQ

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) September 9, 2025

I asked Sandy Brondello if she feels the team, including Tash, has improved at countering the obvious adjustment of teams playing further and further off of her, or going under on ball-screens: “I think we can get better. You know, it’s been really frustrating, I think everyone knows they’re going under. Why do we screen and not hit? Just slow it down, and it’s Tash too. She’s got to slow down to where she can re-space to get a flatter angle, or diversity in our screening, not just sitting one way. Or her pinching it, set up moves.”

What is the solution in a playoff series? Is the sample small enough to where Cloud, 33.8% 3-point shooter, just has to make some shots? Will a rough start to the best-of-3 force Brondello to go triple-big more often, or even close with Kennedy Burke or Rebekah Gardner, who is shooting over 40% from three on low volume?

Natasha Cloud will want to rip the head off her former team, no doubt about that. But if the Liberty can’t get out in transition as frequently as they’d like, if Cloud can’t push the pace, what does her offense look like in this series?

Prediction​


I mean, how else do you end one of these, right?

Ultimately, I’m picking the Liberty to advance in a sweaty but decisive series. Whether that takes two or three games will depend on some shooting variance, but they have what it takes to move on and set up a 2024 Finals rematch with the Minnesota Lynx in the semis.

This may surprise the devoted readers who have seen me declare that it’s just not the Liberty’s year. That they have put together championship-quality basketball for far too long now to make a deep playoff run. And though I still believe that, I don’t believe Phoenix is equipped to hit New York where it hurts. Not consistently, at least.

Between Cloud and Fiebich, they have the defenders to stand a chance vs. Kahleah Copper. Fiebich and Stewie have the length to force (read: assist) Satou Sabally into taking some brutal looks, and whether it’s Mack or Bonner/Westbeld, I think the Mercury have to sacrifice a bit too much with each lineup decision.

The first-round series between the New York Liberty and the Phoenix Mercury, the most compelling matchup to open the WNBA playoffs, tips off at 5:00 p.m. ET on ESPN on Sunday evening. Cleanse your eyeballs after the Giants and Jets both drop to 0-2.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nyliberty/98868/new-york-liberty-vs-phoenix-mercury-series-preview
 
NetsDaily Off-Season Report – No. 20

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The Cam Thomas saga may not have reached an end, but it sure looks like this marriage is irretrievably broken and on its way to divorce. As Lucas Kaplan wrote for us:

The relationship is done. Cam Thomas accepted the qualifying offer in an effort to take full control of his career, a career that will not be set in Brooklyn for much longer. He has watched peers feature on playoff teams and sign contracts that approach $40 million in annual value, only to complete his rookie contract to collect dust in the bureaucratic hell of restricted free agency as the franchise he grew up in declines to pay him what he feels he’s owed.

Moreover, there’s history. Only one player ever has re-signed with his former team long-term after playing a full season on a qualifying offer — Spencer Hawes in 2012-13. Thomas exercised his QO for one reason: to get his freedom. At the moment, we only know — or believe we know — only one side of the negotiation: what the Nets were offering, per Shams Charania.

The Nets were unable to reach a long-term deal with Thomas, so the 23-year-old high-scoring guard opted for the qualifying offer that gives him a full no-trade clause and sets him for unrestricted free agency next summer with at least 10 teams set to have cap space…

Thomas’ representatives, Ron Shade and Alex Saratsis of Octagon, discussed several frameworks of deals with the Nets but ultimately declined Brooklyn’s offers of two years and $30 million with a team option for the second season or one year and $9.5 million with incentives up to $11 million while waiving the no-trade clause, sources said.

Shams did not report what Thomas wanted although from his report, it sure seems like he had access to Thomas’ agents who it would appear was his primary source. There have been reports that he wanted anywhere from $30 million to $40 million a year over several years, quite the gap from what the Nets were offering. And indeed, a league source told ND that a couple of weeks before the Nets guard opted out, that the two sides were “far apart.”

Sean Marks & co. had delayed what Jake Fischer described as “significant engagement” with Thomas until recently, wanting to work through their monopoly on NBA cap space first. The Nets also had as Lucas noted a “bureaucratic” advantage: no other team had cap space to offer Thomas a deal to his liking. It shouldn’t have surprised that the Nets were only offering him a figure around the MLE. That’s all any team had and the Nets had the right to match it. With so many teams near the luxury tax threshold and/or one of the two aprons, the market shrank further. The Nets were not going to bid against themselves.

And there is the reality that pundits repeated over and over during the summer: there was no market for him, period. As one league source, a decision-maker, told ND at the beginning of the process, giving the 23-year-old more than $10 million would ensure their “entire off-season goes from being amazing to shitty.” When we suggested that CamT was “polarizing,” he responded, “Not for people who work in the NBA.”

Finally, and this was not so much talked about, Thomas’s game with its dependence on isolation didn’t fit — at all — with what Marks and Jordi Fernandez has said is what the Nets will look like in 2025-26 and presumably beyond.

Said Fernández back in November: “The ball has energy, and I think if everybody touches the ball, everybody feels better. So that’s important for us, touching the paint is important.”

Then, the night of the Draft, Marks reiterated it: “It’s 0.5-second basketball, you catch and make a decision. You don’t hold the ball. It’s also where the NBA is going: guys who can play multiple positions, guard multiple positions, and make it hard on the defense.”

Does that sound like Cam Thomas? It does not. Did Marks comment and more importantly his five picks that night telegraph his discussions with Thomas? It certainly could have.

Thomas profanity-laced tweets directed at Zach Lowe who had called him, “an empty calorie ball hog” probably didn’t help his case either. And missing 73 games in two seasons to a nagging injury can’t be dismissed.

On the other hand, didn’t Thomas deserve more than the lowest number? Doesn’t his support among the fans. both in Brooklyn and (even more so) overseas warrant a better deal from a team with a wealth of cash available and a lack of identifiable stars? As Pooch write when it first appears that a split was likely…

We watch basketball and love the game for what happens on the court. The money isn’t mine nor is it you who’s reading this (unless you’re Joe Tsai!). Like it or not, Cam Thomas has been one of the few bright spots for Nets fans. It’s undeniable even if you aren’t his biggest fan: He thrills us.

Brooklyn will live on with or without him, they’ve flaunted a good coach, draft capital, financial flexibility, and most importantly the New York City market. But the game IS about stars and Thomas is the closest to one currently dressing in black-and-white.

It’s kind of telling that the official NBA China Games poster features three Nets added this summer: 19-year-olds Egor Demin and Nolan Traore and Michael Porter Jr, whose summer has been, quite frankly, an unmitigated disaster.

Bottom line: it’s a business and not giving Cam Thomas his bag was a business as well as a basketball decision, driven by the new CBA. And what happens to Thomas. Mike Vorkunov of The Athletic/New York Times, wrote this two days ago:

Next summer could be a better option for Thomas. If he’s willing to wait and risk the monthslong anxiety pangs of a qualifying offer, he’ll have unrestricted free agency as a ballast. More teams, as of now, are set to have cap space next summer. That could make the risk worthwhile. The salary cap grew by 10 percent for the 2025-26 season and is projected to grow by seven percent next season, according to the league memo sent to teams.

But there are also trends working against restricted free agents. Players increasingly sign contract extensions rather than go to free agency, in part because the last CBA made it more lucrative to do so. More extensions, of course, means less cap space. And there is still 10 months to go until the next free agency cycle.

It is a risk for both sides, but much less so for the Nets, as Pooch and Lucas pointed out. Brooklyn is tanking. They want to develop the Flatbush 5 (and Fanbo Zeng as well as Dariq Whitehead and Noah Clowney.) They can decide how to use Thomas. He will want to showcase his skills, improve his chances of approving a trade at the deadline or a new contract in July. Will it be bombs away or a different CamT who plays better defense and adheres to the 0.5-second rule that helped the Thunder and Pacers get to the Finals? How will Jordi Fernandez handle all this? We will find out.

Meanwhile, back at the ranch, aka HSS Training Center

The Nets this week added two-way E.J. Liddell who played last season for the Bulls, also on a two-way. He got little playing time on the big club. Liddell has played only 20 games with the New Orleans Pelicans and Chicago Bulls since being drafted by New Orleans in the second round in 2022. A scorer at Ohio State and in the G League, he’s an ideal tw0-way: a young player seeking a new opportunity.

Putting aside the roster math, the signing of Liddell is yet another indication that the Nets are putting a premium on youth, as rebuilding teams do. Indeed, there’s a possibility depending on what Sean Marks & co. do the rest of the way, that the Brooklyn Nets 2025-26 roster will be the youngest ever.

Here’s where things stand, going from youngest to oldest:

  • Nolan Traore, 19.
  • Ben Saraf, 19
  • Egor Demin, 19
  • Drake Powell, 20 (today)
  • Dariq Whitehead, 21
  • Noah Clowney, 21
  • Danny Wolf, 21
  • Fanbo Zeng, 22
  • Cam Thomas, 23
  • Day’Ron Sharpe, 23
  • Ziaire Williams, 23
  • Keon Johnson, 23
  • Ricky Council IV, 24
  • E.J. Liddell, 24
  • Jalen Wilson, 24
  • Drew Timme, 24 (till tomorrow)
  • Tyson Etienne, 25
  • Nic Claxton, 26
  • Tyrese Martin, 26
  • Michael Porter Jr., 27
  • Haywood Highsmith, 28
  • Terance Mann, 28

So, 17 of the 22 players currently on the roster are 25 or younger. We included both Fanbo Zeng and Ricky Council IV in our survey even though they’re not signed. And, of course, the Nets will have to cut as many as three of their five players with team options.

It should also be noted that two current members of the Nets are among the youngest players in franchise history: Nolan Traore at 19.5 years old ranks fifth behind Derrick Favors, Cliff Robinson (not Uncle Cliffy but a player who played with the team in 1979-80 as a 19-year-old), Dariq Whitehead and Noah Clowney. Right behind him and six weeks older is Ben Saraf at No. 6.

Comings and goings

Acie Law becomes Brooklyn’s third chief scout in the past three years, but he brings something special. He has a ring with the OKC Thunder last year, having been part of the Sam Presti front office for four years during which the Thunder had great success obviously. More importantly, Law has experience in managing scouting operations for a team with a vast trove of draft picks. Indeed, Brooklyn has surpassed Oklahoma City in terms of picks going forward.

The Thunder currently have 27 picks over the next seven years: 12 firsts and 15 seconds, second most in the NBA. Brooklyn has a league-leading 32: 13 first and 15 seconds. So he has significant experience in the management of an NBA club’s scouting apparatus. Until the Nets surpassed them this year, the Thunder has long been the team with the NBA most draft assets in the NBA.

Law succeeds Drew Nicholas who spent one year in Brooklyn, arriving from Denver, then departing this summer for Boston. Two years ago, J.R. Holden was both chief scout and GM of the Long Island Nets.

Meanwhile, the Nets have lost another member of their performance team. James Moore, a physiotherapist who was Head of Performance Therapies, worked closely with a number of players on short term rehabs, including Ben Simmons. He is returning to his native Scotland where he will work with the national sports federation.

James Moore is the new Head of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation from Brooklyn Nets, Richard Chessor is the new Head of Nutrition from British Swimming and James McLaren is the new High-Performance Business Analyst from Ernst & Young. Well done to these new appointments 👏🏉🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

— Follow Scotland Sport (@followscotsport) September 3, 2025

Ben Williams, who ran the performance team last season, left shortly after the season ended, returning to his native Britain where he will serve in a similar function with the Queens Park Rangers in London. His replacement will be the fourth head of the team in four years. Stefania Rizzo, head of rehabilitation, has also left the organization.

Expect a press release soon on these and other changes in the front office.

Final Note

Because they’re one of five NBA teams headed overseas in preseason, the Nets will have their Media Day on September 23, a week earlier than usual. Two days later, the team will have its first practice at HSS. The same day the Brooklyn Basketball Center will open in the old Modells. Two days after that, it will the annual Practice in the Park. It’s getting closer.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/off-season-report/98699/netsdaily-off-season-report-no-20
 
FILM STUDY: What should the Brooklyn Nets expect from Nolan Traoré?

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Harry How/Getty Images

Though his reign didn’t last long, Nolan Traoré was crowned as a top prospect in the 2025 NBA Draft one year earlier, at the EuroLeague Adidas Next Generation Tournament (ANGT) in May 2024.

Let Egor Dëmin explain it: “The game before the final game, he dropped like 45, if I’m not wrong. Against [Barcelona] too, which, we were happy to see that. But it was really scary for us to get to this game knowing who he is.”

Dëmin has his facts straight. His u18 Real Madrid team would win the whole thing, but not before Traoré became the talk of the tornament. He led INSEP to a thrilling 101-96 victory over Barça’s u18 squad, posting a monstrous 45/6/9 line to get to the final against a Dëmin-led Real Madrid team. (Seems like the Nets had a scout or two at this tournament, eh?)

Traoré controlled every bit of INSEP’s offense in 2023-24, and the ANGT semifinal was no different; Barcelona hedged most of the million pick-and-rolls Traoré ran in the semifinals, without much success. They went zone for a bit and found no answers, only Traoré calmly getting to the rim, just like he did in transition. To top it off, the French sensation made four 3-pointers, a couple vs. soft pick-and-roll coverages but then a cold-blooded, pull-up dagger from deep…

Traoré didn’t perform as well in the final against Dëmin and company, scoring 18 points on 6-of-14 shooting with five assists and five turnovers, but it hardly mattered. He began spring 2024 by signing with Saint-Quentin — a team in LNB Élite, France’s top league — for the final seven games of their season. In one of them, he scored 25 points, a record for a player under 18 years old. Then, in the loss that eliminated them from the playoffs, Traoré scored 25 again.

At the end of spring, days away from turning 18, Traoré dominated ANGT, his 45-point performance in the semifinal the crown jewel. He seemed too good for his age group. If devoted scouts hadn’t already considered him a true star prospect, they sure did now.



One year later, the Brooklyn Nets selected him at #19 overall, and some draft analysts viewed it as a reach. Traoré spent the 2024-25 campaign with Saint-Quentin, which finished in 10th place in LNB Élite, France’s top league. Over 30 regular-season games, Traoré averaged 11.6/1.7/5.1 on 39/30/71 splits, as well as 2.5 turnovers per game. Evidently, it wasn’t the age-18 leap many expected from France’s best point-guard prospect since Tony Parker.

Traoré arrives in Brooklyn as the most straightforward prospect of the five first-round picks, bringing to the borough defined strengths, weaknesses, and play-style. The 19-year-old has always projected as a full-time ball-handling decision-maker, with questions about his ability to play off the ball, given an inconsistent outside shot, and defense. He’s 6’3” barefoot with a 6’8” wingspan, so he has the tools to succeed on D, but you never know, you know?

The Nets believe those questions will be answered positively. That he’ll shoot, that a clear understanding of the game from the point guard position will translate to other situations, that he’ll defend. Otherwise, they wouldn’t have drafted him (and Dëmin and Ben Saraf). But what about the skills had scouts salivating in the first place?

These two turnovers, from a contest against Le Mans early in the 2024-25 season, are instructive in understanding some of Traoré’s struggles…

First, he gets schooled on a potential pocket pass that he tries to throw over the top. Second, he recognizes a big man has switched onto him, backs it up, and tries to dust him going right. To his surprise, the big man slides his feet, and Nolan can only get to no man’s land.

That u18 Barcelona team was no match for Nolan Traoré. Look at the first batch of clips again. On most possessions, he’s just putting the ball in his right hand and hitting the accelerator, occasionally having to throw in a hesitation move. The big men take poor defensive angles in each clip except the last one, and Nolan, to his credit, treats them like cones.

It was never going to be such smooth sailing in his first full season facing LNB Élite competition. His change-of-pace and passing deliveries were put under the microscope in 2024-25, like you see in those turnovers above. A skip pass that floats to the corner instead of getting there on a line is the difference between a quick corner three and a late shot-clock possession in the pros…

Nolan can't escape the hedge, then throws a loopy skip pass here. Interested to track his change-of-pace and passing deliveries in BKN: pic.twitter.com/lZki6Y8blN

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) September 8, 2025

Though Nolan Traoré is not a tiny guard, he’s not big enough to have a great margin of error. Not if he plans on living in the paint, putting pressure on the rim. Let’s just run through the other concerns while we’re here.

His handle in tight spaces is a tad underwhelming, for a premier guard prospect. His best plays feature explosive moves at the point-of-attack, then long strides and mid-air adjustments as he gets closer to the rim. To this point in his career, he’s not poking and prodding, finding cracks to slither through; he’s trying to split the defense open. Don’t be mistaken, he still did that on plenty of possessions against LNB Élite competition…

Will he have the tools, the counters to succeed when teams play drop coverage, when beelining to the rim isn’t the best course of action? By and large, the best drivers in the NBA — especially the smaller ones like Darius Garland and Jalen Brunson — get as far downhill as possible before picking up their dribble, and even when they do, all can deploy some pivot-foot magic.

Per Synergy Sports, Nolan Traoré had zero dunks in the half-court last season. He’s quick as hell, but not quite explosive enough to go soaring above everybody to get his passes and shots off. That’ll be okay, as long as he can extend his handle more on plays like these…

You’ll notice that first clip comes from that ANGT semi against Barcelona. Even though Traoré misses the skip pass, he still finds a 3-point shooter; that kind of play would become a turnover for Saint-Quentin.

How well Traoré can navigate tight spaces with his handle is his swing skill, more than even the outside shooting. (Teams still go under ball-screens on Ja Morant, a career 31.6% 3-point shooter, but at his best, he dominates defenses from the inside out.)

Yes, the Nets drafted three high-usage ball-handlers. Yes, they spoke at their introductory press conference next to General Manager Sean Marks and Head Coach Jordi Fernández as everybody professed versatility, interchangeability. Why of course Saraf, Dëmin, and Traoré can co-exist as smart basketball players who can thrive off the ball; why of course they’re all eager to do it.

But Nolan Traoré has spent the first 19 years of his life as a ball-dominant point guard. Clearly, Nets scouts liked what they saw while he was pounding the rock. Understandably so!

I’m nitpicked his game here, and we should all be be honed in on how he progresses in these areas (ball-handling in tight spaces, when he picks up his dribble, passing deliveries) during his rookie season, but Nolan Traoré is a very talented 19-year-old. This is an awesome and-1 finish against the eventual LNB Élite champion from later in the season where comes off a re-screen, and uses a sharp crossover to drop in an and-1 finish…

Despite some early turnover problems, he finished the 2024-25 season with an assist:turnover ratio above two. Jordi Fernández’s Nets finished with the highest pick-and-roll frequency in the league last season, and Traoré has shown an exceptional ability to map the floor out of these situations. He reads backline defenders before he breaks the paint, but doesn’t just make the easiest play each time, instead searching for high-level opportunities. Still, he’s not a robot that solely make reads out of pick-and-roll play, but is always a threat to find a loose cutter or spacer…

Nolan Traore playmaking tape.

1.70 A/TO + 42.8% AST (the highest of this draft class). pic.twitter.com/cCSJl69L3I

— Mohamed (@mcfNBA) June 15, 2025

As the above tweet mentions, Traoré accounted for nearly 43% of Saint-Quentin’s assists when he was on the floor. It’s no surprise he ran into some struggles with that type of burden, but he improved throughout the season. Traoré even shot over 40% from three after January, an admittedly cherry-picked 15-game sample but one that shows promise nonetheless.

Though his stock took a hit during his pre-draft year, that shouldn’t scare the believers off. Traoré still displayed a rare combination of speed and passing ability with which he burst onto the scene in the first place. Perhaps his flaws were just masked by some of that natural talent prior to the 2024-25 season.

If Traoré succeeds in the NBA, he will succeed with the ball in his hands, making dynamic plays off the dribble, gliding by onlookers in transition. If he doesn’t, well, that may be why the Brooklyn Nets selected two other point guards in the same draft.

After falling to #19 in the 2025 NBA Draft, Nolan Traoré has much to prove. Not just as a shooter and defender, but as the ball-handler he’s been his whole life. With preseason basketball less than a month away, he’ll soon get his chance.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-anal...ld-the-brooklyn-nets-expect-from-nolan-traore
 
Brooklyn Nets Announce Practice in the Park 2025

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The light at the end of Brooklyn’s offseason tunnel is finally in view. Last week, the Nets announced the date for their annual “Practice in the Park,” which the team hosts every year before kicking off a new regular season. The community and fan-focused event will take place on Saturday, September 27th, starting at 12 p.m. EST.

For a second straight year, PITP will call Potomac Playground in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn home. Last year’s event featured a musical performance from Jadakiss, drills, jersey giveaways, and an influencer dunk contest.


Roughly 2,500 attendees showed up last year. PITP drew as many as 8,000 back in 2022 at Brooklyn Bridge when Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving were part of the cast.

“It’s definitely good to be out being in Brooklyn, experiencing the open practice with the fans and stuff, so I always look forward to it every year,” Cam Thomas said of the event last year. “It’s good to be back outside with the fans and feeling the energy, so it’s good so far.”

Along with their open practice, the team this year promises a scrimmage between Gersh and Zone 6, two local street ball teams. That’ll be followed by another influencer game sponsored by Type.Set.Brooklyn., a new digital media brand recently launched through BSE Global.

The dunk contest will return after that along with a 3-point competition. There will also be a “Brooklyn Basketball combine,” which will invite the fans to participate in a series of skill stations focused on shooting, dribbling, vertical jump and more.

Food trucks featuring local cuisines will be stationed around the affair. The Nets will also include a “Vendor Village,” where fans get everything from a trading card photo, to a tooth gem, to a haircut.

The Nets encourage fans to follow the team on Instagram for updates should the weather pose a threat to the event. Public transit commuters can get to the park via the A and C Trains, stopping at the Nostrand Av or Kingston-Throop Av stations.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-news/98967/brooklyn-nets-announce-practice-in-the-park-2025
 
Brooklyn Nets acquire Kobe Bufkin from Atlanta Hawks for cash

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David Jensen/Getty Images

The Brooklyn Nets have acquired Kobe Bufkin, a 2023 mid first-round draft pick, from the Atlanta Hawks, surrendering only cash considerations in the process. ESPN’s Shams Charania was first with the news, and in reporting it, he summed up the logic for both sides…

The Atlanta Hawks are trading guard Kobe Bufkin to the Brooklyn Nets for cash considerations, sources tell ESPN. Bufkin was Atlanta's No. 15 pick in the 2023 NBA draft, and this now gives him a fresh opportunity in Brooklyn, and the Hawks some roster flexibility. pic.twitter.com/5km2RMICrS

— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) September 15, 2025

Michael Scotto of HoopsHype reports that Brooklyn gave up $110,000 — the bare minimum required — for Bufkin’s services.

Bufkin, who will turn 22 years old on Saturday, spent his first two seasons with the Atlanta Hawks. He suffered significant injuries to his toe and his thumb in his rookie season, before his sophomore season ended in December after suffering a right shoulder injury. Thus, his NBA stats are nearly irrelevant: He appeared in just 27 games for Atlanta, averaging five points on a dismal 44.5% true shooting, but on a total of just 139 field-goal attempts over two years.

Over the Summer, a healthy Bufkin suited up for the Hawks Summer League team and finished with the 20th highest scoring mark, 19.5 points but shot only 35.5% overall and 25.9% from three, but he did shoot 96.4% from the line on seven shots a, giving some encouragement about his shooting prospects. Here’s a Summer League highlights:

Bufkin, who is from Grand Rapids, earned a decent prospect pedigree over two years at the University of Michigan, where current Nets assistant Juwan Howard was the head coach. Bufkin averaged 14 points a night in his sophomore year, showcasing real craft on his drives, good hands defensively, and just enough outside shooting and playmaking ability for the Hawks to draft him at #15 the following summer.

Two yers later, Kobe Bufkin arrives in Brooklyn as a negative asset; he is owed $4.5 million this season with a team option for 2026-27 that must be exercised by October 31. It is the third salary dump the Nets have facilitated without giving up a player this summer, following their acquisitions of Haywood Highsmith and Terance Mann, but it’s really the fourth salary dump in total, given the Michael Porter Jr. / Cam Johnson swap that netted Brooklyn a 2032 first-rounder.

Unlike those three players, Bufkin brings zero NBA pedigree to the Nets. He is now competing with of other young guards for playing time, including the three rookies Brooklyn drafted this year. As for the Nets, there are still decisions to be made:

  • Including Fanbo Zeng and Ricky Council IV — who have agreed to but not officially signed deals with the Nets — Brooklyn is now up to 24 training camp invites. The limit is 21. Training camp opens on September 23.
  • By opening night, NBA teams must roster no more than 15 standard contracts, plus three two-way contracts. The Nets are currently carrying 15 standard contracts and four partially guaranteed or non-guaranteed contracts. (Newly signed David Muoka likely has an Exhibit 10 who can be waived at any point, his G League rights automatically transferring to Long Island.)
  • Thus they’ll need to trim the roster before opening night, but doing so would bring them back below the $139.2 million salary floor, which they cleared with Bufkin’s addition.

ESPN’s Bobby Marks laid out the situation in one handy graphic…

Current roster: Brooklyn

The minimum floor number is fluid since Brooklyn has 4 players on partial/non-guaranteed contracts and they have to reduce their roster to 15 by the start of the season. pic.twitter.com/NN73Dpsmz7

— Bobby Marks (@BobbyMarks42) September 15, 2025

Look for more bits and pieces of Nets news before training camp opens next week. For a bit more on Kobe Bufkin’s addition, here’s my brief pre-draft interview with the soon-to-be 22-year-old guard.

asked Kobe Bufkin about finishing at the rim, falling in love w/ hoop, etc. pic.twitter.com/YQc4Fvs2V4

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) June 21, 2023

Bufkin becomes the eighth oldest player on the Nets roster with only the Flatbush5, Dariq Whitehead and Noah Clowney older.

Meanwhile in other off-season news, Tosan Evbuomwan, cut by the Nets in August, has signed with the Knicks, likely an Exhibit 10 contract.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-news...quire-kobe-bufkin-from-atlanta-hawks-for-cash
 
Brooklyn Nets sign Hong Kong big man David Muoka to partial guarantee

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The Brooklyn Nets have signed David Muoka, a 24-year-old 6’11” big man and a native of Hong Kong near where Brooklyn Nets will play the Suns next month. The contract apparently is partially guaranteed standard NBA deal.

Keith Smith of Spotrac was first with the news

The Brooklyn Nets have signed David Muoka, a league source told @spotrac.

— Keith Smith (@KeithSmithNBA) September 15, 2025

The Nets later made it official.

Unless he surprises in camp, he seems ultimately bound for Long Island where he played two years ago. The contract is likely an Exhibit 10. Once an Exhibit 10 is waived, his G League rights automatically transfer to the team’s affiliate.

The signing officially gives the Nets 21 players, 19 on standard deals, guaranteed and non- or partially guaranteed, and two ways. However, the Nets have all but signed two additional players, Fanbo Zeng, also from Greater China, and Ricky Council IV. The Nets reached an agreement with both, but have yet to officially sign either. So the Nets will have to make moves between now and September 23, Media Day, to get down to 15 standard deals and three two-ways, the training camp limit.

Muoka, a defensive-oriented, traditional big, played at Lamar and UNLV after graduating from West Island School in Hong Kong. Since then, Muoka has bounced around the periphery of the NBA, having played twice in a Nets uniform, with the Long Island Nets in 2022-23 Summer League and the Nets summer league team in July 2024. Last season with the Windy City Bulls, he averaged nearly a double-double: 11.6 points, 9.9 rebounds and 2.4 assists. He shot 64.6% overall and 58.6% from the line. He did not attempt a 3-point shot.

As his Wikipedia entry shows, he’s been knocking at door for two years now:

After forgoing his super-senior season, Muoka was selected 3rd overall in the 2023 NBA G League draft by the Capital City Go-Go, but was waived on 9 November 9 2023. Four days later, he joined the Long Island Nets where he played in 38 games and averaged 4.6 points, 4.8 rebounds and 1.3 blocks in 14.7 minutes.

After going undrafted in last year’s NBA draft, Muoka joined the Brooklyn Nets for the 2024 NBA Summer League and on October 2024, he signed with the Portland Trail Blazers, becoming the first Hong Konger to ink an NBA deal, before being waived the same day. On 28 October, he joined the Rip City Remix[ before being traded to the Windy City Bulls on November 5.

Muoka’s presence will no doubt be another marketing boost for the NBA China Games which are being held across Hong Kong’s Great Bay in the resort city of Macao October 10 and 12. Should he and Fanbo play together in either game, it will be the first time two Chinese will play in an NBA game for the same team. The Games are the first time since 2019 that China has hosted the NBA. The follow an active summer in the league’s biggest market. A host of NBA stars including LeBron James, Steph Curry, Nikola Jokic, Anthony Edwards, Victor Wembenyama and D’Angelo Russell have al

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-feat...kong-big-man-david-muoka-to-partial-guarantee
 
New York Liberty get blown out in Game 2 vs Phoenix Mercury, 86-60

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Elsa/Getty Images

Jonquel Jones will forever be the MVP of the New York Liberty’s first Finals victory. Sabrina Ionescu the forever-improving homegrown megastar, Betnijah Laney-Hamilton the glue, Courtney Vandersloot a free agent catalyst. On and on.

But it’s Breanna Stewart. All of this — the record-setting crowds, the sea foam jerseys that now freckle New York City streets and living rooms — revolves around Breanna Stewart. You feel it at practice, hearing word of her calling a players-only meeting the day before the playoffs, when you watch one of the most decorated players in basketball history dive across the floor in a meaningless June game.

Of course Stewie, who suffered an MCL sprain at the end of New York’s Game 1 victory over the Phoenix Mercury, was going to play in Game 2.

“As long as I don’t wake up from my nap feeling like s***,” she joked at shootaround. When asked if there would be a minutes restriction, she responded not with a full sentence but unfiltered disdain. Turns out, she didn’t need a minutes restriction. The Phoenix Mercury enforced one all by themselves.

It was 25-25 after the first quarter. New York’s offense was operating smoothly, with Ionescu the right buttons at the controls and her teammates spacing perfectly…

good job by everybody involved, decent screen from Stewie, Sab keeping the dribble alive downhill, and with JJ as the nearest spacer, it puts Mack in an uncomfortable position: pic.twitter.com/70AZ9pCIjn

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) September 18, 2025

There were early signs of distress, though. Ionescu got fouled on a 3-pointer only to miss all three free-throws, nauseating a packed Barclays Center. All told, the Liberty missed five free-throws in the first quarter; when Phoenix went on a run to start the second quarter, it felt like those misses would loom large.

But the Mercury never slowed down, their lead growing to double-digits, then 20, then 30. By the end of the night, smooth R&B instrumentals blared throughout a half-empty arena, competing only with the shoe squeaks of bench players in the soundscape.

Nate Tibbetts’ team hunted Ionescu relentlessly in the second quarter, running inverted pick-and-roll not with Alyssa Thomas, but with Satou Sabally. Phoenix’s leading scorer averaging 16.3 points in the regular season, but shot a dismal 2-of-17 in the series opener. Many of those looks were ill-advised, but Sabally would undoubtedly shoot better in Game 2. She did, and it started with Phoenix shepherding Sabally downhill…

PHX goes into the quarter break. They know it'll be a Stewie-Emma front-court, so they play the all-spacing lineup, locking Stewie onto Satou

spamming inverted w/ four other shooters on the floor, removing Stewie from help, encouraging Satou to get downhill

Nate…really good: pic.twitter.com/3BidyvWqNk

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) September 18, 2025

Said Tibbetts: “We wanted to look at it early in the second, kinda got Satou going a little bit, which was great. I thought she had some really good looks tonight, just like the other night, and a couple went in and out. Yeah. that’s been a really good look for us all year, and it’s something that we’ll stay with.”

Phoenix’s reserves also came off the bench and made shots, namely Kathryn Westbeld and DeWanna Bonner, who combined for 24 efficient points. Even Sami Whitcomb, who struggled from the floor, recorded three steals and four assists. On the other side, Emma Meesseman and Kennedy Burke were slightly better than they were in Game 1, though it would’ve been hard to be worse.

New York cannot blame Breanna Stewart’s balky knee for a loss of this magnitude. Phoenix thoroughly outplayed the home team. But you never know what the game would’ve looked like, would’ve felt like if eh could have imposed her will. Stewie didn’t limp up and down the floor the whole night, but she inserted herself into every tenth possession. During Phoenix’s game-deciding second-quarter run, she could only screen for Natasha Cloud on one end and watch as Sabally scored over her on the other.

“I was happy with the way that I was able to kind of really just move, you know,” said Stewie. “And really, I just need to be a little bit more confident in all of my things. But I wasn’t, I wasn’t like in pain or anything like that.”

Maybe not physical pain. But she must have been in pain as the third quarter started, when the Liberty fought to cut the deficit to single digits. One 3-pointer rimmed in and out, then another. Then Stewie watched from the bench as Emma Meesseman missed an open layup.

Meesseman called the team’s performance “inexcusable” postgame, and that’s true, but it also just wasn’t New York’s night. Kinda sums up their season, doesn’t it?

“We’ll make shots,” said Meesseman. “I have confidence in that. Like, I think that was kind of almost the worst game we’ve had, but we’ll make shots.”

The New York Liberty were already hanging by a thread before the playoffs. Without a margin for error, their heart and soul, their leader is now playing on one leg, maybe one-and-a-half. That’s no excuse for getting out hustled, for posting 30/23/64 shooting splits, for not only turning it over 15 times but playing some of the worst transition defense that’s ever been seen in an honest-to-god playoff game.

Sabrina missing a shot so badly it lands out of bounds allows for their best transition defense all quarter

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) September 18, 2025

Stewie provided Liberty fans with a thread of hope postgame: “I think that it probably became more of like a mental barrier than a physical one. I mean, obviously, you know, everyone knows what I’m dealing with, but the good about today was I was able to test it. I was able to see how I felt and and really — I look forward to Friday, really letting loose.”

Perhaps Stewie will be able to let loose and lead her teammates, who might make some shots, to a heroic victory. But as Liberty fans drudged through the exits on Wednesday night, it felt like they had already been forced to say goodbye to their team until next May. Possibly longer, considering the possibility of a WNBA lockout in 2026. And what of the fans unable to afford tickets beyond this season?

The New York Liberty are defending champions, and they will fight. Nate Tibbetts, though careful not to disrespect his opponent, insisted that the Liberty would play better in the decisive Game 3. They probably will.

Liberty scored 25 points in the first ten minutes. It took them 25 minutes to score the next 25.

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) September 18, 2025

But for now, the five hour flight to Phoenix just feels like a long journey to their own funeral.

Final Score: Phoenix Mercury 86, New York Liberty 60

Next Up​

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Game 3. Winner moves onto round two, loser goes home. Tip-off will be Friday night in Phoenix, though the time is currently unscheduled.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nyliberty/99008/liberty-vs-mercury-86-60-breanna-stewart-satou-sabally
 
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