Former Duke basketball star returning to North Carolina with the Charlotte Hornets

Former Duke basketball star Harry Giles will return to North Carolina later this year thanks to a one-year deal with the Charlotte Hornets.

Former Duke basketball player Harry Giles makes his return to North Carolina later this year after he signed a one-year contract with the Charlotte Hornets on Sunday.

The Athletic’s Shams Charania first reported the signing.

A former five-star prospect, Giles was 247Sports’ third-ranked player in the Class of 2016. The 6-foot-10 forward battled injuries during his time in Durham, only playing in 26 games throughout his freshman season, and he averaged 3.9 points and 3.8 rebounds in 11.5 minutes per game.

After the Sacramento Kings took Giles with the 20th overall pick in the 2017 draft, the Winston-Salem native did not play in his first NBA season. He made 104 appearances over the next two years, however, averaging at least 6.9 points per game in both campaigns. He set a career-high with 4.1 rebounds per game in 2019-20, his last season with the Kings.

Giles has played in 61 NBA games since the 2020-21 season began for the Portland Trail Blazers, Brooklyn Nets, and Los Angeles Lakers. His career averages sit at 5.4 points, 3.5 rebounds, and 1.1 assists.

https://twitter.com/ShamsCharania/status/1837896225128907099

Harry Giles and Mark Williams seen celebrating Jayson Tatum’s NBA title in locker room

Former Duke basketball star Jayson Tatum won his first NBA title on Monday night and some former Blue Devils came to celebrate.

The Brotherhood showed out for Jayson Tatum after he won his first NBA title on Monday night.

The Boston Celtics beat the Dallas Mavericks for the fourth time in five games during the NBA Finals, clinching the best-of-seven series. Tatum, the third overall pick in the 2017 NBA draft, averaged 25.0 points, 9.7 rebounds, and 6.3 assists over the postseason, his fifth straight playoff run averaging at least 25.0 points per game.

A video from the Celtics locker room after the celebration showed a few other future Blue Devils ready to celebrate with Tatum and fellow Duke alum Amile Jefferson, a Boston assistant coach. Harry Giles and Mark Williams were both seen in the locker room amid the joyous proceedings.

Giles, the third-ranked prospect from the Class of 2016, played alongside Tatum on the 2016-17 team. The 6-foot-11 Oak Hill product joined Tatum and Frank Jackson to form one of Duke’s best recruiting classes in recent memory. The hyped forward struggled with injury from the end of high school onward, however, only starting six games at Duke and averaging 3.9 points and 3.8 rebounds.

Williams came along later, a 7-footer who was a five-star prospect in the class of 2020. The top-20 prospect actually came back for a sophomore season, scoring 11.2 points and 7.4 rebounds per game in his second season before being picked 15th overall in the 2022 draft.

Williams now plays for the Charlotte Hornets while Giles spent the most recent season with the Los Angeles Lakers.

Report: Harry Giles III to work out for Warriors next week

The former first round pick is reportedly going to work out for the Warriors next week.

[anyclip pubname=”2123″ widgetname=”0016M00002U0B1kQAF_M8170″]

With the preseason a little over two months away, the Golden State Warriors are still surveying options for their roster. 

The Warriors are reportedly one of the teams planning to host a workout for a former first-round pick.

According to Ian Begley of SNY TV, Harry Giles III will work out for the Warriors sometime next week. Giles III worked out for the Orlando Magic and is set to work out for the Brooklyn Nets on Saturday, per Begley. 

In early July, the 25-year-old power forward hosted a private workout for NBA scouts and executives in Las Vegas. 

Via @IanBegley on Twitter:

Since being drafted in the first round out of Duke in 2017, Giles has played three seasons in the NBA, averaging 5.9 points on 51.1% shooting from the field to go along with 3.8 rebounds and 1.2 assists over 142 career games. 

After two years with the Kings, Giles played the 2020-21 season with the Portland Trailblazers, averaging 2.8 points on 43.3% shooting from the field with 3.5 rebounds over 38 games. 

Giles played the 2021-22 season with the Los Angles Clippers G League affiliate, the Agua Caliente Clippers. Throughout his career, Giles has been limited due to different injuries. 

If signed, Giles will have two-way contract eligibility. 

This post originally appeared on Warriors Wire! Follow us on Facebook and Twitter! 

[lawrence-auto-related count=3]

Report: Brooklyn Nets will attend Harry Giles workout in Miami

According to Stefan Bondy of the New York Daily News, the Brooklyn Nets will attend Harry Giles’ workout in Miami on Saturday.

[anyclip pubname=”2123″ widgetname=”0016M00002U0B1kQAF_M8170″]

The Brooklyn Nets have had a solid offseason as they have seen most of their 2023 NBA Draft picks in action in the annual summer league in Vegas and have signed a good amount of players in free-agency. They may have their sights on yet another player that is trying to get back into the NBA.

According to Stefan Bondy of the New York Daily News, the Nets will attend a workout in Miami for free-agent Harry Giles. Brooklyn still has a Two-Way slot open and it’s possible that Brooklyn wants to get a look at Giles to see if they want to give that spot to him.

Giles, 25, came into the league with some promise as the 20th overall pick in the 2017 NBA Draft out of Duke. Giles played his two seasons with the Sacramento Kings, but spent a good amount of his career in Sacramento playing with its G League affiliate. Giles has not played an NBA game since the 2020-21 season due to a variety of injuries and trying to get back onto an NBA roster.

[lawrence-related id=54648,54645,54642]

Jayson Tatum helps get two-way eligibility rules changed to help Harry Giles III

‘I reached out in support,’ Tatum told B/R.

The Boston Celtics had three vice presidents in the NBA’s Players Association last season: Jaylen Brown, Malcolm Brogdon and Grant Williams. However, it was Jayson Tatum who helped his college pal Harry Giles get a rule changed regarding two-way player eligibility according to reporting from Bleacher Report’s Chris Haynes.

“A new provision on two-way contracts in the new CBA will informally be dubbed the ‘Harry Giles III rule,’ which will allow NBA players who sit out an entire season not to have that year count toward the three-year maximum service for two-way eligibility,” writes Haynes. “In the previous CBA, a player with less than four years of service was eligible to be signed on a two-way contract.”

“Under the old guideline, Giles III wouldn’t have qualified for two-way status … because he had technically been on an NBA roster for four seasons,” noted the B/R writer. “He missed the entirety of his 2017-18 rookie season with the (Kings) … and that season officially counted as the first of his four years in the NBA.”

“Tatum, one of Giles’ teammates at Duke, even contacted the league to voice his concerns about the requirements for two-way contract eligibility. ‘I reached out in support,’ Tatum told B/R. ‘Just trying help my guy. He deserves this shot.'”

“After several conversations between Hazan, the union and the league, the requirements for two-way contract status were amended.”

Listen to the “Celtics Lab” podcast on:

Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3zBKQY6

Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3GfUPFi

YouTube: https://bit.ly/3F9DvjQ

[lawrence-auto-related count=1 category=590969556]

Boston’s Jayson Tatum wants someone to sign pal Harry Giles — should the Celtics?

Tatum’s friend was recently waived by the Blazers.

Fans of the Boston Celtics have long clamored for the team to sign big man Harry Giles, either for his potential as a player, his close friendship with All-NBA Celtics forward Jayson Tatum, or both.

Now, the Duke product himself is openly joining those ranks, shouting in all capital letters on Twitter that someone — presumably Boston — should “SIGN HIM!” Cut by the Portland Trail Blazers as part of that club’s offseason moves, the now-free agent and former roommate of Tatum could be inked to the Celtics’ roster on a minimum deal with partial guarantees as a gesture of good will to Tatum with minimal risk and some upside.

In his last season with the Blazers, Giles logged 2.8 points and 3.5 rebounds per game.

Boston will need to keep looking for an additional backup big man they are reportedly looking for on a veteran minimum deal, however.

They’ll likely want to play said option a considerable amount in at least the regular season to preserve the health of bigs Robert Williams III and Al Horford for the postseason.

Follow us on Facebook and check out the Celtics Lab podcast here.

[mm-video type=video id=01g6wwqej4p8ya0s8kxr playlist_id=01eqbzegwgnrje4tv2 player_id=01eqbvq570kgj8vfs7 image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01g6wwqej4p8ya0s8kxr/01g6wwqej4p8ya0s8kxr-51b72bca960b0b51f43b92d90bd036a2.jpg]

[lawrence-related id=105073,105069,105066,105045]

[listicle id=104937]

[listicle id=104956]

[listicle id=104882]

Talen Horton-Tucker and five other breakout stars of the NBA preseason

Even in a normal year, NBA preseason games can be misleading. But specific performances can show the progress of some developing players.

Even in a normal year, NBA preseason games can be misleading. But specific performances can show the progress of some developing players.

Small sample sizes can blur results and overreactions are not always wise, which is amplified even more by how strange this offseason has been. Similarly, anyone can get hot for one night, especially when playing in exhibition games. However, there are key moments that may be indicative of future successes.

Before the 2020-21 campaign tips off, we looked at some of the players around the league who seemed poised to have a potential breakout season based on what we saw during preseason action.

B/R: Thunder should target Kings big Harry Giles III in free agency

Bleacher Report made a free agency pitch for the Oklahoma City Thunder to target Sacramento Kings forward Harry Giles III.

As the Oklahoma City Thunder enter the offseason, questions abound for the direction of the team. Decisions involving veterans Chris Paul, Steven Adams and Dennis Schroder, along with the impending free agencies of Danilo Gallinari and Nerlens Noel, will dictate which direction the organization goes in free agency.

If Gallinari’s price tag is too high and he leaves the Thunder for a contender like the Miami Heat, OKC would be in the market for a power forward.

Bleacher Report thinks that Sacramento Kings big Harry Giles III would be a good target.

Giles, energetic on the court and charismatic off, has become a fan favorite in Sacramento. The Kings declined his fourth-year option, so the 22-year-old is an unrestricted free agent.

His potential in the league is still unclear. Giles was once the top prospect in high school, but ACL and MCL injuries before entering the NBA have set him back.

Over the two seasons he played with the Kings, he averaged 7.0 points, 3.9 rebounds and 1.4 assist in 14.3 minutes per game.

He is more impressive than those stats indicate. The Kings began running some plays for him, and he is a good passer, though maybe not to the level that he has proclaimed.

Bleacher Report thinks he’d fit well with the Thunder. Reporter Zach Buckley wrote:

“He’s still just 22 years old and clearly skilled. He filled out this season’s per-36-minutes stat line with 17.1 points, 10.1 rebounds, 3.2 assists, 1.2 steals and 1.0 blocks. Stick him in the same frontcourt with Darius Bazley and put Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Luguentz Dort on the perimeter, and OKC might already have a young nucleus to build around.”

Depending on his price tag, Giles certainly looks like he could be an option for the Thunder.

Especially if other free agency moves go the way B/R projects.

Bleacher gave one free agency idea for every team under the premise of finding the best free agent each had a realistic chance of signing.

In the projections, Gallinari departed for the Heat. That would not be a surprise. Miami targeted him at the trade deadline and has made quite a pitch to free agents over the past month by getting to the NBA Finals. If Gallinari wants a contender who can pay him well, he has no better option than the Heat.

Bleacher Report also recommended the Portland Trail Blazers to go after Noel as a replacement for Hassan Whiteside.

6 potential 2020 need-based free agency targets for the Boston Celtics

The Boston Celtics still need bench scoring, and may need to bolster the frontcourt and guard rotation — here are six affordable candidates for those roles.

The Boston Celtics will go into the offseason with a lot of financial questions at the same time they’ll need to make important moves around the margins to boost their ability to contend for a title — not an easy proposition, to be sure.

What they will know is what the team needs, as well as the general range of players likely be available for the taxpayer mid-level exception (MLE), the most likely tool Boston will have to add an impact free agent.

With the pre-pandemic cap projections set at $115 million and the Celtics already looking a likely taxpaying team even in the pre- COVID-19 era, it seems improbable Boston will have even the full MLE at their disposal.

The two MLEs — previously at $9.75 and $6 million for the full and taxpayer, respectively — will be considerably less, but likely destined for the same group of players the Celtics will want to look at to fill a few lingering needs.

Those needs have changed little since the February trade deadline, but could be exacerbated if one or both of forward Gordon Hayward or center Enes Kanter decide to leave in free agency.

The needs in question are threefold — bench scoring, a reserve guard able to spell Kemba Walker as much as possible in the regular season, and a more traditional, bulky situational big, preferably with above-average defense.

So who are the candidates the Celtics should have their eye on?

What does the Jabari Parker trade mean for Kings big man Harry Giles?

The Sacramento Kings have traded for former No. 2 overall pick Jabari Parker, sending disgruntled Dewayne Dedmon back to the Atlanta Hawks.

The Sacramento Kings have traded for former No. 2 overall pick Jabari Parker, sending disgruntled Dewayne Dedmon back to the Atlanta Hawks.

Dedmon played for Atlanta from 2017 until last season and had started in 10 of the 34 games he played for Sacramento this year, including all six of his most recent appearances. The Kings also received Alex Len (who has missed the last six games with a right hip strain) to replace the minutes Dedmon was playing.

Len is a seven-footer who started 31 games for Atlanta last season. However, much like their other newly-added frontcourt player Anthony Tolliver, the big is currently on an expiring contract and likely does not factor into their long-term plans. But when looking at their roster even with that in mind, the Kings have a surplus of players in the frontcourt, which is bad news for 21-year-old center Harry Giles.

This problem is temporarily softened by the current absences of Richaun Holmes and Marvin Bagley III, both of whom are out due to injury. Holmes has missed the past 13 games with a strained right shoulder. Bagley, meanwhile, will not be evaluated for another two weeks due to his mid-foot sprain.

Holmes, however, is expected to return to action on Friday and will be slotted back into the starting lineup. Once both he and Bagley return, Sacramento is going to have tough decisions on who will get playing time.

Parker (6-foot-9) is expected to play in the second unit as a scoring option off the bench. He has spent just two percent of his career minutes at the five, so it would be unlikely this happens often. However, he played the position for a career-high 11 percent of his time on the court while on the Hawks this year. When his three-point shot isn’t connecting, the five may actually be his most natural position due to floor spacing issues.

Nemanja Bjelica, who has spent six percent of his NBA minutes at center, is currently spending 14 percent of his time at center. It is worth noting that, according to Cleaning the Glass, the Kings have outscored opponents by 14.2 points per 100 possessions during those minutes. Their offensive rating when he has played center (123.7) is much higher than when Bjelica has been their power forward (108.2) in 2019-20.

But as noted by Yahoo’s Keith Smith, it is possible that the trade to land Parker could make Bjelica more expendable in return for an asset than he was before the trade deadline buzzer hits at 3:00 pm EST on Wednesday.

If they do end up holding on to Bjelica, he will obviously receive plenty of playing time. So, too, will both Bagley and Holmes. They will have to balance that with minutes they are also giving to Parker, Len, Tolliver and Harrison Barnes – who has started every game he has played since January 14, 2016. That leaves seven players who are going to want minutes in the frontcourt before even counting Giles.

This situation does not bode well for Giles, who surprisingly did not receive a qualifying offer from the Kings during the offseason. This means that the young center will become an unrestricted free agent this summer, allowing him to fully test the market.

But the timing of all this is unfortunate considering Giles has finally seemed to turn over a new leaf with his recent play. More time on the court would’ve given him more opportunity to show what he is capable of doing when he is healthy, which is something the basketball world has not seen much since he was the top-rated recruit in the nation coming out of high school in 2016.

During his recent game against the Los Angeles Lakers on February 1, for example, the big man was given just the fourth start of his professional career. Giles put up a season-high 16 points and connected on 7-of-8 field-goal attempts. He also grabbed 8 rebounds in just 16 minutes of action.

Yet his best skill is his passing, which is incredibly impressive for someone his size. Giles has an assist percentage (17.2 percent) ranks 92nd percentile among big men, per Cleaning the Glass.

Since they have handed the keys of their offense to De’Aaron Fox, they’ve also been a team that likes to play fast. Last season, their pace (103.9) ranked third-best in the NBA. But this year, that mark has fallen considerably (98.6) and they rank No. 25 in the league, second-worst in the Western Conference.

Quite a bit of that problem in that regard is their personnel in the frontcourt. Their pace when Dedmon (99.7) and Holmes (98.2) have been on the court has been significantly slower than the ideal version of what the Kings should look like. Their pace with Giles (102.4) is far closer to what Sacramento head coach Luke Walton, who ran a fast-tempo offense with the Lakers, wants to see from his offense.

What is most perplexing is that Giles actually fits this style of play better than any other big on their roster does. The Kings have played at an incredibly fast pace (107.4) when Fox and Giles have been on the court at the same time. Among Sacramento’s various two-man lineups that have been on the floor for at least 90 minutes so far this season, that combination has by far been their fastest.

Giles has averaged 19.4 points and 10.4 rebounds per 36 minutes when playing alongside Fox. That is highlighted by this absurdly awesome alley-oop off a pass from the point guard against the Lakers, embedded above.

According to league insider Zach Lowe, it is possible that the Kings get some kind of asset back for Giles before the deadline passes (via ESPN):

“Keep an eye on Harry Giles III. Sacramento declined his third-year option for next season – a bizarre decision, even given Giles’ spotty health record – and a few teams have poked around, sources say.”

For the sake of his development, one would hope that such a suitor would emerge so that Giles can finally show what he is capable of on an NBA team.

If nothing else, his passing skills alone can make him a valuable option in the frontcourt as a role player in a rotation. Giles is just 21 years old and though his professional career did not get off to an ideal start, there should be plenty of interest from front offices either now or when he becomes a free agent.

Meanwhile, after spending three seasons waiting for him to become a viable option, the Kings may lose Giles right before he is ready to take that leap.

[lawrence-related id=1316651]