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Zion Williamson, LaMelo Ball and a few more interesting factors on the NBA's 5 worst teams

Zion Williamson, LaMelo Ball and a few more interesting factors on the NBA's 5 worst teams

Yahoo20-03-2025

With less than a month left in the 2024-25 regular season, most of the NBA-watching world's attention is focused on the top of the standings: on the Cleveland Cavaliers and Oklahoma City Thunder finishing off their historic regular seasons, on the state of the MVP chase, on the race to secure home-court advantage in the first round of the playoffs, and on which stars can lift their squads clear of the play-in tournament.
While those outcomes will likely remain up in the air until the season's dying days, though, we do have a pretty clear picture of what's going on at the bottom of the standings — the teams that have, for months now, been playing for ping-pong balls rather than postseason seeding.
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The Utah Jazz, Washington Wizards, Charlotte Hornets, New Orleans Pelicans and Brooklyn Nets own the NBA's five worst records and net ratings. They are responsible for 10 of this season's 14 longest losing streaks, led by a truly dismal Wizards team that has produced two separate 16-game skids en route to posting one of the worst point differentials in NBA history.
All five of these teams will likely have better than 40% odds of landing a top-four selection in the 2025 NBA Draft, and at least a 1-in-10 chance of picking first overall. That's important, because there's an awfully shiny pot of gold at the end of that particular rainbow — a 6-foot-9, 205-pound pterodactyl named Cooper Flagg.
While we wait for the draft lottery, though, the balance of the regular season can still have some value for this horrid handful of teams; even bad teams playing out the string feature some things worth keeping an eye on.
Let's consider a few of them, running through the most interesting things — to me! — about the NBA's five worst teams, starting with a big bounce-back in The Big Easy (all statistics as of Wednesday morning):
Any hopes of New Orleans building on last season's 49 wins and top-six net rating were scuttled about two weeks into the new campaign. That's when Zion reinjured the left hamstring that he'd strained during a play-in tournament loss to the Lakers last April, landing the former No. 1 overall pick back on the injured list alongside Dejounte Murray, C.J. McCollum, Herb Jones and Trey Murphy III.
Before you knew it, Brandon Ingram and Jose Alvarado had gotten hurt, too, and a team that had briefly looked like a contender a couple of times over the past few seasons was 20 games under .500 — dead in the water before Christmas. Only seven teams have lost more player games due to injury than the Pelicans, according to Spotrac; only the 76ers, who've lost Joel Embiid and Paul George for the season, have missed a heftier chunk of their team payroll.
Around the dark cloud of the last few months of Pelicans basketball, though, there's been one bright silver lining. Under cover of obscurity on a going-nowhere squad, Zion has looked … pretty friggin' awesome?
Looking slimmer and more explosive than he did for most of last season, Zion remains one of the sport's most unbelievable physical forces. Since his return in early January, Williamson's averaging 24.9 points, 7.1 rebounds, 5.2 assists and 1.3 steals per game, shooting 59% from the field and earning 7.5 free throws in just 27.9 minutes a night. In that span, only Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Cade Cunningham are scoring more points per game on drives to the basket. Only SGA and Giannis Antetokounmpo are drawing more fouls per minute, and nobody is scoring more points in the paint.
With erstwhile running buddy Ingram now gone to Toronto and so many other players out of the lineup, Williamson's taken on an even larger role in the Pelicans' offense, averaging more than 85 touches per 36 minutes, by far a career high. He's continued to evolve as a playmaker, looking more comfortable manipulating coverages whether facing up or playing with his back to the basket. He's posting a 1.83-to-1 assist-to-turnover ratio and creating 14.2 points per game via assist — both of which would be career highs — with the first two triple-doubles of his career both coming since the All-Star break. He's also begun developing more of an in-between game, more frequently and comfortably stopping and popping shy of the rim, taking 38% of his shots from floater range and making 53% of them — which, again, would be career highs.
The impressive individual numbers are backed up by overall on-court results. A Pelicans team that owns the NBA's second-worst net rating this season has been outscored by a comparatively respectable 1.8 points per 100 possessions in Williamson's minutes over the past two-plus months. Even with all of its other injuries, the 15-win Pels have the point differential of a 37-win team with Zion on the floor, according to Cleaning the Glass; quiet as it's kept, impact metrics like estimated plus-minus and DARKO peg the version of Zion we've been getting as perhaps the best one we've ever seen.
"Do you feel like this is the best all around basketball you've played of your career?"Zion Williamson: "I don't know if that is up to me to decide. I will say, this is the best I've felt." 🗣️pic.twitter.com/ZMNKngccgo
— ClutchPoints (@ClutchPoints) March 12, 2025
The $197 million question, as ever, is whether we'll get to keep seeing it. Williamson's perennial soft-tissue and lower-extremity injuries have played a significant role in submarining nearly every season since his arrival in New Orleans, leaving the Pelicans on perpetually unsteady ground. (And, potentially, forced to consider their options on the trade market.)
The optimist, though, can see a future in which a two-man partnership between Williamson and Murphy bears real fruit. (The ascendant wing sniper averaged 23 points and four assists per game on .609 true shooting over a half-season stretch before suffering a season-ending shoulder injury.) It's a future in which lineups pairing them with a healthy Jones, Alvarado and rising big man Yves Missi return to the kind of swarming defensive play on which the last few competitive New Orleans teams were built — one in which this dire season is redeemed by the arrival of another touted prospect (perhaps another all-court monster out of Duke?) capable of putting the Pelicans back on the path toward contention.
You might have to squint pretty hard to see that glass-half-full vision. When Zion's looking like this, though, it's enough to make you keep doing it.
I was watching Wizards-Pistons last week, because I have a rich and interesting social life, when something struck me: Washington just kept getting good shots down the stretch.
This seemed odd, considering the Wiz own comfortably the worst offense in the NBA and were, at the time, neck-and-neck with the crunch-time-deficient Bucks and Heat for the ignominious honor of being the most punchless team in the league when the score's within five points in the final five minutes. And yet, there they were — against a resurgent Pistons team that sits ninth in defensive efficiency this season — repeatedly getting whatever they wanted with the game in the balance.
One reason why? They put the ball in Middleton's hands and let him make the decisions. Which, as it turns out, is a pretty good decision:
None of that is jaw-dropping, Luka-whipping-a-blind-pass-over-his-shoulder stuff. It's just good read after good read, on-time feed after on-time feed. Generally unflashy, uniformly beneficial, part-of-your-balanced-breakfast basketball. That, 13 years into his career, is Middleton's brand — one that's led him to three All-Star appearances, an Olympic gold medal and an NBA championship. And it's one that seems to be agreeing with the terrible young Wizards.
Middleton's individual numbers in D.C. won't blow you away: 11.3 points, 4.2 rebounds and 3.7 assists in 22.8 minutes per game across 11 starts, shooting 44.4% from the field and just 24.3% from 3-point range. But consider:
The Wizards are 15-52 this season. They are 6-5 when Middleton plays, with wins over the playoff-bound Pistons and Nuggets. (The losses include Monday's defeat at the hands of the Trail Blazers, in which Middleton and Jordan Poole played 10.5 first-half minutes and never saw the floor again for, um, reasons.)
The Wizards have been outscored by 790 points on the season. They are plus-15 in Middleton's 251 minutes.
The Wizards have a net rating of minus-11.5 for the season — worst in the league, and on pace to be the lowest of any team since the 2011-12 Charlotte Bobcats. They've got a net rating of plus-1.7 with Middleton on the floor.
Which, through one lens, means Middleton has basically been the difference between the Wizards being the Lakers … and being the worst team in NBA history.
That, obviously, is an overstatement, delivered partly to make sure you haven't fallen asleep midway through reading a blurb about the Wizards in the middle of March. (Congratulations on staying awake!) Directionally, though? It seems about right.
'He's a closer, has been for a very long time in this league,' Wizards head coach Brian Keefe recently said. 'And we are going to take advantage of having him on our roster.'
Washington's offense has gone from bottom-of-the-league to merely bottom-10 in Middleton's minutes, turning the ball over less and getting to the foul line more with superior organization. Small-sample-size caveats abound, but the Wiz have scored at a top-10 clip in the half-court with Middleton on the floor.
Their defense has improved dramatically — tied for 13th since the All-Star break! — thanks to an uptick in forcing turnovers and limiting 3-point attempts, especially from the corners. They've been better at both with Middleton, who's averaging 2.2 steals and four deflections per 36 minutes as a Wizard.
For a team as bad as Washington — one still in 'the deconstruction phase,' one force-feeding minutes to the litany of 19- and 20-year-olds populating the NBA's youngest roster — the journey to sustainable success begins with learning how to not suck. How to create not just a shot, but a good shot, and how to take not just any shot, but your shot. (Here's where we note that Washington's recent lottery picks — Alex Sarr, Bilal Coulibaly, midrange monster Bub Carrington, Kyshawn George — have all seen their shot quality improve playing alongside Middleton.) How to not just study film or drill game-plans, but actually translate them in practice. Where to be on defense, when you need to be there, and how that might change based on personnel.
It might sound hokey or trite, but those basics are the building blocks of winning basketball. For Keefe and his staff, laying that kind of foundation gets a little bit easier when you've got a foreman like Middleton who can supervise on the job site.
The fate of the next competitive iteration of the Wizards likely depends on bright young things like Sarr, Carrington, George, Coulibaly and their upcoming lottery picks developing into consistently positive two-way players. Giving them a no-nonsense veteran craftsman to teach them how to use their tools … well, that seems like a pretty good decision.
This is LaMelo Ball:
This is also LaMelo Ball:
The gift and the curse.
'LaMelo, in my opinion, he's kind of a broadcaster's dream,' famously excitable Hornets play-by-play man Eric Collins said earlier this season. 'He's kind of a broadcaster's nightmare sometimes. But he's a dream for me because I love unpredictability. You don't know what you are going to see and when it's going to happen.'
It's why so many fans love LaMelo so much: the caffeinated command in transition, the naked ambition of those logo bombs, the jolt of electricity that runs down your spine with every half-court lob and 'how did he see that?' dime out of the pick-and-roll. The vision of a postmodern lead ball-handler: size, vision and feel; a threat to pull from anywhere; a fireworks show perpetually poised to pop.
It's also why so many coaches and media members have a hard time fully giving themselves over to his charms: the lethargic hook pass when the defender's got it scouted, the drives into triple coverage seemingly devoid of a Plan B, the obstinate insistence that this time he can split the double, the unerring belief that a contested runner from 18 or a four-dribble stepback from 30 with 11 on the shot clock is the best look you can get. The dreams of a hyperefficient, hyperspeed future, curdled.
Ball has 15 games with 30 or more points this season — 19th-most in the NBA. He also has 24 games of shooting 40% or worse from the floor on 10 or more attempts — tied for seventh-most. Five years into his career, LaMelo isn't just playing the same maximalist tune; he's cranking it up to skull-rattling volumes, guaranteeing you feel something while watching him, and leaving aside the question of whether you can make any sense of it. (LaMelo Ball: Lynchian?)
Had Ball played enough minutes to qualify for the league leaderboards this season, he'd rank 11th in points per game (25.4), ninth in assists per game (7.2) … and fifth in turnovers per game (3.5). He's ninth in touches per game, tied for seventh in average time of possession and No. 1 with a bullet in usage rate, finishing 35.9% of Hornets possessions with a shot attempt, foul drawn or turnover.
Only 11 players in league history (minimum 1,000 minutes played) have ever finished a season with a higher usage rate. Most of them have MVP awards in their trophy cases. The only player taking more shots per game this season than LaMelo (21.5)? SGA (21.6), who might soon have one in his.
Whether that seems like the right kind of company for LaMelo to be keeping can vary from game to game — or even play to play.
Watch LaMelo, and you might find yourself stunned by the audacity of the plays he tries to make and the shots he attempts. He plays almost like he's trying to get away with something. Maybe he is: According to Synergy Sports' tracking, among the 26 players launching at least five 'low shot quality' looks a night, LaMelo ranks 25th in points scored per possession.
Keep watching, though, and you might also find yourself asking the question once posed by the legend Jordan Crawford: 'Who else gon' shoot?'
Sure, there's Miles Bridges and Mark Williams. But they're already combining for about 28 shots a night (and LaMelo's assisted on about 20% of their baskets this season as it is). Brandon Miller's out for the season. Grant Williams is, too. Tre Mann hasn't played since early November. Seth Curry can still shoot it, but he's a deep-rotation player a few months shy of 35; Josh Green runs the floor hard and can hit spot-up 3s, but you don't exactly want to hand him the keys to your offense.
Charlotte's rotation in Tuesday's matchup with the Hawks, which Ball missed with a sore right wrist, featured a slew of young dudes who play hard — Damion Baugh, DaQuan Jeffries, Marcus Garrett, Nick Smith Jr., Wendell Moore Jr. — but who haven't exactly established themselves as bankable NBA-level scorers or creators. In a related story, the Hornets got drilled by 32 points, running their record without LaMelo this season to 2-22; they've been outscored by 3.6 points per 100 possessions in his minutes and by an obscene 12.2 points-per-100 when he's not on the court.
It's all left the Hornets in an odd, uncomfortable state: The sad they are with him is less than the sad they are without him. (It's kind of a reverse Wambsgans situation.) And in the absence of a better alternative, or any reason to believe one's about to waltz through the door … well, might as well just let LaMelo cook and see what happens. At least you won't be able to take your eyes off of it.
Nearly three years after trading Rudy Gobert and Donovan Mitchell, Danny Ainge and Co. are still looking for Utah's next centerpiece. (An illuminating passage from a recent piece by Sarah Todd at The Deseret News: 'The Jazz do not view the 2024-25 season as the third year of a rebuild. Instead, they see it as part of the teardown. In their eyes, the rebuild hasn't started.') That incentivizes them to tank, which they've done with aplomb — too well for the league office's liking, in fact — and which sucks for myriad reasons.
But as much as all parties involved would probably prefer to just hit 'sim to end' on this season and proceed to the draft, though, you do still have to play the games. Sometimes, head coach Will Hardy wishes his young charges were a bit more ready to do so.
'The frustrating part is that there's so much opportunity on our team right now,' Hardy recently told reporters. 'And all of these young players are getting an opportunity to show us who they are, what they are, and that opportunity needs to be met with the desperation that it deserves.'
Credit, then, to Collier — the No. 1 prospect in the 2023 high school recruiting class, who fell to 29th in last June's draft after an up-and-down year at USC — for making the most of his opportunity to show us who he is: a fast, physical, boulder-rolling-downhill point guard with an ahead-of-his-years understanding of how to read and move around the chessboard.
After a rough start scrounging for minutes behind Keyonte George, Collin Sexton and Jordan Clarkson, and that saw him struggle mightily to put the ball in the basket when he did get some tick — 30% from the field, just 14% from 3-point range through 20 games — Collier got a trial run as a starter when George went down with a left heel injury in early January. When George underwhelmed upon his return, Hardy turned back to Collier, perhaps as a means of giving George 'a bit of a wake-up call … about what it takes to earn minutes in the NBA.'
Whatever the genesis of the opportunity, Collier has grabbed it with both hands, earning Western Conference Rookie of the Month honors in February for his work as a facilitator. He's averaging 8.1 assists in 30.3 minutes per game since fully taking over the starting job, sixth-most in the NBA in that span, creating points via dime at roughly the same clip as Luka Dončić and Devin Booker. Collier has posted 24 games of eight or more assists this season, tied with SGA for 10th most in the NBA, and 11 games with double-digit helpers — the same number as Dončić, Booker, Russell Westbrook and Josh Giddey.
'I think he's playing the game with a chip on his shoulder,' teammate and fellow rookie Cody Williams recently told Tony Jones of The Athletic. 'I think he knows that there weren't 28 players better than him in the draft, and he came into this season wanting to prove that.'
His primary pathway to doing so: a straight line, aimed directly at the basket. Collier is top 30 in the league in drives per game since entering the starting lineup, adept at using his 6-foot-3, 210-pound frame to gain an advantage on a defender, hit the gas to extend it, get two feet in the lane and collapse the coverage. Once there, he'll use his vision to find a waiting pair of hands — a shooter in the corner, someone stationed in the slot ready to catch-and-go, a cutter flashing into open space — and an impressively deft touch to deliver the ball to them.
Cross-court lasers with either hand, cotton-soft dump-offs to dunker-spot lurkers, perfectly weighted pocket passes on the roll: you name it, and Collier's got it in the bag. He's also flashed an attractive combination of patience coming off a pick and impatience when he senses an opportunity to push the pace in transition, and an understanding of how to break coverages. (My favorite dime in that clip might be when Collier looks at how the Suns are set up, calls Walker Kessler up for a ball screen and sends George over to set a pindown for Lauri Markkanen, knowing Phoenix will try to top-lock Markkanen … which opens up the back cut for an easy lob dunk.)
It's an impressive level of craft for a 20-year-old — the kind of table-setting you can imagine eventually being part of an actual NBA offense. Provided, of course, Collier can make strides in the other non-negotiable areas for a modern guard.
'I know what I have to work on this summer,' he recently said. 'It's definitely not a secret.'
It starts with the shot. Collier has faced questions about his jumper going back to his prep days, and shot 33.8% from 3 and 67.3% from the free-throw line at USC. Those have persisted into the pros, where he's shooting just 41.2% from the field, 23.5% from 3-point range and 28.4% on jumpers overall for the season.
The good news: Those numbers have risen since Collier's move into the starting lineup, headlined by a sharp uptick in finishing inside the restricted area (from 55.7% before his promotion to 70.8% since) and at the charity stripe (from 60.5% before to 70.1% since). Maintaining those improvements while nudging up from midrange and beyond the arc will be vital for Collier to become a consistently positive player. Pairing that with analogous growth as an on-ball defender will be vital for not turning the 37-year-old Hardy's brown hair prematurely gray. ('I want Isaiah to work on being solid and staying in front of his guy,' the coach recently said. 'That would help our defense a lot.')
Markkanen is a bona fide core piece: someone who has proven he can produce at an All-Star level as a big-wing scorer and floor-spacing shooter. Kessler has established himself as the kind of high-end paint protector and rim-running lob threat who fits on any good team. The jury's still out on pretty much everyone else on the Jazz roster … but with every good read, every slick delivery, and every open mouth fed, Collier increases his chances of joining that club.
When you're 23-46, you're probably not going to get much play in the Coach of the Year conversation. You could argue, though, that what Fernández has accomplished in his first year on the Nets bench ranks among the league's more notable coaching accomplishments.
'I'm so impressed with Jordi,' Warriors coach Steve Kerr recently told reporters. 'I think he's crushing the job with a difficult hand to play.'
Fernández took over a team coming off a 32-50 campaign and just beginning the process of building something from the ashes of the Kevin Durant/Kyrie Irving/James Harden experiment. He was handed a mix-and-match roster — contending-regime holdovers, blockbuster-trade leftovers, second-draft do-overs — and asked to stitch something together that could pass the time while Sean Marks and Co. began steering the franchise into the skid.
A quarter of the way through the season, Fernández had that roster a game under .500, in play-in position, with a top-10 offense. Which, you know, just wouldn't do.
'We're going to have to be systematic with some of the decisions we make,' Marks told Brian Lewis of the New York Post earlier this season. 'And they may not always be in line with winning the next game or putting the most talent out there.'
Thanks to a combination of injuries and subtractions — Cam Thomas suffering a hamstring injury, trades shipping out Dennis Schröder and Dorian-Finney Smith, etc. — Brooklyn's hot start quickly faded, and Fernández set about cycling through his allotment of 10-days and two-ways in pursuit of something like stability. Before you knew it: seven wins in nine games straddling the All-Star break, a sudden surge to top-10-defense status and a return to within a half-game of the play-in spots.
That, too, proved fleeting. Brooklyn's lost 11 of 13, sinking back toward the cellar and jousting with a 76ers team led by a suddenly rampaging Quentin Grimes for bottom-five status and the improved lottery odds that come with it. And yet, with rare exceptions, the losses tend to share a similar character: coming down to a possession or two late, with five players fighting for their next NBA opportunity — guys like Keon Johnson, Trendon Watford, Ziaire Williams, Jalen Wilson, Tosan Evbuomwan, Maxwell Lewis and Tyrese Martin — playing with their hair on fire, like they don't know they're supposed to roll over.
'Watching him prepare for these games — not knowing who's going to play, not knowing who's going to start, or who can finish, who can't play, minute restrictions, etc.,' Nets guard D'Angelo Russell said last month. 'For him to still find a way to get straight wins and keep everybody's energy and spirit high, I think the future's bright here.'
The road to that future begins with Fernández developing a template for how his teams will play. They'll get up a ton of 3-pointers: 41.8% of Brooklyn's shot attempts have come from beyond the arc, the sixth-highest share in the league, according to Cleaning the Glass. They'll prioritize ball and player movement: The Nets are fifth in the NBA in passes per game, fifth in average distance covered on offense and ninth in assist rate. They'll try to scrounge up every last extra possession they can; they send waves of bodies to the glass, ranking 11th in offensive rebounding rate.
On defense, they'll fly around like banshees — fourth-fastest average speed on defense, fifth in opponent turnover rate, fifth in charges drawn — and play with what former Nets bench boss and current Cavaliers coach Kenny Atkinson called 'extreme physicality.'
'I think they're fouling a lot, which is fine,' Atkinson told reporters. 'They made a commitment. They have an identity.'
Atkinson knows all too well how difficult it can be to do what Fernández is doing: securing a commitment and establishing an identity on a first-draft squad, with players who know they probably won't be part of whatever version of the roster is eventually deemed fit to print. He did it himself in Brooklyn, nearly a decade ago, dragging the Nets out of the depths of the post-Kevin Garnett and Paul Pierce era, installing a style of play and creating a culture that could turn a roster of misfit toys into a playoff team. Eventually, that led Brooklyn to grasp for a higher class of winning. It didn't work out.
If, in a few years' time, the Nets are once again ready to try to jump up a weight class, it'll probably be because Fernández has succeeded as Atkinson did: by turning the unglamorous work of development into the sort of consistent success that can lure a brighter brand of star into Barclays Center. For now, though, it means redefining winning — turning every rep, every session, every choice into a step toward becoming something more.
'Seeing these guys getting better, seeing these guys fighting all the way until the end — those are wins for us,' Fernández told reporters in January. 'Winning starts now. We're not waiting to win. It's just that what winning means for you is different … we feel like we're winning a lot of things right now.'

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Why the Orlando Magic went back to bold pinstripes, but with a modern twist
Why the Orlando Magic went back to bold pinstripes, but with a modern twist

New York Times

time39 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Why the Orlando Magic went back to bold pinstripes, but with a modern twist

The Orlando Magic originally planned to debut new uniforms at the beginning of the 2024-2025 NBA season, but when the time came to approve a final design to submit to the NBA, Shelly Wilkes, the team's executive vice president of marketing and social responsibility, and her staff were convinced they hadn't found what they were looking for just yet. Advertisement The Magic decided to go back to the drawing board. The new uniforms would be delayed to the 2025-2026 season, and one more year of planning would be added to a rebranding project that started in 2021. Charged with finding a new look for the future, the Magic realized a key element of the past, and a lack thereof, was holding their plans back. Three agencies helped the Magic with the uniform redesign. Focus groups that included hundreds of season ticket holders and influencers were formed. Surveys were sent out. And with all of that, one thing began to become very apparent. Through all of this, however the Magic were going to look on the court going forward with their new generation of stars like Paolo Banchero, Jalen Suggs, and Franz Wagner, it became clear that pinstripes — and not just any pinstripes, but bold pinstripes (the team's current uniforms featured very subtle pinstripes) — were part of the answer. 'When (the agencies) would leave the pinstripes out of the conversation and out of the design, it really was a bit lackluster,' Wilkes said. 'This is what we think we need and we even looked at interesting takes and it was like, no, let's just do what works. This works. We know (fans) love the bold pinstripes. It was really based on a lot of fan feedback, a lot of social listening and honestly, looking at sales data and what makes sense for the fanbase.' The Magic submitted its final uniform designs to the NBA in September of 2023. The results finally arrived for all to see last week when the team debuted a new trio of uniform options, none of which were lacking for pinstripes. There's the Association uniform, which is all-white with a 'Magic' wordmark with a star replacing the 'a,' the Icon, which is all-blue with an 'Orlando' wordmark with a star replacing the 'a,' and Statement, which is a blue/black combo with a 'Magic' wordmark and a star replacing the 'a.' The latter draws inspiration from the Magic's classic Champion warm-up jackets of the '90s and has a Jordan Brand logo instead of a Nike logo. The return of the bold pinstripes is a continuation of a trend the Magic helped start in the late '80s/early '90s when it became the second NBA team to feature pinstripes on their uniforms in its expansion year arrival in the 1989-90 season. The Charlotte Hornets debuted pinstriped uniforms the year prior during its 1988-89 debut season. The look became a staple for both teams and led to later looks of the Chicago Bulls and Indiana Pacers during the '90s. Advertisement After so much time working on perfecting the look, Wilkes says her personal favorite is the jersey that has received the most 'mixed emotions' — the Statement jersey. 'I think it is going to be ranked as one of the best jerseys in the NBA once people start seeing it on court,' Wilkes said. Merchandising data showed that vintage Magic apparel, especially looks tied to the Shaquille O'Neal and Penny Hardaway era, always sold well, according to Wilkes. It served as an indicator as to what the fanbase favored from the past, present and toward the future. 🙄😬🥴😐🤓 #tbt — Orlando Magic (@OrlandoMagic) May 16, 2019 'You realize how much passion there is around those particular uniforms and that we are one of the only teams that has pinstripes and just a realization of: let's own that. Let's take it and build our identity today around those pinstripes again,' Wilkes said. 'We were successful as well in the late 2000s with Dwight (Howard) and Jameer (Nelson), but people still hold on to the Shaq and Penny years and those references. And that is the image that comes into their mind around the success of the Orlando Magic and the excitement of the Orlando Magic, are those years. It's not only necessarily being (one of) the first (with pinstripes), but I think it truly is something that we as the Orlando Magic can own as part of our identity.' So why didn't the Magic just go back to the exact same classic look of its '90s uniforms if they are so popular with fans? NBA rules forbid it. Once an NBA team stops using certain uniforms, the licensing of them (which is owned by the NBA) reverts to NBA partner and famed throwback jersey maker Mitchell & Ness. The Magic can still wear its classic 'Shaq/Penny' uniforms for anniversaries, but not on a regular basis. Advertisement Wilkes prefers it that way, though, saying that focusing on a new look for a new generation of stars that drew inspiration from the past was the Magic's priority. Along with having a look that matched their current roster and how they play basketball. 'You can't just re-introduce the same exact direction. However, we also didn't want to. We knew it was a new time, a new era. This more modern, simple, clean design is where we were headed,' Wilkes said. 'A lot of people have so much passion about our original wordmark, and so do I, and I love it. It can also be maybe considered a little bit, not as bold or competitive. It's almost playful. It has character in that way. But I don't know that that's the identity of our team today. Our identity is around toughness, grit, hard work, that defensive mindset. And to put something that's almost a little whimsical as the wordmark of our uniform, that didn't feel right for the direction that we've taken on the court.' While the nostalgia factor is strong with the Magic's new uniforms, Wilkes doesn't just want fans not faking the funk on a nasty dunk or replaying Lil Penny commercials in their heads when they see them. She wants the Magic fanbase to have an eye toward the future as well. Pinstripes and all. Every Magic uniform has represented an era. O'Neal and Hardaway with the originals. Tracy McGrady and his pinstripeless stars. Howard and a new logo that followed the team into the Kia Center. And now these new uniforms representing the next generation of Orlando Magic basketball with Banchero, Suggs and Wagner. 'I don't know that I would say I want people to necessarily only think of Shaq and Penny. Sure they are going to. They are two of our biggest stars that have ever come through here. But, I think I want them to think about the success of the Orlando Magic and having the Orlando Magic in a pop culture conversation,' Wilkes said. 'Now we're at a new phase of this team and this new team needs a new identity. So we think we've hit the timing right. Because the only way (the new uniforms are) grabbing hold as much as it is is because we have built a team around Paulo, Franz and Jalen that people are excited about. You can see the future. You can see that we are building a winning team and that there is success on the horizon. And so I think that giving them their own era and their own identity is really core to making this successful.' Are bold pinstripes on the basketball court here to stay in central Florida? Wilkes says the younger generation of the DeVos family, who owns the team, grew up with the Magic and was a part of the creation of the new uniforms. Combine that with a passionate fanbase and it points to a likelihood of permanent pinstripes. 'If I'm here it's bold pinstripes from here on out,' Wilkes said while laughing. 'I think with (the DeVos family's) leadership…you'll continue to see bold pinstripes. It's part of who we are as an organization and I think it's important that we lean into that. And we can have fun with it. There's different ways that we can introduce pinstripes so keep your eyes peeled for future years and iterations of how we take this.' The Athletic maintains full editorial independence in all our coverage. When you click or make purchases through our links, we may earn a commission.

Knicks' PJ Tucker angrily pauses vacation to make strong statement on retirement
Knicks' PJ Tucker angrily pauses vacation to make strong statement on retirement

New York Post

time39 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Knicks' PJ Tucker angrily pauses vacation to make strong statement on retirement

The league's second-oldest player isn't calling it quits just yet. PJ Tucker, 40, played in just three games with the Knicks last season and has appeared for 10 different teams in his 14-year NBA career, and hopes to play in 2025. Advertisement 'PSA.. Since we are in the era of not doing any fact checking and just repost what we hear from uncredited sources smfh i have to take time out of my vacation to set the record straight so yall can stop sending me the dumb s–t,' Tucker posted to his Instagram Story on Wednesday with water in the video's backdrop. 'Never have [I] mentioned retirement or even given any indication that may be a thing. I'm 40 years young 100% healthy, able, and will continue playing the game I've dedicated my life to… HOOPIN!!!! NOW… Carry on.' 3 PJ Tucker has been more of a locker room leader in his last few NBA seasons. NBAE via Getty Images Advertisement Tucker signed a two-year deal with the Knicks last season with a club option for the 2025-26 season. He previously had a contentious relationship during his time with the Clippers spanning the 2023-24 season and last year after receiving limited playing time. 3 P.J. Tucker's Instagram post. @pjtucker/Instagram Tucker was also traded three times in five days last season, after the Clippers sent the disgruntled forward to the Jazz, before immediately being re-routed to the Heat and then getting traded to the Raptors. Advertisement After the trade, the Raptors waived Tucker and the Knicks swiftly signed him to a 10-day contract. 3 PJ Tucker denied retirement is coming for the league's second odlest player. Getty Images Tucker was then signed to a two-year contract, as they were impressed with his locker room presence. Tucker was certainly a favorite of ex-coach Tom Thibodeau, consistently being lauded as a 'veteran leader.' Advertisement He appeared in three regular-season games for the Knicks and one postseason game. With Thibodeau now fired and the Knicks in limbo and trying to lure a big-name coach, it is unclear where Tucker fits into the team's long-term plans. The only player in the NBA older than Tucker (40 years, 38 days) is LeBron James (40 years, 163 days), and he is one day older than Chris Paul (40 years, 37 days).

Thunder vs. Pacers: How Indiana's bench beat OKC in Game 3 of NBA Finals — 'Our second group really won us the game'
Thunder vs. Pacers: How Indiana's bench beat OKC in Game 3 of NBA Finals — 'Our second group really won us the game'

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Thunder vs. Pacers: How Indiana's bench beat OKC in Game 3 of NBA Finals — 'Our second group really won us the game'

INDIANAPOLIS — The Pacers are who they are because of Tyrese Haliburton — because of the way his predilection toward frenetic and decentralized possessions produces one of the NBA's most efficient and effective offenses; because of his swashbuckling swagger; because of his growing highlight reel of unbelievable late-game shot-making. The Pacers are who they are because of Pascal Siakam — because of the matchup nightmare he presents opponents on offense; because of the gap-plugging boost he offers Indiana's defense; and because of how perfectly his ever-revving motor fits within the Pacers' offensive ecosystem. Advertisement But throughout this postseason, as Indiana's All-Stars have received praise for their roles in propelling and prolonging a magical run that now sits just two wins away from an NBA championship, those stars — and head coach Rick Carlisle — have refused to accept too much individual acclaim. Instead, they've repeatedly insisted that it's something else that makes them special: The Pacers are who they are because of their depth — because of how many damn good players they have; because of how their ability to contribute has allowed Carlisle to avoid overloading his stars and starters in Indiana's frenzied and fast-paced two-way approach; and because of how consistently they've tilted the run of play in Indiana's favor. T.J. McConnell energized the Pacers on both ends of the floor in Game 3. (Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images) (NBAE via Getty Images) 'Look, this is the kind of team that we are,' Carlisle said after Indiana scored a 116-107 win in Game 3 of the 2025 NBA Finals on Wednesday. 'We need everybody to be ready. It's not always going to be exactly the same guys that are stepping up with scoring and stuff like that, but this is how we gotta do it, and we gotta do it as a team, and we gotta make it as hard as possible on them.' Advertisement Which is precisely what Bennedict Mathurin, T.J. McConnell, Obi Toppin and the rest of Indiana's reserve corps did against the Thunder on Wednesday night at a raucous Gainbridge Fieldhouse. 'Honestly, our second group really won us the game,' Haliburton told NBA TV. In a game decided by three possessions, Indiana's bench outscored Oklahoma City's 48-19. Twenty-seven of those 48 points belonged to Mathurin — a career playoff high, tied with Jalen Rose for the most ever scored by a Pacer off the bench in a playoff game, and tied with Manu Ginóbili and Jason Terry for the third-most ever by a reserve in a Finals game. The third-year swingman has seen his effectiveness, minutes and opportunities wax and wane in this postseason, but he was absolute nails from the second he checked in at the start of the second quarter on Wednesday. Advertisement 'I think he was great being aggressive,' Siakam said. 'That's who we want him to be — when he's aggressive, he's active on defense, he's picking up full-court, he's cutting. Like, when he's doing that … I mean, it looks easy out there for him.' Mathurin met the Thunder's vaunted athleticism and physicality with plenty of his own, attacking the paint, finding opportunities to get to his spots, and never once wavering on a night that saw him go 9-for-12 from the field, with five of those buckets coming in the paint — more than any Pacer scored on the interior in Game 2 — and a couple more coming between the paint and the arc. 'I thought he did just a great job of playing within what we do so well,' Haliburton said. 'He did a great job of coming off handoffs, reading the pocket, rising up from the midrange. This is a defense that will give that [midrange shot] up — analytically, that's not the best shot — but I thought he did a great job of hunting that and getting downhill.' And when he got downhill, he did what he does better than all but a few wing players in the NBA: hunt contact, drawing seven fouls in just 22 minutes of work and going 7-for-8 from the free-throw line — vital points in a series where Indiana has often struggled to consistently generate offense in the half-court. Advertisement 'That's kind of what he does: He's a scorer,' said Thunder guard Alex Caruso. 'We let him get to his fastball for the night, which is impact the game by scoring the basketball. Granted, he made a couple of tough ones, but we probably didn't make it tough on him to start initially.' Coming up with a game this big on a stage this big — the youngest player to score 25 in a Finals game since Kawhi Leonard in 2014, the youngest player to score 25 off the bench in a Finals game since they started tracking starters and bench players in 1970 — had to feel particularly sweet for Mathurin, who missed all of Indiana's run to the 2024 Eastern Conference finals after suffering a torn labrum in his right shoulder about five weeks before the start of the playoffs, and who'd been counting the days until he could have his moment. No, like, literally. Advertisement 'After he sustained the injury — it was either in February or early March — you can order these calendars that start on a specific day, and then they count days,' Carlisle recalled Wednesday. 'And so — I think it was Dr. [Neal] ElAttrache that did the surgery — there was a calendar sitting in our training room. And every day, he would come in and take one off, take one off. He was counting the days down to being cleared sometime in August, and then be able to begin training camp, begin 5-on-5 with our guys in September, and then be in training camp, really, with his eyes firmly set on an opportunity in the playoffs.' 'As much as this is a dream right now, I'm not trying to live in my dream,' said Mathurin. 'I'm trying to, like, live in the present and make sure the dream ends well, which means winning [the] next game and winning a championship.' Joining Mathurin in wreaking havoc in the second unit: backup point guard McConnell, who became just the 16th player to score 10 points, dish 5 assists and snag 5 steals in a Finals game since the NBA started tracking steals in 1973 … and the first to ever do it off the bench. Three of the five steals came in the first four minutes of the second quarter, a stretch that saw the Pacers rip off an 11-2 run to erase Oklahoma City's early lead and put themselves in position to actually play with the advantage for the first time in this series. Advertisement 'We didn't start the game the way we wanted to,' Haliburton said. 'I thought our first quarter was poor. But our second unit did a great job of giving us energy to start that second quarter, and we just rode the wave from there.' Three of the five also came on inbounds passes, a longtime McConnell specialty, with two leading directly to Pacers scores — which, again, in a game that wound up being decided by just three possessions, were massive plays for Indiana, ratcheting up the intensity on the bench and in the stands to a hysterical degree. 'Yeah, I mean, I feel like that's my job, the job of people that come off the bench,' McConnell said in the Pacers' locker room after the game. '… It's the NBA Finals. We've got to bring that energy — all of us. Because if we don't, it's doing a disservice to these fans and this organization. We've got to continue to bring energy to the highest level.' 'When T.J. is playing with that type of energy — I mean, obviously, the crowd loves him,' Siakam said. 'So it's great for us, because every time he does something good, they go crazy.' (Haliburton joked about McConnell's, um, special connection with the Indiana fanbase: 'I call him the 'Great White Hope.'') Advertisement Those momentum-swinging steals are also, in turn, massively deflating for Oklahoma City. 'Yeah, those plays hurt, especially because they're very controllable,' said NBA MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. 'They sucked,' added Thunder forward Jalen Williams. Mathurin's downhill aggressiveness, McConnell's mix of defensive playmaking and pedal-to-the-metal attacking, Obi Toppin's exceedingly athletic two-way contributions (which included a couple of slick passes in the second quarter) and what Carlisle praised as Ben Sheppard's 'absolute, full-capacity effort all the time' in teaming with Andrew Nembhard to guard Gilgeous-Alexander gave the Pacers exactly what they needed on Wednesday to bounce back in a big way from their Game 2 loss, get back on top in this best-of-seven series — and put Oklahoma City in an exceedingly uncomfortable position heading into Game 4 on Friday. Advertisement Whether all of the Pacers' reserves can replicate that production remains to be seen. Given the array of options to whom Carlisle can turn, though, Indiana will enter Game 4 feeling pretty good about the chances that somebody, and possibly several somebodies, will come through with precisely what the team needs once again. 'That's the great thing about the Finals, great thing about basketball,' Haliburton said. 'When you have a team with this much depth, it can be anybody's night.'

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