Fan’s dreams of LeBron James and Steph Curry playing together are officially cooked

The dream was fun while it lasted.

Welcome to Layup Lines, For the Win’s basketball newsletter. Subscribe here to get it delivered to your inbox every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Have feedback for the Layup Lines Crew? Leave your questions, comments and concerns through this brief reader survey. Now, here’s Mike Sykes

Happy Friday, folks! Welcome back to Layup Lines. Thanks so much for joining me today. I hope you’re having a great day and are ready for the three day weekend ahead of you.

The Golden State Warriors got their work done a bit early this week, didn’t they?

Stephen Curry has reportedly signed a one-year, $62.6 million extension with the team for the 2026-27 season. He’ll join the NBA’s $500 million club and remain a Warrior through the remainder of his deal unless he asks out.

That’s great news for Warriors fans out there who thought Curry might dash for greener grass after a couple of underwhelming seasons in a row for the Warriors. While that’s still not completely outside the realm of possibility, it’s become a lot less likely now.

What is completely cooked with this extension, though, are hopes that he and LeBron James would ever play together.

Fans have almost always fantasized about the two defining players of this era of hoops playing together. Steph at point with LeBron on the wing? That’d be a nightmare, even in their twilight years. Curry is still the game’s best shooter and James knows how to manipulate defenses better than almost anyone in NBA history.

Their Olympic stint together this summer only added fuel to the fire for those thoughts. And when Steph removed “Warriors guard” from his Instagram bio? Whew, boy. Things were getting crazy.

But now, Curry is locked in. He could theoretically be traded for, sure. But it’d take half the Lakers’ roster to get a deal done without a third team while also keeping Anthony Davis and James on the roster. Plus, they don’t have the draft capital or young prospects the Warriors would be looking for in return. Much of the same could be said on the Warriors end of things if, say, James were to request a trade.

At this point, we know that’s not happening. Neither of these guys are going anywhere. The teams they’re with now are the teams they’re going to be finishing their careers with. You never say never — this is the NBA. You never know.

But if you were holding out any hope for a union between these two, you should probably let that hope dissipate now.

Do us justice, Netflix

Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

Speaking of LeBron, I cannot wait to watch Netflix’s Starting Five docuseries coming out this year.

The docuseries is set to release ahead of the NBA season, according to the Hollywood Reporter. It’s been in the making for the last year. The series follows James, Anthony Edwards, Jayson Tatum, Jimmy Butler and Domantas Sabonis through the 2023-24 season.

We’re going to see LeBron crack the 40,000 points record. We’re going to see Jayson Tatum win his first championship. We’re going to see Anthony Edwards be…Anthony Edwards. That should be fun stuff.

Netflix has been cooking with sports documentaries lately. Drive to Survive is an incredible production around Formula 1 racing. That sounds like it’s kind of the basis for what this series is, except for it’s not happening live during the season.

This doesn’t need to be as good as that. But if it gets close? I’ll be satisfied.

Shootaround

— Kiyan Anthony’s quote about Bronny James making it to the NBA is…kind of weird? Idk what to make of this. Bryan Kalbrosky has more.

— Speaking of Bronny, he can’t call his dad “Dad” on the court. Here’s Andrew Joseph with more.

— The NBA 2k25 ratings are out and these are…kind of disrespectful to Joel Embiid.

— Could Caitlin Clark be the WNBA’s MVP? Nah. But Rebecca Lobo thinks she might be in the conversation.

That’s a wrap, folks! Thanks so much for reading Layup Lines today. Have a fantastic weekend. Let’s do this again next week.

Jaylen Brown’s new song proves that he should probably stick to his day job

I don’t want to tell Jaylen Brown what to do. I also just don’t want to hear him rap anymore.

Welcome to Layup Lines, For the Win’s basketball newsletter. Subscribe here to get it delivered to your inbox every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Have feedback for the Layup Lines Crew? Leave your questions, comments and concerns through this brief reader survey. Now, here’s Mike Sykes

Happy Friday, folks! Welcome back to Layup Lines. Thanks so much for joining me today. I hope you’ve had a good week so far.

My Friday was going great…until I heard Jaylen Brown rapping on a new song with A$AP Ferg.

And, look, I’m not anti-athletes rapping. I actually enjoy it when we see athletes get into a different bag than the one we’re used to.

Damian Lillard is great at it, obviously. You know who else is really good? Flau’jae Johnson. She’s got star potential on and off the court, which is pretty impressive. That’s the same stuff Shaq used to do.

You know who isn’t very good at it? Jaylen. Brown. This was…not great.

When I heard him rhyme monogamy with astronomy I knew it was time for me to check out. Let’s just say this wasn’t for me.

WARNING: There is some NSFW language included in this tweet

I get what Brown was trying to do here. Vocally, he sounds like a mix of early Dom Kennedy and current Larry June. It kind of works, but it’s just not that smooth. This is somewhere between better than Dwyane Wade (yikes, this was bad) and worse than Kevin Durant (Still not great!).

I’d give Brown an A for effort here. But, uh, you should probably stick to your day job, Mr. Finals MVP.


Rest in peace, Al Attles

On a more serious note, the game lost one of its legends this week.

Warriors legend Al Attles died on Wednesday, the team announced on social media.

He played for the Warriors for 10 years from the 1960-61 season through the 1970-71 season. During that time, the team transitioned from Philadelphia to San Francisco. It’s remained in the Bay Area since.

He was a bruiser — a physical player they nicknamed “The Destroyer” because of how relentless he was on the court.

He transitioned to being a player-coach during the 1969-70 season and became the full-time coach from 1970 until 1983. On the court, Attles led the Warriors to a 1975 championship over the Bullets in a four-game sweep. He has 557 wins, which still stands as the most in franchise history.

As good of a coach as he was on the court, he meant a lot more of it.

Attles was one of the first Black head coaches in the NBA, following in Bill Russell’s and the Celtics’ footsteps. Without him, the league wouldn’t be where it is today.

What a legend. We’ll miss you, Al.

Shootaround

— They had the Warriors all over the DNC this week. Sheesh.

— Sue Bird has three teams she wouldn’t want to play in the playoffs this year, including Caitlin Clark’s Indiana Fever. Meg Hall has more.

— The NBAPA could probably learn a thing or two from the CBA the NWSLPA put together. This is incredible.

— This cool moment between Tina Charles and Diana Taurasi is what sports is all about, man. Here’s Cory Woodroof with more.

That’s a wrap, folks. Thanks so much for rocking with us today. We appreciate you. We’ll have more next week. Talk to you then.

Peace.

-Sykes ✌️

NBA expansion discussions are right around the corner and the league better be ready for it

The NBA needs to ask itself some serious questions about expansion

Welcome to Layup Lines, For the Win’s basketball newsletter. Subscribe here to get it delivered to your inbox every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Have feedback for the Layup Lines Crew? Leave your questions, comments and concerns through this brief reader survey. Now, here’s Mike Sykes

Happy Friday, Winners! Welcome back to Layup Lines. Thanks so much for joining me today. I hope you’ve got a great weekend planned ahead of you.

The NBA has been making some power moves on the business side of things. We’ve heard all about the league’s upcoming television rights deal, which we’ll actually get into a little bit later in the newsletter.

But what I want to touch on here today is expansion. It’s coming. And it’ll probably be here pretty quickly after the league wraps up its new TV deal.

At this point, the NBA has been talking about expansion for years. Adam Silver has maintained that the league would explore expanding further after the business with the TV deal wrapped up. He reiterated that again to reporters earlier this week.

Well, here we are. The deal is just inches away from the finish line with Turner Sports holding things up. With that in mind, Silver says expansion discussions about expansion will begin “in earnest” this fall.

But what do those discussions look like? What do they entail? The league has to ask itself if it’s the right time to expand. Parity has taken over NBA basketball over these last few years. The NBA has landed in a sweet spot where the talent pool isn’t too dense with stars stacking up on a few teams at a time. Almost every team has a player capable of being an All-Star.

When you expand, you dilute that product. Just simply adding two teams means adding 24 roster spots. A majority of those players will come from teams that are already well-balanced. Does the NBA want that? What does that mean for the product?

That doesn’t even touch on the logistics of it all. Where would these teams be located? What’s travel like there?

This isn’t an argument against expansion. These are just the essential questions the NBA will need to ask itself this fall. when discussions begin. Hopefully, the league finds good answers to them.

READ MORE: Seven most likely cities for NBA expansion


Inside the NBA may survive

(Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

Speaking of the NBA’s new TV deal, it seems like there’s a chance that Turner may hold onto the league’s broadcast rights after all.

You know what that means? Inside the NBA might just survive these negotiations after all. I wrote about that a bit this morning for The Morning Win. 

Turner has five days to decide whether it’ll match a deal from either NBC Universal or Amazon:

“Deadline reported on Wednesday that TNT intends to match the Amazon Prime Video offer, which is reportedly $700 million cheaper than the NBC bid. That won’t come easy. Considering how much money is on the table here, it will probably get ugly and litigious. The stakes are high.

But this is good news for fans hoping the Inside the NBA crew could stick together for the long run. Regardless of negotiations, we’re technically still getting one more season of the show, but so many people have grown up with this show and its incredible cast of characters. Charles Barkley and crew have worked their way into people’s hearts over the last few decades. Knowing that it’s on its last legs is a bit heartbreaking. Most people don’t want to see that simply go away.”

Amazon seems like Turner’s likely target here. If TNT decides to match, surely Amazon will probably try to fight it, considering how much money is on the table.

But the bottom line is this: As close to done as this deal seems, there’s still a bit more work to do before all sides can cross the finish line.


Shootaround

— Five undrafted free agent rookies who have really impressed so far in Summer League from Bryan Kalbrosky.

— Five second-round picks who have emerged as steals so far in the Summer League, again, from Kalbrosky.

— Indiana Fever broadcasters going crazy over Caitlin Clark’s record 19th assist will never get old to me. Meg Hall has more.

—  The Golden State Valkyries are already doing some pretty cool things in the bay area.

That’s a wrap, folks! Thanks so much for reading. Have a fantastic weekend. Peace.

-Sykes ✌️

The Milwaukee Bucks are the forgotten team in the NBA’s Eastern Conference now

Don’t sleep on the Bucks, folks.

Welcome to Layup Lines, For the Win’s basketball newsletter. Subscribe here to get it delivered to your inbox every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Have feedback for the Layup Lines Crew? Leave your questions, comments and concerns through this brief reader survey. Now, here’s Mike Sykes

Happy Friday, folks! Welcome back to Layup Lines. Thanks so much for joining me today. I hope you’ve had a great week and that your rhythm wasn’t completely thrown off like mine was because of the Thursday holiday.

RELATED: The 4th of July was the most Saturday-est Thursday ever

Enough about that. Let’s talk about the NBA for a second — specifically the Eastern Conference.

Is it just me or have we forgotten about the Milwaukee Bucks?

The East’s landscape has drastically changed. The 76ers are signing Paul George, which significantly boosts their championship odds. The Knicks — who were the conference’s second-best team in 2024 — just traded for Mikal Bridges. Even the Orlando Magic just made a move for Kentavious Caldwell-Pope that will certainly hurt the Nuggets.

Because of those moves, we’re talking about all those teams right now. And we were already talking about the Celtics because they’re the champs. That’s what happens when you win a championship. Folks think Boston might be a dynasty in waiting.

The talk has been about one of those four teams winning the East for most of the summer. But nobody has anything to say about Milwaukee these days.

I get it. The Bucks just petered out last season. After making the move for Damian Lillard last season, the team fell flat and got eliminated by the Pacers in the first round last year. That was after Milwaukee ousted Adrian Griffin for Doc Rivers who did a worse job running the team.

You can blame the end of the season on injuries. Damian Lillard and Giannis Antetokounpo were absent at the end of that series against the Pacers. But the Bucks never really felt like a championship threat this season at any point, no matter what the reason. People can’t seem to shake that.

But I think they should.

It’d be a mistake for everyone to forget about the Bucks here. When healthy, this Milwaukee team is easily one of the best in the NBA. It has one of the best trios in basketball: Antetokounmpo, Lillard, and Khris Middleton.

That three-man unit was +17.5 last season in 758 minutes together. Obviously, it would be best if they played together more. Health will always be a huge impediment for this team, considering their core’s age. But still, that’s impressive, especially considering how tumultuous the season was.

Milwaukee is running that same core back. Some may think the core is stale, but with a year of experience and a full training camp, the fit together might look much cleaner than most anticipate.

Does that mean this team will beat the Celtics next year? No. But I don’t think we should talk about Milwaukee as if the team is lightyears behind Philadelphia and New York, either. The Bucks have their share of problems and those teams do, too.

Let’s make sure we’re putting a bit of respect on Milwaukee’s name by the time the season rolls around.

LeBron’s reign isn’t over yet

Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports

LeBron James may have just signed a new deal with the Lakers, but folks shouldn’t anticipate this being his last one.

I wrote about how he has a couple of tools at his disposal with his new contract that make me think he’s got a deal or two left in him — partially because I think he’ll end up signing another new one next season.

Here’s more:

“Two key inclusions in the contract signal that he might be playing more: The included no-trade clause and the player option he’s getting in year two.

The no-trade clause is self-explanatory. James won’t be leaving the Lakers unless he wants to leave the Lakers. The team has to get his approval before trading him and, if he doesn’t want to go anywhere else, he won’t. They’re locked in for better or worse.

What’s more key here, though, is James’s player option in year two. This is a clear flex of power for James. He basically signed a one-year deal with the Lakers here, with the option to come back for a second year next season.”

For those of you who think Bron might try and stick around to get Bryce James on the Lakers, too, this is where it all starts.

Shootaround

— DeMar DeRozan’s cameo in the “Not Like Us” video is legendary. Here’s Mitch Northam with more.

— I absolutely NEED this Kobe jacket Aaliyah Edwards wore. This is awesome. Meg Hall has more.

— This pic of MJ on Tyler Reddick’s car is so awesome. Here’s Mitch again with more.

— Here’s Bryan Kalbrosky with more on how the Lakers are kind of stuck because of LeBron’s new deal.

That’s a wrap, folks! Thanks so much for reading. We appreciate you. Have a fantastic weekend. Peace.

-Sykes ✌️

The Celtics’ cakewalk to a championship might signal its time to change the NBA’s playoff format

This isn’t taking away anything from the Celtics! It’s just making a more entertaining product

Welcome to Layup Lines, For the Win’s basketball newsletter. Subscribe here to get it delivered to your inbox every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Have feedback for the Layup Lines Crew? Leave your questions, comments and concerns through this brief reader survey. Now, here’s Mike Sykes

Happy Friday, folks! Welcome back to Layup Lines. Thanks so much for joining me today. I hope you’ve had a fantastic week and have an even better weekend ahead of you.

Celtics fans, I don’t want you to be mad at me today. Your team will probably win the NBA championship tonight — it feels like a sweep is coming. If it doesn’t happen tonight, then it’ll probably happen the very next game.

READ MORE: The Mavericks and Oilers have given us two incredibly awful Finals

Congratulations! The Celtics deserve it! Boston has been the best team in the NBA all season long. This team deserves to win the NBA Finals for plenty of reasons. The Celtics have earned their place among the greatest teams in NBA history.

That said, I think it’s fair to mention Boston’s relatively easy path to this point. The Celtics had a cakewalk through the Eastern Conference. Boston didn’t have to play a 50-win team until the Mavericks in the Finals.

As we discussed, injuries decimated every team the Celtics saw in these playoffs. That’s not uncommon — you need a bit of injury luck to make deep playoff runs and the Celtics have had plenty of it outside of Kristaps Porzingis. But, in the East, their competition wasn’t up to snuff.

Meanwhile, in the West, the Mavericks had to claw their way through the Clippers (51 wins), the Thunder (57 wins) and the Timberwolves (56 wins). The West has generally been a tougher conference than the East over the last 30 years, but this season shows us exactly how stark that difference is. The best teams in the West totally beat each other down while the Celtics just cruised to the Finals.

To be fair to Boston, that’s not the Celtics’ problem. The team played who it had to play and dominated the competition. This team had three 50+ point wins in a season — we can’t (and shouldn’t!) try to take anything away from that. There are no asterisks here.

I just think that if there was ever a time to consider switching the NBA’s playoff format from a two-conference situation to a 1-16 seeding format, then this is that time.

The league has discussed it before—it was even reportedly close to happening at one point when the NBA was restarting during the pandemic. With how dominant the West has traditionally been, it makes sense to consider it.

Obviously, logistical issues would need to be resolved. Boston traveling to, say, Sacramento for a 1-seed vs. 16-seed matchup would be an issue. But I think there are creative ways to get around that, whether finding neutral sites to host playoff games or even shortening early rounds so that the travel is less hectic.

But I think this format would solve a core problem the NBA has had over the decades: Teams in the West are presented with tougher matchups early on in the postseason than their counterparts in the East. This year’s Nuggets and Timberwolves series felt like the NBA Finals. I’m not sure the Celtics have played a series that’s felt like the Finals yet.

Part of that is just how good that team is. Another part, though, is that they just haven’t gotten any real competition. And maybe there isn’t any. Maybe they’re just that good.

But, man, I would’ve loved to see it.


It’s not Luka’s time

(Photo by Tim Heitman/Getty Images)

I really, really hate the word “exposed” when it comes to discourse about the NBA today.

Folks always use the term in a way that feels so absolutist. If a player’s flaws are “exposed” then the book is written on them. Everyone has to be this weird image of perfection, but no one ever is. So it doesn’t matter.

That said, I do feel like “exposed” is the right word to characterize what the Celtics have done to Luka Doncic in these Finals. He’s not a great defender. I wouldn’t even call him a good one — especially at his size. And the Celtics have driven right at him over and over and over again in these Finals to kickstart their offense. It’s been a huge problem.

Down 3-0 in the Finals, Doncic is acknowledging his defensive shortcomings, our Robert Zeglinski writes. And he’s ready to learn from it.

“It’s not unprecedented for stars of Doncic’s mold to experience a little heartbreak before they finally break through. Losing and learning where you have to improve to succeed has been a rite of passage for every major star in NBA history. Everyone from Michael Jordan and LeBron James to Nikola Jokic went through this kind of challenging trial in some capacity.

Doncic knows what next steps he has to take to lift the Mavericks over the top. That’s half the battle. And no matter what happens during the rest of these Finals, he still has plenty of time to grow.”

The path is there for Doncic. You don’t lead a team to the NBA Finals by osmosis – you’ve got to be good enough to do this. He is.

Let’s see if he’s ready to do what it takes to get better.

Shootaround

— Pat McAfee is stoking the flames of the Woj vs. Shams beef. Here’s Zeglinski with more

— Dan Hurley denies that he used the Lakers as a leverage play. We all know what it is, though. Bryan Kalbrosky has more.

— Speaking of Bryan, our latest NBA Mock Draft is out. Take a peek and see who your favorite team is picking.

— Brian Windhorst had a brutally honest take about Luka that should stick with him for a long time. Charles Curtis has more.

That’s a wrap, folks! Thanks so much for reading Layup Lines today. We’ll be back at it again next week. Until then! Peace.

-Sykes ✌️

Dan Hurley would be a better hire for the Lakers than JJ Redick but it’d still be a risky proposition

Is Dan Hurley the fix the Lakers think he is? History says he may not be.

Welcome to Layup Lines, For the Win’s basketball newsletter. Subscribe here to get it delivered to your inbox every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Have feedback for the Layup Lines Crew? Leave your questions, comments and concerns through this brief reader survey. Now, here’s Mike Sykes

Happy Friday, folks! Welcome back to Layup Lines. Thanks so much for joining me today. I hope you’ve had a fantastic week so far.

When Adrian Wojnarowski first broke the news that the Lakers were seriously considering UConn’s Dan Hurley as the team’s new head coach, I couldn’t help but make jokes.

I mean, the Kendrick vs. Drake comparison between Woj and Shams Charania was right there. Shams says Redick is the guy for weeks and then — BOOM — here comes Woj blowing all of that to smithereens in one morning. It was hilarious.

But after taking a bit of time to think about it, I think I would actually like the hire. I’d especially like it over Redick, who I still believe is being considered partially because of his excellent podcast chemistry with LeBron James.

Facts are facts, and Hurley has coached his team to a college championship in back-to-back years. He’s got years of experience on different benches across the sport. I think he’s more of a proven commodity than Redick is, and he’d also be good for the Lakers’ young guys (especially if Bronny James is actually happening).

But, again, facts are facts. And while I do think this might be a good hire, plenty of recent history suggests it’s probably not the right move for the Lakers to make.

Plenty of teams in the NBA have hired head college coaches recently. The results have ranged from pretty, pretty, pretty good (shoutout to Larry David, the only man with two first names you should trust) to “wow, that was a dumpster fire.”

  • Brad Stevens: Stevens amassed a 350-281 record with the Celtics and came one game away from an NBA Finals appearance
  • Billy Donovan: Billy Donovan’s 399-319 record with the Bulls is solid, but has never really amounted to anything.
  • Fred Hoiberg: Speaking of the Bulls, Hoibgerg’s 115-155 record with Chicago was pretty dreadful.
  • John Beilein: John Beilein didn’t even last a full season with the Cavaliers before getting the boot.

The results there are mixed, at best. Larry Brown is probably the most prominent example of a coach who jumped from college to the pros and reached the mountaintop of the league. Stevens has come close. But everyone else? It’s been pretty hit or miss.

That doesn’t mean that Hurley would be a bad hire. Maybe he bucks the trend! Who knows? But if recent history tells us anything, the Lakers shouldn’t be so quick to bring him in without exploring other options first.


Tanking helps!

Bruce Kluckhohn-USA TODAY Sports

Look, I know the Mavericks are down horrendously right now to the Celtics. It’s not looking great for them.

But, hey! The fact that Dallas is in the Finals right now is a pretty big accomplishment. It wouldn’t be possible without Dereck Lively II, who wouldn’t even be a Maverick if Dallas didn’t tank at the tail end of last season.

Our Bryan Kalbrosky wrote about how tanking helped the Mavs get to where they are right now with Lively. Dallas was so close to not having this dude.

“If they made the playoffs or if they had worse lottery luck, their draft pick would have gone to the Knicks as part of the 2019 deal for Porzingis. But instead, they ended up with the No. 10 overall pick in the 2023 NBA Draft.

Fortunately for the Mavericks, they were able to retain the pick. Dallas easily could have shopped the pick around to try to get immediate value by trading for a veteran. Instead, they selected Dereck Lively II from Duke and became one of the biggest winners of draft night.”

Now, you can’t even imagine the Mavericks playing without him. The team literally would not be where it is.

I know we all hate tanking—it’s an affront to the game and makes for bad basketball. But the results are the results, folks. It works.

Wish my Wizards luck, please.

Shootaround

This Taylor Rooks meme is so funny, man. I hope it never goes away. Meg Hall has more.

— JJ Redick gives Doris Burke a big shoutout for her historical moment during this year’s NBA Finals broadcast. Here’s Bryan with more.

— Here’s Blake Schuster on Adam Silver apologizing to Inside the NBA for this prolonged (and public!) media rights negotiation from the NBA.

— Jaylen Brown might be my Finals MVP off this dunk alone.

That’s a wrap, folks! Thanks so much for reading today. We appreciate you. Have a fantastic weekend. Peace.

-Sykes ✌️

The Timberwolves’ path back to the Western Conference Finals in the future might not be as easy as you think

The path back to the WCF is not going to be an easy (or cheap!) one for Minnesota

Welcome to Layup Lines, For the Win’s basketball newsletter. Subscribe here to get it delivered to your inbox every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Have feedback for the Layup Lines Crew? Leave your questions, comments and concerns through this brief reader survey. Now, here’s Mike Sykes

Happy Friday, folks! Welcome back to Layup Lines. Thanks so much for joining me today. I hope you’ve had a great week and have an even better weekend ahead of you.

Things didn’t go so well for the Minnesota Timberwolves on Thursday night when the Mavs bounced them out of the playoffs. The Wolves lost 124-103, and somehow, it was one of those games where the score was a lot closer than the game was. We’re talking about a 21-point loss here. It was that bad.

READ MORE: The Timberwolves got off to such a bad start that Ernie Johnson swore on Inside the NBA

The natural reflex for people after the loss usually sounded something like this: “Don’t worry — the Wolves will be back.”

That’s a reasonable take. After all, the team’s 22-year-old superstar in Anthony Edwards is only getting better. He’s not even close to reaching his prime yet he’s already carried this team this far. Expecting a higher climb in the near future makes plenty of sense.

While I fully believe in Ant-Man’s power and his ability to carry this team, I am not sure that this team will be taking the next step anytime soon. It’s not because of anything the Timberwolves are doing or have done — it’s because of what they might not be able to do.

The NBA’s new luxury tax rules make it extremely hard for teams already spending a ton of money to get any better. The Wolves fall into that category.

When Anthony Edwards’ extension finally kicks in next season, Minnesota will around $194 million in salary on their books, according to HoopsHype’s salary data. If the Timberwolves don’t make a move to shake things up, that puts them firmly over the luxury tax for next season at $171.3 million and well into the tax’s second apron, at around $190 million, per Yahoo! Sports.

If the Wolves are a second-apron team, it’s going to be hard to get better. Being in that second apron takes away access to key roster building tools like:

  • The ability to make sign-and-trades to acquire players
  • The ability to use the tax-payer mid-level exception to sign new players
  • Sending out cash in trades for things like extra picks
  • The ability to take back more money in any trade made

That’s just the tip of the iceberg. There’s a lot more that ESPN’s Bobby Marks goes over here. The point is, though, that the Wolves will have to find creative ways to get better while not taking on any money. That’s hard to do in the NBA.

Maybe Minnesota doesn’t have to — it could be a matter of internal improvement. Run it back with the same team, and they’ll likely still be competitive. This was a 56-win team, after all.

But don’t be surprised if the Wolves don’t do much this offseason. The new collective bargaining agreement might not let them.

There’s still basketball to watch, folks

Caitlin Clark #22 and Aliyah Boston #7 of the Indiana Fever react during the first quarter against the Connecticut Sun in the game at Mohegan Sun Arena on May 14, 2024 in Uncasville, Connecticut
(Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)

I know we’ve got a minute before the first game of the NBA Finals tips off — there’s a long time between now and June 6. But don’t be like Nike and completely forget that there’s still other basketball being played.

Meg Hall has your fix for you here:

“We get it. There’s almost a week until the Boston Celtics and the Dallas Mavericks meet for Game 1 of the NBA Finals, and you’re just not quite sure what to do without basketball. There’s no Luka Doncic around to troll fans ruthlessly, and there’s no Jaylen Brown here to be transparently and hysterically honest.

But there is the WNBA ― something the Nike basketball account forgot ― who has a staggering 16 matchups until the Celtics and Mavs take the floor.”

The WNBA is in full swing, and now is a good time to catch up on the league if you’ve been entrenched in the NBA playoffs. With a full 16-game slate this weekend, you’ve got plenty to watch. Tap in.

READ MORE: Here’s Meg with the WNBA’s weekend schedule for you


Shootaround

Luka Doncic wants to keep Inside the NBA around. Make it happen, TNT. Charles Curtis has more. 

— Here’s Robert Zeglinski chronicling all of the terrible votes Kendrick Perkins has ever made. Maybe he should stop voting on all NBA awards and not just DPOY.

Anthony Edward’s new sneaker commercial is so perfect. Maybe he really is MJ.

— Stephen A. Smith is blaming LeBron James for Bronny’s rising stock in the draft, but he should really blame his employer.

That’s a wrap, folks. Thanks so much for rocking with Layup Lines this week. We’ll be back on Monday with more. Until then! Peace.

-Sykes ✌️

The Celtics are looking vulnerable for the first time since last year’s playoffs

The Celtics should be so much better than this.

Welcome to Layup Lines, For the Win’s basketball newsletter. Subscribe here to get it delivered to your inbox every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Have feedback for the Layup Lines Crew? Leave your questions, comments and concerns through this brief reader survey. Now, here’s Mike Sykes

Happy Friday, folks! Welcome back to Layup Lines. Thanks so much for joining me today. I hope you have a fantastic weekend ahead of you.

We’ve got some good games on the slate tonight between the Wolves-Nuggets and the Pacers-Knicks series. But, man, is anybody else as stuck on the Celtics-Cavs series as I am?

I don’t know what it was about that game. We’ve seen this Celtics team get blown out before. It happened in Boston’s first-round series against Miami.

But doesn’t it feel like Boston is as vulnerable as ever right now? That’s what it feels like to me.

The Celtics’ live-and-die by the 3-pointer philosophy bit it against Cleveland on Thursday. The C’s shot a paltry 8-35 from deep in Game 2 while allowing Cleveland to dominate inside with 60 points in the paint.

That’s not Celtics basketball. Well, at least it hasn’t been. Not this year.

Boston was 37-4 this year at home. The Celtics have already lost two home games in these playoffs. It’s not just the fact that Boston lost, but how it happened. Especially in this latest Game 2.

This is the same thing that came back to bite Boston against Miami in 2023. This team that relies way too much on jump shooting just…inexplicably goes cold. Derrick White suddenly isn’t Steph Curry. Jayson Tatum’s steady diet of tough shots isn’t good enough. Jaylen Brown’s rim attacks aren’t working. Add the Celtics missing Kristaps Porzingis because of his calf injury to the mix, and you’ve got a pretty troubling path forward for a team everyone expects to win a championship.

Tatum isn’t worried about it. He was asked about the Celtics’ shooting after the game and told reporters “Sometimes, you just don’t make them.” And he’s right — the NBA is a make-or-miss league more often than it isn’t.

But something has got to give. This feels like a story we’ve seen before. And if we see it again this year? Whew, boy. Boston is going to have a lot of questions to answer.


Budenholzer is back, baby

Mandatory Credit: Benny Sieu-USA TODAY Sports

Mike Budenholzer will reportedly be taking the reigns in Phoenix after the Suns dismissed Frank Vogel earlier this week, according to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski.

On the one hand, I’m glad to see this guy back in coaching. I won’t say he shouldn’t have been fired, but so many teams should’ve been calling him before Phoenix.

  • This is a guy with a 484-317 record in the NBA as a head coach. He’s got the goods.
  • And, sure, he’s got a bunch of postseason gaffes on his resume. But he’s also an NBA champion. He’s proven — the exact type of coach Phoenix wants.

On the other hand, I’m not sure how great of a fit this will be. It’ll depend on how Phoenix maneuvers this offseason, but Budenholzer’s defenses usually revolve around having size in the middle of the floor for rim protection. And, uh, let’s just say Phoenix is a bit short on that right now.

It’ll be difficult to craft this roster that fits traditional Bud teams, considering the team-building constraints Phoenix faces as a second-apron luxury tax team. We’ll see how they do this.

Regardless, it’s good to see Bud back in the game. He deserves another shot.

RELATED: Mat Ishbia is ruining the Phoenix Suns all by himself

Shootaround

— We now know why Luka Doncic and all the reporters heard NSFW noises after Game 2 vs. OKC. This is hilarious. Charles Curtis has more.

— This Timberwolves – NWO Wolfpac mashup is GOLD for any wrestling fans out there. Christian D’Andrea has more.

The NBA’s MVP award continues to grow worldwide. Here’s Robert Zeglinski with more.

— Here’s Robert Zeglinski again on why Patrick Beverley’s suspension doesn’t even matter at this point.

That’s a wrap, folks. We’ll chat again next week. Until then, peace. Happy Mother’s Day to all the moms out there!

-Sykes ✌️

Victor Wembanyama’s shot at Rudy Gobert shows us just how serious he is about winning

Victor Wembanyama is going to be THAT GUY. But you already knew that.

Welcome to Layup Lines, For the Win’s basketball newsletter. Subscribe here to get it delivered to your inbox every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Have feedback for the Layup Lines Crew? Leave your questions, comments, and concerns in this brief reader survey. Now, here’s Mike Sykes

Happy Friday, folks! Welcome back to Layup Lines. Thanks so much for joining me today. I hope you’ve had a fantastic week.

Let’s talk about Victor Wembanyama today because we don’t talk about Victor Wembanyama enough.

With the NBA’s pillars in LeBron James, Steph Curry, and Kevin Durant coming to the end of their careers soon, the whole “face of the league” thing has become one of the most popular subjects folks like to discuss.

Everyone wants to know who the next torch bearer for the NBA is going to be? Giannis Antetokounmpo thinks it might be multiple players. Others believe a charismatic player like Anthony Edwards can do it. There are certainly plenty of good answers out there.

But for me? It’s Big Vic, man. This dude just has the juice.

Part of being the face of the NBA is not just having a great game — plenty of players have that. The other part of it is just being a great quote. You’ve got to want that spotlight. You have to know the right things to say when. And the things you say have to be interesting.

We know Wemby has the game to do it — he’s not even averaging 30 minutes a night and is putting up impressive numbers. But that’s not what lets me know that he’s ready to be the guy in the NBA.

It’s the moments like this that get me.

What you’re hearing in that video is Vic responding in French to a question about competing with Rudy Gobert for Defensive Player of the Year this year.

Here’s a translation for you: “I know that Rudy [Gobert] has a very good chance of winning it this year and it would be deserved. But let him win it now, because afterward it’s no longer his turn.”

That’s some unreal confidence from this kid. He’s talking about a three-time (likely soon to be four) Defensive Player of the Year like this, who is also one of his NBA mentors, by the way.

Wembanyama doesn’t care. If you’re not with him, you’re against him. And he’s coming for you.

This is the sort of confidence people love. It’s what makes people root for you. The Spurs only have 14 wins, but you wouldn’t know it from the way Wembanyama talks about himself and his team. With that quote, he’s literally selling you, me, and everyone else on his future as one of the best defensive players this league has ever seen.

Might that come back to bite him? Sure. It’s possible. But Wembanyama not being afraid of that spotlight — not being afraid of failure — is exactly why Wemby will be the player we’re all glued to moving forward.

Well, that and his ability to make grown men look like 5-year-olds.

Joe Mazzulla is the best

I don’t know about y’all, man. But Joe Mazzulla has always given me that “I should be out there with those guys” vibes while coaching from the sideline.

I mean, think about it. He’s one of the youngest coaches in the NBA. He played basketball at a pretty high level himself, too. I guarantee you that Joe Mazzulla thinks he can get out there and contribute. He’s a rotation player in his mind.

That’s why I wasn’t shocked when he tried to block Royce O’Neale’s shot after a timeout. Charles Curtis spotted it for us here.

This man is a nut. Here he is attempting the block in real-time.

Man. Come on. I’d love to play for that guy.

READ MORE: Here’s more from Charles Curtis on this hilarious move from Mazzulla. 

The Curry Brand adds another star

(Photo by Aurelien Meunier/Getty Images)

Steph Curry’s namesake brand with Under Armour has been on a tear over the last few months.

De’Aaron Fox was the first athlete other than Curry himself to be added to the brand back in October. Now, the brand is extending into the college ranks with an NIL deal for South Carolina’s star freshman point guard Milaysia Fulwiley.

The deal was announced with this slick video here:

That’s a big move. Fulwiley is the second athlete to join the Curry Brand, which is a huge deal. The connection is there — South Carolina is an Under Armour school. She’ll be able to wear the best Curry and the brand have to offer on the court, unlike other athletes with NIL deals that conflict with their school’s sponsors.

I’m excited to see what the Curry Brand cooks up for Fulwiley over these next few years. She’s a special one. Good times are ahead.

Shootaround

— Bryan Kalbrosky put together a mist-read breakdown on why Bronny James declaring for the draft is so complicated

— This has got to be the funniest steal I’ve ever seen in my life. Has to be.

— Here’s Robert Zeglinski on Jamal Murray selflessly benching himself for Reggie Jackson in the 4th quarter.

— Chris Paul giving a ref a tech is every hooper’s dream. Here’s Bryan again with more.

That’s all, folks! Thanks so much for reading Layup Lines today. We’ll chat again next week! Until then! Peace. Be easy.

-Sykes

The Washington Wizards have hit rock bottom and somehow things are only getting worse

The Wizards have somehow become worse than the Pistons

Welcome to Layup Lines, For the Win’s basketball newsletter. Subscribe here to get it delivered to your inbox every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Have feedback for the Layup Lines Crew? Leave your questions, comments and concerns through this brief reader survey. Now, here’s Mike Sykes

Happy Friday, folks! Welcome back to Layup Lines. Thanks so much for joining me today. I hope you’ve had a great week and have a better weekend ahead of you.

Mine? Oh, it going great until Thursday night. I watched my Wizards fumble away a win against LeBron James and the Lakers.

This has got to be the most painful season I’ve ever endured as a fan of this team. And y’all know me, man — I’ve been through some stuff with this team. That Clippers comeback. The John Wall thing. Spencer Dinwiddie. Just…ugh.

Somehow, though, this season sits on a pedestal of suckitude alone. The Wizards are a laughingstock. Only having nine wins so far this season already felt like rock bottom. It certainly is. But, as it turns out, things are only getting worse.

Washington didn’t win a single game in February — the team went 0-12. You have to call the team the Ashington Izards now. The Ws are gone. I would say throw some Ls in front of that but I also feel like actual Lizards might be insulted.

I don’t know when the next Wizards win might come. There’s no “get right” game on the schedule. The Wizards are the “get right” team everyone looks forward to. The team can’t play itself. If it did, it’d obviously lose. Yes, it’s that bad.

We’re still quite a bit away from the Wizards potentially breaking the Piston’s streak, but I’ll tell you what: It does feel possible.

It’s hard to pinpoint where the team’s next win will come from.

Washington’s next five games are: @ L.A. Clippers, @ Utah Jazz, vs. Orlando Magic, vs. Charlotte Hornets @ Miami Heat.

Of those five, maybe the Hornets’ game can be a win? The Jazz also aren’t playing the greatest, though that’s a road matchup. The Wizards might be able to steal a game or two from one of these teams during this stretch.

But nothing here is clear. None of these games are guaranteed. And, if Washington doesn’t get one here, we could be looking at another all-time losing streak like the one we saw from Detroit earlier this year.

The basketball gods, man. They’re so cruel.

The 40-20 rule

Jan 19, 2024; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Denver Nuggets center Nikola Jokic (15) works the ball around Boston Celtics center Kristaps Porzingis (8) in the second quarter at TD Garden.
Mandatory Credit: David Butler II-USA TODAY Sports

Robert Zeglinski is using an old Phil Jackson rule to determine which team might win the championship this season.

The rule is this: Generally, the NBA champion is going to be a team that wins 40 games before it loses 20 games. He explains more here:

“The 11-time champion coach with the Chicago Bulls and Los Angeles Lakers once said that for a team to be a true “elite” championship contender, it must win 40 games before losing 20. Now, that might seem like a random barometer that Jackson thought up out of thin air. But when you look at NBA history, it’s actually a fantastic indicator of who has a realistic chance of winning the title.

That’s because 27 of the last 30 NBA champions won 40 games before losing 20. Dearest readers, that is 90 percent of all title winners in recent memory.”

If we’re going by 40-20 rule logic, we’ve got four legitimate contenders: The Celtics, the Timberwolves, the Nuggets and the Thunder.

We’ll revisit this once we get to the Finals.

Shootaround

— Here’s Bryan Kalbrosky with the latest mock draft. Of course, the Wizards are picking at No. 1.

— Shaq trying to bait Charles Barkley into giving an OnlyFans shoutout on the air is incredible content. Here’s Charles Curtis with more.

— Prince Grimes has the best bets for division winners in the NBA. That Southwest division is going crazy right now.

— Here’s the latest Morning Win on Caitlin Clark and the false idea of a pay cut waiting for her in the WNBA.

That’s a wrap, folks! We’ll be back on Monday. Until next time! Peace. We out.

-Sykes ✌️