NBA rumors: Fred VanVleet, OG Anunoby, Khris Middleton, Nikola Vucevic, Rockets, Warriors, Mavs

The latest reporting on free agents Fred VanVleet, Khris Middleton, Nikola Vucevic, Harrison Barnes, Donte DiVincenzo, Grant Williams, and trade talks surrounding OG Anunoby and Jonathan Kuminga from HoopsHype’s Michael Scotto.

With the NBA draft less than a week away, several teams have an eye toward free agency days later.

Below is a look at the latest intel gathered by HoopsHype on Raptors starters Fred VanVleet and OG Anunoby, Bucks swingman Khris Middleton, Bulls center Nikola Vucevic, Warriors players Donte DiVincenzo and Jonathan Kuminga, Harrison Barnes, and Grant Williams.

Rockets rumors: James Harden, Kyrie Irving, Brook Lopez, Austin Reaves, Cam Johnson

Reporting on who the Houston Rockets will target in the NBA Draft and free agency, KJ Martin’s future, and more.

HoopsHype’s Michael Scotto and The Athletic’s Rockets writer Kelly Iko share new intel surrounding NBA Draft and free agency targets for the Rockets, KJ Martin’s future, and more.

For more interviews with players, coaches, and media members, be sure to like and subscribe to the HoopsHype podcast on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and anywhere else you listen to podcasts. Listen to the podcast above or check out some snippets of the conversation in a transcribed version below.

Jabari Smith on Eurocamp, rookie year, Rockets future and James Harden

Jabari Smith caught up with HoopsHype to talk about the upcoming season, his goals, and James Harden rumors.

Jabari Smith has been among several NBA players in attendance for the Adidas Eurocamp 2023 in Treviso, Italy, the only officially sanctioned NBA pre-draft camp outside the United States.

Smith, 20, finished his first season in the NBA averaging 12.8 points and 7.2 rebounds per game while also making the All-Rookie Second Team.

The young star caught up with HoopsHype to talk about his experience at the Eurocamp, his first season in the league, the 2023-24 Houston Rockets, James Harden and more.

2023 Aggregate NBA Mock Draft: Trade Talks; Dereck Lively, Bilal Coulibaly, Brandin Podziemski rise

HoopsHype’s Michael Scotto reports on which teams could trade their picks in a new NBA mock draft. Plus, which players are rising on boards.

Following the NBA draft’s early entry deadline, mock draft boards have shifted, with several players rising, including Dereck Lively, Bilal Coulibaly, and Brandin Podziemski, making major first-round leaps. Julian Phillips, Olivier-Maxence Prosper, Ben Sheppard, Jordan Walsh, Emoni Bates, Seth Lundy, and others rose in the second round.

To better project where the top prospects currently stand, we compiled 10 mock drafts from ESPN, The Athletic, Bleacher Report, The Ringer, NBADraft.net, Sports Illustrated, CBS Sports, Yahoo, SB Nation, and USA TODAY’s For The Win.

Then, HoopsHype gathered thoughts from multiple NBA executives and scouts for their insight on the projected first-round picks for the sixth edition of the aggregate mock draft to find the answer.

NOTE: These rankings reflect the composite score to get a feel for the overall consensus, not our own opinion. For example, if a player was the first pick on a publication’s mock draft, he received 60 points. If a player was second, he received 59 points, and so on. We then tabulated the total number of points for each player’s consensus ranking. 

HoopsHype’s Alberto de Roa contributed research to this report. 

2023 Aggregate NBA Mock Draft: Brandon Miller climbs to No. 2; Taylor Hendricks rising

HoopsHype’s aggregate NBA mock draft reports which teams may trade their picks and lists rising players, including Brandon Miller, Taylor Hendricks, and more.

Following the NBA Draft Combine, mock draft boards have shifted with the lottery results unveiled and several players rising, including Brandon Miller, Taylor Hendricks, Olivier-Maxence Prosper and Ben Sheppard.

To better project where the top prospects currently stand, we compiled 10 mock drafts from ESPN, The Athletic, Bleacher Report, The Ringer, NBADraft.net, Sports Illustrated, CBS Sports, Yahoo, SB Nation, and USA TODAY’s For The Win.

Then, HoopsHype gathered thoughts from multiple NBA executives and scouts for their insight on the projected first-round picks for the sixth edition of the aggregate mock draft to find the answer.

NOTE: These rankings reflect the composite score to get a feel for the overall consensus, not our own opinion. For example, if a player was the first pick on a publication’s mock draft, he received 60 points. If a player was second, he received 59 points, and so on. We then tabulated the total number of points for each player’s consensus ranking. 

HoopsHype’s Alberto de Roa contributed research to this report. 

Rockets offseason primer: James Harden possibility, max cap space, draft picks, more

The Houston Rockets are set to make a playoff push by capitalizing on their league-high $60 million in cap space.

The Houston Rockets appear poised to end their rebuild after three consecutive seasons at the bottom of the standings. Since trading James Harden, they’ve been focused on accumulating draft picks and developing their young players. Now it seems like a reunion with Harden is near as they look to sign him with their cap space for a playoff push.

Here is a preview of the 2023 offseason for the Houston Rockets.

NBA Mock Draft, Lottery Edition: Spurs land Victor Wembanyama No. 1; Scoot Henderson and Brandon Miller battle for No. 2 pick

HoopsHype’s Michael Scotto projects the lottery picks and shares intel on which teams could trade their picks in a new NBA mock draft.

The San Antonio Spurs hit the jackpot in the draft lottery landing the No. 1 pick for the right to select Victor Wembanyama.

While Wembanyama to the Spurs is a slam dunk, the rest of the draft isn’t. With that in mind, below is a look at how the rest of the lottery picks could shake out in June.

NBA intel: James Harden free agency, Doc Rivers, Sixers, Rockets, Nets, more

The latest NBA intel on the futures of James Harden and Doc Rivers with the 76ers, and coaching updates for the Rockets, Nets, Frank Vogel, and more from HoopsHype’s Michael Scotto.

Hours ahead of the 2023 NBA draft lottery, executives and scouts arrived at Wintrust Arena and hotels nearby in Chicago buzzing about the futures of Sixers star James Harden and coach Doc Rivers and other coaching spots around the league.

HoopsHype spoke with NBA execs and scouts on hand to get their takes on the futures of Harden and Rivers, who could be coaching candidates in Philadelphia if Rivers is let go, and the latest coaching intel on the Rockets, Nets, Mavericks, Celtics, and interest in former head coaches Frank Vogel and Stephen Silas.

Jae Crowder’s journey from Suns trade request and Nets detour to Bucks: ‘I’d do it all over again’

Bucks forward Jae Crowder discussed what happened with the Suns, why he didn’t want to play for the Nets and free agency with Michael Scotto

After several trade talks that fell through since the summer and leading up to the trade deadline, Bucks forward Jae Crowder has been all smiles since arriving in Milwaukee months later than he expected.

Despite trade interest from the Hawks, Wizards, Heat, Cavaliers, Mavericks, and other teams for several months – including a brief detour with the Nets as part of the Kevin Durant trade – Crowder kept his eye on one destination throughout, Milwaukee.

While Crowder waited for the Phoenix Suns to trade him, he worked with a trainer and a masseuse while working out twice daily. Crowder didn’t play any five-on-five and focused on individual work and body maintenance to be ready when he got the call.

Michael McLoone-USA TODAY Sports

After former Suns forward Cam Johnson suffered a torn meniscus in his right knee in early November, some around the league wondered if there could be a pathway to reconciliation for Crowder and the Suns. Despite Johnson’s lengthy injury, the Suns never discussed bringing Crowder back into the fold, nor did he express interest in a return, league sources told HoopsHype.

“Nah, there wasn’t a chance I was going to play there,” Crowder told HoopsHype. “Both sides knew that the road had come to an end. That came to an end way before Cam got hurt. I wasn’t going back on it, and they weren’t going back on it.”

[afflinkbutton text=”Jae Crowder Bucks jersey” link=”https://fanatics.93n6tx.net/9WbJm5″]

As noted above, Atlanta was one of the teams trying to acquire Crowder. The Hawks, Rockets, and Suns had exploratory discussions on a three-team trade. In that scenario, John Collins would’ve landed with the Rockets, Eric Gordon and KJ Martin with the Suns, and Crowder and Landry Shamet with the Hawks, but nothing of substance materialized, league sources told HoopsHype. Atlanta also tried to acquire Crowder in three-team trade talks with Utah and Phoenix centered around Collins going to Utah, Jarred Vanderbilt and Malik Beasley going to Phoenix, and Crowder and Shamet going to Atlanta. Among the reasons this scenario didn’t materialize was a disagreement in draft pick compensation that would’ve gone to Utah in the talks.

The Wizards and Suns had trade talks centered around Rui Hachimura for Crowder, but Washington pulled out of the Crowder sweepstakes and sent Hachimura to the Lakers instead.

Jeff Hanisch-USA TODAY Sports

The Bucks tried to acquire Crowder through several other trade scenarios before finally landing him. One included a three-team trade where Crowder would’ve landed in Milwaukee, Grayson Allen in Charlotte with draft pick compensation, and Jalen McDaniels and salary filler in Phoenix. Charlotte was angling for a first-round pick in this scenario but couldn’t secure one in the trade talks, league sources told HoopsHype.

On Tuesday, Crowder faced the Nets for the first time since Brooklyn rerouted him to the Bucks before the trade deadline. Following Milwaukee’s win at Barclays Center, Crowder was asked if he ever thought he’d remain with Brooklyn past the trade deadline.

“Honestly, I think this situation was so far along in the negotiation talks that I was destined to be here,” Crowder told HoopsHype. “I was trying to get here. That’s what it was. It had nothing to do with their organization or team. I just felt like I was so far along in the negotiation period that I was talking to these guys (Bucks) for months. I wanted this situation to go down because I knew my role, and I didn’t want to go to a different situation without a role.”

Michael McLoone-USA TODAY Sports

Since joining Milwaukee, Crowder has been openly embraced by his teammates and coach Mike Budenholzer. After missing the first 60 games of the season, continuing to learn Milwaukee’s full playbook, and being on a minutes restriction, the Bucks are asking Crowder to bring defense and be a locker room leader comparable to PJ Tucker.

The Bucks are 4-0 with Crowder in the lineup since the trade deadline and extended their winning streak to 16 games with a win over Orlando on Wednesday. Given Crowder’s role and journey to get to Milwaukee this season, could he remain a Buck long-term when he becomes an unrestricted free agent this summer? Crowder hinted at the possibility.

“I think this team has what it takes to win a championship,” Crowder told HoopsHype. “That’s my main goal right now. I think once you win a championship, the rest of that stuff will take care of itself. My main goal, honestly, is not thinking about free agency or the summer. It’s all about winning the championship. I think that’s our locker room goal, and when I came into it, I knew that was the goal of the team.”

After several months of being in limbo with his free agency value and future hanging in the balance before finally beginning to settle in with Milwaukee, HoopsHype asked if he would’ve done anything different throughout his trade request and experience since the summer.

“I’d do it all over again,” Crowder replied.

You can follow Michael Scotto (@MikeAScotto) on Twitter.

We occasionally recommend interesting products, services, and gaming opportunities. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. HoopsHype operates independently, though, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

Revisiting LeBron James’ 2018 free agency: Was there a better choice out there?

LeBron James was rumored to be joining the Los Angeles Lakers for more than a year before officially signing with them. This move was a little unusual compared to James’ previous free agency decisions since he was not joining an instant contender. …

LeBron James was rumored to be joining the Los Angeles Lakers for more than a year before officially signing with them. This move was a little unusual compared to James’ previous free agency decisions since he was not joining an instant contender. His move to Los Angeles was more than a basketball decision, but of course, the basketball mattered.

While the Lakers weren’t competitive enough to compete for a championship in James’ first season there, they did have enough trade assets with their many talented prospects and first-round picks to offer. They eventually parlayed their assets into Anthony Davis and built a juggernaut that would win the 2020 championship.

Fast forward to 2023 and it’s safe to say James’ tenure in Los Angeles has been more mixed than anyone anticipated. It has been a success with the title, but it also has featured two seasons out of the playoffs and possibly a third if they don’t turn things around this year. There have been plenty of discussions recently on how the Lakers are wasting the remainder of James’ prime and the situation in L.A. probably isn’t getting better any time soon. He is under contract with the Lakers for two more years, including a player option for 2024-25.

While James joining the Lakers was seemingly set in stone, he did have several other good options in 2018 free agency. If his decision prioritized being in the best basketball situation, it’s possible he could’ve found that on a different team. Here are some of James’ rumored suitors in 2018 and an analysis of how things could’ve played out.