LaMarcus Aldridge, other Nets enter health protocols ahead of Sixers matchup

LaMarcus Aldridge and other Brooklyn Nets will enter the health protocols ahead of their matchup with the Philadelphia 76ers.

The Philadelphia 76ers were blown out by the Memphis Grizzlies on Monday after losing Joel Embiid and Seth Curry to injury shortly before tipoff, but their next two matchups could offer a chance to get back on track a bit.

While the Sixers will play a Miami Heat team down All-Stars Bam Adebayo and Jimmy Butler on Wednesday, they will also take on a Brooklyn Nets team on Thursday who will be down a few pieces.

Nets big man LaMarcus Aldridge entered the league’s health and safety protocols on Tuesday ahead of their matchup with the Toronto Raptors. He will join Paul Millsap, DeAndre’ Bembry, James Johnson, and Jevon Carter in the protocols with the team also missing Kyrie Irving and Joe Harris.

Aldridge scored 23 points in Brooklyn’s win over the Sixers in Philadelphia’s home opener back on Oct. 22 and the Sixers will now take on a Nets team that will be a bit more shorthanded than usual. On the flip side, they will still have Kevin Durant and James Harden so they will still be a formidable opponent on Thursday.

This post originally appeared on Sixers Wire! Follow us on Facebook!

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Brooklyn Nets quotes: James Harden, Patty Mills, James Johnson on win vs. Magic

Here’s what the Nets had to say after erasing a 19-point deficit against the Magic.

Brooklyn had to march on without their leading scorer, Kevin Durant, against the Orlando Magic on Friday. He sat out to rest his shoulder, the same shoulder Durant first injured it in a game against the Chicago Bulls on November 8. In his absence, the Nets took care of business, but barely.

James Harden not only erupted for 36 points, but he simply just did it all for Brooklyn. The 32-year-old matched James Johnson (17 PTS, 10 REBS) on the glass to grab a team-high 10 rebounds and he dished out eight assists in the process. The Nets needed every bit of it too after trailing by 19 in the first half.

After rallying back, Harden, Johnson, Patty Mills and head coach Steve Nash reacted to the victory that put them at the top of the Eastern Conference.

Nets GM Sean Marks says Brooklyn’s roster is about ‘90% complete’

Brooklyn Nets GM Sean Marks is not done making roster changes, but the Nets’ roster is near complete.

It has been a busy offseason in the NBA already up until this point. For the Brooklyn Nets, they have been forced to bring in reinforcements with former players like Jeff Green departing. Some key signings that have been completed are Patty Mills, DeAndre’ Bembry, Jevon Carter and James Johnson.

At this point it seems like the Nets are done and are ready for next season. Right? Wrong! Nets GM Sean Marks admitted on Wednesday that the roster is certainly not complete:

“I don’t want to say the roster is complete, maybe it’s 90% complete.”

If this is only 90%, then what does the spontaneous GM have in store next? In fact, what more can be done? You have the big three of Kevin Durant, James Harden and Kyrie Irving playing their best basketball. You secured a proven champion and scorer in the form of Mills. Defense has amped up thanks to acquiring Bembry and Carter while also bringing back Bruce Brown. Surprisingly, this is not enough?

In the coming weeks, we will surely find out what the remaining 10% will be. Prepare for the unexpected, but expect changes to surely occur.

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How a late-night text to Zion Williamson sparked Lonzo Ball’s career night against Golden State

Unhappy with his performance on Monday, Lonzo Ball vowed to make it right in a text to Zion Williamson and did just that on Tuesday.

Late Monday night, following the Pelicans’ frustrating loss to the Warriors on national television, Lonzo Ball sent a text to teammate Zion Williamson. It was part-apology, part-promise as Ball vowed to make up for his poor shooting performance.

If he talked the talk on Monday night, he walked the walk on Tuesday. Ball bounced back from his 3-of-18 performance on Monday with his second 33-point performance both of his career and in the last three days as the Pelicans knocked off Golden State 108-103.

“I just knew I let my team down and I wasn’t going to do that two nights in a row,” Ball said on the motivations for the text. “I know the type of player I am and I believe in myself. I was very confident coming into tonight. I knew I wasn’t going to shoot 3-of-18 again. I just wanted to let (Zion) know I was going to be there with him tonight and I did my best doing that.”

“I think those are big words and he showed us what he’s all about today,” Williamson added. “He came today and showed out. A lot of respect for that.”

While every one of Ball’s shots was important in a narrow win, his fourth-quarter performance stood out. With Brandon Ingram in the locker room after spraining his ankle late in the first half, the task of picking up a necessary win fell on the shoulders of Ball and Williamson.

And with Williamson the focus of Golden State’s defense throughout the two nights, most of that burden went to Ball, who delivered in kind, scoring 12 of the Pelicans final 16 points.

He matched a pair of 3-pointers by Golden State in the final three minutes with long-range shots of his own, tying the game at 95-95 and 98-98, respectively, after each bucket. And with the game on the line and the score tied at 100-100 in the final 30 seconds, it was Ball who came off a Williamson screen and knocked down a step-back, fadeaway midrange jumper to put the Pelicans up two points.

“I’m glad he’s my teammate,” Williamson said. “You love to have teammates like that, you know, that can say stuff like that and then come the next day and show out. He just wants to win and that’s what I love about Lonzo. He wants to win and he’ll do whatever it takes to win.”

Ball capped off his night by once again showcasing his improvements at the free throw line, knocking down four straight freebies in the last 15 seconds to ice the game away.

“He was huge,” head coach Stan Van Gundy said. “What that guy has done with his shooting over the past two years in the time he’s been here – 3-point shooting and then free throw shooting – it’s phenomenal. It really is phenomenal what he’s done and he deserves a ton of credit for that.”

“When he’s making shots, it’s a whole different world for us.”

Tuesday’s 33 points tied Ball’s career-high, which was set on Saturday against Minnesota in another crucial win. Prior to Saturday, he had zero 30-point performances in his first 210 games. In his last three games, he’s done it twice.

“I don’t want to play too many bad nights,” Ball said. “For me, I just felt like I let my team down. I know what I can do on the court and I didn’t step up to the plate last game. I wanted to be there for the guys tonight, especially Zion. He’s going out every night basically getting 30 (points) and 10 (rebounds) for us. For me to have the type of performance I had yesterday, it’s pretty unacceptable at this time of year and I wanted to fix it.”

Ball knocked down seven 3-pointers on Tuesday, the seventh time in his career he’s done so. Three of those outings have come in the last month.

“That’s what good players have to do,” James Johnson said. “It has to be consistent. It has to be day in and day out. And he’s improving greatly, from the free throw line to the 3-point line, his all-around leadership and the way that he’s pushing the ball off makes and off misses. He’s really keeping up our pace and giving us a different look when he’s out there.”

The win keeps the postseason hopes for the Pelicans alive. While catching Golden State, who is three games ahead of New Orleans with six games remaining, seems unlikely, the slumping Spurs look a slightly more realistic target.

San Antonio sits two games ahead of the Pelicans in the 10th seed with eight games still remaining. New Orleans won’t control its own fate in the race, but the Spurs have lost four games in a row.

It’s a faint hope, but a hope only possible because of Ball, Williamson and a gutsy Pelicans side grinding out a win on Tuesday.

Like I said, I’m glad he’s my teammate,” Williamson said. “A dude who just wants to do anything he can to help his team win? I love stuff like that.”

Stan Van Gundy on Lonzo Ball’s career-best night: ‘We needed him’

The Pelicans needed Lonzo Ball on Sunday. Ball wanted to help. The result was a career-best performance and a much-needed win.

The Pelicans needed Lonzo Ball on Sunday. With players dropping like flies to injury, New Orleans was quickly running out of guards and quickly falling out of the playoff picture.

In the not-so-distant past, Ball would have returned slowly. The Pelicans couldn’t afford that either with the team’s top two scorers in Brandon Ingram and Zion Williamson out.

Ball knew all of the needs the Pelicans had on Sunday and stepped up to the plate, setting a career-high in 3-pointers with eight as part of his 27-point effort in his first game in three weeks, leading New Orleans to a 122-115 win in Houston.

He did it all while playing 37 minutes, 20 of those coming in the second half before cramping up in the final two minutes.

“We needed it, too,” head coach Stan Van Gundy said. “Obviously, he looked around and he knew what was going on when we played on Friday and how tough it was. He knew we needed him and he was anxious to get back out there.”

“He wanted to play. He wanted this win badly. He knew we needed him to do that. He didn’t want to come out when I took him out in the fourth and I just gave him…about a minute I think.”

Sunday was a showcase of how far Ball had come both in his mental approach and his skillset. Despite missing seven games, Ball came out of the gate firing, showing off his reformed jumper. Ball hit all four of his 3-point attempts in the first quarter, helping New Orleans to a 70-point first half.

“That guy works hard,” James Johnson said. “We see his work ethic. We see the amount of work he puts in. But for him to miss all those games and to have a rhythm like that, that just shows his confidence in himself and shows what he’s capable of doing every night for us.”

Yet, despite a double-digit halftime lead, Ball and the Pelicans watched it all slip away in the third period. Taking one of his rare breaks on the bench in the third, Ball wasn’t content watching the lead slip away and told Van Gundy to put him back in the game.

Ball checked out with the Pelicans up seven at the 5:54 mark. After six unanswered from Houston, Ball returned 67 seconds later. He would check out just once more in the fourth quarter for 90 seconds before cramping up with 1:24 left and exiting the game for good.

“I took him out to get a rest in the third quarter,” Van Gundy said, “things went south and he just said ‘Put me back in.’ And I was like ‘Alright, sounds good.’ We gave him one little minute there in the fourth quarter and then we gave Bledsoe about a minute and that was it. Those guys had to finish.”

Sunday was the seventh time Ball’s played at least 36 minutes this season. But each minute mattered on Sunday, particularly after Nickeil Alexander-Walker left in the first half with an ankle injury and did not return.

It was Ball that checked in for Alexander-Walker at the 3:31 mark of the second quarter. In total, Ball played 23:33 of the final 27:31. In his first game in three weeks. After missing seven games with a strained right hip flexor.

“I got a little tired in the first (quarter) but then after that, I felt good,” Ball said. “I was locked into the game all the way up until the cramp. I felt fine and I was telling Stan to leave me in and he trusts me to be in there and help the guys out so I tried to play as much as I could tonight.”

“It was amazing to see Lonzo back with us,” Willy Hernangomez added. “I love to play with him. I love to watch him play. He’s a really smart player, a really good player. It was really fun to watch him starting out the game then play along with him was something great. I think we missed him. We need him to get wins and get better. Hopefully, he’s going to be healthy and with us the rest of the season.”

With – and without – Ball, the Pelicans patched together a lineup in the fourth quarter that featured a heavy dose of Hernangomez to win the game. Ball, Bledsoe, Johnson and Wes Iwundu, the latter two only added at the trade deadline, rounded out the lineup that saw the game out.

It was an important win as the Pelicans moved to within a half-game of the 10th seed and a spot in the play-in tournament. The Pelicans knew that. Ball knew that. And both delivered.

“I was just proud of the guys,” Ball said. “We had a lot of lineups out there that we weren’t familiar with. But at the end of the day, we all played hard and came out victorious. No matter what was going on out there, we band together as a team and ending up finishing the job.”

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With Ariza traded, the Thunder received 3 draft picks for James Johnson

Neither James Johnson nor Trevor Ariza joined the Thunder. Sam Presti still managed to pull three draft picks out of them for Oklahoma City.

He was salary match. In November, the Oklahoma City Thunder completed a draft-night trade with the Minnesota Timberwolves centered around point guard Ricky Rubio and the draft rights to Aleksej Pokusevski.

To acquire Rubio, owed $17.8 million, the Timberwolves sent the Thunder James Johnson. With an expiring $15 million contract, Johnson’s primary value was as a contract matcher — someone the Timberwolves, Thunder or a future team could use if they wanted to create a trade centered around a young prospect and a longer-tenured player.

That is, in part at least, the mindset the Dallas Mavericks had when they acquired Johnson from the Thunder as part of a three-team trade with the Detroit Pistons.

Here was the timeline:

  • Nov. 18: Draft night. The Thunder/Timberwolves trade was reported.
  • Nov. 20: The trade was announced by the two teams.
  • Nov. 27: Oklahoma City announced Johnson had been traded to the Mavericks.

In exchange for Johnson, the Thunder received Ariza, Justin Jackson, a 2023 second-round draft pick (best of either Dallas or the Miami Heat) and a 2026 second-round pick (via Dallas).

The Mavericks received Johnson. The Pistons received Delon Wright.

Ariza never suited up for the Thunder, but as a longtime NBA veteran with playoff experience, teams around the league had interest. The Thunder received calls for services as the trade deadline approached.

On Wednesday, the trade was made official by the Thunder and Heat. Ariza would go to Miami. In exchange, Oklahoma City received a 2027 second-round draft pick and big Meyers Leonard, who will not report to the Thunder.

That’s a long-winded way of saying this: In exchange for James Johnson, who was on the team for a week, Oklahoma City received three second-round draft picks, Justin Jackson, and saved about $6.4 million (the difference in the contracts of Johnson and Leonard).

It’s just a crazy scoop for general manager Sam Presti, one that traces back to the Chris Paul deal (Rubio was acquired in that trade).

For those of you on Twitter trying to compare the Thunder’s trade of Ariza and the Houston Rockets’ trade of P.J. Tucker: don’t. They are two completely different trades for two completely different players and situations.

Tucker hadn’t been playing well on the struggling Rockets, but he has been one of the most coveted role players in the league for years. Ariza has been bad on three of the last four teams he actually played for — the Phoenix Suns, Washington Wizards and Sacramento Kings — before playing very well for the Portland Trail Blazers. He didn’t even join the Thunder, meaning their only leverage was that the Heat were afraid they wouldn’t secure him on the buyout market.

Rafael Stone got an incredible deal for the Rockets. That’s not debatable.

It’s also not debatable that the exchange Presti got for Ariza and, by extension, Johnson, is unbelievable. He pulled out three draft picks, a player, salary savings and a $3.4M trade exception for two guys who probably never even flew to OKC after their respective trades were made.

Once again, impressive work done by the Thunder general manager.

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2020 rewind: 5 best Oklahoma City Thunder transactions of the year

The Oklahoma City Thunder made quite a few transactions in 2020. Let’s review the best, including Chris Paul, Danny Green and Steven Adams.

The Oklahoma City Thunder were one of the most active teams this past year.

After choosing to keep players Chris Paul, Dennis Schroder and Danilo Gallinari, even when teams were publicly chasing Schroder and Gallinari at the trade deadline, the Thunder made the playoffs.

Then they traded everyone.

General manager Sam Presti was impressive as he flipped and flopped players around the league, making trades with seemingly half the teams in the NBA.

Let’s take a look back over this past year, at both offseason acquisitions and transactions that happened during the season, and review the most impactful ones for Oklahoma City.

Thunder announce full James Johnson trade; includes 2 draft picks

The Oklahoma City Thunder’s return for James Johnson includes two second-round draft picks along with Trevor Ariza and Justin Jackson.

If you didn’t have time to get a James Johnson jersey while he was on the Oklahoma City Thunder, it’s forgivable.

Johnson was acquired from the Minnesota Timberwolves in the Ricky Rubio deal. He was part of the Thunder for about 20 minutes before he was traded again, this time in a three-team deal involving the Dallas Mavericks and Detroit Pistons.

In return for the forward, the Thunder received Trevor Ariza from the Pistons and Justin Jackson and two second-round draft picks from the Mavericks.

One of the second-round picks will be in 2023. It will be whichever is the best between the Mavericks and the Miami Heat, both of which are owned by Dallas. The other is a 2026 Mavericks pick.

LIST: FUTURE THUNDER DRAFT PICKS

Johnson, now on the Mavericks, has one year left on his contract that will pay him $15.8 million. Ariza is also on the final year of his and is owed $12.8 million. He is also a tradable wing.

Jackson is on the final year of his deal and owed $5 million. He will be a restricted free agent next offseason.

The Pistons received Delon Wright, who has two years remaining that will pay him $9 million this season and $8.5 next.

This move indirectly adds to the haul that the Thunder received in the Chris Paul trade. That deal netted them Rubio, who was shipped to the Minnesota Timberwolves along with draft picks for the rights to No. 17 pick Aleksej Pokusevski and Johnson. Johnson, in turn, was traded for two players and a pair of second-rounders.

General manager Sam Presti continues to add to his collection.

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Report: Thunder get James Johnson as salary match in Ricky Rubio deal

As part of the Ricky Rubio trade, the Oklahoma City Thunder have acquired James Johnson from the Minnesota Timberwolves.

To match salaries, the Minnesota Timberwolves are sending forward James Johnson to the Oklahoma City Thunder as part of the Ricky Rubio trade, according to The Athletic’s Shams Charania.

During the draft on Wednesday, the Thunder traded Rubio, the 25th pick and the 28th pick to the T-Wolves for Johnson and the No. 17 pick, which Oklahoma City used on Aleksej Pokusevski.

Johnson is opting into his $15.8 million deal for the 2020-21 season, according to Charania.

He was traded from the Miami Heat to the Timberwolves last season as part of the salary swapping that allowed Miami to acquire Andre Iguodala. In Johnson’s 14 games with Minnesota, he bumped up to the center position and averaged 12 points, 4.7 rebounds and 3.8 assists per game while shooting 37% from 3, which would have been by far the best percentage of his career if it was a full season.

Johnson is known as one of the toughest players in the league. At 6-foot-7 and 240 pounds, he is able to play the forward positions and center.

With his salary, it’s unclear if Oklahoma City could trade him. In the past Johnson has been linked to trade rumors because his salary can help match a contracts if his own team was moving a cheaper player — similar to what happened here, though he is paid roughly a million less than Rubio — but it’s unlikely that the Thunder will be pursing a different highly paid player and need Johnson to match it.

It’s useless to speculate about where he’d fit into the roster because almost the entirety of Oklahoma City’s team could change between now and the beginning of next season, but it makes sense that he would be a backup forward and big option if the Thunder do not waive or trade him.

Johnson’s contract expires after this season, so he is not a long-term commitment for Oklahoma City.

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Analyzing every deal from 2020 NBA trade deadline with Ben Golliver

Alex Kennedy and Ben Golliver break down every deal from the 2020 NBA trade deadline, the biggest winners/losers, possible buyouts and more.

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On this episode of The HoopsHype Podcast, Alex Kennedy is joined by Ben Golliver of the Washington Post. They break down every deal from the 2020 NBA trade deadline, the biggest winners and losers, possible buyout candidates and more. Time-stamps are below!

1:35: Alex and Ben discuss their biggest winners of the deadline.

5:12: Alex and Ben discuss their biggest losers of the deadline.

7:55: Did the Golden State Warriors make the right move trading D’Angelo Russell to the Minnesota Timberwolves for Andrew Wiggins and a top-three protected 2021 first-round pick? Alex and Ben debate whether Golden State should’ve waited to see if a better offer emerged over the offseason, what to expect from Minnesota’s new-look team and more.

13:50: Breaking down the three-team deal that sends Marcus Morris to the Los Angeles Clippers. How much better does Morris make them? And what does this deal mean for the New York Knicks and Washington Wizards?

16:05: Alex and Ben discuss Darren Collison’s options if he decides to make an NBA comeback. If you were Collison, would you sign with the Los Angeles Lakers, Los Angeles Clippers or another team (such as the Denver Nuggets or Philadelphia 76ers, who have shown interest in him)?

20:15: The Cleveland Cavaliers added Andre Drummond and they didn’t have to give up very much to the Detroit Pistons. Alex and Ben discuss the trade, why they like the move for Cleveland and what Detroit was thinking. They also talk about what this trade says about the evolution of the NBA.

25:10: Alex and Ben discuss the four-team, 12-player trade between the Atlanta Hawks, Houston Rockets, Minnesota Timberwolves and Denver Nuggets. They break down Atlanta’s acquisition of Clint Capela, Houston’s addition of Robert Covington and the Rockets’ decision to go super small.

32:45: The Miami Heat acquired Andre Iguodala in a three-team deal with the Memphis Grizzlies and Minnesota Timberwolves, parting ways with Justise Winslow, Dion Waiters and James Johnson. The Heat also added Jae Crowder and Solomon Hill from the deal. Alex and Ben discuss Iguodala’s fit in Miami and the two-year, $30 million extension he signed with the Heat, as well as Memphis’ return for the 36-year-old.

37:25: Alex and Ben rattle off the remainder of minor deals that went down before the deadline and discuss their significance.

39:25: After the trade deadline, focus shifts to the buyout market. Alex and Ben talk about a number of veterans who could potentially be bought out and what kind of impact they could make on a contending team.