News Nets Team Notes

Brooklyn Nets fall in home opener to Cleveland Cavaliers

imagn-27407984.jpg


Kenny Atkinson praised the Brooklyn Nets for how much trouble they gave his team last year before tipoff this evening. With Cleveland eyeing a Larry O’Brien and the Nets eyeing ping pong balls, they gave Cleveland more than any game preview expected, especially in November, when Brooklyn nearly ended their perfect start to the season.

“We know how hard they play; when we’re playing at that intensity for that long, like they do, that causes any team problems,” he said. “So, I know we’ll be in for a fight tonight.”

Neither team’s aspirations for the season changed tonight, but Atkinson’s impression of his old team was surely jeopardized.

Brooklyn’s start to the game was twice as good as their last one — still not great by any means, but better. Cleveland caught them sleeping a handful of times fast breaks and with weak side baseline cuts. They also booted their way into nine first quarter turnovers…

transition defense summary through five quarters pic.twitter.com/ziBKUYlrev

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) October 24, 2025

That said, they also had a few fizzles of energy. Newcomers Michael Porter Jr. and Terance Mann snatched some early points from an otherwise air-tight Cleveland defense via their two man game. Veterans Nic Claxton and Cam Thomas did the same…

first Clax Attack of the szn 😤 pic.twitter.com/9Wo9epPWOg

— Brooklyn Nets (@BrooklynNets) October 24, 2025

It didn’t acclimate to much on the scoreboard, except perhaps a 10-point deficient rather than a 20-point one. The Cavs went up 23-12 less than four minutes into the game, and the score remained lopsided with Brooklyn shuffling lineups but getting no closer to logical play.

A tough Cam Thomas fadeaway tugged Cleveland’s lead back to a dozen, which had grown as large as 17 by that point, less than a minute before the break. But however, and not soon after, he committed an eight second violation that abruptly ended what should have been Brooklyn’s last possession before halftime. That emblematic play made the score 63-51 at the half.

Cam Thomas drains a tough fadeaway but gets tagged with an eight second violation on the next possession to end the half. pic.twitter.com/up3GKPUhpT

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) October 25, 2025

“We can’t really start off slow like that,” opined Cam Thomas postgame. “Start off slow, turn the ball over, you know, just them getting open threes, getting their momentum up, and then we get in a rut a little bit and it’s tough to come back.”

Switching ends brought no effect to the score, but the third period did give us our first Cam Thomas NBA Jam moment of the campaign. We’ve seen him put up the blinders before, though tonight might’ve been the best use case to do it in his career. Brooklyn’s offense had been shooting just 43% from the floor by the half, so CT put in a quick 13 points in the third quarter, going 5-10 from the field and 2-5 from deep. Though he often initiated possessions determined to shoot, he even dropped in four assists. Thomas went on to finish with 31 points and a tied a career-high with nine assists.

Electrifying as those buckets were, Brooklyn’s run at the lead didn’t come until about 10 minutes later. The Nets opened the fourth quarter shooting 11-13 from the field and 6-8 from deep, making it a six point game with about five to go. It felt like the team’s first run in eight quarters of basketball. It wasn’t without miscues, but I don’t think anyone outside of perhaps Jordi Fernández cared.

Nets have life? Ziaire cans one after a tough Egor sequence in the backcourt.

Williams is 5-7 from deep tonight. pic.twitter.com/6CtoDngNPG

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) October 25, 2025

That shot for Williams capped off a 25-point scoring night where he shot 9-13 from the field and 6-9 from deep.

As the score tightened, Brooklyn’s defense did the same. Cleveland put up .294/.100 splits down the stretch of the fourth. Even Mr. Whammy, who I’m glad to now call a Hall of Famer, chipped in, forcing four Cavalier misses at the line. After a 45-point third quarter, they put up just 13 in the fourth with only a handful of minutes to spare.

Then, with 3:48 to go, Egor Dëmin walked into a deep triple that made it a one point game. Up until that point, it was a game where you had to keep reminding yourself it’s the home opener, not some snoozer on a Tuesday night in February. Even when Dëmin, the team’s first lottery pick in more than two decades, checked in, the crowd cheered him like you would for a speaker at a work event you were forced to go to.

But in that moment, they applauded him like you would a rising star having his first big moment in front of his fans. Against the odds, “Brooooklyyyyyyn” and “Let’s-Go-Nets” chants were heard, and loud.


“It was great. I think that kinda threw me back to my BYU times, with the crowd we had there with the student section,” Dëmin said of the shot. “It was really cool, honestly. I felt great looking at the stands and seeing people really stand up and cheer for us. It was an amazing moment for me.”

He finished the game with nine points, four assists, and six boards while shooting 3-5 from beyond the arc. Thomas led with 33 points and nine assists, one shy of his career-high. Porter Jr. poured in 31 points after shooting 13-22 from the field and 5-10 from deep.

For Fernández, much of the comeback was about righting the wrongs of Wednesday night in front of the people who it would matter to the most.

“We experienced our first game, and it’s not who we want to be,” he said. “There were some positives, but overall, the feeling was that we didn’t fight enough. Today, for obvious reasons, you’re at home, you get there to fight for a one possession game, the energy in the building, the fans, making the run, the momentum and you know, credit to our guys…I hope everybody felt like the fans were supporting. And that’s what we want. I want everybody here in Brooklyn to be proud of this group, show the grit, and when the adversity hits, you try to overcome.”

After that, the Nets only scored two points. Thomas, Dëmin, and Mann each missed shots one after the other during the following possessions, and the Cavaliers did what they were supposed to, winning the foul game at the line to keep their distance as the clock wound down.

Said Jordi Fernández of the season-opening loss in Charlotte: “There was some positives, but overall, the feeling was that we didn’t fight enough.”

On Friday, there were many tactical negatives. Defensive rotations were off, the transition defense was non-existent until the fourth quarter, and of course, the turnovers themselves. But at the very least, Brooklyn fought: “You’re at home, you get to fight for a one-possession game — the energy in the building, the fans while [we are] making the run, the momentum, credit to our guys. They trusted the pass, ended up with 30 assists. We shot 44 threes and made 19 … Now we got to clean up a little bit more. You know, our pick-and-roll defense, our low man, those little things. But you know, really proud of those guys.”

Fernández, after another frustrating start to the night, walked off the podium emanating proud. Barclays Center was not quite deflated by the loss, still buzzing despite (or maybe because of) poor defense and an exciting finish that didn’t go Brooklyn’s way. In some ways, it was a perfect evening.

Final Score: Cleveland Cavaliers 131, Brooklyn Nets 124

Milestone Watch​

  • Cam Thomas and Michael Porter Jr. both scored 30+ points for the Nets tonight, making it Brooklyn’s first game with two 30+ point scorers since 11/6/23 vs. Milwaukee (Thomas – 45 & Mikal Bridges – 31).
  • Egor Dëmin seven 3FGM in the last two games tie Keegan Murray for the third-most 3FGM by a rookie in their first two career games in NBA history.
  • Cam Thomas scored 31 points tonight (11-of-22 FG) with nine assists – one shy of his career high – in 33 minutes tonight vs. the Cavs. It marks Thomas’ first 30+ point game since 11/24/24 at SAC.
  • Ziaire Williams made a career-high-tying nine field goals and a career-high-tying six 3-pointers tonight en route to 25 points – his second-most in any game in his career.

MPJ talks about his brother’s gambling case including the death threats he received from gamblers.

In an interview with Brian Lewis, Michael Porter Jr. opened up about his brother’s situation following Thursday’s gambling indictments and arrests. Jontay Porter had been previously banned by the NBA, indicted and pleaded guilty to charges in the same investigation that led to similar charges against Chauncey Billups, Terry Rozier and Damon James. MPJ said he and Jontay had only recently had a detailed conversation about his brother’s case … and the death threats he faced. The threats were mentioned in Thursday’s indictment but he faced no new charges. Jontay will be sentenced in Brooklyn Federal Court on December 10.

“Yeah, me and Jontay actually recently sat down and had a conversation and spoke for the first time. He told the extent of his story for the first time to me,” Porter, told The Post. “And that was recently, and those details were kind of relayed to me. But for a long time I was kind of on the outside looking in as well, because for a long time he wasn’t trying to involve the family because of the fact that the people that were involved were dangerous people.

“There was threats and there was [danger] and he wasn’t trying to [involve us]. I think for the first time we kind of had a conversation, and I was made aware of some of the details of the situation he was in, which was rough. I still don’t know everything. That means we will have a follow-up conversations. But yeah, it definitely was a complicated, tricky situation. I think there’ll be more information kind of revealed. But the good part about Jontay is he’s at this point very forthcoming and honest. He wants to share his story.”

Next Up​

gettyimages-2242700279.jpg

Game No. 3 will take the Nets out west for the first time this season. They’ll visit demigod Victor Wembanyama and the San Antonio Spurs. Brooklyn split their series with Spurs last year, though San Antonio won the real battle, jumping the Nets and several others in the NBA Draft lottery to acquire Dylan Harper.

The game starts at 2:00 p.m. EST, so you’ll only have to watch the Jets for about an hour.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-scor...cavaliers-131-124-egor-demin-donovan-mitchell
 
LIVE NBA DISCUSSION: Cleveland Cavaliers at Brooklyn Nets, 7:30 PM ET

gettyimages-2206301942.jpg


Hey pro-tankers: rejoice. The first game of the 2025-26 season would’ve been one of the ugliest – if not the ugliest – out of all the games last season. They simply didn’t look engaged as a collective unit, particularly on the defensive end. On the bright said, Egor Demin shot 4-of-6 from three. So, at least there’s that!

BACK AT BARCLAYS​


WHO: Cleveland Cavaliers (0-1) at Brooklyn Nets (0-1)

WHEN: 7:30 PM ET

WATCH: YES Network/Gotham

GAME PREVIEW | JORDAN GREENE​


The Game: Despite the Nets being clearly outmatched, there is a chance that they can take advantage of weakened Cavs as well. But like the Knicks, they will have to play in a cohesive manner with efficiency being their main goal. Our main guy Cam Thomas will be at the forefront of this as he shot just 2-9 from the field two nights ago.

***

Please be respectful with your comments. NetsDaily prides itself on being a safe space for Nets and basketball fans alike to have healthy conversation. Reach out to Anthony Puccio or Net Income with any issues.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-disc...leveland-cavaliers-at-brooklyn-nets-730-pm-et
 
LIVE NBA DISCUSSION: Brooklyn Nets at San Antonio Spurs, 2:00 PM ET

gettyimages-2243137193.jpg


The Spurs are back and Victor Wembenyama is quickly becoming the new face of the NBA. The 0-2 Nets are hoping for the same fortunes as San Antonio. Until that day, the two meet in a lopsided matinee — the first of a Texas back-to-back — with KD and the Rockets awaiting in Houston.

KEY INFO​

  • WHO: Brooklyn Nets (0-2) at San Antonio Spurs (2-0)
  • WHEN: 2:00 PM ET
  • WATCH: YES Network / Gotham

GAME PREVIEW

This is the home opener for the Spurs. It should be an exciting afternoon in Texas as Spurs fans look to give the home team an extra boost as they try to establish themselves as a solid team… For Brooklyn, they’ve got to get on the same page defensively. The team has been getting torn up on that end so far and that’s just not going to fly when you’re at a talent disadvantage. The lapses on defense, inattention to details, etc. are not what this team is about… at least what they shouldn’t be about.

– bRIAN FLEURANTIN

Injuries​


No Haywood Highsmith, Drake Powell, or Danny Wolf. Cam Thomas has a nasal fracture but is available. Sounds like a mask. No De’Aaron Fox, Luke Kornet, Kelly Olynyk, Jeremy Sochan, or Lindy Waters III.

Please be respectful with your comments. NetsDaily prides itself on being a safe space for Nets and basketball fans alike to have healthy conversation. Reach out to Anthony Puccio or Net Income with any issues.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-disc...-brooklyn-nets-at-san-antonio-spurs-200-pm-et
 
Brooklyn Nets spoil latest comeback against San Antonio Spurs

gettyimages-2243155194.jpg


Sundays are often spent lounging around or relaxing in some capacity. The Brooklyn Nets took a different approach this afternoon.

In their matinee contest against the San Antonio Spurs, Brooklyn came ready to run, pressure, and give the home fans anything but the easy win they surely expected. The Nets forced San Antonio into seven first quarter turnovers, trapping everything and turning a handful of possessions into slams at the other end. Sometimes they even ended some them before they got started…

Nets just forced a five second violation out of a San Antonio timeout.

Pressure has been next level to start this game. They also have four steals. pic.twitter.com/1RKs829CDP

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) October 26, 2025

At the other end, Cam Thomas picked up right where he left off. His teammates reminded him to be aggressive after Brooklyn’s bout with Cleveland on Friday night, and that message seemed to stick with him, dropping in 11 points on 5-9 shooting in the first. He went on to finish with 40 points, pulling himself into a tie with Kevin Durant for the third most 40-pieces in Nets history.

“I just liked his engagement, his communication with his teammates, and everything else,” Jordi Fernández said postgame. “That’s the CT we need. When he’s engaged and he’s asking his teammates to be in the right spot, if he’s asking to run A, B, and C, that’s what we need.”

However, Keldon Johnson had a similar mindset, matching Thomas’ first quarter scoring to put the Spurs up 31-24 heading into the second frame. There, Victor Wembanyama made his presence known. It feels odd having not mentioned his name yet, and the Nets were fortunate for us to get this far without doing so.

Wemby *insanity* with Ruocco on the call: pic.twitter.com/bmpl2u2zJK

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) October 26, 2025

The French phenom added 15 points in the second to lift San Antonio’s lead to 21 at halftime. In an early season where his increased paint touches have already been a hot topic, he reminded us once more just how versatile he is, sinking two triples in the process.

“He’s great player,” Thomas said postgame. “So, you know, he commands a lot of attention. I think we did a good job. When he gets the ball in certain areas of the paint, there’s really nothing we can do, we’re all selling out, then they’re getting wide open threes. So, I mean, other than that, I don’t think we really had trouble.”

Wembanyama’s game proved more impactful at the other end. He made erasing shots like you would on a Nerf hoop a habit…or sometimes just scared visitors out of the paint with his mere presence. Michael Porter Jr. did beat him off the dribble once, but outside of that, he looked like the Defense Player of the Year candidate we expect him to be. Wemby finished with 31 points, 14 rebounds, four assists, six blocks, and three steals.

Michael Porter Jr. goes right by Wemby pic.twitter.com/d4Dj94xZSC

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) October 26, 2025

MPJ had a dozen at halftime, shooting 4-8 from the field and 3-5 from deep. Thomas, who had 21 by that point, needed help in more ways than one. He and Porter Jr. were the only ones with more than eight points by the break, as Ben Saraf, Egor Dëmin, and Ziaire Williams were scoreless at the break. He also got cut on his face at one point and needed Jalen Wilson to start the second half in his place.


Thomas landed on the injury report yesterday with a nasal fraction, but was always available for today’s game.

“Just part of the game,” he said. “You know, getting my ass beat out there, but it’s all good.”

He wasn’t the only one who felt that way. Not long after CT re-entered the game, Williams went back to the locker room after falling hard on back following a block attempt. He did not return to the game.

Alas, you wouldn’t have known the Nets were down at man by looking at them. Brooklyn’s defense locked in down the stretch of the third, keeping San Antonio scoreless for over five minutes of play. With Thomas’s 29th and 30th points of the day, he cut the lead to nine with 3:10 left in the period. The Nets then carried a 14-4 run into the fourth quarter, which gave them the lead with 10:08 to go. Jalen Wilson made strong contributions off the bench after not playing on Friday. He finished the game with nine points going 3-4 from deep.

.@thejalenwilson for the lead!!

no quit in this group😤 pic.twitter.com/UvLNBbnAin

— Brooklyn Nets (@BrooklynNets) October 26, 2025

“I just give them credit for keep shooting them and then finding that rhythm,” Fernández said. “So, extremely proud. CT, I mean, first game, broken nose. Second game, he’s got stitches. JWill, he gets called, he’s ready to go. He helps make a run. Day Day, 15 minutes and +15 like. Everybody did a great job. They stayed together, and that’s who we want to be moving forward.”

Brooklyn got up by as many as five, but went not further. Over the summer, it hurt when the NBA Draft lottery put the Brooklyn Nets out of position to select Dylan Harper, who played his college ball in their backyard. Then, that pain resurfaced today, as Harper largely contributed to San Antonio’s retaking of the lead and closeout efforts.

After checking in with 7:42 to play, Harper generated a quick six points finding his teammates and finishing a few possessions off himself.

Dylan tells BKN he thinks Egor is too small: pic.twitter.com/thEJbUZdgz

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) October 26, 2025

Cam Thomas tried to keep Brooklyn in it the best way he knows how…

Cam Thomas doing Cam Thomas things pic.twitter.com/Eb45bxwiTn

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) October 26, 2025

However, San Antonio looked more made for the clutch. They hit their shots when it mattered most. Thomas and Mann each got high percentage looks with a chance to reapply some late pressure, but failed to find nylon. A Devin Vassell scoop and score with 57 seconds remaining made it an eight point game and essentially ended Brooklyn’s pursuit of their first win.

Jordi Fernández picked up a technical foul in the game’s waining moments, unhappy with an uncalled moving screen against Noah Clowney.

“Just the frustration of them getting 12 free throws and us getting two,” Fernández said. “My guys need to see that I’m fighting for them. The officials need to see that whether we have young guys or whoever we play with, we’re going to keep fighting. And that’s who we are. And right there, it’s just in a statement. Wherever we go, play at home, play on the road, we’re going to fight and fight against everybody.”

It was a fitting end to a gritty performance that reminded you how unforgiving the basketball gods can be sometimes, no matter your fight, whether it’s with late swing plays or lottery luck.

Final: San Antonio Spurs 117, Brooklyn Nets 107

Injury Report


Jordi Fernández called Williams’ injury a back contusion postgame and said they’d “see how he feels.” We’ll provide updates when we can.

Going back to Thomas’ nasal fracture, he also added postgame that he considered wearing a mask, but ultimately decided not to when the team told him it wouldn’t be completely necessary. He got three stitches after his cut today and also had some ice on his hand postgame. Regardless, he said he’ll be ready to go tomorrow.

Brian Lewis also shared the following update on Drake Powell, who appears to be progressing well since twisting his ankle in the season opener.

Drake Powell had a workout this morning to test his sprained ankle, and said he felt "pretty good." The first-round pick won't play vs. the #Spurs, but will test it again tomorrow in Houston. He's day-to-day and expects to be a gametime decision against the #Rockets.

— Brian Lewis (@NYPost_Lewis) October 26, 2025

Milestone Watch​

  • Cam Thomas now posted his 10th 40-point game as Net today in San Antonio, tying for the third-most 40-point games in Nets NBA history (Vince Carter – 17, Kyrie Irving – 14, Cam Thomas – 10, Kevin Durant – 10).

Next Up​

gettyimages-2243135165.jpg

The Nets will stay on the road this week to face old friend Kevin Durant and the Houston Rockets on Monday evening. It’ll be the latter half of Brooklyn’s first back-t0-back of the season. They split their series with with them last year.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-scores-results/100583/nets-vs-spurs-117-107-cam-thomas-michael-porter
 
Long Island Nets set camp roster, Danny Wolf, Drake Powell assigned to LI

gettyimages-2225008328.jpg


After last-minute trades on Sunday which landed two players with NBA experience, the Long Island Nets released their 16-man training camp roster on Monday. Long Island opens its camp on Friday morning, a day after Media Day at the Coliseum. Opening night of the season is Friday, November 7th, against the Capital City Go-Go at Nassau Coliseum.

The Brooklyn Nets and Long Island Nets also revealed that two of their five first round draft picks, 22nd pick Drake Powell, a 6’6” 3-and-D candidate taken at No. 22; and Danny Wolf, a near 7-footer taken five slots later, will be spending time at Nassau Coliseum. The two, both recovering from ankle sprains, have been assigned to Long Island for the foreseeable future. There’s no limit to the number of times any of the rookies can be assigned to the G League.

The L.I. roster includes two returning players, point guard Terry Roberts and forward Tre Scott as well as as two local tryout players, Seton Hall’s Chaunce Jenkins and Fordham’s Abdou Tsimbila. The roster must be cut down to 10 plus up to five players assigned by Brooklyn before Opening Night.

The camp roster includes a number of players acquired by Long Island GM Matt MacDonald in recent weeks, among them

Also, several players who worked out with Brooklyn but were waived are also listed, most notably Grant Nelson, the undrafted 6’11” Alabama big. Absent from the roster: China’s Fanbo Zeng who like Nelson is a 6’11” forward who played for Brooklyn in one of two NBA China Games earlier this month in Macao. Much of the roster was drawn from veteran G League players that Long Island GM Matt MacDonald and head coach Mfon Udofia acquired specifically to work with the Flatbush 5.

Probably the most important addition was Yuri Collins, a 24-year-old point guard who led the G League in assists last season with the Santa Cruz, the Warriors G League team.

“The guys that we acquired for this year are more veteran guys,” Udofia told ND last month. “Yuri is going into year three or four. Guys like (25-year-old shooting guard) Malachi Smith, who we got his rights, (24-year-old big) David Muoka, and we’re looking to bring back Terry Roberts and Tre Scott. 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.” Brooklyn also signed 24-year-old wing E.J. Liddell from the Windy City Bulls on a two-way.

Indeed in two trades on Sunday, the Long Island Nets continued to add returning player rights. sending out the G League rights to Drew Timme and Oshae Brissett and landing Nate Williams and Jay Scrubb in return. Williams was exchanged for Drew Timme, makes his way over from the South Bay Lakers, whereas Scrubb makes his way from the Maine Celtics.

Here’s the full camp roster…

97D2C43F-92C5-4B0F-8484-2503FE782136.png

However, the biggest story of the day was that Powell and Wolf were both assigned to the Long Island team from Brooklyn. Powell and Wolf are each coming off ankle injuries and were the first two names to be assigned to Brooklyn’s G League team.

Powell missed the past two games for Brooklyn with an ankle sprain, but he’s been cleared to practice for Long Island when training camp gets underway Thursday. Powell is likely to see more opportunities at the G League level as the season progresses.

Powell is a major outlier in Brooklyn’s draft class. He had one of the lowest usage rates in all of high-major NCAA basketball last year, but the five-star 2024 recruit posted decent shooting numbers and has athleticism-based defensive potential. In the interim, the assignment will give him some minutes.

Wolf was a McDonald’s All-American Game nominee and a three-star recruit. In 2023, he earned a silver medal playing for Israel during the U20 Euro Championship and was named to the All-Tournament Team behind 17.7 points, 12 rebounds, 2.4 assists, 1.6 steals and 1.3 blocks per game.

Wolf played his first two seasons at Yale, having a breakout sophomore campaign in which he was named to the All-Ivy First Team and was the Ivy League Tournament Most Outstanding Player. Wolf then transferred to Michigan, where he averaged 13.2 points, 9.7 rebounds, 3.6 assists, and 1.4 blocks on 50/34/59 shooting splits as a junior. He was named to the All-Big Ten Second Team and Big Ten All-Tournament Team.

Wolf missed the last three games at the NBA level for Brooklyn, but he too has been cleared to begin practicing for Long Island once training camp underway.

Sean Marks told NetsDaily the day after the Draft that the picks will spend some time on Long Island.

“I assume some of these guys will definitely spend some time in Long Island,” he said. “We’ll have to see how the season sort of plays out and what minutes are there for everybody, but at the same time, as Jordi mentioned, it’s an environment of competitive nature out here. So that’s what we want to see. These guys go compete. There are no promises given to anybody, let alone the draft picks.”

Udofia was even more specific with his plans to build around the Flatbush 5 as they filter through Long Island. While Udofia said that they didn’t add any new resources, per se, to help develop the rookies, but noted that the Brooklyn and Long Island staffs work together.

“Our staff is an extension of the Brooklyn Nets staff,” said Udofia, now in his third year on Long Island. “So, we’re there all summer, all training camp. Since our season ended, their season ended, we’ve been there. It’s a culture that Jordi and the staff set, and we’re just here to mimic that in the G-League. We do a really good job at communicating between both staffs, so it should be a seamless process when those guys (the entire Flatbush 5) come down.”

Another veteran presence that Long Island will have on hand is Tyson Etienne, the Nets’ 26-year-old two-way. Etienne kept turning it up to end the season and got a two-way deal. Udofia believes Etienne can make a difference for the rookies.

“It doesn’t get any better (than Tyson Etienne), and that’s what this league is about,” says Udofia. “Last year, he started the year as a regular G League player and ended the season with a two-way contract. He’s been with Brooklyn all summer and had a really good summer league. I just love his progression. He just continues to grow. It’s the way he works. He’s a really good example to have in our gym, both on the Brooklyn Nets and the Long Island Nets.”

E.J. Liddell was signed to the second of three two-way deals earlier in the summer. The third two-way deal is up for grabs. With Drew Timme having been traded to South Bay, he could play for Brooklyn under a two-way but not Long Island.

Other possibilities for the two-way include Nelson and Zeng as well as players cut by other NBA teams in recent weeks. The Nets are one of two NBA clubs who haven’t filled all three of their two-way slots, the other being Cleveland.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/longislan...roster-danny-wolf-drake-powell-assigned-to-li
 
Brooklyn Nets get smoked by the Houston Rockets, losing 137-109

gettyimages-2243704251.jpg


The Houston Rockets had been struggling to achieve liftoff this season. Despite being among the favorites to win the superior Western Conference, they entered today’s game with the same amount of wins and in the same position as the lottery lusting Brooklyn Nets.

However, that just made Brooklyn the perfect launch pad to get Houston’s title pursuit started.

After falling behind by double digits early in their last two games, the Nets made it clear they’d had enough of that early tonight in Space City. Terance Mann and Michael Porter Jr. each began the game with some added aggression at the offensive end, probing into the paint early and often. The early burst helped lift Mann to his best game as a Net thus far, pitching in 22 points after shooting 8-11 from the field.

Saraf started again beside him, Porter Jr., Claxton, and Cam Thomas. Despite doing so in all of Brooklyn’s games thus far, he hasn’t played as much in second halves, and his case for a change tonight was weak. The far more athletic Amen Thompson had an easy time going left, right, or sometimes over him in the contest’s early minutes.

Amen Thompson driving dunk in isolation. pic.twitter.com/ml3vROBdxa

— Rockets Clips (@Rockets_Clips) October 28, 2025

But between Mann’s hot start and some stay afloat threes from Day’Ron Sharpe and Tyrese Martin, the Nets kept this one a game for almost the entire first quarter. Yes, almost.

Tari Eason, who had a combined seven points in his first two games, scored eight in about two minutes, propelling Houston on a 15-0 run at the close of the opening quarter and into a 42-25 lead. First impressions have consistently been poor for Brooklyn this year. They’re now -41 in opening frames on the season.

Eason kept it up the second as well, going on to drop 20 points in his 15 minutes of first half play after nailing five triples. He finished the game with a game-high 22 points, five assists, and five boards.

Brooklyn eventually grew wise enough to take a page out of Eason’s book. After throwing the ball around Houston’s zone for a handful of minutes to open the second, curating high-percentage looks but unable to flush them, they finally pierced the Saran Wrap over the rim, going 5-7 from deep in the heart of the period.

Saraf even got in on the action, redeeming his prior defensive miscues and hitting the first two threes of his career. Cam Thomas got a “the future is now, old man,” moment, too.

Cam Thomas takes his mentor KD to school.

This three also moved him to 13th in franchise history for triples made. pic.twitter.com/x0OYGdu9bO

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) October 28, 2025

Saraf went on to finish with six points, five assists, and two steals after shooting 2-8 from the field and 2-5 from deep. Thomas tallied nine points and two assists after shooting 3-9 from the field and 1-2 from deep.

Still, Houston led 71-60 at the half, and Brooklyn’s next two quarters of play contradicted their first. The Rockets opened up the third on a 13-2 run. In a blink, the Nets were back in a familiar place: down 20 points.

“It was just a run,” Fernández said postgame. “You saw it in the Charlotte game. You saw in the Cleveland game. I believe the San Antonio game, but the beginning of the third hasn’t been good, so that’s going to be addressed. Once again, it’s just a level of attention to detail, and to go there and put possessions together on both ends of the floor, and just be better.”

It didn’t help when Nic Claxton also picked up his fourth foul during that run, only for Day’Ron Sharpe to do the same a few minutes later. Brooklyn’s interior defense already appeared to have the strength of a wet paper towel tonight, as the Rockets went for 66 points in the paint, and that only softened things more.

Even with each Brooklyn center edging closer disqualification ahead of schedule, Fernández chose to ride with Sharpe. It was another good call by the young coach. Sharpe put in nine points in six minutes during the third, going 4-4 from the field.

I wish I could say that equated to anything on the scoreboard, but unfortunately, Sharpe’s burst was nothing more than another reach at a silver lining in a good old fashioned blowout. In fact, Brooklyn went into the fourth down by 26, then their largest deficit of the evening.

This time, Brooklyn made no comeback threat. The Nets simply could not stop Houston from filling it up, nearly notching a 50/40/90 game as a team, posting .576/.500/.885 splits.

“It’s just acceptable to take an NBA game for granted, and our guys are trying, they just don’t know how much harder and focused they can do things,” Fernández said. “I believe they’ll keep taking those steps, a lot of them just lack experience, but we’re going to challenge them. The coaches are great, and we’re going to find a way to challenge, to sustain the focus every possession. It doesn’t matter if you play 20 seconds, if you play three minutes, if you play 10 minutes, your attention to detail and your effort has to be there.

As the Rocket lead swelled up to as many as 33, the Nets waived their white flag by giving their two-ways their first burn of the season. EJ Liddell contributed six points after shooting 2-3 from the field, including one made triple, and the Nets went quietly into the dark.

Final: Houston Rocket 137, Brooklyn Nets 109

Injury Report​


Brooklyn held Egor Dëmin and Ziaire Williams out tonight. Williams fell hard on his back in the second half of Sunday’s game and mentioned postgame that he had issues moving around the court after. Dëmin’s day off seemed a bit more precautionary, as the Nets cited injury management for his left plantar fascia tear on the injury report.

Milestone Watch​

  • With his lone 3-pointer tonight, Cam Thomas tied Bojan Bogdanovic for 13th in franchise history in 3FGM (319). Next up is Keith Van Horn with 335.
  • With his first offensive rebound tonight, Nic Claxton tied Jason Kidd for 11th in franchise history in offensive rebounds (698). Next up is George Johnson in with 712.
  • Day’Ron Sharpe recorded his 15th career double-double and the first for a Net this season with 15 points and 10 boards in 20 minutes off the bench tonight.

Next Up

gettyimages-2209653221.jpg

The Brooklyn Nets begin a three-game home stand Wednesday evening when they host the new look Atlanta Hawks. The Nets took one out of three vs Trae Young and company last year. Atlanta is out to 1-2 start, beating the Orlando Magic but falling to the Toronto Raptors and Oklahoma City Thunder.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-scor...vs-rockets-137-109-terancemann-michael-porter
 
LIVE DISCUSSION: Brooklyn Nets at Houston Rockets, 8:00 PM ET

gettyimages-2242129106.jpg


The Brooklyn Nets have started 0-3 for the first time since the 2015-16 season. That team lost seven straight to start the season and finished 21-61 (14th in the East). They, of course, didn’t have their own draft pick. The Nets might continue forcing us to bring up infamous notes from the past if they keep losing this way.

They’ll face a humbling reminder of the past as Kevin Durant and the Rockets look for their first win.

KEY INFO​

  • WHO: Brooklyn Nets (0-3) at Houston Rockets (0-2)
  • WHEN: 8:00 PM ET
  • WATCH: YES NETWORK / GOTHAM

THE GAME


As bad as the Nets have been so far ( and will be), the Rockets have not been off to a strong start. With losses to both OKC and Detroit, Houston continues to find that chemistry that many believe will propel them to a winning season, especially after the high profile addition of KD and the rise of Amen Thompson. The Rockets’ size will be tough to defend for the Nets, as Thompson serves as the point guard with VanVleet out for the season. Yes you heard that right, a 6’7 athletic freak at the point guard.

INJURY REPORT​

  • Egor Dëmin: OUT – Left Plantar Fascia Tear, Injury Management
  • Ziaire Williams: OUT – Lower Back/Glute Contusion
  • Drake Powell: OUT – G League Assignment
  • Danny Wolf: OUT –G League Assignment
  • Haywood Highsmith: OUT – Right Knee Surgery, Injury Recovery

***

Please be respectful with your comments. NetsDaily prides itself on being a safe space for Nets and basketball fans alike to have healthy conversation. Reach out to Anthony Puccio or Net Income with any issues.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-disc...on-brooklyn-nets-at-houston-rockets-800-pm-et
 
Brooklyn Nets vs. Atlanta Hawks preview: A BK homestand

gettyimages-2243318051.jpg

gettyimages-2243318051.jpg

Still nothing on the board. The Brooklyn Nets took on the Houston Rockets Monday night and were never really in it as the Rockets cruised to a 28 point victory. It was Houston’s first win of the year while the Nets remain winless.

The opponent tonight is hoping to get back on track. The Atlanta Hawks were on the road Monday night to face the Chicago Bulls, but couldn’t bring it home late and suffered a close loss.

Where to follow the game​


YES Network on TV. Gotham Sports on streaming. WFAN on radio. Tip after 7:30 p.m. ET.

Injuries​


No Haywood Highsmith. Ziaire Williams is questionable after his bad fall two games back. Egor Dëmin missed Monday’s game as the second leg of a back-to-back, but he’s back. Drake Powell and Danny Wolf will be with the big club tonight.

Jalen Johnson and Zaccharie Risacher are both probable with right ankle sprains.

The game​


The Nets need to show something. What’s the something? Take your pick! Show better attention on defense, get back in transition, etc. It’s been an ugly start to the season so far and the defense has been one of the worst in the NBA. Steve Lichtenstein identifies one of the biggest problems:

“Look, Claxton’s impact, or lack thereof, is far from the only problem with Brooklyn’s defense, as I delineated in my last post (It’s On Fernandez To Fix Nets’ Indefensible D). But having someone who is considered an elite rim protector is supposed to compensate for a host of perimeter defenders’ sins; in fact, those defenders are often encouraged to play more aggressively because of a player like Claxton’s presence behind them.

Well, Nets Head Coach Jordi Fernandez seems to be imploring that whoever is guarding the ball must get into their men…and the results have been dunkathons. Literally. In the early going, no team has been dunked on more than Brooklyn, according to basketball-reference.com. Yes, Nets rookies Ben Saraf and Nolan Traore were exposed in Houston, with the vastly more athletic Rockets going around or right through them en route to the hoop. But where was the weak-side help?“

Oof.

Whoever controls the glass will likely win the game. Both teams are in the bottom four in rebound percentage and when you don’t do your work to secure possessions, you wind up creating trouble for yourself. For the Nets, that starts with Claxton. He’ll need to be more forceful on the boards and work to prevent the Hawks from finishing at the rim and clean up any mistakes his teammates make on the perimeter. Brooklyn needs to play with a lot more force, and that starts with their center.

Kristaps Porzingis is looking to get back to star quality play in a new city. He was instrumental to the Celtics’ 2024 championship run, but was limited in the 2025 playoffs due to Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome. He’s over it now thankfully and he can return to playing like normal. When he’s at his best, he’s a plus rim protector, solid post option, good pick and roll partner, and all around gamebreaker.

We’ll get to see a player that has All-Star potential tonight. Jalen Johnson has been the Hawks’ best player thus far and we’re starting to see him put everything together. He hasn’t made a three yet, but who cares about that when you’re making over 70% of your shots inside of three feet. Johnson does a little bit of everything and as the Hawks look to go on a run, he’ll be a big part of it.

Michael Porter Jr will look to carry some of the scoring load next to Cam Thomas. Offense is hard to come by for the Nets, and if they want to start winning games, they’re both gonna have to go for 20+ points a night. We knew what the deal was going to be for the Nets this season, but it’s somehow managed to go worse than we thought. If the duo isn’t able to consistently put up big scoring numbers while being efficient, winning becomes next to impossible for Brooklyn.

Player to watch: Trae Young​


The Hawks need more from their franchise player. So far, he’s only shooting 36.4% from the field and a ghastly 19.2% from 3-point range. You can’t prosper when your lead option and face of the franchise is playing like this and if the Hawks want to meet expectations, Young will need to be a lot better. It’s still early in the NBA calendar, and by the time the Nets see the Hawks again in February, Trae might be at his usual numbers. But for now, it’s a slump for one of the game’s leading engines.

Guard play has been hit or miss for the Nets, and we’ll see if their rookies can put a good outing together. Ben Saraf and Egor Dëmin have had their moments, but it’s tough for rookies early in their NBA careers. They just have to keep plugging away and learning from each experience. It’s tough now, but they just have to keep plugging away and hopefully things turn around.

From the Vault​


I watched an Allen Iverson documentary on Amazon Prime a few days ago and would recommend it! With that in mind, let’s watch AI go to work against a darn good late 90s Hawks team

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


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-game...awks-preview-nba-trae-young-michael-porter-jr
 
Brooklyn Nets come up short vs Atlanta Hawks in latest failed comeback

imagn-27449510.jpg


The Brooklyn Nets eyed and poked at their first win of the season again tonight, but in the end, sent it back to the kitchen.

However, the Nets did find uncharted territory: a double-digit lead, which occurred immediately. Over the first four games, they were a league-worst -41 in the first quarter, but opened up Wednesday’s contest against the Atlanta Hawks with a 12-0 burst, taking advantage of a Hawks defense that looked out of sync rotating to the paint and slow to the ball on the perimeter. Sound like another team you know?

The Nets opened the game with a 12-0 run pic.twitter.com/4hV9MaXpee

— Nets Videos (@SNYNets) October 30, 2025

But, like an inexperienced long distance runner, they eventually started to huff, puff and recognize they didn’t have the chops to keep up their pace and fell by the wayside.

Atlanta responded with an extended 43-17 run — even as Trae Young limped off the floor with a knee injury in the middle of it — finishing off almost every fast break opportunity the Nets kicked their way. Nic Claxton called out transition defense before anything when asked what the Nets need to focus on before their next game.

“Transition defense, our pick and roll defense, our defense all together, our defense has been like astronomically bad, so we got a lot of stuff to work on from the coaches to all the players, ” he said. “We got to lock in and take advantage of these next two days.”

Meanwhile, Brooklyn’s own offense was curling back up into its shell; that said, it did still have its fair share of entertaining possessions…

This Brooklyn Nets offense remains…interesting pic.twitter.com/F0CtWOsQOy

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) October 30, 2025

With Brooklyn’s non-shooting personnel and inability to put pressure on the rim, the offense looked looked like an off-track rollercoaster almost all night. Ball-handlers lucky enough to find their way into the paint often lofted the ball out to the perimeter whether a shooter was there to catch it or not, much like a pressured quarterback heaving the ball downfield. Cutters occasionally ran into each other rather than open spaces on the floor.

While his defensive woes persisted, Porter Jr. was Brooklyn’s top grenade heaver during many of those sequences, opening the night 6-7 from the field. He almost singlehandedly kept the Nets in the game, or at least “in the game,” by their newfound standards. By halftime, he was up to a game-high 17 points with the Nets behind by a 64-51 score.

The second half followed a similar script, at least in its opening act. Brooklyn put together a quick run, only for Atlanta to find its footing after a few jogs up and down the court. Frustration boiled over at the four-minute mark of the third. Following a a timeout, a Day’Ron Sharpe turnover turned into a Hawks jam at the other end. Fernández immediately called another timeout.

“They scored 27 points out of 16 turnovers and we only scored seven out from eight,” the coach remarked. “So, that 20 point difference, it’s a big deal. I always tell the guys, I give them 14 [turnovers]. Everything that passes 14, it’s not good, and if your turnovers are the ones where you give it to them and they score a layup, it’s not good. You have to be able to turn it over, get back, and get a stop.”

Porter Jr. notched 30 points before the nine minute mark of the third. He ended up only getting two more, but his pursuit toward a career-high scoring evening was perhaps the only entertainment in game that otherwise felt two hours spent in a dentist’s office waiting room. Old school fans hoping to see their team compete were left disappointed, as the Nets stayed at an arms distance almost all night. Tank commanders and rookie stock brokers didn’t get much to gauge either, as Egor Dëmin combined for Ben Saraf 28 minutes while Danny Wolf and Nolan Traoré ate some DNPs.

Instead, it was Tyrese Martin, Jalen Wilson, and Terance Mann who handled the bulk of the guard work. The former finished with 13 points, five rebounds, and an assist after shooting 5-7 from the field and 2-3 form deep.

“I thought Tyrese was awesome,” Fernández said. “If you look at his minutes: 20 minutes, 13 points, five rebounds. So, it’s about us, and whoever helps right then to help the team fight. Here, there’s nothing given to anybody, so I’m just rewarding a player who has had a great summer, and he’s playing well. That’s very simple.”

Saraf did not score after putting up only two shots but did snatch and assist. Dëmin tacked on four points going 1-6 from the field. He’s still yet to attempt a two-point field goal this season.

“Yeah, he’s got to figure it out,” Fernández said. “Obviously, I want him to touch the paint. Everybody will figure it out that he’s a threat from the three point line, but he cannot play just behind the three. So, you know, touching the paint, spraying the ball, I’m okay if he finishes with a lot of threes and a lot of assists, but at some point, can you be more aggressive when they’re in the bonus, and can you play off two feet, and all those things? This is like the proper steps. I’m not that concerned or anything.”

Brooklyn chipped it down to seven with about four minutes to go, and then traded shots with Atlanta as four turned to two. There, a Nic Claxton pump and drive followed by some Porter Jr. free throws made it a three point game with just over a minute to go.

Clax quietly turned in a solid night. He entered the game with fewer blocks on the season than Cam Thomas, but got on the board there this evening. He also added 18 points while shooting 8-14 from the field and pulling down a dozen boards…

Nic Claxton finally gets his first rejection of the season pic.twitter.com/rNrIhZBecQ

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) October 30, 2025

“I feel amazing, like, I put in a lot of work,” said Clax postgame, referencing a back injury that gave him trouble in 2024-25. “Just my posterior changes, getting my body back together. So, I feel really good, and now it’s just about consistency with the group, with myself.”

Alas, that was it for him and the Nets. After a stop and a chance to make it a one point game, Claxton missed a point-blank turnaround and a subsequent tip-in.

“That’s just basketball, man,” he said of the shot. “Sometimes you miss easy shots in a crucial part of the game, that’s just part of the game. I can’t dwell on that shot, there’s a whole bunch of other plays where I could have made them, and I missed them. It’s just the game. But, just got to finish though. This is tough, but it’s just basketball though.”

Brooklyn dropped the game and their record to 0-5, making it their worst start since the 2015-16 season when they finished with 21 wins and drafted Jayson Tatum.

“We just gotta get a win. And like, we all just want to win, I want to win … We just need to get a win,” Claxton went on.

At least this year, they’ll have a chance to actually draft whoever this year’s version of JT is. And, not that this is an original idea, but perhaps that’s the real “win” they should be after. It’s all they have, for now.

Final: Atlanta Hawks 117, Brooklyn Nets 112

Milestone Watch

  • Day’Ron Sharpe recorded his 500th career offensive rebound tonight, becoming the third player in NBA history to do so before playing their 3,000th minute (since individual offensive/defensive rebounds first started being tracked in 1973-74). The other players are Jerome Lane from 1988-89 to 1990-91 and Moses Malone from 976-77 to 1977-78.
  • Michael Porter Jr. had his second 30-point as a Net tonight in just five games. Porter Jr. recorded his second 30-point game in his 51st game for the Nuggets last season.

Next Up​

imagn-25486758.jpg

Brooklyn will take four days off before resuming action against the Philadelphia 76ers at home. Philly is undefeated as of Wednesday night, largely thanks to V.J. Edgecombe’s extremely premature but equally tight grip on the Rookie of the Year award. Funny what can happen when Adam Silver likes you, right?

Just kidding, but also, not really.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-scor...s-vs-hawks-117-112-nic-claxton-michael-porter
 
LIVE DISCUSSION: Atlanta Hawks at Brooklyn Nets, 7:30 PM ET

gettyimages-2243113892.jpg


The Brooklyn Nets are off to their worst start since the 2015-16 season, seeking its first win after losses to Charlotte, San Antonio, Cleveland and Houston. They’ve been outmatched, their defense is historically bad, and there aren’t too many positive takeaways on the rookies. Thankfully, we’re only four games in.

KEY INFO​

  • WHO: Atlanta Hawks (1-3) at Brooklyn Nets (0-4)
  • WHEN: 7:30 PM ET
  • WATCH: YES Network/Gotham Sports App

GAME PREVIEW​

“Nets Head Coach Jordi Fernandez seems to be imploring that whoever is guarding the ball must get into their men…and the results have been dunkathons. Literally. In the early going, no team has been dunked on more than Brooklyn, according to basketball-reference.com. Yes, Nets rookies Ben Saraf and Nolan Traore were exposed in Houston, with the vastly more athletic Rockets going around or right through them en route to the hoop. But where was the weak-side help? Oof.”

– Brian Fleurantin

INJURY REPORT​

  • Ziaire Williams: OUT – Lower Back/Glute Contusion
  • Haywood Highsmith: OUT – Right Knee Surgery, Injury Recovery

THE VAULT​


Please be respectful with your comments. NetsDaily prides itself on being a safe space for Nets and basketball fans alike to have healthy conversation. Reach out to Anthony Puccio or Net Income with any issues.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-disc...sion-atlanta-hawks-at-brooklyn-nets-730-pm-et
 
Nets Reacts: Are You Pro-Tank or Anti-Tank?

gettyimages-2210007324.jpg


Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NBA. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Nets fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed

Dating back to last season, Nets fans aren’t all necessarily on the same page. Some want the Nets to win, some want them to lose. Neither is objectively right or wrong!

So, Nets fans: Are you rooting for losses to attain better lottery odds? Or are you rooting for wins? Please be respectful if you’re going to comment about your stance.

Results will be updated in a separate article.​


Please be respectful if you’re going to comment. Root however you want to root but don’t put others down if it doesn’t align with your fandom.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nba-reacts/100691/nets-reacts-are-you-pro-tank-or-anti-tank
 
Egor Dëmin and Ben Saraf lead Brooklyn Nets Rookie Report — No. 1.

gettyimages-2243315425.jpg

Jacob Kupferman/Getty Images

Michael Porter Jr. did not take up the mantle of ‘veteran leader’ following the Brooklyn Nets’ loss to the Atlanta Hawks on Wednesday night, a loss that placed them at 0-5 on the season and in a cage match with the New Orleans Pelicans for worst NBA team of the young season.

When asked about Brooklyn’s defense — which, by giving up an 80th percentile half-court offensive rating to the Trae Young-less Atlanta Hawks actually turned in its best performance of the season — he pointed a bit more to the scheme than the (lack of) execution and effort: “Clax and Day’Ron are getting dragged out on ball screens, and then teams are able to hit the pocket and then from there, whether they make the shot or miss the shot — because once you hit the pocket, our big guys are away from the rim — I feel like that opens up everything offensively. So we got to figure out a way to let Clax and DayDay play to their strengths … Also, I think a lot of it comes down to hustle and flying around behind that.”

You can quibble with the strategy behind Jordi Fernández’s Brooklyn’s blitz-heavy defense early in the season, but with this current effort and attention to detail, any coverage would be getting torched. Then, when asked what the veteran leaders must do to prevent Brooklyn from spiraling (toward better NBA Draft lottery odds), Porter Jr. said: “Something’s gotta change, I think, in terms of maybe the groups that are on the floor together or certain things. Because we’re having good runs, and then we’re letting go of the rope and then teams are going on runs. But our job is to show up here and work hard and go out on the floor and give our full effort and the rest is up to the coaches and we trust them.”

It’s difficult to fully parse Porter Jr’s responses. As is well demonstrated, the highest-paid Net loves to think aloud, great news for reporters. If he has spare thoughts — even just inquisitive ones — about scheme and rotations, we want to hear them. But after five games, the gap between the #12 and #29 ranked defenses is the same as the gap between the #29 ranked defense and the league-worst Brooklyn Nets. Read that again.

If there was ever a time for some “we have to be better” and “it’s on us” veteran clichés, Wednesday night was that time. Lastly, I asked Porter Jr. the following: “In your experience, what are the things that — you know, it’s only been five games — that don’t fully form yet for a team, things that really change and grow over the course of the season?“

The answer that followed: “I think it starts off with the point guard spot. It’s really hard to win in the NBA when, you know, we have a lot of rookie point guards who are going to be great in this league for a long time, but they’re still rookies, and this game five against and they’re matching up. I think the point guard position may be the hardest position in the game and we got a lot of young guys playing that position.”

Michael Porter Jr. on the Nets' 0-5 start and what can change throughout the season:

“I think it starts with the point guard spot. We have a lot of rookie point guards who are going to be great in this league for a long time, but they're still rookies… I think the point guard… pic.twitter.com/tqxcP9w9UG

— Erik Slater (@erikslater_) October 30, 2025

Michael Porter Jr. is right. It is damn near impossible to be an additive NBA player as a 19-year-old rookie point guard, and the Nets have three* of those guys, two of whom are receiving rotation minutes out of the gate. (*We’ll ultimately see what Egor Dëmin is.) Perhaps Porter is looking around the room, seeing by far the least talented NBA team he’s ever played on, and trying to offer some optimism by promising rookie growth. t

And yet, Brooklyn’s offense has actually been slightly above league-average with either Ben Saraf or Egor Dëmin on the court, which is to say, most of the time. For all their deficiencies, it’s tough to say they are the main culprits of Brooklyn’s 0-5 start considering nobody has played much defense on this team. Hell, the majority of Nolan Traore’s 30 career minutes have come only after Brooklyn’s main units find themselves down by 25 or so.

Does this MPJ comment — an answer to a question that did not invoke the rookies — really matter? I don’t know, maybe. Erik Slater of ClutchPoints posted the video above; at the time of writing, it has over two million views on X/Twitter. It just seems odd that Egor Dëmin could watch his veteran teammates play insultingly bad defense all night only to open his phone after the game and see the highest-paid of them imply he is a main reason the team is 0-5?

Or is that too moralistic? Point being, I’m about to outline what we’ve seen from Egor Dëmin, Ben Saraf, and Nolan Traore thus far. Most of it has not been great. But the rookies are not why the Brooklyn Nets have been so dreadful to start the year.

This is the first edition of the (hopefully weekly) Rookie Report, your one-stop shop for following the progress of the Flatbush 5 this season, one of the most critical draft classes in Nets history. Though the preambles will grow shorter, the true content will hopefully grow longer the rookies get healthier and see more minutes.

Egor Dëmin​


Season stats: 4 GP, 20.5 MPG, 7.5/4.0/2.5 slash line, 41/41/75 shooting splits (no 2PA). 2 TO + 2.8 PF + 0.5 stocks (stl+blk) per game.

Stats this week: N/A

With 22 threes and zero twos attempted, Dëmin is just two long-balls away from breaking the NBA record for most consecutive 3-pointers attempted without a 2-pointer to begin a career, a feat saved by the Charlotte Hornets scorekeeper (rightfully, I think) counting this as an assist…

Egor Dëmin is two 3-pointers away from breaking the all-time record for most 3PA without a two to begin a career…because this went down as an assist. What say you?#FloaterGate pic.twitter.com/ggeAp7RphA

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) October 31, 2025

Here’s the good news: Egor Dëmin still looks like he can shoot the ball. He’s 9-of-22 from three, and most of his misses look good, too. When he gets an open catch-and-shoot three, the ball feels like it’s going down; he’ll draw frantic closeouts at the NBA level.

Outside of the shooting, it’s been expectedly tough sledding for the Russian teenager. Dëmin has gotten ripped trying to bring up the ball up the court a handful of times already, and while he’s long pledged to live in the weight room, strength isn’t the issue. The #8 overall pick can’t shake defenders right now, and as a primary ball-handler, his height is a challenge: shorter on-ball defenders can sit underneath his dribble, underneath his hips, and swipe at him. These plays have little to do with a lack of strength…

It’d be nice to see Dëmin force the issue a bit more when running pick-and-roll. He can’t undergo a physical transformation overnight, but he will never be a plus-athlete with that lack of explosion/wiggle. (See: two stocks to 11 fouls.) Still. it’s never to early to start figuring out solutions, whether it’s a pivot game or an in-between game or some handle combinations he’s comfortable with; right now, Dëmin probably can’t put much pressure on a defense, but he’s also not trying to…

That passivity is also limiting his P&R impact. He's picking up his dribble and looking to pass before putting the big man in any real conflict.

Needs to attack downhill harder or probe into the mid-range to leverage his playmaking ability. It's too easy for defenses right now. pic.twitter.com/SaYeOxXds7

— Erik Slater (@erikslater_) October 31, 2025

To that end, I’m surprised by how little Brooklyn’s coaching staff has helped him out. Part of this, surely, is the fact that Dëmin missed most of training camp and the preseason with that plantar fascia issue, but through five games, there has been little organized offense ran for him. Cam Johnson is, of course, a way more accomplished NBA player, but he has a similar build with similar athletic limitations, and Fernández’s staff did everything they could to put him in favorable situations last season…

one reason Cam Johnson is having a career-year is that Brooklyn runs a ton of actions — whether set plays like this or not — that put Johnson in great situations.

CJ absolutely a beneficiary of play-calls like this… pic.twitter.com/9CyYVONmif

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) January 2, 2025

Egor Dëmin is a fascinating first centerpiece to this rebuild, not just because he’s the best interview and most talkative guy on the team. (He dressed up as Aang from Avatar: The Last Airbender for Halloween.) He cannot create advantages with a live dribble, but he’s already shown the processing ability Brooklyn fell in love with; how those two qualities come together, I do not know, but at least he’s already made a couple great plays…

When asked about his short-term goals at practice Friday, Dëmin said: “I think, just trying to get to the paint as much as I can and to get these angles, not going around the player, but through and getting to the paint on two feet. Looking for finishing or the sprays, and just being more aggressive on the pick-and-roll, using the setups and after that, obviously, using our big as a gravity for the help.”

The main challenge so far? “Probably just physicality. Physicality.”

Ben Saraf​


Season stats: 5 GP, 18.2 MPG, 3.2/2.2/3.2 slash line, 21.7/16.7/66.7 shooting splits, 1.6 TO + 2.6 PF + 0.4 stocks (stl+blk) per game.

Stats this week: N/A

Ben Saraf is the first #26 overall pick to start the first game of his rookie season since Vonteego Cummings in 1999. He has started all five games so far, but he has struggled mightily. Saraf played just a dozen minutes in the game Jordi Fernández tried hardest to win, Wednesday’s loss to the Atlanta Hawks, (wherein Fernández started switching Nic Claxton out on the perimeter rather than trapping, a tactic all of Claxton’s head coaches have deployed when the rubber hits the road).

Saraf is listed at 6’6”, has a wealth of professional experience overseas, and is the most physically developed with the tightest handle of the three point guards Brooklyn drafted in June. This does not mean his transition to the NBA would be easy, though; he is still a relatively poor athlete with a jumper defenses decidedly do not respect. Hence the spooky stat line.

Like Dëmin, he has also committed 11 fouls to just two stocks. Wednesday night against Atlanta was his roughest showing on the defensive end; he struggled to make timely closeouts, rotations, and to fight through screens. While that was all to be expected for the 19-year-old, his struggles from the field are eyebrow-raising. Before the season, I wrote:

Saraf is going to have to do most of his damage at the rim, no matter where his career takes him. If he can approach a 60% conversion rate (55% might be more realistic) in the restricted area and supplant that with a high foul-drawing rate, that will be cause for celebration.

It’s too early to put any stock into the numbers — Saraf is currently shooting 1-of-7 at the rim — but it’s clear the athleticism adjustment will be a big one for him. On this play, he shakes Clint Capela with a little jab step, trying to fly immediately to the rim…

There’s no outside shooter readily open, the take itself is fine. But we’ll see if Saraf can adjust to NBA-level defense in the paint, and how well he can counter their physicality/athleticism with pure craft.

On the plus-side, he’s already shown some off-ball utility. I like this cut to the paint and attempted alley-oop that he just leaves a little bit short…

Saraf will need to shoot (and improve on defense) no matter how much he has the ball in his hands. But despite the lack of statistical production, it’s clear that his feel for the game is off to a fine start. That’s at least something.

Nolan Traore​


Season stats: N/A

Stats
this week: N/A

I can’t include Nolan Traore’s stats in good faith yet; he’s only played 30 career minutes over two games, most of them coming in garbage time. At the very least, he’s looked like the quickest defender of the three point guards and has two of his five 3-point attempts. Anecdotally, his catch-and-shoot ball doesn’t look quite as smooth as Dëmin’s, but noticeably better than Saraf’s does. Hooray?

Traore, who has already taken a couple car rides from Industry City to Uniondale, should probably familiarize himself with the Belt Parkway. He and Danny Wolf were not at practice on Friday, instead scrimmaging with Long Island Nets.

“Development doesn’t stop,” said Jordi Fernández. “And you know, there’s different different layers to it, there’s different avenues. And I think that, you know, that’s great for them now to get a higher volume, more scrimmaging right now.”

Traore’s areas for growth seem clear, even after just 30 NBA minutes…

That first play is probably a foul, but Traore has to dribble through that weak dig at the 3-point line. Really, he has to extend that handle as much as possible to get the most out of his small frame.

On the second play, he misses a floater over Ryan Kalkbrenner; teams with capable big man will dare Traore to beat them in the intermediate area. He’ll either need to develop that pull-up jumper forcing them to get up to the level, or some counters that maximize his speed closer to the basket. Alas, this is nothing we didn’t know previously, and with Traore presumably on Long Island for much of the season, he’ll have ample opportunity to grow.

Drake Powell​


Season stats: N/A

Stats
this week: N/A

I have to draw the line at seven total minutes, which Drake Powell played against the Charlotte Hornets before spraining his ankle. Powell was available against the Atlanta Hawks but did not get off the bench; however, he was a full participant in practice on Friday.

Danny Wolf​


Season stats: N/A

Stats
this week: N/A

Danny Wolf is yet to make his NBA debut, but was finally cleared to play ahead of Wednesday’s loss to the Hawks. He did not get in the game, but Fernández confirmed he is healthy and the decision to have him practice with Long Island on Friday was not any sort of demotion.



I asked Jordi Fernández about MPJ’s comments on Friday. Specifically: “How do you think over the season, the rookies improving might change the outlook of the team?”

The answer: “I don’t know what Mike said, but the reality is these guys work every day. They have the right intentions, and they’re the right people here for what we’re trying to do. So, working every day, nobody’s perfect here, and we’re going to continue to get better. I think that this group is growing; it’s already grown in five games. We’re process-oriented, we’re not result-oriented, and at the end of the day, that’s the most important thing. It’s the growth. A lot of time, growth comes with pain, but that’s for everybody. It’s not just for one person. So I think, we all will have high standards for ourselves, and we all should look at ourselves in the mirror and think about, ‘what can I do better? How can I help the team, and how can I help my teammates?’ That’s what’s more important.“

Is Jordi Fernández subtly suggesting MPJ look in the mirror? Is he (rightfully) including the fans of this 0-5 team among those that will feel pain during this growth process?

What we do know is that the Brooklyn Nets are finally playing a couple homegrown rookies, and though they haven’t been playing well yet, there are flashes and plenty of time. That’s not to say we can’t draw any takeaways from Ben Saraf and Egor Dëmin just yet, that’s why you play the games after all. Here’s to seeing even more of the Flatbush 5 the rest of the way.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-anal...ets-rookie-report-week-1-egor-demin-ben-saraf
 
Clowney conumdrum: does he break out this season?

gettyimages-2244064332.jpg


Noah Clowney remains one of the youngest players in the NBA. Just turning 21 this summer, Clowney is younger than half the players taken in the 2025 NBA Draft. He also bulked up significantly this summer, his body only enhancing his potential, potential first seen when he burst on the scene at the end of the 2023-24 season, hitting threes and blocking shots, often in spectacular fashion.

Since then, it’s been mostly crickets as his game, despite near unanimous praise of his work ethic this summer, has been quiet so far this season. No worries says his head coach.

“He had a great summer, his body looks great,” Fernández said after practice in Brooklyn Friday. “Obviously, we want him to have a bigger impact as far as making things happen, [but] I’m very happy [with his play].”

But Clowney’s numbers have been rough as The Post’s Dan Martin wrote Saturday:

Through five games, the Nets’ third-year forward has scored just 5.2 points per game and hit only 25 percent of his shots (3-for-8 from inside the 3-point arc, and 7-for-28 from outside the arc, both down from a year ago).

While Nets fans were expecting a break out, Clowney seems to have taken a step back. Fernandez thinks some of the disappointment can be laid on his shooting but the second year head coach thinks the shots have been fine, but missed. He was asked specifically about Clowney’s 1-of-7 shooting vs. the Atlanta Hawks.

“I felt like he played very well,” Fernández said. “Just good shots didn’t go in. The shots looked really good.”

Nets development has taken a hit the last few weeks. Brooklyn waived Dariq Whithead, taken one slot after Clowney, and the Cam Thomas controversy calls into question where the 27th pick in the 2021 Draft will ever play for the Nets again after his contract, a qualifying offer, expires in July … if not sooner.

So Clowney reaching his potential would give the Nets a nice lift particularly since their five rookies — three of them teenagers — have mostly struggled, not surprisingly.

On the offensive end, the head coach’s advice to the player is simple: “Just keep shooting it,” Fernández said he told Clowney. “Don’t overthink it.”

Defense, though, is where the real disappointment has come, as Lewis notes.

“I just need him to be better defensively and he embraced it,’’ Fernández said. “Last game, he was better.”

Bottom line from the head coach: “We need Noah. Noah is a big presence for our team. [He has] toughness, size, shooting, rebounding [and] winning plays. We need more verticality and he’s a big part of doing that.”


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-analysis/100828/clowney-conumdrum-does-he-break-out-this-season
 
Brooklyn Nets vs. Philadelphia 76ers preview: Sunday night hoops

gettyimages-2243320241.jpg

gettyimages-2243320241.jpg

Still waiting on that W. The Brooklyn Nets began their three game homestand with a showdown against the Atlanta Hawks on Wednesday night. Brooklyn fought, but once again fell short as the Hawks proved to be too much. Brooklyn is 0-5 on the season.

The opponent tonight has gotten off to a darn good start. The Philadelphia 76ers went on a mad dash in the second half, but it wasn’t enough as the Boston Celtics held on to win by one point. That was Philadelphia’s first loss of the season, which doubles as their first loss in NBA Cup play.

Where to follow the game​


YES Network on TV. Gotham Sports on streaming. Tip after 6:00 p.m. ET.

Injuries​


No Haywood Highsmith or Danny Wolf.

No Paul George, Jared McCain, Dominick Barlow, or Joel Embiid who the 76ers want to have two days rest between games.

The game​


This is the first night of a back-to-back for the Nets. They host the Minnesota Timberwolves on Monday night.

The Nets started to have Nic Claxton switch more on defense, and the defenders behind him will need to be in sync behind him while he’s out on the perimeter. Brooklyn’s defense has sprung many a leak this year and if they want to get a win any time soon, they’ll need to correct that in a hurry. His job will be a bit easier as he won’t have to face his old nemesis Embiid, but the Nets defense can’t afford to think they’ve got an easy night at the office.

The biggest reason why is waiting for them in the Philadelphia backcourt. Tyrese Maxey will make them pay for it. Maxey is averaging 35 points a game during the first stretch of the season and he’s been scoring from everywhere imaginable. He’s possibly the fastest player in the NBA and his first step is absolutely electric. Maxey has fully stepped into the role as franchise player, and it’s a role that suits him well! For the Nets, they have to do everything they can to keep him out of the paint.

Brooklyn needs better from Noah Clowney. A lot was expected of him coming in to the season, but it hasn’t connected yet. Jordi Fernandez spoke about his struggles at practice on Friday and is pushing to be better, especially on the defensive end. The kids on this team have a lot on their shoulders, but they’re going to have to meet the challenge. If they don’t, this Nets situation will get a LOT darker.

Player to watch: VJ Edgecombe​


Nothing energizes a fanbase more than a good rookie. The 76ers had a miserable 2024-2025 season, but it was all worth it now that Edgecombe is on the team. He endeared himself to the Philly faithful even more with this sequence on Friday night

CLAMPS by Edgecombe… SWAT by Bona!@sixers showing off their defensive prowess 🔒

🏆 BOS-PHI • East Group B
📺 @emirates NBA Cup on Prime: https://t.co/q8Zh2aG7US pic.twitter.com/28Pk4LWXb1

— NBA (@NBA) November 1, 2025

Good defense does it every time! Edgecombe has been filling up the stat sheet thus far and gives the 76ers another downhill threat and a great finisher at the rim. Edgecombe’s early excellence has made the Sixers’ future a lot more exciting than we thought it was last February.

Cam Thomas will look to do some more tonight. Brooklyn needs CT to score efficiently and make the right play when facing traps and double teams. Thomas didn’t do a great job of either against the Hawks and with the Nets offense needing to hit all of its cues to succeed, more is required of Thomas. It’s a challenge he’ll have to consistently meet every game if he wants to reach the level of stardom he aspires to.

From the Vault​


Game 7 of the World Series was last night, and the Dodgers pulled off a miraculous comeback in the 9th to win it in extra innings. It had been six years between Game sevens, so let’s take it back to 2019

More reading: Liberty Ballers, SB Nation NBA, New York Post, New York Daily News, Clutch Points, Nets Wire, Steve’s Newsletter


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-game...s-sixers-game-preview-vj-edgecombe-cam-thomas
 
Sixers Torch Nets as concern grows about effort from NBA’s youngest team

gettyimages-2244244370.jpg

Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images
gettyimages-2244244370.jpg

For a team already off to a rough start, running into one of the NBA’s most efficient scoring machines wasn’t exactly the ideal get-right game for the Brooklyn Nets.

Sunday night’s 129-105 loss to the Philadelphia 76ers, though, carried even more weight than that.

This loss was a loud alarm. The team’s effort, especially on the defensive end, has become a growing concern for everyone from casual fans to the head coach.

It’s not just the losses, but in the way they’re happening.

“I’m failing at trying to get my guys to play hard…It starts with me,” Fernández said postgame. “We need to play really hard and play with purpose. And we’re not doing it, so I’m doing something wrong…

“It’s everything. From the lack of attention to the body language. That all goes with energy… This group is different than all the groups that I’ve worked with, and we want to create winning habits. And right now, we don’t have them. We’re very far from that. We’re actually on the other side.”

It was the kind of honest admission you don’t often hear from a head coach, particularly six games into a season: calling out the team’s lack of identity and consistency while also accepting accountability and showing vulnerability.

He plans to embrace the challenge.

“I’m trying to ask them questions, ‘how can I do it’ to get them to play really hard and you live with the result. I’m not living with the result because the effort is not there, the defense is not there and we’re turning it over.”

Still, Fernández expressed some optimism that things can shift soon, with Brooklyn set to face an Anthony Edwards-less Minnesota Timberwolves squad on Monday night.

“That’s the beauty of this job,” he added. “There’s not one thing that works for all the groups. This group is different than all the groups that I’ve worked with. We are going to create winning habits, but right now we don’t have them. We’re very far from that.”

But at this point, six games in, the Nets have already set a franchise record for the most points allowed in the first six games of any season in franchise history. Their six straight losses at the beginning of the season is also the third longest streak in franchise history.

The challenge was indeed tough. The Nets were facing a Sixers squad with just one loss, a top-three offense averaging 125 points a night, and the fourth-most made threes in the league. In other words, a team that’s been on fire for two weeks met one that’s still trying to find the match.

Brooklyn’s young backcourt faced the near-impossible task of containing Tyrese Maxey, the league’s leading scorer at 35 points per game, along with rookie standout V.J. Edgecombe and the ever-reliable Quentin Grimes.

Another Night, Same Problems​


Just like in their last outing against Atlanta, Brooklyn came out swinging. Cam Thomas poured in seven points within the first five minutes, and Nic Claxton kept up his improved aggression on offense, tallying seven in the opening quarter.

When asked about Claxton’s extra aggression, one of the few bright spots in a dark night, Fernández pointed to the center’s offseason growth and the impact it has on the rest of the team.

“It’s part of having a better summer,” Fernández said. “The energy is contagious, and when he can play like that the team benefits from it. We need the best version of him. I’m happy to see him pushing the ball and getting to the rim.”

Alongside them, Terance Mann, Michael Porter Jr., and Tyrese Martin rounded out the starting five. Rookie Ben Saraf, who had started every game up to this point, recorded a DNP, being replaced by Martin. Nolan Traore was also a DNP and Egor Demin finished with only five points, two assists and no rebounds in 15 minutes. Danny Wolf (ankle) was out with a sprained ankle. He has yet to play this season.

Fernández explained his point guard adjustment, pointing back to what he saw in the previous game against Atlanta.

“In the fourth quarter against Atlanta, we allowed 23 points. We won the second half. There was good physicality, Tyrese did a great job,” he said. “That was the thought process — to try and help with the lineups. It just didn’t work.”

Then came Kelly Oubre Jr., who looked completely in rhythm from the start. The 6’8” 29-year-old wing torched Brooklyn for 22 points in the first quarter alone, hitting 9 of his 11 shots while knocking down two threes. The 12th-year veteran finished the night with 29 points, setting the tone early and never really cooling off until he was forced to leave the game with an ankle injury.

Other than Claxton, the Nets got another good game from Ziaire Williams who is still easing back from a minor back fracture. Williams managed to slow Maxey down after checking in midway through the first quarter. After Williams took over Maxey duties, the 6’2” 24-year-old didn’t hit another field goal the rest of the quarter. Williams also added nine points himself, making him the team’s leading scorer in the opening quarter.

Rookie Drake Powell gave them a nice, but brief, defensive spark off the bench before having to exit the game after re-aggravating a right ankle injury that kept him out of Summer League and limited him early in the season.

When asked about the rookie first-round pick having to step out of his second game of the year, Fernández chalked the injury up to a case of bad luck.

“It’s bad luck when you step on somebody,” he said. “Ankles are usually soft tissue. You can’t control that. Bad luck, I feel for the kid. He’ll be back soon ’cause he’s a worker. He started well with great energy.”

Drake Powell capitalizes on the turnover, slips past Quentin Grimes for the tough finish pic.twitter.com/nUTXJRH7So

— Tyler Carmona (@TylerCarmona) November 2, 2025

No word on any next steps for the 20-year-old.

Still, Philly’s ball movement kept Brooklyn chasing shadows. The Nets weren’t flat offensively, they shot 54.2% from the field, but the Sixers entered the quarter with a 40-37 lead after shooting 62.5% from the field and 40% from beyond the arc.

Edgecombe kept building his early-season case as the league’s top rookie, catching fire in the second quarter. The Baylor product drilled a pair of threes before flying past Ziaire Williams to throw down a poster dunk that woke up the crowd. By the end of the game, Edgecombe totaled 16 points while shooting 50% from the field.

VJ Edgecombe is a STARpic.twitter.com/HHBRMzEV67

— Sixers Nation (@PHLSixersNation) November 3, 2025

Meanwhile, Brooklyn’s offense went silent. Tyrese Martin, who got the start, couldn’t get much going either, heading into the break 0-for-4 from the field.

The Nets entered halftime shooting a brutal 15.8% from three and just 42.2% from the field in the quarter, while the Sixers kept rolling at 57%, ballooning the gap to 73–55 by halftime.

Down big, Brooklyn never really flirted with a comeback. The deficit never dipped below double digits, and the offense couldn’t find any rhythm. At this point, it’s clear for the Nets to hang around in most games, they’ll need a few offensive explosions to offset their defensive growing pains. Today wasn’t that day.

Michael Porter Jr. and Cam Thomas tried to shoot them back into it, but it was like trying to dig out of a hole with a straw. Porter Jr. finished the game with 17 points on 7-23 shooting (30.4%) while Thomas totaled 29 points on 9-19 shooting (47.36%) but of the 29, 13 came in the fourth quarter after the Nets had gone down by 26.

As Frank Isola of YES noted after the game, accusing Thomas of “stats padding.“ Frustration was everywhere.

In the postgame press conference, 29-year-old Terance Mann — the Nets’ oldest player — paused when asked how things could change for the team, eventually scratching his head as he searched for an answer.

“That’s a tough question,” said Mann. “When you’re 0-6, it’s tough to figure out.”

Final Score: Philadelphia 76ers 129, Brooklyn Nets, 105.

Milestone Watch​

  • Michael Porter Jr. posted his first double-double as a Net, tallying 17 points, a career-high 17 rebounds, and two assists vs. Philadelphia. His 17 boards surpass his previous career best of 16 (set with Denver on 4/2/24 vs. San Antonio).
  • Cam Thomas knocked down four three-pointers, passing Bojan Bogdanovic for 13th on the Nets’ all-time 3-pointers made list (323). He now trails Keith Van Horn (335) for 12th.

Next Up​

gettyimages-2244084611.jpg

No time to rest for the Brooklyn Nets. They have another game at the Barclays Center on Monday, this time hosting the Minnesota Timberwolves, likely without Ant. Tip-off is scheduled for 7:00 p.m. ET.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-scor...s-sixers-129-105-cam-thomas-michael-porter-jr
 
Nets vs. Timberwolves preview: Still looking for that 1st win

gettyimages-2243506198.jpg

gettyimages-2243506198.jpg

Another one on the board. The Brooklyn Nets started decently against the Philadelphia 76ers, gradually let go of the rope, and wound up getting demolished at home in front of the fans at Barclays Center last night. They are now 0-6 on the season and things are NOT looking good.

the opponent tonight is a bit bruised, but still in the fight. The Minnesota Timberwolves are shorthanded these days, but they’re still competing and hope to break through this season and get to the NBA Finals for the first time. They beat the Charlotte Hornets on the road Saturday night to improve their record to 3-3.

Where to follow the game​


Peacock is the place to be! WFAN on radio. Tip after 7:00 p.m. ET

Injuries​


No Haywood Highsmith. Drake Powell reaggravated an ankle injury last night and did not return to the game. It is likely he sits this one out. Night two of a back-to-back so we’ll see if anyone else sits.

Anthony Edwards is out.

The game​


Minnesota’s defense has been a cause for concern early in the season. They are currently 23rd in defensive rating and 23rd in rebounding as well. It’s rocky right now, but as Andrew Dukowitz of Zone Coverage notes, there’s room for optimism in the Twin Cities:

Here’s the issue with the Timberwolves: Their defense breaks down when Gobert is off the floor. For the Wolves, who are attempting to build a defensive identity around gritty, physical play, the steep drop-off without Gobert is unsustainable. That isn’t to say Gobert solves all of Minnesota’s problems. The offense similarly goes from a 129.4 offensive rating (1st in the league) to a 110.6 (26th).

The Wolves will likely have to find a balance between the two. They will have to embrace the Gobert minutes and find ways to improve the offense. More importantly, when Gobert isn’t on the floor, the defense must be considerably better to alleviate Finch’s concerns about their defensive identity.

For as shaky as the Wolves defense may be right now, they’re a heck of a lot better than the Nets. The issue with Brooklyn is they just don’t appear in sync at all on defense. Blown coverages, late rotations, and just a general lack of resistance all around. It makes for a draining, frustrating watch for Nets fans at home and in the arena.

To that point, Jordi Fernandez fell on the sword for the team in postgame last night:

After tonight's 129-105 loss to Philadelphia, Nets HC Jordi Fernandez takes responsibility for the team's performance.

“We need to play really hard and play with purpose. And we’re not doing it, so i’m doing something wrong.” @NetsDaily

— Tyler Carmona (@TylerCarmona) November 3, 2025

I mentioned it on social media, and I’ll say it here as well: It’s hard to invest hard to invest your time, dollars, and attendance at Barclays Center in the Brooklyn Nets if they’re gonna play like this every game, especially at home. I think the majority of Nets fans are on board with a rebuild and increasing lottery odds so they can get back to respectability and contention. However, before you get there, you still have to give people something worth connecting to and real effort in the interim. Jordi Fernandez is going to fall on the sword for his players, but ultimately, it’s up to them to execute the gameplan or at the very least work harder to make up for mistakes and breakdowns. They’ve all played basketball long enough to know better than this.

With this being night two of a b2b, we’ll see if the rookies get real playing time. It’s been a struggle for the guards, but they’re going to have to learn on the job and finding their comfort level against NBA caliber opponents.

Jaden McDaniels has taken on more with Edwards recovering from injury, and it will serve the Timberwolves well going forward. He’s doing some more ballhandling and paid it off with a season high six assists on Saturday night in Charlotte. McDaniels has made strides each season he’s been in the league and next to a healthy Edwards, Minnesota will be a pain in the neck to deal with come playoffs time.

Player to watch: Julius Randle​


With Edwards out, Randle has taken on the mantle of lead scorer and shot creator. So far, so good! Julius has shot at least 50 percent from the field in every game so far. He’s been knocking down his fair share of three pointers, but he’s at his most dangerous when he’s putting his head down and finishing through and over defenders

View Link

That’s how you do it! For the Nets, they’re going to have to ensure they bait Randle into heavily contested midrange jumpers.

When a team is as down bad as the Nets are, the most experienced player on the team has to help get them back on the right track. For Brooklyn, that’s Michael Porter Jr. The Nets need more from everybody, and that starts with MPJ. He grabbed 17 rebounds last night, but shot just 7-23 from the field in 31 minutes. Brooklyn needs an efficient 20+ points from him every night and a lot more attention to detail on the defensive end. Teams go by their veterans and as the most senior player on the club, it’s up to former NBA champion MPJ to help get things in a better place.

From the Vault​


The Vault can’t stop thinking about Yoshinobu Yamamoto. What a BEAST

More reading: Canis Hoopus, Zone Coverage, SB Nation NBA, New York Post, New York Daily News, Clutch Points, Nets Wire, Steve’s Newsletter


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-game...wolves-preview-still-looking-for-that-1st-win
 
Brooklyn Nets fade late against Minnesota Timberwolves, lose 125-109

gettyimages-2244404277.jpg

Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images

The Brooklyn Nets’ sixth consecutive loss to begin their 2025-26 campaign was embarrassing. Fans who had come to see Brooklyn’s five first-round draft picks take on an I95 rival in the Philadelphia 76ers saw those rookies combine for 19 total minutes and shuffled out of Barclays Center early in the fourth quarter, with their team down by nearly 30 points (again). Many of the paying customers who saw it through were Philly fans sitting behind the visitors’ bench, either chanting ‘E-A-G-L-E-S’ or imploring Head Coach Nick Nurse to insert player-coach Kyle Lowry into the game. Joel Embiid, in turn, implored them to get louder.

It was in this context that the D-team Sixers made sure to get two different rookies their first career buckets. It was in this context that a seething Jordi Fernández forced a starter-heavy lineup including Cam Thomas, Michael Porter Jr., and Terance Mann to apply a quarter-hearted full-court press while suffering through garbage time.

“I’m failing at trying to get my guys to play hard,” said a haunted Fernández postgame. “And I’m trying to ask questions. Ask them questions, ‘how can I do it?’ To get them to play really hard, and then you live with the result. I’m not living with this result because the effort is not there and the defense is not there.”

Yes, the Brooklyn Nets are tanking this season — and for good reason — but the product after six games felt far more miserable than your average tank-fest. The locker room, which was jovial enough after their moral victory (scoreboard loss) of a home opener against the Cleveland Cavaliers, was funereal on Sunday. Not even Terance Mann, oldest player on the team, could pinpoint the problem.

“When you’re 0-6, it’s tough to figure out” he said, literally scratching his head. “I mean, it’s hard to pinpoint one thing, you know? It’s a little bit of everything. It’s just a tough job to tackle. So yeah, it’s gonna be tough.”

That was the backdrop for Brooklyn’s Monday night contest against the Anthony Edwards-less Minnesota Timberwolves, the second half of a back-to-back. As on Sunday, #26 overall pick Ben Saraf did not start (or even appear until garbage time), with Tyrese Martin taking his place. Fellow rookie Drake Powell did not play after re-injuring his right ankle, and Michael Porter Jr. was a late scratch with personal reasons. Noah Clowney got the start in his place.

Despite (or due to) that change, Brooklyn played a respectable first half against the Wolves, tied after a quarter and down by four at the break. Clowney made the most of his opportunity early, forcing three Timberwolves turnovers and scoring five of his 15 points before the first media timeout.

Cam Thomas and Nic Claxton led the offense, however, with Clax embracing his growing role as an initiator at the top of the key. He drove the ball against Rudy Gobert and hit open cutters, winding up with a healthy 19/8/7 overall, though he and CT still mixed in some traditional dribble-handoff stuff as well…

go up and get it clax!! 😤

📺 @NBAonNBC pic.twitter.com/kw5F8iqImb

— Brooklyn Nets (@BrooklynNets) November 4, 2025

“Yeah, it’s pattern recognition, film recognition,” he said of his comfort in Brooklyn’s offense. “And just like, a lot of reps from last year, and just letting my basketball IQ and imagination kind of just take over.”

Thomas scored 19 of his game-high-tying 25 in the first half on his characteristic array of high-arcing jumpers, which prevented Minnesota from ever truly pulling away. Still, behind a well-balanced scoring attack, the Wolves led 63-59 at half because even a decently-intentioned Brooklyn squad cannot play much defense. On this play, switchy Nic Claxton has Naz Reid well-contained until Jalen Wilson overhelps to give Jaden McDaniels a rhythm three…

3 letting it fly. 🎯 pic.twitter.com/UNSWnOx8J2

— Minnesota Timberwolves (@Timberwolves) November 4, 2025

Not much changed in the second half, though Cam Thomas did what he does best: starting hot and finishing 10-of-24 from the floor. Just bad luck, according to him.

“Most of the shots I took tonight were great shots for me, just missed them. I mean, those are normal, routine shots I always work on. They were open and I just missed them. So probably just, you know, a little fatigued, but at the end of the day, those are routine shots I always take and make — I work on it but I didn’t really feel like they was difficult shots or anything like that. I was open, good looks, so sometimes the balls didn’t go in the second half. But it is what it is. I got another game coming up. I’ll probably make them then.”

The Nets did hang around to keep it more competitively interesting — but less morbidly entertaining — than Sunday’s loss. Donte DiVincenzo got free for six 3-pointers, Julius Randle laughed at Brooklyn’s thin wings on drives. On the other end, Head Coach Chris Finch went to a zone that stifled Brooklyn’s offense to start the fourth quarter, therein deciding the game.

At the very least, Fernández let three rookies — including Danny Wolf, who did not score in his NBA debut — and E.J. Liddell play garbage time. The one rookie who got real rotation minutes on Monday was Egor Dëmin, who struggled mightily on defense to begin the night before modestly turning it around in the second half. He only posted a 2/2/4 line on 1-of-4 shooting, but hey, he racked up a handful of deflections and his one field goal came inside the arc! Progress…

Egor Demin hits a stepback in the mid-range. pic.twitter.com/J0Id400ULk

— Erik Slater (@erikslater_) November 4, 2025

Postgame, Fernández was pleased with the #8 overall pick: “21 minutes against a very physical team, which, you know, puts you through a lot, and that’s good for him. All his setups have to be on point, how he runs all the actions, how he plays pick-and-roll, whether it’s to spray the ball or to create a shot for himself. I think it was good … We just all need to rebound better. He’s more than capable of rebounding with his size, and I would challenge not just him, but everybody else. His minutes were very positive, and we’ll keep building from there.”

Somewhat surprisingly, Fernández kept the good vibes rolling from there.

“I thought we took really positive steps. You saw the fight and the purpose and winning two quarters, also allowing less than 30 points in two quarters. For us right now, that’s a win. And I’m really proud of these guys for keep fighting. And even when we were down, like you said, we punched back and we took the lead. And then at the end, obviously, they’re big and very good defensively, and some of our shots didn’t go in.”

To be clear, the Timberwolves put up a 95th percentile offensive rating before garbage time on Monday. They shot 17-of-21 at the rim. Jordi isn’t lying about the Nets taking a positive step, but my goodness does that clarify how low the bar is right now? They are 0-7 for a reason.

Attendance Monday was 17,287, the first time in four games that the Nets didn’t draw a sell-out (which after the latest renovations is now 17,548.)

Final Score: Minnesota Timberwolves 125, Brooklyn Nets 109

Milestone Watch​

  • Jalen Wilson reached 1,000 career points in this one. In all sincerity, that’s an achievement a #51 overall pick can smile about.
  • Nic Claxton has now led the Nets in assists the last two games. Seven on Monday, five on Sunday.

Injury Update​


Pregame, Jordi Fernández spoke about the absent Nets and provided some valuable tidbits of information on the following three players.

  • Long-term concern for Drake Powell? “No. I don’t know if you watched, like, how it happened. It’s unfortunate. You know, it was almost the tip of his shoe that got stuck, and he sprained it a little bit. Obviously, we’ll do whatever we can on our side to strengthen it, to use precautionary stuff to strengthen — to get more secure right there. But we’re not concerned, actually. When he just sprained it last time, he came back pretty quick, he put his work in, he was looking great. That’s what basketball is about, sometimes it’s bad luck.
  • On Haywood Highsmith’s recovery: “We have no update, it remains the same.”
  • On MPJ’s timeline: “We expect him being back.”

Next Up​

gettyimages-2244819661.jpg

The Brooklyn Nets head out to the Midwest for one game before NBA Cup play begins. They’ll visit the Indiana Pacers on Wednesday night, tip-off scheduled for 7:00 p.m. ET.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-scor...berwolves-125-109-cam-thomas-donte-divincenzo
 
LIVE DISCUSSION: Minnesota Timberwolves at Brooklyn Nets, 7:00 PM ET

gettyimages-2244697301.jpg


If the Nets lose tonight, it’ll be their worst start to a season since they lost the first seven games in 2015-16. After that, we’re beginning to look at 12-70 territory when the team opened the season with 18 straight losses. Let’s hope it doesn’t get to that, but it’s hard to stay optimistic.

Their defense remains historically bad. The rookies are hardly playing. And Jordi Fernandez said the Nets lacked effort on Sunday. A young team that is trying to rebuild its identity with five first-round picks should NOT have issues with effort. Just saying. Maybe they’ll find solace with Anthony Edwards out on Monday night.

KEY INFO​


Who: Minnesota Timberwolves (3-3) at Brooklyn Nets (0-6)

When: 7:00 PM ET

Watch: Peacock

THE GAME


For as shaky as the Wolves defense may be right now, they’re a heck of a lot better than the Nets. The issue with Brooklyn is they just don’t appear in sync at all on defense. Blown coverages, late rotations, and just a general lack of resistance all around. It makes for a draining, frustrating watch for Nets fans at home and in the arena.

– Brian Fleurantin


INJURY REPORT​

  • Wolf: PROBABLE – Left Ankle Sprain
  • Powell: OUT – Right Ankle Sprain
  • Highsmith: OUT – Right Knee Surgery, Injury Recovery

***

Please be respectful with your comments. NetsDaily prides itself on being a safe space for Nets and basketball fans alike to have healthy conversation. Reach out to Anthony Puccio or Net Income with any issues.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-game...esota-timberwolves-at-brooklyn-nets-700-pm-et
 
Brooklyn assigns three rookies to Long Island with G League opener Friday night

imagn-27409906.jpg


Will the next time we see Nolan Traore, Ben Saraf and Danny Wolf in a Nets uniform be Friday night at Nassau Coliseum … donning the Long Island Nets red, white and blue?

Brooklyn assigned the three first round picks to its G League affiliate Tuesday, filling the Long Island roster. Although the Brooklyn Nets will play vs. the Indiana Pacers in Indianapolis Thursday and the Detroit Pistons in Detroit Friday, it seems more likely the three will be in Uniondale instead preparing to battle the Capital City Go-Go, the G League affiliate of the Washington Wizards in Long Island’s opener. That means only Egor Demin, the Nets lottery pick, is likely to be only one of the Nets five first rounders with the team. Drake Powell has been slowed by an ankle injury and remains questionable.

Of the three, Saraf has played the most minutes in the NBA, with 16.7 minutes per game in five games. Traore has played 11.0 minutes in three games and Wolf had his league debut last night, playing a little more than three minutes. All can be expected to play a lot more minutes with Long Island which of course is the point of the assignment.

They’ll join Grant Nelson who was in camp on an Exhibit 10 for the Nets as well as two-ways Tyson Etienne and E.J. Liddell and a host of NBA veterans including point guard Yuri Collins, the G League’s leading playmaker, who played for the Golden State Warriors last season, shooting guards Nate Williams and Jay Scrubb who have 71 games of NBA experience as well as David Muoka, the near 7-footer from Hong Kong who’s a two-year G League veteran and returning Long Island Nets, point guard Terry Roberts and forward Tre Scott.

As Hoops Rumors reported Tuesday, the Nets are the only NBA team not to fill all three of its two-way roster slots. There’s plenty of time to add a player. Teams can add a two-way as late as March 4.

The opener will be broadcast on the G League website starting at 7:00 p.m. ET. Long Island and Capital City will also play Sunday afternoon, then be off until a week from Friday.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/longislan...long-island-with-g-league-opener-friday-night
 
Nets vs. Pacers preview: Still looking for that 1st win, part 8

imagn-27497161.jpg


We officially enter into Day 14 of a winless 2025/26 season, the two week-mark of the deep tank. The Brooklyn Nets struggles have continued as of late as they are coming off a less embarrassing but still demeaning loss. Even without their superstar in Anthony Edwards, the Minnesota Timberwolves managed to pull off a second half surge en route to a 125-109 win. But guess what, we played harder!

Tonight, the Nets will be playing an Indiana Pacers squad that also does not have their superstar, Tyrese Haliburton, who is out for the season after his Game 7 NBA Finals Achilles rupture. To be more specific, the Pacers will go into tonight’s game without much of their main roster, which has led them to their own pitiful 1-6 record.

The battle between both losing records will be about who wants it more, and with how the Nets played in their last outing, they could have a chance!

Where to Watch

Catch the action at 7:00 p.m. ET on the YES Network and streaming on the Gotham Sports App.

Injuries

Ben Saraf, Nolan Traore, and Danny Wolf are with the Long Island Nets. Drake Powell (ankle) and Haywood Highsmith (knee) will also be out.

Hold your breath for this one. Tyrese Haliburton (right achilles), T.J. McConnell (hamstring), Kam Jones (back), Obi Toppin (foot), Andrew Nembhard (shoulder), Benedict Mathurin (toe), Quenton Jackson (hamstring), and Johnny Furphy (ankle) will all be out tonight. Phew.

The Game

The Indiana Pacers are a great example in the NBA of how time can be a component of an organization’s downfall. Just some months ago, the Pacers were playing a game 7 of the NBA Finals. And now, simply because of injuries and time, they sit with one of the worst records in the beginning of the season. Crazy stuff.

Back to tonight’s matchup. Though the Pacers do not have much of a backcourt right now, their frontcourt could still be difficult to manage. Pascal Siakam, who I believe is the most underrated player in the league, is averaging 26 PPG, 8.4 rebounds, and 5.3 assists to start the year. Known to get to his spots efficiently since he helped the Raptors secure a championship in 2019, Siakam is amongst the elite.

Isaiah Jackson is also coming off a big performance from the Pacers’ two point loss against the Bucks, where he went for 21 and 10. Claxton and Clowney could have their hands full, but if they fight, they could hold their own.

All the guards can contribute greatly in this game. Aaron Nesmith will probably be tasked with guarding Cam Thomas, and he can guard. Which means Egor, Tyrese Martin, Terence Mann, etc. can use the opportunity to get open looks and find opportunities for both themselves and the team to possibly lead the Nets to their first win

Player to Watch: Jarace Walker

In addition to Siakam, Jarace Walker is a forward on the Pacers who can see a lot of the ball handling duties. Despite only shooting 34% on the season, Walker has athleticism and ability that can take him far, especially once this team gets healthy.

Only 22, the 6’7” 235-pound Houston product is someone the Pacers believe is a long term project and one that will remain in the rotation after everyone gets healthy. He missed the entirety of the NBA Finals last season with an ankle injury. Now, he’s getting another chance.

From the Vault

Donna Jean Godchaux-MacKay, a soulful mezzo-soprano who provided backing vocals on such 1960s classics as “Suspicious Minds” and “When a Man Loves a Woman” and was a featured singer with the Grateful Dead for much of the 1970s, died this week in Nashville at the age of 78. Although not as well known as Jerry Garcia and Bob Weir, she had many fans among Dead Heads. Here’s her last interview talking about her experiences with the Dead.

Of times, a voice is more than a voice. It’s a reflection of a life. Rest in Peace.

More reading: Liberty Ballers, SB Nation NBA, New York Post, New York Daily News, Clutch Points, Nets Wire, Steve’s Newsletter


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-game...preview-still-looking-for-that-1st-win-part-8
 
Back
Top