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Welcome to the new NetsDaily: A fresh look, fewer ads and a new feature

Things will look a little different around here today.

A few weeks ago we told you something new was coming to NetsDaily and today it’s here. Things are cleaner, faster and easier to use. There are the same writers, coverage, comments, and community you’ve come to rely on, now with less clutter and clunkiness.

Let’s dive in. If you scroll down the page on your phone or computer, it’s smoother. You’ll notice that the most talked-about stories have a bigger font displaying the number of comments. You’ll also see a section called Active Conversations to point you to the busiest conversations right now.

But there’s two changes we’re most excited to tell you about:

Fewer ads for logged-in users​


Our loyal readers and commenters are the heartbeat of our communities, and with this new design we’re excited to offer them fewer ads when they’re logged in. Specifically:

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You can log in or sign up here and check it out.

A new feature by the community, for the community: The Feed​


Today we’re launching a brand new space for you to come together. The Feed is a running stream of posts and updates from you, the community, mixed in with links and updates from the team and our staff. Think of it as our community’s group text where you can easily grab your phone and share a link to a story, post a question or write your own post on the day’s news.

You can find it in two places:

  • On the homepage, adjacent to the top stories. Community participation is core to who we are, so we want it right on the front page to share your stuff.
  • A devoted homepage for The Feed where you can see the full stream of posts coming in from the community. You might want to bookmark that.

Log in or sign up here and you can start posting on The Feed and seeing fewer ads immediately.

Today’s launch is a big deal for our community, and it’s also a kickoff of broader efforts to build around the community we have here. Soon you’ll get alerts when someone replies to your comment or your post on The Feed, with more to come thereafter. We want to put the community in the driver’s seat, so let us know what you want in the comments below or in The Feed.

If you want to dig into more of this updated experience, head over to this post on sbnation.com from SB Nation’s Head of Product Ed Clinton, where he expands on the changes in our ads and design. Ed will be responding to questions in the comments. If you have any questions about how to log in to our new system, check out this article from last week.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/site-news...aily-a-fresh-look-fewer-ads-and-a-new-feature
 
Can the Brooklyn Nets lose (a lot) while building a winning culture?

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Kaplan’s Note: This article was written by Net Income. We’re still working out the kinks as we transition from Chorus to WordPress publishing, so in the meantime, NI will be using me, Lucas Kaplan, as a medium.

It’s about as certain as anything in the NBA this coming season: the Brooklyn Nets are going for broke. No, they’re not pulling out the stops to win. They are trying to go broke, lose as many games so they can wind up with one of three can’t-miss prospects, each seen as the equal if not a better version of Cooper Flagg. The 2026 Draft may very well be better (if not as deep) than 2025.

Tanking is for fans another chance to, literally, hit the lottery. Social media is filled with hopes that the Nets will tank “properly” this time around, unlike last year when they argue the Nets won too many games and wound up with the eighth pick and Egor Demin. Never mind that since the league instituted new rules in 2019 no team with the worst record has won the overall No. 1 nor that the last two years, the overall No. 1 has gone to a team that made the play-in.

Maybe with three superstar prospects, tanking will be more productive. Whatever.

On Wednesday, the New York Post’s Brian Lewis offered another view of purposeful losing: the effect on young players, particularly rookies. Losing can drain teenagers of their optimism and even hurt development, thus ruining the culture.

There is a stark difference between losing and tanking, and the Nets will be doing the latter, having torn the roster down to the studs in an attempt to rebuild it.

It’s a gamble — and a dangerous one.

“You just exist on a spreadsheet,” one highly regarded agent told The Post.

If the Nets are going to lose all these games, they better get a payoff, because the cost can linger for years in the locker room.

That same agent points to what happened in Philadelphia a decade ago when then-GM Sam Hinkie raised tanking to an art form — the vaunted Process, angering the league and other GMs. No one is suggesting the Nets are going to out-Hinkie Hinkie, but Lewis quotes an agent saying that tanking can harm the very culture you’re trying to create. The toxicity can linger and fester.

“A lot of these teams that try to bottom out by tanking like Brooklyn is doing, they think there’s no consequences,” an agent told the Post. “You risk eroding the environment you’re trying to create. That’s what happened in Philadelphia.”

Lewis also quotes Jelani McCoy, the former NBA big man who now has his own podcast on the subject of tanking’s long term effect. McCoy thinks that the issues with the Sixers even now is the result of Hinkie’s “Process.”

“Sam Hinkie started the dogheading … just follow my lead and we’re going to do this tanking shit and get you a Ben Simmons and Jahlil Okafor and build us a contender based off dogheading,” McCoy said on his “Forgotten Seasons” podcast discussing the extended tanking and the impact it has had, “This is why they’re over there acting a damn fool now. Silly s**t only begat silly s**t.”

(Kaplan’s note: From Ben Simmons’ rookie year to the present — even after a disastrous 2024-25, choosing Tobias Harris over Jimmy Butler, the Kawhi Shot, the disintegration to dust of Embiid’s knees and Simmons’ back — the Sixers are fifth in the NBA in wins.)

The effect on the Nets rookies, who are in the formative first days of their careers, could be tough. They have all been winners in their short careers and the loss of confidence that comes with losing is a danger. There were times last season that Head Coach Jordi Fernandez, seemed frustrated with loss after loss after loss.

“You hire a coach who is all about development and culture, and Jordi [Fernández] — bless his heart — really is about all of those things. But what is he really coaching for? Who is he developing and what are they playing for?” Lewis quoted one league source who like the others wished to remain anonymous.” “And you’re not in Memphis or Sacramento. You’re in New York City. It’s a big-time city and you’re [tanking].”

There is also the danger that if this rebuild doesn’t work or work well that the losing will become endemic. the rebuild extended beyond two or three years, the franchise and its culture becoming decidedly unattractive to the stars they hope to attract.

Lewis points to other franchises where nothing seemed to work for years.

The Kings endured a stretch that saw them get 10 consecutive top-10 picks from 2009-18 without a single winning season. Charlotte had top-10 picks in 10 out of 12 years from 2004-15 and didn’t muster a playoff win until 2016. And the woebegone Wizards got top-10 picks in six of their past seven drafts, but still are expected to jostle with the Nets this season for the worst mark in the league.

In other words, nothing is guaranteed. As Lewis notes, Finishing with the worst, second-worst or third-worst record would only give the Nets 40.1% chance of landing AJ Dybantsa, the BYU wing, Cam Boozer the Duke power forward or Darryn Peterson, the Kansas combo guard. The last two seasons, the team that made the play-in — the Atlanta Hawks in 2024 and the Dallas Mavericks in 2025 — got the overall No. 1.

Risk, of course, is at the heart of any rebuild. How much can you manage is the issue.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-anal...s-lose-a-lot-while-building-a-winning-culture
 
New York Liberty ride strong first quarter to win over Dallas Wings, 88-77

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Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

It was vintage New York Liberty at the beginning of their Friday night showdown with the Dallas Wings. The last time they visited Dallas, it was July 28 and they got embarrassed by Paige Bueckers & Co., down by 30 points before applying some window dressing. New York got some revenge on Tuesday night at the Barclays Center, winning a fairly comfortable game 85-76.

But to win the season series, the Liberty would have to return to Dallas to finish off the second half of a home-and-home; fortunately for them, Bueckers would be sidelined with a back ailment. In the first quarter, they seemed rejuvenated by a rare two days between games, ready to embarrass Dallas on their home-court just as they had in 2024, when they won two contests by a combined 46 points.

With Emma Meesseman playing her third game in the sea foam, this time unrestricted by any minutes limit, New York’s offense was unstoppable with Meesseman in the middle of it…

Leo sold the first one but Liberty offense is going crazy right now pic.twitter.com/0FL2eRFPOA

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) August 8, 2025

Meesseman would post a hearty ___ statline, doing most of her damage in the first quarter. But outside of a few post-ups over helpless Dallas defenders, it wasn’t a coordinated effort to get her the ball. Meesseman unsurprisingly thrived in a fast-paced Liberty offense that didn’t allow a single offensive rebound in the first quarter, getting out in transition and whipping the ball around.

They led 28-15 after one quarter, and by the time Chris Koclanes called a timeout with seven minutes left in the second, his team was doubled up 38-19. The Liberty were on pace to score 120 points against a crappy defense who shouldn’t be able to hang with them. Balance restored.

Except, then the Liberty stopped scoring. At first it was simple regression to the mean; they stopped hitting every single open shot. But to their credit, the Wings picked it up. Rotations off the ball improved from bad to decent, and on the other end, they started crashing the offensive glass, prevent New York from getting out in transition.

The home team still trailed by 16 to start the third quarter, but ultimately won that period 23-14. Guards JJ Quinerly and Grace Berger got downhill while Arike Ogunbowale scored 12 of her 17 points in the frame. New York, no longer in cruise control, went from competitive to agitated in the blink of an eye. Even Head Coach Sandy Brondello got a rare technical foul…

you do not normally see Sandy that hot

was arguing MHA fouled Izzy before JJ's hook (probably right) pic.twitter.com/7CwvsvfMdu

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) August 9, 2025

“It’s no news that we struggle a little bit when we come out of the halftime,” said Leonie Fiebich. “I feel like they were a little more aggressive on both ends of the floor, and just making it really hard for us to get into our stuff. You know, they were in in our jerseys, they were pushing wherever they could, so it was really hard for us to execute.”

Brondello’s team would collect themselves, as she would play a starter-heavy lineup to begin the fourth quarter. Once and for all, they shut the door. Fiebich and Jonquel Jones each matched Meesseman’s 14 points, with the latter cashing four triples, letting Meesseman patrol the paint while she spaced out, a wonderful combination…

Corner 👌 action from @jus242! pic.twitter.com/Ud3ZxOzQTj

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

“I love playing with JJ,” said Meesseman of her frontcourt partner. “You know, you don’t always have that connection between bigs automatically. We’ve played a couple times together already, but it’s just something that is chemistry. You just look at each other and kind of know what she’s going to do, or what she knows I’m going to do. And it’s also cool to see how much she’s grown as a leader, like vocally. She’s vocal, she talks, and she’s showing emotions. So I’m just really happy to be back on court with her.”

New York shot 38.5% from three on the night, compared to a pitiful 14.3% from a talent-deprived Dallas team, with Bueckers only able to contribute claps and handshakes. Sabrina Ionescu led the Liberty with 16 points while Natasha Cloud added ten to put all five scorers in double-digits, as well as Marine Johannès’ ten points off the bench. She hit some, perhaps not big, but timely shots at the end of the third and start of the fourth, when Dallas had cut it to two possessions.

So while it wasn’t the rout revenge-minded fans may have hoped for, it was nearly a wire-to-wire victory, and New York’s third straight. A couple of victories against the Dallas Wings — especially with one of them missing Paige Bueckers — don’t mean a ton, but even without Breanna Stewart, Kennedy Burke, and Nyara Sabally, it’s clear that Emma Meesseman has leveled up the Liberty.

For the rest of the WNBA, that’s a terrifying thought.

Final Score: New York Liberty 88, Dallas Wings 77

A milestone for Sandy Brondello​


New York Liberty Head Coach Sandy Brondello did not just earn a technical foul on Friday night, but her 100th victory as the leader of the franchise. She is just the second coach in Liberty history to reach that mark, and is now one victory away from passing Richie Adubato as the all-time leader.

“Obviously, it’s a great organization to be coaching for. And to get 100 wins, and this is my fourth year, it means I have a pretty good team,” said Brondello in a bit of an understatement.

Leonie Fiebich praised her as a leader, a former player who is easy to relate to, but first had to get a little ribbing in: “I was really proud of her for getting a tech today. I think that was needed, and it helps.”

Next Up​

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In another galaxy-brained bit of scheduling from the WNBA, the Liberty will have 36 hours to fly home and get to the arena to take on the Minnesota Lynx, in the first 2024 WNBA Finals rematch at Barclays Center. Then they’ll hit the road for three games out West, only adding to the stupidity. Anyway, tip-off against the Lynx, who are missing Napheesa Collier, is scheduled for 12:30 p.m. ET on Sunday.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nyliberty...-first-quarter-to-win-over-dallas-wings-88-77
 
NY Liberty at Dallas Wings preview: the rubber match

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Catalina Fragoso/NBAE via Getty Images)

(Kaplan’s Note: This article was written by Jordan Greene. We’re still working out the kinks as we transition from Chorus to WordPress publishing, so in the meantime, some of our writers will be using me, Lucas Kaplan, as a medium.)

Sometimes, it is important to have reminders on who you are. The Liberty lost their last three games of July, then opened August with a loss to the league-worst Connecticut Sun. Dog days indeed.

Since then, they have now won two in a row, including a big 85-76 win against the Dallas Wings Tuesday night. It was particularly satisfying, because the Libs’ blowout loss to the Wings back on July 28 might have been the most demoralizing loss of the season to that point. Tonight, the Liberty take on the Wings in their last matchup of the season to see who will win the series between the two, this time in Dallas.

Where To Watch​


Check out the action at 7:30 PM on ION TV.

Injuries​


Breanna Stewart and Nyara Sabally continue to be absent with knee injuries, while Kennedy Burke is out for another couple weeks with a calf strain.

On the other side, young superstar Paige Beuckers is questionable for tonight’s game as she is experiencing back issues. Myisha Hines-Allen is also questionable with an ankle injury, while Tyasha Harris is out for the rest of the season after going through a procedure on her left knee.

The Game​


In the win against the Wings, the frontcourt was the name of the game for the Libs. The trio of Jonquel Jones, Leonie Fiebich, and newcomer Emma Meesseman combined for 42 points and proved that Dallas was just too small for them down low.

New York’s defense proved to be a key factor as well. Arike Ogunbowale (who I have to admit is my favorite player outside of a player in a Liberty uniform) was held to just 14 points on 3-of-12 shooting from the field. The name of the game today, though, will be Paige Beuckers. Bet you couldn’t guess that? She was the main catalyst the Liberty couldn’t stop. She dropped 21 points and grabbed eight rebounds. Beuckers’ availability having a question mark next to it, her potential absence would leave the Wings in a darker spot than it could already be in with their 8-22 season record.

Of course if she was in street clothes instead of her Wings uniform, the Liberty would be even clearer favorites even without their superstar in Breanna Stewart.

Player to Watch​


Outside of Bueckers, Grace Berger played well in the Wings loss to the Liberty. Berger is currently on her third seven-day hardship contract with Dallas, and has thus far displayed real poise and athleticism, traits that could secure her a permanent spot in the WNBA as the expansion era begins. If Bueckers doesn’t play, she and point guard J.J. Quinerly will need to step up big time.

On Tuesday, Berger played a season high 21 minutes. “That was the feel. She got in, and I liked that on offense she was keeping it simple, moving the ball, and getting it where it needed to go,” Koclanes told DallasHoopsJournal.com about the decision to play Berger. “She had us organized. Defensively, she competes. She’s bigger and longer than you think, she’s physical, and she can stay in plays. I thought she did a really good job at times against Cloud, even on Sabrina, just staying straight up around the rim. She brought another fight and toughness that we needed.”

From the Vault​


Paige Bueckers earned her second Rookie of the Month award this week, after, averaging 18.2 PPG,
3.2 RPG, and 5.2 APG in July. She’s very, very good.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nyliberty/96627/ny-liberty-at-dallas-wings-preview-the-rubber-match
 
New York Liberty lose sloppy, tired game to Minnesota Lynx 83-71

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No, Breanna Stewart and Napheesa Collier were not playing, each sidelined with injury. Both the New York Liberty and Minnesota Lynx played in the Central Time Zone on Friday night, having to fly eastward for ready for a 12:30 p.m. tip at Barclays Center on Sunday afternoon.

But it was the Liberty and the Lynx in a nationally televised rematch of the 2024 WNBA Finals, their second matchup of the season and first on the court where the title was decided, in overtime of Game 5 no less. You knew it was going to be good.

After a neck-and-neck first quarter, the Liberty bench threw the first big punch of the night. Sandy Brondello played an unorthodox lineup to start the second, the only starters on the floor Natasha Cloud and Emma Meesseman. But Cloud hit couple jumpers while her Isabelle Harrison did real work down low…

look how hard Minnesota tries NOT to switch this screen, but Tash/Izzy make it happen anyway.

Everybody's favorite couple are leading NYL with nine points apiece: pic.twitter.com/ubd4oft5V7

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) August 10, 2025

The beloved couple and Marine Johannès, who would hit three 3-pointers and finish with ten points, created distance. None of them were present for last year’s Finals, but experienced a taste of them on Sunday. Despite a level of physicality only scorned rivals can bring, Minnesota and New York would combine for just 17 free-throws on the night. Stretches of two or three minutes would pass without a whistle, and after an adrenalized first quarter, tired legs started to show. The Liberty won the second quarter 14-11 to take a slim lead into the half, barely fending off a scoring run from Courtney Williams and the monstrous defensive impact of Alanna Smith (8/9/7/4/3).

The Liberty built an eight-point lead just after halftime, scoring on their first three possessions thanks to Emma Meesseman…

Part of Sandy's pregame answer on how Emma makes life easier for her guards (seen here): "She has great diversity about how she screens, and knowing what to do. You know, if it's a tap-and-go, or a ghost, or a hold, whatever we need to do there." pic.twitter.com/Dgi4KBATKc

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) August 10, 2025

As you’d expect, Minnesota did not go quietly. Williams made another couple jumpers before picking up her fourth foul, but it turned out to be a blessing in disguise for Cheryl Reeve’s team. She subbed Natisha Hiedeman and, soon after, DiJonai Carrington into the game; they had the same impact New York’s bench had in the first half.

Those two guards would combine for 28 points, and after a couple more leads changes, Carrington hit a three in transition to give the Lynx a 56-54 lead. Stunningly, the lead changes would end right there.

Turnovers mounted for the Liberty; they’d finish with 20 giveaways that led to 22 Minnesota points. Sandy Brondello’s team could not get the ball into the paint, but not for a lack of trying. Entry pass after entry pass went astray, intercepted by helping Lynx defenders or simply just off-target…

"timeout New York" 😏 pic.twitter.com/oEnZlQE0yn

— Minnesota Lynx (@minnesotalynx) August 10, 2025

“Some of the passes we threw, no one was open, especially into the paint,” said Brondello. “Like, I don’t know what we’re looking at. I think we were just a little bit rattled, and we got to settle them down. I’ve got to do a better job of settling them down there.”

Jonquel Jones, who only managed seven FGAs and four free-throws in 32 minutes, further explained: “They do a really good job of just congesting the paint, making us make that skip pass. And I think tonight we didn’t — I don’t think we made the skip pass maybe two times, and we tried to force it into paint.”

Much credit must also go to Minnesota’s guards, who applied physicality and ball-pressure on the perimeter, blowing up New York’s initial actions and forcing them into slacking possessions where the only way out was a prayer of an entry pass.

Natasha Cloud acknowledged the pattern: “It is the tale of the second half for us, where we get stagnant.”

Sabrina Ionescu was the recipient of much of Minnesota’s ball pressure, shooting 4-of-15 with four turnovers. But Ionescu was a bit more positive after the game: “To be honest, I think it’s one of those things where it’ll be great [that] you can kind of go back, watch film, and understand ways that you can attack it. And, you know, continuing to find ways to get downhill and attack the rim.”

But the Liberty should not have to go through such a poor second half, yet again, to learn these lessons. The Lynx shot 10-of-21 from deep to New York’s 8-of-24, and you can look at the box score and blame it on that good ol’ shooting variance, but it didn’t feel like misfortune. The Lynx earned it.

New York’s two-point deficit grew to five, then eight, then ten, and suddenly, they were calling timeout down 15 in the fourth quarter. Emma Meesseman, ever the savior, didn’t have the answers this Sunday; the Lynx forced her into four ugly turnovers as well. It was a true team loss, despite Harrison’s strong play in the first half, as well as Natasha Cloud’s positive minutes.

As you’d expect, there was no panic, only bristling at the suggestion that the 27-5 Minnesota Lynx might have something the 20-11 Liberty don’t.

“I’m not answering that question,” said Jonquel Jones.

It’s a fair response. The Liberty and Lynx had the same unfortunate lack of rest, but games like this happen over the course of a compressed, injury-riddled regular season. They are still unimpeachable title contenders. But has this happened too often to the Liberty? Can we hand-wave it away? Are the standards too high, or too low for a team trying to repeat as champions?

“Minnesota, just right now, have played a little harder and more intentional than we did today.” — Sandy Brondello.

Final Score: Minnesota Lynx 83, New York Liberty 71

Breanna Stewart injury update​


Prior to Sunday’s action, Breanna Stewart spoke with reporters for the first time since suffering a bone bruise in her right knee against the Los Angeles Sarks on July 26. The injury has caused Stewart to miss New York’s last seven contests, including Sunday’s, and she’ll miss a few more.

Reporting states that the Liberty hope to welcome the 2023 WNBA MVP back by the end of August, a target date that Stewie affirmed on Sunday: “I think so. I think that like, the exact date, we don’t have it. It just depends on how well I progress. But I’m hoping — I’m on ’em, I’m on the training staff to let me be back, to free me a little bit. But definitely, like, before my birthday (August 27th), that’s a non-negotiable. I have to be back before my birthday.”

For Stewie to get the birthday present both she and Liberty fans would die for, there’s still some work to do: “I mean, I think my next two weeks, it’s just going to be really getting the cardio, that part of things, back into place, and then progressing the on-court workouts to get into playing. Also then, when I do come into the game, it’s not as much of a change. Obviously, some things you can’t recreate, but as close to that so there’s kind of no restrictions. It’s just about, like, keeping the load lower.”

But overall, a positive update for Breanna Stewart. There seems to be no danger that this is a season-ending sort of injury, rather it’s likely the Liberty are making sure she’s truly 100% before she comes back, just as they did with Jonquel Jones’ ankle injury earlier in the season.

Breathe out.

Tari Phillips inducted into Ring of Honor​


During halftime, the New York Liberty inducted the Tari Phillips into the Ring of Honor, the eighth player to receive the honor. It was a short but touching ceremony, and the packed Barclays Center crowd made sure Phillips felt the love…

Tari Phillips is emotional as she receives love from the Liberty Loyals. Today, she joins the Liberty Ring of Honor. @Winsidr pic.twitter.com/sF6lebn3xs

— Myles (@MylesEhrlich) August 10, 2025

“I’d like to thank the fans,” said Phillips. “You love me. You love me. You accepted me here, and I thank you for that. I thank you for all the times that you’ve been here, and I love you guys for that.”

Phillips, the eighth overall pick in the 1999 WNBA Draft, spent five of her nine seasons with the Liberty, making four consecutive All-Star teams in that span. In 2000, her inaugural season with the team, New York would once again lose to the Houston Comets in the Finals, but Phillips had a heck of a playoff run, averaging 16/8/1/2/1 over seven games.

The 6’2” forward was — and still is — a fan-favorite for playing her ass off every night. The intensity, before anything else, is what her former teammates harp on, and many of them were in attendance on Sunday, which capped off Legends Weekend for the franchise…

LOVE TO OUR LIBERTY LEGENDS 🙌🗽

A special thank you for paving the way♥️ pic.twitter.com/a5c10sY1yk

— New York Liberty (@nyliberty) August 10, 2025

New York may have lost, but halftime was a truly special moment for a franchise legend.

Next Up

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The New York Liberty are headed out West, playing the Los Angeles Sparks in the first leg of a back-to-back on Tuesday night. Tip-off is scheduled for 10:00 p.m. ET.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nyliberty/97727/liberty-vs-lynx-83-71-natasha-cloud-izzy-harrison
 
Whitehead, Timme & Etienne Host at Brooklyn Basketball Camp

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Around this time last year, there was an abundance of talk about the Brooklyn Nets trading Mikal Bridges for “a bunch of middle schoolers.” Dariq Whitehead, Drew Timme, and Tyson Etienne recently spent some time bettering the Brooklyn community, and just maybe scouting for those picks in the process.

Last week, the three Nets made a surprise appearance at a Brooklyn Basketball Camp at Hellenic Classical Charter School near Park Slope. Each spent time chatting with the youth in attendance, answering questions, giving advice, and cheering everyone on.

“Being able to be in the community, with the kids, being in Brooklyn, I think it’s special,” said Etienne. “To be able to contact those kids and let them know that we’re an arms reach away, to inspire them. Maybe it’s somebody here one day that might play on the Brooklyn Nets, you never know. But I think us being able to come in here and talk to them, talk about the game, I think that’s really important, and I’m just glad to be a part of it, especially with my dog Drew.”

“It’s always good seeing kids getting to play basketball,” Timme added. “It’s a game that brought us so much joy, and to see that joy with them, and to see how happy that we can make them just by showing up for a little bit, it’s super rewarding and it reminds you why we work as hard as we do.”

Both Timme and Etienne suited up for Brooklyn in Las Vegas this year. However, this is the first we’ve heard from Whitehead in some time. Despite wanting to play in the tournament, his agent and Sean Marks agreed he should sit out to ensure he’s at full health going into the 2025-26 campaign.

“I feel like it’s everything that I didn’t have growing up…for them to want to play basketball and be in this profession, to have a guy who’s an NBA player here, for them to ask me any question they want, there’s no limitations to the questions they can ask me, I feel like that will help them a long way,” Whitehead said.

With an abundance of new competition on the roster following a historic draft which saw the Nets add five rookies via the first round, the upcoming season feels like a pivotal one for Whitehead, who dealt with a series of lower body injuries during his rookie and sophomore years. He’s appeared in a collective 22 games in two years, but has shot 42.9% from three on 3.5 attempts per game in said appearances.

The same can also be said of Etienne and Timme, arguably to a greater extent. Each are on non-guaranteed deals, with Etienne holding one of the team’s three two-way slots. Another is held by Tosan Evbuomwan, while the final one remains up for grabs.

On the topic of contracts, Ricky Council IV and Fanbo technically remain unsigned. While it’s been reported that the Nets intend to each, official announcements are still pending, although they should be announced this week.

There’s surely more to come on the youth basketball front for Brooklyn as well. Roughly two months ago, BSE Global announced the launch of its youth hoops facility in the abandoned Modell’s store across from Barclays Center, set to open this fall. The 18,600-square foot training facility will include two full courts and a half court, a “‘shooting lab’ half court, auxiliary baskets, multi-purpose court flooring for other events, “cutting-edge technology,” and “expert.”

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-news/96761/whitehead-timme-etienne-host-at-brooklyn-basketball-camp
 
Are Cam Thomas and the Brooklyn Nets are headed for the iceberg?

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Is it time to panic? Is Cam Thomas set to throw in the towel and exercise his qualifying offer? Not yet, according to multiple league sources who spoke to NetsDaily. Let’s review:

In Sunday evening’s Off-Season Report, we chronicled NBA insider Jake Fischer’s belief that Cam Thomas is the “most likely” of his bedfellows in restricted free agency to take the qualifying offer, adding, “Brooklyn has not made an aggressive effort to retain Thomas on any long-term deal, sources say. Sources also say Thomas is showing an increasing interest in playing out next season on a $6 million qualifier for the right to enjoy true free agency next summer.”

On Monday morning, ESPN released a primer covering “the seven biggest names” that are still unsigned and where exactly they stand. Tim Bontemps wrote about Cam Thomas, and in doing so, reiterated Fischer’s belief that Thomas is the “most likely” restricted free agent to take the one-year, $6 million qualifying offer allowing him to enter unrestricted free agency next season. The noise grows louder.

The 23-year-old scoring guard’s contract value has been difficult to peg since he slipped too late in the first round in 2022. He averaged 24 points last season, but it remains unclear what kinds of offers he is receiving…

If a deal gets done with Brooklyn, expect it to look, at least in structure, like the ones the Nets signed with center Day’Ron Sharpe and forward Ziaire Williams earlier this offseason: one-year deals with team options on the second.

By every indication, Thomas and the Nets remain miles apart, though the team’s side of negotiations is murkier than that of CT and his camp. Amid the stream of Fischer and Bontemps’ reporting, one league source told NetsDaily where Thomas sees his market, using comparable players around the league:

  • Jalen Green, making $33.3 million per year until 2027-28, when he has a $36 million player option
  • Immanuel Quickley, making $32.5 million over the next four years
  • Tyler Herro averaging $32 million over the next two years

“That’s where he sees his market, if not higher,” said the source.

It’s easy to understand these reference points for Thomas, the second-youngest player of the four behind Green. A quick snapshot of their career DPM, a nerd-favorite all-in-one metric whose methodology can be explained here, suggests these four players are in the same ballpark. The market is not…

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This suggests Thomas is searching for an annual salary starting at $30 million, likely closer to $40 million. It’s unclear what Brooklyn has put on the table, but you can be sure it’s not that.

And yet, according to league sources, nothing indicates the Nets are worried about losing Cam Thomas. Armed with plenty of cap space and roster flexibility (of their many training camp invites, only ten are on fully guaranteed contracts), there is no rush to find a deal for CT, just as there wasn’t in July. The deadline to accept a qualifying offer is October 1, though could be extended to March 1. Brooklyn does not seem to believe Thomas would pull that trigger, and almost certainly expects to engage further with Thomas over the coming weeks.

In other words: The Brooklyn Nets don’t appear to be panicking, and though their offers will start at much lower numbers than CT’s, they have all the leverage. Even non-apron teams can only offer Thomas the midlevel exception, which can run for a maximum of four years starting at $14.1 million with 5% annual raises.

Brooklyn, of course, would have the right to match any such offer given Thomas’ status as a restricted free agent, and given Fischer’s previous reporting that they’ve offered the 23-year-old guard a two-year deal around the value of the MLE ($29 million) it seems likely they would do so. But they’re not going to bid against themselves. No team is.

This all feels precarious. The Brooklyn Nets and Cam Thomas, who didn’t exactly have the steadiest partnership over his four-year rookie contract, are worlds apart now that it’s time to determine his value once more. Thomas seems — for good reason — frustrated by the situation. He’s fighting just to get half the annual salary some of his counterparts cruised to. (Restricted free agency, if I may editorialize, is truly terrible for the players.)

So, are they headed for the iceberg? Is CAMAGEDDON? Is this becoming an untenable situation, or will the Brooklyn Nets find a contract for CT in the coming weeks, allowing business to continue as usual? The stream of reporting from Fischer and Bontemps, in a typically barren August no less, may suggest an explosive conclusion is coming soon.

But, after talking to various league sources, we must ask if that’s likely, given how much time there is left to negotiate. Whenever Cam Thomas and the Brooklyn Nets return to the negotiating table, they’ll still be far apart. But that doesn’t have to be the end of the story.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-news...-the-brooklyn-nets-are-headed-for-the-iceberg
 
NY Liberty vs LA Sparks preview: Can an exhausted Liberty team dig deep?

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Photo by Scott Eklund/NBAE via Getty Images
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More work to be done. The New York Liberty took on the Minnesota Lynx at Barclays Center as those two rivals re-acquainted themselves with each other. The Liberty started strong, but a string of turnovers and incredibly timed Minnesota buckets doomed them to a tough home loss. The Liberty are at second place in the standings, but the Phoenix Mercury and Atlanta Dream are breathing down their necks.

The opponent tonight has been on a big run as of late. The Los Angeles Sparks have fought their way back into the playoff race after a slow start and have a great chance of capturing the eight seed. Their game went down to the wire against the Seattle Storm on Sunday night, and Dearica Hamby hit the game winner to give them the win. LA is now only one half game behind Seattle for the eighth and final playoff spot.

Where to follow the game​


MY9 on TV. Liberty Live and Fox Local on streaming. League Pass for the outsiders. Late night affair so we’re getting started after 10 PM.

Injuries​


No Breanna Stewart, Nyara Sabally, or Kennedy Burke, per usual. But late Monday, the team announced that Isabelle Harrison is in concussion protocol and did not travel with the team. The avalanche continues.

On the other hands, it’s all clear for the Sparks.

The game​


LA won the first meeting. Perhaps you remember the ending…

RICKEA JACKSON GAME-WINNER.

Sparks win their 5th straight game!

🤯🤯🤯pic.twitter.com/94L55ieUjE

— NBA (@NBA) July 27, 2025

The Liberty have been running ragged for a while, and it’s not about to get any easier. This is the first leg of a three game road trip, and the first night of a back-to-back. They’re off to Las Vegas tomorrow night for a showdown with the Aces. No rest for the weary.

You see the vision with Rickea Jackson, but the results haven’t consistently been there as of yet. The shooting percentages are down compared to last year, but it can be attributed to an increase in three point attempts. She’s still just 24 years old and has made tangible gains from her rookie to sophomore season, so it’s all a part of the process.

The guard matchup should be exciting. Kelsey Plum has been on a tear since the beginning of July as LA has fought their way up the standings. KP is averaging 18.9 points on .465/.405/.910 in a league leading 35.1 minutes per game across that stretch. Plum is hell on wheels and is seventh among guards in field goals attempted inside the restricted area. On the other side, Sabrina Ionescu is looking to bounce back from a shaky Sunday outing. Ionescu has been cold from the field as she’s shot just 30.5 percent from the field over the past three games. Ionescu had a ton of success in the first LA matchup as she tuned the Sparks up to the tune of 30/8/6/4 in 36 minutes. If she can do it again, the Liberty have a great chance of getting this road trip off to a good start.

Player to watch: Cameron Brink​


Amazingly, this is the first time the Liberty will be seeing Brink. In 2024, Cam tore her ACL against the Connecticut Sun, one game before she was to face the Liberty. This year, she made her return the game after the Sparks played the Liberty. And now, she gets to face off against the champs. Brink has gotten back to business and has already blocked 13 shots in just six games. The potential is through the roof and as Edwin Garcia wrote over at Silver Screen and Roll:

I understand Brink is on a minutes restriction and recovering from an ACL injury, but can we give her more playing time? She has been sensational. Brink’s 3-point shot is developing very well, and her rim protection is unreal. She averaged 2.3 blocks this week, and fans should expect her to do that more often than not. At this point, the more Brink we can see, the better.

LA is knocking on the door of a playoff spot. Can they get Brink out there a little more while not putting too much on her plate? We’ll see.

With Harrison now out, Jonquel Jones will probably cross the 30 minute plateau tonight. With this being the first leg of a road back-to-back, it’s not something Sandy Brondello wants to do, but she might have to. JJ has been solid since returning from the second ankle sprain. New York struggled getting the ball into the post against the Lynx, so we’ll be keeping a close eye on how they run their offense and get into their secondary actions.

From the Vault​


It’s WNBA rivalry week, so let’s revisit the best rivalry of the 2010s…

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

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nyliberty...ink-jonquel-jones-sabrina-ionescu-kelsey-plum
 
New York Liberty win barnburner against Los Angeles Sparks, 105-97

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It’s well-established which side of the ball the Los Angeles Sparks, who rank 4th in the WNBA in offense and 11th in defense, butter their bread on. But you really have to see it to believe it.

The New York Liberty are familiar. Rickea Jackson stood in the paint at the west end of Barclays Center on July 26, every muscle flexing, ready to scream, celebrating one of the highlights of her young career after hitting a buzzer-beating game-winner to even the series with New York at one apiece…

Rickea Jackson hits the GAME-WINNER to give the @LASparks the 101-99 win over the Liberty!

The sophomore put up 24 PTS to lead LA to their 5th straight win!#WelcometotheW https://t.co/LyBXkqhPr2 pic.twitter.com/WO1KrgEaV4

— WNBA (@WNBA) July 27, 2025

Note that the final score there was 101-99, kicking off a four-game losing streak for the Liberty in which their opponents averaged 93 points a night. Not great.

The circumstances would be even tougher for the rubber match on Tuesday night. New York flew across the country — after playing Sunday — with just eight available players after Isabelle Harrison was left behind in concussion protocol, though Kennedy Burke did put on the uniform in case of emergency. And they’d have to play on Wednesday night in Las Vegas; this was just the first half of a back-to-back following an annoying loss to the Minnesota Lynx.

In other words, this was their chance to get a win. It didn’t start well.

Los Angeles led 30-28 after one period, not a worrisome deficit but worrisome but for the quality of defense. Another shootout against the offensive-minded Sparks seemed a sure thing, especially with New York defending Kelsey Plum like this, unsure of what the coverage even was…

Everything KP touches is gold. 🔥@Kelseyplum10 x @WNBA pic.twitter.com/hDG5uC1mGa

— Los Angeles Sparks (@LASparks) August 13, 2025

Maybe the available players were conserving energy. Maybe they knew one injury was one too many, or maybe they were saving themselves for the Las Vegas Aces. Example: Jonquel Jones will have to guard A’ja Wilson on Wednesday night; on Tuesday, she hardly broke a sweat defensively.

At least she made up for it on the other end. She scored 14 of her 21 points in a blistering hot first half, hitting 3-points, post fade-aways, and rolling to the rim. But every Lib got in on the offensive action. Once again, all five starters hit double-digits, and at no point did L.A. seem prepared to slow them down. (The one woman who could have stopped them, Cameron Brink, played just five minutes before having her ankle wrapped and tunneling between the locker room and the bench for the rest of the game.)

New York raced ahead in the second quarter, finally playing some defense and getting pretty lucky that the Sparks were not as hot from three as they were. After Jackson’s breakout performance in NY, she shot just 7-of-20 in this one, including 2-of-10 from three. They took a 50-44 lead into the break after their bench, albeit depleted, outplayed the opponent for the second straight game.

But the similarities between Sunday’s loss and Tuesday’s game continued into the third quarter. The Liberty are the only team that can stop themselves, Head Coach Sandy Brondello likes to say, and they almost obliged again. Preventable turnovers kept L.A. in reach…

Liberty were up nine, with momentum. Two terrible turnovers that lead to Sparks runouts and the margin is now five. Big sequence: pic.twitter.com/WDhdEIV7wH

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) August 13, 2025

…and New York never quite pushed it to double-digits. Of course, their own halfcourt defense was the primary suspect.

But ultimately, it didn’t matter. They were crisp enough — Brondello deserves some credit here too, it felt like the Liberty scored on every set play — to take advantage of a Sparks defense that had no pride. I wish (not really) there was a nicer way to say it. Emma Meesseman was the star of the second half, and would ultimately lead the Liberty with 24 points in addition to nine boards and four assists. She shot 9-of-15 and 6-of-7 from the line, and while she continued to display solid chemistry with Sabrina Ionescu (14/3/6) in the pick-and-roll, most of her buckets came from manhandling mismatches down low…

the Sparks are guarding Emma Meesseman like they have the over: pic.twitter.com/QhDL1180uZ

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) August 13, 2025

A switch, a post-up, minimal help, and a bucket. Not a surprising formula, is it?

“I think our approach was a little different, and we paid more attention to details,” said Meesseman postgame. “So it made it easier for me to, you know, kind of read more of what’s happening on the court. And hopefully game by game is going to be like that.”

Sandy Brondello acknowledged that, despite LA’s length, it’s not too hard to gameplan when you have a frontcourt as talented as hers: “They’re switching and doing a whole lot of different things, but just their individual brilliance and talent does the rest. It’s just about just getting the ball into them, and there, they’re making the plays out of it.”

Los Angeles couldn’t defend Leonie Fiebich either, who finished with her second 20-point game of the season. Like the other matchups, they brought minimal help for a smaller defender, Kelsey Plum in this case. Fiebich and her teammates attacked that matchup with great success…

NYL and Leonie Fiebich are attacking this KP matchup pic.twitter.com/alsE34j4WU

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) August 13, 2025

Said Brondello: “Obviously they had Plum on Leo, and that was a favorable matchup for us … we just love the versatility that she brings. And I thought she was really aggressive to the rim. You know, I thought last game we didn’t get her in enough action, and she wasn’t wasn’t as aggressive as we would like her to be.”

This is the Fiebich question of the season, if she can manage her fatigue and defensive assignments with enough offensive aggression. Her coaches and teammates have occasionally begged for it this in 2025; on Tuesday, they got it.

And they did get the win they desperately needed. The Sparks fought the only way they know how (playing offense), but it wasn’t enough. They cut it to a possession or two here and there, but mostly stayed an arm’s length away until the final buzzer.

New York shot a preposterous 56% from the field and 50% from three. It won’t always be that easy to score, but it’s nice when it is. As for the defense, well, just focus on the win.

Final Score: New York Liberty 105, Los Angeles Sparks 97

Injury report​


Sandy Brondello didn’t have much information on Izzy Harrison, back in New York in concussion protocol: “I didn’t find out until after the press conference of the last game… all these post players going down, it’s been a tough run. Not sure when [the injury occurred], could’ve been the game before and didn’t think much of it.”

Thus, one of Meesseman or Jones was on the court at all times on Tuesday, and it’ll be that way for the foreseeable future. As for Kennedy Burke, she put on the uniform but was never expected to get it the game. That could change Wednesday, though, as she targets a return from her calf injury. It’ll likely be a game-time decision for KB.

Brondello makes history​


Sandy Brondello entered postgame media with wet hair and a big ol’ smile. That’s because she won her 101st game as head coach of the New York Liberty, the most in franchise history. Only fitting for the only head coach with a ring…

Sandy Brondello came into postgame soaking wet, after the team celebrated her becoming the franchise's winningest coach: "It means a lot. It's a privilege to be the head coach of the Liberty, an original franchise, with the best owners in the league. It means I've had good teams… pic.twitter.com/Lb9VqIgb4X

— Myles (@MylesEhrlich) August 13, 2025

After praising the organization and the incredible talent she gets to coach, Brondello was asked another question about the milestone. She had to laugh: “I don’t really get into this kind of stuff. Obviously, it’s nice. It means we’re winning. But, you know, I’m more about just trying to win this game more than any kind of records, and how we continue to get better, and getting ready for Vegas.”

Next Up​

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A quickly fading rivalry nonetheless takes center stage during WNBA Rivalry Week. The uneven Las Vegas Aces welcome a very tired New York Liberty team to Sin City on ESPN, where both teams will be very focused on their own issues. Tip-off is scheduled for 9:30 p.m. ET.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nyliberty/97809/liberty-vs-sparks-105-97-jonquel-jones-rickea-jackson
 
NY Liberty vs. Las Vegas Aces preview: Rivalry week heads to Sin City

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Defense not optional. The New York Liberty opened up their three game road trip with a night time party against the Los Angeles Sparks. Nobody played any defense and the Liberty did just enough to walk out of LA with the win. No time to celebrate since the level of competition will jump a few notches tonight.

The opponent tonight is still hanging around despite everything. The Las Vegas Aces have had some incredibly LOUD losses in 2025, but they’re still in the thick of the playoff picture. They helped themselves immensely with home win against the Connecticut Sun on Sunday night.

Where to follow the game​


ESPN is the place to be. Tip after 9:30 PM.

Injuries​


No Breanna Stewart, Nyara Sabally, or Isabelle Harrison. Kennedy Burke will suit up, and it appears she’ll be making her return to action after being out with a calf injury.

Cheyenne Parker-Tyus is on maternity leave.

The game​


New York won the first and second meetings. This is the final regular season matchup between these two clubs.

As the second scoring option, All-Star, and replacement for Kelsey Plum, Jewell Loyd has been an unmitigated disaster. She wasn’t assertive as a starter, often found herself stuck in the corners watching while her teammates tried to make things happen, and just could not put a consistent run of good hoops together. As a player coming off the bench? Very, very, very good! In seven games coming off the bench, Loyd is averaging close to 15 points a night on .452/.412/.889 shooting splits. Although she doesn’t start, she’s someone that can be on the court down the stretch and can be trusted to make big plays. It takes time for star players to find their footing in a new city, and it looks like Loyd has finally gotten used to her new environment.

When you try to hide a weaker defender on Leonie Fiebich, bad things happen. The Sparks learned that the hard way when they had Kelsey Plum guarding her. When Fiebich is an active participant in the offense, she makes the Liberty next to impossible to beat. She does everything well and her size creates mismatches every possession down.

The big focus for Leo tonight will be defending Chelsea Gray. Gray hasn’t had any success against the Liberty since Fiebich joined the team and Leo has consistently made things difficult for the future Hall of Famer.

Considering the level of opponent, look for the Liberty defense to be a lot more dialed in tonight. Having Kennedy Burke back will help immensely as KB can guard multiple positions and allow for everyone else on the roster to get a bit of a breather. The team has been running ragged for a while and anybody who can provide good minutes will be a lifesaver.

Player to watch: A’ja Wilson​


It’s only right we focus here after Wilson secured the first 30/20 game in WNBA history. She’s had to do everything to keep this Aces franchise afloat, and damn it she’s done it. Wilson leads the W in blocks and is second in points and rebounds. Amazingly, she’s doing all that in just 30.5 minutes per game. Wilson is everything you could ever want in a franchise player and has made the Aces respectable despite everything going on with them this season. She left the second Liberty matchup early due to an injury, so we’ll get to see the former MVP at the peak of her powers tonight.

The Liberty dynamic duo will draw this matchup tonight. Jonquel Jones and Emma Meesseman were outstanding last night and will handle all the center minutes with Isabelle Harrison in concussion protocol. Despite some loud lapses on defense, Jones was otherwise excellent as her 21/11/3/2 set the tone for the Liberty offense early on. Meesseman has continued to get comfortable with her new team and had 24/9/4/1. She’s always in the right place at the right time and for a Liberty team that is looking to find the right lineup mix to repeat as WNBA champions, Meesseman’s presence and excellence will give Sandy Brondello plenty of options to work with.

From the Vault​


The last time the Liberty touched down in Vegas, it was a party

More reading:

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nyliberty...n-leonie-fiebich-jonquel-jones-emma-meesseman
 
Long Island Nets set local tryouts for September 21

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The Long Island Nets are looking for a few good men.

Brooklyn’s G League affiliate will host two local player tryouts, presented by HSS, on Sunday, September 21, at Queens College ahead of the 2025-26 season. Long Island will host a total of 75 prospects at the North Gym of the Fitzgerald Gymnasium on Queens College’s campus

The morning session at 9:00 a.m. ET and an afternoon session at 1:00 p.m. NBA G League hopefuls will be put through a variety of drills and scrimmages led by Brooklyn and Long Island basketball operations staff as they vie for the chance to earn an invitation to Long Island training camp in late October. The Nets open play at Nassau Coliseum on November 7.

Recent local player tryout success stories include Jordan Minor, who appeared in 42 games for Long Island during the 2024-25 season after participating in the LI Nets’ 2024 local player tryout, and Terry Roberts, a 2023 local tryout participant and Amityville, N.Y., native, who played in 59 games with Long Island over the past two seasons (2023-25). Roberts played with the Brooklyn Nets Summer League team in Las Vegas last month. Going back further to October 2021, Craig Randall II joined Long Island after a successful local tryout. He was named the NBA G League Most Improved Player.

Check-in for the morning session will begin at 8:00 a.m. ahead of the 9:00 a.m. tryout, with check-in for the afternoon session slated for noon ahead of the 1 p.m. tryout.

Participation in each tryout will be limited to the first 75 applicants who submit the non-refundable registration fee and complete the required registration and waiver forms. Players who register prior to September 1 will pay $250. Those who register after will have to pay $275.

Both tryouts will be closed to the public.

All candidates must pre-register online and be eligible to play in the NBA G League. For more information on the tryouts or to begin the registration process, please visit longislandnets.com.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/longislandnets/97928/long-island-nets-set-local-tryouts-for-september-21
 
Danny Wolf to push the envelope for Brooklyn Nets

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Danny Wolf is a bit different from the Nets other picks in the 2025 Draft. The Yale and Michigan product is the oldest of the five first rounders at 21. In fact, he’s the only one who’s not a teenager. He’s also a big man, although his passing skills are his big calling card as they are for Egor Demin, Nolan Traore and Ben Saraf. Indeed, he is a very BIG man, at nearly 7’0” and 250 pounds with a 7’2 1/2 wingspan, a half-inch shorter than Nic Claxton’s.

He’s a bit of a conundrum. Not the hyper athlete so many his size are anymore. His 3-point shooting is still a work in progress and his defense needs some refining. All that may have led to him dropping all the way to No. 27 back on June 25. He had been mocked at No. 18 in the final ESPN mock draft. To be described as “intriguing” or “interesting” is fine, but it doesn’t help your bank account. The difference in first year salary between a player taken at No. 18 and the one at No. 27 is a cool $1 million.

But the Brooklyn Nets seem happy with their luck and so does he. They even featured him in their latest video about the five rookies that followed the Flatbush 5 through Summer League.


As Brian Lewis wrote Thursday,

It’s easy to see why Danny Wolf is such an intriguing prospect: A first-round rookie on a franchise desperately starved for young talent. The Nets’ need at power forward. Wolf checking the multi-positional box the front office wants. And finally, his unique playmaking and passing skillset for a man his size.

But will Wolf earn his way to Brooklyn or labor on Long Island? And how will the Nets use him even if he does?

“He’s just so unique. I don’t want to compare him to certain players,” said Nets lead assistant Steve Hetzel, who coached Wolf in Las Vegas. “He’s very unique because he can handle, he can play pick-and-roll … at Michigan, he was a primary ballhandler in pick-and-rolls. So he has a ton of skill and he can shoot the 3.”

One way the Nets brain trust may use him, Lewis writes, is using him in a pick-and-roll with Claxton

Running four-five pick-and-roll is a tantalizing possibility for the Nets, especially with a lob threat such as Claxton (as opposed to the ground-bound post scorer Drew Timme, whom Wolf shared the court with in summer league). Nikola Jokic and Giannis Antetokounmpo have used big-big pick-and-rolls to devastating effect.

But Wolf is neither of those MVPs. And he’ll have to earn playing time at first, much less have Jordi Fernandez put the ball in his hands as an offensive hub.

“It was bread-and-butter at Michigan, and I’m going to have to earn the coaches’ trust to kind of run that 4-5,” said Wolf, who operated as the ballhandler just once in his summer league finale. “It’s really effective, especially with different guys out there. As the screener, I can keep working at it in the short roll. That’s what excites me. What I am right now is a complete work in progress. It’s what I can become, and that’s just what excites me most.”

One encouraging point: He’s only been playing the ball-handler role for the past two years at Michigan. In his freshman year at Yale, he was a traditional big making the All-Ivy League team and earning the MVP in the Ivy League tournament. So he is not a finished product.

“Right now, I’m just learning,” Wolf told reporters in Las Vegas. “At Michigan was the first time I did it, and I had a heavy load on my shoulders. And some games were far more successful than others. At the NBA level, it’s just gonna be doing what the coach told me to do, but within that continuing to try to prove myself and prove a few different things.

“No matter who else is on the court in the NBA, you’re playing with four of the best players in the world, and they make everything so easy for everybody with spacing and their athleticism and their shooting ability. So I’m excited to see what that really looks like in an NBA setting and in practice, and I’m gonna keep working my butt off to be successful at that.”

Indeed while his highlight reel from his Big 10 games featured a lot of 00h-and-ah passing, they didn’t show the turnovers which were a problem, even he admits.

Where does he fit? It’s going to be complicated, as Lewis notes.

Claxton is going to start at center, backed up by (Day’Ron) Sharpe.

Michael Porter Jr. is going to start at either power forward or small forward. If it’s small forward, (Noah) Clowney would be the nominal starter as a stretch-four.

Wolf is going to have to get in where he fits in, but the coaches may still have to discover exactly where that is.

Wolf understands that.

“I have a very unique playstyle,” he said. “Some things that a coach might want me to do and some things that they’re not gonna want me to do. Just learning how they want me to play and playing within the flow of the offense.

“I think early on [in summer league], I didn’t do that as well. [Later] I just let the game come to me. But I’m gonna have an NBA staff to help me to develop and I know my work ethic to develop. It’s just gonna be putting my head down and working and becoming the best I can become in what the coaches want me to do.”

One thing that will help him get minutes is his rebounding. He grabbed nearly 10 boards a game with Michigan — 9.7 to be exact — leading the league in that category as well as double-doubles.

He remains optimistic he can make it work and prove to those teams that passed on him that he was worth a high pick.

“I wanted to stay in a relaxed mindset just to let the game come to me a little bit better and do what I do best and play a little bit slower,” Wolf said. “But the coaching staff was great. I got in the gym a lot and watched a lot of film. … There’s so many more games for me to go.”


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-analysis/97950/danny-wolf-to-push-the-envelope-for-brooklyn-nets
 
ESSAY: Brooklyn Nets have a problem and his name is Michael Porter Jr.

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Much of the attention around Michael Porter Jr.’s appearance this week on “One Night with Steiny,” an L.A.-based podcast that specializes in the NBA, was on his discussion of the dangers of sports betting.

MPJ’s younger brother, Jontay, is being sentenced on December 10, ironically in Brooklyn Federal Court, for his role in a betting scandal. He’s facing jail time and MPJ decried how gambling is “bad and getting worst,” talking about death threats to players and how the “authenticity and integrity” of the game is at risk.

But in that same podcast, whose hosts don’t steer away from raunch, Porter Jr. once again raised questions about his relationship with women, something that is not new. In the podcast, he said that when dating, he will “test girls” on “their beliefs” by playing them audio of Andrew Tate, whose entire persona revolves around toxic masculinity and who has faced charges of rape, trafficking minors, sex with a minor, money laundering and actual bodily harm in the United Kingdom and Romania. Tate is currently under investigation in the state of Florida.

Here’s the video:

“Another thing I do is see a little bit around their beliefs,” he told Aaron Steinberg and Bob Menery. “Like I’m not saying I’m a misogynist or anything but I’ll throw on some Andrew Tate and see how they’ll react.”

“Like Andrew Tate from five years ago,” interjected Steinberg, referring to Tate’s most active and vile period when among other things he described women as “intrinsically lazy” and said there was “no such thing as an independent female.”

“I’ll bring up conversations and play like devil’s advocate,” Porter continued. “Just to see how this girl thinks about certain things because if they’re too, if they’re too …”

After Steinberg and Menery jumped in and agreed that such testing was a good “strategy” to protect MPJ’s “time,” Porter concluded by saying, “Once they passed that test, and you obviously like them…” again trailing off.

He also raised some eyebrows at another point, describing what he eventually wants in a woman.

“She got to bring something to the table… She got to be able to cook, clean help me mentally… You got to be able to do something. These girls today want to live like queens and do nothing.”

He later told Steinberg and Menery that he will soon begin a “celibacy journey.”

It was the second time in a week that Porter discussed his relationship with women. On his “Curious Mike” podcast two days earlier, he said women are “his vice” and that God tests him through his relationship with women.

“My vice has always come in the form of women,” he said. “And when I’m far from God, and I’m not in my word, I’m not praying, I’m not prioritizing Him, like that seems to be the place that the devil gets me, is in the space of women.”

He did not detail how, when, where and why women have tested him.

Porter’s revelations were just the latest in his complicated history with women, including those who play in the WNBA.

While he has advocated for women players, specifically saying how shoe companies should create signature sneakers for women players, even playing in Breanna Stewart’s brand.

Inspired by the Porter family’s love for women’s basketball & legacy in hoops, MPJ is playing in Breanna Stewart’s Puma signature shoe this season.

“I’ve always admired Stewie’s game since back at UConn … You have guys wearing women’s shoes, and it’s usually the other way… pic.twitter.com/rwUmeTc1GY

— Nick DePaula (@NickDePaula) January 17, 2024

But he has also been criticized for his comments on equal pay for women players, saying this last year about the issue:

“I see it from both sides. I know these females want to get paid more and they’re very talented, but so is a famous ping pong player. The best ping pong player is just as talented as the best basketball player.

“That doesn’t mean they’re going to get paid the same. It’s what the people want to watch. As much as I understand females wanting the same treatment as men basketball players, it’s a different sport. They’re not packing out the arenas. Their TV deals aren’t the same. So, as much as I advocate for women and their equality and the respect of their craft and all those things, you can’t pay them the same thing. I do feel like there should be a little way to make a little bit more money because they are very talented.”

That of course led WNBA players and others to question his support for them. Meghan L. Hall of USA TODAY Sports wrote this: referring not only to sneakers, but his comments about how his mother and four sisters are big fans of the W.

“His campaign feels inauthentic and screams, “I stand with women’s basketball players, like my mom and my siblings, but I draw the line at tangible actions to support them.”

This week in yet another “Curious Mike” podcast, Porter talked about getting Liberty players on the podcast to talk about the Liberty and WNBA.

“I heard they’re dope,” he said of the Liberty. “I want to get Breanna Stewart or Sabrina (Ionescu) on the podcast eventually.”

At this point, that would be entertaining and could be a good tonic for him. A better tonic for him and us might be for Mike no matter how curious to put down the mic. Surely, there’s someone on the Nets staff who can talk sense into him. This is after all New York City, not Denver.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-feat...e-a-problem-and-his-name-is-michael-porter-jr
 
NY Liberty vs. Minnesota Lynx preview: A Finals rematch on CBS

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No rebounds, no wins. The New York Liberty had a chance to win both ends of the back-to-back, but couldn’t stop fouling and couldn’t grab a rebound when they needed it. As a result, the Aces got their first win against the Liberty in two years.

The opponent tonight is at the top of the WNBA. The Minnesota Lynx have been off all week after beating the Liberty last Sunday. That WNBA schedule, am I right?

Where to follow the game​


CBS is the place to be. Only game on the WNBA calendar and tip-off will be after 2 PM.

Injuries​


No Breanna Stewart, Isabelle Harrison, or Nyara Sabally.

Napheesa Collier is listed as doubtful. Per Madeline Kenney of the New York Post, there’s no timetable as to when Phee will return, but it appears she’ll be on the way back soon.

The game​


Minnesota won games one and two. These teams see each other again on Tuesday. That schedule…

To get you prepared for this matchup, our very own Lucas Kaplan joined Andrew Dukowitz of the Missing Lynx Pod!

Sabrina Ionescu will be tasked with getting good looks for the offense. In the last Lynx meeting, the Liberty couldn’t get into the paint after halftime and it bogged their offense down. New York is most dangerous when they’re getting into and finishing in the painted area. It won’t be easy against this stout Lynx defense, but that’s certainly something they’ll be focused on.

They’ll also be focused on making things hard on Kayla McBride. K-Mac scored a game high 18 points last Sunday and was able to consistently get just enough room to avoid the Liberty defense and get clean shot attempts from deep

View Link

How they defend McBride will be key to this matchup as well as possible future one when the stakes are higher. Leonie Fiebich figures to get the matchup again, and Leo has been working hard to fight through the exhaustion and fatigue she’s been dealing with for the past few weeks.

Having Kennedy Burke back will be a god send for the Liberty. In addition to giving them some much needed depth back in the front court, KB is someone that can consistently drive to the rim and put pressure on opposing defenses. Burke’s three point shooting has been her calling card this season, but she went 0-3 from deep against the Aces. If she gets open looks this time, look for a different result.

If all else fails, get the ball to Emma Meesseman. We saw that in action on Wednesday as she was the focal point of the offense in the fourth quarter. As she gets more chemistry and minutes with the team, they’ll have the timing down pat and can be even better.

Player to watch: Alanna Smith​


Say hello to the leading contender for Defensive Player of the Year. Smith has been outstanding on that side of the ball and had perhaps her best outing of the season against the Liberty last weekend. Lan is incredibly tough and someone that can single-handedly change the course of a matchup.

No rebounds, no wins. If the Liberty want to win, they need to be a lot better on the glass. Amazingly, this team is 11th in the W in rebounding rate this season, and that’s unacceptable for a team of this caliber. To correct that, it will start with Jonquel Jones. JJ is third in rebounds per game, but she might have to do even more on that front to help the team out. When she’s dialed in, there are very few players in basketball that can keep up with her. In order to get the win today, New York will need the best version of Jonquel. When New York was able to win against Minnesota last year, they were able to get Jones the ball within the flow of the offense and get her enough space to operate. Sandy Brondello talked about spacing after Sunday’s loss, and we’ll see if the group can take the lessons they learned from last weekend and apply it to tonight.

From the Vault​


In happy news, it looks like Hall and Oates have squashed the beef!

More reading: Canis Hoopus, Zone Coverage, Swish Appeal, Breakaway, SB Nation, Women’s Basketball Roundup, The Local W, New York Daily News, No Cap Space, New York Post, 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/nyliberty...-emma-meesseman-kayla-mcbride-sabrina-ionescu
 
Liberty lose a heartbreaker to the Lynx, 86-80

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Against championship level teams, the margin for error is zero. You can’t afford to make mistakes, start slow, or lose focus. When that happens, you put yourself in a hole that’s very difficult to come out of. The great teams can do it and sometimes escape with wins, but after a while it catches up to even the best teams.

Early on, the New York Liberty were struggling to find their flow on offense. They went the entire first quarter without making a jump shot from beyond ten feet and left a lot of points on the table. However, Natasha Cloud took it upon herself to will her team back into the game. Slowly but surely, the driving lanes started to open up and the Liberty found success in the paint. Kennedy Burke, Cloud, and Marine Johannes gave the Liberty the downhill juice they needed to get back into this game at the Target Center. Their efforts got the Liberty to within five at halftime despite zero points from Emma Meesseman and three points from Sabrina Ionescu.

After the break, we saw the full idealized version of the team while Breanna Stewart is out. They continued to get downhill, the defense was making things tough on the Lynx, and most importantly, the three point shooting made its way to Minneapolis. Everything was firing on all cylinders and the Liberty looked like they were one good run away from firmly taking control of this rivalry game.

Two Kennedy Burke threes, first off a screen->flare, then a guard-to-guard for Cloud

I'd say Sandy and the staff has had a great stretch of calling organized offense, deserve big credit for this lead pic.twitter.com/JYWaamr4c5

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) August 16, 2025

After three, New York led 61-60. It was a back and forth affair throughout the fourth as these teams showed why they’re the very best in the WNBA.

LOOK AT MARINE JOHANNES pic.twitter.com/JPpXOS8t8s

— Steve Jones Jr. (@stevejones20) August 16, 2025

Johannès was one of six Liberty players in double figures as she helped provide some much needed scoring punch off the bench.

“We want them to come off the bench and be aggressive,” Sabrina Ionescu said in postgame, “and they did just that. Obviously keep builidng [Kennedy Burke] up and am really excited to have her back. Same with Marine. The way she came

Unfortunately for New York, the Lynx got off the mat and finished the game on a 13-7 run. Courtney Williams was excellent throughout the game and led all players in scoring with 26 points on 10-16 shooting from the field.

Target Center went bonkers in the final minute when Kayla McBride cashed in a 29 foot three pointer

MAC makes it happen. pic.twitter.com/HOJ3f9I6FO

— Minnesota Lynx (@minnesotalynx) August 16, 2025

“I have to go back and see how Kayla McBride was so open,” Sandy Brondello said in postgame. In watching it back, you can see a miscommunication in the back line of the defense. Leonie Fiebich and Jonquel Jones both went to the roller (Alanna Smith), which left one of the league’s best three point shooters wide open in a one possession game.

Amazingly, the Liberty still had a chance to escape with a win. Coming into the game, McBride was shooting a league best and career high 93.8 percent from the free throw line. However, she missed two free throws inside of the final 21 seconds and left the door open for the Liberty. Down three, the Liberty designed a great play that got Natasha Cloud a driving lane to the cup and a layup she makes 99 times out of 100. Unfortunately, this was the one time she would miss, and it shut the door on the Liberty’s chances at victory. Mistakes add up and when you put them all together, it equals a heartbreaking loss.

Final score: Minnesota Lynx 86, New York Liberty 80

(Don’t) Blow the Whistle​

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The big discussion following the game was the free throw disparity between the two teams. The Lynx shot 33 free throws, their second highest total of the season. New York shot eight free throws, a season low. What was their season low before today? Nine… against the Minnesota Lynx on August 10. Naturally, when you see a discrepancy that large, you wonder what the opposing team thinks of such a development. The Liberty were asked about in postgame, and Jonquel Jones and Sabrina Ionescu passed on the question while Brondello jokingly asked Jones if she wanted to get fined. From there, Brondello rhetorically asked reporters if the team wasn’t driving hard enough and what they themselves thought of the discrepancy. Nobody shared what they thought.

33-8 is incredibly loud, especially when you see plays like this late in the game

lmao alright pic.twitter.com/NguepQQTPt

— iz ও (@sunkisses4bella) August 16, 2025

Such is life. Ionescu later added that the team will continue to stay true to their identity of driving to the lane, getting into the paint, etc.

Even with the lousy officiating, the Liberty will be the first to tell you that there were things that they could have done better throughout the game. The team missed a bevy of makeable layups on offense, had ill-timed breakdowns on defense, and didn’t do enough down the stretch to bring it home. Here, I’ll step away and pass the mic to our very own Lucas Kaplan…

so @busyxb has the game recap for us today

but I have to say everything is different when you have championship expectations. Minnesota's defense was awesome from the jump, but

— Tash takes the game into her own hands by just willing her way to the paint
— Marine plays one of…

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) August 16, 2025

When you’re the best, more is expected of you. And even for a shorthanded team like the Liberty, there’s more they can do to ensure they remain near the top of the WNBA standings.

Next up​

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One more dance with Minnesota. This series shifts back to the ‘clays for a matchup on Tuesday night. Tip at 7 PM.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nyliberty...-wnba-recap-courtney-williams-marine-johannes
 
NetsDaily Off-Season Report – No. 17

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Another week, another salary dump, another roster slot filled. It’s one or the other, sometimes both.

This week, it was a trade for another solid if not spectacular NBA wing: Haywood Highsmith, a 6’5” 3-and-D wing and another second rounder. In return for the 28-year-old, the Brooklyn Nets gave up basically nothing: a heavily protected second next year. For the pick to transfer, the Nets would have to finish with a top five record in 2025-26. That’s not happening and if it somehow did, who would care about a second rounder? The rebuild would be over; the Nets 2025 picks having succeeded beyond anyone’s wildest dreams.

Sean Marks and company have now participated in three salary dumps: giving up a net of $41.7 million in cap space, Cam Johnson, $1.1 million in cash considerations and that heavily protected second in 2026 to acquire Michael Porter Jr., Drake Powell, (the 22nd pick in June’s draft,) the Nuggets unprotected first in 2032 and the Heat’s unprotected second in that same draft. And they still have anywhere between $16 and $22 million remaining cap space, depending on how many their five team options they exercise … and what happens with Cam Thomas.

We expect to see some movement on all that and Exhibit 10s in the next couple of weeks, the Exhibit 10s even earlier. The roster math and league rules will dictage it. With the addition of Highsmith, the Nets now have 22 players — one more than the max allowed in training camp.

Once again, the roster math:

—11 players on guaranteed standard deals: Michael Porter Jr., Nic Claxton, Terance Mann, Egor Demin, Haywood Highsmith, Nolan Traore, Noah Clowney, Drake Powell, Dariq Whitehead, Ben Saraf and Danny Wolf,

—five players on non- or partially guaranteed deals: Keon Johnson, Jalen Wilson, Tyrese Martin, Drew Timme and Ricky Council IV whose signing has yet to be announced. Johnson, Wilson and Council all have partial guarantees.

—three unsigned restricted free agents: Cam Thomas, Day’Ron Sharpe and Ziaire Williams, the latter two having agreed to deals that have yet to be finalized

—two two-ways: Tosan Evbuomwan and Tyson Etienne. Two-way contracts are not guaranteed so they’re most likely holding spots rather than certainties. The Nets also have a third two-way still open.

Brooklyn can also sign players to training camp deals, Exhibit 9s and 10’s, which can be converted into two-way spots or G League contracts. In order to do that, though, they’ll have to waive someone to get down to 21 by the opening of camp, presumable the end of September, presumably from the quintet of players on team options or the two two-ways. Both Fanbo Zeng and Grant Nelson, athletic 6’11” forwards, are seem the most likely to get the call, based on media reports, with Zeng the more likely of the two. They could also sign a free agent, of course, perhaps a veteran point guard? Like we’ve said all summer, flexibility.

There’s also the issue of getting to the salary floor, the minimum under the CBA. At the moment, they are $7.3 million under. They have until October 21 to get to that level or face some monetary sanctions.

As for Thomas, there appears nothing much new. The reporting, always sketchy, seems to suggest that the team will get serious with him once they feel they’re exhausted their opportunities with cap space. After the Highsmith trade, they appear to be close that. And again, the Nets can sign Thomas out of Bird Rights. However, by all accounts, the two sides are far apart and he can exercise his qualifying offer up to October 1 (or even beyond although that’s not likely.

Beyond the roster math, the Highsmith acquisition raises another question: what are the Nets to do with all the small forwards they have on their roster? We have heard all the talk of position-less basketball and 0.5-second decision making, but at the moment, Brooklyn has a lot of players nominally listed at the 3.

There’s Noah Clowney, Dariq Whitehead, Drake Powell, Haywood Highsmith, Tosan Evboumwan, Tyrese Martin, Terance Mann, Jalen Wilson and even Fanbo Zeng. Miss anyone? Of course, there’s going to be experimentation, like running Egor Demin at the 3 in Summer league or having Ben Sarah play the 1, 2 or 3. And Highsmith may not be ready until a month into the season.

Training camp will be interesting.

Draft Haul Grows

In his tweet breaking the Haywood Highsmith news, Shams Charania noted this…

Brooklyn has remained active in trade conversations as the league’s only team with remaining significant cap space, and takes Highsmith in with an unprotected second-rounder. Nets have also acquired two 1sts this offseason to add to the most 1st and 2nd round picks in the league.

By our count, the Nets currently have 13 first rounders and 18 seconds for a total of 31, the same number it had going into the 2025 Draft, even with using five firsts. The haul is indeed caveated with swaps particularly in the second round, but here’s the list:

First the firsts

2026 (1)
Nets
2027 (2)
Nets (Rockets have swap rights) Knicks,
—2028 (2)
Nets (best of Nets/Suns/Knicks), 76ers (top 8 protected)
—2029 (3)
Nets, Knicks, and worst of Mavs/Suns/Rockets
—2030 (1)
Nets
—2031 (2)
Nets, Knicks
—2032 (2)
Nets, Nuggets

And the seconds

2026 (2) – least favorable of Clippers/Celtics and most favorable of Celtics/Pacers/Grizzlies and Hawks

2027 (1) – Lakers

2028 (3) – Nets. Hawks, Grizzlies, Mavs

2029 (4) – Grizzlies, Mavs, Warriors

2030 (4) – Nets, Celtics, Mavs, Lakers

2031 (2) – Mavs, Lakers

2032 (2) – Nets, Heat

There are a number of caveats we didn’t detail, but the numbers speak loudly. The big question besides quantity is quality and the Nets seen to be in good shape there as well. As Brian Lewis wrote recently:

CBS Sports’ Sam Quinn ranked all 63 traded picks in the NBA, and Brooklyn holds two of the top 10 — with a third, even more valuable, omitted merely through a technicality.

By far Brooklyn’s best asset is their own natural first-round pick next year, which they reacquired from Houston via trade. Since it had originally been their own pick, Quinn didn’t include it in his list. But if he had, it would have been right near the top of the most coveted in the league, behind only the selection New Orleans shockingly traded to Atlanta.

“Probably second, to be honest,” Quinn told The Post. “The [2026] Pelicans pick, just by virtue of the attached swap rights with Milwaukee and being in the West rather than the East, is probably slightly better. But obviously an unprotected pick from a very bad team in the upcoming draft is almost automatically going to rank very near the top. That sort of certainty is rare.”


What’s the value of all those seconds? Under the new CBA, first rounders became more valuable. Teams need to stay under various thresholds and aprons while still paying stars. The easiest solution is do well in the draft, pay the firsts according to the rookie salary scale. As shown this summer, teams, particularly those who see themselves as contenders, are now willing to buyout or stretch big contracts rather than give up draft assets in salary dumps. Also, multiple seconds can replace the value of a single first. The Nets got three seconds for Dorian Finney-Smith, Dennis Schroder and Royce O’Neal.

More numbers

Etienne Catalan, the NBA numerologist, supplied some news on Sunday morning. He tweeted that Nolan Traore and Danny Wolf are changing uniform numbers.

UPDATE: Danny Wolf is switching from No. 18 to No. 2 for the #Nets. Number last worn by Cameron Johnson in 2025. #NBA pic.twitter.com/vXg46RwQG2

— Etienne Catalan (@EtienneCatalan) August 17, 2025
UPDATE: Nolan Traoré (@nolantraore0) is switching from No. 19 to No. 88 for the #Nets. Number never worn in franchise history. #NBA pic.twitter.com/kHber3BzEu

— Etienne Catalan (@EtienneCatalan) August 17, 2025

No word on why. We’re sure they’ll asked.

And Traore won’t be the only one wearing No. 88 in October when Nets play the Suns in Macao. Vince Carter will be there as well.

VC this morning with jersey he’ll wear during promotions at NBA China Games in Macao https://t.co/w7ACdk27fa pic.twitter.com/ZAx4rNsUIY

— NetsDaily (@NetsDaily) August 17, 2025

Vince Carter will be there for the NBA China games. Among the promotions: 10 lucky Chinese fans will get to meet and greet VC. The promotion appears to be sponsored by Taobao which is part of Alibaba.

It also should be noted that “8” is the Chinese lucky number.

Final Note

We’re closing on the training camp and the end of the off-season. It’s now only six weeks away!

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/off-season-report/98033/netsdaily-off-season-report-no-17
 
Brooklyn Nets acquire Haywood Highsmith, 2032 second from Miami Heat

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In their latest salary dump, the Brooklyn Nets have traded a heavily protected 2026 second round pick to the Miami Heat for Haywood Highsmith, a 28-year-old 6’5” wing, and an unprotected second rounder in 2032. Highsmith, who started 42 games for the Heat last season as a 3-and-D specialist, will earn $5.6 million this season on an expiring contract. He averaged 6.5 points a game on 46/38/72 shooting splits in 74 games overall, along with 4.3 rebounds and 1.5 assists. He will be Brooklyn’s second oldest player, a couple of months younger than Terance Mann, acquired this summer in another salary dump.

Shams Charania was first with the the news…

The Miami Heat have traded Haywood Highsmith and a 2032 second-round pick to the Brooklyn Nets for a protected 2026 second-round pick, sources tell ESPN. pic.twitter.com/ilO1dBStWw

— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) August 15, 2025
Heat shed Highsmith's salary to lessen their salary bill. Nets send Miami a 2026 second-rounder that is protected 31-55.

— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) August 15, 2025
Brooklyn has remained active in trade conversations as the league's only team with remaining significant cap space, and takes Highsmith in with an unprotected second-rounder. Nets have also acquired two 1sts this offseason to add to the most 1st and 2nd round picks in the league. https://t.co/pnjlseX4SN

— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) August 15, 2025

The Nets confirmed the trade and provided details.

The 2026 second rounder sent to Miami is protected 31-55 meaning the Nets would have to finish with the fifth best record in the NBA next season for the pick to transfer. Brooklyn now has 32 picks: 19 seconds and 13 firsts, most in the league as Shams pointed out. Of the 13 firsts, nine are tradeable, also the most in the NBA.

Highsmith has shot 49% from three over the past two seasons and is known as a tough defender…

Haywood Highsmith is a REALLY FUN defender 🔒 pic.twitter.com/rfRTGTqabj

— Brooklyn Netcast (@BrooklynNetcast) August 15, 2025

However, there’s a question about how soon Highsmith will be ready. Eight days ago, Highsmith underwent surgery to repair a meniscal tear in his right knee which he suffered while training in Baltimore. The Heat said then that he would begin rehabilitation immediately and is expected to miss eight-to-10 weeks. The Nets training camp is expect to open in six weeks. Could the Nets waive him?

Yossi Gozlan of capsheets.com projected that the Nets currently have $22.5 million left in cap space…

The Brooklyn Nets have $22.5 million remaining in cap space after acquiring Haywood Highsmith.

Day'Ron Sharpe and Ziaire Williams remain unsigned, so they're likely working with less cap space when factoring them.

They'll need to cut two players before start of regular season. pic.twitter.com/S0qY7kU9ZP

— Yossi Gozlan (@YossiGozlan) August 15, 2025

Highsmith is the 11th roster player on a guaranteed standard NBA deal. The Nets also have five players on non- or partially guaranteed deals, three unsigned restricted free agents, two two-ways and one reported Exhibit 10, giving the them 22 players, one more they can bring to training camp at the end of September.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-free...haywood-highsmith-2032-second-from-miami-heat
 
NY Liberty vs. Minnesota Lynx preview: Liberty look to avoid the season sweep

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Still can’t get over that hill. The New York Liberty played the Minnesota Lynx down to the wire on Saturday afternoon, but couldn’t bring it all the way home and suffered a tough loss. It was the Liberty’s third loss to the Lynx this season.

Where to follow the game​


MY9 on TV. Liberty Live and FOX Local for streamers. NBATV for the out-of-towners. Tip after 7 PM.

Injuries​


No Breanna Stewart, Nyara Sabally, or Isabelle Harrison. Stewie was at practice yesterday and got some work in, but the team isn’t rushing her back.

Napheesa Collier is officially listed as doubtful, but she likely won’t suit up tonight.

The game​


This is the final regular season matchup between the 2024 WNBA Finalists this season.

The Liberty will need to find a way to execute better down the stretch. Against a team like Minnesota, any lapses in judgment will be punished and defensive breakdowns become even more magnified. It takes an A+ game to beat a great team, and the Liberty will have to keep the mistakes to a minimum.

That starts with making things tougher on Kayla McBride. K-Mac delivered the dagger on Saturday with a 29 foot three pointer in the final seconds. She got open on a Liberty miscue and they’ll work to limit her touches tonight and contest every shot attempt of hers. McBride’s release is lightning quick and all she needs is half a second of daylight before she gets a shot up. New York will toggle through various defenders to keep her off-balance and present her with different looks.

We gradually saw New York start to find their way to the rim against this Lynx defense on Saturday. That was the big change from the game at Barclays Center, and they’re going to have to insist their way to the cup tonight. Having Kennedy Burke back helps with that as she has a great first step. Sabrina Ionescu is having her best season shooting inside of the restricted area, and will look to find her way to the cup. It’s highly unlikely we see a 33-8 free throw disparity again, and New York is going to look to force the issue in this contest. If they do get to the line a lot, it’ll help keep the Lynx out of transition and allow New York to set up their halfcourt defense.

But ultimately, if they want to win, they’re going to need a big game out of Jonquel Jones. JJ played 7:34 in the fourth quarter on Saturday night, but didn’t attempt a single field goal or free throw. That can’t happen again as they need her dialed in from the top of the game and all throughout it. Alanna Smith has given the Liberty trouble all season and is adding to her Defensive Player of the Year case. As Sandy Brondello noted in pregame on Saturday, Lan is incredibly tough and has started to reach her full potential.

Player to watch: Courtney Williams​


When you see a team enough times, you start to develop a lil bit of resentment. When you’re both battling near the top of the mountain, it’s gonna get intense and it’s gonna get tough. For Courtney Williams, the goal is real simple: beat the Liberty at all costs

Courtney Williams on if her trash talk gives her more fire to beat the Liberty

“The fire is there they beat us last year, I don’t need more ammunition. I don’t like them, I love them as people… but when it comes to basketball, no it’s nothing, I don’t want them to win… it’s… pic.twitter.com/SypJwvz8qn

— Andrew Dukowitz (@adukeMN) August 16, 2025

That’s what’s up! With all the rivalry talk and chatter from the Lynx players and fanbase, New York was asked about it. Here’s what Sandy Brondello had to say

Coach Sandy Brondello on the Lynx “Punk ass team” comment

Key takeaways:
1. Sandy wants all the smoke
2. Rivalries are great for the league
3. Minny needs to build a bridge and get over it #wnba #nyliberty

( 🎥 @busyxb ) pic.twitter.com/offyhwb40j

— NYLFTV (@NYLibertyFanTV) August 18, 2025

I like that! These teams want to take the other down and it’ll lead to some awesome, elite hoops.

When Williams is dialed in, she can take over a game and kill you in the midrange area. It was essential to Minnesota’s fourth quarter comeback and the Liberty will look to make things a bit tougher on her. Court has a flair for the dramatic and can always get to her shot when the time is right. With a fully healthy Lynx team, you almost prefer her taking those shots compared to Collier or McBride (see game 5 of last year’s Finals), so the Liberty will look to manage things with Williams as the centerpiece of the offense.

Natasha Cloud woke the Liberty up on Saturday through sheer force of will. With the team struggling and a few moments away from a blowout loss, Cloud forced the issue, battled her way to the rim, and gave the Liberty a much needed shot of energy. Now that this matchup shifts to Barclays Center, the home crowd will give her and the team even more of a boost. You never want to get swept in a season series, so look for the team to match Minnesota’s physicality and do everything they can to get the win.

From the Vault​


Ones in the air for Naomi as she and Jimmy Uso will be welcoming a baby into the world!

More reading: Canis Hoopus, Zone Coverage, Swish Appeal, Breakaway, SB Nation, Women’s Basketball Roundup, The Local W, New York Daily News, No Cap Space, New York Post, 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/wnba-cont...s-natasha-cloud-kayla-mcbride-sabrina-ionescu
 
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