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Insider names 3 teams most likely to trade up in 2025 NBA Draft, including Oklahoma City Thunder

Insider names 3 teams most likely to trade up in 2025 NBA Draft, including Oklahoma City Thunder

Yahoo10 hours ago

While the national focus right now is on the NBA Finals, a majority of teams around the league are making their final preparations for the 2025 NBA Draft. In what could be the busiest night in basketball this offseason, several marquee teams could be eyeing big moves.
Insider Jake Fischer reports that the Oklahoma City Thunder, Orlando Magic and Brooklyn Nets are viewed around the league as the three likeliest teams to trade up in the first round of the 2025 NBA Draft.
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Related: Teams 'preparing for' Oklahoma Cty Thunder to make big move in 2025 NBA Draft
Oklahoma City has two first-round picks this year, holding the 15th and 24th overall picks. Paired with its future first-round picks, Thunder general manager Sam Presti has more than enough assets to move up high in the lottery. Oklahoma City's incentive would be to consolidate some of its draft capital to potentially bring in a higher-end prospect on a rookie contract.
Orlando is expected to be one of the more active teams this offseason. It's already been linked to several role players who can provide three-point shooting in both NBA free agency and the trade market. In the 2025 NBA Draft, the Magic have two first-round picks (16th and 25th overall) and two second-round picks (46th and 57th overall) to work with.
Read More: 2025 NBA Draft order, picks by team
Brooklyn is an obvious trade candidate to watch in Round 1. The Nets have four first-round picks – 9th, 19th, 26th and 27th overall – and it's highly unlikely they bring in that many rookies next season. The Nets are also calling around the league, offering to package draft picks with Cam Johnson to move up.
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There's been less buzz about which teams are willing to trade down, though the Philadelphia 76ers (3rd overall pick) and Houston Rockets are known to be receptive to trading their first-round picks.
Related: Orlando Magic named 'team to watch' for top role player in NBA free agency
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Jespersen: Grief, grace and goodbye
Jespersen: Grief, grace and goodbye

Yahoo

time34 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Jespersen: Grief, grace and goodbye

I had other plans for this column. Around this time each year, I usually write something to commemorate the end of another school year; a reflection of what teams around Gaylord have accomplished and a thank you to all that have made another year special (a 'thank you' you all still deserve). This one was going to be a little different, looking back on the first graduating class I had seen go from freshman when I first arrived in 2022 to high school graduates in 2025. This isn't that column. On Saturday, June 7, in-between the Gaylord softball regional games, I received a text that one of my best friend's younger brother, Patrick McElroy Govan, had tragically passed away at just 27-years-old. Through his older brother Bradley, I had my own relationship with Patrick, as throughout my trips to the Govan household, Pat had become almost like an adopted little brother to our high school friend group. This week, I watched his family have to say goodbye to him, a truly good man gone way too soon. Outside of dredging up dormant memories, reuniting with friends I haven't seen in years and the many, many tears shed for one of my best friends, this past week has put so much of life into perspective. Now, I need to say my goodbyes to the Class of 2025. Right now? Yeah, right now. Like I mentioned, I had other plans for this column; however, if I have to say goodbye right now, I think I need to add a little bit more. So, in lieu of my traditional 'goodbye', I'd like to leave my first freshman class with a bit of wisdom that, at least I think, Patrick would approve. When I first went to the Govan's household and met Patrick, the first thing I learned about him was this quirk that Bradley could not understand. "His favorite college? Michigan," said a young Brad Govan. "His second? Ohio State." Being the college sports fanatic I was, I spent much of our first meeting trying to explain why those are conflicting interests. Patrick didn't care. Patrick liked what Patrick liked. Years went by and we never changed his mind. What did change his mind? Eventually becoming a student at Michigan State, leaving both Michigan and Ohio State in the dust. It was quirks like that; his passion for Legos and K'nex, his love for EDM music and everything in between that made Patrick such a unique character. Those quirks that have filled the stories of Patrick's life this week, something small in each anecdote that makes you say 'yep, that's Patrick.' It's so easy to do the opposite; to hide those things that make you different, to become someone you're not in hopes of finding acceptance somewhere else. I implore you, and I think Patrick would as well, to leave that mindset in high school. Be yourself, and be proud of it. The memories you make and the people you attract will be that much better, more meaningful and more memorable. One of the things that has become very clear in the past few days is how easy it is to lose touch with people you truly care about. Unfortunately for many of my high school friends and I, we have been treated to the worst kind of high school reunion, having to catch up with so many people while dealing with the worst of circumstances. Many of you in the Class of 2025 are going your separate ways in less than two months. While social media allows us all to stay somewhat plugged in to each others lives, its no where near a substitute for real, face-to-face conversations, something that will become very difficult to have with even your closest friends soon enough, at least on a regular basis. So, as you feel it becoming easier and easier to skip a phone call, not text back and slip out of touch, don't; fight that urge to let things slip, even when it's inconvenient. Losing your little brother at 27 is something no older sibling deserves. While I watched my good friend deal with an unimaginable trauma, I've been truly impressed with how well he and his family seem to be holding up. And, while I know everyone handles grief differently, I can't help but think that the memories Patrick left with them have been helping to keep their emotions from overwhelming them. And man, its hard to fathom a 27-year-old making as many memories as I've heard shared over the past few days. And not just the mental memories; photos, videos, audio recordings, anything that the Govans have been able to share have been either laugh creating or tear jerking, all cherished and none lost. As the Class of 2025 goes out and joins the world, I want you all to remember that; take those pictures, those videos, keep them and keep them close. You never know when a random 15 minute clip is the last you'll ever have. Goodbyes are never easy. I think now, for the time being, I've said enough goodbyes. Contact GHT Sports Editor Dylan Jespersen at Djespersen@ Follow him on X, formerly known as Twitter, @dylanjespersen, and Instagram, @dylanjespersen This article originally appeared on The Petoskey News-Review: Jespersen: Grief, grace and goodbye

Chasing the checkered flag: The allure of Indy Car racing
Chasing the checkered flag: The allure of Indy Car racing

CBS News

time34 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Chasing the checkered flag: The allure of Indy Car racing

It's billed as the fastest racing on earth. Indy Cars, as they're called, can hit 240 miles an hour on an oval track – that's more than a football field every second. And a second is about all it takes to end someone's day. In this sport, not all the big names are drivers. David Letterman has co-owned an Indy Car team since 1996, and in that time, Rahal-Letterman-Lanigan Racing has won the Indy 500 twice. David Letterman prior to the 106th Indianapolis 500 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on May 29, asked Letterman himself what made Indy Car racing so appealing. "When I was a kid, my family (and every family on our block) would have it on the radio. And it would be Memorial Day, and Dad would be home from work, and we'd be having a cookout. And I can remember listening to the broadcast sitting in a tree. So, that was my first memory of it. It wasn't an option; it was mandatory. It was part of the culture of living in Indianapolis." I asked, "And now that you're a co-owner, which you've been for almost three decades now –" "Isn't that crazy?" he laughed. "What's your role on race day?" "On race day? Listen to the race, sitting in a tree," Letterman replied. "That's what they want me to do." Josef Newgarden (2) driving for Team Penske during the 108th Indianapolis 500, May 26, 2024, at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis, Indiana. Michael Allio/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images There are now 17 race days every year, at tracks from coast to coast, and the sport is promoting a new crop of heroes, like Team Penske driver Josef Newgarden. He's won the Indy 500 (still considered the granddaddy of the Indy series) back-to-back, in 2023 and 2024. By tradition, the winning driver celebrates with a big swig of milk, and in 2024, Newgarden's wife and son joined him in another Indy tradition: kissing the speedway track. We caught up with Newgarden a few weeks ago before the Long Beach Grand Prix. I asked him, "Do you have a mantra that you say? Anything you tell yourself?" "I don't know that I have a specific mantra, but I try not to be superstitious," he replied. "I just try to be positive more than anything. If that's my mantra, it's positivity." Team McLaren driver Pato O'Ward has just about everything a race car driver needs; the only thing he's missing is an Indy 500 win. He's come agonizingly close, and in 2024 O'Ward just about had it won, but Newgarden passed him in the final lap. "I know I'm going to get my Indy 500 win, because I've been damn good there every single year," O'Ward said. "So, I know the more I put myself in that position, I'm going to get at least one." What is it like to win one of these races? According to Letterman, "It's a jolt of adrenaline I have never experienced in my life. There was a crush of people around me. And suddenly I'm not just Dumbbell Dave, the talk show host. I'm the owner of the Indianapolis 500 winner. And that euphoria stays with you, well, you may be able to tell, I still have a touch of that in me." For more than a century, speed demons have been chasing Indy Car trophies. The first Indianapolis 500 dates back to 1911, and it quickly became one of the premier sporting spectacles of the year, drawing huge crowds attracted by the sound and the speed. In 1926, racers sped better than 90 miles an hour! In the last century, Indy Car racing has changed: it's much faster, and recently more popular. The Indy Car brand withered for a few years under an internal re-organization, but now the crowds are coming back. This year's Indy 500 grandstand was sold out for the first time in nearly a decade, and the place is starting to look like it did back in 1969, when Mario Andretti took the checkered flag. Asked how sweet that milk tastes, Andretti said, "Honey cannot compare!" At 85, Andretti's still in the game as a team owner. "I think the ability of the drivers that you have in place [today], the talent is unprecedented," he said. "It's unbelievable, yeah." I asked, "Are you saying those guys are more talented than you were?" Well, he didn't go that far. Race car safety has come a long way since Andretti's day; the track walls are now padded, the drivers are more protected. But while it's safer, it not safe, and the worst can still happen, says AP motorsports reporter Jenna Fryer. "It'll never be safe; you can never call racing safe," she said. "They can be idiots. And if they get upset with each other and one wants to retaliate against the other, you know, people do stupid stuff. They see red, they kind of forget what they're doing for a second. There's no way to ever say, 'Racing is safe.'" But for drivers, it really is just part of the game. Asked if he ever thinks of the danger while driving, O'Ward replied, "No. You think of winning. You think of winning when you're in that car. At least I do. That's all I think of." This year's Indy 500 winner wasn't O'Ward or Newgarden, or anyone from Letterman's team. It was Spanish driver Alex Palou. But there are nine more races this season, and on an oval track, you never know what's around the bend. Letterman said, "What I love about it is the romance of it. And the sound is unlike anything you've ever heard. The sound is something humans were not meant to hear." I asked, "What does that sound do to you?" "This is a good measure for my heart; if it doesn't accelerate my heart beyond what human's hearts should be accelerated, then there's something wrong," he said. When asked what he would say to someone who has never seen an Indy Car race, Letterman said, "Oh, for God sakes, it doesn't even pertain to motor sports fans, just go. I mean, one day. It's unimaginable. And you may not go back, but you'll talk about it the rest of your life." WEB EXCLUSIVE: Extended interview with David Letterman For more info: Story produced by John D'Amelio. Editor: Steven Tyler.

NBA Finals TV ratings don't reflect complete picture of fan reach
NBA Finals TV ratings don't reflect complete picture of fan reach

USA Today

time37 minutes ago

  • USA Today

NBA Finals TV ratings don't reflect complete picture of fan reach

INDIANAPOLIS — The NBA Finals TV ratings discussion is a classic struggle between the optimist and the pessimist. One headline: "NBA Finals have been most-watched programs since first week of May.' Another headline: 'NBA Finals ratings down 24%.' Two things can be true in this season's Finals between 'small-market' Indiana and Oklahoma City. Yes, ratings are down from last season's Finals between Boston and Dallas, and yes, the Thunder-Pacers Finals have brought in millions of viewers, including a peak of 11.54 million at 11 p.m. ET of Game 3 on Wednesday, June 11. Of the top 10 TV shows June 2-8, four were NBA-related for ABC: Games 1 and 2 of the Finals, postgame coverage of Game 2, and the Game 1 pregame show. Those four totaled 25.6 million viewers, including 8.9 million for Game 1 and 8.7 million for Game 2, according to Nielsen. The topic of NBA TV ratings is shaped by the teams playing; the lack of household names driving the competition even though OKC's Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is this season's MVP and Tyrese Haliburton is a two-time All-Star, 2024 Paris Olympics gold medalist and cold-blooded, game-winning shooter; a new era in which different teams are playing the Finals each season; and stars not named LeBron James, Steph Curry and Kevin Durant getting to the Finals. The league and its TV partners need to navigate those issues, and they are focused on attracting more viewers, especially casual sports fans. But, if you were to ask the league and Disney/ABC/ESPN if they are unhappy with the numbers, their answer is no. Would they like more viewers? Of course. However, winning the night and winning with key demographics is exactly what they and corporate/partners advertisers want. In today's world of viewing consumption – streaming, multiple devices, YouTube highlights – nuance is required. Nielsen numbers are important but no longer the only factor. 'Ratings have changed from what they used to be,' NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said before Game 1 of the Finals. 'Netflix is the most valuable pure play media company out there. Nobody in this room knows what their ratings are. We don't even think in terms of ratings. We think maybe in terms of popularity, buzz around a program. We're going through a transition, and we're going to work through that.' Silver and his business operations staff have given considerable thought to the topic. Don't fret too much for the league. The NBA's nine-year, $24 billion TV deal expires after the Finals, and the new 11-year, $76 billion pact with ESPN/ABC, NBC and Amazon starts next season. That's almost triple the previous deal. Before that deal was secured, there was skepticism that the NBA could net a deal that averaged $7 billion annually. But Silver got it done. That amount does not include the league's media deals with international broadcast partners. For the TV partners, the amount they agreed to pay the NBA was not arbitrarily snagged from the ether. High-paid executives analyzed the data and the financials and settled on a figure that allows their network to make money. There is extreme value in the NBA, and that's also reflected in the value of franchises. The Boston Celtics are expected to sell for at least a valuation of $6.1 billion, and if the NBA decides to expand, those expansion teams will go for at least $6 billion. Live sports on TV remain desirable to traditional and modern means of consumption. The NBA's YouTube channel has more than 20 million followers, its X account has 48 million followers, its Instagram account has 90.8 million followers and its Facebook account has 50 million followers. In February, Disney CEO and chairman Bob Iger said, 'We obviously believe in the NBA long term. We think it's a growth sport. We don't really look at ratings year-to-year that carefully. … We're not distracted in any sense by what's happening ratings-wise this season. We're happy to have this now for 11 more years, including the Finals in 10 of those years. It is and will continue to be a marquee part of ESPN's offering.' Also in February, this time at All-Star Weekend in San Francisco, Silver addressed the topic with a five-minute answer when asked by USA TODAY Sports how the NBA views TV ratings and what is considered success. It's clearly a topic that is front of mind for Silver. 'I like the challenge, frankly, because I think for the league, and together with our partners, we have to up our game at the same time,' Silver said. 'There's a lot more competition for attention than there used to be. Just think of all of your habits in the room for people who grew up watching more traditional television. … 'I don't think that kind of engagement through social media is necessarily a substitute for watching live games because that comes up all the time. Some suggesting, 'Well, isn't that bad you're training the next generation of fans who might never watch live games but only watching highlights?' I actually think it's additive. We have a much better chance of moving young fans, in particular, to live games if they become engaged with various forms of our content, whether it's things that our players are doing off the floor, music they love, fashion or highlights.' TV ratings for the NBA's 2024-25 season were down 2% which mirrors the NFL's 2.2% decline for its 2024 season. Through the NBA's conference finals, playoff ratings were up 3%, and viewership for Games 1 and 2 was 50% higher than the next three highest-rated shows ('The Tony Awards,' '60 Minutes,' 'America's Got Talent') for the week of June 2-8. Thunder-Pacers has turned into a compelling series of talented, well-coached teams whose offensive and defensive efforts make every possession matter. This Finals is going at least six games, and any Finals series that goes more than five games is a financial success for the league's TV partners. Follow NBA reporter Jeff Zillgitt on social media@JeffZillgitt

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