logo
NBA trade rumors: The latest on Giannis Antetokounmpo, Kevin Durant, Cooper Flagg pick

NBA trade rumors: The latest on Giannis Antetokounmpo, Kevin Durant, Cooper Flagg pick

Yahoo2 days ago

The NBA Finals aren't even here yet, but that hasn't stopped the trade rumor mill from reaching a higher gear. Judging from what is being said around the league, multiple All-Stars could find themselves joining new teams this offseason.
Here are all the latest rumors, whispers and inklings going around the NBA right now, starting with the former MVP and his several suitors.
Who's going after Giannis Antetokounmpo?
It's no secret the Milwaukee Bucks have good reason to trade Giannis Antetokounmpo this offseason. After years of contending and the first championship in 50 years, the team's supporting cast behind Antetokounmpo has become a significant concern, from Damian Lillard's torn Achilles to Kyle Kuzma's existence.
Advertisement
So any team in need of an MVP-level, defensively dominant power forward is going to be on the phone, even if the price is likely to start with a young player or two and end with every first-round pick that isn't nailed down. Antetokounmpo himself is going into the offseason "open-minded" about a possible new home, per ESPN's Shams Charania.
One of those teams is the Toronto Raptors, as the Toronto Star's Doug Smith reports there is mutual interest in a deal there. That's couched with the odds of a deal being "long," but Toronto is looking for a new way forward after the slow break-up of their 2019 championship team, which beat Antetokounmpo and the Bucks in the Eastern Conference finals.
Giannis Antetkounmpo could be a popular man on the NBA trade market. (Photo by)
(John Fisher via Getty Images)
Another possibility is the Houston Rockets, whom The Athletic's Kelly Iko reports are targeting Antetokounmpo. However, the team has reportedly experienced recent uncertainty over whether the Bucks will actually part with their star, to say nothing of the price he is likely to command.
Advertisement
The Brooklyn Nets could also get involved, per the New York Post, and then there's the haunting idea of an Antetokounmpo-Stephen Curry team-up. We don't know how seriously the Golden State Warriors are there, but you can't ignore one of their players talking about the possibility on television.
Suns reportedly lowering asking price for Kevin Durant
Kevin Durant's Phoenix Suns were an expensive disaster this season, and all parties are reportedly ready to call it a day. We've known this for months.
Iko also reported the Suns have been "aggressive" in moving the 36-year-old, with the Rockets in communication there and Phoenix gradually lowering its asking price. Few teams would be a better fit for Durant than Houston, which features a core of young players, a proven coach in Ime Udoka and one of the best defenses in basketball last season.
Advertisement
In addition to the Rockets, Charania recently reported the New York Knicks, Minnesota Timberwolves, Miami Heat and San Antonio Spurs were all interested in Durant when he was being dangled at the trade deadline, and he expects them to be similarly interested this offseason. Stein also mentioned Minnesota to have "significant interest" in teaming Durant up with Anthony Edwards.
Nothing on the Mavericks moving the Cooper Flagg pick yet
The Dallas Mavericks got the most unearned fortune of the offseason by winning the NBA Draft Lottery, but the question remains if they will A) stick with the pick and draft generational prospect Cooper Flagg or B) trade the pick for what would be one of the biggest hauls in the offseason.
Advertisement
Right now, there has been very little indication the team is considering Option B. Veteran reporter Marc Stein reported weeks ago there's "no chance" Dallas moves off the Flagg pick and head coach Jason Kidd was talking Tuesday about focusing on Flagg, though with the caveat "we all understand that things change."
Flagg represents a significant fork in the road, as the Mavericks quite loudly committed to an older core of Anthony Davis and Kyrie Irving when they traded away Luka Dončić at only 25 years old. Expecting Flagg to be instantly ready as a member of a championship Big 3 would be a heck of a bet, but this front office has shown itself to be nothing if not bold.
Is the Cavaliers' Core 4 really a Core 2?
The Cleveland Cavaliers won 64 games this season and looked like an emerging power in the East, right up until the Indiana Pacers ripped their hearts out. That begs the question: is this a team that should be just running it back?
Advertisement
The answer appears to be "Yes, unless they get a particularly good offer on a couple guys." Cleveland.com's Chris Fedor said on the "Wine and Gold Talk" podcast that while the Cavaliers consider stars Donovan Mitchell and Evan Mobley to be "untouchables," he has gotten the sense that the team could consider deals for Jarrett Allen and Darius Garland.
Detroit Pistons looking into Naz Reid, Myles Turner
The Detroit Pistons took a nice leap this season and want to take the next step with a big man who can help space the floor. Per Stein, they have an eye on both the Timberwolves' Naz Reid and the Pacers' Myles Turner.
Advertisement
Turner is a pending free agent and could be available, but he looked pretty happy after the Pacers' Eastern Conference title and seems a decent bet to re-sign with Indiana, which certainly has cap space for him.
Reid, meanwhile, has a $15 million player option for next season that he is almost certain to opt out of. Minnesota had one of the highest payrolls in the NBA last offseason, so this would likely be the center to chase.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Oklahoma City Thunder vs. Indiana Pacers NBA Finals odds, tips and betting trends  Game 2
Oklahoma City Thunder vs. Indiana Pacers NBA Finals odds, tips and betting trends  Game 2

USA Today

time11 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Oklahoma City Thunder vs. Indiana Pacers NBA Finals odds, tips and betting trends Game 2

Oklahoma City Thunder vs. Indiana Pacers NBA Finals odds, tips and betting trends | Game 2 | June 8 The Oklahoma City Thunder will take on the Indiana Pacers in Game 2 of the NBA Finals. The Thunder are a double-digit favorite against the Pacers when the Thunder and the Pacers square off. The Thunder are favored by 11 points. The matchup's point total is set at 227.5. Thunder vs. Pacers betting odds NBA odds courtesy of BetMGM Sportsbook. Odds updated Friday at 3:29 a.m. ET. For a full list of sports betting odds, access USA TODAY Sports Betting Scores Odds Hub. Spread: Oklahoma City -11 Oklahoma City -11 Total: 227.5 227.5 Moneyline: Oklahoma City -581, Indiana +429 Pacers at Thunder odds, spread, & more Prediction Pick ATS: Thunder (- 11) Thunder (- 11) Pick OU: Over (227.5) Over (227.5) Prediction: Thunder 122 - Pacers 107 The Thunder have won 66 of the 79 games they were listed as the moneyline favorite this season (83.5%). When it has played as a moneyline favorite with odds of -581 or shorter, Oklahoma City has a record of 28-2 (93.3% win percentage). Based on this contest's moneyline, the Thunder's implied win probability is 85.3%. The Pacers have entered the game as underdogs 33 times this season and won 16, or 48.5%, of those games. Indiana has played as an underdog of +429 or more once this season and lost that game. The Pacers have a 18.9% chance to win this game based on the implied probability of the moneyline. The Thunder put up 120.5 points per game, 5.4 more points than the 115.1 the Pacers give up. When Oklahoma City puts up more than 115.1 points, it is 40-14 against the spread and 47-7 overall. Indiana is 38-33-1 against the spread and 48-24 overall when it scores more than 107.6 points. Oklahoma City's record is 51-12-2 against the spread and 61-4 overall when it gives up fewer than 117.4 points. The Thunder are the NBA's fourth-ranked scoring team (120.5 PPG), while the Pacers rank 17th in points per game allowed (115.1) in the league. Indiana is the NBA's seventh-ranked offense (117.4 PPG), while Oklahoma City is the third-ranked defense (107.6). The Thunder have out-scored their opponents by a total of 1055 points this season (12.9 points per game on average), and the Pacers have put up 183 more points than their opponents on the year (2.3 per game). Oklahoma City has an average implied point total of 118.5 this season, which is 0.5 points lower than its implied total in Sunday's game (119). So far this season, Oklahoma City has put up more than 119 points in 46 games. The 119.6-point average implied total on the season for Indiana is 11.6 more points than the team's 108-point implied total in this matchup. How to watch Thunder vs. Pacers Game day: Sunday, June 8, 2025 Sunday, June 8, 2025 Game time: 8 p.m. ET 8 p.m. ET TV channel: ABC ABC Location: Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Arena: Paycom Center Paycom Center Live stream: Watch this game Fubo Watch this game Fubo NBA League Pass: The most live games plus NBA TV. Sign up today Watch the NBA on NBA League Pass!

T.J. and Megan McConnell swap jerseys before Game 1 of NBA Finals
T.J. and Megan McConnell swap jerseys before Game 1 of NBA Finals

CBS News

time35 minutes ago

  • CBS News

T.J. and Megan McConnell swap jerseys before Game 1 of NBA Finals

T.J. and Megan McConnell are known to have strong sibling love and on Thursday night, they supported each other's basketball journeys from afar. The brother-sister duo showed up to their respective games wearing each others jerseys as T.J. was making his first appearance in the NBA Finals in Oklahoma City. Megan was sidelined with injury from the Phoenix Mercury's game against the Golden State Valkyries. Both T.J. and Megan were star players at Chartiers Valley before going on to play college basketball at Duquesne University and entering the NBA and WNBA, respectively. When T.J. showed up to the Paycom Center for Game 1 of the NBA Finals, he did so wearing Megan's Mercury jersey. Your brother wearing your rookie pro jersey to his first @NBA Finals game is such a flex 😎 — Phoenix Mercury (@PhoenixMercury) June 5, 2025 Earlier this week, Megan signed a contract with the Mercury, becoming just one of three active duos in the NBA and WNBA of brother-sister combinations. Megan made her WNBA debut earlier this week, scoring three points during 13 minutes of playing time before she suffered a knee injury and is now expected to be sidelined for several weeks. Even though she was sidelined for Thursday night's Phoenix game, she showed up wearing T.J.'s Pacers jersey. For T.J. and the Pacers, it was a good night as Indiana stunned Oklahoma City with a 111-110 comeback win to take a 1-0 series lead in the Finals. T.J. McConnell is just the ninth player from the WPIAL or Pittsburgh's City League to play in the nearly 80 years of the NBA Finals.

Inside the Comeback: How the Pacers pulled off a stunner in Game 1 of the NBA Finals
Inside the Comeback: How the Pacers pulled off a stunner in Game 1 of the NBA Finals

Washington Post

time44 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Inside the Comeback: How the Pacers pulled off a stunner in Game 1 of the NBA Finals

OKLAHOMA CITY — The game plan was the obvious one. Just chip away, the Indiana Pacers said, because there was no other option that would have made any sense at that point. They were down by 15 with 9:42 remaining. They were turning the ball over about once every three possessions, couldn't stop Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, and had the Oklahoma City crowd in a deafening fury. 'We just said, 'Hey, let's just keep chipping away at the rock,'' Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said. 'Got to keep pounding the rock and just chip away and hang in.' With 0.3 seconds left, there was no more rock left to pound. Not for Game 1, anyway. Tyrese Haliburton scored with that much time left and the Pacers stunned the Oklahoma City Thunder 111-110 in the opener of this year's NBA Finals on Thursday night. A look inside the comeback: The Pacers outscored the Thunder 32-16 in that final 9:42, with only six players getting used for those final minutes and all of them figuring into the scoring column. Obi Toppin took two shots. Both were 3-pointers. Both connected. Myles Turner and Andrew Nembhard each scored eight points to lead Indiana during the flurry. Aaron Nesmith led the Pacers with four rebounds in that stretch. And Haliburton provided the exclamation point with the jumper at the end. 'I've worked my entire life to get to this stage, so there's no holding back,' Turner said. The Thunder shot 4 for 16 in that closing stretch. Gilgeous-Alexander was 2 for 4; everyone else on the Thunder combined to shoot 2 for 12. The MVP had 10 points; everyone else on the Thunder combined for six. The reasons for all that? 'A little bit of everything,' Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. 'They made some plays. On some of those plays they made some shots. They got a couple that you wish you'd get back. We had bonus fouls, which were costly. Then offensively we didn't move the scoreboard as well as we could have. So you just add all that up and that's how you get that sort of comeback.' There was no choke sign from Haliburton, no celebratory dance, just a bunch of hugs with teammates and a big hug with his father John Haliburton in the hallway near the Pacers' locker room afterward. The Pacers, coach Rick Carlisle said, haven't engaged in a ton of raucous postgame victory laps during this playoff run. 'This is going to be a long journey and a lot going on,' Carlisle said. 'So, we're just going to have to keep our eye on the ball and keep focusing on one another.' Here were some of the key moments: — Carlisle subbed in five new players — Haliburton, Nembhard, Nesmith, Toppin and Turner — with 9:42 left and Indiana trailing 94-79. — Turner hits a 3-pointer with 7:47 left, cutting the lead to 96-88 and forcing an OKC time-out. — Toppin and Turner made 3-pointers on consecutive possessions (Turner keeping the second one alive with an offensive rebound) to get Indiana within 98-94 with 6:16 left. — Gilgeous-Alexander's two free throws with 2:52 left pushed the Thunder lead to 108-99. Nesmith and Nembhard connected on back-to-back 3s, and Indiana was within thee with 1:59 left. — The Pacers got a stop with 11 seconds left and didn't call time, having taken advantage of a challenge stoppage 11 seconds earlier to map out scenarios. The clock kept running and Haliburton hit the winner with 0.3 seconds left. 'I don't know what you say about it but I know that this group is a resilient group and we don't give up until it's 0.0 on the clock.' — Haliburton. ___ AP NBA:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store