LIVE DISCUSSION: Miami Heat at Brooklyn Nets, 7:30 PM ET

gettyimages-2249868806.jpg


Welcome back! It’s been a few days, but in case you forgot: Brooklyn is coming off a 45-point win (franchise-high) against the Bucks (without Giannis). Steve Hetzel got his first win ever as a head coach, while Jordi Fernandez stayed home with an illness. He should be back tonight.

KEY INFO

  • WHO: Miami Heat (14-12) at Brooklyn Nets (7-18)
  • WHEN: 7:30 PM ET
  • WATCH: YES Network / Gotham Sports App

Injury Report


Heat (Out):

  • Tyler Herro — (toe)
  • Nikola Jovic — (elbow)
  • Pelle Larsson — (hip/ankle)

Nets (Out):

  • Cam Thomas — (hamstring)
  • Haywood Highsmith — (knee)
  • E.J. Liddell (ankle)
  • Ben Saraf — (illness)


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...cussion-miami-heat-at-brooklyn-nets-730-pm-et
 
Nets vs. Raptors preview: headed north to meet cold team

gettyimages-2252283265.jpg


Jordi had said it best after Brooklyn’s 106-95 loss to the Miami Heat.

“Little mistakes that you can correct, and shots going in or not — I’m happy with the looks that we had that didn’t go in. So sometimes, a little bit of that is the difference, right?” Thank you for the quote Collin.

When you have a team as young as this, there will be nights where shots are simply not falling. But if the effort is there, as Jordi seemed to think that it was, you can handle a loss like the one the Nets had a couple of nights ago. As we should know better than any other franchise, it is a marathon, not a sprint. And when you’re rebuilding over a number of years, that marathon can sure stretch out.

Tonight, the Nets will look to get back in the winning column against the Toronto Raptors, who are coming into this contest with a not-so-pleasant loss to the Jaylen Brown-less Celtics. Although the Raptors have the fifth best record in the East, their 3-7 in their last 10 and have a worse record at home (6-7) vs. the road (9-5.)

Where to Watch

Check out the action at 6:00 p.m. sharp on the YES Network, while also streaming on the Gotham Sports App. For out-of-towners, it’s League Pass.

Injury Report

Cam Thomas (left hamstring), Drake Powell (that right ankle again), and Haywood Highsmith (right knee) will all be out. Ben Saraf, Tyson Etienne, and E.J. Liddell will be out on Long Island duties at the G League Winter Showcase in Orlando.

For the Raptors, R.J. Barrett (knee) and Jakob Poeltl (back) will be out.

The Game

The loss against the Celtics was not a good look for the Raptors. First, the Celtics did not have Jayson Tatum or Jaylen Brown. Second, the main options (besides Brandon Ingram who scored 24 points) did not show up. Scottie Barnes went 5-of-15 for a mediocre 12 points, Ja’Kobe Walter, who is not seeing the same amount of action that he saw during his rookie season, only had seven points in 15 minutes of action, and Immanuel Quickly had an abysmal three points in 32 minutes. This is the second game in a row where Quickly went for less than 10 points while playing over 25 minutes.

The Raptors still have a respectable 17-12 record, which is good for fifth in the Eastern Conference. Which means that the Nets still have to look to attack.

Nic Claxton and Michael Porter Jr. could be in the running to have a big game due to the Raptors lack of size. Don’t be surprised if he is able to get in the lane for paint touches in which he can get his own while finding others for open looks. He’s averaging a career high 4.5 assists per game.

Player To Watch: Brandon Ingram

When you look at a player like Brandon Ingram, you realize that consistency can make players underrated in a sense. This season, Ingram has been averaging 22 points per game on 47% from the field. He has been averaging at least 20 for seven seasons now. With his long frame, Ingram can get his shot off whenever he wants. It will be tough to defend him, which is why the Nets should take the approach of what they will willing to give up instead of what they can take away.

As CBS Sports reported Sunday, Ingram has often saved the Raptors and is happ7 to rise to the occasion.

Ingram co-led the Raptors in scoring with Sandro Mamukelashvili, and the former also tied a season high with seven dimes during Saturday’s loss. Ingram continues to carry the scoring load for the Raptors this season, even more so in the absence of RJ Barrett (knee), who has not played since Nov. 23 against the Nets. In the 12 games without Barrett in the lineup, Ingram has averaged 24.1 points, 5.9 rebounds, 3.8 assists and 2.5 threes over 35.8 minutes per game.

From the Vault

Greg Biffle, the beloved NASCAR driver who died this week in a private plane crash in North Carolina, was not only known for his championship driving skills but his humanitarian work in the hills of his native North Carolina, raising money for the less fortunate and last year organizing a helicopter ferry service when rural parts of the state became inaccessible during

I'm at a complete loss for words.

Greg Biffle was one of the most heroic volunteers during the aftermath of Hurricane Helene.

For 2 weeks straight, Greg flew his own personal helicopter every single day to rescue victims who were stranded in the mountains.

A true hero. pic.twitter.com/SDC7kXm1Sz

— Matt Van Swol (@mattvanswol) December 18, 2025

Like a lot of pro athletes and sports figures, Biffle did a lot of his community work outside the limelight. For him, it was a Carolina charity that helped foster children, the extent of his help not known till after his death. Rest in peace.

More reading: Raptors Republic, SB Nation NBA, New York Post, New York Daily News, Clutch Points, Nets Wire, Steve’s Newsletter, City of Nets


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-game...aptors-preview-headed-north-to-meet-cold-team
 
Nets defense shines again vs the Raptors, winning 96-81

imagn-27867429.jpg


“Defense wins championships” is a cliché as old as you’ll find in sports. That might stem from older fans, nostalgic for low scores and clinging to what they grew up on. People might just say it at the sake of sounding different since average viewers are often more engaged by offense, regardless of the sport. Sometimes, like with our NBA champ last year, it’s just god’s honest truth.

I don’t think think the Nets will win a championship this year. I don’t think anyone thinks the Nets will win a championship this year. But defense did help them beat the Toronto Raptors tonight.

Most positive conversations around the Nets lately have started at the defensive end, and that’s not just because they only scored 95 points on Thursday. In the month of December, Brooklyn’s posted the second best defensive rating in the league. The defending champs are the only team they trail, no pun intended.

It’s easy to scoff at a stat like that for a team with only seven wins. It’s hard to get excited about numbers when the one in your win column isn’t very high. But while that may be true, the Nets proved their defensive datum legitimate this evening, and wasted little time getting started as well.

In the first half, the Nets held the Raptors to just 39 first half points, a low in any half for the season. They’d also go on to give up their fewest in a game all year. But started in the first period, when the Nets came away with five steals and forced Toronto to shoot just 7-18 from the field.

“It’s credit to the coaches, to find a way to break things down, when we have time to practice, watch film with the players, do their 1-0 work, embracing the defensive end of the floor, and especially the players, because they’re the ones putting the work in and buying into it,” Fernández said of the defensive turnaround postgame. “We didn’t start well at all defensively. It was very poor. We didn’t buy into a lot of things. Obviously, we have evolved and made some adjustments, but now it feels like we have a good rhythm with our physicality, with our communication, getting multiple stops in a row and making winning plays.”

Brooklyn also flipped the script at the other end in the first, specifically on Toronto. Despite the Raptors being a top five team in transition points per game this season, the Nets outscored them on the break 9-0 in the opening frame. Much of it started with Noah Clowney…

Noah Clowney doing a good job protecting the rim early…putting BKN in position to score via the break pic.twitter.com/2yLXAhdct4

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) December 21, 2025

Toronto’s live ball turnovers set the Nets up for many of those points, but so did Nolan Traoré. It was only natural that the member of the Flatbush Five known for his speed was a major contributor in Brooklyn’s fast break offense tonight, throttling it forward in the period’s latter half like a french sports car. The Brooklyn Bugatti, if you will, certainly made the most of his first quarter burn with Drake Powell out, appearing in just the seventh game of his career…

Nolan Traoré speed is on display here in the first. Gets the step on Ja'Kobe Walter. pic.twitter.com/FkchlYlHUk

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) December 21, 2025

Traoré even nailed a deep triple and rejected a driving Immanuel Quickly a few minutes later — two plays which felt far beyond his range in more ways than one less than a month ago…

Deep triple for Nolan Traoré. He's making the most of his minutes so far tonight. pic.twitter.com/rXWAV05599

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) December 21, 2025
Add a block on Immanuel Quickley to the ledger… pic.twitter.com/626vpzuTJq

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) December 22, 2025

“He’s playing with great energy, and then also contributing on the offensive end, on the floor, you know, he’s shooting the ball,” Fernández said of Traoré who played 31 minutes for the Long Island Nets Saturday afternoon. “He’s shooting well, he’s getting to the free throw line. All those things are impressive and the sky is the limit for this kid.”

Evidenced by the above, Traoré stayed in to begin the second, where the Nets started with a 24-18 advantage. An 8-0 Raptor run to begin that period gave Toronto a quick lead, but the Nets recovered even quicken and without Nic Claxton, who had to exit and receive stitches after taking a shot to the face.

Often working around Day’Ron Sharpe screens, Michael Porter Jr. just kept doing what he does to keep the Nets ahead — scoring on the interior, exterior, and still doing it more efficiently than almost everyone expected him to this season. MPJ poured in 10 points in the second period while shooting 3-5 from the field and 2-4 from deep. He led all scorers at half with 17 points along with two assists, four rebounds, and a steal. The Nets went into the break with a 49-39 advantage…

17 points for MPJ at the half.#NBAAllStar votes count 3x today btw » https://t.co/HMJ1hUXd1C pic.twitter.com/KTtIvAMep0

— Brooklyn Nets (@BrooklynNets) December 22, 2025

Clowney and Porter Jr. scored Brooklyn’s first 11 points of the third to match Toronto’s offensive output through the period’s first six minutes. Ja’Kobe Walter must’ve missed the clips I posted earlier of the former’s rim defense, because he tried to end Clowney’s existence at one point in that quarter too.

That, or he did catch them, and hoped to get revenge for his rejected teammates. If that’s the case, he had as much luck as Harvey Dent did in The Dark Knight, coincidentally losing to the big guy wearing black…

WHAT A BLOCK BY NOAH CLOWNEY pic.twitter.com/2VBmqFJKNV

— Brooklyn Nets (@BrooklynNets) December 22, 2025

But Brooklyn’s fun in the period ended there. Whatever turnover bug Toronto picked up before tonight eventually proved itself to be contagious. The Nets matched their entire turnover output for the first half in the third alone with nine giveaways. They ended up with 22 for the game, making it a lone, but sizable blemish on the box score tonight.

Those mishaps set the stage for a Toronto comeback, and in the final minutes of the third, Quickley shined atop it, splashing two quick triple that capped off an 11-o run. That made it a two point game entering the fourth.

IQ WITH BACK-TO-BACK 3s 👌 pic.twitter.com/nPmM4men3a

— Toronto Raptors (@Raptors) December 22, 2025

Then, just a few seconds into the fourth, Quickley created two more buckets for Jamison Battle and Collin Murray-Boyles, which gave Toronto its first lead since the second.

After the scoreboard flashed Toronto’s advantage and a shouting, smiling Quickley, the guys from up north looked ready to truly own the first day of winter.

However, Egor Dëmin is from Russia — where the winter bites harder. His blood runs just as cold. Much like in the Boston game, he calmly knocked down a handful of shots after a Fernández timeout, seizing the moment and pushing the Nets back in front…

Egor Dëmin splashes it from near the logo… pic.twitter.com/vwg1BfnPNb

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) December 22, 2025

Not long after, Brooklyn then reinflated its lead to 13 points with 4:42 to go via a 16-2 run, started by Dëmin. With win No. 8 within reach, the Nets still valued their rebuild down the stretch, closing with a lineup that featured their rookie ball-handers in Dëmin and Troaré up top. Danny Wolf even logged some late minutes, assisting on Dëmin’s third three of the period, before Toronto waived the white flag with about two to go.

The Raptors, even with veterans like Scottie Barnes and Ingram on the floor, simultaneously went scoreless for seven minutes.

“Egor’s threes were huge,” Fernández said. “And then from there, I think everybody contributed to the win in that fourth quarter…We remained composed, and we fought all the way through, and it was, it was really good to see against a very good team.”

Dëmin finished with 16 points, three assists, five boards, and two steals. He shot 4-of-8 from deep and 6-of-10 overall. Porter Jr. led the way with 24 points, 11 rebounds, and five assists while shooting 9-of-18 from the field and 4—of-8 from deep as well. Clowney followed with 19 points, grabbing nine rebounds and those two blocks. Claxton (12 points) and Sharpe (8 points, 4 assists) also turned in fine nights, but Troaré’s progress was perhaps more considerable. He finished with eight points, two assists, a block, steal, and two rebounds while shooting 3-9 from the field and 1-4 from deep.

“I was waiting for this game and I just took the opportunity they gave me,” Traoré said. “I think I did good and I hope it will continue…I think we played for 48 minutes. We won three of the four quarters. So, I think it was a team win, and it was a very good game.”

Coming into tonight, Toronto looked like the tree that the seed that is the Brooklyn Nets will hope to grow into next year. The Raptors are a winning team, built on the backs of young talent and salary dumped players who are now (almost) justifying their contracts. That’s exactly who the Nets want to be, and what they’re building to.

But tonight, they beat them. Perhaps the seed is growing faster than we expected.

Final: Brooklyn Nets 96, Toronto Raptors 81

Milestone Watch​

  • After the Milwaukee game, where the Nets held the Bucks to 82 points on 12/14, this is the first time the Nets have held their opponent to 82 points or fewer multiple times in a season since 2018-19 (twice). With tonight accounted for, they’re also now holding opponents to 102.3 points per game in December, the fewest in the NBA.
  • Egor Dёmin had 16 points tonight against the Raptors on 6-10 FG and 4-8 3PT. It is his fifth game this season with at least four 3-pointers made, tied with Bojan Bogdanović in 2014-15 for the second most by a rookie in franchise history (Kerry Kittles, nine times, 1996-97).

Injury Report​


Pregame, Jordi Fernández provided a couple of updates on injured Nets, one short and one long. On Drake Powell, who on Thursday sprained his right ankle for the third time this season, but was walking around postgame without crutches, a boot, or a noteworthy limp: “Yeah, not concerned. He’ll be back soon.”

And on Cam Thomas, who missed his 19th straight game with a left hamstring injury: “CT is doing great. He had his 5-on-5 yesterday, looked really good. And he’s going to continue to do that until we feel he’s ready to go. Big part of the non-contact with the rest of the team. Like I said, played a 5-on-5, and it’s just a matter of when. We’re not targeting a specific date, but we want to see how he feels, and then go to the next session, see how he feels, and then keep building from there.”

Next Up​

gettyimages-2252292302.jpg

The Nets will head south for their third game of the season against the Philadelphia 76ers on Tuesday evening. Brooklyn failed to pull in a win against Philly in either of their first two contests, which were both held at the Barclays Center. Tipoff is scheduled for 7:00 p.m. EST.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-scor...vs-raptors-96-81-egor-demin-michael-porter-jr
 
LIVE DISCUSSION: Toronto Raptors at Brooklyn Nets, 6:00 PM ET

gettyimages-2252632485.jpg


The Nets are back again after another short break, looking for a bounce-back performance tonight against a Raptors team that has struggled to maintain consistency lately. This is the third meeting this season between the teams, with Toronto winning the previous two.


KEY INFO​

  • WHO: Toronto Raptors (17–12) @ Brooklyn Nets (7–19)
  • WHEN: 6:00 PM ET
  • WATCH: YES Network

INJURY REPORT

Toronto Raptors

  • RJ Barrett — Out (Knee)

Brooklyn Nets

  • Cam Thomas — Out (Hamstring)
  • Drake Powell — Out (Ankle)
  • Haywood Highsmith — Out (Knee)
  • Ben Saraf — Out (Illness)

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-toronto-raptors-at-brooklyn-nets-600-pm-et
 
Lichtenstein: Should Nets trade Michael Porter Jr.? It’s not that easy

gettyimages-2252457477.jpg


MIchael Porter Jr. is having the time of his life and that success is driving yet another debate in Nets World fan base between the tankers who want nothing less than one of the three franchise-changers at the top of the 2026 Draft and those tanking skeptics who want to let things play out, let the chips fall where they may come the Lottery in mid-May. After all, they note, the last two No. 1 picks were awarded to play-in teams, the Atlanta Hawks in 2024 and the Dallas Mavericks last year.

The argument on the tanking side of things is simple: lose now and win later, putting aside all the vagaries of the draft. Dumping Michael Porter Jr. — ASAP! — would just makes things sweeter: He could bring back yet another first rounder, maybe in 2026, the Holy Grail of draftniks and improve the team’s chances in the lottery come mid-May. But wait, writes Steve Lichtenstein, the former WFAN write who now has his own substack, Steve’s Newsletter, things aren’t so simple.

The 27-year-old 6’10” forward who won a chip with the Nuggets three seasons back is indeed having a great season. After the Nets win Sunday night vs. the Toronto Raptors, Porter is averaging 25.6 points on 49/40/82 shooting splits along with 7.4 boards and 3.3 assists. In the last month, the numbers have gotten even better: 28.7 on 51/47/79 splits with 7.6 boards and 4.0 assists. Them’s all-start numbers.

Moreover, Porter who was the fourth option in Denver has now become a leader on the league’s youngest team. So, as Lichtenstein writes, in normal times, all that would lead to a bidding war. But Lichtenstein argues these are not normal times for a lot of reasons, some but not all related to the CBA.

From my vantage, it just seems like teams are continuing to circle the 2023 Collective Bargaining Agreement with caution. General Managers would rather part with a kidney than a first-round pick. Well, unless they deem the acquired player a transformational piece or perhaps a sure thing that they believe will put them over the hump in their Championship quest.

Waiving-and-stretching bad contracts became the more preferable avenue than attaching an asset, especially a 1, just to dump it in a trade. Whereas the old salary cap rules had exceptions you could drive a truck through, those routes are now obstructed by aprons.

Indeed, the Nets attempt to pry a second first rounder in the 2026 Draft beyond their own failed last summer. There was no market, as Lichtenstein noted. The June draft is seen as even better than the 2025 Draft which looks very good a third of the way into the season. Sean Marks & co. did extract the Nuggets unprotected first in 2032 in the Porter deal, another first that became Drake Powell and three seconds in four salary dumps. At the moment, Brooklyn has 32 draft picks: 13 firsts, 10 of them tradeable, and 19 seconds, all tradeable.

Lichtenstein breaks down the reasons why he thinks MPJ may not return what fans want, another unprotected first, at least for the moment.

  • While Porter has proven himself “a complementary cog on a champion in Denver,” there are doubts that he can be the lead guy anywhere but Brooklyn where he is that guy be default, Lichtenstein argues. (As he does in each of his arguments, Lichtenstein notes his positives, not just his 40% career 3-point percentage but his 37.4% mark over 75 playoff games.)
  • Porter’s contract will be hard to move, particularly at the deadline when only one team — his — has cap space. Lichtenstein notes “Porter’s contract—he is owed $40.8 million next season on top of the $38.3 million cap number … has to be matched by an acquiring team in an in-season trade.”
  • MPG’s contract is so large that if the Nets require a first rounder in exchange, they’ll have to take on bad contracts to fill out a trade package. Lichtenstein notes that the Nets had to take on Terrance Mann’s three-year, $47 million deal to acquire the pick that became Powell as well as $1.1 million in cash. “It might not be so easy to put together a Porter proposal that sticks the Nets with a couple more of them.”

Lichtenstein doesn’t mention the salary cap floor the Nets would have to meet or face some real sanctions — like a prohibition on aggregating salaries — at the deadline. Brooklyn currently has less than $200,000 of a cushion in that calculation.

He also cites a number of trade scenarios that might be appealing to fans, but again argues they have downsides, putting aside the draft assets that might flow to Brooklyn. The deal that seems to have he most currency in fans’ trade machinery is one with Detroit.

The cleanest trade partner is Detroit, who has the $26.6 million expiring contract of Tobias Harris plus a selection of salary-matching reserves, including old friend Caris LeVert. The Pistons are 21st in the league in three-point field goal percentage. The question for them, though, is how much would Porter represent an improvement over their No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference lineup. Would they attach a 1 in such a scenario, because the Nets have no incentive to sign off without it? It’s not clear-cut.

The Pistons have all their own firsts available. but they’re likely to be Tlow considering how well their youngsters are playing.

Then, there’s the reality that the Oklahoma City Thunder may run away with the NBA championship and no mid-season deal, particularly one with unprotected firsts, is likely to change that.

[T]here might not be any urgency for rivals to go all-in. I don’t envision anyone pulling the trigger on such a move until much closer to the February 5 trade deadline. If then.

Lichtenstein concedes that without MPJ, the Nets are likely to lose more games — “Porter is such a gamebreaker that he can sway a couple of marginal games into the ’wins’” column.“ That, he adds, ”was Marks’ ‘mistake’ last season, according to the fervent pro-tanking fans, until it was too late.“

So, maybe it’s better to wait till the off-season when a lot of the issues cited by Lichtenstein will either go away or dissipate. Back when he was traded to the Nets last June, the punditry all suggested that that would be the plan: pump up his value after a highly successful season.

The worst-case scenario with an MPJ trade, absent him getting hurt, is that the Nets don’t get any offers that include first round picks. Lichtenstein, whose position on tanking in general is well known — he hates it, wonders whether it would be smarter just to wait and let things play out.

To a tanking agnostics, the worst outcome this time would be if Porter were dealt for second rounders. The Nets already have 19 of them over the next seven Drafts, including three in 2026. I’d rather they keep Porter and live with the lottery consequences if 1s are out of bounds.

It seems likely that any trade scenarios won’t materialize until closer to the February 5 — 3:00 p.m. ET — deadline five weeks from now. A lot can happen between now and then.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-rumo...ets-trade-michael-porter-jr-its-not-that-easy
 
The Long Forecast: Wagler, Yessoufou headline rising draft stock

gettyimages-2251293851.jpg


Welcome to Week 4 of The Long Forecast on NetsDaily.

With the New Year right around the corner and the college basketball season in full swing, the focus continues to sharpen on the NBA draft.

Each week brings new names and a clearer picture of which prospects are starting to separate themselves ahead of June.

Where do the Nets’ picks sit?


Since last week’s column, the Nets have gone 1-1 and still hold the league’s sixth-worst record at 8-19.

Currently, Brooklyn’s own second-round pick sits at No. 36 overall, while their additional night-two selection projects at No. 45, rising two spots since last week’s update. Here’s the latest mock draft from Tankathon and Ben Pfiefer.

Risers


Keaton Wagler, Illinois

Listed as a sleeper two weeks ago, Wagler has firmly established himself in riser territory as his draft stock has been soaring as of late.

Keaton Wagler is the only 6'6"+ freshman in the nation with a 15%+ assist rate shooting 40%+ from 3.

Thing I love most is his paint touch playmaking which is evident from his signature spin move.

Uses the spin to create space, draw help & does SO well finding shooters/cutters… pic.twitter.com/pAq6kOG62e

— Ryan Hammer🔨 (@ryanhammer09) December 23, 2025

Over the past three games, Wagler has been on a tear, averaging 21.3 points per game while shooting 54.2% from the field and knocking down a whopping 63% of his 3-point attempts, while adding 6.3 assists and 3.7 rebounds.

The 18-year-old also possesses great floor vision along with a high basketball IQ.

This is an awesome pass by Keaton Wagler. Really good example of his composure under pressure, floor vision, and ability to move weak side defenders with his eyes based on knowing where their rotations have to go. pic.twitter.com/rv92ivx5F1

— Tyler Metcalf (@tmetcalf11) December 23, 2025

If Wagler continues to play at this rate, come draft time, he could firmly be in the conversation as a top 10 selection.

Tounde Yessoufou, Baylor

My biggest concern about opening the season was Yessoufou’s offensive inconsistency.

That concern is starting to fade. and his draft status brightening. Yessoufou has shown real, tangible growth on that end of the floor, a promising sign for NBA evaluators as he continues to tap into an offensive ceiling that still feels far from fully realized.

Smooth Tounde Yessoufou footwork on the fadeaway middy pic.twitter.com/6iP6mEssLM

— NBA Draft Dude 🤙 (@CoreyTulaba) December 11, 2025

Over his past five games, Yessoufou is averaging 20.7 points, 5.7 rebounds, and 3.7 assists while shooting 51.2% from the field, highlighted by a 28-point performance against Southern.

Baylor's Tounde Yessoufou TORE IT UP Sunday afternoon

🔺28 POINTS🔥
🔺8/14 from the Field – 3/6 from 3PT Range🎯
🔺8 Rebounds🔥
🔺6 Assists🔥
🔺2 Steals🔥
🔺2 Blocks🔥

Highlights⬇️#Big12MBB | @BaylorMBB pic.twitter.com/Zd4zjixkt8

— Big 12 Studios (@big12studios) December 21, 2025

If this level of production holds, the conversation around Yessoufou will begin to shift drastically.

Fallers​


Nate Amnet, Tennessee

Placed in this category two weeks ago, Amnet finds himself trending downward once again.

Consistency has been the biggest issue on both ends of the floor this season. Over his past five games, Amnet is averaging 12.2 points, 6.2 rebounds, and 2.2 assists while shooting a grim 32.8% from the field, production that continues to raise questions as the season moves forward.

It is still early in his freshman year, and there is plenty of time for things to turn around. But if this is still the conversation a month from now, concern will be warranted. For now, it is certainly not a promising start to his college career.

Spotlight of the week​


Caleb Wilson, North Carolina

Caleb Wilson has looked the part from day one in Chapel Hill.

Through the season’s opening stretch, the UNC freshman has been one of the most productive players in the country, averaging 19.5 points and 10.4 rebounds while shooting 54.6% from the field.

UNC freshman Caleb Wilson puts up his ninth double-double in 13 games 🤯

21 PTS | 7-11 FG | 12 REB | 4 BLK | 3 STL | 24 MINS pic.twitter.com/sQJpnYYKgt

— B/R Hoops (@brhoops) December 23, 2025

The 6’10” forward plays with great pace, finishes through contact, and consistently wins on the glass. Most of his damage comes inside, but he’s comfortable facing up and attacking slower defenders, which gives scouts an idea of his offensive capabilities at the NBA level.

Caleb Wilson vs E. Carolina tonight..

21 PTS (7-11 FG, 7-13 FTs)
12 REBS
4 BLKS
3 STLS

Im not big into comparing games..

But as far as production in his own style.. he’s like Evan Mobley and Kevin Garnett.. again Impact wise.. his style of game is his own style of game…

If… pic.twitter.com/bPLvCnh4g6

— Frankie Vision (@Frankie_Vision) December 23, 2025

Wilson is playing with an identity most freshmen haven’t found yet.

Sleepers​


Blue Cain, Georgia

Through the season’s early stretch, Cain has been one of the most quietly productive players for Georgia.

The junior guard is averaging about 16 points, 5.5 rebounds, and 2.6 assists per game while shooting just over 50% from the field this year, showing not just scoring but a well-rounded impact on both ends.

Jeremiah Wilkinson and the Georgia Bulldogs.

Wilkinson put up a solid 26 vs Western Carolina last night, and the Bulldogs are now 10-1.

Wilkinson + Blue Cain is one of the sneakiest backcourts in America
pic.twitter.com/KqTYXLxZ4e

— College Basketball Headquarters (@CBBheadquarters) December 19, 2025

He’s been ultra-efficient, posting a 64% true shooting rate, a 3:1 assist-to-turnover ratio, and a 4% steal rate. Cain processes the game quickly and is a competent decision-maker.

His 3-point shot needs work, shooting the 3-ball at just over a 30% clip, but the touch is there — he’s converting 88% of his free throws, a strong indicator of shooting upside.

All aboard the Blue Cain Train 🚂

The Georgia JR is having a phenomenal season. Upped his scoring by over 6 PTS in less mpg. Has been uber efficient—sporting a 64% TS with a 3:1 ast:tov and a 4% STL%. Quick processor/decision maker. Shooting 74.5% at the rim with 8 dunks per… pic.twitter.com/oz2xjoRpoj

— NBA Draft Dude 🤙 (@CoreyTulaba) December 23, 2025

Cain is a fun prospect to watch as the NCAA season progresses.

This week’s watch guide​


Here is a list of games fans should tune into this week:

  • Illinois vs. Southern: December 29, 3 p.m. tip-off. Look out for Illinois’ Keaton Wagler.
  • Georgia vs. Long Island: December 28, 7 p.m. tip-off. Look out for Georgia’s Blue Cain.
  • Arkansas vs. James Madison: December 28, 8 p.m. tip-off. Look out for Arkansas’ Meleek Thomas.
  • Arizona vs. South Dakota State: December 28, 9 p.m. tip-off. Look out for Arizona’s Koa Peat.
  • Tennessee vs. South Carolina State: December 30, 8 p.m. tip-off. Look out for Tennessee’s Nate Amnet.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-draf...-wagler-yessoufou-headline-rising-draft-stock
 
Nets outwork 76ers for second straight win, 114-106, in Philly

gettyimages-2252683278.jpg


Even without the win totals, talent, or even fan pull in their own home city, the Brooklyn Nets pride themselves on their ability to show up for work every single day. The hard hats, plastic lunch pails, and steel-toed boots thing may be long gone from the NBA, with Blake Griffin now in the broadcast booth and Patty Mills out of the league, but its spirit lingers nonetheless some places… and one of them is in Brooklyn.

That gritty attitude’s not unique to the Nets, no matter how much Jordi Fernández talks about it, or Brooklyn’s marketing team tries to claim it. However, it sure felt foreign early tonight in the “fighting” city of Philadelphia.

In fairness, everyone wants an easy day of work before going into the holiday break, and Nets also looked to be in the giving mood early in game no. 28. It took seven possessions for Brooklyn to finally see a shot go down — and even that was just one out of two free throws.

But their Christmas spirit didn’t last long. No. led by a notorious grinch and some youthful elves, Brooklyn decided they were going to bah humbug all over the city of Brotherly Love.

Michael Porter Jr., in particular, wasn’t fancying any red-and-ermine Victorian era decor this evening. Not at all. He wore a smile on his face all night rather than a cold scowl. Other than that, he played a convincing Ebenezer Scrooge in this holiday scenario. Curious Mike put in 12 points in a little over two minutes in the heart of the first period, simultaneously saying “not so fast” to the Sixers hoping to scurry off with a free win.

Porter Jr. ended up scoring 14 of Brooklyn’s 27 points in the quarter. Those are the second most points he’s had in a quarter all season, just trailing the 16 he put up against Boston on November 21st.

MPJ hits three straight threes to give the Nets the lead. He's locked in. pic.twitter.com/Ahws8mckGj

— Erik Slater (@erikslater_) December 24, 2025

“That’s what All-Stars do,” Nic Claxton said of MPJ. “They come out and they play at an extremely high level every single night. They demand double teams. They make their teammates better, they make the game easier for everybody else. He was really good for us tonight, getting us going, especially in the first half, and that’s what we expect from him every night.”

Claxton was able to support Porter postgame, but couldn’t do the same in that first quarter. Joel Embiid came out looking for his shot to lead the Brooklyn center into foul trouble, as Clax picked up two personals less than four minutes into the contest. We were then gifted s a heavy dose of Day’Ron Sharpe in the frame, who ultimately just missed a double-double tonight with nine points and 11 rebounds. Danny Wolf got some first period burn as well. Nolan Traoré joined him on the floor too, making it the second straight game where the rookie received non-garbage time minutes.

Ben Saraf, who was activated before the game, never got in, even after setting the G-League ablaze yesterday. Brooklyn probably could have used him and his touted on-court poise though in the second quarter, where the Net offense hit a few bumps. Brooklyn turned it over six times leading to seven extra Philadelphia points in the period, which allowed them to take a momentary lead…

54 seconds of prime PG ✨ pic.twitter.com/NzhVMHYgV9

— Philadelphia 76ers (@sixers) December 24, 2025

Finally, among elves there was Egor Demin who kept up his recent string of hard work.

So, when behind, or under their high-flying hosts, the Nets went back to what’s been working for them: suffocating defense. Tyrese Maxey seemed to struggle breathing the most. The league’s third leading scorer was held scoreless for until the 2:02 mark of the second. At one point in the second period, he and Sixers didn’t score for roughly three minutes, ushering the Nets into a 15-3 run.

“He just wasn’t in a good flow tonight,” Claxton said of Maxey. “I think he was a little frustrated. Some things may have been getting in his way, a little bit out there. I think I might have flustered him a little bit.”

Speaking of Claxton, he refused to stay silent after his quite first quarter, unlike Maxey. Igniting the break after many of those Sixer misses, he added 10 second quarter points while shooting a perfect 4-4 from the floor. Porter Jr. got his way to 25 first half points, the most he’s had in a game in his career. The Nets added to their lead in the process, and went into the half up 63-57.

“It was big, we were in the game, we had the lead, and Mike was a big part of it,” Fernández said. “As you guys know, he makes open shots, he makes contested shots, and he makes impossible shots. He was huge for us.”

Embiid led Philadelphia at that point with 19 points but ran into trouble, or Terance Mann, soon after that. He tripped over Brooklyn’s combo guard in the third quarter’s opening possession. He stayed on the deck for a while after the collision, and after getting up, went straight back to the locker room. He’d eventually return but without the aggression which fueled Philly’s offense early.

Embiid’s momentary exit seemed like a call for Maxey or Paul George to turn things up, but it was old friend Andre Drummond who answered. The journeyman big scored six points in the third’s first four minutes to keep the scoring up for the then Embiid-less Sixers. He took a page out of Brooklyn’s book to do so, with many of those buckets being second chance points, which the Nets outscored Philadelphia in 11-4 during the first half.

Meanwhile, Maxey looked like someone with the ground shrinking under him. He kept clanking the step backs were usually see him bury. He also picked up his fourth foul of the game less than halfway through the period after crashing into Dëmin, who finished with 20 points tonight, began his second half onslaught from downtown.

Egor Dëmin gets the first four-point play of his career pic.twitter.com/l9k8gG2SbY

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) December 24, 2025

As mentioned, Dëmin would have more to say later on, including five dimes four more triples. But for as majestic as that hit for was for him, Traoré was the rookie guard to get Brooklyn’s offense really humming in the third period. Some might call the Sixers throwing two at him an ludicrous defensive decision. I’ll just call it the Nets eating what’s in front of them…

Traoré finds Sharpe from way across the court pic.twitter.com/Tws3B1q125

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) December 24, 2025

Ziaire Williams and Tyrese Martin mixed in triples not long after Sharpe’s, also benefitting from the Brooklyn’s pass-heavy offense leveraging its way around Sixer blitzes. The Nets promptly went up 89-77 going into the fourth.

There, boos from the always friendly Philadelphia crowd started to rain down. The Sixers started the period 0-5 from the field. Traoré especially did well staying in front of the Jared McCain in the process. McCain joined his backcourt mate in the dog house tonight, as he and Maxey combined to shoot just 6-25 from the field during the contest.

With 7:11 to go, the Nets led by 19, their largest advantage of the night. Philly then started throwing a few extra stunts at Brooklyn, and their frenzied defensive attack halted the Nets offense for a few minutes. A triple from George, only his team’s fifth for the game made it a nine point game with roughly three and a half to play.

But even as the pressure mounted, the Nets did all the right things to dial it back a few notches. For a second straight game, Dëmin delivered “silencer” shots, except this time actually in front of opposing fans. His two quick triples put the Nets up 14 with under two to play. Maxey even assisted on one of them…

Tyrese Maxey can't catch a break tonight pic.twitter.com/TaIZqBjPvf

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) December 24, 2025

While Fernández acknowledged the importance of those makes, he also noted that’s he’s been impressed with the other aspects of Dëmin’s game lately and explained the mindset he wants him to carry going forward.

“I think it’s good when you see the shots go in,” he said. “I’m very happy for him, but what I’m very proud of him, is, there’s two possessions that he guards the ball, he checks the drive, he’s physical, he kept Maxey in front one or two times, and with McCain, and that’s the growth that I want to see — how his physicality is getting better on both sides of the floor, because I know he’s going to make shots. I know he’s going to find his teammates, he got five assists, and he’s got to keep shooting. Sometimes they’re going to go in, sometimes they’re not going to go in, but he’s a great shooter…Right now, I want him to have the mindset of going into the next game and having a good game whether the shots go in or not.”

McCain hit two threes with under a minute which gave them license to play the foul game, but all that did was put a few more minutes between them and their time off. The cold-blooded kid from Moscow iced the game with free throws — and introduced the Nets to their eighth win of the season.

Final: Brooklyn Nets 114, Philadelphia 76ers 106

Milestone Watch​

  • The Nets have allowed 375 total points (93.8 per game) over their last four games, their fewest in a four-game span since 11/5-12, 2022. They have allowed 102.7 points per game across nine games in December, the fewest in the NBA.
  • Egor Dëmin’s five 3-pointers are tied for the most of his career in a game (11/28 vs. PHI). It is his sixth game this season with at least four 3-pointers, the second most among rookies this season (Kon Knueppel, 16) and second most by a rookie in franchise history (Kerry Kittles, 9).
  • Dëmin has also scored 14+ points in four straight games, joining Cam Thomas (eight straight games in 2021-22) and Jarrett Allen (four in 2017-18) as the only Nets rookies with such a streak in the past 10 seasons.
  • Nic Claxton now has 85 double-doubles in his career, one behind tying Sam Bowie (86) for the eighth-most in franchise history.

Next Up​

gettyimages-2253062073.jpg

Tank commanders, rejoice. Brooklyn’s next game will feature a more formidable than any we’ve seen in weeks, and certainly more star power via the Ant Man. The Nets will take three days off and then hit the road for Minnesota on Saturday. The game is scheduled to tipoff at 8:00 p.m. ET.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-scores-results/103465/nets-vs-76ers-114-106-egor-demin-michael-porter
 
LIVE DISCUSSION: Brooklyn Nets at Philadelphia 76ers, 7:00 PM ET

gettyimages-2253058159.jpg


Sunday night was a reminder that for the Nets: Anything is possible when they’re locked in collectively on the defensive side of the ball. No matter who’s on the floor. In other related news, Ben Saraf went off for 40 points in the G-League showcase, so that’s good news.

Let’s see if these guys can stay hot — they’re 5-3 in the past eight games.


KEY INFO

  • WHO: Brooklyn Nets (8-19) @ Philadelphia 76ers (17-13)
  • WHEN: 7:00 PM ET
  • WATCH: YES Network

NETS INJURY REPORT

  • Cam Thomas — OUT (hamstring)
  • Drake Powell — OUT (ankle)
  • Haywood Highsmith — OUT


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-philadelphia-76ers-700-pm-et
 
Shams: NBA wants to make tanking harder … unlikely to affect Nets

gettyimages-2236703653.jpg


The “T” word is a no-no in most NBA front offices. It conjures up teams willfully losing games to get better draft position or avoid having to give up a protected pick. GMs and others would prefer to call their long-term strategy “flexibility for sustained success” explain the difference between tanking and rebuilding.

Tanking is deliberately losing games by manipulating who gets minutes in key games. Rebuilding is about creating a roster that is unlikely to succeed — perhaps because of its youth — on the court but one which management thinks doesn’t insult the integrity of the game. Did we mention that rostering a young team can work?

Sometimes, of course, the line isn’t always a bright one and maybe someone says something that gives away the punchline, like Joe Tsai may have done in September when he discussed the team’s strategy this September

“Well, I have to say that we’re in a rebuilding year,” Tsai said on the All-In podcast back in September. “We spent all of our [2025] picks — we had five first-round draft picks this past summer. We have one pick in 2026, and we hope to get a good pick. So you can predict what kind of strategy we will use for this season. But we have a very young team.”

Now, Shams Charania reports the league is taking note of how many teams are trying to get a top pick and is looking for solutions to make sure that teams aren’t losing on purpose. Is it likely to affect the Nets? Not for years. The process is still in its early stage. Back in the 2017, the last time the NBA looked into making the Draft less prone to tanking, the changes took two years to implement. Moreover, and this seems more important, Shams description of what the Nets are doing leans toward a rebuild rather than a tank.

Shams said the discussion began in earnest Friday at the NBA Board of Governors — aka the owners or their reps — meeting in Orlando.

In recent years, multiple teams have either shut down players early or sat players for games to try to improve their draft positioning, often tied to a protected pick. Sources said multiple ideas were proposed as a brainstorming measure to combat tanking, including:
Limiting pick protections to either top four or 14 and higher, which would eliminate the problematic mid-lottery protections

No longer allowing a team to draft in the top four two years in a row

Locking lottery positions after March 1
These ideas, which came from the league and its high-ranking officials, would theoretically dissuade non-playoff teams from sitting their starters for games throughout the season and provide reason to continue to try to win games, particularly down the stretch of a campaign.

Shams, however, was quick to point out the changes are not meant to stifle rebuilds which are most often based on tearing down the old rosters and replacing them with younger players chosen in the draft through a lottery that’s based on the team’s record in a previous season.

As multiple sources described, the attempts to find solutions to tanking are not intended to deter rebuilding teams who use their players as normal but rather teams that deliberately manipulate their rosters down the stretch of a season to land a higher pick or a protection range.

That sounds like what Sean Marks & co. have been doing since last season, winning the No. 8 pick in 2025 and hoping for a top four pick this June.

Shams points to three examples from recent NBA Drafts where teams deliberately tried to spin losing into better draft position. In each case, the tank succeeded. Two of the three — the Mavericks in 2023 and the Jazz last year — were ultimately fined but kept the picks they sought by losing. Last year, the 76ers who were not fined were rewarded for their efforts which mostly concerned keeping players out with questionable injuries and illnesses.

Last season, the Philadelphia 76ers, who entered the year with title aspirations, were able to preserve the top-six-protected pick they owed the Thunder. They lost 29 of their last 37 games, finishing with the fifth-worst record entering the lottery. They moved up two slots in May and selected guard VJ Edgecombe at No. 3. That pick is now top-four protected in the 2026 draft; it’s currently slotted 21st, as Philadelphia is 16-11 and Edgecombe is averaging 16 points per game.

No one has seriously accused the Nets of keeping healthy players out of games to help their draft lottery position, but if they start winning and they decide against trading Michael Porter Jr., there might a temptation to do the same.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-draf...o-make-tanking-harder-unlikely-to-affect-nets
 
Jordi Fernandez promises Ben Saraf will be ‘great NBA player’

gettyimages-2250414519.jpg


Back before the NBA Draft in June, Jordi Fernandez made it known in scouting meetings that he liked the Israeli point guard Ben Saraf. The Nets head coach, an admirer of European basketball and knowledgeable about FIBA talent — having been the head coach of Team Canada, was a strong advocate of the 6’7” (in shoes) combo guard. So when the 26th pick arrived, Sean Marks & co. selected Saraf. When the season opened in October and Egor Demin was still recovering from a torn plantar faschia, Fernandez chose Saraf as his starting PG. Things didn’t work out that well then, but the head coach didn’t lose faith in the 19-year-old.

So when Saraf exploded two days ago and scored 40 points in the G League Showcase, Fernandez was ready to endorse him again, this time to Nets beat writers.

“He was composed the whole game,” said . Obviously, he scored 40 points, but he looked like an NBA player out there,” Fernandez said after the Nets win over Philly. “We watched the game and how confident he was, how he shot the ball, how he shot the three, and his just finishes around the rim. If he would have finished a few more at the rim, he could have scored 50.

“And those are the challenges. He’s really hard on himself. And that’s why Ben is so great, and he will be a great NBA player. But I was happy that he helped the team compete and get a win. That’s got to be the main purpose, whether you play here with the Nets or in Long Island, is you want to help the team compete and then come out with a win.”

Strong praise but the eighth youngest player in the NBA this season was all that Fernandez described. Saraf finished this game connecting on 14 of his 26 shot attempts, including going six-of-10 from beyond the arc. All of these numbers marked career-highs. He also registered six rebounds and four assists.

Fernandez certainly would have knowledge of his potential from Saraf’s FIBA exploits.

A little more than a year ago, he averaged 28.1 points for Israel in the FIBA Europe’s U19 tournament, winning MVP honors. Two years earlier, he averaged 24.3 for the Israeli junior national team in FIBA Europe’s U16 tournament.

As Erik Slater noted Wednesday, the explosion — the second highest game total in the four-day, 31-game tournament — wasn’t completely unexpected.

Saraf has shown flashes of high-level advantage creation during his NBA minutes. However, he’s struggled as an outside shooter and finisher. The 19-year-old has averaged 5.8 points, 1.6 rebounds, 3.3 assists and 2.2 turnovers on .362/.250/.769 shooting splits across 10 appearances during which he played over 10 minutes.

Now, of course, will come the quest for minutes at the NBA level. Saraf was called up by Brooklyn after his big performance in the Winter Showcase, flying up from Orlando, but didn’t get any time on the court vs. the 76ers. Expect Fernandez to reward him the way he’s rewarded Nolan Traore following his improvements with Long Island. The Nets have plenty of time to further develop Saraf. He’s the eighth youngest player in the NBA.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/longislan...z-promises-ben-saraf-will-be-great-nba-player
 
Common and the Social Justice Fund team up to help Brooklyn

practice-wbb-graphics.jpg


The holidays are always a special time. It’s a time to reflect on the year, take stock of where you find yourself, and begin preparing for the new year ahead. It’s also a time to build community and create new relationships that will guide your future. In early December, we got to see that in action here in Brooklyn.

On December 6, the Brooklyn Nets hosted the Dream Summit at their new Brooklyn Basketball Training Center. The new Center has been open since September 25 and has already hosted community events featuring the Nets and New York Liberty. The Social Justice Fund hosted the event on the 6th, and as we’ve covered here at NetsDaily, the SJF has worked to uplift various organizations and causes in Brooklyn.

This time around, they linked up with a Chicago hero.

Social-Justice-Fund-101.jpg

Common has been involved in community efforts for many years. The Chicago artist, activist, and entrepreneur has been active across the United States in advocating for various causes over the decades and continues to do so heading into 2026. Free to Dream has been active since 2024 and has assisted kids in places such as Chicago, Los Angeles, and now New York. This line from their website stands out and is something we should all remember:

“We don’t know what the future will look like, but we do know the dreams of this next generation will help create it.“

That guiding light influences the work Free to Dream does, and it was on display in Brooklyn on December 6

“One of the things I always wanted to be a part of is things that can be active in people’s lives for young people, Common said. ”For me, to be here with the young people and say, “Okay, when we leave, you have some things to do. You got work to do, and you know what you need to do.

“I don’t like just coming up and speaking, donating some money, and then I don’t know what the follow through is. You make an impression, but we need follow through… So to know that we are laying down groundwork for practical things that they can apply in their lives, and we will be checking in and making sure that this is a process that we can be supportive in and encouraging. This a long term journey, and not just a one [time] moment [where] I’m showing up [and] taking pictures. [Follow through] is the most important thing for me.“

Social-Justice-Fund-282.jpg

To begin the Dream Summit, the kids took part in deep breathing exercises and affirmations to refresh their bodies and energize them for the day ahead. From there, took part in group exercises in which they discussed their experiences and intentions for the year. Some of the group came from as far as Paterson, New Jersey to take part in the Summit. We also got to see organizations like CASES, who have past history with the Social Justice Fund, partner with Free to Dream and take part in the festivities. The Social Justice Fund has made community building a big part of their mission and partnerships like these go a long way in achieving their goals.

Common of course is not new to the Nets organization. Back in 2010, he and Queen Latifah starred in “Just Wright,” in which he played a New Jersey Nets superstar falling in love with his trainer played by Latifah. In fact, he and Latifah are reprising their roles in a sequel, “Just Wright 2 – Full Court Christmas Miracle.”

“Our focus,” Gregg Bishop, Executive Director of the Social Justice Fund said, “is really on supporting grassroots organizations across Brooklyn that are making investments in their particular community. And together, through our investments, we’re making them stronger. We want to make sure that they are sustainable and they continue delivering the great services that they’re doing in their community. So the Social Justice Fund is really about investing in Brooklyn, and today, this is a manifestation of that.”

After the events concluded, everyone took a trip across the street to Barclays Center and got to watch one of the best games of Michael Porter Jr’s career as the hometown Nets beat the New Orleans Pelicans.

As we move in to a new year, having people pour into you and support your dreams matters more than ever. With an unknown amount of challenges awaiting us, it helps to know that you’ve got good people behind you and uplifting you at the same time. For the Social Justice Fund, their work in uplifting Brooklyn guides them and keeps them motivated to do even more. With partnerships like the one with Free to Dream, they can continue to reach as many people as possible.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-feat...-social-justice-fund-team-up-to-help-brooklyn
 
Cam Thomas cleared to return from hamstring injury

gettyimages-2243319627.jpg

gettyimages-2243319627.jpg

After a month and a half, the Brooklyn Nets will get their shooting guard back.

On Friday, Brian Lewis of the New York Post reported that Cam Thomas had been cleared and returned to full practice for the Nets after a month away due to a left hamstring injury. Shortly afterwards, Jordi Fernandez and the team made it official:

Head Coach Jordi Fernández says Cam Thomas will return tomorrow night at Minnesota. pic.twitter.com/sAsYhJdm4m

— Brooklyn Nets (@BrooklynNets) December 26, 2025

As of this writing, there hasn’t been any reporting as to possible minutes restrictions, whether he’s starting, etc. The 24-year-old had missed 20 games this year after missing 53 to previous hamstring issues last season.

Thomas rejoins a Nets team that has started to figure some things out, especially on the defensive end. Prior to Thomas’ injury on November 5, the Nets defense was allowing 125.1 points per 100 possessions, worst in the NBA and on pace to be one of the worst in basketball history. Since his absence, the team has allowed just 112.2 points per 100, eighth best in the Association. And if you want to get even more specific, in December they’ve allowed only 102.8 points per 100 possessions, far and away the best mark in the NBA. How did Jordi and the Nets fix things? From our Lucas Kaplan:

Good fortune is always involved in small-sample success, but this ain’t that. Jordi Fernández, scarred by his team’s start to this season, has dialed the blitz way back, instead opting to switch most ball-screens. This season’s Nets are forcing fewer turnovers, but as Fernández explains, the constant switching decreases stress on help defenders: “The other thing is switching a little bit more pick-and-roll. It creates less help, less rotations, and you know, you can defend the 3-point line easier, and then the multiple efforts.

With Thomas back in the fold, it will be interesting to see how the team looks from here. Noah Clowney got through some early struggles and has done very well next to Nic Claxton in the frontcourt. The rookies have had their flashes of greatness and are on the path to being solid contributors. And Michael Porter Jr has played some of the best basketball of his life and has a good chance of making the All Star team. With a defense that has found its way and plenty of athleticism to spare, the Nets hope that Thomas’ offensive punch can turbocharge a group that is still struggling a bit on offense, last two games notwithstanding.

Fernandez recently acknowledged that things have changed since Thomas went down. How does he fit now, the coach was asked.

“That’s a good question,” the coach said back on December 8. “The context is different. Before Cam got hurt, obviously, his superpower was the ability he had to score. At the same time, we always want to see playmaking efficiency and improvement on defense. So all those things were important at the time. Now, he’s been out, the team continues to get better and play in a [good] way… The skillset, he’s very unique and very good at what he does. But at the same time, now the group is taking positive steps.

“For the most part, I’m very happy with the whole group. And now when he comes back, it’s going to be on me to figure out how we introduce him into the group, and thinking that the most important thing, it’s always the group. And then from there, it’s [that] you’re willing to do whatever it takes to help the group and obviously improve yourself. That’s how this works: Team success will bring your own success as well.”

On Friday, Fernandez emphasized that he’ll play a role in Thomas return to action.

“I want him to be solid defensively…a great playmaker and a great efficient scorer. He’s more than capable to do all those things. If he doesn’t then I’m going to have to sit down with him & try to help them get there.”

For Thomas, something to keep an eye on is how often he gets to and finishes at the rim. Per Basketball Reference, prior to the injury, CT was at career lows in field goals attempted inside of three feet and field goal percentage inside of three feet. Throughout his career, Thomas has had his fair share of highlights with twisting layups in traffic at the rim. Now that he’s back at full strength, we’ll see if he can return to old form in a hurry.

The Nets are in a pretty interesting spot heading in to 2026. They’re still near the bottom of the Eastern Conference standings, but the team’s level of play has improved dramatically as the season has gone on. With Thomas back and with a lot to prove, we’ll see how he and the team get back in sync.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-news...y-analysis-brooklyn-nets-jordi-fernandez-2026
 
Nets sign Chaney Johnson, Cavs G Leaguer, to third two-way

gettyimages-2246398641.jpg


Chaney Johnson, a 6’7” 3-and-D prospect who went from the Auburn Tigers Final Four team to the Cleveland Cavaliers G League team, has been signed to the Nets final two-way contract, both the Brooklyn and Long Island Nets announced via tweet …

Welcome to Brooklyn, Chaney! pic.twitter.com/gVeYZxZMeN

— Brooklyn Nets (@BrooklynNets) December 27, 2025

Johnson, 23, played this season for the Cleveland Charge, the Cavaliers G League team, where in 16 games – 10 starts — he averaged 12.6 points on 60/40/73 shooting splits. He also averaged 5.4 rebounds, 1.9 assists, 1.2 blocks and 1.4 steals. He scored in double figures in 10 outings for the Charge, including three consecutive 20-point games from November 7-12 along with recording double-digit rebounds three times, multiple steals five times and multiple blocks in five games.

He also played in four games with the Cavaliers Summer League team in July on an Exhibit 10.

In the recently concluded G League Winter Showcase, he averaged 10.5 points and four rebounds and showed off his athleticism vs. the Portland Remix last weekend…

OH MY GOD CHANEY JOHNSON@__cjohn__ | #ChargeOn pic.twitter.com/2TK2iowImu

— Cleveland Charge (@ChargeCLE) December 20, 2025

After a high school career in Alabaster, Alabama, Johnson enrolled at Division II Alabama/Huntsville where he excelled, getting his team to the Division II Sweet Sixteen before transferring to Auburn. While at UAH, he was named Gulf South Conference Player of the Year. At Auburn, Johnson quickly became a favorite of Tigers legendary coach Bruce Pearl, winning a reputation as a hard-worker.

He joins fellow two-ways shooting guard Tyson Etienne and small forward E.J. Liddell. At 23, he’s the youngest of the three. Two-way deals are non-guaranteed and pay half the league minimum or a little more than $600,000 .


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/longislan...chaney-johnson-cavs-g-leager-to-third-two-way
 
LIVE DISCUSSION: Brooklyn Nets at Minnesota Timberwolves, 8:00 PM

gettyimages-2252691538.jpg


The Brooklyn Nets are back after another mini break. Cam Thomas is set to return tonight — he’s been out since Nov. 5. The Nets were 0-7 when he went down; 9-12 since he’s been out. We’ll see how things go.

🏀 KEY INFO​


🐺 Brooklyn Nets (9–19) @ Minnesota Timberwolves (20–11)
📍 Target Center — Minneapolis, MN
⏰ 8:00 PM ET
📺 YES Network / Gotham Sports App


INJURY REPORT​

  • Highsmith: OUT – Right Knee Surgery, Injury Recovery
  • Liddell: OUT – G League Two Way
  • Etienne: OUT – G League Two Way
  • Saraf: OUT –G League Assignment


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...rooklyn-nets-at-minnesota-timberwolves-800-pm
 
Cam Thomas returns, Brooklyn Nets beat Minnesota Timberwolves 123-107

gettyimages-2252973950.jpg

David Sherman/NBAE via Getty Images

Fresh off a thrilling overtime loss to the Denver Nuggets, the finale of a five-game Christmas Day slate, the Minnesota Timberwolves traveled home to face the well-rested Brooklyn Nets on Saturday night. To call it a trap game would be disrespectful to Minnesota, actually — the West’s 5-seed certainly has a focused coaching staff aware of Brooklyn’s recent improvements.

But understandably, the Wolves were just tired. They came out flat, and were likely caught off guard by a switch-heavy Brooklyn defense hedging screens and outright doubling Julius Randle. They were also caught off guard by Cam Thomas, returning after 20 missed games due to a left hamstring injury. Ladies and gentlemen, we did not get a good Cam Thomas game. We got a great one. CT scored his first points of the night on a backdoor cut, an auspicious start…

Cam Thomas is on the board! The cuts are always live in BKN. pic.twitter.com/cZuOCdkBbs

— Nekias (Nuh-KY-us) Duncan (@NekiasNBA) December 28, 2025

… and led a funky, young bench unit that Minnesota — missing Terrence Shannon Jr. and Mike Conley — simply could not handle. CamT checked in with the score 15-15 in the first quarter, and by the time he checked out, Brooklyn was leading 46-37 in the second quarter.

The Wolves managed to take a 63-62 lead into the halftime break. They did not right the ship, though; they had built a house of cards, shooting 56% from three compared to 19% for the Nets. The team about to run away and hide was not the home favorite.

The Nets won the third quarter 36-23, but this time their starters pitched in too. Michael Porter Jr., who finished with a 27-and-10 double-double, scored nine points in the frame, Nic Claxton switched onto the perimeter a bit more and tossed some pretty dimes…

Point Clax dishing 🥽

MPJ finishing plus the foul 💪 pic.twitter.com/XNlxPmZ4Ek

— Brooklyn Nets (@BrooklynNets) December 28, 2025

The Nets never really caught a heater, shooting 11-of-40 from deep on the night, but they didn’t need too. They outscored Minnesota 66-46 in the paint. Put another way: They shot 35-of-44 from two!! it was ugly with Rudy Gobert on the floor but a massacre without him, the story of the Wolves’ season and part of why Brooklyn’s big bench was so effective.

Jordi Fernández, birthday boy, went ten deep in this one, playing Thomas, Nolan Traore, Drake Powell, Danny Wolf, and Day’Ron Sharpe off the bench. (That meant Tyrese Martin and Ziaire Williams fell out of the rotation.) Fernández evidently picked the right five reserves; all five played between 15 and 20 minutes, with Thomas on a limit.

The rookies really showed flashes: Traore zapped to the rim for two layups, dished four assists to one turnover, and even had the defensive sequence of the game…

pure hustle from Nolan! 😤

gets the block, then draws a charge and the bench LOVES it! pic.twitter.com/A2NAU4qGeu

— Brooklyn Nets (@BrooklynNets) December 28, 2025

Danny Wolf scored 11 points, including a 3-pointer. Drake Powell stayed solid without becoming invisible, scoring seven points and using his 7-foot wingspan to deflect a couple Wolves passes without committing a turnover.

But it was Brooklyn’s 2021 draft class that shined brightest. Day’Ron Sharpe shot 5-of-5, posting 10/4/4 and making Chris Finch regret every second Gobert had to sit on the bench. The Nets won his minutes by a whopping 21 points, second only to the man of the hour, Cam Thomas.

Thomas went for 30/3/4 in just 20 minutes, and Jordi Fernández could not have been happier with his performance: “He made the simple play every time. And I’m pretty sure the potential assists were were high, because he made the right play over and over and over. Sometimes you cannot control if those are going to be assists, but he just played the right way. And, you know, getting to the free throw line, as efficient as he was, it was impressive.”

Cam Thomas returned to the lineup and immediately made a winning impact!

🏀 30 PTS
🏀 3 REB
🏀 4 AST
🏀 3 3PM

Nets win in Minnesota for their third in a row. pic.twitter.com/gqxnFvoMY5

— NBA (@NBA) December 28, 2025

It might have been even better than a great Cam Thomas game. How about a perfect one? The fourth-year guard was the idealized spark plug off the bench, an archetype only going out of style if you watched this game with your eyes closed, with every trip to the foul line or step-back jumper a smirk to all who believed he’d return and immediately torpedo the surging Nets.

An uncharacteristically smiley Thomas wasn’t worried about all that postgame: “It felt really good to just be out there, back playing. The main thing was just being back and happy out there, feeling good to be out there with the guys, making the right play, making the right shots. We played really well, we got a win out of this, that’s even better for me.”

It was the first 30-piece for a Nets reserve since Tyrese Martin’s shocking explosion in Phoenix last season. Thomas scoring 30 isn’t a shock, but it was tough to imagine his first game back going much better than that.

That 63-62 lead Minnesota held at half turned out to be their final lead of the game. The hosts’ outside shooting fell back to Earth in the second half, and none of Anthony Edwards’ (28 points) supporting cast put a scare into Brooklyn. The Nets are now 10-19, but 10-12 in their last 22 games and looking like anything but one of the league’s worst teams. What happens from here — with The Tank, with Cam Thomas in a Nets uniform, with the progress of the rookies — nobody knows.

Best just to enjoy a belated Christmas present.

Oh yeah, Michael Porter Jr. finished with 27 points, 10 rebounds and four rebounds shooting 56/50/100. It was that kind of game for the Nets.

Final Score: Brooklyn Nets 123, Minnesota Timberwolves 107

Milestone Watch​


We’ve got a lot on our plate here, courtesy of Nets PR:

  • The Nets are having one hell of a December. Their 7-3 record this month (.700 winning %) is the fifth-best in the league, and they’re doing so with the league’s best defensive rating, allowing opponents to shoot just 44% from the floor.
  • More on that defense: The Nets have held their opponents under 108 points for five consecutive games. That this the second-longest streak in the NBA this season. (The Thunder hold separate streaks of five games and six games.)
  • This was Cam Thomas’ 30th career 30-point performance and his sixth off the bench. That breaks a tie with Spencer Dinwiddie for the most 30-balls by a reserve in franchise history.
  • Brooklyn scored 62 bench points tonight, their third-most in a game this season as they’ve hit 63 twice.
  • Day’Ron Sharpe has now recorded multiple assists in eight straight games, a new career-high.

Jordi Fernández celebrates a birthday​


Jordi Fernández, unfortunately destined for snubbery on year-end Coach of The Year ballots, celebrated his 43rd birthday on Saturday. What better present than a victory? Well, maybe his whole family making the trip…

special b-day delivery for our leader 🎂🎶 pic.twitter.com/oitxh9rYXw

— Brooklyn Nets (@BrooklynNets) December 27, 2025

Anthony Edwards didn’t have such a good time:

Anthony Edwards on a lack of energy tonight and how it gets corrected

“We got boo’d and s*** by the fans today, I’m with the fans, I would have boo’d us too, but yeah, lack of energy. I don’t know what’s going on, I guess this is just Timberwolves basketball” pic.twitter.com/DpbimivUWm

— Andrew Dukowitz (@adukeMN) December 28, 2025

Next Up​

gettyimages-2253537921.jpg

Last time Steph Curry visited Barclays Center, things got kinda crazy. The Brooklyn Nets will try to prevent another Curry 40-piece when they take on the Golden State Warriors on 7:30 p.m. ET on Monday night.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-scor...mberwolves-123-107-cam-thomas-anthony-edwards
 
June 25, 2024: How it will drive Brooklyn Nets future

imagn-19122180.jpg


There have been some big days in the history of the Nets.

On June 27, 2001, the New Jersey Nets sent Eddie Griffin, the seventh overall pick in that night’s Draft to the Houston Rockets for a package of Richard Jefferson, Jason Collins and Brandon Armstrong. The same day, the two principals, Rod Thorn and Jerry Colangelo shook hands on a trade of Stephon Marbury for Jason Kidd, a deal finalized three weeks later. It was an unmitigated success.

Twelve years to the day after those deals, on June 27, 2013, the Brooklyn Nets sent a package to the Boston Celtics that included Gerald Wallace, Keith Bogans, Kris Humphries, MarShon Brooks and Kris Joseph plus three unprotected first-round draft picks — 2014, 2016, and 2018 — and a swap of firsts in 2017. In return, Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett and Jason Terry — all 35+ — became Brooklyn Nets. It was an unmitigated disaster.

We don’t yet know how the events of June 25, 2024 will work out, but it’s likely going to be just as crucial. The Brooklyn Nets made two franchise-altering trades with the New York Knicks and Houston Rockets that night which for all intents and purposes were one big trade. They were negotiated simultaneously, revealed in tweets by Adrian Wojnarowski and Shams Charania 14 minutes apart and were hedges against each other.

Most of all, they signaled the Nets were going into a deep rebuild which much of the fan base had wanted, a clean break for mediocrity in return of long-term hope. They were hedges against one another. It also signaled that the post-Big Three hope that Mikal Bridges and to a lesser degree, Cam Johnson, would be the lynchpins of a future success had been abandoned.

The team had officially given up on a strategy to build around the two young players who had been the centerpiece of the Kevin Durant traded 16 months earlier. What had changed? The front office had not succeeded in finding a bigger piece, like a Donovan Mitchell, to form a nucleus for the future. Not to mention that Bridges quite obviously was unhappy in Brooklyn and longed for a reunion with his three Villanova cronies across the river.

Moreover, the Knicks offer was, as one insider has told ND, simply too good for the Nets to refuse. While the Knicks had sent a version of the Bridges trade package to Brooklyn at the 2024 deadline, the final form was a better deal. Also important, the offer reportedly softened Joe Tsai’s reluctance to go against the prevailing wisdom in New York: that you can’t do a deep rebuild in the Big Apple. That wisdom was simple: there’s just too much competition for the city’s entertainment dollar to walk things back. That is, if you lose fans’ interest, it will take you a while to get it back.

The Nets had seen that happen after the collapse of the Pierce-Garnett-DWill-Lopez-Johnson core in 2014-15. Even the feel-good aura of 2018-19, when the Nets shocked everyone and earned the sixth seed, didn’t help. Brooklyn finished dead last in attendance that season. They filled less than 85% of Barclays. They’re filling 98.8% of Barclays. So much for that prevailing wisdom.

So, now 18 months after the trade, where are we? Bottom line: it’s still too early to tell, but milestones are approaching that will likely tell the tale.

—————————————————————-

First a review of that night’s events, with what’s happened so far. Where there’s been some subsequent tangible developments, we note them in parenthesis. Asterisks designate players no longer with the team. A “+” sign indicates the player is no longer in the league

Brooklyn Nets received:

From New York Knicks:


  • Bojan Bogdanovic*+
  • Mamadi Diakite *+ (Zaire Williams, Mavericks second round pick in 2030)
  • Shake Milton* (Maxwell Lewis*+)
  • unprotected 1st-round pick in 2025 (Ben Saraf)
  • unprotected 1st-round pick in 2027
  • unprotected 1st-round pick in 2029
  • unprotected 1st-round pick in 2031
  • unprotected pick swap in 2028
  • top-four protected 2025 1st-round pick via Bucks (Nolan Traore)
  • 2nd round pick in 2025 (two future picks: a 2026 2nd round pick that’s the least favorable between Los Angeles Clippers and the most favorable of Miami Heat, Indiana Pacers and Boston Celtics along with a 2030 Celtics 2nd round pick)
  • a $21.9 million trade exception (that went unused.)

From Houston Rockets

  • unprotected 1st round pick in 2025 (Egor Demin)
  • unprotected 1st round pick in 2026

NOTES: On July 19, two weeks after Nets-Knicks deal was finalized. Nets traded Momadi Diakite ($1.4 million guaranteed), the final piece of of the Nets-Knicks trade, and the draft rights to Serbian wing, Nemanja Dangubić. to Memphis Grizzlies for Ziaire Williams and the Dallas Mavericks second round pick in 2030.

The Nets acquired Maxwell Lewis in a December 29 deal that sent Dorian Finney-Smith and Shake Milton to the Los Angeles Lakers for him, three second round picks and D’Angelo Russell.

The Nets 2025 second rounder (No. 36), re-acquired from the Knicks, was traded to the Phoenix Suns on June 26, 2025, hours before the second round of the 2025 Draft was set to begin. Nets received two future picks in return: a 2026 2nd round pick that’s the least favorable between Los Angeles Clippers and the most favorable of Miami Heat, Indiana Pacers and Boston Celtics along with a 2030 Celtics 2nd round pick.

(The Nets also used a pick swap from the 2021 Nets trade for James Harden to acquire Danny Wolf.)

Brooklyn Nets sent out:

To the New York Knicks

  • Mikal Bridges
  • Keita Bates-Diop*+
  • 2026 2nd-round pick
  • Draft rights to Juan Pablo Vaulet, Argentine wing.

To the Houston Rockets

  • Phoenix Suns’ 1st round pick in 2025 (Khaman Maluach)
  • the Phoenix Suns’ 2027 1st round pick
  • Swap rights to the two most favorable of the Dallas Mavericks, Phoenix Suns and Houston Rockets 1st round picks in 2029. Brooklyn retains the least favorable of Dallas, Houston and Phoenix’s first round draft picks in 2029.

NOTES: The 2026 2nd rounder will likely not transfer to the Knicks.

Grading each element of the trades is the traditional way to measure things, but the two trades were so complicated and so intertwined with other elements of team-building that grades wouldn’t be that illuminating. (Shortly afterwards, various writers did lay out their thoughts, giving the Nets high grades — almost all A’s — for the Knicks trades and little lower grades for the Houston deal.)

Milestones:

The bottom line is that we still have a long way — perhaps years — before the final grades can be be recorded but there are milestones that can be used to gauge how things are going. Two have already passed: the 2025 Draft where three of the five first rounders the Nets selected were the result of the two trades: the eighth (Demin), 19th (Traore) and 26th (Saraf) picks. All three 19-year-olds have shown some indications they can be good NBA players with the highest picked of three, Demin, looking the most solid. The other two, both among the 10 youngest players in the NBA, have shown flashes particularly in the G League.

The Suns pick of Khaman Maluach at No. 10, who many expected the Nets to take, has so far gone the other way. He was seen as a raw talent and he is perhaps more raw than the Phoenix braintrust thought when they took. Demin, taken two picks earlier, is certainly more advanced. The two are within six months in age.

Also, the Knicks, buoyed by Bridges, got further than any New York team had in a generation, making it to the Eastern Conference Finals. It’s a pro sports truism that if a trade results in a championship, that trumps everything. The Knicks came close.

Bigger milestones approach. The big one or at least the one most visible on the horizon is how well the Nets do in this May’s lottery. Even after their three-game winning streak. Brooklyn currently has the sixth best chance at the overall No. 1 pick — a nine percent shot — and a 27.6% chance of picking in the top three where most draftniks think you can’t go wrong. A.J. Dybantsa, the BYU wing, Darryn Peterson, the Kansas shooting guard, and Cam Boozer, the Duke big, have all been given the “franchise changer” label.

Getting one of those three would likely tip the trade scales in favor of the Nets. On the other hand, one NBA decision-maker told NetsDaily that “if the Nets don’t secure a top five pick in the lottery, (the rebuild) may take 10 years.”

The reasoning: while the Nets have a very good young coach, likely a core of good young players, some great draft assets, and the lure of New York, nothing attracts a superstar like a superstar. Still, while Brooklyn is currently sixth, two of the teams above them, the New Orleans Pelicans and Los Angeles Clippers, have no incentive to tank. Their firsts are already headed elsewhere. So that’s a positive. (Note the Nets will also have a second rounder in 2026 from the June 25 trade.)

In 2027, the Nets may have to swap first rounders with the Rockets another big milestone. Unprotected there, too. For many fans, that is the biggest milestone going forward. The Nets will have to be contenders by then, the narrative goes, or they will have to once again give up with of their own picks. Of course, trying to determine how things will go for either team two years in advance is hardly a science. Also, the Nets have the rights to the Knicks unprotected pick in 2027. As we noted, the two trades were perceived as hedges against one another.

Moreover, the 2027 NBA Draft is seen as very weak. Back in the summer, Jonathan Givony, the dean of draftniks, described how NBA executives feel about it back. “The most forward-thinking of those executives are already ringing alarm bells in their front offices for the 2027 NBA draft, which appears to be an especially weak group of rising high school seniors and international players born in 2007 and 2008.“ He is not alone.

There are other, perhaps under appreciated consequences from the two trades that fit the franchise’s long-term planning.

  • The Nets vast cache of draft assets is now unbalanced … in a good way. Of the 32 picks they have going forward, 15 are bunched together between 2028 and 2032. Also, Brooklyn doesn’t owe any firsts after 2029.
  • Assuming their five picks in 2025 work out, they’ll have an advantage the next few years in balancing rookie deals with the those required by stars and superstars. Next year, for example, the Nets will have seven players on rookie deals. Noah Clownely will be on the final year of his four-year deal, the Flatbush Five will be on their second year and whoever they take in the lottery will be in first year. Assuming nothing changes, those seven players will make around $40 million or a quarter of next year’s salary cap. So half the roster for a quarter of the cap. As one insider has told ND, having controllable first rounders offers GMs a lot of flexibility in filling out rosters … and avoiding aprons.

Of course a number of things could go wrong. Anyone who experienced the Big Three collapse knows that. If for some (now unlikely reason,) most of the Flatbush Five are busts, that would be a negative. If the Nets don’t secure a top pick in May or the pick doesn’t work out, that could make the Houston pick swap a disaster. If there’s a big gap between the Rockets and Nets in the 2026-27 season, fans will recall how the last big trade swap, from the Celtics trade, resulted in the Nets having to surrender the rights to Jayson Tatum. And if Mikal Bridges helps ignite a Knicks dynasty, those unprotected firsts in 2027, 2029 and 2031 and the unprotected first swap in 2028 would become low first rounders and lose a lot their value.

So, at this point, virtually everything would have to go wrong for all those hedges to go bad. So what’s the bottom line. It’s much like Saturday night’s win over the Timberwolves. You can find all manner of issues if you’d like. It hurts the tank putting a high pick at risk, Cam Thomas future looks iffy, MPJ may be on his way out because his value is just so high, but overall, you won and move on.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-feat...5-2024-how-it-will-drive-brooklyn-nets-future
 
Ben Saraf, EJ Liddell combine for 45 points in Long Island win over College Park

gettyimages-2252564937.jpg


Following their two-game split in the NBA G League Showcase, the Long Island Nets returned to their normal schedule Sunday afternoon traveling to Atlanta to face the College Park Skyhawks in suburban Atlanta.

Before the game, Ben Saraf was assigned to Long Island to give him some more reps in the G League in a move that was likely related to Cam Thomas’s return to the court with the big club. Saraf was coming off his highest scoring game as a pro, Monday’s 40-point, six 3-point effort in the G League Winter Showcase.

Saraf didn’t match that Sunday, but he and Brooklyn two-way player, 6’7” forward EJ Liddell, did combine for 45 points in Long Island’s 119-111 win against the Skyhawks. The Nets are now 2-1 in the G League’s regular season which began with the Winter Showcase. Chaney Johnson, the 6’7” 23-year-old wing the Nets signed to a two-way deal Friday night, was not available for Long Island…

Another win in College Park ✅ #StrongIsland pic.twitter.com/C3944gnV2c

— Long Island Nets (@LongIslandNets) December 28, 2025

Saraf still had another solid showing in this one. He didn’t have the best shooting performance. He finished the game connecting on three of his 10 shot attempts, compared with his 14-of-26 outing on Monday. But he continued this solid 3-poing shooting, hitting 2-of-5 from beyond the arc. Over the course of the two games, the 19-year-old has shot 8-of-15 from deep. Saraf has credited Bob Love, the free-lance shot coach Brooklyn has used this season to help a number of players. Where Saraf really excelled was at the foul line going 7-of-8.

Saraf also recorded four rebounds, six assists and five steals. all in the first half. He had his hands all over this one. In fact, he tied a franchise record for Long Island for steals in a half.

As for Liddell, who turned 25 earlier in the month, he led the team and the game in scoring, picking up 24 points. He connected on 7-of-15 shot attempts, including 2- from beyond the arc. Indeed, he picked up 14 points in the third quarter alone, matching his G League career-high in a quarter. Liddell also flirted with a double-double in this one, as he had a team-best nine rebounds.

E.J. Liddell dropped 14 points in the third quarter at College Park, matching the highest-scoring quarter of his NBA G League career. pic.twitter.com/QDlI5JU5cV

— Long Island Nets (@LongIslandNets) December 28, 2025

Liddell also blocked four shots. Rim protection has proven one of his strongest assets. If you try and go up on Liddell in the paint, it won’t end well for you. So far this season, the Ohio State product has 13 in 6 games for an average of 2.6 a game, fifth in the league.

Tyson Etienne, the Nets other two-way, finished third on the team with 18 points, connecting on five of his 14 shots, including 4-of-9 from 3-point range. He also had five rebounds, three assists, and three steals. As for Nate Williams, he picked up 16 points and came very close to a double-double in this one, with eight rebounds. This performance gave Williams 1,500 points in his career in the NBA G League. Trevon Scott picked up 10 points, while Terry Roberts picked up a season-best 10 points from the bench.

Long Island led most of the way, going up 59-5o at the half, then broke away in the third, leading 90-75 going into the fourth when College Park cut things down.

Next Up


The Long Island Nets (2-1) look to continue their winning ways as they travel to Ohio on Friday to take on their old friend Killian Hayes and the Cleveland Charge which also is Chaney Johnson’s last address. The Nets list all three two ways and Saraf as being assigned to Long Island. The game tips off at 7:00 p.m. EST and can be watched on the NBA G League and Long Island Nets respective websites.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/longislan...5-points-in-long-island-win-over-college-park
 
LIVE DISCUSSION: Golden State Warriors at Brooklyn Nets, 7:30 PM ET

gettyimages-2252973956.jpg


Umm… the Brooklyn Nets have been a really good basketball team and dare we say fun? Other than abysmal three-point shooting, the Nets approached near perfection Saturday in Minneapolis. Cam Thomas returned with 30 points in 19 minutes, arguably his best game as a Net. It’s all strange?

🏀 KEY INFO


Golden State Warriors (16-16) @ Brooklyn Nets (10-19)

📍 Barclays Center — Brooklyn, NY

⏰ 7:30 PM ET Tip-off

📺 YES Network / NBC Sports Bay Area

INJURY REPORT​

  • Highsmith: OUT – Right Knee Surgery, Injury Recovery
  • Liddell: OUT – G League Two Way
  • Etienne: OUT – G League Two Way
  • Johnson: OUT – G League Two Way
  • Saraf: OUT –G League Assignment

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...den-state-warriors-at-brooklyn-nets-730-pm-et
 
Brooklyn Nets lose lead against Golden State Warriors, lose game, 120-107

gettyimages-2253238243.jpg

David L. Nemec/NBAE via Getty Images

Steve Kerr knew what his Golden State Warriors were in for when they visited the Brooklyn Nets on Monday night: “Every time we’ve played them over the last couple years, they’ve been energetic, well-organized, well-coached. So, you know, they came to our place last year and beat us. We came here last year, and it was like 24-to-6 right out of the gate. We had to fight to win at the end, so I just think they’re doing a great job. Jordi is doing a great job, his staff, player development … Obviously they’re doing something right.”

Kerr also knew it was going to be even harder for his team — the second-oldest in the NBA — on the second night of a grueling back-to-back: “They’re a long, athletic team at multiple spots, and they cause a lot of problems defensively with that activity. So you may have heard me say this once or twice, but we’ve got to secure the ball tonight and execute. But I think what makes tonight a little different is just the quick turnaround, the back-to-back, the overtime game in Toronto.”

Flash forward an hour: Kerr called a timeout with his team down 18-8, the Nets catapulted in front after scoring a couple baskets off Warriors turnovers. Michael Porter Jr. and Egor Dëmin had a pair of 3-pointers in the opening minutes, and Steph Curry, the man who spiked Monday’s get-in price to nearly three bills…


seemed sluggish. Brooklyn quickly extended their lead to a baker’s dozen; another bench performance like the one they got in Saturday’s victory might have been a knockout punch, but they didn’t get it.

Granted, defending Steph Curry — who ran with GSW’s reserve-heavy unit — is a bit different than defending Rob Dillingham. It wasn’t all bad for the reserves: Nolan Traore shot 3-of-4 from three on the night, and was part of an electric sequence that doubly embarrassed Draymond Green…

Draymond Green gets dunked on by Nic Claxton then stuffed by Nolan Traore. pic.twitter.com/jYTjfVhHHg

— Erik Slater (@erikslater_) December 30, 2025

Alas, Brooklyn lost Traore’s minutes by 21 points, tied with Cam Thomas for the worst mark on the team. Thomas, fresh off his triumphant, 30-point return to the lineup, put up 13/0/2 on 5-of-12 shooting. Surrounded by three rookies and Day’Ron Sharpe, Thomas not have the easiest task in creating offense, but Golden State’s blitzing defense largely gave him fits, and the Nets had just a 97.3 offensive rating with CT on-court.

“It’s never the same game,” said Jordi Fernández. “And you know, this is a very good defensive team, they’re trying to be very aggressive with CT, which we knew, and when we make the simple play, we still get an open shot. But it was a good experience for the group … that second group was not good, but I still trust them.”

Others stepped up, though. Porter Jr. maintained his hot start to lead Brooklyn in scoring with 27/9/5 on 10-of-18 shooting. Nic Claxton, perhaps motivated by early double-techs with Draymond Green, played one of his best games of the season — against a potential trade suitor no less, posting 15/9/4/3/3 and making some highlight passes that did not lead to assists.

The Warriors, though, just chipped away. De’Anthony Melton, salary-dumped to Brooklyn last season with one ACL intact, was excellent off the bench, as was Trayce Jackson-Davis. Gary Payton II and Will Richard also reached double-digits off the bench, as the Warriors recovered from their early sluggishness to take a two-point lead into halftime, then a four-point lead into the fourth.

They shot 28-of-38 inside the paint, to Jordi Fernández’s despair: “We allowed 76% [shooting] at the rim, so that’s not good enough, but it was not just there. This is a team that plays off the ball, and they move the ball and move bodies and play splits, and they don’t play off pick-and-roll, so you have to be very on point with guarding those cuts. And today, we just gave up that. I remember backdoor cuts and drives and slips to the rim. It can happen because they’re very good at it, but it was a lot of falling asleep on the weak-side and stuff like that that we haven’t done before.”

Pat timed it perfectly ⏱️

📺 @NBCSAuthentic pic.twitter.com/AlyNj5dllK

— Golden State Warriors (@warriors) December 30, 2025

Thanks to layup after layup, the visitors began to pull away. Brooklyn’s last hope was simply to outscore the Warriors, and rookie Egor Demin gave it his best shot. His seventh 3-pointer of the night cut the deficit to 110-106 with two minutes left, giving him 23 points to match a career-high.

Overall, he shot 7-of-17 on the night but 7-of-14 from three, a new Nets single-game record among rookies…

Egor Demin hits his 7th three of the night. pic.twitter.com/A0PsHEvoO8

— SleeperNets (@SleeperNets) December 30, 2025

Dëmin tried to will the Nets even further, but got blocked and then coughed up a turnover at half-court in the waning minutes, humbling him just a little on his career-night.

Said Fernández: “The lessons come every day, especially against a good defensive team. Like I said, shot good but his decisiveness and ability to touch the paint, to create assists, could have been better. And now he’s watched film, he’s always very good with — you know, he has high expectations for himself, and I say the same. I want that 3-point shooting percentage and aggressiveness the same, I want better setups. I want more paint touches. I want more assists. I want more physicality in both ends, and he’s going to try to do his best.”

Steph Curry made some ridiculous shots in the second half … no news there, and Jimmy Butler bullied his way to the line … same. Despite Dëmin’s best efforts and despite those of his teammates, the Warriors didn’t show age on the second night of a back-to-back, just experience. But neither the Nets nor their 19-year-old rookie backed down.

They’re not going to win every night, and the future is wildly undetermined, but it’s tough not to feel like Dëmin and the Nets are getting somewhere.

“Well, I haven’t played that many NBA games yet, so I’m trying to take all of them under my belt, if I can say it that way, right? And especially against teams like this, where I can really not just play against them, but learn from them … it can be helpful for me in the future and for us as a team.” — Egor Dëmin.

Final Score: Golden State Warriors 120, Brooklyn Nets 107

Milestone Watch​


Rookie-centric, as expected:

  • As mentioned, Egor Dëmin’s seven 3-pointers is the most a Brooklyn Nets rookie has ever made in a game. It also ties Kon Knueppel for the most 3-pointers made by a rookie in any NBA game this season.
  • Dëmin also becomes the first Nets rookie with three games of 5+ 3-pointers made in a season.
  • Nolan Traore had a career-night as well. His three 3-pointers are a new career-high, and so are his nine points. Combined, the two — the sixth and 11th youngest players in the NBA — were 10-of-18, or 55.6%.
  • With nine rebounds on the night, Nic Claxton (2,631) passed Richard Jefferson for the eighth-most rebounds in Nets franchise history.

Mr. Whammy vs. Draymond Green, and more​


It likely surprised some viewers how much animus the veteran Warriors seemingly had for this young Nets group. The double-technicals and ensuing battle between Nic Claxton and Draymond Green was one thing, but nobody was spared. Not even … Mr. Whammy??

Draymond told Mr. Whammy to take a seat:

"Sit ya old ass down!"

😂😂😂😂 pic.twitter.com/BWNn6aoIcd

— Erik Slater (@erikslater_) December 30, 2025

Both Green and Mr. Whammy seemed to enjoy the interaction, with Green laughing about it in the locker room postgame: “That was fun. I had a lot of fun tonight.”

Danny Wolf had less fun. Jordi Fernández tested the 21-year-old out by switching him onto the perimeter frequently on Monday night, and at one point, Wolf drew the Jimmy Butler matchup. After Butler scored an and-1, some choice words were exchanged…

Jimmy Butler to Danny Wolf after the And-1:

"WHITE BOY…. WHITE BOY….. WHITE BOY…. EVERY TIME… SHUT UP…. SHUT THE F*CK UP" pic.twitter.com/XyzFnKlIJ0

— Ahmed/The Ears/IG: BigBizTheGod 🇸🇴 (@big_business_) December 30, 2025

Postgame, Wolf didn’t seem too bothered by it, just a little confused about what he did to draw Butler’s ire.

Finally, at the end of the game, when guys had stopped playing, Warriors rookie Will Richard (at the instruction of his teammates) shot a jumper to avoid a shot-clock violation. Terance Mann fouled him on the attempt, confused why Golden State tried to score. Mann exchanged very brief words with Draymond Green, and Green waved Brooklyn off the floor after the, uh, misunderstanding?

Jordi Fernández could only roll his eyes postgame: “Whatever rules they have — I had one of my young guys almost hurt for taking a shot against one team. I don’t want anybody to get hurt. If they take a shot, they take a shot. I’m completely fine, the game was over, and it is what it is.”

For all the odd moments, Michael Porter Jr. was encouraged by the attitude throughout: “Yeah, we’re maturing very quickly. Like I said, that team has a lot of years and a lot of championship experience. We’re getting better and better.”

Add Steve Kerr to those endorsing the Nets development strategy. Many, of course, had questioned Brooklyn’s decision to select — and work with — five first round picks. Kerr thinks there’s evidence it’s working…

Steve Kerr on the Nets’ strategy of bringing in five rookie first-round picks:

“It looks like it’s working. I watched the Minnesota game today. That was impressive… They’re doing a great job. Jordi and his staff are doing a great job with player development.” pic.twitter.com/3YfPm18Yz2

— Erik Slater (@erikslater_) December 29, 2025

As expected, it was a big night for attendance, with 18,163 the official number, meaning meaning more than 600 standing room tickets were sold or distributed.

Chris DeMarco officially joins New York Liberty​


We’ll have a full story for New York Liberty fans up tomorrow, but Monday’s contest marked Chris DeMarco’s final game with the Golden State Warriors after 13 years and four championships with the organization. He’ll stay behind in New York and prepare to take over the New York Liberty as incoming head coach…

Thank you, CD, for over a decade of greatness.

Tonight, we say farewell to Assistant Coach Chris DeMarco and wish him the best of luck as the NEW Head Coach of @nyliberty 💛💙 pic.twitter.com/7taY0anugp

— Golden State Warriors (@warriors) December 30, 2025

Next Up​

gettyimages-2253238073.jpg

That wraps up the calendar year of 2025 for the Brooklyn Nets. On New Year’s Day, the Nets will take on old friend Kevin Durant and the Houston Rockets at home. Tip-off is scheduled for 6:00 p.m. ET.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nets-scores-results/103737/nets-vs-warriors-120-107-egor-demin-steph-curry
 
Chris DeMarco comes to New York Liberty with rave reviews

gettyimages-2253242396.jpg

David L. Nemec/NBAE via Getty Images

“What a strange day for him, you know, to come to his new arena, go to his new office, come back to our locker room, help us play a game, try to win a game, and then that’s it. He’s staying here, and it’s almost surreal. So, he’s been a great coach, great friend. I’m going to miss him.”

Golden State Warriors Head Coach Steve Kerr had to say goodbye to long-time assistant Chris DeMarco on Monday night. The Warriors were not just visiting the Brooklyn Nets at Barclays Center, but dropping DeMarco, the incoming head coach of the New York Liberty, off at his new crib.

Monday marked the end of DeMarco’s 13-year run with the Dubs, which included four NBA championships. He even predates Kerr as a member of the organization: “Bob Myers called me and said, ‘There’s one guy from the previous staff I think you should talk to and interview.’ And as I was putting my staff together, I sat down with Chris and instantly connected and knew that I wanted him to be part of it.”

Over Golden State’s ensuing dynasty, DeMarco did it all, from advance scouting to player development to offensive and defensive game-planning.

Yes, the 40-year-old seen more star-power in one locker room than most coaches will see in a lifetime. And he exudes a chill confidence; the Liberty’s championship expectations aren’t going to have him acting like JJ Redick…

Brian Windhorst calls out JJ Redick after the Lakers lost in 5 to the Timberwolves.

"Reggie Miller said on the broadcast last night he had to try to calm him down in the pregame meeting because JJ was acting, frankly, childishly." pic.twitter.com/kRzpWvTE7j

— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) May 1, 2025

But that’s not why Kerr believes DeMarco will thrive in New York: “He watches everything. You know, he was constantly keeping his finger on the pulse of the game, wherever. FIBA, European basketball, he studies the trends, he loves the game. And he’s also just a great dude, like, he’s really fun to be around and to collaborate with. He’s smart, but he doesn’t have to be the smartest guy in the room. And he’s seen an awful lot here, you know, in these last 14 years.”

Ultimately, Kerr and his Warriors had two things to say about DeMarco: The guy loves ball, and they love him.

Thank you, CD, for over a decade of greatness.

Tonight, we say farewell to Assistant Coach Chris DeMarco and wish him the best of luck as the NEW Head Coach of @nyliberty 💛💙 pic.twitter.com/7taY0anugp

— Golden State Warriors (@warriors) December 30, 2025

“For a guy like that that’s earned everything he’s gotten in this league with his hard work — there’s a reason he’s still a part of the staff from the Mark Jackson era to now, the Bahamian national team experience, and even the process of seeing him go after the Liberty job,” said Steph Curry. “I talked to the GM [Jonathan Kolb] here on his behalf, and just understanding who he is as a coach and everything that’s he contributed and learned along the way will hopefully be a smooth transition to that locker room. I’m excited for him. I know he’s ready. He’s chomping at the bit to get there.”

Steph Curry is one hell of a reference, but so is Buddy Hield, who has not just worked with DeMarco in Golden State but with the Bahamas men’s national basketball team.

“You just know when you’re around winners and people with a winning mentality,” said Hield in this Dalton Johnson story. “You just know how to believe in them. When [DeMarco] is around that whole environment, you just know that something good comes out of that from everything that he’s learned. I was just happy to learn from him. I was ecstatic to learn from him.”

After the Warriors defeated the Nets on Monday, DeMarco bid farewell with a short interview on NBC Sports Bay Area…

Chris Demarco talks about coaching the Liberty after his last game with the Warriors pic.twitter.com/fRr3ebdWpX

— Tanya (@ScriptedTanya) December 30, 2025

…and referenced his time with the Bahamas.

“I’ve seen a lot, and one of the things I wanted to do — this being my 14th season with the Warriors — is get head coaching experience. And at the international level, it’s a different game. We don’t have live-ball timeouts, the games are shorter, they’re only 40 minutes, you really have to learn teams on the fly … You just become a better coach.”

Then, finally, DeMarco turned toward the future: “I’ve talked to all of our players here at the Liberty, just getting acquainted with everything. I love Barclays, I love what they’re building, we got the Brooklyn Basketball Training Facility across the street. It’s a beautiful thing to see in a very, very growing league, and I’m just excited to get started.“

Now, he can. The WNBA is attempting to avoid a work stoppage in 2026. Nearly the entire the league is set to enter free agency. The New York Liberty don’t know what their path back to another championship is going to look like, from the schedule to who exactly is on the roster. But they have their head coach.

And if Chris DeMarco finds half as much success in New York as he did with the Golden State Warriors, it’ll be a slam-dunk hire.

THANK YOU to Chris DeMarco for an incredible 13-year run on the bench with #DubNation

Wishing you all the best on this next chapter with the @nyliberty. pic.twitter.com/IDpZIPcHTW

— Golden State Warriors (@warriors) December 30, 2025

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/nyliberty/103781/chris-demarco-comes-to-new-york-liberty-with-rave-reviews
 
Back
Top