
What should we grade the Boston Celtics selection of Spanish small forward Hugo Gonzalez?
And while Gonzalez did not get on the floor enough to log particularly impressive stat lines, he also earned 10 minutes per game with the club while showing off the bounce and grit that caught the Celtics interest in the first place. So how should we grade the pick for Boston, given where they could have gone instead?
The folks behind the "CBS Sports" YouTube channel put together a clip of their assessment of the Celtics' 2025 NBA draft first round selection. Check it out below to see it for yourself.

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USA Today
30 minutes ago
- USA Today
We used ESPN's Misery Index to find the worst possible fan experience
Earlier this week, ESPN unveiled its "Sports Misery Index," an algorithmic system designed to help sports gauge how much joy (or sadness) they derive from their favorite games and leagues. It was always bound to be a touchy subject, albeit a fun one. Because unless you're a brazen bandwagon fan of whoever happens to be good in that present moment (have you no shame?), you're bound to understand what it means to experience sports heartbreak at best and apathy at worst. Everyone, from all walks of life, likely has a wide range of current sports preferences. In the interest of coming to a miserable consensus, I tried to formulate the most depressing possible combination of "Big Four" sports teams (NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL) according to the misery index's metrics. I would've included more teams and other leagues, but this was the most straightforward path. For posterity, a score of "0" is generally regarded as the best possible outcome. In this scenario, the index says you have no real reason to be upset with your favorite teams at the moment. (Though, I'm sure some of you bona fide diehards still are.) Naturally, a score of "100" would be the definition of nihilism through fandom. None of your favorite teams has given you any meaningful positive reinforcement in a long time. Makes sense, right? When trying to find a score as close as I could to 100, I kept banging my head against the wall. Even when I chose the index's most miserable team in a particular league, it would somehow lower my overall misery score by a slight notch, which defeated the purpose of what I was trying to accomplish. You couldn't go with what the index said was the saddest team in a particular niche in every instance. You had to play around a little bit. Please note that I also used a timeline of 15-plus years when I said how long I was a fan of a specific team. The results might have been skewed differently otherwise. Still, I felt that range of time was the most accurate measurement for a sports fan because, to me, someone who started following a team less than five years ago (another possible selection) doesn't really know what sports pain is. There is nothing quite like watching a hopeless team year after year, while your personal and professional life starts to progress. But that's just me. After some finagling, here is, in my estimation, the most woeful possible combination of Big Four sports teams, along with why I think the misery index thinks they're sad. By the way, I ended up getting an overall score of 97. I'm so sorry if this mix of teams somehow describes your sports fandom. NFL: New York Jets Misery rating: 97 (tied at No. 1 overall among NFL teams, with Jacksonville Jaguars) Why: This explanation should be pretty straightforward, right? Where other organizations execute successful rebuilds without really blinking much, the Jets usually fall down and vomit all over themselves. They have had one winning season since 2010, the year of their last playoff berth and positive relevance. Their first-round pick quarterbacks are almost always busts. Their owner makes free-agent decisions based on what his sons see in Madden. More often than not, the Jets are a dumpster fire that is impossible to look away from. They make being bad and inept look like an art form. They are a Broadway show with a theatre director who may or may not be drinking adult beverages while on the job. Essentially, with the disproportionate attention a New York sports team tends to receive from the national media, Jets fans get all the trappings of a good football team without the good football. NBA: Charlotte Hornets Misery rating: 97 (No. 2 overall among NBA teams, behind the top-ranked Detroit Pistons) Why: Funnily enough, I have no idea why ESPN's algorithm gives the unfortunate slight edge to the Pistons here. At least people care about the Pistons! No offense to the extreme handful of Hornets fans (there are some out there, right?) who might come upon this paragraph. Let's put it this way. As a huge nerd, I sometimes enjoy thinking about the most forgettable professional sports franchises. You know what I'm talking about. Those teams that aren't worth writing home about in any meaningful fashion. Those teams that you have to remember still exist sometimes. Those teams that occasionally act as glorified farm systems for the contenders in their respective leagues. They have the worst of all worlds in almost every meaningful facet. The Hornets are usually at the top of my list in this regard. They are the definition of an afterthought, and they've never really had enough of the spotlight to change my mind. This franchise has been around for 37 years, and it has NEVER even won a division championship. It has six winning seasons this millennium. I'm honestly surprised the NBA hasn't commandeered the Hornets to instill some respectability, but I'm unsure that even the league cares all that much about Charlotte. MLB: Colorado Rockies Misery rating: 95 (tied at No. 1 among MLB teams, with Chicago White Sox) Why: Ask any bog-standard Denver resident these days about Coors Field, the Rockies' home stadium, and you'll probably hear a familiar refrain. Everyone will tout how it's a lovely space to spend a summer day in with some ballpark snacks and a few beers. An entire section of downtown Denver is effectively a dedicated Rockies hangout spot, replete with bars, restaurants, and trendy stores. Come for an evening game, and you might get lucky watching a beautiful sunset on the Rocky Mountains just West of the stadium. In all of these conversations, very few will mention anything about the "baseball" happening on the field. Because these days, no one goes to Rockies games to watch the Rockies. People go to their stadium because it's, in some estimations, the best outdoor bar in town. Nothing more. Anything that happens on the diamond while at a Rockies game is just gravy that folks only pay half attention to. Full stop. This unfortunate dynamic is what happens when a sports franchise has six winning seasons in 33 years of existence. This is what happens when the Monfort ownership family has unsubtly waved the white flag on trying to field a competitive baseball team. The only traction you'll get over time in that regard is from people looking for something fun to do in July that isn't hiking or a Denver Broncos, Denver Nuggets, or Colorado Avalanche game. Well, at least the mascot is cool? It's a purple dinosaur called DINGER! The Rockies have that going for them and not much else. NHL: Buffalo Sabres Misery rating: 97 (No. 1 overall among NHL teams) Why: There are a lot of futile, hopeless NHL teams. It feels like the nature of the league at the bottom. But no one takes the cake quite like the Sabres. It's not enough that Buffalo hasn't made the playoffs since the 2010-2011 season. It's not enough that the Sabres, who reside in a Western New York market ripe for hockey madness, seldom warrant throwing a wayward glance towards. It's not enough that even when it feels like the Sabres have something cooking, they tend to step on a rake instead. It's also about how they've alienated and/or failed some of their biggest talents. Former No. 2 overall draft pick Jack Eichel? A miserable shell of himself in Buffalo before really reaching his full potential with the Vegas Golden Knights. Sam Reinhart, another past No. 2 overall draft pick? A young man who treaded water with the Sabres before becoming an integral piece on the two-time reigning Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers. Even a short-lived stint with Evander Kane somehow managed to be more disappointing than it should have been. And that's not even counting the various high-profile draft misses over the years. It seems everyone who comes into contact with the Sabres is, on some level, the worst versions of themselves. At the moment, this franchise has never felt further from its peak, which, perhaps by no coincidence, was a loss in the 1999 Stanley Cup Final. And what a heartbreaking (controversial) loss it was, at that.


New York Post
30 minutes ago
- New York Post
Sage Steele recalls how Skip Bayless helped her when Bill Simmons wanted her off ‘NBA Countdown'
Former ESPNers Sage Steele and Skip Bayless claimed Bill Simmons had it out for Steele when she hosted 'NBA Countdown' in 2014. During Wednesday's installment of 'The Sage Steele Show,' the former 'SportsCenter' anchor praised Bayless for warning her that Simmons was working behind the scenes to get her ousted from the show. 'I don't know if you remember 2014 [NBA] Finals,' Steele said. 'We were in Miami and there was some drama going on behind the scenes on 'NBA Countdown' — and we went on a walk … around the lake. And I didn't know what was willfully happening around me with Bill Simmons, who did not want me on that show. And you gave me the heads up and just were kind with no ill words about him. Advertisement 4 Sage Steele praises Skip Bayless for warning her that Bill Simmons apparently didn't want her on 'NBA Countdown' in 2014. YouTube/Sage Steele 'It was literally like, 'I know you, I see you, I love you as a friend and you need to watch your back and you need to be careful and know that they're coming.'' Bayless recalled having 'a great walk' with Steele and that things became emotional. Advertisement 4 Skip Bayless on 'The Sage Steele Show' on August 13, 2025. YouTube/Sage Steele 'I had heard things and we looped your hotel a million times in the heat of the afternoon,' Bayless said. 'And that's all we talked about for at least an hour, and I just poured my heart out to you — because I believe in you and definitely believed in your ability then, and you just needed to keep your eyes open and be tough and you were.' Steele explained that she was confused about why Simmons didn't want her on the show. The two had an awkward moment during the Finals when Simmons said, 'Do I get to speak now? It's been like 10 minutes.' Advertisement 4 Bill Simmons arrives at the Los Angeles premiere of HBO's 'Jason Isbell: Running With Our Eyes Closed' at The GRAMMY Museum on March 23, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. Getty Images 'It was not even about me,' Steele said. 'He didn't want a host, and wanted a talk show without a host, and they threw me in and I was the double. 'But you didn't have to do that, and I never forgot that either, along with many other things.' Advertisement Steele left ESPN in August 2023 after both sides settled a lawsuit she filed following her being removed from the air in October 2021 for comments she made about the company's COVID-19 vaccine policy. 'I have decided to leave so I can exercise my first amendment rights more freely,' Steele, who worked at ESPN since 2007, said at the time. Simmons, the founder and CEO of The Ringer, spent 14 years at ESPN as a writer and NBA analyst before being fired in 2015 — following his suspension by the network for comments he made about NFL commissioner Roger Goodell. 4 Steele (l) and Simmons (r) during an ESPN show in 2014. @G4NBAVideosHD2/YouTube Bayless left ESPN in 2016 when his contract expired after joining the worldwide leader in 2004. He abruptly left FS1's 'Undisputed' in August 2024 following an eight-year run and now hosts his own YouTube show.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Sixers' Adem Bona receives high block rating in upcoming NBA 2K26 game
The popular video game, NBA2K26, will be released very soon as everybody prepares for the 2025-26 NBA season. The game promises to add new features and continue to upgrade graphics and things of the like as the game's production team looks for improvements. A big topic everybody looks for is ratings. The masses want to know what their favorite player's 2K rating is in the game and the official Twitter account released the top 10 rated shot blockers in the game. Philadelphia 76ers big man Adem Bona received a high block rating as he prepares for his second season in the league. Bona, who averaged 1.2 blocks as a rookie in the 2024-25 season, received a shot block rating of 91 which is tied for sixth with Orlando's Jonathan Isaac in the top 10 of shot blockers in the game. Bona will be looking to give the Sixers a little bit of everything out on the floor as he begins his second season after a productive rookie year in Philadelphia. This article originally appeared on Sixers Wire: Sixers' Adem Bona receives high block rating in upcoming NBA 2K26 game