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Brooklyn Nets exercise team options on four players

New York Knicks v Brooklyn Nets

Photo by Jordan Bank/Getty Images

Official: Nets keeping Keon Johnson, Jalen Wilson, Tyrese Martin and

On Saturday afternoon, the Brooklyn Nets announced they have exercised team options on four of their young rotation players: Keon Johnson, Tyrese Martin, Jalen Wilson and Drew Timme, one day after waiving Maxwell Lewis. All five had a Saturday deadline to extend their deals with Brooklyn.

All four are on vets minimum deals at around $2 million and are non-guaranteed, per Yossi Gozlan of Capsheets.com. Even after the options move, Gozlan reports that the Nets retain $45 million in cap space...


Updated 2025 offseason spending tiers:

⚫️Brooklyn Nets set with $45 million in cap space after exercising all team options.

Memphis Grizzlies lost some cap space by moving up in the draft.

Houston Rockets as of now below the aprons with the new Fred VanVleet contract. pic.twitter.com/0RPGxRszLA

— Yossi Gozlan (@YossiGozlan) June 28, 2025

Johnson, Wilson and Timme have further option dates coming up which if not exercised can give the front office more flexibility and limit salary cap exposure.

Johnson and Wilson are now partially guaranteed at $271,614 and $88,075, respectively through NBA Opening Night, October 22. If they make the Nets final roster, Johnson’s guarantee jumps to $760,000 while Wilson’s goes to $381,695. Like all players on non and partially guaranteed deals. they and Timme can be waived up to January 10.

Lewis had an extension outstanding and the Nets will have to pay him $100,000.

Brooklyn has until Sunday to extend qualifying offers to their three restricted free agents: Cam Thomas, Day’Ron Sharpe and Ziaire Williams. Brooklyn has had exclusive negotiating rights with the three since last Monday. The team was expected to move onto their own free agents following the Draft. Also, Sunday, starting at 6:00 p.m. ET, the Nets can talk with other teams’ free agents, even extend them offer sheets that their current team has 48 hours to match. Sean Marks did that four times in his first two years, each time unsuccessfully.

————————————————-

In another roster move involving last season’s roster, two-way Reese Beekman has signed an Exhibit 10 deal with the Denver Nuggets. He had been on a two-way with Brooklyn, having been acquired as part of the December trade that sent Dennis Schroeder to Golden State.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/2025/6/28/24457938/brooklyn-nets-exercise-team-options-on-four-players
 
Brooklyn Nets invite Dre Davis, former Seton Hall and Ole Miss wing to Summer League

Indiana State v Seton Hall

Photo by Mitchell Layton/Getty Images

More invites on the way to Brooklyn...

Dre Davis, a 23-year-old 6’6’ wing who played for Seton Hall, Louisville and most recently Ole’ Miss, has been invited to play for the Brooklyn Nets Summer League team in Las Vegas.

Jon Chepkevich of Draft Express broke the news...


Ole Miss’ Dre Davis will join the Brooklyn Nets for NBA Summer League, I’m told.

The 6’6” forward averaged 10.1 PTS, 4.8 REB, 1.3 AST, 1.0 STL, and 1.0 BLK for the 24-win Rebels this season.

Started 111 games over five seasons, with previous stops at Louisville and Seton Hall. pic.twitter.com/EIof5VeCJ6

— Jon Chepkevich (@JonChep) June 28, 2025

In two seasons at Seton Hall, played in 60 games while scoring 774 points with 297 rebounds, 75 assists, 46 steals and 57 blocks. In 2023-24, he was tied for second on the team in scoring with an average of 15.0 points per game. After transferring to Ole ‘Miss last season, he averaged 10. 43/36/68 shooting splits. He also averaged 4.8 rebounds as well as a block and a steal in 34 games, all starts.

Davis has a reputation as defensively versatile, capable of guarding a number of positions. He also had a reputation stepping up in big games.

“He played with courage and like the player we recruited and coached and taught to be. Just really proud of the way he competed more than anything,” said Ole ‘Miss head coach Chris Beard. “We ask a lot of Dre. Position-less player; guarding all five positions on offense. Had some timely baskets, a double-double against Tennessee on Senior Night. That speaks for itself.”

At Seton Hall, he was more of a go-to scorer for Shaheen Holloway

Davis is the third SL invite following the end of the Draft’s second round Thursday night. Brooklyn had previously signed Grant Nelson, a 6’11” big who played for North Dakota State and Alabama, and T.J. Bamba, a 6’5” wing who played for Washington State and Villanova prior to transferring to Oregon. All three are seen as two way players, 3-and-D candidates.

The Nets are expected to add at least one more Summer League participant.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/2025/6/28...davis-former-seton-hall-wing-to-summer-league
 
Brooklyn Nets extend QO to Cam Thomas, not Day’Ron Sharpe or Ziaire Williams

Brooklyn Nets v Charlotte Hornets

Photo by Jacob Kupferman/Getty Images

Something up? Sure looks that way.

This story is likely to be updated!

As the clock ticked toward 6:00 p.m. ET Sunday, the official start of free agency, the Brooklyn Nets made big decisions on their three restricted free agents, extending a qualifying offer to Cam Thomas but not to Day’Ron Sharpe or Ziaire Williams, making the two unrestricted free agents, free to talk with any other team.

But from everything we have heard from inside and outside the the front office, Brooklyn intends to re-sign both Sharpe and Williams using cap space or Bird Rights while simultaneously working some other deal yet to be revealed.

As one league source reported, “We hope to sign both. Not extending QO’s gives Nets more flexibility heading into free agency.” The start of free agency permits teams to negotiate with free agents, tender offer sheets, etc. It seems almost certain that the Nets have spoken to representation for the three players, all of whom have publicly an expressed a desire to return.

Mike Scotto was first with the news ...


Sources: The Brooklyn Nets tendered Cam Thomas his one-year, $5.99 million qualifying offer, making him a restricted free agent. Thomas averaged a career-high 24 points and 3.8 assists for Brooklyn this season. pic.twitter.com/Bp5fjVJHRB

— Michael Scotto (@MikeAScotto) June 29, 2025

Sources: The Brooklyn Nets declined to tender Day’Ron Sharpe his 1-year, $5.98 million qualifying offer. He’ll be an unrestricted free agent after averaging 7.9 points and 6.6 rebounds in 18.1 minutes per game this season. Brooklyn hopes to re-sign him with cap space flexibility. pic.twitter.com/BfPc6T9Bpa

— Michael Scotto (@MikeAScotto) June 29, 2025

Sources: The Brooklyn Nets won’t tender Ziaire Williams his 1-year, $8.35M qualifying offer. The Nets hope to retain Williams. This move gives themselves more free agent cap flexibility. Williams will become an unrestricted free agent after averaging 10 points and 4.6 rebounds. pic.twitter.com/mQK8n7M7yK

— Michael Scotto (@MikeAScotto) June 29, 2025

The big reason to renounce the capholds on the two 23-year-olds is simple as Yossi Gozlan pointed out. If they hadn’t, Sharpe’s $11.9 million caphold and Williams $18.1 million caphold would’ve counted against the salary cap, removing $14 million from the cap, thus decreasing the Nets ability to work larger deals like salary dumps in return for future picks, particularly in 2026. The Nets have four picks, but only one, their own, in the first round.

They could also use the additional cap space to tender an offer sheet to a player like like. Santi Aldama of the Memphis Grizzlies, rumored to be a Nets target. Once that business, whatever it is, gets done, the Nets can return to the bargaining table to work out deals with Thomas, Sharpe and Williams.

They can also hold off on negotiating a new contract with Cam Thomas. By tendering him a qualifying offer of $12.0 million, the Nets retained the right to match any deal the 23-year-old gets from another team. Since virtually no team other than Brooklyn has any cap space, that’s unlikely.

Sean Marks & co. have already worked one salary dump this week. They used some of their cap space to facilitate Tuesday night’s three-team deal with the Atlanta Hawks and Boston Celtics. The Nets took on Terance Mann’s three-year, $47 million contract and in return received the Hawks No. 22 pick which became Drake Powell ... without giving up anything appreciable. Final details on that deal will become available when it’s made official on July 6.

Indeed, even after that move, the Nets are estimated to still have between $45 and $52 million, as Gozlan, Bobby Marks and Brian Lewis all reported.


Brooklyn offseason

* Brooklyn has to spend 90% of the salary cap ($139.2M) by the 1st day of the regular season.

* They have $93.8M in salary

* Minimum of $45.4M in spending pic.twitter.com/N1Zz73evDO

— Bobby Marks (@BobbyMarks42) June 29, 2025

When might we hear something? Anytime, basically.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/2025/6/29...m-thomas-not-dayron-sharpe-or-ziaire-williams
 
Two-Time Brooklyn Net Bojan Bogdanović to retire

NBA: Brooklyn Nets at Toronto Raptors

Tom Szczerbowski-Imagn Images

He (technically) had multiple stints on the team in its Brooklyn era and somehow dodged all the craziness

Bojan Bogdanović is hanging it up. The sharp shooting Croatian forward announced his retirement from the game of basketball this morning on Instagram.

While technically a Brooklyn Net last year, Bogey never appeared in a game. He suffered an ankle injury with the New York Knicks during the 2024 playoffs, underwent season-ending foot surgery in April, and then again this past February as a member of the Nets, who waived him to make room for Killian Hayes.

That all seemed to play a large role in his decision to call it a career.

I’m



“After 14 months of battling a foot injury, two surgeries, and countless efforts to get back on the court, the time has come to close a chapter,” Bogdanović said. “After more than two decades in the game, the moment has arrive to say goodbye to basketball. Not just as a sport, but as part of who I am.”

“I’ve had the privilege of playing for clubs that left their mark on both European and NBA basketball. From Mostar and Zrinjski, to Real Madrid and Murcia, then to Cibona and Ferenbahçe, I wore every jersey with pride,” he also wrote. “The NBA brought a whole new level of challenge and experience. I had the honor of wearing the jerseys of the Brooklyn Nets, Washington Wizards, Indiana Pacers, Utah Jazz, Detroit Pistons and finally the New York Knicks. Every stop left a mark. Every jeresey carried its own weight.”

Bogdanović came to Brooklyn in 2014 after playing 10 years overseas, staying until midway through the 2016-17 season. As a talented player new on the NBA scene, he was a bright spot for a team stuck in limbo. He averaged 11.2 points and 3.1 rebounds per game in a Nets uniform while posting .441/.366/.847 splits. Although his best years came in Utah, his lone NBA accolade came in Brooklyn when he was named to the 2014-15 NBA All-Rookie Second Team.

After playing another season and a half, the Nets dealt him along with Chris McCullough to the Washington Wizards for for Andrew Nicholson, Marcus Thornton, and a 2017 first round draft pick that turned into Jarrett Allen. He came back last summer as part of the Mikal Bridges trade — but the closest thing we got to an actual return from him was during Practice At the Park.


Bojan Bogdanović gets welcomed back in Brooklyn pic.twitter.com/FxKK6xAIHM

— Collin Helwig (@collinhelwig) October 13, 2024

As someone able to contribute as a starter or off the bench, being a more than capable shooter from deep, and a rather humble guy, Bogdanović’s game and character were both well-respected throughout his career.

“He’s a pretty complete player,” said Mirza Teletovic of Bogdanović in 2014, taking him under his wing at the time. “His motor, both offensively and defensively, is pretty good...He really understands basketball, understands what he’s supposed to do on the court.”

Bogey’s place on the Nets timeline is as interesting as anyone’s. The amount of things that happened between his first season and his last are frankly astonishing. He left in a trade that planted a few seeds for Sean Marks’ first rebuild, Brooklyn then made the playoffs with D’Angelo Russell for the first time in three years, completed the “clean sweep” and nearly won a championship, blew it up, tried to retool with Bridges, and then blew that up as well.

He began his career as a Net. Now he’ll end it that way. And everything that happened in-between was absolute theater.

“I’m closing this chapter, but my love for the game remains,” he concluded. “I didn’t reach the end. I’ve reached the other side of the beginning.”

Cheers to that and a great career, Bogey. We’re wishing you the best.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/2025/6/29/24458512/two-time-brooklyn-net-bojan-bogdanovic-to-retire
 
TRADE: Brooklyn Nets trade Cam Johnson to Denver Nuggets for Michael Porter Jr., first

Denver Nuggets v Brooklyn Nets

Photo by Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images

Nets get a guy with a ring...

Michael Porter Jr, a key player in the Denver Nuggets title run two years ago, has been traded to the Brooklyn Nets along with an unprotected first rounder in 2032. Going west: Cam Johnson.

Shams Charania was first with news...


BREAKING: The Denver Nuggets are trading Michael Porter Jr. and an unprotected 2032 first-round pick to the Brooklyn Nets for Cam Johnson, sources tell ESPN. pic.twitter.com/o6rdWhu3Rl

— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) June 30, 2025

Shams colleague, Ramona Shelburne, responded to the news saying “the Nets are excited about MPJ and the intention is to keep him.”

The trade brings to Brooklyn a 6’10” 27-year-old with a career 16.2 point average on 50/41/80 shooting splits. Last season, MPJ scored 18.2 points on 50/40/77 not much different from CamJ’s 18.8 points on 48/40/89 shooting. Porter Jr. however is two years younger ... and with far more playoff experience, 75 games compared to 38.

The big difference is in salary. Porter Jr. will make $33.3 million in 2025-26 $40.8 million the year after. (In his contract, signed in 2022, the Nuggets commitment 2026-27 could have been reduced to a partial guarantee of $12.0 million. But also under terms of his contract, the salary would become fully guaranteed if Nuggets won a title in the course of the deal … which they did in 2023.)

Brooklyn Offseason

FYI- The 2nd year of the Michael Porter Jr. contract became guaranteed when Denver won the 2023 NBA Championship. pic.twitter.com/TZLJtb6SFS

— Bobby Marks (@BobbyMarks42) July 1, 2025

Johnson has two years guaranteed on his deal, $21.1 million this coming year and $23.1 million in 2025-26. He is eligible next month for a three-year, $102 extension.

Mike Scott spoke with him after the trade.


I spoke with Cam Johnson shortly ago about his reaction to being traded by the Brooklyn Nets to the Denver Nuggets for Michael Porter Jr and an unprotected 2032 first-round pick.

Johnson told me, “I’m excited to compete for a championship. It’s a new beginning.” pic.twitter.com/I5LIok12hh

— Michael Scotto (@MikeAScotto) July 1, 2025

The disparity in salary will reduce the Nets salary cap flexibility as Yossi Gozlan tweeted.


The Brooklyn Nets have $17 million in cap space after swapping Cameron Johnson for Michael Porter Jr.

They can get to $25 million by waiving all non-guaranteed players. pic.twitter.com/u89ppMqIDh

— Yossi Gozlan (@YossiGozlan) June 30, 2025

For the Nuggets, the trade gets them under the luxury tax. MPJ has been relatively healthy the last several years after experiencing back issues that required three surgeries that short-circuited his career.

The first rounder while seven years in the future is unprotected and likely to be beyond Nikola Jokic’s prime.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/2025/6/30...to-denver-nuggets-for-michael-porter-jr-first
 
Nets Reacts Survey: How do Nets fans feel about the five picks?

2025 NBA Draft - Content Circuit, Media Availability and Portraits

Photo by Sarah Stier/Getty Images

Vote here!

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

The Brooklyn Nets took a chance with five players that few probably expected, particularly Egor Demin at No. 8. We aren’t going to act like we know all that goes on behind the scenes, and these are the people who get paid to do it.

Here’s what they landed at the Draft

  • Egor Demin (Russia)
  • Nolan Traoré (France)
  • Drake Powell (USA)
  • Ben Saraf (Israel)
  • Danny Wolf (Israeli-American)

Without further ado, we wanted to ask how Nets fans are feeling about Brooklyn’s acquisitions during the 2025 NBA Draft.

This article will be updated with results on Wednesday, July 2 or Thursday, July 3.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/2025/7/1/...ey-how-do-nets-fans-feel-about-the-five-picks
 
Long Island Nets to be a big part of young players development says Sean Marks.

Brooklyn Nets Introduce Egor Demin, Nolan Traore, Drake Powell, Ben Saraf, and Danny Wolf - Press Conference


As the Brooklyn Nets continue their rebuild, Long Island will play a big part in their plans.

Things are looking pretty different for the Brooklyn Nets these days. Familiar fan favorites are off to new destinations and new, younger talent are coming in to make names for themselves as they begin their NBA journey. Brooklyn will likely be the NBA’s youngest squad. It will make for an exciting time for Brooklyn fans as their team embarks on a new era. Part of that excitement, that development will take place in Uniondale on Long Island.

The Long Island Nets have been in operation for about a decade. As it happens, that’s about the same amount of time Sean Marks has been General Manager of the Nets.

“Long Island, they are exactly the same as the Brooklyn Nets,” Marks told the media at the introductory press conference on Tuesday. “Maybe in a different infrastructure and a little bit further away, but we wanna make sure whenever our players from Brooklyn spend time in Long Island, there’s nothing amiss.”

That’s been the mantra for Long Island since the G League franchise started up: Keep the systems identical so that players will be able to move seamlessly between Nassau Coliseum and Barclays Center. The offense and defense are the same as is the jargon. There’s also free movement by basketball operations staff going both ways along the Long Island Expressway. In addition to getting minutes, players will get a chance to enhance or learn new skills.

“So it’s clear communication between the two groups,” emphasized Marks.”Matt MacDonald, our GM there, has done a heck of a job in helping to develop them. Mfon (Udofia), our head coach down there, same thing.

“I think the proof’s in the pudding,” he argued. “When we’ve looked back and seen some of our guys over the last few years who have developed and spent a lot of time in Long Island and then all of the sudden come up to Brooklyn and next thing you know they’re starting for us or playing meaningful minutes in Brooklyn, you can see there’s a development path and a development track there.”

Indeed, about half the current roster has spent time in the G League proving ground. On the current Brooklyn roster, Nic Claxton, Cam Thomas, Day’Ron Sharpe, Dariq Whitehead, Noah Clowney, Jalen Wilson, Keon Johnson, Drew Timme and Tyrese Martin (although Martin was only there for Media Day, spending all of his two-way playing time in Brooklyn.) Some were on there on two-way contracts, some on assignment during their rookie contracts.

Marks said that he expects that his five first round picks, an NBA record, will likely get time in the G League. Getting bigger minutes in Long Island than they could’ve gotten in Brooklyn will be crucial.

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

In addition to the five rookies, the Nets have two players on two-way deals who can expect to move back and forth; Tosan Evbuomwan and Tyson Etienne. Both players were signed late in the season.

Player development may very well be the biggest measure of team success this season. So Long Island will play a bigger role than any time since they first took the court in 2016. Jordi Fernandez is confident despite a lot of doubt from pundits and league execs.

Player development is going to be important. We’ve been very diligent. The coaching staff has done a great job making our guys work, and those guys have improved, and we believe they’ll do the same thing.”

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/2025/7/2/...rdi-fernandez-sean-marks-long-island-g-league
 
NY Liberty vs. LA Sparks preview: The first game of the month

Los Angeles Sparks v Indiana Fever

Photo by A.J. Mast/NBAE via Getty Images

The Liberty are back home after a tough road trip and will welcome the new look LA Sparks to Barclays.

Los Angeles Sparks v Indiana Fever
Photo by A.J. Mast/NBAE via Getty Images

Finally back home. The New York Liberty have been on the road the past few weeks, and it was a rocky road for the defending WNBA champions. They closed it out with a loss to the resurgent Atlanta Dream on Sunday afternoon.

The opponent tonight is trying to figure things out as they go. The Los Angeles Sparks underwent a lot of changes this off-season, but the results haven’t paid off quite yet. They hosted the Chicago Sky on Sunday afternoon as Candace Parker got her jersey retired. LA couldn’t bring the W home as they fell short 92-85.

Where to follow the game​


FOX 5 on TV. Liberty Live and FOX Local on streaming. League Pass for the out of towners. Tip after 7 PM.

Injuries​


Leonie Fiebich is back! Jonquel Jones is on the road to recovery, but still has some more time to go.

Cameron Brink is still out following an ACL tear from last season. Rae Burrell is back from an early season leg injury and Julie Allemand has returned from Eurobasket. As a result, the team waived Shey Peddy and Oddysey Sims.

The game​


If you’re heading to Barclays Center tonight, you’ll be in for a treat! The Liberty have been working on an installation at Barclays Center and will unveil it tonight! Check out this one of Betnijah Laney-Hamilton!

Betnijah Laney-Hamilton
Latoya Ruby Frazier
July 3, 2025: Betnijah Laney-Hamilton art installation at Barclays Center

BSE Global has worked to make that plaza area a great spot for fans to congregate and relax. Art like this will help make that more of a reality.

Having Fiebich back will be a godsend for the Liberty. She provides the length on defense needed to allow New York to deploy all sorts of fun lineups. Sandy Brondello told me at practice yesterday that she’s looking to get Leo more usage on offense as well. It would be a welcome development and one that can allow the Liberty to get even more exciting.

Fiebich will likely draw the assignment against Rickea Jackson tonight. Jackson hasn’t had the sophomore season she hoped for, but there’s still plenty of time for her to get back on track. She’s taking a lot more three pointers this year as compared to last year, which was to be expected with new coach Lynne Roberts’ offense. If Fiebich and the Liberty can force Jackson into tough shots and keep her off the free throw line, they’ll be in great shape.

Breanna Stewart continues to do everything for the Liberty, and that all around excellence is why she’s an All-Star starter once again. She’s still trying to find it from three point range, but when you’re in a slump, you just gotta keep going for it and hope that you end the drought. She’ll get the matchup with Dearica Hamby and hope to keep the former two time Sixth Woman of the Year off the boards. Hamby is tied for seventh in the WNBA this season with five double doubles and has been a veteran presence on a Sparks team that’s still trying to find itself. As they wait for Cam Brink to return, Hamby’s role in the frontcourt will continue to be essential to her team’s chances of success.

Player to watch: Kelsey Plum​


For the first time in a while, Plum is the lead option for her team. She’s spent the past few years alongside A’ja Wilson in Las Vegas and now that she’s guiding the young Sparks, is taking on the largest workload of her career. Her usage rate is at a career high 27.7 percent and she’s working to attack the basket a bit more than she did last season. Historically, she’s been an excellent finisher at the rim but is only shooting 48.6 percent on shots inside of three feet. I wonder if that has something to do with the Sparks’ spacing on offense, so it’ll be exciting to see how she goes about her business tonight.

Natasha Cloud will draw the Plum assignment in all likelihood. Tash was speaking to us at practice yesterday and stressed the importance of getting back to the basics on defense after a rough road trip. Cloud has up her activity on offense due to all the absences in the starting five, and when she’s got the team moving well, their offense becomes incredibly dynamic. The team will need to be better on the defensive end, and that starts with Cloud at the point of attack.

Honestly, Sabrina Ionescu probably should’ve missed a few more games with her neck injury last week. However, Sab is a trooper and fought through it even though she wasn’t 100 percent. She started picking it up after halftime on Sunday and the Liberty hope that she can build on that throughout this homestand. When Sab is getting downhill, she’s tough to handle and can finish in traffic. The team needs her at full strength if they want to win, and tonight is a great chance for her to put on an All-Star caliber show.

From the Vault​


This is for Pat

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

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/2025/7/3/...sabrina-ionescu-natasha-cloud-breanna-stewart
 
New York Liberty finally wake up, rally to beat Los Angeles Sparks 89-79

Los Angeles Sparks v New York Liberty

Photo by Ishika Samant/Getty Images

New York was moving in slow motion through one half, then dominated the third quarter to get back in the win column vs. the lowly L.A. Sparks

Just as the alarms were about the sound, the New York Liberty got themselves together.

After starting the season 9-0, the defending champions lost five of seven games, including a 1-3 road trip without Jonquel Jones, who isn’t projected back until after the All-Star break. That’s a problem on its own, but more concerning than a sprained ankle was a lack of toughness, of effort.

Sandy Brondello expected that to change on Thursday night when her team hosted the Los Angeles Sparks: “It’s getting back to what our identity is. And I thought we went away from that on the road trip, and getting back to the fundamentals of having some toughness and physicality. Really, it wasn’t about the schemes. Schemes don’t work if you don’t have that first. So it’s just a little bit of attention to detail and not being happy with where we’re at at both ends of the floor.”

Still, New York did not reutrn home in dire straits. At 11-5, they were still the WNBA’s #2 seed, and had just lost to the Atlanta Dream, Phoenix Mercury, and Seattle Storm on the road. All strong teams. To boot, the Liberty were welcoming back Leonie Fiebich, who had missed the roadie while playing at EuroBasket.

Then they came out and lost the first half by four points to the 5-12 Los Angeles Sparks. Then they gave up five straight points to start the third quarter. Their play, more so than on the road trip, was unacceptable...


Sparks exit the half on a 5-0 run, have taken a nine-point lead. Liberty just look *bad*

No fancy analysis required: pic.twitter.com/cfYe1g9ACB

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) July 4, 2025

“We have to be able to throw the first punch,” said Natasha Cloud. “And obviously, we started slow today, so we got to figure it out within our locker room, and that’s something that we talked about at halftime, just having the accountability.”

Many of the issues were on the defensive side of the ball, same as the road trip. Every time the Sparks scored in the first half, it was at the rim — they only made one 3-pointer but shot 17 free-throws...


Our euro-champ blew by the D for the finish @JulieAllemand x @WNBA pic.twitter.com/vQiWQ1589C

— Los Angeles Sparks (@LASparks) July 3, 2025

Said Brondello: “In the start, they had layups, because our help wasn’t in the spot, our low-man wasn’t in the position where we need to be, and that’s, you know, everyone has to be disciplined on defense. And it starts on the ball — it still started on the ball — but there’s positioning behind it.”

That bled into the Liberty’s offensive struggles, as the hosts couldn’t get out and run easily. In the half-court, L.A.’s switching gave the Liberty pause, though it didn’t completely dismantle them. Though Sabrina Ionescu’s struggles continued with a 1-of-10 start, Leonie Fiebich infuriatingly passed up some open 3-point looks, and there was little rhythm to the offense, the worst part was New York’s inability to hit open shots.

Only Marine Johannès could raise the energy...


average Marine Johannès 3-pointer: pic.twitter.com/AlG2p1vVQA

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) July 3, 2025

All this was weighing on Brondello and her team when she called timeout early in the third, down 46-37. By the end of the third quarter, New York was up ten. Breathe out.

They went on an electric 27-6 run to end the period, during which Sparks coach Lynne Roberts called just one timeout, and it was classic Liberty ball. They finally hit some threes, which created driving lanes for Natasha Cloud & Co. to attack, but their biggest plays came off turnovers, including this and-1 by Isabelle Harrison that blew the roof off Barclays...


place went nuts for this Izzy Harrison play

couple miscues, but has pretty much done everything NYL could've hoped for pic.twitter.com/oPzepiJ2uu

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) July 4, 2025

Harrsion stole Nyara Sabally’s minutes in the second half, a troublesome long-term storyline, but on Thursday night, Harrison deserved all the shine, posting 7/4/2/0/2 in a dozen strong minutes off the bench.

Said Brondello: “I just thought we went with what we thought we needed to win. It was a must win game, and Izzy gave us bigger minutes, so we honed in on that.”

After Ionescu and Breanna Stewart took 22 of New York’s 37 shots in the first half, they combined for just 14 attempts in the second half. The ball swung to all sides of the court more often; Harrison was big, Kennedy Burke finished 4-of-6 from deep, but Natasha Cloud soared with a team-high 23/4/7 on 7-of-12 shooting.

She made jumpers, got downhill, and did everything that she did in her first week of the season, everything the Liberty could want from her...


another pitch play for Natasha Cloud: pic.twitter.com/zgQlzRquAr

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) July 4, 2025

“I mean, we were adjusting a bit better for their switching,” said Leonie Fiebich of the second half. “We couldn’t really find a solution. We were a bit too slow, I think, in the first half. In the second half, we were moving the ball better and finding better solutions.”

New York never relinquished that double-digit lead in the fourth quarter, though it did dwindle. They played mediocre ball in the first half, and decent ball in the fourth quarter. But for ten minutes, they found themselves, and that was enough to win the game.

“It was more about getting the physicality back defensively and then running out of that,” said Brondello. “And Sabrina got going. It was a pretty tough first half for her, and pretty tough to start at the third too, but she got going, and that’s what we need from her. You need your best players, you know, playing well every game.”

Indeed, Ionescu shot 6-of-8 in the second half to finish with 18/6/6, despite seven turnovers. Seemingly healthy, there were no excuses for her poor play in the first half, though there’s not much to say about missing open shots. Then Ionescu made up for it in the second half, even if she’ll need to put together more complete performances going forward.

Sounds like the Liberty as a whole, really. But a win is a win.

When asked if such a dominant third quarter made the win even sweeter after the team struggled coming out of halftime for much of May and June, Natasha Cloud said it best.

“No. I want that s*** to happen in the first quarter.”

Final Score: New York Liberty 89, Los Angeles Sparks 79

Next Up

Seattle Storm v Atlanta Dream
Photo by Andrew J. Clark/ISI Photos/ISI Photos via Getty Images

The New York Liberty take on the Seattle Storm at Barclays Center, looking to avenge a loss. This one should be good. Tip-off is scheduled for 1:00 p.m. ET on Sunday afternoon.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/2025/7/3/24461349/liberty-vs-sparks-89-79-kelsey-plum-natasha-cloud
 
NEW MATH: Brooklyn Nets sign draft picks, two-way as roster pans out

Egor_Demin_signs.14.jpg


Nets roster adds players as Summer League approaches

The Brooklyn Nets announced several signings Thursday just before the July 4 holiday, officially signing three of their five rookies — Egor Demin, Ben Saraf and Danny Wolf — and giving Long Island Nets combo guard Tyson Etienne a two-way deal.

Both Drake Powell and Nolan Traore signings have been slowed by paperwork issues that expected to be resolved in a matter of days. Powell was part of last week’s three-way deal with the Boston Celtics and Atlanta Hawks that was centered on Kristaps Porzingis. That trade can’t be finalized till Sunday under league rules.

As for Traore, Brian Lewis reports the Nets had to agree to an $850,000 buyout to free up Traore’s contract with his French team, Saint-Quentin. He and the Nets now await approval of the transfer from FIBA which governs international transfers. Once that’s done, he’ll sign with Brooklyn....


#Nets fans worried about Nolan Traore being shipped out as part of this seven-way trade can bring their blood pressure down. He's going nowhere. The French point guard's delay in signing is just due to paperwork issues. He should be good to go for Las Vegas Summer League. #NBA

— Brian Lewis (@NYPost_Lewis) July 3, 2025

The #Nets had to pay Saint-Quentin the maximum buyout for Nolan Traore. (It was $850,000 last year, for perspective). Now the parties have been waiting on a #FIBA letter regarding said buyout. Once that's all done, Traore can officially sign with Brooklyn. #NBA

— Brian Lewis (@NYPost_Lewis) July 3, 2025

As for Cam Thomas, Jake Fischer reports Friday morning that there’s likely no market for Cam Thomas. Speaking on Bleacher Reports NBA Insider Notebook, he said this:

“Cam Thomas—no—does not really have a market, to my understanding. Josh Giddy also—I think people know what his price tag, he would like it to be. We’ve heard he wants $30 million as well. I don’t see a widespread market for that on the open market right now too.”

Should the Nets and Thomas not reach an agreement and no other suitor emerges for him, he can opt into his qualifying offer, play out this season, earn $12.0 million and become an unrestricted free agent next June.

Fischer also reports that the rumored seven-team trade revolving around Kevin Durant’s move from Phoenix to Houston has been finalized and should be announced Sunday.

The Nets are one of the teams that’s been mentioned in the deal, but its involvement is likely to be limited as they and the other teams work to resolve cap issues. Speculation is that last Thursday’s trade of the Nets pick at No. 36 for two future Phoenix Suns seconds will be integrated into the larger deal.

So with all that out of the way, here’s what we know about the Brooklyn Nets roster heading into the holiday:

GUARANTEED DEALS (7)

—Nic Claxton (C)

—Michael Porter Jr (PF)

—Terance Mann (SF)

—Noah Clowney (PF/SF)

—Dariq Whitehead (SF)

—Day’Ron Sharpe (C/PF)

—Ziaire Williams, (SF)

ROOKIE DEALS (5)

—Egor Demin (PG)

—Nolan Traore (PG)

—Drake Powell (SG/SF)

—Ben Saraf (PG)

—Danny Wolf (C/PF)

RESTRICTED FREE AGENTS (1)

—Cam Thomas (SG)

UNRESTRICTED FREE AGENTS (1)

—D’Anthony Melton (PG)

TWO-WAY DEALS (2)

—Tosan Evbuomwan (PF)

—Tyson Etienne (SG)

NON-GUARANTEED (4)

—Jalen Wilson (SF)

—Keon Johnson (SG)

—Tyrese Martin (SF)

—Drew Timme (C/PF)

EXHIBIT 10 TRAINING CAMP INVITES (1)

—Grant Nelson (C/PF)

SUMMER LEAGUE INVITES (2)

—Terry Roberts (PG0

—T.J. Bamba (SG)

—Drew Davis (SG)

That’s 23 players and NBA teams can bring 21 players into training camp, which is a long way off in late September. Melton is rumored to be headed to the Lakers and the bottom half of the non-guaranteed list above is unlikely to make it.

Brooklyn now has 31 picks over the next seven Drafts: 13 firsts and 18 seconds, one short of the total they had going into the 2025 Draft although the configuration of firsts and seconds is different.


Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/2025/7/3/...ign-draft-picks-two-way-as-roster-spreads-out
 
Deadlines and Commitments: Summer and its league begins

2023 NBA Summer League - Brooklyn Nets v Toronto Raptors

Photo by Garrett Ellwood/NBAE via Getty Images

Summer League starts in six days!

The Draft is over, free agency is close to a conclusion. Contracts have been signed, qualifying offers tendered and now the testing begins with the opening of NBA Summer League in Las Vegas next Wednesday. There’s still some things to clear up, most prominently Cam Thomas free agency. And there’s always the possibility of a surprise.

July 6: Free agent signings and Draft Day trades become official, starting at 6:00 p.m. ET. Specifically, the Nets participation the three-team trade involving the Atlanta Hawks and Boston Celtics centered on Kristaps Porzingis will be finalized. In that deal, in case you forgot, the Nets wound up with the No. 22 pick, which became Drake Powell, and Terance Mann. Initial reports did not indicate what Brooklyn gave up. It has to be something: a draft stash, cash considerations, a G League contract.

Also, the Nets are one of teams in the massive, record seven-team deal centered on Kevin Durant’s move to Houston. It’s anticipated that the Nets involvement will only be the already agreed-to trade of their 2025 second rounder to Phoenix for two future seconds.

July 7: Nets $23.3 million trade exception from Mikal Bridges trade expires. Because the Nets have so much cap space, there seems little use for it. The Nets will have to be over the cap to use it. That is highly unlikely.

July 8: Nets contingent led by assistant coach Steve Hetzel will depart for Las Vegas. Roster TBA.

July 10-20: NBA Summer League in Las Vegas With all those draft picks plus a number of young players from last year’s team and camp invites, Brooklyn should be one of the most interesting squads. In addition to their five first rounders, Dariq Whitehead seems like a lock to be on the roster. Noah Clowney more a question mark. It is his third season in the NBA. And in case you forgot, Jalen Wilson won the SL MVP last year so he’s proven himself on the Vegas courts. Here’s the schedule of the preliminary round:

  • July 10 vs. the Thunder (5:30 p.m, ET, ESPN2),
  • July 13 vs. the Wizards (8:00 p.m, ET, ESPN2),
  • July 15 vs. the Knicks (6:00 p.m. ET, ESPN2)
  • July 16 against Magic (7:30 p.m, ET, ESPN)

Among the rookies you can expect to see are Thomas Sorber and Nique Clifford of OKC, Tre Johnson and Walter Clayton Jr. of Washington.

July 17–21: WNBA All-Star Break

July 19: WNBA All-Star Game at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. With the Liberty dominating the W, expect multiple selections from New York.

Early August TBA: NBA schedule for 2025-26 is released. Games to look for: the four vs. the Knicks of course, the rivalry enhanced by New York hiring Jordi Fernandez’s mentor, Mike Brown; the Dallas Mavericks with Cooper Flagg and if he’s healthy at the time, Kyrie Irving, plus the OKC Thunder and Indiana Pacers. We’ll also find out how many national TV games Brooklyn will play.

August 7: WNBA Trade Deadline, 3:00 pm ET.

August 29: WNBA Player Playoff eligibility from Waivers, 5:00 pm ET

September 11: WNBA Regular Season Ends

September 14: WNBA Playoffs begin

September 28: Rough starting date for training camp and Media Day for those teams like the Nets who play overseas in preseason The Nets, of course, are playing in China. Teams can bring 21 players into camp.

October 10: First of two NBA China Games vs. Phoenix Suns at the 14,000 capacity Venetian in Macao. Will Nets have a Chinese player on the roster?

October 12: Second of two NBA China Games. Same opponent, same venue.

October 19 - Last possible date for WNBA Finals.

October 21: Regular Season Opening Night, opponent TBA, NBA Teams have to get down to 15 standard roster spots and three two-ways. Big day for non-guaranteed players: Jalen Wilson, Keon Johnson, Tyrese Martin and Drew Timme. Keon Johnson and Jalen Wilson contract partial guarantees: $760,520 for Johnson; $381,695 for Wilson.

October 31: Nets team option on Noah Clowney and Dariq Whitehead for 2026-27.

November 7: Long Island Nets opening night at Nassau Coliseum. Opponent TBA. As our Brian Fleurantin wrote this week, the G League affiliate will play a big role with so many young players.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/2025/7/4/24461656/deadlines-and-commitments-summer-and-its-league-begins
 
Nets Reacts: How do fans feel about Brooklyn’s Draft?

Brooklyn Nets Introduce Egor Demin, Nolan Traore, Drake Powell, Ben Saraf, and Danny Wolf - Press Conference


The votes are in!

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

The Brooklyn Nets took a chance with five players that few probably expected, particularly Egor Demin at No. 8. We aren’t going to act like we know all that goes on behind the scenes, and these are the people who get paid to do it.

Sure it’ll take years before we know whether it’s a success or not, but for now we’re having some fun with it. The same way Sean Marks, Jordi Fernandez and the rest of Nets front office personnel are enjoying the offseason, particularly as Summer League rosters will be announced with an expectation that all five will be joining. Joy!

So, we asked the NetsDaily community how they felt about the Draft selections. Drum roll please..



Check out FanDuel, the official sportsbook partner of SB Nation.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/2025/7/3/...-nets-fans-feel-about-brooklyns-draft-results
 
All five rookies to play for Brooklyn Nets Summer League team

DA1A6328_D9BC_4BBF_B63D_9BD7D5FA6EC5.0.jpeg


Sixteen Nets hopefuls will be in Vegas for Brooklyn.

All five draft picks will be on the court in Las Vegas when the Brooklyn Nets open Summer League play Thursday. They’re among 16 players on the Summer League roster announced Saturday morning. In addition to the rooks, three young Nets who played for Brooklyn and the Long Island Nets last year — Drew Timme, Tosan Evbuomwan and Tyson Etienne are listed, plus Quincy Olivari, a guard who played two games for the Lakers on a two way contract last season,

Here’s the full list



Also Saturday, YES Network announced that will cover all five games, four live. Thursday’s opener will be tape delayed and broadcast at 11:00 p.m. ET after the Yankees’ post game show. ESPN2 will cover all the games live.

Not on the roster: Dariq Whitehead and Noah Clowney, the Nets two 20-year-olds. Third-year players do not typically participate in Summer League.

Of the five rookies, four are already under contract. Drake Powell, taken at No. 22 is part of the three-way deal centered on Kristaps Porzingis and can’t sign till July 6 when the trade is finalized.

Olivari may the most intriguing of the remaining roster prospects. The 24-year-old 6’3” point guard played two games for L.A., scoring three points. In 31 games with the South Bay Lakers, averaged 17.5 points on 40/34/79 shooting splits as well as 5.0 rebounds and 4.3 assists. Two days ago, the Lakers announced their roster for the California Classic and Las Vegas Summer League which included Olivari. He is one of three players beyond the Nets own G Leaguers who spent considerable time in the NBA’s developmental league last season.

Among the other prospects:

— Grant Nelson, a 6’11” big who played for North Dakota State and Alabama, winning the nickname Dakota Durant for his scoring versatility and rebounding. He will reportedly sign an Exhibit 10 deal and compete for the team’s remaining two-way contract.

— Caleb Daniels, a 6’4’ guard who twice was in camp for the Miami Heat in 2023 and 2024 after playing collegiate ball at Tulane and Villanova. After being cut both years, Daniels wound up with the Heat affiliate, the Sioux Falls Skyforce, playing 64 games and averaging 11.8 points on 47/34/79 shooting splits. He’s 26.

—Tyrese Samuel, a 25-year-old 6’10” Canadian power forward who played college ball at Florida and Seton Hall. After signing with the Suns last season, he was waived and assigned to the Valley Suns, where he averaged 10.8 points on 64/21/58 shooting and 7.3 rebounds

—Dre Davis, a 23-year-old 6’6’ wing who played for Seton Hall, Louisville and most recently Ole’ Miss, After transferring from Seton Hall to Ole ‘Miss last season, he averaged 10.1 points on 43/36/68 shooting splits. He also averaged 4.8 rebounds as well as a block and a steal in 34 games, all starts.

—TJ Bamba, 24-year-old wing and a native of the Bronx, N.Y., He played for Washington State and Villanova prior to transferring to Oregon for last season. Last season, in Eugene, he averaged 10.5 points on 39/25/74 shooting splits as well as 3.3 rebounds, 3.0 assists and 1.8 assists.

Here’s the full schedule

  • July 10 vs. the Thunder (5:30 p.m, ET, ESPN2, YES, GSN),
  • July 13 vs. the Wizards (8:00 p.m, ET, ESPN2, YES, GSN),
  • July 15 vs. the Knicks (6:00 p.m. ET, ESPN2, YES, GSN)
  • July 16 against Magic (7:30 p.m, ET, ESPN, YES, GSN)

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/2025/7/5/...-to-play-for-brooklyn-nets-summer-league-team
 
NetsDaily Off-Season Report - No. 12

Barclays_Center_court_from_above.0.jpg


Every weekend, we’ll be updating the Nets’ off-season with bits and pieces of information, gossip, etc. to help fans get ready for ... whatever.

It’s the end of the free agent moratorium and the vaunted seven-team deal is official. Nothing new in it for the Brooklyn Nets who folded the trade of its No. 36 pick to the Suns into the largest trade in NBA history.

Here’s best summary we’ve seen…


Here is a clean look at the 7 teamer

In a 3+ team trade, 2 teams have to touch each other with compensation pic.twitter.com/aX6cPqRcOU

— Bobby Marks (@BobbyMarks42) July 6, 2025

Still haven’t seen reports that the Nets two other trades have become official: Not the deal that’s bringing Terance Mann and the No. 22 pick (Drake Powell) to Brooklyn nor the one bringing Michael Porter Jr. and the Nuggets 2032 unprotected first to Brooklyn for Cam Johnson. The signings of both Day’Ron Sharpe and Ziaire Williams also have to be cleared. Once they’re done, Powell can sign his rookie deal.

As of 5:00 p.m. ET, there’s a lot of business left to pass through the league offices. So not to worry. As for Cam Thomas, we’ll let you know when we know. Same with any surprises.

Summer Time and the living is easy


The Summer League is upon us. Games begin Thursday vs. OKC. Four games are already scheduled. A fifth, part of the SL “playoffs,” will take place on July 18th or 19th.

We would expect that the five first rounders — Egor Demin, Nolan Traore, Drake Powell, Ben Saraf and Danny Wolf — will get the bulk of the playing time early on but we wouldn’t be surprised if some of the five leave early. It’s not uncommon that teams don’t play their first rounders through the entirety of Summer League.

Who else do we expect to see beyond them? The Nets are already invested in three players who spent time with both Brooklyn and Long Island last season and are under contract: two-ways Tosan Evbuomwan and Tyson Etienne plus Drew Timme who is on a standard but non-guaranteed NBA deal.

Then, there’s Grant Nelson who played for North Dakota State then Alabama and who reportedly will get a chance to compete for the remaining two-way. An athletic big, he reportedly had opportunities to get drafted in the second round but told teams he preferred to go undrafted so he could sign with a team of his choice which became the Nets.

Another good bet is Quincy Olivari a 6’3” combo guard who played for the Lakers in Summer League and preseason last year, becoming a fan favorite, He secured a sneaker deal with Steph Curry’s Under Armour brand and during his May graduation at Xavier ripped open his gown to reveal a Lakers jersey. He was on a two-way deal when in January he was waived to help the Lake Show add to their big man depth. Laker fans expected him back in Las Vegas after he told Laker Nation last month that he planned to play in Summer League, but was careful to note that he wasn’t sure for who. Laker fans missed that nuance.

Finally, there’s the feel-good story of Terry Roberts. He’s getting his big chance a year and a half after being shot in a case of random violence then returned to Long Island in February of this year and played well for LI as it made a playoff run.

None of the Nets other non-guaranteed players — Jalen Wilson, last year’s Summer League MVP; Keon Johnson or Tyrese Martin will be on hand, nor will third-year players Dariq Whitehead or Noah Clowney. It’s not that common for third year players, even those as young as the Nets 20-year-olds to pass on Summer League. Similarly, it’s rare for head coaches to hold the reins in Las Vegas and so Steve Hetzel will be in the big chair for the second straight year. Last July, Jordi Fernandez was in Vegas, but prepping the Canadian national team for the Olympics.

It’s never a perfect proving ground, but Summer League will often become a showcase for guards, particularly point guards. They have the ball in their hands and often have the green light on offense. Offensive sets are basic adding to their freedom. Defense? Never heard of it. Of course, the Nets will have a LOT of guards in Vegas. Expect them to shine.

Once the last balls are put away in Las Vegas on July 20, the next competition we’re likely to be interested in is Eurobasket 2025 which will be played across four European countries: Cyprus, Finland, Poland and Latvia between August 27 and September 14. Ben Saraf is committed to the Israeli national team. Danny Wolf will pass and we don’t know the status of Nolan Traore who has played for French youth teams in the past. Russia is not participating.

After that interlude, the off-season desert continues through the last week of September when the Nets will get an early start on preseason training because of their commitment to NBA China games in Macao, October 10 and 12.

Ironman


The rivalry between the Nets and Knicks got a little juicier with the news that Mike Brown has been hired by the Knicks as their new head coach. Twice in his coaching career, Jordi Fernandez benefited from his relationship from Brown which began a decade ago when Brown, then head coach of the Cavaliers, watched as Fernandez trained his son, Elijah. He liked what what he saw and eventually hired Fernandez as a player development coach in 2009, then as head coach of the Cleveland G League team.

After a six-year stint with the Denver Nuggets where he worked with new Net Michael Porter Jr,, Brown brought him on board the Sacramento Kings staff in 2022. He rost to associate head coach before Sean Marks handed him the head coaching job in Brooklyn.

“He’s a mentor, but he’s more than that,” Fernandez said of Brown in November before their first match-up as rivals game. “He’s like family to me. I would not be in this position without him. And life is one big circle, right? He’s the one that brought me here, and then years later, we were back together.”

The Nets won that game and the Kings fired Brown not long after.

This week, Brian Windhorst revealed another dimension of the relationship going back to Fernandez’s early days in Cleveland.

“So, on Mike Brown — what you need to know about Mike Brown… and I don’t think he does this anymore, but it helps you understand a little bit about him: He, for years, used to bring his own iron on the road. He had this thing where he would iron — he would bring an ironing board too — because he had a specific ironing board. He definitely packed his preferred iron.

“And the man who was in charge of packing his iron was Jordi Fernandez. Jordi Fernandez was the lowest staffer on the Cavs’ staff — just over from Spain, looking for a foothold in the NBA. Jordi was kind of like… I don’t know what his role officially was, but he was basically Mike Brown’s gopher. I mean, he helped out in practices — he was doing some coaching — but he was also Mike Brown’s gopher. He was in charge of packing the iron. Mike had this thing where — before every game — he would have an ironing board set up in the coach’s office, home and road, and he would iron his own shirt. He wanted to be the one to iron it. It was like a zen thing for him — a routine to clear his mind before going out to the game.”

One big circle indeed like ironing.

Draftnik Gold Medal


So, we went back to our last mock draft round-up to see which of the draftniks did the best job in projecting the Nets picks. There was a clear winner: Jonathan Wasserman of Bleacher Report. This is before the Nets traded for the No. 22 pick, but Wasserman got three of the five right and all three close to where they wound up getting picked!

#8 - Noa Essengue, C/PF, 6’10” Ratiopharm Ulm

#19 - Nolan Traore, PG, 6’3” Saint-Quentin

#26 - Danny Wolf, C, 7’0” Michigan

#27 - Drake Powell, SF, 6’6”, North Carolina

#36 - Jamir Watkins, SG/SF, 6’7” Florida State

Extraordinary work, Jon. Indeed, no other mock got more than one right. Three of the nine mocks we tracked did have Traore going to the Nets somewhere in those mid-first slots. Only one, Yahoo! Sports, got Egor Demin, but not at No. 8. Instead, they had him at No. 19. Traore was mentioned by three of the mocks, Wolf by two.

And here’s another fun list, 247.com’s ranking of the top 100 collegiate prospects in 2024. The top six were all lottery picks in the 2025 NBA Draft. Now take a look at where Drake Powell was listed. No. 11. That was two ahead of Derek Queen, five ahead of Egor Demin, seven ahead of Kon Knueppel, 17 ahead of Carter Bryant, 25 ahead of Kasparas Jakučionis and 54 ahead of Jeremiah Fears, all taken before him. We’re read in a couple of places that fans should look more to his high school and AAU work than what he did at North Carolina where he played the good soldier role under head coach Hubert Davis (who it should be noted is his mother’s first cousin.)

Good Work


Peter Stern is the Chief Financial Officer of BSE, the parent company of the Brooklyn Nets, New York Liberty, and Barclays Center. Prior to joining BSE, Stern was Head of U.S. Investments at Alibaba Group. He previously had banking and finance jobs in New York, Beijing, Hong Kong and Sydney but there’s another side to Stern.

As his BSE Global bio notes:

Stern is known for his justice work at Sing Sing prison where he teaches financial literacy and acts as Senior Advisor to Hudson Link, the prison’s college program. Previously, Stern was active at San Quentin prison and remains Senior Advisor to The Last Mile which provides incarcerated individuals with business and technology training across six states.

We learned the last few day how Stern’s work has extended overseas to the prisons of Uganda, one of Africa’s most brutal regimes...


Peter Stern, CFO of the Brooklyn Nets, shared powerful reflections from his time in Uganda, working inside prisons with Justice Defenders.

#BridgeBuildingForJustice
#JusticeDefenders pic.twitter.com/9eRO68qUDR

— Jia Rizvi (@JiaDocs) July 6, 2025

We’ve noted before that Clara Wu Tsai has been instrumental in the Meek Mill-inspired REFORM Alliance which has been lobbying states to change their parole and probation laws and with success. The alliance has helped over 800,000 people exit the justice system through the passage of 18 bipartisan bills in 11 states. These reforms focus on “transforming probation and parole systems by creating pathways for individuals to transition out of the justice system and into their communities.”

Wu Tsai is a founding partner of the alliance along with Patriots owner Robert Kraft, Jay-Z and Fanatics CEO Michael Rubin and Mill. She has also contributed significant funding, by some accounts up to $10 million.

Rubin described recently how REFORM got started and how he recruited Wu Tsai and others...


Michael Rubin, explains how he teamed up with Jay-Z, Meek Mill, Clara Wu Tsai, and among others to co-found "Reform Alliance" against the terrorist activity of Police Enforcement.

(via YouTube / Gil's Arena) pic.twitter.com/2qBXgQaq5W

— Tribe ERA Worldwide™ (@TribeERAWW) June 10, 2025

Good work indeed.

Final Note


A community note: How to pronounce Egor Demin’s name straight from his mouth:


Not just pronunciation, it’s family & culture.

Learn from @whoisegor3 how to say his last name ⤵️ pic.twitter.com/OpWcctX6Ky

— Brooklyn Nets (@BrooklynNets) July 6, 2025

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/2025/7/6/24462458/netsdaily-off-season-report-no-12
 
What’s really going on with the struggling New York Liberty? How worried should we be?

WNBA: JUL 06 Seattle Storm at New York Liberty

Photo by Gregory Fisher/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Jonquel Jones is too good to replace, but does that mean there are no problems in sea foam land?

The New York Liberty have lost six of nine games, most recently a nine-point-but-not-really-that-close defeat to the Seattle Storm on Sunday afternoon. What happened? Well, they scored six points in the third quarter.

Postgame, Sandy Brondello said: “For me, it’s not the offense, it’s the defense.”

I have to respectfully disagree there, but the Liberty have gone from 9-0 to 12-6 because they’ve lost many different games. The one saving grace is that they’ve exclusively been against good, maybe even great teams.

But in road games against the Phoenix Mercury and Indiana Fever, they gave up triple-digits due to soft perimeter defense, getting punished every time they left a 3-point shooter open. Atlanta was a schedule loss. They haven’t been able to score against the Storm.

This has been the most challenging stretch of regular-season ball in the New York Liberty’s Superteam Era. In June, I emphasized just how impactful the temporary losses of Leonei Fiebich (now back from EuroBasket) and Jonquel Jones (out through the All-Star break) were, and how their absences muted many worries. We knew months ago that this wasn’t a championship team without Fiebich and Jones, right?

The players agree. Natasha Cloud and Sabrina Ionescu nearly reached their breaking points on Sunday, after independently fielding a million more versions of the same question — what’s wrong with you guys?? — that has one obvious answer...


what are the odds that all this crashout will be forgotten by October?

pic.twitter.com/iiXYKiQcMO

— Tanya (@ScriptedTanya) July 7, 2025

“Because we’ve been down three starters in the last Seattle game, and then two starters for all these entire games,” said Ionescu. “Like these are huge pieces of offenses, and there’s no way around it. You know, you can say that it doesn’t affect the team, or you know, ‘the next man up,’ but at the end of the day, we’re missing our finals MVP. We’re missing Leo for all these games. It’s hard.”

Though Leo has finally returned, Ionescu’s point stands, and they’ve only lost to good teams. But the Liberty have to be better. This can all be true. So here are some collected thoughts on the 12-6 Liberty, and what’s really going on with the team right now.

There’s no replacing Jonquel Jones


I don’t think more casual New York Liberty have grasped it until now. Sabrina Ionescu has a signature shoe, Breanna Stewart is Breanna Stewart, and both will start in the All-Star Game this season. Sure, Jonquel Jones won Finals MVP, but it was the same year Jaylen Brown won it over Jayson Tatum, you know?

Nah. She makes the whole thing work, and has since 2023...


since '23 pic.twitter.com/pp11Odilck

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) July 7, 2025

That the Liberty are playing like a .500 team without her, losing to good teams but surviving against lesser competition, shouldn’t come as a surprise.

Versatility has become, essentially, an empty cliché in basketball-speak, but allow me to make an exception for Jones. Defensively, she can play any coverage while being one of the strongest players in the league, shoring up the defensive glass and combining forces with Stewie to create an all-time great paint defense.

Jones is the reason New York can match up well with the Las Vegas Aces and the Minnesota Lynx. She credibly guard A’ja Wilson and Napheesa Collier, allowing Stewie to wreak havoc everywhere else. Against the Indiana Fever on May 24, she switched late-game ball-screens against Caitlin Clark and gave her hell on an island. There’s also the transition boost...


1: awesome Jonquel outlet pass for a Stewie layup
2: good Jonquel outlet for another transition layup pic.twitter.com/g5dLmXYjNu

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) September 13, 2024

It’s the same story on offense — there is no easy coverage for her. She’s shooting over 38% from deep on the Liberty, on real volume. She’s adept rolling the basket. Defenses can’t play drop coverage when she sets a screen, because she’ll either pop out to the arc or catch it with downhill momentum, meaning instant death for her defender.

Get cute, and this happens...


Jonquel Jones PnP dime, nice Stewie cut pic.twitter.com/MOUqS4hOTi

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) May 19, 2025

Right now, the Liberty miss her because defenses are free to play much more aggressive coverages. They switch because they don’t have to worry about Jonquel finding a mismatch down low, or willingly trap and put their defense in rotation for the same reason.

Switching has always been New York’s bug-a-boo as an offense, even with JJ on the court. But to start this season, they seemingly finally struck the right balance of featuring her inside and utilizing her talent on the perimeter. Defenses didn’t know what to do.

They do now. Seattle effectively switched plenty of actions on Sunday, and the ball often died in New York’s hands. Having to bail their teammates out consistently, Stewie and Sabrina took 36 of the team’s 68 shot attempts. They weren’t playing selfishly, but were often left with no other choice.

(That’s a nice telltale sign for how New York’s offense is flowing. If those two are responsible for over half of the Liberty’s shot attempts, it’s probably not going well.)

Her defensive impact doesn’t need much explaining. But to understand what the Liberty are missing on offense without Jones, ask yourself this question: Where are the easy layups coming from?


With Jonquel OFF

- New York's attempts at the rim decrease by 8%
- Their fg% at the rim decreases by 5%
- and the most revealing: their rate of *assisted* makes at the rim decreases by 19%

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) July 7, 2025

Jonquel Jones has an MVP. She has a Finals MVP. And yet, she’s clearly underrated as one of the very best players in the league.

We can be honest: A couple games a month, she just doesn’t show up. Jones will look disengaged and stumble into, like, a 9/6/2 line, depressing her averages and end-of-season award cases. Over a 44-game season, she’s not a real MVP candidate. And she is allowed to have these off nights considering Stewie, who’s never taken a possession off in her life, is around to pick up the slack.

But in the 80% of games where she brings it, she’s in that top-tier of the league with A’ja Wilson and Napheesa Collier, full stop. That’s who Liberty are missing right now. They are a historically great team with here, and merely a good team without her. There’s no replacing that.

Bad timing for Leonie Fiebich


The Liberty were counting on Leonie Fiebich to take an offensive leap in her sophomore season. Starting in the second of 2024, Brondello has constantly talked about involving her in more actions, particularly as a secondary creator coming off dribble-handoffs or even initiating some pick-and-roll possessions.

It doesn’t look like it’s happening in 2025. Fiebich arrived in New York just days before the season opener, then left to compete in EuroBasket for three weeks. Over 11 games this season, she’s averaging 6 points, and hasn’t taken more than six field-goal attempts in a game once. This is not what the Liberty envisioned.

It was a glaring problem on Sunday afternoon. With Stewie and Sabrina overtaxed, Fiebich had just two shot attempts until the closing minutes of the third quarter, and passed up multiple open looks much to the dismay of the crowd a likely seething Brondello.

She sat to the bench, then hit a contested three immediately upon returning. Shoot the ball!!


Leonie Fiebich remembers she's 6'4" with a ratchet: pic.twitter.com/aziel18OWB

— Lucas Kaplan (@LucasKaplan_) July 6, 2025

Fiebich finished with more turnovers (5) than shots (4) for probably the first time in her life. Everybody is entitled to a rough game here and there, and some of her turnovers were uncharacteristically silly.

“Leo doesn’t usually play like that,” is all that Brondello needed to say postgame.

But she’s sporting a 10% usage rate this season, which is hardly higher than what you, the reader, would put up if Brondello threw you out there. We can’t even talk about her coming off dribble-handoffs or isolating favorable switches if she’s going to pass up open 3-pointers.

Without Betnijah Laney-Hamilton, who often excelled as a post-up option against smaller guards and a secondary ball-handler who could shoot it from three, the Liberty were banking on a jump from Fiebich. Without Jonquel Jones, they really need it. And they might not get it.

Nyara Sabally’s disappointing season


Kennedy Burke, bless her, is starting for the New York Liberty as Jonquel Jones pulls off increasingly cool outfits on the bench.

That should tell you all you need to know about Nyara Sabally’s season, to date. After bursting onto the scene in the 2024 WNBA Finals, Sabally seemed poised to fulfill her destiny as a truly valuable pro. New York protected her in the expansion draft over Kayla Thornton, and it made sense at the time, even though Sabally had no pathway to starting minutes. At the very least, they had a great trade asset on their hands.

Fast-forward to July, and her star has dimmed considerably, getting justifiably benched for Isabelle Harrison lately and still dealing with knee issues. It might just never happen for her on a consistent basis.

Earlier this season, Sabally received a PRP injection for her balky right knee, which caused her to miss six straight games. She was perpetually listed as day-to-day, but it turned into a near three-week absence.

The 2022 first-round pick showed some flashes upon returning, but has since fallen off as concerns about her knee have again popped up. Sandy Brondello told reporters on Sunday that she had been a non-participant in practices throughout the week, and that she had been questionable for Thursday’s victory over the Los Angeles Sparks.

(Sabally wasn’t listed as questionable on the Liberty’s public injury report, but Brondello confirmed that internally, they considered the possibility of a late scratch.)

Her knee is not right, and whether it’s just injury-related or a lack of offensive finesse and defensive awareness (or most likely a combination of both), she’s been unable to seize a tremendous opportunity with Jonquel Jones on the shelf.

At this point, Nyara Sabally is playing her age-25 season and since being drafted in ‘22, has put together about four strong weeks of play. But hey, one of those weeks came during the freaking WNBA Finals, and banners hang forever.

Other notes

  • What is Natasha Cloud doing when Sabrina Ionescu is handling the ball? This was the obvious question New York would face this season, as they replaced the injured Betnijah Laney-Hamilton with a more dynamic driver and passer in Cloud, also a worse shooter. We don’t have an answer yet, though.
  • It’s fascinating to see Ionescu transition from a combo-guard in 2023 to a fully ball-dominant initiator with a nearly 30% usage rate in 2025. For all of her incredible hand-eye and anticipation gifts, she doesn’t create a ton of space with a live dribble. She doesn’t feast in isolation. This will always leave her prone to these 5-of-20 shooting stretches we’ve seen from her, though this is now simply a feature of New York’s offense.


The New York Liberty are 12-6, now the three-seed and just one game away from losing home-court advantage in the first round of the playoffs. There is a LONG way to go until we worry about that, but the Libs will need to stack a couple wins before Jonquel Jones returns. Their win on the road against the Golden State Valkyries in a 50/50 contest feels huge, a week later.

Their next game is scheduled to tip off on Tuesday evening at 8:00 p.m. against the Las Vegas Aces. It’s a big one for both teams, should be fun.

Source: https://www.netsdaily.com/2025/7/7/...ed-should-we-be-jonquel-jones-sabrina-ionescu
 
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