News Nets Team Notes

Speedy Nolan Traore likely to see early action at point guard

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With Egor Demin’s timeline for a return from a flantar fascia tear still uncertain and preseason only a week away, it looks like two rookies, Nolan Traore, the 6’4” Frenchman and pure PG, and Ben Saraf, 6’7” but more of a combo guard out of Israel, will get early minutes. The two are among the youngest players in the league, with Traore fourth youngest. You might also see Kobe Bufkin, acquired from Atlanta 10 days ago, get minutes too but overall the Nets see him as more of an undersized 2 rather than a 1.

So far, we’ve heard a lot out of training camp about Saraf, who won praise from Nic Claxton, Michael Porter Jr. and Sean Marks, most of it volunteered, at Media Day, plus some gaudy mentions from Jordi Fernandez since. Saraf’s maturity, poise and playmaking have won him fans. Said one person familiar with his play in summer at HSS Training Center, “guys like playing with him.”

Traore has had a good camp as well, we and others have been told. He was known as the quickest guard in the draft and has surprised even since, being described as having “elite” speed at the NBA level. Traore takes pride in his speed, he told Brian Lewis Friday.

“(It) just means you got to be the fastest guy on the court. That’s every game, and it’s 82 games,” Traore told Brian Lewis. “It’s a lot, and you just have to keep your body and take care of your body. That’s what that is.”

Fernandez has noted it as well, but warns that Traore (as well as his other rookies) will have to sustain it over the course of an 82 game season and that physical adjustment will be challenging.

“Yeah, it’s just sustaining it, right?” Jordi Fernández said of Traore. “You know coming into the NBA he’s fast, and he’s fast in the NBA, but there’s going to be guys in front of him that are going to be physical and fast. So how can he sustain that? How he can gain (and sustain) physicality?

“Because his paint touches are not just good for him to score, collapse the defense and find the 3-point line or find that second side. So, that is very good (that he’s fast), but now it is how long can you sustain it in the NBA? And that’s something that we’re going to be able to see soon enough in real games.”

Traore played a half-NBA season last year for Saint Quentin in the French league (41 games.) He started slowly which caused his preseason mock draft stock to fall. He had been expected to do better, particularly with his shooting, after many draftniks had ranked him top-five before he moved from one level of French ball to another. He improved as the season wore on, but his stock never rose much and he went at No. 19 to Brooklyn, slightly higher than projected. (ESPN had him going to the Nets at No. 22.)

Saraf has a lot more experience despite the fact that only six weeks separate the two in age. Saraf played 66 games last season starting with the FIBA U18 championships last summer, winning MVP with a 28.1 points a game, then helping lead his team to German League finals. Saraf has also played in domestic leagues in Europe, Israel and Germany, as well as in the EuroCup, giving him an advantage.

Traore likes the challenge and has a chip on his shoulder. He has crossed one hurdle already. He likes his new home.

“It’s a really good city, and I just enjoy it. I didn’t visit everything yet, but I will. I like it,”


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-anal...ore-likely-to-see-early-action-at-point-guard
 
Long Island Nets roster taking shape with latest trade for David Muoka

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On Monday, the Long Island Nets finalized a trade with the Windy City Bulls to acquire David Muoka for a first and a second-round pick in the G League draft. With the rumored move now official, the 6’10” 24-year-old Hong Kongese big man is part of Long Island’s roster.

Indeed, with a little over a month to go before opening night at the Nassau Coliseum — against the Capital City Go-Go — the Nets G League roster is starting to take shape.

Muoka is the team’s latest acquisition in a busy summer. Each is a G League vet:

  • Yuri Collins, a 6’0” point guard who led the G League in assists with the Santa Cruz Warriors;
  • Malachi Smith, a 6’4” shooting guard formerly with the Memphis Hustle;
  • Max Fielder, a 6’11” center who spent last season with the Texas Legends;
  • Kyle Rose, a 6’4” shooting guard who starred at Fordham and played for the Mexico City Capitanes;
  • Tre Scott, a 6’8” power forward who last played for the Osceola Magic, and
  • E.J. Liddell, a 6’6” wing who Brooklyn signed to a two-way. He last played for the Bulls affiliate.

Other than Liddell, Long Island acquired each player in a trade, mostly using G League draft assets. Long Island is also expected to sign Dre Davis, a 6’6” 3-and-D wing who like Muoka and Collins was signed to a standard deal — with an $85,000 guarantee — then waived by Brooklyn earlier this month.

“The guys that we acquired for this year are more veteran guys,” said Long Island Nets head coach Mfon Udofia last week, adding, “Those guys add to the mix, who will be down on Long Island, and get them (the rookies) up to speed as much as possible.”

And not just the draft picks.

“Fanbo, first of all, is a really good human being,” Udofia told ND. “High character individual. Then, from the basketball side, he has a really good skill set, can shoot the ball, and his athleticism is good. I’m excited to coach him, excited to have him, and I think he’ll play very well for both teams.”

In addition, Long Island is bringing back two veteran guards who played at the Coliseum last season: Tyson Etienne, the 6’2” shooting guard who the Nets signed to a tw0-year two-way deal last season, and Terry Roberts, the 6’4” point guard who also played with Brooklyn’s Summer League entry.

The rookies Udofia mentioned are, of course, the five first rounders, aka the Flatbush 5: Egor Demin, Nolan Traore, Drake Powell, Ben Saraf, and Danny Wolf as well as Fanbo Zheng, who Brooklyn signed last week to an Exhibit 10. Most if not all of them are likely to spend some time in the G League.

Among the new Long Islanders, the Net who’s likely to play the biggest role in mentoring the rooks is Collins, the G League’s top playmaker. He appeared in 49 games last season between the NBA G League Tip-Off Tournament and the regular season. He averaged 13.7 points, 3.5 rebounds, 10.2 assists, and 1.3 steals in 32.2 minutes per game. His 10.8 assists per game in the regular season led the league.

In addition all of this, Long Island is hoping to find its diamond in the rough from their annual local player tryouts . Close to 150 prospects, split between two sessions, hoped to find their spot on the roster. This is something that has spelled success for Long Island in the past.

The most likely to get a G League deal was Romani Hansen. Hansen is a former captain of the U.S. Virgin Islands Men’s National Team who grew up in the Bronx.. He stands at 6’9” and has a pretty lengthy resume. He played college ball at Pensacola State, Independence CC, Savannah State, and Albany from 2016 through 2020, before going overseas to play some more in Portugal, Finland, Luxembourg, Lebanon and most recently, Venezuela.

Long Island training camp opens at the end of October with the season opener on November 7 at Nassau Coliseum vs. the Capital City Go-Go.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/longislan...aking-shape-with-latest-trade-for-david-muoka
 
The Brooklyn Nets rookies are inching along. It’s their only option.

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Evan Bernstein/Getty Images

The Brooklyn Nets are a lock to miss the NBA Playoffs in 2025-26, as they were last season. Thankfully, there are five first-round draft picks on the roster this time around, five young players actually worth investing your time and energy into. Not to mention third-year players Noah Clowney and Dariq Whitehead, each just 21 years old, looking to have their first fully healthy and productive years in the NBA.

But it’s really about the rookies, all of whom except for Danny Wolf were just 19 years of ago on Draft Night. You know the Brooklyn Nets will not be a good NBA team this season, and that’s okay, but every time the rookies step onto the court, you might be catching glimpses of the promised future of this franchise. When 25-year-old Nolan Traoré is wiping off the champagne-soaked rims of his goggles after the 2031 NBA Finals, you will think back to his first 25-point game in the NBA, a 10:00 p.m. ET tip-off on the West Coast during a 25-win season. It’ll all be worth it. The journey is just as much yours as it is his.

By and large, this is the hope the Brooklyn Nets are supplying their fans this season. It won’t be smooth sailing.

Egor Dëmin is already dealing with a plantar fascia injury, and has not participated in any contact drills throughout training camp. He seems iffy at best to play in any preseason game. Drake Powell, the #22 overall pick, is dealing with left knee tendinopathy, but he started the week by participating in his first full-contact practice.

“It’s been great,” said Powell of his limited experience. “You know, just being able to be a student of the game, still trying to learn different concepts to this new system that I’m in. But, like you said, now being in it, I think that’s helped me 100%. It’s not saying that I learned everything — there’s still some things to learn — as it’s different being on the sidelines and now being on the court, but yeah, just still taking it day by day.”

Head Coach Jordi Fernández shares that positivity: “He’s been doing a great job. His body looks good. Getting ready to better ramp up and just being cautious. He’s done a really good job. He’s an elite athlete — we believe the best athlete in the draft — so it’s exciting to watch him take those steps and he is putting the work in, for sure.”

Indeed, it is ramping up season, the season of being cautious (and repeating the “best athlete in the draft” line, which is not the easiest sell). But for Powell and his fellow draft-classmates, and Nets fans, this approach will extend beyond injury management. Just take a look at the roster; guys like Haywood Highsmith, Terance Mann, Ziaire Williams, Clowney, Jalen Wilson if he survives training camp cuts…they all expect to play early and often, for good reason. Say what you will about Kobe Bufkin and the rookie guards, but is there any doubt that Bufkin is presently the best player of the crop?

After Tuesday’s practice, Jordi Fernández was asked how he views #27 overall pick Danny Wolf. Is he more of a stretch forward or a ‘backup’ center? “You mean the backup center being the one coming out the bench, so he takes Day’Ron’s spot?”

Point taken, though Fernández did clarify his position in a follow-up: “I see him as a basketball player. He’s a player that can play-make, a big, capable shooter, obviously trying to learn the NBA, whether he’s on offense and defense and establishing himself. So once again, giving him the proper steps, giving him the chance to go beat — if he’s better than Nic, he’ll play over Nic. If he’s better than Day’Ron, he’ll play over Day’Ron. If he’s better than Noah, he’ll play over Noah and so on.”

Those, at least for the moment, are some pretty big ifs. Nets fans eager for the rookie revolution will have to tune into Long Island Nets games throughout the season, though that’s not such a terrible thing. Just ask Noah Clowney, who parlayed a strong rookie season in the G League into a fantastic spring in the NBA…

With Long Island about to tip-off their 2nd game of the season, I wanted to highlight what I noticed from the Nets' rookies in their G-League debuts, starting with Noah Clowney's rim protection ability. It was just outstanding: pic.twitter.com/32BFgaRtFw

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) November 12, 2023

Said Clowney: “The G League is probably the most similar to NBA speed you’re going to get … I think it’s good for anybody that goes there. If you go there with a positive mindset, it’ll be all right.”

As with every NBA team, one of the main principles Jordi Fernández and the Nets instill into their young players is shot quality. But isn’t that getting easier these days? Drake Powell, just turned 20 years old, has been hearing “threes and layups” for about half his life.

Indeed, Powell feels like he has a “pretty good understanding” of how Brooklyn wants to play: “Just, given my time that I spent in North Carolina, you know, mid-range shots, they were, like, limited. He still wants us to take them, but you know, obviously not at a high clip, still want to get layups and threes, as many as you can. But yeah as I get into the flow and start to understand the offensive system, I’ll start to have a better gauge about that.”

With a player as raw as Powell, these are the signs we’ll have to look for. Even if he doesn’t have a 20-point game all season, something as simple as attacking a closeout, jump-stopping in the paint, and hitting a kick-out pass is cause for excitement. And Powell knows it: “Punching gaps whenever I see them, especially in transition. Just attack, get two feet in the paint, find corners however you can.”

This is exactly what Jordi Fernández wants to hear: “Those are the little things that we are going through in training camp. Defining a lot of things, not just on offense: good shots, bad shots, but also defensively in our priorities. It’s a process. We cannot throw it all at once, otherwise it would be overwhelming. So far, these guys are doing a great job.”

As you probably know, the Brooklyn Nets did not draft Cooper Flagg this past June. Of their five first-rounders, three are 19-year-old ball-handlers, one is a 20-year-old wing who must figure out his offensive game beyond jumping high, and one is a 21-year-old, um, “basketball player,” in the words of his head coach.

For the 2025-26 Brooklyn Nets, progress will be measured in inches, not miles. But isn’t it always?


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-news...hing-along-drake-powell-egor-demin-danny-wolf
 
‘New’ Cam? Cam Thomas, Jordi Fernandez talk about leaner camp version

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There’s this picture of Cam Thomas the Nets released after the Practice-in-the-Park …. where received the biggest reception of the 21 players on hand. He’s sitting on the stoop of a Brooklyn brownstone… resolute, determined and yes, alone.

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“Ain’t shit funny” might be an appropriate caption.

It is Cam Thomas, September 2025. In charge of his own fate by his own choice. He knows he has to change the league’s perception of him and he has a finite amount of time — 82 games — to do it. And despite how he and they got to this point, Cam Thomas and the Brooklyn Nets are both approaching the season in the belief that they can help each other. On Tuesday, the Nets official site on x.com tweeted out video of him at practice…

Cam Thomas hoops pic.twitter.com/JYqW07yWpn

— Brooklyn Nets (@BrooklynNets) September 30, 2025

In talking to reporters on Monday, Thomas talked first about his new look: a lesser Cam, more svelte, perhaps better conditioned. No, he says, the change in his body was not a reaction to him having missed 73 games over the last two seasons, mostly to hamstring issues. Indeed, last year, he suffered three hamstring injuries that finally ended his season in March.

“No, it’s just something I want to do. Just me being me,” Thomas said. “Not really related to the hammies. … If I have the weight on or not, I’ll still be doing the same thing. It doesn’t really change how you play, really. At the end of the day, it’s how you look and how you feel. I feel good. Feel good, look good and you play good. The weight, it doesn’t really matter. It’s just what you go out there and do.”

He won’t say how much less he weighs than he did last season when in 25 games he averaged 24.0 points a game.

“Less now,” Thomas said with a smile.

He admits that last two years he bulked up so he could battle some of the league’s top defenders. Brian Lewis writes that the move concerned some on the Nets staff. Was he “a bit too bulky,” as Lewis put it?

“My last two years, I wanted to put on a little more weight, try the strong, bulky route,” said Thomas. “I mean, it was cool. I never liked how I looked, honestly, but the results were still good. At the end of the day, it’s about how you look and how you feel. So I feel like I look better and I feel better. We’ll see how it goes this year.”

There’s also been a change in attitude, says Day’Ron Sharpe, who was drafted along with him in 2023 but unlike him signed a two-year $12.5 million deal, the second year non-guaranteed.

“I’ll say that his mindset coming in [is different]. He’s being more of a pro now,” said Sharpe also a bit leaner in this year’s camp. “I feel like he’s got his body better coming into this season. But, you know, CT is always going to be that elite scorer that he is, so I just hope he continues to show everybody what he can do and put the league on notice.

“I think it will help a lot,” said Sharpe, who also trimmed his physique this summer. “You know, everything starts with the body. If we don’t take care of our body, we can’t play a full season. So, just for the fact that he bought into that, I feel like that means he’s showing everybody that he’s got a chip on his shoulder.”

His head coach has noticed as well and Jordi Fernandez who once said scoring was CamT’s “super power,” likes what he sees.

“I’m not a doctor. We, right now, know that CT is full go. He’s done a great job,” Fernandez said. “So nothing that he had last year is going to jeopardize this season. I want him to have the best season of his career, and that comes with being in great shape. And right now, he is in really good shape.

“We believe that he can sustain numbers if he’s in elite shape. The other thing is he tried so hard in these different areas, and his body couldn’t sustain it. Now, we believe he’ll be able to give the same effort, and his body will be able to sustain it. Twenty-five games is not enough. Hopefully he’ll get into the 70s or 80s.”

That would indeed help his bargaining position next summer. He’ll be an unrestricted free agent and unlike this summer when only Brooklyn had significant cap space, somewhere between 10 and 14 teams will be able to make bids on free agents.

As for how he can improve his game, Fernandez gave beat writers some headlines … and complimented the 23-year-old for improvements in a key area.

“The thing with CT is that teams can decide to try to get the ball out of his hands early or late. That’s where he has to trust the spacing and his teammates,” said Fernandez. “I think his game can evolve in that way. Defensively, I want his effort to be more consistent and more physical. He’s been great this training camp… His body looks great, and he’s done a really great job this summer. So I’m expecting to see a new CT and a way better CT.”

In other camp news, Fernandez said Drake Powell who missed Summer League with left knee tendinopathy, has finally started participating in contact drills but wouldn’t commit to whether he’ll play Saturday at Barclays Center vs. Hapoel Jerusalem. No word on Egor Demin’ status. He suffered a plantar faschia tear in Summer League.

“We have a plan for them, and they’ve been progressing as we’ve wanted,” Fernandez said.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-news...ordi-fernandez-talk-about-leaner-camp-version
 
As Macao approaches, Brooklyn Nets promote Fanbo Zeng in China

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The Brooklyn Nets are expected to leave this weekend for Macao and the NBA China Games where they’ll face off against the Phoenix Suns on October 10 and 12. It will be the first time NBA teams have played in China since Brooklyn’s ill-fated 2019 trip was cut short by then Houston Rockets GM Daryl Morey’s tweet supporting Hong Kong’s pro-democracy demonstrators. The NBA was taken off the air not returning for three years.

It’s a big deal for the league whose China-based revenues rivaled those in North America before that controversy. Now with a new TV deal in place, games easily accessible … and following a steady stream of visiting NBA stars from LeBron James to Steph Curry to Nikola Jokic … this summer, the games should re-establish the relationship.

It’s also a big deal for the Nets and their ownership. It’ll be the third time the Nets have traveled to China, the first NBA team to reach that milestone as well as a personal triumph for Joe Tsai who played a leading if mostly undisclosed role in getting things back on track.

The games are also likely to be a showcase for the Nets’ Fanbo Zeng, who is one of two Chinese-born players in the NBA. Hansen Yang, the 7-foot 20-year-old surprisingly taken at No. 16 in the NBA Draft by the Portland Trailblazers, is the other. Indeed, in the last couple of weeks, the Nets social media team has started to push Zeng-related content across Chinese media as the games — and other promotions — begin to roll out. He may only be an training camp invite and a candidate for that open two-way spot, but he is obviously more than that in China.

The Nets are featuring the 6’11” 22-year-old in their offerings on Weibo, the big Chinese social media site. Brooklyn is the NBA’s third most popular team in China behind only the Los Angeles Lakers and the Golden State Warriors and the number of followers on Weibo reflect that: the Nets have more followers on Weibo then on x.com, formerly Twitter, and Instagram … combined. Having a Chinese player and one of the most popular in the country is an easy sell.

The attention began on September 22 when the Nets officially announced his signing on Weibo …rather than Twitter.

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Since then, there’s been other content focused on Zeng, starting with his interview a day later at Media Day. “As a Chinese player here, I must keep working hard to break stereotypes for all Asians,” he said, echoing a theme his both has also spoken about. (He didn’t talk about his relationship with Tsai.)

There’s also been images of him in scrimmages

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On Saturday, Nets internal TV production team followed Zeng around the Potomac Playground at the Practice in the Park, showing him meeting with Chinese fans and connecting with young Brooklynites.

Of course, the Nets Weibo site features a lot of media on the team and other players, but there’s no guarantee Zeng even make the team. He’s most likely to spend most of this season on Long Island in the G League. Disproportionate? Sure, but surprising? No way. It’s called marketing.

Zeng may not be as popular as Yang, but he won the Most Improved Player award in the Chinese Basketball Association and was named first team All-CBA. He’s also a member of the Chinese national team. He also played a season with G League Ignite. In other words, he has the requisite talent, particularly as a big 3-and-D prospect. He was among the CBA leaders in both 3-point shooting (40.5%) and blocks (1.5 per game.)

Beyond the Nets online promotions, Zeng is going to be involved with league and corporate promotions in Macao as well. He is after all, the hometown favorite, the only Chinese player on either the Nets or Suns. In fact, he’ll be one of a number of current and past NBA stars available for selfies and autographs in a Fanatics promotion (for a price of course.)

Fanbo Zeng will be among current and past NBA players who’ll sit for Fanatics autograph sessions at “NBA House” in Macao starting next week. Report out of China says price tag is US$210. pic.twitter.com/9Nm2kSiT2z

— NetsDaily (@NetsDaily) October 1, 2025

How much will he play when the ball goes up a week from Friday at the sold-out Venetian resort in the Chinese version of Las Vegas? TBD, but it’s a good bet. You don’t promote him to the hundreds of millions of NBA fans in China then have him sit on the bench!

As Jordi Fernandez said this week in talking about the Nets international preseason — the China games plus Saturday’s opener vs. Israel’s Hapoel Jerusalem plus a quick trip to Toronto to play the Raptors.

“It’s really great to have this opportunity, not only to play overseas like we’re going to China, but also to play against a foreign team here at home; this time, our opponent is a team from Jerusalem. So you see, it really shows how global the NBA is, how well the league promotes itself, and the support we have from all over the world.”

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-feat...hes-brooklyn-nets-promote-fanbo-zeng-in-china
 
Michael Porter Jr., Dariq Whitehead at opposite ends of injury spectrum

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Dustin Satloff/Getty

At the beginning of training camp, hope springs eternal. So does hype.

Michael Porter Jr. — who, if nothing else, is a reporter’s dream (and a public relations concern) given his willingness to meet every question with a long, sincere answer — spoke after Wednesday’s practice. He shouted out Brooklyn’s stable of young point guards, but then unprompted, said: “Top to bottom, I’ve been really impressed with a lot of players. Noah’s taken a leap to me, from what I saw in games from last year to now. He’s taken a leap. Tyrese [Martin] has really been probably the most impressive player that I’ve seen on the team so far, because I didn’t know a lot about him. But he’s been consistently killing through scrimmages, through open runs. He’s a player that can slide in that point guard place but can also play the two. He can pass the ball. He’s been really impressive.”

Almost every Net on the roster has received compliments, on or off the record, through the first week of training camp. But there’s plenty of buzz around Tyrese Martin, who last season signed a training camp deal, then a two-way deal, then a standard contract. With only 16 NBA games under his belt before 2024-25, he made 60 appearances for the Nets, averaging 9/4/2 on 53.3 TS%.

Martin didn’t exactly light the world on fire, but he went from NBA afterthought to potential rotation piece. It’s a great sign that the 26-year-old is a training camp standout, competing against many players much younger than he is. Does it mean a ton for his NBA future? Not exactly, but it’s better than nothing.

For example, the Nets and their fans probably wish Dariq Whitehead was receiving such buzz. We haven’t heard much of anything about the third-year guard, still just 21 years old but with only 22 NBA appearances under his belt. Whitehead hasn’t even been productive in the G League over two seasons, sporting just a 51 TS% down there. Perhaps the parade of lower-leg injuries since graduating high school is just too much to overcome.

But at least Whitehead had a healthy summer in 2025, something he pointed out at Media Day: “Not being able to do what I had needed to do the past three summers, being able to work out, work on my body. Just the difference I felt from the last game of last season to now and just being able to trust my body, how comfortable I am with just handling things that I’d done before, is just night and day.”

Head Coach Jordi Fernández says he has seen that work pay off: “I can tell you he’s gotten better. You look at his body from the summer, how hard he’s worked, he’s already gotten better and keeps taking advantage of his opportunities. I think that’s a big part of it. This training camp and preseason games are going to be important and we want all of our players, not just Dariq, to try to take advantage of that.”

These are the morsels of hope Whitehead believers must cling onto; there hasn’t been much else. No off-the-cuff compliments from teammates. No social media posts from the Brooklyn Nets highlighting Whitehead, not even clips of him buried in their practice posts…

one day closer to gameday 🏀 pic.twitter.com/Ct2OHjeivi

— Brooklyn Nets (@BrooklynNets) October 2, 2025

At practice Wednesday, Fernández was asked about what a roster full of off-ball wings means for Whitehead. Forget Michael Porter Jr., Ziaire Williams, and Terance Mann, is he really going to play over Tyrese Martin? The head coach side-stepped the question.

“I’m excited to watch all of these different guys compete … For the most part, then players will play in the rotation. So, I want that responsibility. And guess what? Maybe I make a mistake, but I hope they stay with it and they keep showing what they’re able to do. At the end of the day, even if I make a mistake, my assistants will tell me and if he has an opportunity he’ll take advantage. Everything will work out for everybody.”

The Nets have until October 31 to pick up Whitehead’s 2026-27 option, which would be the fourth and final year of his rookie contract. One year ago, I wrote that Whitehead’s upcoming sophomore season was something of a make-or-break year. He had to show something. Many read that as a statement of hyperbole, but less than one month away from his extension date, it’s time to ask if Whitehead has shown enough, or if injuries will be the story of his NBA career.

Porter Jr. was once in that position. Like Whitehead, MPJ was one of the tip-top college basketball recruits in the nation. An NBA star in waiting. But back injury after back injury limited his explosiveness; Porter Jr. missed his whole rookie season after to falling to the end of the draft lottery, and his 2021-22 season was cut short by another herniated disk, leading to his third back surgery.

Since then, Porter Jr. has appeared in 220 out of 246 possible regular-season games. He won a championship with the Denver Nuggets in 2023, indispensable as an off-ball scorer but wholly reliable as a big body who could rebound and rotate around the rim. Porter Jr. never became the Kevin Durant-like monster he was projected as in high school, but he carved out a wildly successful NBA career.

“A lot of it is a lot of hard work on my body,” he said. “The other part is a lot of hard work when it comes to my mind and my emotional state, my mental state, my spiritual state. I feel like all that combines together. Nicole Sachs is the name of a woman who helped me a lot, overcome some of the back problems, and I didn’t realize how much of that actually stemmed from the mental side of things and the stress and all that. So once I kind of put all those pieces together, and I didn’t just pay attention to the physical side of things, I was able to have a very well-rounded approach to my rehab. And since then, I’ve been…I haven’t had any problems with my back since. It’s been about three, two-and-a-half, three years since I kind of figured that out.”


Porter Jr. continued to explain his belief in the mind-body connection, and how a strong mental state can contribute to physical healing: “I know what helped me heal, and I feel like helping bring that onto the scene would be a cool thing for me. And for players that are dealing with chronic things — or after surgery — they’re tentative to move a certain way. I feel like I can be a big part of bringing that onto the scene.”

Roll your eyes if you wish. But of all the things Porter Jr. has said in front of a camera since last season ended, this is the most inspiring. Brooklyn’s new veteran leader has transformed his NBA career in the face of herniated disks, three back surgeries, damage to his sciatic nerve, and other gruesome troubles.

“I needed to try something new after the third surgery,” he explained.

On Wednesday, MPJ also clarified an earlier comment that sounded like he was on the brink of retirement: “Basketball is my passion. I want to play as long I can. I think that it’s just easier in my head to be like, ‘man, give it my all, everything I have this year, and then when the year is over, see where I’m at mentally and reevaluate.’ But in the back of my mind, obviously I wanna play as long my body allows me to.”

“People underestimate how tough mentally Mike and players that went through serious injuries are,” said Fernández, who was an assistant coach in Denver during the thick of MPJ’s health issues. “What he’s accomplished with everything he had to go through is very impressive. I give him a lot of credit.”

Michael Porter Jr. is a healthy 6’10”, still only 27 years old and an incredible shooter. Through all the injuries, his size and bread-and-butter skill never left him. Even still, he overcame a brutal injury history, won a championship ring, and signed a contract so lucrative it led him to the Brooklyn Nets, where he is now the most recognizable player, for better or worse, on a rebuilding team. As he excitedly admitted on Wednesday, he now has a chance to expand his game.

As a 6’4” guard, Dariq Whitehead doesn’t have that same cushion; the explosion has to be there. But just maybe, he too can find a path to NBA relevancy, putting his injury history in the past. He has established himself as a 3-point shooter, hitting 40% last season both in the G League and NBA. The sadder, more likely outcome, is that Whitehead will see his career in Brooklyn come to an end sooner rather than later. Nobody is doubting that Whitehead has pushed himself to the limit, working as hard as he can in overcoming his injury troubles.

Sometimes, you’re just dealt a really crappy hand. Hopefully he can flip it on its head.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-news...dariq-whitehead-injury-spectrum-brooklyn-nets
 
For Ben Saraf and Danny Wolf, Saturday’s game vs. Hapoel Jerusalem will be big

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Back in June when the Brooklyn Nets took Ben Saraf and Danny Wolf back to back in the NBA Draft, it got noticed. Having two players who carry Israeli passports — a first — on an NBA roster made Brooklyn hugely popular in Israel. Searches for the Brooklyn Nets jumped, the Nets site as well as blogs and podcasts got a lot more traffic from Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. On the other hand, some of those outraged by what Israel has done in Gaza were angered, seeing political meaning.

Since the Draft, Israeli media have started following the two in Brooklyn. Sport5, the big Israeli sports site, was at the Practice in the Park last weekend, for example…


A month after the Draft, when the Nets announced that they would open the 2025 preseason vs. Hapoel Jerusalem in Brooklyn, the interest just intensified. For Saraf and Wolf, it will be an even bigger deal. Not only will it be their first games as Brooklyn Nets but it will be a game vs. players they know, in Saraf’s case players he grew up with.

“Of course,” Saraf said. “I know the guys, I know the coach, I got some friends over there playing on the team, so it’s going to be great. It’s going to be a great experience for all of us.”

Saraf was born in South Africa but raised in Israel starting at age 3. Wolf was born in Illinois but obtained an Israeli passport while at Yale. Both have played for Israeli national team entries in FIBA youth tournaments, Saraf winning MVP of the FIBA Europe U18 tournament last year. Wolf played for Israel’s U20 team a year earlier winning a silver medal and making the all-tournament first team.

“It’s going to be really special for me,” Saraf said after Tuesday’s practice. Based on his play this summer and in camp, it looks like Saraf is going to get a lot of time on the court. The team’s veterans have raved about the 26th pick. “Guys want to play with him,” one league source told NetsDaily. Jordi Fernandez noted that it would have to be special, considering the circumstances. He also noted the Nets overall international appeal.

“I would assume so,” Fernández said, suggesting he hasn’t spoken directly yet with the players. “If we would play a Spanish team, it would mean something to me. That’s what I guess.

“But it’s pretty cool that we get to play not just outside the country — like when we’re going to China — but also against a foreign team here; in this case, a team from Jerusalem. So, you know, that tells you how global the NBA is, and how great of a job that the league does, but also the support that we receive from all over the world.”

For the record, the Nets currently have five players with international passports, including Saraf and Wolf. The others are Egor Demin, Russia; Fanbo Zeng, China; and Nolan Traore, France. Fernandez of course holds a Spanish passport (and Cam Thomas was born in a U.S. military hospital in Japan.)

Saraf and the Nets have shied away from politics in talking about Saturday, but it’s likely there will be some level of protest at the arena. As Israel drives deeper in Gaza and with Hamas refusing to release Israeli hostages, tensions are high in New York and the presence of an Israeli team in the city may marshal demonstrations. Two weeks ago, the UN Human Rights Commission declared what Israel has done as genocide and international sporting bodies are considering banning Isreali teams. On Friday morning, President Trump set a deadline of Sunday for Hamas to accept his peace plan or face “all HELL, like no one has ever seen before, will break out against Hamas.” Hamas later agreed to some parts of the plan, wants negotiation on others. Uncertain if that satisfied Trump.

The 21-year-old Wolf, who holds both U.S. and Israeli passports, essentially said the situation is above his pay grade and that he’s going to be focused on basketball, protests or not.

“Its keeping the main thing, the main thing. I only can control what I can control and I don’t have any say or thought as to whats going to happen outside of the game. I’ll leave that to be and focus on the game as best I can.” he said after Friday’s practice per Brian Lewis.

Neither player has served in the Israeli military. Saraf’s sister does serve, Brian Lewis reported Tuesday.

Whatever goes on outside the arena, political protests are banned inside. No doubt there will be a strong showing from the Israeli community in the city with the Nets 26th and 27th picks in the 2025 Draft taking the court for the first time.

In other news out of Friday’s practice, Fernandez said that discretion always being the better part of valor in the Nets performance circle, Drake Powell will not play vs. Hapoel Jerusalem and make his long-awaited debut next weekend at the NBA China Games in Macao. Powell has been affected by left knee tendinopathy. It kept him out of the Summer League and out of contact practices until this week. Egor Demin’s timeline remains uncertain but he has yet to participate in contact drills. He is recovering from a tear in his plantar fascia which he has described as “not a big deal.” He suffered the injury in Summer League.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-game...aturdays-game-vs-hapoel-jerusalem-will-be-big
 
Fanbo Zeng wants open two-way spot, looking forward to Macao

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Just as Saturday night’s game vs. Hapoel Jerusalem will be a big deal for Ben Saraf and Danny Wolf, next week’s two games in Macao will be a big deal for Fanbo Zeng, bigger in fact. While Saraf and Wolf may be playing against friends and colleagues from Israel, Zeng (his family name) will be going home … or close enough.

Zeng is from Harbin, an industrial city near the Russian border in the country’s far northeast. Macao, the Las Vegas of the people’s republic, is across the bay from Hong Kong, 1,800 miles to the south. That said, the 6’11” 22-year-old is well-known throughout the country, a member of the Chinese national team who was both Most Improved Player and first team All-CBA, a rising star.

In an interview with Brian Lewis Friday, Zeng said he plans to give 100% whenever he gets on the court whether it’s Saturday at Barclays Center against Hapoel Jerusalem or next week in Macao vs. Phoenix Suns. All three games will be broadcast live in China as well as in the U.S.

“It will be so big for me, especially to play as part of this [Nets] family,” Zeng told the Post. “And playing in part of China is huge for me. No matter what I’ve got, I’ll go 100 percent every single second.

“And especially [since] we’ve got 21 on the roster right now, that’s a big fight for me, especially [after] in the summer I had a [back] injury. I’m enjoying the whole process. So no matter if it’s in Macau or whatever, since I got a chance to play, I’ll go 100 percent, go hard.”

Zeng is currently on an Exhibit 10 deal, a camp invite without a contract, but is seen as a strong candidate for the vacant third two-way. The Nets currently have Tyson Etienne and E.J. Liddell on two-ways.

“We’ve got a lot of good players and we’re all fighting for something: Some of whom are fighting for a starting spot, some for the rotation. Like me, I’m fighting for a two-way or getting on the roster,” Zeng explained to Lewis. “I’ve been going through the summer, all I did was try to prove myself and just get the chance.”

Zeng noted that this is his second chance at the NBA. In October 2021, Zeng reneged on a commitment to Gonzaga and instead signed with the G League Ignite of the NBA G League. He went undrafted in 2022 and two days after the draft, signed an Exhibit 10 contract with the Indiana Pacers.

“I had a chance before , and I missed it. The second chance, it was huge for me trying to even get it. Just got to keep fighting, keep working hard… I just keep doing my thing. I’ve got a long career, looking to get another shot. But this time I’m going for it.”

Indeed after he didn’t make the Pacers, he headed back to China where he played for the Beijing Ducks for three years before joining Brooklyn the day before Media Day.

While some fans might see Zeng’s time in Brooklyn as part of the team’s international marketing effort, particularly with Joe Tsai as principal owner and just before the trip to China, Zeng has said repeatedly that he sees this as an opportunity to play in the NBA. It’s a dream he’s harbored at least since he came to the U.S. to play high school ball, making first team All-Star in Florida as a sophomore.

He’s developed a lot since he averaged 3.8 points and 1.8 boards in 13.6 minutes for G League Ignite in 2021-22. As Lewis points out, Zeng now weighs 228 pounds, up from less than 200 back then.

Zeng told Lewis he hasn’t had a chance to meet Tsai yet but is aware of the franchise’s unique connection to China where they are generally seen as the third most popular NBA team. This will be the fourth time — eight games — the Nets have played in China over the last 15 years. No other team has visited three times. And of the nine Chinese players who’ve made it to the NBA, three played for the Nets: Yi Jianlian, Jacky Cui and now Zeng.

What if he doesn’t make it, Lewis asked Zeng. He said he’d return to China confident he did all he could, adding that he’s fighting to help break down stereotypes to help the next crop of young Asian players coming up behind him.

In the meantime, the Nets and NBA are going to promote him on their page on Weibo, the big Chinese social media site, posting stills and even a video of his time at this weekend’s Practice in the Park. Chinese fans will get their first look at Zeng in a Nets uniform Saturday. Chinese TV is carrying the Nets game vs. Hapoel Jerusalem live – 8:00 a.m. Beijing time Sunday.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-news/99576/fanbo-zeng-competing-for-open-two-way-deal
 
NBA Live Discussion: Hapoel ‘Bank Yahav’ Jerusalem at Brooklyn Nets, 8:00 PM ET

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Let the games begin.

This is the first and only home preseason game for the Nets in Brooklyn. After this, they head to China for a two-game mini series against the Phoenix Suns in China. Then they travel to Toronto for the preseason finale against the Toronto Raptors before Opening Night October 22 on the road in Charlotte against the Hornets.

WHO: Hapoel at Nets

WHEN: 8:00 P.M. ET

WATCH: YES Network

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Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-disc...nk-yahav-jerusalem-at-brooklyn-nets-800-pm-et
 
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