Steph Curry seems to have added Michael Jordan to his list of haters

M.J. may have made an enemy.

Michael Jordan hoped that Stephen Curry wouldn’t take offense when M.J. said the Golden State Warriors guard wasn’t a Hall of Famer yet. But, of course, that was never going to happen. Curry insinuated that Jordan was one of the haters during a recent interview with SoleCollector.com.

During the video segment, SoleCollector.com’s Matthew Welty asked if Curry had ever autographed his shoes and sent them to the haters.

“Not yet, I might have to set up a little service,” Curry told Welty. “I might have to send them to M.J.”

Curry laughed it off, but perhaps there’s some gravity to his statement. And it was surely a reference to Jordan’s recent comments. Here’s a look at the moment.

There is no doubt Curry will someday be a Hall of Famer. He knows it. I know it. Everyone — except apparently M.J. — knows it.

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WATCH: Anthony Davis says he still feels the discomfort from shoulder injury

Anthony Davis told ESPN the injury he suffered to his right shoulder while attempting a dunk is something he continues to feel.

The Lakers’ seven-game win streak ended Sunday at the hands of the reigning NBA Champion Raptors Sunday night. Anthony Davis, who joined Los Angeles in June, lead the purple and gold with 27 points, eight rebounds and four blocks.

The numbers are right around what the former New Orleans Pelican averages this season, despite having suffered a shoulder injury while attempting a dunk in a game a couple of weeks ago. Davis told ESPN postgame Sunday that the injury is something he continues to feel, even in performing well.

“There’s really never a play I don’t feel it,” Davis said of his injured right shoulder. “I’m going to go out there and play. I try not to let it affect my game. I just play through it and then worry about taking care of it after the game.”

The 26-year-old wears a compression shirt under his t-shirt in the game and the Lakers staff applies a heat pack to his shoulder on the bench to keep him able to play right now. Davis tweaked the shoulder again Sunday in blocking on of his four denied shots, but there does not seem to be an indication that he’ll be taken off the court.

LeBron James shouldn’t blame AAU coaches for letting kids chase dreams

LeBron James correctly calls out some flaws in the system but misidentifies the culprits.

LeBron James is right about a lot of things a lot of the time. He’s an inspiration, truly: an athlete who lived up to soaring hype and now uses his fame to speak out on issues far beyond the court. He’s probably the most complete basketball player ever, but his legacy, I think, will be in emboldening following generations to pay attention to, and speak out about, problems they have ascended past. What an incredible thing to give to the world.

But sometimes he is … well, wrong. That was the case with his take on the NBA’s China issue. Other times he’s badly misguided. That seems to be the case with his criticism of “AAU coaches.” James ripped into them during an interview with Yahoo, blaming them, in part, for the need to allow NBA players to rest strategically during the season — a practice saddled with the awful term “load management.”

Here’s what James had to say:

“These kids are going into the league already banged up, and I think parents and coaches need to know [that] … well, AAU coaches don’t give a f—,” James told Yahoo Sports. “AAU coaches couldn’t give a damn about a kid and what his body is going through.”

James granted Yahoo Sports an exclusive interview that covered the state of load management, a draining AAU culture that often leads to destruction, how he monitors his son’s involvement, and preventable measures to ensure that kids aren’t being taken advantage of and physically damaged before beginning their professional careers.

“I think [AAU] has something to do with it, for sure,” James told Yahoo Sports. “It was a few tournaments where my kids — Bronny and Bryce — had five games in one day and that’s just f—ing out of control. That’s just too much. And there was a case study where I read a report. I don’t know who wrote it not too long ago, and it was talking about the causes and [kid’s] bodies already being broken down and they contributed it to AAU basketball and how many games that these tournaments are having for the [financial benefit]. So, I’m very conscious for my own son because that’s all I can control, and if my son says he’s sore or he’s tired, he’s not playing.

“Because a lot of these tournaments don’t have the best interest of these kids, man. I see it. It’s like one time, they had to play a quarterfinal game, a semifinal game and a championship game starting at 9 a.m., and the championship game was at 12:30 p.m. Three games. I was like, ‘Oh, hell no.’ And my kids were dead tired. My kids were dead tired. This isn’t right. This is an issue.”

I’m not going to pretend that I know a lot of AAU coaches, but I regularly covered top programs in Indiana, met coaches in the D.C./Baltimore area and reported on several programs in New York City. The coaches cared about the players — deeply, in most cases — and wanted what was best for them. Are there some bad apples in summer basketball? Of course.

But mostly, summer coaches are in a strange position. The point of summer basketball is not to win. It’s not to build balanced teams and manage them so that they are in position to compete for trophies. That’s all a sideshow. Scholarships aren’t awarded based on that; coaches don’t get the call to be Director of Ops at a mid-major because they went zone in the waning minutes of a Sunday championship game. No, the point of summer ball is to get kids noticed. Players want to get minutes, have the ball and put up shots as college coaches watch.

(I’m speaking somewhat generically about the summer basketball experience, which has been in flux as shoe companies moved to control more of the action and the NCAA worked to give more power to high school coaches. The actual mechanics have changed, but the idea is the same: players want to show out for coaches and, when coaches aren’t there, the recruiting services covering the events.)

Summer teams are generally not carefully constructed so as to produce deep, well-rounded teams. If a kid is told he’s going to be the seventh or eighth man, he’ll just scout around for a less talented team where he’ll have a starring role. All the while, parents who are spending time and money to support their children, want to watch those kids get chances (who could forget James himself exuberantly enjoying his sons’ games this summer?). And often that means playing multiple games per day in tournaments meant to fit into long weekends.

And kids want to play! James basically admits this, saying: “It didn’t affect me. But now that I look back on it, I don’t know.” You know how hard it would be to get a 17-year-old chasing a dream to admit he’s tired? They all think the constant playing and training doesn’t affect them — it’s the price to be paid for greatness, after all.

James is right: The AAU system creates unhealthy experiences for many players. But those experiences are coveted opportunities for kids who need to scrape and claw for scholarships. James notes that Nike’s Elite Youth Basketball League has done a better job at spacing out games — but that’s because Nike has the money to do things the right way. The summer basketball ecosystem also includes dozens of teams without the funds to stay the extra night in a hotel that would be required if a tournament was elongated to give players time to rest. James laments that some cities hosting tournaments don’t have Whole Foods, as if every kid pushing to get to the next level can afford to pay $9 per pound of food.

Besides, the vast majority of NBA players have time between AAU and their turn in the pros, and they spend it playing college basketball, where TV schedules dictate they play 9 p.m. games and class schedules call for 7 a.m. wake-ups — unless, of course, the players are flying across the country after the game. That’s not exactly the right way to get bodies ready for the next level, either.

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David Fizdale isn’t the one who should take the fall for the Knicks’ woes

What are the Knicks thinking here?

The New York Knicks spent the last year trading Kristaps Porzingis to create cap space, whiffing on all the big-name free agents they hoped to attract with that room and then putting together a hodgepodge collage of one- and two-year contracts to surround the few valuable pieces they have.

They’re 2-8, and after a surprise press conference with president Steve Mills and general manager Scott Perry after Sunday’s awful loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers, there’s writing on the wall.

But it’s not about their front office. Per ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski and Malika Andrews, Mills is starting “to lay the internal groundwork for the eventual dismissal of coach David Fizdale.”

I would say that’s a shock, considering Fizdale is in his second year with the franchise. But a backwards move like this is nothing shocking when it comes to the Knicks.

It’s not Fizdale’s fault that the previous regime couldn’t see eye to eye with Porzingis, who has resumed looking every bit like the star he was in his limited Big Apple time. It’s not his fault that the marquis names took their talents elsewhere, including over the Brooklyn Bridge. And it’s certainly not his fault that he was saddled with a roster that any coach would struggle with, one that includes a plethora of power forwards, disappointments and iffy fits.

Yet he might be the one to take the fall? Really?

Who out there believed this was the roster that would compete in the East? No one should have. It’s supposed to be a year of development for RJ Barrett — who actually looks like he’s living up to the billing of being the No. 3 overall pick in the 2019 draft — Kevin Knox, Mitchell Robinson and Frank Ntilikina. The Knicks were going to be bad no matter what, although they could have taken that route by taking on bad contracts in exchange for first-round picks. It would have produced the same result with long-term dividends.

But here we are. And the kicker is part of that ESPN report:

“Rival coaches and executives see a mismatched Knicks roster slow of foot, without legitimate NBA guard play, but Mills is selling (owner James) Dolan on a poorly coached team that is underachieving at 2-8 to start the season, league sources said.”

As it seems to always be with the Knicks, it goes up the ladder. If it’s Dolan who’s demanding the franchise compete NOW and Mills has to save his job by throwing Fizdale under the bus, that’s what’s ultimately crushing any chance at putting together a winner in New York. This will keep happening — the Knicks will create cap space, no one notable will be sold on joining all this dysfunction, coaches will be axed, front offices will be remade, lather, rinse, repeat. There’s no process to trust.

This is not on Fizdale. It barely has anything to do with him — he’s just a pawn for an owner who has repeatedly failed to figure any of this out.

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The Dion Waiters marijuana edible situation, explained

Waiters was just suspended for 10 games.

Welcome to FTW Explains, a guide to catching up on and better understanding stuff going on in the world.

The Miami Heat recently suspended guard Dion Waiters 10 games for what was called “conduct detrimental to the team” after reports of an incident involving a marijuana edible on the team plane.

It ended days of reporting and speculation about just what happened with the NBA veteran on that plane as everyone is piecing together reports about the incident that was considering detrimental conduct.

Here are some questions you might have and as many answers as we’ve gotten in the last few days about what exactly happened:

Who is Dion Waiters?

He’s a 27-year-old shooting guard for the Miami Heat who has averaged 13.2 points per game in a seven-year career after he was drafted out of Syracuse by the Cleveland Cavaliers with the fourth overall pick in 2012.

And what’s this now about marijuana edibles?

Well, marijuana is a substance that —

No no, what does that have to do with Waiters?

Oh, okay! There was a report on Friday from a Fox Sports radio host Andy Slater that a Heat player had a “medical emergency” on their flight out of Phoenix:

Slater added this:

Did that really happen?!

According to another report from ESPN, Waiters had a “panic attack” after consuming the edible.

Did the Heat confirm that was the case?

Not fully. In a statement that came with the 10-game suspension, the Heat said “Dion’s actions this season (included) the very scary situation on Thursday night,” and that the team was “grateful that the outcome wasn’t worse.”

They also mentioned there were other actions that were detrimental to the team this year.

Like what?

That might have been a reference to him being suspended for the home opener because of — per a Pat Riley statement via the Sun-Sentinel — “unprofessional conduct on the bench” during a preseason game.

Where did he get an edible from?

It’s unclear, but per The Athletic’s Shams Charania, the Heat believe it came from a teammate, although he won’t say:

How costly was this suspension?

Extremely:

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LeBron James blasts AAU culture: ‘AAU coaches don’t give a (expletive)’

Lakers star LeBron James had a candid conversation about AAU culture and how it’s contributing to injured NBA players.

The big debate of the early NBA season is load management, as the league debates why so many of its star players are choosing to sit out games during the regular seasons.

Players are banged up and being more careful to protect their bodies. The league is fine with that, in theory, but it’s hard to justify to people paying for expensive tickets, and for national TV audiences, why they can’t see their favorite players play on some nights.

The Lakers’ LeBron James has often spoken out about players having the right to do what’s best for their bodies, and is someone who has taken time off during the regular season to rest and recharge for a playoff push.

In a candid interview with Yahoo Sports this week, James also spoke out about what he sees as an issue for players’ health: The fact that they’re entering the league already banged up.

He points to a toxic culture in AAU youth basketball which puts players through outrageous schedules and is taxing on young bodies. He cites his perspective watching his two sons, LeBron Jr. and Bryce, go through the process now, and has seen what they are being demanded to do.

From Yahoo Sports:

“These kids are going into the league already banged up, and I think parents and coaches need to know [that] … well, AAU coaches don’t give a f—,” James told Yahoo Sports. “AAU coaches couldn’t give a damn about a kid and what his body is going through.”

He went on:

“I think [AAU] has something to do with it, for sure,” James told Yahoo Sports. “It was a few tournaments where my kids — Bronny and Bryce — had five games in one day and that’s just f—ing out of control. That’s just too much.

James went on to speak about how there isn’t being enough done to protect these athletes from fatigue, and how they aren’t being taught how to eat right, either. Read the entire article over at Yahoo Sports.

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Security confronted a fan who chanted ‘Fire Dolan’ at the Knicks-Cavs game

The embarrassment continues.

It’s another season, and not much has changed with the New York Knicks. They missed out on Zion Williamson, struck out in free agency and still have the league’s most overbearing, hypersensitive owner in Jim Dolan.

That was on full display during Sunday’s 108-87 loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers.

With the Knicks trailing by 28 points in the third quarter, a “Fire Dolan” chant broke out at Madison Square Garden as frustrated Knicks fans urged Dolan to sell the team. It’s unclear how the Madison Square Garden staff would be able to pinpoint the origin of a “Fire Dolan” chant, but videos hit Twitter that showed a fan getting escorted out by security.

The tweet claimed that the arena security was ejecting the fan who started the chant, and when another fan mockingly chanted, the six (!!!) security guards turned to threaten another ejection.

Though the video showed security escorting the fan out of the section, a Knicks spokesperson told For The Win that “no one was ejected last night from MSG for any reason.” A person claiming to be the fan in the video tweeted that he was removed from his seat for the chant.

Oddly enough, this was nothing new for Dolan who has a history of ejecting fans for merely voicing their frustrations at MSG. Last year, Dolan banned a fan for life who told him to “sell the team.”

The Knicks have lost eight of their first 10 games this season, and as long as Dolan is at the helm, there’s no reason to expect an end to these embarrassing scenes at Madison Square Garden.

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Melo was the second youngest player to receive NBA MVP votes. Make a wild guess about No. 1

All ages at the end of the regular season.

All ages at the end of the regular season.

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Timberwolves-Pistons odds: Minnesota a small road dog

Previewing Monday’s Minnesota Timberwolves at Detroit Pistons odds and lines, with NBA matchup analysis and picks.

The Minnesota Timberwolves (5-4) visit the Detroit Pistons (4-6) Monday at Little Caesars Arena for a 7 p.m. ET start. We analyze the Timberwolves-Pistons odds and lines, with NBA betting advice and tips around the matchup.


Place a legal sports bet on this NBA action or other games at BetMGM.


Timberwolves at Pistons: Key injuries

Timberwolves:

  • PG Jeff Teague (illness) questionable
  • PG Shabazz Napier (hamstring) questionable
  • PF Jordan Bell (shoulder) questionable

Pistons

  • PG Derrick Rose (hamstring) questionable
  • PG Tim Frazier (foot) probable
  • PF Blake Griffin (hamstring) probable

Timberwolves at Pistons: Odds, lines, picks, and betting tips

NBA odds courtesy of BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports for a full set of today’s betting odds. Odds last updated at 10:30 a.m. ET.

Prediction

Timberwolves 114, Pistons 108

Moneyline (ML)

The +125 line for the visiting TIMBERWOLVES is quite inviting. Even with the Pistons’ anticipated return of PF Blake Griffin, there expects to be a decent amount of rust.

Can Detroit keep up with Minnesota? The Pistons have shown tendencies of having a tough time piling up points. Griffin will help but maybe not right away.

New to sports betting? A $10 bet on the Timberwolves to win outright returns a profit of $12.50. Detroit has too much uncertainty and is a -150 favorite which seems a bit high.

Line/Against the Spread (ATS)

The moneyline is a better play but a TIMBERWOLVES (+3.5, -106) pick is not a terrible choice. A Minnesota cover here (lose by three or fewer points or win outright) returns a profit of $9.43 on the same $10 wager.

Minnesota is 3-2 against the spread on the road with a higher point cover projection (plus-2.2 points per game). Detroit is 3-2 ATS at home but there’s just too much uncertainty with Griffin returning to the lineup.

Over/Under (O/U)

Let’s take the OVER 219.5 (+105). There is a tendency to acknowledge offense comes first over defense when players return. The two teams combine for around 224 points per game.

Want some action in this one? Place a bet at BetMGM now. For more sports betting tips, visit SportsbookWire.com.

Chris’ NBA betting record: 19-15

Follow @ChrisWasselDFS and @SportsbookWire on Twitter.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services.  Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

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Rockets-Pelicans odds: Houston slight road favorite

Previewing Monday’s Houston Rockets at New Orleans Pelicans odds and lines, with NBA matchup analysis and picks.

The Houston Rockets (6-3) visit the New Orleans Pelicans (2-7) Monday at the Smoothie King Center for an 8 p.m. ET start. We analyze the Rockets-Pelicans odds and lines, with NBA betting advice and tips around the matchup.


Place a legal sports bet on this NBA action or other games at BetMGM.


Rockets at Pelicans: Key injuries

Pelicans

  • PG Lonzo Ball (hip) out

Rockets at Pelicans: Odds, lines, picks, and betting tips

NBA odds courtesy of BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports for a full set of today’s betting odds. Odds last updated at 9:45 a.m. ET.

Prediction

Rockets 127, Pelicans 120

Moneyline (ML)

The -189 line for the visiting ROCKETS is a bit of a concern given they are 3-2 away from home; however, New Orleans is just 1-3 at home with a penchant for not playing defensively sound.

Can New Orleans stop anyone? It allows nearly 123 points per game and goes up against a Houston team that can easily put up 120-plus points.

New to sports betting? A $10 bet on the Rockets to win outright returns a profit of $5.29. This is a little chalky, but it’s better than risking this on a Pelicans team (+155) that cannot win anywhere – losers of seven of nine games to start the season.

Line/Against the Spread (ATS)

The wiser idea for this contest is taking the ROCKETS with the -3.5 points at -125 odds. A Houston cover here (win by just four or more points) returns a nicer profit of $8.00.

Houston is 2-3 on the road against the spread. New Orleans is 1-3 ATS at home but is five points off of the projections. Houston has covered in its last two games.

Over/Under (O/U)

Lean slightly to the OVER 243.5 (-106). There expects to be a ton of offense as the Pelicans have allowed fewer than 110 points to an opponent just once this year. Houston figures not to be the second.

Want some action in this one? Place a bet at BetMGM now. For more sports betting tips, visit SportsbookWire.com.

Chris’ NBA betting record: 19-15

Follow @ChrisWasselDFS and @SportsbookWire on Twitter.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services.  Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

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