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Nets get first win of season in back-and-forth battle with Indiana Pacers

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The Brooklyn Nets were alone in the win party waiting room Wednesday morning. For two weeks, they sat beside the New Orleans Pelicans, who somehow found a way to start this season in an even more disappointing fashion than their last. It looked certain to spiral further when the Pels put Zion Williamson on the injury report with a left hamstring strain Tuesday, but they managed to sidestep 0-7 and the bouncer.

While some pre-season commentary from Brooklyn’s owner and some early efforts from the team (or lack thereof) might’ve led you to believe the Nets were happy to be on the outside looking in, anyone paying attention realized that wasn’t the case. The losses stacked up — and embarrassing feelings festered.

So tonight, they did something about it.

Brooklyn’s first five this evening indicated their eagerness to change things up early on. The starting group included Terance Mann at the point and a returning Michael Porter Jr. at SF. The latter quickly reintroduced himself to Brooklyn fans and the Pacers, putting up eight points on 3-of-3 shooting to lift the Nets up 15-6 four minutes into the game.

The Nets managed to stay in front of Indiana after one by a 25-18 score, topped off with a play you probably thought they didn’t have the facilities for, until they did…

Alley-oop… to BEAT the 1Q buzzer 🔥

Tyrese Martin runs the break to perfection & with perfect timing!

Watch LIVE on NBA League Pass: https://t.co/bmsnufr6Zl pic.twitter.com/mZy8x7WVDc

— NBA (@NBA) November 6, 2025

Brooklyn led after one for the first time all season tonight, despite having their best excuse of the year to be down big early. Cam Thomas, who’s shot-making has singlehandedly carried the Net offense for much of this young season, exited the game at the 6:25 mark of the first. He was ruled out shortly after with hamstring tightness, the same injury which limited his season to just 25 games last year.

Though a quarter late, the Nets eventually did fall behind. Indiana kicked open the door in the second with an 8-0 run to seize the lead. After an opening frame of Aaron Nesmith bricks and mistimed low-post moves from Pascal Siakam, Indiana found its offense, starting 8-11 from the field and 4-5 from three.

However, they didn’t fall apart…

Not Day'Ron Sharpe's first poster against the Pacers pic.twitter.com/1MXJgwLbFl

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) November 6, 2025

After that Day’Ron Sharpe poster and a handful of tough sequences from point guard Terance, the Pacers enjoyed a 9-0 burst and took a 57-49 lead, their biggest of the game, with 1:27 to go in the half. Still, the Nets finished the second just as they did the first, pulling to within five as we hit the break…

another quarter, another buzzer beater 👀🚨 pic.twitter.com/ZxIm0FV4xJ

— Brooklyn Nets (@BrooklynNets) November 6, 2025

After Porter Jr.’s fast and Indiana’s slow starts, everyone returned or regressed to the mean. While MPJ still led all scorers with 20 by that point, he shot just 3-7 from the field and 1-5 from deep. Meanwhile, the Pacers posted .640/.556 shooting slashes in the frame. Reminder: they did this without Tyrese Haliburton, Johnny Furphy, Andrew Nembhard, Obi Toppin, and T. J. McConnell.

The second half burst open with the same shock that closed the first. For starters, Rick Carlisle lasted only eight seconds in it. After a bang-bang play where the Nets attempted to steal an inbound pass on Indiana’s end of the floor, officials quickly awarded Brooklyn the ball. They inbounded it, Porter Jr. splashed a three, and Carlisle let Marc Davis have it.

Pretty wild sequence to open the second half. Michael Porter Jr. forces a turnover in the backcourt. The refs give the Nets the ball, and MPJ hits a three.

Rick Carlisle is incensed and gets tossed. pic.twitter.com/o0RibG13S2

— Erik Slater (@erikslater_) November 6, 2025

Without their coach, the Pacers fell back behind. Punishing Isaiah Jackson inside one moment and then any other defender holding his early season 3-point percentage against him the next, Noah Clowney pitched in eight points to begin the third. He finished with 17 points and four rebounds for the game after shooting 6-9 from the field and 2-5 from deep.

“When he plays like this, he just looks like a grown man at 21,” Fernández said of him. “Focused, he can help us on the boards, he can shoot the three, he’s an overall player…He definitely has the grit that we’re looking for.”

The chaos continued as the period progressed. An energized Nic Claxton multitasked like an octopus with a lengthy to-do list, defending the rim, occasionally switching, and rim running on the break.

“We know we can play through him,” Fernández said. “When he’s aggressive, then things open up, and I think he’s just making the simple play every time. Even in transition, I trust him 100% and that’s what he’s doing. He’s getting better.”

However, Siakam was eager to race beside him, as was Jay Huff to let it fly, who nailed two in the frame.

That all culminated in several minutes of back and forth basketball which put the Nets down three entering the fourth. Egor Dëmin got in on the action too, not shooting inside (yet), but at least getting there, and dishing.

Come for the Egor behind the head toss. Stay for the Ziaire step back three. pic.twitter.com/DzW5QQvS3c

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) November 6, 2025

In the game’s closing moments, Brooklyn looked like the only winless team in the NBA, but for all the right reasons. You could see their will to win with every loose ball pursuit, crash against the boards, and blitz in the back court. Not to be undone by Claxton, Mann also brought his his tow-way talents to the table in the clutch, running the offense at one end to queue up threes for the suddenly hot Tyrese Martin and ripping balls away from Siakam at the other.

Mann, touted in his NBA career for being a “glue guy,” had his best game as a Net by those standards. The Nets threw him into a ball-handling role tonight and were then forced to double down on it after the Thomas injury. He responded to unfamiliarity and unexpectedness with poise and precision, finishing with 15 points, six assists, and two steals while shooting 5-12 from the field.

He, and everyone for that matter, seemed to channel their desperation to their advantage.

“That’s the team we want to be — a disruptive team,” Fernández said. “We look like a selfless group, and we look like a connected group, and that’s the that’s the way that we want to get better.”

The Nets led 101-93 with just under three to go, and looked like they were going to finally do it. A Ben Shepard triple cut the lead to five with about two and a half to go, but the Nets refused to crumble even as the pressure mounted.

Clowney, turning in his second consecutive 15+ point game, shook Siakam on the perimeter before driving and kicking to Martin, who nailed another triple to make it nine with 1:34 to play. Nesmith, known for late game theatrics vs New York teams, of course hit a three to again make it six with just over a minute to go, but Brooklyn drew the curtain on the night soon after that.

After each team turned it over on three straight possessions, a Siakam layup made it four with 30 second to go, but Porter Jr., who also started the game for Brooklyn, then ended it, drawing a foul and goaltend call on the next possession.

This MPJ shot was ruled a goaltend and foul. Looked like someone got their hands in the net.

Brooklyn trying to hold on here… pic.twitter.com/YM6uo6x4jU

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) November 6, 2025

That only left a few seconds for Indiana to chug down the court one more time and put up a quick heave, which the Nets rebounded and then iced the game.

“I think we had effort last game, we didn’t win it, but I think we we played harder,“ Clowney said. ”We had it today. We wanted to win, and we did that.“

That, they did. Welcome to the party, boys.

Final: Brooklyn Nets 112, Indiana Pacers 103

Milestone Watch​

  • Nic Claxton’s 17 assists in the last three games mark his most assists in any three-game span in his career.
  • Noah Clowney posted 16 points (6-of-9 FG) in 25 minutes for Brooklyn tonight in his second start of the season, recording 15+ points in consecutive games for the third time in his career.

Injury Report​


If Jordi Fernández knew anything else about Thomas’ injury postgame, he made sure not to share it. He said he did not know if it’s the same injury as the one Thomas suffered last year, despite both being tagged as hamstring strains.

A closer look at Cam Thomas injuring his hamstring and exiting tonight via YES pic.twitter.com/wlJgS26ZJt

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) November 6, 2025

“It’s just tightness,” he said. “We haven’t announced anything else…we’ll give you guys more information, and the only thing that I can say is he’s done a great job. He’s worked on his body, he plays, and he’s played really hard. So there’s a lot of things he’s got to work on, but it’s part of basketball. ”

Next Up​

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Brooklyn’s returns home Friday night to host the Detroit Pistons and take part in their first NBA Cup action of the season. The Nets have yet to move past the group round in the tournament’s now three year existence. They don’t seem likely to change that this year, but you never know. Tipoff is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. ET.

Also Friday, you’ll be able to watch three of the Nets first round picks — Nolan Traore, Ben Saraf and Danny Wolf — play their first game for the Long Island Nets at Nassau Coliseum. That game starts at 7:00 p.m. ET and can be viewed on the G League website.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-scor...-vs-pacers-112-103-nic-claxton-michael-porter
 
LIVE DISCUSSION: Brooklyn Nets at Indiana Pacers, 7:00 PM ET

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We’re breaching history, folks. The Brooklyn Nets are off to their worst start since 2015-16 and if they lose tonight, it would mark the worst start to a season since they started 0-18 in 2009-10. That team, as you might already know, finished 12-70 and landed Derrick Favors with the third overall pick. They had better odds back then, too.

They’ll have a chance at snapping history — the depleted Pacers only have one win to their name.

KEY INFO​


WHO: Brooklyn Nets (0-7) at Indiana Pacers (1-6)

WHEN: 7:00 PM ET

WATCH: YES Network/Gotham Sports App

THE GAME


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.

– Jordan Greene


INJURY REPORT​


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

For Indy, 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.

***

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Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-disc...ion-brooklyn-nets-at-indiana-pacers-700-pm-et
 
Questions of playing time, Egor Dëmin abound in Rookie Report — No. 2

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Getty Images

On Thursday’s episode of The Zach Lowe Show, the titular host and guest Howard Beck briefly touched on the Brooklyn Nets, who picked up their first win of the season the previous night against the Indiana Pacers.

After Beck raised an eyebrow at the state of veteran leadership on the team, Lowe cringed at the thought of Brooklyn’s offense if Cam Thomas — who exited the game with left hamstring tightness — misses extended time. But then their focus turned to the five first-round draft picks, the rookies that we’ve all heard plenty about but really haven’t seen too much of.

“It’s disconcerting to simultaneously tank and not even play your young players, your rookies. Like, they’re playing young players, but not the five guys you just drafted. We’re not trying to win, but also, we don’t think these guys are even ready to participate heavily in games we’re not trying to win,” says Lowe.

Beck responds that “over the course of a couple home games at Barclays,” he asked some non-Nets personnel which Brooklyn prospect (not necessarily a rookie) intrigues them the most: “I just got these long pauses and deep stares off into the distance.”

Here is the full episode, timestamped at their Nets discussion, but that’s the gist of it. Lowe repeats the frustration we all share, to a degree: that Brooklyn stinks but the rookies aren’t playing. Beck lands one more blow: “There’s nobody on the Nets that is really even intriguing anyone on rival teams right now.”

Listen, I hated their draft as much as the next guy (not that I am a devoted draftnik, in which case I’d still be wrong quite often), but there’s a little bit of confirmation bias going on here. Many believe Brooklyn had a bizarre draft, that Sean Marks’ front office as a whole is lost at sea, and that’s fine. But I’m not sure their start to the season is, in and of itself, evidence to all that. Let’s go in order.

  • Egor Dëmin missed all of training camp and most of preseason with a plantar fascia injury, and is already entrenched in the rotation eight games in.
  • Nolan Traore is a small, skinny guard with a questionable shot who doesn’t turn 20 until next offseason. He is not ready for serious NBA action right now, and is primed to play plenty of G League minutes. Does that speak poorly to Brooklyn’s decision to take him at #19? Perhaps. But not to their development plan.
  • Drake Powell dealt with left knee tendinopathy all summer, then sprained his ankle in Brooklyn’s first game of the season, then re-injured it the next time he played. He’s appeared in two of three games in which he was available.
  • Ben Saraf, the #26 overall pick, started Brooklyn’s first five games of the season, and in that time, he was comfortably and unsurprisingly the NBA’s worst starting point guard. He’s currently out of the rotation.
  • Danny Wolf, dealing with a sprained ankle, has only been available for two games. He received garbage time minutes in one of them.

Is that ideal? No. Brooklyn’s coaches certainly knew Saraf was going to struggle mightily, yanking him after those predictable struggles is a bit strange. And Danny Wolf is 21; he has to play soon. But it’s been just eight games of an 82-game season. Injuries (and some trades, possibly) will befall this roster. It’s undeniably frustrating to watch a team tank for the second year in a row and not play the fruits of that first tank-year, but there is a ton of basketball to be played. The only two rookies that have been entirely healthy and scratched from the rotation are two of the youngest players in the whole 2025 NBA Draft.

The Brooklyn Nets very well might have messed up their five first-round selections last June. Still, it’s too early to say that for sure, and it’s definitely too early to say they are messing up the development of these five rookies.

Egor Dëmin​


Season stats: 7 GP, 18.9 MPG, 5.3/3.0/2.6 slash line, 33/32/75 shooting splits. 86% of shots from three. 1.6 TO + 1.9 PF + 1.3 stocks (stl+blk) per game.

Stats this week: 3 GP, 16.7 MPG, 2.3/1.7/2.7 slash line. 3-of-14 from floor, 1-of-9 from deep. One turnover, two fouls, seven stocks.

The scariest part of Dëmin’s prospect profile was never the 3-point shooting, but rather the overall lack of burst, lateral mobility, flexibility, juice … you get the idea. These deficiencies impact every facet of the game, of course, but they are really exposed when the #8 overall pick has to zone up on the weak-side then close out to an athlete like Terrence Shannon Jr. which he does here…

OKAY TJ 👀 pic.twitter.com/bAZDtec2JB

— Minnesota Timberwolves (@Timberwolves) November 4, 2025

Oy.

Dëmin has had a few of these moments through his first seven games, and will have plenty more over the course of his rookie season. You’ve heard the spiel many times: In the modern NBA, high pick-and-roll takes place 35 feet away from the rim, and both corners are often filled with deadly shooters. That is so much ground to cover, so much space to close. Without stop-and-start athleticism, you don’t have a chance.

Defense might end up being the biggest challenge for Dëmin to overcome, but to that end, he had a rollercoaster week. Not just downs like the closeout above, but ups in the form of those seven stocks (stl+blk) you see above, and even more deflections…

Egor Demin's first 106 Minutes: 3 Stocks
Final 10 Minutes Vs MIN: 3 stocks

Encouraging to see some of the defensive playmaking we saw in college, using his size to his advantage pic.twitter.com/gBV7GpahKS

— Nets Film Room (@NetsFilm) November 4, 2025

I love that second clip, where he stunts at Naz Reid in order to bait a pass, which he then gets his hand on. It may seem counterintuitive for a player with such poor foot-speed to be aggressive and take chances on defense, but with Egor’s 6’10” wingspan, that might be his best path to defensive productivity in the league.

Regarding the offense, Head Coach Jordi Fernández had this to say after Monday’s loss to the Minnesota Timberwolves: “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 find himself or create a shot for himself.”

What does that mean exactly? Well, what’s the difference between these two plays?

On the first one, Dëmin doesn’t wait for Day’Ron Sharpe to set a solid screen, meaning his primary defender can get through it, no problem. And as we’ve established Dëmin doesn’t have the on-ball juice just yet to shake a defender here, so he travels.

On the second play however, he gets a solid screen, and a little hesitation dribble is all he needs to hit the paint, collapse the defense, and let his vision do the rest. Dëmin’s development will not leap off the screen in year one. He won’t go from getting ripped at half-court to crossing people up and scoring in isolation. But keep an eye on how he can run defenders into screens; and again, hopefully Fernández & co. start to draw up more designed plays for him.

Egor Dëmin had a rough shooting week. He shot 1-of-9 from deep and most of those misses were not close. But the week overall? Not too bad, really.

Ben Saraf​


Stats: N/A

Ben Saraf played a couple garbage time minutes against the Timberwolves, but is otherwise removed from the real rotation for now. When asked why he thought this was the case, he responded quite clearly: “I think he [Jordi] wants more on the defensive side. I think the last two games, I had, like, a couple of breakdowns on defense. So, it’s really important for the team. I think this is the main thing.”

We know Jordi isn’t punishing him for missing shots, so I have no doubt this is true. The Nets are just trying to drill that Saraf cannot snap out of focus, even for a second. He’s already facing a deficit in (once again) athleticism. On this play…

…Nic Claxton goes to double Alperen Şengün. I’d bet my bottom dollar that Fernández outlined pregame — notice this play occurs before the first media timeout — that the Nets were to on send aggressive help at Şengün in the post if he had a mismatch. Sure, you’re doubling off KD here, but you can’t double off the other side and leave a totally empty corner. Saraf has to be behind Clax and rotate to Durant more quickly.

Saraf will struggle chasing more athletic guards through screens and sprinting around the perimeter (like Dëmin), but he can’t drift out of focus and miss Nic Claxton going to double. Harsh? Sure, but that’s the message.

“I feel like I’m a capable defensive player, I think I just need a little more focus on some possessions. Yeah, I need to be there.

The Rest​


Though I largely defended the early-season strategy above, I sure do wish the other rookies were playing more. I might have jumped the gun with this column here, huh. At least Drake Powell did this before tweaking his ankle yet again…

Drake Powell with a strong take and finish on the fastbreak. His transition play finishing was the best part of his offensive game at North Carolina. pic.twitter.com/EwGTxNrXxx

— Erik Slater (@erikslater_) November 2, 2025

The next chance Jordi Fernández will have to play Egor Dëmin and some of his draft mates is on Friday night, when the Brooklyn Nets host the Detroit Pistons at 7:30 p.m. ET, beginning NBA Cup play.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-anal...n-nets-rookies-playing-time-rookie-report-two
 
Nets vs. Pistons: NBA Cup debut and chance at a winning streak

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Well, the days of fighting for that first win is officially over! Coming off a much needed 112-103 victory against the Pacers, led by a Michael Porter Jr. 32 point night in 35 minutes, the Nets were able to finally get a W after being the only team left without one. Again, we aren’t expecting much this season, but little stuff like this can matter down the road.

This time, the Nets will be taking on a much better Eastern Conference opponent in the Detroit Pistons. Placed as a second seed in the conference just behind the Chicago Bulls (yes you heard that right), the Pistons are a young team that already have their cornerstone pieces for the future. The Nets will look to stand their ground against these players in their first action of this year’s NBA Cup.

Where To Watch

Catch the action at 7:30 p.m. ET on the YES Network and streaming on the Gotham Sports App.

Injuries

Cam Thomas (hamstring), Drake Powell (ankle), and Haywood Highsmith (knee) will be out. Three of the Nets first round picks — Nolan Traore, Ben Saraf and Danny Wolf — will play their first game for the Long Island Nets at Nassau Coliseum. That game starts a half-hour earlier and can be seen on the G League website.

For the Pistons, Tobias Harris (ankle), Jaden Ivey (right knee discomfort), and Marcus Sasser (hip), will be out.

The Game

Just take a second to look at these two statlines. In the Pistons last victory against the Utah Jazz, Cade Cunningham went for 31 points and 10 assists while Jalen Duren went for 22 points and 22 rebounds. In the same night.

After being the first overall pick in the 2021 draft, Cade Cunningham has lived up to the hype and has transitioned himself into an arguable top five point guard in the league. Over the last five games, he’s averaging 28 and 11.5 assists, at 6’7”. Not only has he been great, the Pistons have centered lots of young talent for him to flourish. Other than the promising Duren, Detroit rosters a Thompson twin, that alone speaks for itself. They also have Ron Holland, who is reminiscent of the toughness Detroit basketball was once known for because of his willingness to get his hands dirty to go along with elite athleticism.

Without Cam Thomas, it will be hard to find opportunities to score against this team. Noah Clowney will have to step once again, as he did so well in his 17-point effort against the Pacers. If the tandem of Terance Mann and Egor Demin can find a way to create opportunities for Clowney and Clax, as well as themselves, they can see some success against Detroit. Michael Porter Jr. will be Michael Porter Jr., so I’m not necessarily worried about him.

Player to Watch: Ausar Thompson

If it wasn’t for his brother having the spotlight, Ausar Thompson would be labeled as the most athletic player in the NBA. You have to keep an eye on him on both ends of the floor, because Thompson will spend one second locking down your team’s star player on one end and then catching an alley oop dunk on the other. Averaging close to 14 points and 6.9 rebounds, Ausar is taking a leap this season after the playoff run the Pistons had last year, and this is surely not good for the league.

Max Sturm of Detroit Bad Boys laid out how he’s improved.

Outside of Cunningham, the biggest individual takeaway is the on-ball creation of Ausar Thompson. While he has always possessed tantalizing talent, Ausar often struggled to maintain control during his first two seasons and appeared unsure of himself with the ball in his hands. With Jaden Ivey, Marcus Sasser, and Caris LeVert all missing significant time due to injury to start the year, Thompson has been thrust into an on-ball role by necessity, and I don’t think anyone could have imagined the returns being much better to this point. The handle is noticeably tighter, and his decision-making has been a revelation for this team.

From the Vault

Detroit is Motown and Motown is Detroit but one of the untold stories of Hitsville, U.S.A. was the support of Ed Sullivan who famously had an 8 p.m. Sunday slot on CBS. He was legendary for his ability to spot talent and promote it on his show which was watched by tens of millions each week. Most famously, the Beatles 1964 U.S. debut attracted 73 million viewers. He also was resolute in promoting black artists particularly those of Motown’s impresario Berry Gordy.

Here’s a compilation of the top ten Motown acts that appeared on Sullivan.

Enjoy.

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


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-game...-nba-cup-debut-and-chance-at-a-winning-streak
 
Brooklyn Nets fall in NBA Cup opener to Detroit Pistons, lose 125-107

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The Brooklyn Nets moved around a bit easier on Friday night. For the first time all year, they walked into the Barclays Center fresh off a victory and free from the mental shackles that come from having a goose egg in your win column. While we can’t expect them to be there often this year, it set the scene for a jubilant start to the weekend.

In a rebuilding season, you have to at least be happy with that.

The evening also brought Nets fans their first dosage of NBA Cup action this season. In the tournament’s two-year run, Brooklyn has yet to advance past the group round, but their efforts to change that this evening were clear from the jump.

Brooklyn began the game 6-of-8 from deep, largely thanks to Noah Clowney, who has continued to tell the law of averages to ante up after his slow start to the season from three. The stretch big hit four triples in less than four minutes to start the game, propelling the Nets into an early 19-9 lead.

Noah Clowney made four threes in less than four minutes to open this game.

He is on pace for 153 points against the Pistons tonight. pic.twitter.com/nTQiQMT4Zz

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) November 8, 2025

Egor Dëmin, who made his first start of the season with Cam Thomas in street clothes, even got in on the action with five first period points. The perfect shooting from floor? Nice to see. The location of the shots? Really nice to see. The eighth overall pick splashed a three and finished inside in the opening frame.

I don’t want to make a mountain out of molehill here, but in fairness, concerns about his perimeter shooting percentage in college and shot volume in the paint to open the season were each both blown into Himalaya-sized proportions over the past six months. Just for kicks, Dëmin also threw four assists in the first.

Egor Demin with a drive and finish + a nice assist in the pick-and-roll to start the game. pic.twitter.com/b6WbTHntwj

— Erik Slater (@erikslater_) November 8, 2025

Dëmin wasn’t the only rook to receive some early burn. Drake Powell, back again from an ankle injury, got some first period minutes with Day’Ron Sharpe, Ziaire Williams, Tyrese Martin, and Michael Porter Jr., even operating at the point for a few. The lineup may have been -6 in the first, but Powell looked confident pushing the ball down the floor, and most importantly, healthy.

Outside of Cade Cunningham’s made triple to start the scoring tonight, the heavily favored Pistons didn’t take their first lead until the 10:53 mark of the second. A flurry of fouls slowed the game down around that point, keeping it a one basket game for almost the entire quarter’s top half.

Energy spiked again though around the five minute mark when Clowney and Dëmin returned with some encore sequences to their first period performances. Almost immediately after checking in, Egor hit a motion triple before taking Ausur Thompson’s lunch a few sequences later. Clowney’s already made notable strides putting the ball on the floor and attacking defenders this season, though none were more impressive than this take on the 6’6”, 220-pound Cunningham…

How bout it Noah Clowney pic.twitter.com/aj1gtAo8cC

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) November 8, 2025

“I love him,” Dëmind said of Clowney postgame. “I think it’s really important for me, personally, and for the team, to make sure that he has this confidence to keep shooting, and everybody knows that he can shoot the ball extremely well, as he did today, as I said, in first two minutes of the game, and not just those stretches, but he can be consistent during the whole 46 minutes, right? So I think that’s amazing, that he keeps shooting.”

What seemed like mere a hot shooting night for Clowney felt like it was about to turn into a career-game after he started putting the vision on display in the second as well…

Dude is really doing it all tonight pic.twitter.com/TDLMhIctnV

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) November 8, 2025

That MPJ long ball momentarily gave the Nets back the lead, although Caris LeVert, playing in his eighth game as a Barclays Center visitor tonight, buried his own triple to give Detroit a lead just before halftime. Jalen Duren, who beat Clowney by one point to lead all scorers at the break, padded it to give himself 18 and the Pistons a 60-55 lead.

The second half’s fist two minutes featured five turnovers between the two teams, making it a sloppy restart by all accounts. But the Nets more often than not ended up the wrong side of those exchanges, as Detroit slid into a 12-2 start in the third, giving them their largest lead of the contest at the time.

As they did in the first, the Pistons continued to punish Brooklyn inside, blowing their paint advantage up to from 20 to 48 points by the end of the period. Porter Jr. did his best to keep Brooklyn within reach, scoring all eight of Brooklyn’s opening points in the second half. He also drove and dished to Nic Claxton on one play, getting him to the line and Brooklyn to it’s ninth and 10th points. He even made a few plays at the other end, covering down low as the Nets continued to blitz screens.

However, Brooklyn couldn’t get anything going outside of that. While Detroit shot 57% from the field in the frame, the Nets posted .211/.200 splits and were unable to find a proper grip on the ball. After Cunningham poked one away from Sharpe in the high post and flushed it at the other end, the scoreboard showed the Pistons up by an 84-68 score with 3:23 to play in the third. The deficit swelled to 20 by the end the quarter.

“They ended up finding their rhythm, we knew what they do with their ball pressure and their physicality, and we didn’t handle it very well, especially in quarters two and three,” Jordi Fernández said. “I think we started with the mindset of running and letting it fly. We saw at the beginning, great energy, and you know that this team, especially good teams, playoff teams, that they’re going to punch and punch hard, and you got to be reay to take it and then respond. At one point we dropped our shoulders, and I told the guys, I’m proud of their effort, we just gotta be better.”

The Nets have already established a reputation for staging ferocious comebacks, which J.B. Bickerstaff even alluded to pregame, but after the Nets missed their first four field goal attempts begin the fourth, it became clear we wouldn’t experience that today. Dëmin and Clowney had cooled off, leaving the Brooklyn offense on life support and depending on MPJ heaves like a pacemaker. Meanwhile, Detroit continued its onslaught on the interior with Duran reaching 30 points just after the eight minute mark of the fourth.

Porter Jr. finished the game with 28 points , two assits, and five rebounds after shooting 8-17 from the field and 5-10 from deep. Clowney, adding only two in the second half, got to 19 points shooting 5-13 from the field and 4-8 from deep. Claxton quietly enjoyed another solid outing, chipping in 17 points, eight boards, two dimes, and a rejection. Dëmin reached eight points, seven assists, and three boards shooting 3-8 from the field and 2-5 from deep.

E.J. Liddell and Tyson Etienne checked in around the four minute mark as the Nets officially waived their white flag. The teams collectively kicked the can that was Detroit’s 20-point lead down the road during the game’s final possessions, getting the Pistons a wealthy point differential advantage for potential Cup standings tiebreakers, and the Nets back in first place for early tankathon sims.

Final: Detroit Pistons 125, Brooklyn Nets 107

Injury Report​


Cam Thomas met with the media to speak on his hamstring injury pregame. The Nets announced before tipoff that he’d be re-evaluated in 3-4 four weeks. Read his commentary and more here.

Clowney exited momentarily in the second half but returned later. Postgame, he said that he rolled his ankle, but didn’t seem too concerned.

“Maybe I’ll feel it in the morning, maybe not,” he said. “But it wasn’t like I landed on somebody’s foot or something like that, so I think I’ll be fine.”

Milestone Watch​

  • Noah Clowney’s 13 points in the first period tonight were his second-most points in any quarter of his career (14 in the 2Q on 4/3/24 vs. IND). Then, his 17 points in the first half were his most points scored in any half in his career (previous high: 15 points twice, both vs. Detroit at Barclays Center – first half on 1/8/25 and second half on 4/6/24).
  • With his second offensive rebound tonight, Nic Claxton passed George Johnson for sole possession of 10th in franchise history in offensive rebounds (713).

Next Up​

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The Nets will head across the river next to play the New York Knicks on Sunday afternoon. This “rivalry” hasn’t always felt like one, with neither team contending at the same time since the Nets made the move to Brooklyn. That won’t change this Sunday, but the two teams will do battle regardless. Tipoff is scheduled for 6 p.m. EST.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-scor...s-pistons-125-107-noah-clowney-michael-porter
 
Long Island Nets defeat Capital City Go-Go, 109-102, behind Ben Saraf, Danny Wolf

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The Long Island Nets kicked off the 2025-26 G League season on Friday night, facing off against the Capital City Go-Go, the Washington Wizards affiliate, at the Nassau Coliseum. The game would be about as competitive as it gets, with each team getting the better of one another throughout. However, in the end, Long Island would walk away with the hard-fought victory, 109-102.

But that wasn’t the big news, of course. This season, more than any in the 10-year history of the Nets G League affiliate, is about development and by night’s end, fans in Brooklyn as well as Long Island had to be pleased with the result, as as they were at Barclays Center with the play of Egor Demin and Noah Clowney.

Brooklyn sent three of the five first round picks — the Flatbush 5 — to Uniondale for playing time and two of them — Ben Saraf and Danny Wolf — looked very good and even Nolan Traore, the sixth youngest of the 539 players on NBA contracts, had his moments.

Chief among them was Saraf, the 6’6” combo guard the Nets took with the 26th pick in the 2025 Draft.

There were a number of factors that played into the win but none were bigger than Ben Saraf’s history-making performance. Saraf came off the bench for Long Island in this one and made a little bit franchise history as he became the first bench player to notch more 20 points in his debut. Saraf finished with 21 points, which led the team, and connected on seven of his 13 shot attempts. He also connected on one of his three from deep, and connected on four of his six shots from the foul line.

However, Saraf’s big offensive output didn’t just stop at the points. The 19-year-old Israeli also picked up four rebounds and three assists, getting his teammates involved. To round out his impressive day, Saraf picked up two steals and even had a block to his credit.

Long Island Nets head coach, Mfon Udofia, on Ben Saraf’s history-making game.@NetsDaily #StrongIsland #NetsWorld pic.twitter.com/ugMjCMA77L

— Scott Mitchell (@Scott44Mitchell) November 8, 2025

“It’s who he is,” Long Island head coach Mfon Udofia tells ND of Saraf. “Whether he starts or he comes off the bench, he wants to play. He finished the game, and he didn’t complain, not for one minute. He just had fun, had great camaraderie with his teammates, and shared the ball, moved the ball, so it was good to see. Happy he made history.”

For fellow rookie Danny Wolf, it was a tale of two halves as well as two cities. The first half was one that he’d like to forget, as he only connected on two of his 10 shot attempts, including whiffing on all three of his shots from deep. He also turned the ball over three times in the half and picked up two personal fouls. He looked to be a liability for Long Island.

However, at halftime, something clicked for the near 7-footer, and the second half was all Wolf’s game. The 21-year-old, taken one spot after Saraf in the Draft, finished with a double-double, picking up 15 points and 11 rebounds. He also had two assists, two steals, and two blocks. His 15 points were good enough for fourth-best on the team. To Wolf’s credit, he went into the half knowing he had to fix something; he fixed it and had a hell of a second half. Wolf became the eighth player in franchise history to record a double-double in his first career G League game.

“Obviously, getting the win was great. It wasn’t the prettiest of games on a lot of fronts, but we were able to guard the ball in the second half, and that’s what led us to getting the victory,” Wolf told ND. “For myself, especially, in the first half just kind of getting sped up and was just trying to do a little bit too much, and then I settled in in the second half. I got to my spots, and my shots just weren’t falling. I have to live with that and trust my work… My teammates picked it up, and a lot of the guys had a great game, so that was a good one.”

Brooklyn Nets rookie, Danny Wolf, on his double-double performance, finding his game in the second half, and more.@NetsDaily #StrongIsland #NetsWorld pic.twitter.com/LFCXTQvM4t

— Scott Mitchell (@Scott44Mitchell) November 8, 2025

While he no doubt liked his own numbers, Wolf said it was the win that mattered.

“I don’t care about stats. I got to my spots, and just some of the shots I threw that I was comfortable with were falling, and just continuing to rebound the ball,” Wolf continues. “Especially when I’m a five. Even at the forward, just rebound the ball, throw it in, start the break, and again, the one that really matters is the win.”

“It was great, like you said, the tale of two halves,” Udofia said. “Our big thing with Danny is he just has to play hard for 48 minutes. He has to rebound at a high level, sprint the floor at a high level, and have ball pressure at a high level. He did that in the second half. He didn’t worry about the offense so much; he just wanted to do the little things, and he did a really good job in the second half. I’m just happy for him.”

Long Island Nets head coach, Mfon Udofia, on Danny Wolf’s performance and looking ahead.@NetsDaily #StrongIsland #NetsWorld pic.twitter.com/5hfGwovfv2

— Scott Mitchell (@Scott44Mitchell) November 8, 2025

The third piece of the Flatbush 5, Nolan Traore, had a hot-and-cold game for Long Island. He got the start, alongside Wolf, and connected on just four of his 16 shots, for 12 points. However, he made some adjustments and got his teammates involved, finishing the game with seven assists, which led the team. Traore also finished the game with two rebounds, but also had four turnovers, one behind Wolf.

Following the game, ND had the chance to catch up with Traore and speak about his first game with Long Island, his hopes for the season, and what it meant for him to get his teammates involved and lead the team in the assists category.

“It was great to play with this team,” Traore said . “We have some good guys… I had fun and we got the win.” Traore also tells ND that his major goal, whether it be with Brooklyn or Long Island, is to get better every day.“ For Traore, it’s also important to get his teammates involved. ”I’m just running the right play every time, so I’m glad that I can help the team win and I think that’s a good thing.“

Brooklyn Nets rookie, Nolan Traore, on his first game with Long Island, his hopes for the rest of the year, and being a playmaker.@NetsDaily #StrongIsland #NetsWorld pic.twitter.com/rXd7dWpZ0h

— Scott Mitchell (@Scott44Mitchell) November 8, 2025

Returning player Tre Scott picked up 18 points, connecting on 8 of his nine shots. Nate Williams, the 6’6” wing who the Nets acquired in the trade for Drew Timme, also had an impressive performance, picking up 18 points of his own, landing three of his six shots from deep. Yuri Collins, the G League’s best playmaker last season, had a quiet game by his standards, finishing with only eight points and four assists.

The Long Island team had a hard time slowing down Capital City’s Alondes Williams, a former Nets two-way and Tyler Williams, who scored 24 and 23 points, respectively.

Long Island’s bench got off to a strong start in the first quarter, outscoring Capital City’s reserves 17-7 to close the quarter ahead by a point, 26-25. Capital City battled back in the second frame, outscoring Long Island 38-28 in the period. The Go-Go closed the first half ahead by nine, 63-54.

In the third, Capital City, came back, outscoring Long Island 29-20 to erase the Go-Go’s 14-point lead and tie the game at 83 heading into the final frame. The Nets pulled away in the fourth, outscoring the Go-Go 26-19 behind Ben Saraf’s 11 points in the period. It’s not an exaggeration to say Saraf simply took over. Long Island finished with 33 points off turnovers, marking the most points scored off turnovers in a season opener ever and went on to defeat Capital City.

Final score: Long Island Nets 109, Capital City Go-Go 102.

All in all, this was a very positive first step for Long Island. Not the prettiest game, but Long Island got it done on the backs of their vauned rookies. “We just have to keep getting better,” coach Udofia told NetsDaily. “It’s going to be a daily approach and just keep getting 1% better every day, and we’ll go from there.”

Next Up


Long Island returns to the court on Sunday, November 9th, at the Nassau Coliseum as they face off with the Capital City Go Go in a rematch. The game tips off at 3:00 p.m. EST and can be watched on NBA TV and the Gotham Sports app.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/longislan...ity-go-go-109-102-behind-ben-saraf-danny-wolf
 
LIVE DISCUSSION: Detroit Pistons at Brooklyn Nets, 7:30 PM ET

Can the Nets go streaking in the opening round of the Emirates Cup.


Can the Brooklyn Nets put together a winning streak after their first win of the season two nights ago in Indiana where they beat the Pacers. It’s the opening round of the NBA’s Emirates Cup play/

KEY INFO

Who:
Detroit Pistons (6-2) at Brooklyn Nets (1-7)

When: 7:30 PM ET

Watch: YES Network, Gothem Sports App

THE GAME


Well, the days of fighting for that first win is officially over! Coming off a much needed 112-103 victory against the Pacers, led by a Michael Porter Jr. 32 point night in 35 minutes, the Nets were able to finally get a W after being the only team left without one. Again, we aren’t expecting much this season, but little stuff like this can matter down the road.

This time, the Nets will be taking on a much better Eastern Conference opponent in the Detroit Pistons. Placed as a second seed in the conference just behind the Chicago Bulls (yes you heard that right), the Pistons are a young team that already have their cornerstone pieces for the future. The Nets will look to stand their ground against these players in their first action of this year’s NBA Cup.

-Jordan Greene

INJURY REPORT

  • Thomas OUT – left hamstring
  • Highsmith OUT – Right Knee Surgery, Injury Recovery
  • Traore OUT – on assignment, G League
  • Wolf OUT – on assignment, G League
  • Ben Saraf OUT – on assignment, G League
  • Powell PROBABLE – right ankle sprain


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-detroit-pistons-at-brooklyn-nets-730-pm-et
 
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