logo
‘No reason to have disappointment' about draft position: UConn star

‘No reason to have disappointment' about draft position: UConn star

New York Post4 hours ago

Liam McNeeley was thrilled for his friends and high school teammates, Cooper Flagg, Derik Queen and Asa Newell, who were getting drafted.
But he kept on waiting for his turn. It was past 11 p.m., and the Connecticut star still hadn't heard his name called.
Then it finally happened.
With the 29th selection in the first round of Wednesday's NBA draft, the 6-foot-7 wing was off the board.
He was taken by the Suns, but the pick was reportedly dealt to the Hornets.
'I've been dreaming of this moment since I was five years old,' McNeeley said shortly after walking across the Barclays Center stage and shaking NBA commissioner Adam Silver's hand. 'This is all I've ever wanted, and this is where the work really begins. So just all the memories and people that have helped me get to where I am, that's where the tears came from.
'It takes so much sacrifice and dedication and passion. I've missed out on a lot of hangouts with my friends, a lot of time with my family. But it's all worth it to me. I love basketball.'
McNeeley enjoyed a standout lone season in college with UConn.
He averaged 14.5 points, 6.0 rebounds and 2.3 assists, helping the Huskies win an NCAA Tournament game for the third straight season.
Liam McNeeley celebrates after being selected with the No. 29 pick in the 2025 NBA Draft on June 25, 2025.
AP
He became the fifth Connecticut first-round pick in the past five years.
There were questions about his ability to defend at the next level, along with his 3-point percentage of 31.7.
Ultimately, those issues contributed to the Texan falling to the bottom of the first round.
But McNeeley insisted he wasn't upset afterward. He was more relieved.
UConn star Liam McNeeley is all smiles after he was drafted.
NBAE via Getty Images
'You know, there's no reason to have disappointment,' McNeeley said. 'I just got drafted to play in the NBA.'
McNeeley was one of two Big East players drafted in the first round.
Thomas Sorber of Georgetown was the other.
He was taken 15th by the defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder.
Asked which players he was looking forward to facing in the league, McNeeley immediately thought of his former Montverde Academy (Fla.) teammates Flagg, Queen and Newell.
'Getting to play against them is going to be amazing,' he said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How to watch the 2025 NBA Draft Round 2: Time, TV channel, schedule, date, streaming
How to watch the 2025 NBA Draft Round 2: Time, TV channel, schedule, date, streaming

Fox Sports

time44 minutes ago

  • Fox Sports

How to watch the 2025 NBA Draft Round 2: Time, TV channel, schedule, date, streaming

The 2025 NBA Draft is here! After an action-packed day 1, day 2 continues later tonight. Here are the full details of how you can watch all the action for the 79th edition of the NBA Draft: When is the 2025 NBA Draft Round 2? What time does it start? The 2025 NBA Draft will continue on June 26, 2025. Coverage starts at 8 p.m. ET. This is the second time that the draft used a two-night format. LeBron James said that Cooper Flagg is "going to be amazing". Colin Cowherd discusses Flagg's potential in the NBA and if he'll have an immediate impact with the Dallas Mavericks if they select him. How can I watch the 2025 NBA Draft? What channel will it be on? The second round of the 2025 NBA Draft will be available on ESPN and the ESPN App. How can I stream the NBA Draft? You can stream the NBA Draft on any streaming service that carries ESPN, like Sling or YouTube TV. Where is the NBA Draft? The 2025 NBA Draft will be hosted at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. When was the 2025 NBA Draft Lottery? The 2025 NBA Draft Lottery was on May 11 in Chicago, IL. What is the 2025 NBA Draft order for Round 2? The second round of the NBA draft kicks off with the Minnesota Timberwolves. They are followed by the Boston Celtics and Charlotte Hornets. Check out the full order and picks. Who are some of the top prospects left in the NBA Draft? There is plenty of talent left in the 2025 NBA Draft. The top prospects remaining at the start of Day 2 on our big board include: Ryan Kalkbrenner Johni Broome Maxime Raynaud Noah Penda Check out our full list of prospect rankings. How does the NBA Draft work? In advance of the draft lottery broadcast, an actual lottery takes place with a representative from the accounting firm Ernst & Young overseeing the entire process. The results of that drawing are then sealed in an envelope for NBA deputy commissioner and chief operating officer Mark Tatum to reveal in descending order to a panel of 14 anxious team representatives. The No. 1 pick in the draft is awarded to the team that draws the winning four-number combination from the lottery machine. There are 14 ping-pong balls numbered one through 14, with each number representing a different lottery team. In total, there are 1,001 possible four-number combinations, but only one winning combination. Once a winner is selected, the drawing process is repeated to determine picks 2-4. The rest of the draft is done in order of win percentage. How many rounds does the NBA Draft have? Since 1989, the NBA Draft has consisted of two rounds. In the '60s, the drafts ran until teams had run out of prospects, leading to drafts lasting up to 21 rounds. In 1974, 10 rounds were more common and in 1985 it was shortened to seven rounds. The NBPA and NBA agreed to limit the draft to two rounds with undrafted players given the chance to try out for any team. When was the 2025 NBA Draft Combine? The 2025 NBA Draft Combine took place from Sunday, May 11, 2025, to Sunday, May 18, 2025, in Chicago, IL. recommended Get more from National Basketball Association Follow your favorites to get information about games, news and more in this topic

The first round of the NBA Draft is in the books
The first round of the NBA Draft is in the books

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

The first round of the NBA Draft is in the books

Yahoo Sports AM is our daily newsletter that keeps you up to date on all things sports. Sign up here to get it every weekday morning. 🚨 Headlines ⚾️ Misiorowski dazzles again: Brewers rookie Jacob Misiorowski outdueled Paul Skenes with yet another sensational start in Milwaukee's win over Pittsburgh, improving to 3-0 with just 3 hits allowed through his first three career starts. Advertisement 🏒 Oilers trade Kane: Edmonton has traded forward Evander Kane, a 16-year veteran, to the Canucks in exchange for a fourth-round pick in this week's NHL Draft. ⚾️ Bonds getting statue: While Barry Bonds remains locked out of Cooperstown, it sounds like he may soon be immortalized in San Francisco. Giants CEO Larry Baer says they plan to erect a statue. "It's coming," he said. 🏀 Bonner breakup: The Fever released DeWanna Bonner just four months after signing her in free agency. The six-time All-Star requested to be waived because "the fit did not work out." ⚾️ Sox fan banned: A 22-year-old White Sox fan has been banned from MLB games indefinitely after taunting Diamondbacks star Ketel Marte about his late mother during Tuesday's game in Chicago. 🏀 NBA Draft: 30 dreams come true (Yahoo Sports) The first round of the 2025 NBA Draft saw three Duke players go in the top 10 and a record 18 freshmen get selected. Advertisement Plus: The Trail Blazers shocked the world by picking Yang Hansen at No. 15, the Nets made history by using all five of their picks, and many tears were shed. (Yahoo Sports) Go deeper: Winners and losers 🏀 One high school, four draftees (Timoth A. Clary/AFP via Getty Images) The only team with more 2025 NBA first-round draft picks than Cooper Flagg's Duke? Cooper Flagg's prep team, Montverde Academy. Flagg was the No. 1 recruit out of high school and went No. 1 in the draft. Derik Queen (Maryland) was the No. 18 recruit and went No. 13 in the draft. Asa Newell (Georgia) was the No. 13 recruit and went No. 23 in the draft. Liam McNeeley (UConn) was the No. 17 recruit and went No. 29 in the draft. Best high school team ever? You will not be shocked to hear that Montverde went 33-0 and won the national championship during their senior year. They were so stacked that they adopted a system where they'd rotate starters and have a different player come off the bench. Newell (left), McNeeley and Queen. (Kai Tsehay/NBAE via Getty Images) Talent pipeline: While this was a historic class for the Florida prep school, Kevin Boyle's program* is no stranger to draft night. Cade Cunningham, Joel Embiid, Scottie Barnes, RJ Barrett, Jalen Duren, Andrew Nembhard, Ben Simmons, D'Angelo Russell and many other current and former NBA players also went there. Advertisement *On the move: Boyle departed this spring for Spire Academy (Ohio) after leading Montverde to eight of the past 12 national championships. 🥎 Pro softball's moment is here Volts utility player Danieca Coffey celebrates a HR. (AUSL) Has professional softball's moment finally arrived? MLB certainly seems to think so. Meet the AUSL: The new Athletes Unlimited Softball League's inaugural season began earlier this month, and a week before the first pitch it secured an eight-figure investment from Major League Baseball as a strategic partner. "This is a watershed moment for women's sports and especially for softball," said AUSL commissioner and former Marlins GM Kim Ng. "MLB's investment will supercharge our efforts to build the sustainable professional league this sport has long deserved." AUSL, explained: Athletes Unlimited launched in 2020 with a unique concept for women's professional sports, using fantasy-style scoring to crown individual champions in their softball, basketball and volleyball leagues that redraft new teams each week. AUSL takes a different tack, giving AU its first traditional, team-based league. Advertisement Teams and format: Four teams (Bandits, Talons, Volts, Blaze) are playing a 24-game barnstorming season across 10 cities, with plans to expand to six city-based teams next summer. The season culminates in a best-of-three championship in late July, followed by the All-Star Cup in August, which will revert to AU's original redraft format. Players: Rosters are peppered with recent college superstars like 2025 POY Bri Ellis (Arkansas), 2021 pitcher of the year Odicci Alexander (JMU) and four-time Women's College World Series champion Tiare Jennings (Oklahoma). How to watch: All 72 games, including those in the All-Star Cup, will air on linear TV, with a majority broadcast across ESPN's platforms. What they're saying: "Our goal is to get a softball league into the same position of stability that the WNBA has found," says MLB commissioner Rob Manfred. It's a tall task, to be sure, but the sport appears to be in a prime position to take it on. McKenzie Clark, part of AUSL's first-ever trade, slides into home plate. (AUSL) Business is booming: After decades of professional softball leagues failing to gain traction, MLB's historic investment and the current landscape should combine to give AUSL a real chance of breaking through. This year's WCWS was the most-watched ever across its 15-game slate, with Game 3 of the Finals drawing a college softball record 2.4 million viewers. That's more than watched the first round of the Masters (2.3M) or Duke-UNC in the ACC tournament semifinals (2.3M). Texas Tech's NiJaree Canady signed two $1 million NIL deals this year. That type of star power is exactly what the AUSL is banking on, with fans following their favorite players from college to the pros like they do in other major leagues. Looking ahead: The next few years are critical. If the league has a strong start, it can take that momentum straight into 2028, when softball returns to the Olympic program in Los Angeles. 📚 Good reads (Dillon Minshall, Yahoo Sports) 🥊 Elliot Worsell: Deontay Wilder's right hand can only break things, not fix them Advertisement Once one of the most ferocious fighters on the planet, Tuscaloosa's former heavyweight king returns Friday as a cause for concern rather than the cause of fear. (James Pawelczyk/Yahoo Sports) 🏀 Jeff Eisenberg: Why AI — and how to use it — has become the NBA's biggest secret As basketball analytics have altered the game, NBA teams have become more and more secretive about how they use the heaps of data available to them. (Matthew Grimes Jr./) ⚾️ Jake Mintz: Braves still face an uphill battle, but with Ronald Acuña Jr., anything seems possible Since missing the last four months of 2024 and the first two months of this season while recovering from his second career ACL surgery, Acuña has reemerged like a bat out of hell. 📺 Watchlist: Thursday, June 26 Real Madrid during Sunday's match against Pachuca. () The group stage concludes today with four more games, headlined by Juventus vs. Manchester City in Orlando (3pm ET, TNT) — though both sides have already clinched knockouts. Later, Real Madrid and RB Salzburg square off in Philly (9pm, DAZN), with their spots not yet secured. Advertisement 🏀 NBA Draft, Round 2 | 8pm, ESPN 29 more players will hear their name called tonight in Brooklyn. Some of the best players still available include Stanford's Maxime Raynaud, Creighton's Ryan Kalkbrenner and Arkansas' Adou Thiero. ⚽️ USWNT vs. Ireland | 9pm, TBS A relatively inexperienced roster of Americans (six uncapped players) take the field in the Denver suburbs for their first of three friendlies in the next week, as head coach Emma Hayes will use this window to widen the player pool. More to watch: 🏀 WNBA: Sparks at Fever (7pm, Prime); Mystics at Aces (10pm, Prime) … Can Caitlin Clark rebound from her season-low six-point performance? ⛳️ PGA: Rocket Classic (6:45am, ESPN+; 3pm, Golf) … No. 5 Collin Morikawa and No. 7 Keegan Bradley headline the 156-player field at Detroit Golf Club. Today's full slate → 🇺🇸 Geography quiz (GraphicaArtis/Getty Images) The Pine Tree State is in the spotlight this week thanks to Maine native Cooper Flagg. Advertisement Question: What's the capital of Maine? Portland Lewiston Augusta Concord Answer at the bottom. 🤟 Longhorns on top (Davis Long/Yahoo Sports) For the fourth time in the last five years, Texas won the Directors' Cup as the nation's top athletic department, edging out USC and Stanford. Coming up: What's the Directors' Cup? What separates the Longhorns from the competition? How close was this year's finish? We'll dive deeper tomorrow. Trivia answer: Augusta We hope you enjoyed this edition of Yahoo Sports AM, our daily newsletter that keeps you up to date on all things sports. Sign up here to get it delivered to your inbox every weekday morning.

Celtics give injury updates on Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown
Celtics give injury updates on Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown

CBS News

timean hour ago

  • CBS News

Celtics give injury updates on Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown

There is no timeline for Jayson Tatum to return from his ruptured Achilles, and the Boston Celtics don't anticipate having one anytime soon. At least the news is better on Boston's other injured star, Jaylen Brown. Celtics president of basketball ops. Brad Stevens held court with reporters late Wednesday night after taking Spanish wing Hugo Gonzalez with the No. 28 pick in the NBA Draft, but also gave a quick update on the health and well-being of Boston's top two players. Stevens said both Tatum and Brown have been training at the Auerbach Center on a daily basis and are fully committed to their rehabs. "It's usually the time of the year when I don't see those guys a lot," said Stevens. "They usually go and kind of rest, and get away, but they've both prioritized getting better and rehabbing, and after a long season, I appreciate that about them." No timeline for Jayson Tatum Tatum ruptures his Achilles in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference semifinals against the New York Knicks, but was able to undergo surgery the very next day. That is expected to expedite his return, though he'll likely miss the entire 2025-26 season. And the Celtics are not going to rush the 27-year-old back. Stevens was asked if there is a timeline for Tatum's return, and said not to expect one for a while. "We don't and we won't. We won't put a projected timeline on him for a long, long time," said Stevens. "As we look at it, there's no reason to. It's baby steps right now." Stevens said that Tatum has "progressed great" so far, but knows it's a long road ahead for the six-time NBA All-Star. "I don't know what that means with regard to projected timelines," he said. "That'll be in consultation with him and [team trainers] Nick [Sang] and Phil Coles and everybody else to make sure that when he hits the court, he is fully ready and fully healthy. That will be the priority." Jaylen Brown expected back before training camp Stevens gave a soft timeline for Brown, who had to undergo a procedure for a partially torn meniscus. Brown has already returned to limited on-court activities, and the Celtics are expecting him to be ready to go "well ahead" of training camp. "He's doing great," Stevens said of Brown. "His rehab looks good. He was actually on the court the other day doing some ball handling and doing some light work around the rim. Nothing big movement-wise yet." Priorities for rest of Celtics offseason While the moves aren't yet official, the Celtics are reportedly trading away veterans Jrue Holiday and Kristaps Porzingis, moves that have put the team get under the vaunted second apron. Stevens couldn't discuss the trades on Wednesday, but said the team has been focused on regaining flexibility and maximizing their assets and trade returns. Now that the Celtics are out of the second apron and have some wiggle room to sign players, Stevens is making his priority for the rest of the offseason clear. It includes bringing back a pair of fan favorites to the Boston frontcourt in veteran Al Horford and reserve big man Luke Kornet. "As you look at the rest of the team and what we're trying to do, there's no question our priorities would be to bring Al and Luke back. Those guys are huge parts of this organization," said Stevens. Both are free agents, and would likely have to take a team-friendly deal to return to Boston. "They're going to have, I'm sure, plenty of options all over the place, and that's well deserved," said Stevens. "But that would be a priority. At the same time, I don't want to put pressure on them. It would be their call, ultimately, but we would love to have those guys back." The Celtics are scheduled to make the second pick in Thursday night's second round of the NBA Draft -- No. 32 overall -- and a pair of promising big men remain on the board in Stanford's Maxime Raynaud and Creighton's Ryan Kalkbrenner.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store