Celtics reportedly offer Svi Mykhailiuk a deal with Boston for 2023-24

The Ukrainian forward is reportedly also considering a contract with Greek team Panathinaikos.

The Boston Celtics have reportedly extended a contract offer to free-agent forward Svi Mykhailiuk, according to Greek news outlet SDNA. Mykhailiuk, who has also reportedly been in discussions with the Greek club team Panathinaikos, is expected to make a decision soon about whether he will play for Boston or continue his career in Europe.

Over the past five seasons, the Ukrainian forward has played for six NBA teams, most recently splitting time between the New York Knicks and the Charlotte Hornets during the 2022-23 season. During his stint with Charlotte, the 6-foot-7 wing played significant minutes and averaged 10.6 points per game while shooting an impressive 40.4% from beyond the arc.

Throughout his career, Mykhailiuk has maintained a solid 36% shooting accuracy from 3-point range. If Mykhailiuk were to join the Celtics, he would likely be considered a deep reserve player.

Still, the 6-foot-7 forward can complement their core of Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown, and Kristaps Porzingis with his shooting, which is a good fit for the Celtics’ 3-point-heavy style of play

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Alperen Sengun grabs career-high 21 rebounds as Rockets edge Hornets

Led by a career-high 21 rebounds from Alperen Sengun, the #Rockets won their second straight game and third of four, overall, on Friday night in Charlotte. Their season finale is Sunday.

In their second-to-last game of the NBA’s 2022-23 season, the young and rebuilding Houston Rockets won their second straight and third of four overall, in Friday’s 112-109 win (box score) at Charlotte.

Relative to 2021-22, the biggest improvement for the Rockets (21-60) has come in rebounding, where they rank near the top of the league on a per-game basis after ranking dead last a season ago. That growth was visible at Charlotte (26-55), where second-year big man Alperen Sengun had 14 points and a career-high 21 rebounds. His streak of five straight double-doubles is the first of Sengun’s career.

Young Rockets guards Kevin Porter Jr. and Jalen Green matched each other with 26 points apiece, which were game highs. Porter made 7 of 13 shots (53.8%) and 2-of-5 from 3-point range, while Green hit 9-of-22 overall (40.9%) and 3-of-8 on 3-pointers (37.5%). Porter also connected on 10-of-12 free throws (83.3%).

Rookie forward Jabari Smith Jr. had 13 points and 3 blocks, making 6-of-11 shots (54.5%) and 1-of-2 from 3-point range (50%). KJ Martin added 14 points and 6 rebounds on 7-of-10 shooting (70%).

Svi Mykhailiuk led the Hornets, who were without marquee players LaMelo Ball, Terry Rozier and Gordon Hayward due to injury, with 25 points and 5 assists while making 5-of-14 from 3-point range (35.7%). As a team, Charlotte hit eight 3-pointers in the fourth quarter compared to just one for the Rockets, which nearly allowed them to send the game to overtime.

Scroll on for highlights, postgame interviews, and reaction by Houston fans and media members. Houston will end its season on Sunday at Washington, with the tip set for noon Central.

Report: Mykhailiuk had interest from ‘several contenders’ before signing with Toronto

Svi Mykhailiuk, who signed with the Toronto Raptors, reportedly had interest from “several contenders.”

Former Oklahoma City Thunder wing Svi Mykhailiuk has found a new team. The 24-year-old signed a two-year deal with the Toronto Raptors, The Athletic’s Shams Charania reported Saturday.

The second year of the deal is a player option, according to Charania.

That wasn’t the only Mykhiailuk-related news from the reporter. Charania also tweeted that “several contenders expressed interest” in Mykhailiuk before he signed with the Raptors.

Reports broke recently that the Lakers considered bringing him in on a minimum.

It was unclear which other contenders had real interest in bringing in the 6-foot-7 former Thunder wing.

Mykhailiuk played for Oklahoma City for the latter half of last season. Acquired along with a second-round draft pick in exchange for Hamidou Diallo, the Thunder wanted to see whether Mykhailiuk could get be a 3-and-D type player and potentially more.

The former Detroit Piston was inconsistent at best. Tabbed as a sharpshooter after hitting 40% of his 3s in 2019-20, Mykhailiuk shot 33.6% from beyond the arc for the Thunder on 4.8 attempts per game. He averaged 1.8 assists in 23 minutes and was not a particular positive on defense.

He did not do enough for the Thunder to want to bring him back. After initially extending a qualifying offer, Oklahoma City rescinded it, according to HoopsHype’s Michael Scotto.

Whether or not there were offers from contenders, Mykhailiuk joined the Raptors with a player option for the second season, per Charania. He will try to work his way into a rotation role and prove he belongs on an NBA roster.

Lakers’ target Svi Mykhailiuk signs with Raptors in free agency

Svi Mykhailiuk, who was reportedly a target for the Los Angeles Lakers, is instead signing with the Toronto Raptors.

The Los Angeles Lakers were involved in two pieces of free agency news Saturday, despite one player not joining the team.

The first involved Rajon Rondo, who had his contract bought out by the Memphis Grizzlies after arriving via trade earlier in the month.

Shortly after that news dropped, it was reported the Lakers were the front-runner to pick up Rondo for the minimum, fulfilling the third point guard signing the franchise had been seeking.

The other included Svi Mykhailiuk, the third-year player who entered free agency as an unrestricted free agent after being traded by the Detroit Pistons to the Oklahoma City Thunder.

Los Angeles was reportedly in the mix for Mykhailiuk for the minimum, but that will not be the case anymore.

The Toronto Raptors signed Mykhailiuk to a two-year deal, according to Shams Charania of The Athletic:

The Lakers drafted the 24-year-old wing with the 47th pick in the 2018 NBA draft but dealt him to the Pistons during his first season.

A reunion will not happen right now, but the Raptors landed a 36.2% career 3-point shooter in Mykhailiuk, which is a nice add alongside Pascal Siakam, Fred VanVleet, OG Anunoby and the rest of Toronto’s new core following the departure of Kyle Lowry.

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3 takeaways: Gabriel Deck outscores most OKC starters in 4th quarter alone

Gabriel Deck had 12 points in the fourth quarter and Al Horford returned to the bench but the OKC Thunder lost to the Utah Jazz.

The Oklahoma City Thunder trailed by as many as 29 points to the Utah Jazz before losing 109-93 on Friday.

The Thunder, Orlando Magic and Detroit Pistons all lost, making this a night with no change on the Tankathon leaderboard. Oklahoma City and the Magic are tied for the third-best odds in the NBA draft lottery, while the Pistons are one game ahead of them for the second-best odds.

Though it was a defeat, OKC head coach Mark Daigneault spoke about how it was good for the Thunder to go up against Jazz center Rudy Gobert, the likely Defensive Player of the Year.

Wing Svi Mykhailiuk, who led the Thunder with 19 points, talked about how he used a Steve Nash method to create some space and open looks against Gobert and the drop defense that the Jazz play.

Mykhailiuk, guard Theo Maleddon and forward Gabriel Deck all played well, but the Thunder didn’t have enough juice to truly get going against the intense Utah defense.

They shot 42.9% from the field, 31.6% from 3 and, entering the fourth quarter, had only attempted six free throws in the entire contest.

Here are three takeaways from the game, including the return of center Al Horford to the Thunder bench.

Thunder ball handlers try a Steve Nash method against Rudy Gobert

To attack Rudy Gobert and the Jazz defense, Thunder players like Theo Maledon and Svi Mykhailiuk tried a Steve Nash under-the-rim method.

Even while the Thunder continue to rest players and lose games, head coach Mark Daigneault has found different areas of evaluation and training for the young Oklahoma City team.

In the 109-93 loss to the Jazz on Friday, it was all about how they played against star Utah center Rudy Gobert.

Gobert is likely to win the Defensive Player of the Year award for the third time in his career. The presence of the 7-foot-1 French athlete forces the ball handlers to adjust their way of play and find new ways to attack.

“It’s good experience for all of our players to go against Gobert,” Daigneault said. “I thought there were some good plays there and I thought there were some not-so-good plays that we can learn from.”

On Friday, they tried out a page from the playbook of Hall of Fame point guard Steve Nash.

One of the ways the two-time MVP broke down defenses was keeping the dribble alive after penetrating the rim. He would drive and circle under the hoop, dribble out, and then go right back down low in a circle. He would eventually find room for either a pass, layup or a patented short-range fadeaway.

There was a little of this from Thunder players including Theo Maledon and Svi Mykhailiuk on Friday.

“We were supposed to use a lot of ‘Nashes,'” Maledon said. “… Against a great defender like Gobert that sits in the paint a lot, I think trying to get him on the perimeter more and spacing out was something that was beneficial for us and something that we have in the game plan.”

Driving and keeping the dribble alive under the hoop allows the ball handler to do a couple things.

One, as Maledon said, if the big switches on to him, the ball handler can pull him out of the paint and create room for a big man. It confuses the defense. It also helps the ball handler read the court around him. Nash was a master at pulling out from under the rim and passing to open shooters whose defenders had been watching Nash take the ball to the hoop.

Here are two examples from Mykhailuk:

“I dealt with teams like that who play deep drop, kind of like Gobert, who blocks a lot of shots, it’s very useful,” Mykhailiuk said. “You try to get a defense confused, and when you do that and the guys cut, it’s easier to pass and find the right play.”

The wing scored 17 points in the first half alone and finished with a team-high 19. He went 3-for-4 from 3.

Maledon had 18 points on 7-for-16 shooting and was the only starter in the Thunder lineup to reach double-digit points.

The final score, a 16-point Thunder loss, showed a little bit closer of a game than it really was. Oklahoma City again allowed 30 or more points in each of the first three quarters and trailed 92-66 at the beginning of the fourth.

The bench unit at the end, led by Gabriel Deck’s 12 points in the fourth quarter alone and 18 total, helped the Thunder cut the loss to a respectable number.

The Orlando Magic and Detroit Pistons also lost on Friday night, leaving the Thunder tied with the Magic for the third-best odds in the NBA draft and one game back of the Pistons for the second-best.

All three teams have one more game this season.

Thunder suffer another big loss in Mykhailiuk’s return to Detroit

Svi Mykhailiuk faced his former team, while Jaylen Hoard and Justin Robinson debuted for the OKC Thunder against the Detroit Pistons.

If one time is chance, two times is coincidence and three times is a pattern, the Oklahoma City Thunder have reached that final phase: With a 132-108 loss to the Detroit Pistons, they have suffered three bad losses in a row.

Without any active players from the preferred starting lineup, this is starting to become a trend.

The Thunder lost to the Phoenix Suns by 37 points on Friday. The next night, they fell by 48 to the Portland Trail Blazers, two shy of the organization’s worst deficit in team history. They couldn’t recover Monday despite playing against one of the worst teams in the league.

Svi Mykhailiuk faced the Pistons for the first time since they traded him to the Thunder. He had 17 points and a career-best four steals, showcasing some of the skill that Detroit had wanted to see more of from him before trading him, but he couldn’t get revenge.

The Thunder are now 10 games below .500 for the first time this season.

Oklahoma City cut it close in the middle two quarters, but they couldn’t sustain any runs. After falling behind by 24 in the second quarter, they cut the deficit to seven before slipping just prior to halftime. Detroit extended its lead back up to 15 early in the third, but OKC cut it down to nine.

None of it was sustainable. The Pistons shot 52.1% from the field and 46.4% from 3 while Oklahoma City made only 41.2% of its looks and shot a mere 18.5% from behind the arc.

“We didn’t play really good defense,” Mykhailiuk said. “We scored enough, we scored 100 points, I feel like that’s enough to win a game, but on defense we let them score 130.”

That’s the third game in a row the Thunder have given up more than 130 points, and the third game in a row they lost by a huge margin.

Thunder vs. Pistons halftime: Mykhailiuk has 11 points vs. former team

Svi Mykhailiuk led the OKC Thunder with 11 points in the first half in his first game vs. the Pistons since Detroit traded him.

The Oklahoma City Thunder only scored 19 points in the first quarter against the Detroit Pistons and trailed by as many as 23 in the second, but a run by the OKC bench unit helped the team get back in the game. At halftime, the Thunder trailed 58-47.

The Thunder bench scored 12 straight points in the second quarter, all from players new to the team. Six were from Justin Robinson and two were from Jaylen Hoard, and the other four came via Tony Bradley.

Those three players each had six points in the first half.

Svi Mykhailiuk helped the Thunder cut the deficit to single digits before the Pistons found their footing. Mykhailiuk, who was traded from Detroit to Thunder last month, led OKC with 11 points.

Hamidou Diallo, who the Pistons got in return, posted four points in the half.

Ty Jerome had some very nice passes to help the Thunder cut back into the deficit, and Darius Miller had three steals.

To get back into the game, the Thunder will have to improve their shooting — the team is shooting 37.5% from the field and 26.7% from deep — and get more transition chances on offense. The team only had six fast break points.

Tune in to Bally Sports Oklahoma to see the remainder of the game.

After recent late letdowns, Thunder dominate 4th quarter in win over Raptors

The OKC Thunder beat the Toronto Raptors behind a dominant fourth quarter led by Svi Mykhailiuk’s scoring outburst.

In the loss to the Memphis Grizzlies a week ago, the Oklahoma City Thunder led midway through the third quarter before falling apart and losing. Against the Boston Celtics on Saturday, the OKC went into the fourth with a lead but only managed 14 points in the final frame.

Against the Toronto Raptors on Wednesday, the Thunder flipped the script, holding the Raptors to just 14 fourth-quarter points to get a comeback 113-103 victory.

“Tonight I thought we did it with stops,” Daigneault said. “We kept them off the scoreboard and held them to one shot per possession down the stretch.”

Oklahoma City was able to do this short-handed. In addition to the absences of usual starters Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Lu Dort, Darius Bazley and Al Horford, rookie Aleksej Pokusevski, backup guard Ty Jerome and big Mike Muscala were also injured.

This left nine active players, none of whom has a full season of starts under his belt, and only one of whom has even reached 60 total starts in his career.

But the Thunder absolutely dominated the glass, out-rebounding Toronto 64 to 35, and grabbed 19 offensive rebounds, including seven from Moses Brown and four from Isaiah Roby.

“On the offensive [rebounding] end, I just thought it’s a good barometer of our competitiveness. I thought we made great extra efforts and kept balls alive,” Daigneault said. “I just thought we went after it. The competitive level was really, really good for 48 minutes.”

The rebounding, the tough second-half defense that prevented Pascal Siakam from getting back to the free throw line after he had 10 attempts in the first half, and a scoring outburst from Svi Mykhailiuk helped the Thunder put it away.

Here’s the fourth quarter, based on quotes from the team:

The evaluation of Bradley, Hall, Mykhailiuk was important part of OKC-Mavs game

As important as the score of the OKC Thunder and Dallas Mavericks game were the performances of Tony Bradley, Josh Hall and Svi Mykhailiuk.

Thunder lose to Mavericks, Luka Doncic

It’s worth wondering if Oklahoma City Thunder fans are going to start seeing more of this.

The Thunder have remained competitive even with lack of on-paper talent and injuries to starters for a few reasons. They hustle more and play harder than you. Every rotation player has at least one NBA-level skill, which is different than many rebuilding rosters. They are versatile enough that even without their main players, they typically can find enough creation on offense and smart rotation on defense.

But finally, in the 127-106 loss to the Dallas Mavericks on Monday, it looked different. The lineups didn’t have the same complexity and skill sets. The roster as a whole doesn’t have much acquaintance with the NBA, but even so, this group was less experienced.

“We’re learning those things, and we have really, really good moments where it’s really, really tight and then we have moments where we slip, and that’s where we’re most vulnerable,” head coach Mark Daigneault said.

“We’re not vulnerable with energy, we’re not vulnerable with competitiveness, we’re not vulnerable with team-orientation. All those things are tight with this group, that’s why it’s so enjoyable to coach this team. But where we are vulnerable is just in those details, and it shows up on both ends of the floor.

The Mavericks went on a run to pull ahead midway through the second quarter when the Thunder had Theo Maledon, Ty Jerome, Josh Hall, Kenrich Williams and Moses Brown on the court. It’s not hard to see why this group would struggle together, especially against an offense like Dallas’.

Jerome is a point guard, but he’s had more success this year than as a rookie because he hasn’t had to play much of a creator role. Hall entered the night with a grand total of 72 NBA minutes played. He and Brown have still not had time to learn NBA defense and rotations, meaning Williams was the only markedly good defender on the court.  They were picked apart by the Mavericks and, during this stretch in particular, Tim Hardaway Jr.

We’ll see more of these types of rotations as the Thunder explore the roster.

Oklahoma City doesn’t need to evaluate Brown anymore the way it does players like Hall, Svi Mykhailiuk and Tony Bradley. They’ve seen enough, and signed the center to a contract for up to four years. But they’ll still get him as much court time as possible to improve, particularly on the defensive end, where his ability to read and react to the opposing big is still developing.

Brown, Hall and Aleksej Pokusevski, all of whom were on the OKC Blue G League roster a month ago, will likely see time on the Thunder court together. That is not a design that should win often. That’s written with hesitation, because the Thunder have proved that mindset wrong time and time again this season — what should be competitive vs. what is competitive — but with Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Lu Dort, Darius Bazley and Al Horford all out for the foreseeable future, the circumstances have changed.

After trailing by nine points at the end of the first quarter, the Thunder cut the deficit to a 47-46 Dallas lead with 5:51 to play in the half. Over the next 18 minutes, the Mavericks outscored Oklahoma City 53-37 to take a lead that stood.

To be frank, at this point in the season, more important than the score will be how the individual players performed. In this game, the focus was on Hall, Mykhailiuk and Bradley.

Bradley appeared in a Thunder jersey for the first time since the George Hill trade with the Philadelphia 76ers and New York Knicks. His first basket was early in the second quarter, and then he scored four more points before anyone else on the floor could get a bucket as he launched a solo 6-0 run with one of the baskets coming off an offense rebound.

Beyond that stretch he struggled to score, though, finishing with eight points and five rebounds in 14 minutes.

The newest Thunder member finished the game with eight points and five rebounds in 14 minutes.

After the game, Daigneault mentioned that Bradley hasn’t yet had time to learn the playbook or team terminology.

“Everything he does well, he deserves credit for. And everything he’s done poorly is a position we’ve put him in,” Daigneault said. “This is his starting point, he’ll just continue to learn … He’s a good player and will hit his stride.”

From Bradley: “Different things I’m still trying to learn and pick up, kind of on the fly. As I continue to play more, it’ll get more comfortable.”

Hall returned from a left knee injury on Saturday and scored four points over 20 minutes in his first game in almost two months. On Monday, he reached double-digits for the first time in his career, finishing with 10 on 3-for-6 shooting in 22 minutes.

He wasn’t great, but it was a step forward for the 20-year-old undrafted rookie who didn’t get a traditional NBA summer with Summer League or fall build-up with the Thunder.

“With the lack of those touchpoints, you have to understand how early this is in his trajectory,” Daigneault said. “This is like square zero for him, and he’ll gain the experiences. We’ll keep working with him. We have a lot of confidence in him as a person and in his game, but it’s gonna take time.”

Mykhailiuk started in place of Dort, his first start as a member of the Thunder.

It came on a night in which he would be the primary defender of one of the best offensive threats in the league, Luka Doncic.

The third-year Mavericks star finished with 25 points on 9-for-17 shooting in 28 minutes. When Mykhailiuk was asked about his defensive performance, he sounded very unsatisfied, pausing for several seconds before answering.

“For us, I feel like it was not to let him get comfortable on the court and just trying to get the ball out of his hands,” Mykhailiuk said. “He’s a great players, so it’s tough to do, especially in this situation. It is what it is.

Even while defending Doncic, Mykhailiuk was one of the better Thunder players on Monday. He shot 7-for-10 from the field, a line that included a couple nice step-back looks, and he impressed Daigneault beyond his shooting ability.

“With a guy that shoots it as well as he does, the tendency is to sometimes slip into a belief that you have a shooter on your hands, but when you unpack his game, he’s a way more complete player than that,” Daigneault said.

His 16 points were second on the Thunder to only Pokusevski, who finished with 21.

The rookie had a good night offensively, scoring from a variety of spots around the court. He made five of his seven attempts from inside the arc, though only three of his 10 from 3.

He is now averaging 11.3 points, 6.8 rebounds and 2.8 assists per game since coming back from the G League.

“With his size and his abilities, with his skills, it’s going to be tough to not play him and he’ll be tough to guard,” Mykhailiuk said.

Without Gilgeous-Alexander or Dort on the floor, OKC will be starved for playmaking. Expect Pokusevski’s role to continue to increase.

The Thunder will get a day off before their next game. Daigneault emphasized that losses like 21-point defeat to the Mavericks cannot affect the team’s mindset.

“We can’t allow this outcome to impact our process tomorrow, because otherwise you stagnate, and that’s the last thing we want to do,” he said.

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