Kentucky guard Jaland Lowe withdraws from NBA Draft
LEXINGTON, Ky. (FOX 56) — Kentucky has now officially sealed the deal on its starting point guard after Jaland Lowe announced on Thursday that he would withdraw from the 2025 NBA Draft.
Lowe broke the news on Instagram, stating, 'Can't miss out on this opportunity.'
He comes to Lexington with two years of eligibility remaining. Last season, as a sophomore, he averaged a team-high 16.8 ppg, 5.5 assists per game, and 4.2 rebounds.
Kentucky guard Jaland Lowe withdraws from NBA Draft
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'Jaland is an incredibly explosive, playmaking, veteran point guard,' Pope said. 'He's a great kid who has a tremendous work ethic and, most importantly, loves this game and wants nothing more than to win,' said head coach Mark Pope.
Lowe is projected to make a direct impact next season with the Cats.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
How Pacers coach Rick Carlisle helped Thunder GM Sam Presti break into NBA C-suite
How Pacers coach Rick Carlisle helped Thunder GM Sam Presti break into NBA C-suite A general manager's job is to win now and plan for the future. It's not easy. Since taking the Thunder job in 2007, Sam Presti has turned the franchise into one of the NBA's best. Show Caption Hide Caption Pacers and Thunder NBA Finals is better than it's 'small-market' billing USA TODAY Sports' Jeff Zillgitt breaks down the star-studded NBA Finals between the Indiana Pacers and Oklahoma City Thunder. Sports Pulse OKLAHOMA CITY — Thunder executive vice president and general manager Sam Presti is a student of the game. Not just of the people who played in the NBA, but the people behind the scenes, the GMs and front-office executives who helped define the position and made it what it is today – an indispensable role necessary to competing for championships. When Presti was named NBA Executive of the Year last month, he released a statement and within, mentioned several former executives: Wayne Embry, Kevin O'Connor, Jack McCloskey, Rod Thorn, Sam Schuler, Mark Warkentien, John Gabriel, Bob Whitsitt, Carroll Dawson, Scott Layden and Geoff Petrie among others. Some of those names are familiar. Some are forgotten. But not to Presti, who made sure the trailblazers are appreciated. ANALYSIS: A tale of two point guards: Thunder have MVP, Pacers have Mr. Clutch OPINION: Thunder filled with regret after fumbling NBA Finals Game 1 Presti, 47, started in this business when he was 22 – a video intern for the San Antonio Spurs in 2000. Quickly, Presti, who graduated from and played basketball at Emerson College in Boston, moved into the scouting and player personnel department. He began traveling and got to know those executives he named. Sitting with them at airports. Visiting European cities with them in search of a hidden gem. They might arrive at a gym in Ljubljana only to find out the player they wanted to scout was no good. Maybe they traded NBA apparel for a VCR cassette recording of a potential prospect. Or maybe Presti saw something in a young Tony Parker and encouraged the Spurs to draft him. Spending time with Embry, O'Connor, McCloskey, Gabriel, Dawson and others, Presti learned about team building. McCloskey's work with the Detroit Pistons' Bad Boys in the 1980s left an impression. McCloskey shipped fan favorite Adrian Dantley to the Dallas Mavericks for Mark Aguirre. The smaller trades were important, too, and acquiring Rick Mahorn helped shape Detroit's 1989 championship. Consider a couple of Presti's moves: Trading Paul George to the Los Angeles Clippers for Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and trading Josh Giddey to Chicago for Alex Caruso. Embry drafted Brad Daugherty, Ron Harper and acquired Mark Price in a draft-day trade, turning the Cleveland Cavaliers into one of the top teams in the East. Think about some other moves Presti has made: drafted Aaron Wiggins No. 55 in 2021; drafted Chet Holmgren No. 2 overall, Jalen Williams No. 12 and Jaylin Williams No. 34 in 2022; selected Cason Wallace No. 10 in 2023; drafted Ajay Mitchell No. 38 in 2024; signed Isaiah Joe and Isaiah Hartenstein in free agency. Presti has found value through the three-pronged approach to team-building: trades, draft picks and free-agent signings. How Sam Presti built the Thunder for long-term success A GM's job is to win now and plan for the future. It's not easy. Since taking the Thunder job in 2007, Presti has turned the franchise into one of the best in the NBA. From 2009-10 through 2019-20, the Thunder made the playoffs 10 times in 11 seasons, reaching the NBA Finals in 2012 with Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook and James Harden and the Western Conference finals in 2011, 2012, 2014 and 2016. They averaged 51 wins in that span. After 2019-20, Presti promoted Mark Daigneault from assistant to head coach and embarked on a rebuild that has led to this Finals appearance. Presti wants another decade of 50-win seasons and championship-caliber teams. The Thunder won 57 games last season, 68 this season and are set up contractually to keep Gilgeous-Alexander, Holmgren and Jalen Williams. MORE: How Shaq 'flipped the script,' expanding fortune after retirement ANALYSIS: Unsung heroes? Underrated players who could make a difference in NBA Finals 'I didn't know much about professional basketball before I came here, and so my entire philosophy in professional basketball was underneath the umbrella of the Thunder organization,' said Daigneault, who was an assistant for Billy Donovan at Florida before joining the franchise in 2014. 'Our philosophical alignment is so tight because of that, because this is the only place I've ever worked and this is the only way I've ever done it, and a lot of it is stuff I've learned from Sam and learned from being in this organization in terms of understanding that these organizations are robust. 'It's not just you coaching your team. You're part of a large ecosystem of developing players and developing a team, and you're executing a large strategy for an organization. Those are things that have to exist in order to be a sustainably successful team in the NBA.' Pacers coach Rick Carlisle first met Presti 25 years ago, and Carlisle told reporters that after the Pacers fired him in 2000, he spent time around the Spurs. 'He is from the Boston area. So, he had grown up a Celtics fan,' Carlisle said. 'He actually remembered when I played, which was miraculous to me. Seemed like he was probably way too young for that. We had a couple of dinners together. He asked me, 'What can I do? I got to somehow get a job out of this.' 'I said, 'Just become a guy they can't live without.' ' Presti has done that – first with the Spurs and now during nearly two decades with the Thunder. He has an expert eye for talent, a special knack for roster construction and a clear understanding of the collective bargaining agreement/salary cap machinations. He has the vision to see where the league is headed. 'Sam is a great demonstration of resourcefulness and wherewithal and stuff like that,' Carlisle said. 'He's forged himself a great career. He and (Indiana's) Kevin Pritchard are two of the best franchise builders around.' Shai Gilgeous-Alexander on Sam Presti: 'Seemed like a guy I can trust' Presti also has built relationships with players. It's not a one-way transaction. When the Thunder traded for George, Presti ‒ who has forged relationships with city leaders through philanthropy and commitment to Oklahoma City ‒ kept an open dialogue and when the time came, found a deal that worked for both sides. And he may have found an even better one for the Thunder and Gilgeous-Alexander, this season's NBA MVP. 'He's honest and upfront with me from day one,' Gilgeous-Alexander said. 'That helped our relationship right away. You don't get that very often, especially that early. Seemed like a guy I can trust. He's been that. I just try to be the same back to him. Nothing more than just two guys with good character trusting each other and have one common goal in mind.' You won't hear much from Presti during the Finals. TV cameras may catch him watching a home game from a tunnel near the Thunder's bench. He does two interviews a year, at the start of the season and after it's over, preferring the focus go to players and coaches. And other GMs who came before him and did the job with fewer resources financially, technologically and personnel-wise. Presti has learned from the past while creating his vision for what a team that wants to capitalize on its NBA Finals window should look like today - and in the future. Follow NBA columnist Jeff Zillgitt on social media @JeffZillgitt


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
How Knicks and Wolves both won Karl-Anthony Towns-Julius Randle trade
Karl-Anthony Towns was hanging out with his father and a few friends at his house in suburban Minneapolis on the night of Friday, Sept. 29, when he got a knock at his door. Waiting on the other side was Minnesota Timberwolves president of basketball operations Tim Connelly. He had a bottle of tequila to present as a gift, and some difficult news to deliver that he could only do face-to-face, eye-to-eye. Advertisement The group gathered around a kitchen island and Connelly quickly let Towns know that the Timberwolves had agreed to trade him to the New York Knicks for Julius Randle, Donte DiVincenzo and a future first-round draft pick from the Detroit Pistons. The room immediately went quiet. Towns had spent the first nine years of his career in Minnesota and was two days away from reporting for his 10th training camp with the Timberwolves. Along with Anthony Edwards, Towns was a face of the franchise who had just helped lead the team to its first Western Conference finals appearance in 20 years. He understood the business of the league and knew that after a loss to the Dallas Mavericks the team could look to change its roster. But once the summer came and went without any major moves to the team's core, Towns was ready to go to work with his team and try to take the final step. 'There was no part of me that was willing to leave,' Towns told The Athletic in December. 'And life had a different path for me. I was stunned.' He wasn't alone. Even a week before the deal was made, Connelly was content to start the season with, essentially, the same team that lost 4-1 to Dallas. He knew that the Wolves would eventually have to address their bloated payroll, but talks with the Knicks had gone nowhere and Connelly understood that for him to trade a player of Towns' caliber, he had to get financial flexibility and existing talent that would allow the Wolves to remain competitive. Finally on that late fall Friday, the Knicks put their best offer forward, and the deal quickly took shape. Four days earlier, across the country in New York, Randle was giving back to a community that had given him so much over the previous five years. And, in turn, the people offered him one more gift. Standing on a stage, surrounded by community members, former Knicks greats and current members of the franchise, as well as NBA commissioner Adam Silver, Randle was the focus at the groundbreaking ceremony for the Earl Monroe New Renaissance Basketball High School in the South Bronx. Randle was a longtime supporter of the school and, through his foundation, donates $500 for each 3-pointer he makes during the regular season. Advertisement Unbeknownst to Randle, though, part of the groundbreaking ceremony was to honor him, and it was revealed to the multi-time All-Star that the school's basketball court would be named after him. 'What a time,' Randle said on the Knicks' Instagram account following the event. 'Happy to be a part of it. These kids are doing amazing things so make sure you guys are following it and checking it out. And I got a court named after me, too, so that's pretty cool. 'I look forward to seeing you guys soon. It's going to be a great season.' Randle shared this moment with Knicks executives, many of whom stopped by to show support. Behind those beams of pride, though, was a secret that only a handful of the hundred or so people in attendance knew: Randle, who was far off on an agreement for a contract extension with New York, could be in his final days in orange and blue. Not long after Connelly was at the doorstep of Towns' home, the Knicks returned to work up in Tarrytown, N.Y. The annual media day festivities had commenced and the Knicks were light on bodies. The trade between the Timberwolves and Knicks had been agreed upon and reported, but was not yet made official, so every player and coach who spoke had to pretend like the news that shook the NBA landscape over the weekend never happened. 'We got KAT?!' Josh Hart said with phony shock as he looked over at the team's public relations official following a question about the trade. 'Whoa! Wow!' The deal took days to finalize. Once it became official, it changed the faces of two teams that had designs on making deep playoff runs in their respective conferences. And that is exactly what happened. The Knicks and Timberwolves went through their share of growing pains in the days, weeks and months following the deal. Both were also able to persevere through those issues to advance to the conference finals. Towns played a prominent role in the Knicks' first Eastern Conference finals appearance in 25 years. Randle was one of the best players in the playoffs in Minnesota's victories over the Los Angeles Lakers and Golden State Warriors in the first two rounds out West. Advertisement In the end, one of the biggest deals of this NBA season turned out to be the rare blockbuster trade in which both teams appeared to get what they wanted. 'I think if you had asked either front office last year, 'Hey, worst-case scenario, you'll lose in the conference finals?' I think we'd have probably taken it even though we both have higher aspirations,' Connelly said this week. 'But it was fun to watch. It was fun to see all the guys in the trade do well, and they're all really, really good guys.' Shortly before the start of training camp, the Knicks got word that center Mitchell Robinson would be sidelined for longer than anyone previously anticipated. The big man suffered multiple foot/ankle injuries the season before, and the initial belief was that Robinson would be back in time for the start of the new campaign. Then his return date got pushed back to December. Then, eventually, it got pushed back to February. New York was all-in on this roster, with hopes of becoming serious Eastern Conference contenders. The previous December, the Knicks traded R.J. Barrett, Immanuel Quickley and a second-round pick to Toronto for OG Anunoby, who then signed a five-year, $212 million contract extension in June. New York's aspirations were further made clear in July when it traded five first-round picks to the Brooklyn Nets for swingman Mikal Bridges. Despite Bridges never making an All-Star Game, the organization saw his ability to defend and play as a complementary piece on offense as the perfect fit for a roster centered around the abilities of Jalen Brunson. With all of that commitment, and Robinson, who was slated to be the starting center, out for the foreseeable future, the Knicks didn't want to waste a second of their window. They pivoted and went back after Towns, whom the franchise had interest in for several years. New York saw Towns and Brunson as a damaging offensive duo. One of the best scoring guards in the league could have one of the greatest shooting big men at his disposal. The organization also viewed it as a way to get value back for Randle, as the two sides were nowhere close on a deal to keep him in New York long term. The Knicks were initially reluctant to put Donte DiVincenzo in the deal, league sources said, but ultimately viewed Towns as the perfect fit for their star guard. Towns was reunited with executive Gersson Rosas, who was the president of basketball operations in Minnesota from 2019-20. Towns is a CAA client, and the Knicks' lead decision-makers Leon Rose and William Wesley were big players in CAA before coming to New York. The trade also connected Towns with Tom Thibodeau, who he had a tricky relationship with at one time but was the first coach to give Towns a taste of team success with the Timberwolves. Advertisement 'There is some benefit to having coached him before and to know who he is as a person, but, also, that was more than five years ago,' Thibodeau said. 'He's in a different place, he's a different player. There is going to be a learning curve and we have to adjust quickly.' In a perfect world, the Timberwolves could have kept their entire core — Towns, Edwards, Jaden McDaniels, Rudy Gobert and Naz Reid — together for the long run, leaning on the experience they gained in the playoffs and smoothing out the wrinkles as they chased an NBA Finals berth. But not long after the Wolves traded for Gobert in 2022, the league adopted a new collective bargaining agreement that placed significant roster-building restrictions on its big spenders. Despite being in a mid-tier market and having a team that had won two playoff series in 35 years prior to the 2024 run to the conference finals, the Timberwolves assembled one of the league's-highest payrolls to try to set a new standard on the court. Towns, Edwards and Gobert all were making max money. McDaniels and Reid were both paid handsomely as well. Ownership was willing to pay the luxury tax to chase a championship. What the Wolves, and many other teams, are discovering in this new financial landscape is that they cannot afford to stay above the second apron of spending for too long for other reasons. Second-apron teams cannot aggregate salaries in trades, lose their midlevel exception to sign free agents and, if they are above that apron for three of the five years, have their first-round pick frozen at the bottom of the round. As Connelly looked at his cap sheet, Towns was set to make $49 million in 2024-25 and $171 million in the three years after that. With Edwards emerging as the player the team planned to build around, Connelly just did not see a way to keep Towns and be able to have the salary-cap flexibility to add enough talent to sustain a contender. In an era where super-teams were going by the wayside and depth was starting to become a vital part of championship runs, Connelly looked for ways to break one of the big contracts into multiple, more affordable players. Towns, coming off of his fourth All-Star appearance and playing exceedingly well in playoff victories over the Phoenix Suns and Denver Nuggets, had more value than Gobert, so Connelly believed that was the best way to move forward on a roster reconstruction. The Knicks had approached the Wolves several times over the previous year about Towns, league sources said, but Connelly was trying to thread a very fine needle. He not only wanted to gain financial flexibility, he wanted to avoid any kind of rebuilding phase after trading one of his most important players. Advertisement Once the Knicks included DiVincenzo and the Pistons pick in their offer for Towns, they shot to the top of Connelly's list of suitors. In Randle, he could get a player at Towns' position who had been productive for years in New York, and one that had a great rapport with Wolves coach Chris Finch because of their time together in New Orleans. DiVincenzo gave them a gritty shooter off the bench to bolster their scoring and defense, and the Pistons pick, which turned out to be No. 17 in this month's draft, gave Connelly another asset to either use in a trade or add a young player to the roster to develop. The trade not only alleviated a potential financial catastrophe down the road. It also, in the eyes of many of the Wolves' decision-makers, made them deeper, more versatile and a little tougher in the unforgiving Western Conference. The early days of the deal were difficult in Minnesota. Towns was a somewhat polarizing player locally, having racked up astronomical numbers and individual accolades by the bushel, but unable to lift the team from the gutter by virtue of his presence alone. There were plenty of Wolves fans who clamored for him to be traded after he struggled in the conference finals against the Mavericks. But Randle as the headliner of a deal for Towns was underwhelming for many, and Connelly started to take a lot of heat when the Wolves started the season 8-10 and were still just 22-21 in late January. Randle and DiVincenzo were both shocked by the trade, both needing to uproot young families days before camp. Both needed time to acclimate to a new city, new teammates and new coaches. And with Towns putting up huge numbers from the start in New York, the restlessness in the Target Center crowd was palpable. It reached full-on panic on Dec. 19, when Towns made his return to Minnesota and put up 32 points and 20 rebounds in a 133-107 Knicks wipeout. The Wolves tried to preach patience in the moment, but it wasn't easy for a scarred fan base that is used to the men's sports teams in the Twin Cities disappointing them. No men's professional team in Minnesota has won a title since the Twins in 1991, a drought that has conditioned sports fans in the area to expect the worst. Advertisement 'It's not normal to make a trade the day before the season,' DiVincenzo said after that game. 'So both sides, it takes time to adjust and great things take time. More so on our side, I believe that, but also on their side. KAT's playing really well, but it's going to take time to mesh and other guys adjust to what he does.' The Wolves missed Towns the most on two fronts. First, his chemistry with Gobert was the best on the team. Towns willingly included Gobert in the offense, throwing lobs to him in the half court to make sure opponents had to keep an eye on him on offense. One of the low points of the season for Minnesota came in a game at Toronto in November when Gobert purposely lingered in the lane for a 3-second violation because he was frustrated that Randle was not throwing him the ball. Secondly, one of the big things that held Minnesota back during the regular season was a frustrating lack of urgency against teams that were short-handed or languishing at the bottom of the standings. The Wolves lost in Portland twice, at home to Washington, at Utah and to Miami without Jimmy Butler, Milwaukee without Giannis Antetokounmpo and Damian Lillard, and the Pacers without four of their starters. Team personnel privately acknowledged that having Towns' sheer talent likely would have been enough to help them win many of those games, which could have helped their playoff seeding. Even with Towns' fast start, Knicks fans felt some uneasiness as well. New York basketball returned to relevancy over the previous few seasons behind a tough, rugged team that embodied a lot of what the city grew to love. The 2023-24 Knicks were the epitome of that. That group competed every night. It defended at a high level. It was a breath of fresh air for a fan base that had spent a lot of time over the last 20 years talking itself into players like Frank Ntilikina and Damyean Dotson, just hoping for something to believe in. Randle wasn't everyone's cup of tea. His poor defense and unwillingness to move the ball at times earned him a lot of haters in New York. However, there was always a level of respect surrounding him. The Knicks' return to stability coincided with Randle's time in New York. From 2021-2024, Randle helped New York earn three playoff appearances, two of which ended in the second round. The Knicks made the playoffs zero times between 2014-2020. In Randle's five seasons in New York, he made three All-Star appearances. Yet, a large section of the fan base wasn't upset that the Knicks decided to move on from him. In fact, it was DiVincenzo's departure that provided the most angst. Advertisement New Yorkers grew to love the ''Nova Knicks,' the trio of DiVincenzo, Brunson and Josh Hart. Their camaraderie was palpable on the floor and off of it. The three college teammates reunited to help bring the franchise its first 50-win season in a decade. DiVincenzo's game-winning 3-pointer in a 2024 second-round playoff matchup against the Philadelphia 76ers will be remembered by Knicks' faithful forever. The departure of DiVincenzo depleted the Knicks' bench, which had already taken a hit with Robinson's injury and the financial limitations the franchise faced after its recent moves. There was worry that Towns wouldn't upgrade the team enough to warrant also giving up DiVincenzo and one of the few valuable draft picks that the Knicks had left at their disposal. Through all of the pain and suffering of the first three months of the season, the Wolves managed to hold together. Oddly enough, it may have been injuries to Randle and DiVincenzo in late January and early February that allowed the team to figure things out. Randle missed 13 games with a groin injury and DiVincenzo was out 19 games with turf toe, an injury that came five games after he joined the starting lineup and began playing well. The two watched from the bench as the Wolves soldiered on, and Randle said the time observing allowed him to gain a greater understanding of where he best fit with this team. He returned to the lineup in a win over Phoenix on March 2, which kicked off a 17-4 surge to the end of the regular season that moved the Timberwolves out of the Play-In Tournament field and into the sixth seed in the West. Randle became more of a playmaker than a lead scorer, DiVincenzo started to knock down shots from the outside and the Wolves stormed past the Lakers and Warriors in the first two rounds of the playoffs, beating both teams 4-1 to earn a return trip to the conference finals. Where last year's run seemingly came out of nowhere, this one was more satisfying because none of it was easy. Advertisement 'Just sticking together, having each other's backs and just battling through adversity together, not letting hard times split us up as a group,' Randle said after beating the Warriors. 'But us having the mental toughness and determination to say we're going to figure this thing out, because all of us, as a whole, believe how good we could be as a team. I'm extremely proud of everybody within this organization and this team.' After starting the season 6-6, New York won nine of its next 12 games and then rattled off a nine-game winning streak that helped put any unrest at ease. The Knicks were firmly one of the NBA's best teams by the start of the New Year, with an offense that had come together like the decision-makers envisioned. Brunson was playing at an elite level. Towns was, too. The skilled big man shot an absurd 43 percent from 3 from the start of the season until Dec. 31. As a collective, New York had the second best offense in basketball during that period. Even the defense was in the middle of the pack. The Knicks were 24-10 after Jan. 1. Both Towns and Brunson were named All-Stars. 'It's important for us to continue to stay consistent,' Brunson said during the winning streak. 'That's what we're working on.' Yet, when the calendar turned, the Knicks' flaws started to show more regularly. The offense, statistically, was tremendous through the first 35 games, but the team struggled to generate 3-point attempts. In the final months of the year, teams started consistently guarding Towns with smaller, athletic wings and putting their centers on Hart. That mucked up New York's offense and led to a major decline from January on. Both Brunson and Towns continued to put up tremendous counting stats, but the offense as a whole wasn't nearly as dynamic as it had been. From Jan. 1 until the end of the regular season, the Knicks' offense ranked 16th in the NBA. They were 28-21 in their final 49 games. New York couldn't beat the NBA's best teams, going 0-10 against the Boston Celtics, Cleveland Cavaliers and Oklahoma City Thunder. The Knicks even had a tough time with good and mediocre teams, squeezing out nail-biting victories seemingly every other night. If not for Brunson's heroics time and time again during a stretch that lasted from the end of February to early March, the Knicks might have dropped as far as the No. 5 seed in the playoffs. Advertisement However, the team's talent overcame most of its flaws. The Knicks ended up narrowly passing the likes of Indiana and Milwaukee in the standings. New York finished the regular season as the No. 3 seed, setting up a matchup with the young, feisty Pistons. Despite having the more talented team, New York struggled with Detroit. The series went six games and the Knicks trailed going into the fourth quarter on multiple occasions. Heroics from both Brunson and Towns, as well as Bridges, allowed the Knicks to escape the first round, and it set up a second-round matchup with the defending-champion Celtics, a team that was worlds better than New York during the regular season. The playoffs appeared like they would go the same way. The Knicks were down by 20 in Game 1 but pulled off a comeback for the ages. They did it again in Game 2. New York trailed by 14 or more points in nearly every game of the series against the Celtics but still found ways to win in six games. The team built an identity as a resilient group that didn't quit. Towns' defense was as good as it had been all season behind Thibodeau's plan to allow him to guard Boston's star players one-on-one. New York, for the first time in 25 years, went to the Eastern Conference finals. 'When you're in these situations, especially in the playoffs, we had that belief that we will never lose,' Towns said. 'If you want to go deep, you have to have that. I think we showed that in this series and it was special for us. In the last series, we showed we were able to finish games in the fourth quarter and, even in the close games, we'll find ways to win. This series was different because we had ourselves in deficits that were 20-plus and still found a way to win. That's a testament to these guys.' In the end, the results speak for themselves. The Timberwolves made back-to-back conference finals for the first time in franchise history. In an interesting twist, they actually improved on offense without Towns, going from 17th in offensive efficiency last season to eighth this year, but got worse on defense, falling from first last season to sixth this year. They won seven fewer games in the regular season without Towns, but ended up in exactly the same spot at the end. Advertisement DiVincenzo was a little streaky at times, but he gave the Wolves a tough-minded shooter off the bench with a great contract — $24.5 million combined over the next two seasons. 'The fans were amazing for me and my family,' DiVincenzo said. 'They made it feel like home right away. And comfortable. It's just the beginning. It was a helluva year.' Randle averaged 23.9 points, 5.9 rebounds and 5.9 assists over the first two rounds of the playoffs and quickly grew to enjoy living in Minnesota with his wife, Kendra, their two young boys and a baby girl who arrived last month. 'I definitely found a comfort level and got used to the cold and blizzards in March and all that different type of stuff,' Randle said with a smile. 'So it was cool, man, and I enjoyed it, and I'll probably spend my summer here.' For all of the good feelings about what Minnesota accomplished and endured, there is some uncertainty. Randle can opt-out of his contract and become a free agent this summer. Through the first two rounds of the playoffs, he seemed destined to sign a new deal with the Wolves to stay for the long term. But Randle's struggles against Oklahoma City in the conference finals — he averaged 17.4 points and 3.6 turnovers in the 4-1 loss — make those decisions less straightforward. Connelly said that he hopes to bring Randle back, but also did not rule out another big trade if one presents itself and can get the Wolves closer to a championship. 'Fingers crossed, our ability to be a little more flexible could serve us well this season,' Connelly said. The Wolves' end of the deal was also aided by the unexpectedly successful season from the Pistons. The pick they acquired from New York in the trade was lottery protected, but Detroit advanced to the playoffs, allowing it to convey this year, which is important because the Wolves do not have their own pick because of the Gobert trade. Ultimately, this Knicks season was a success. The team won 51 regular-season games, one more than last year and the most in over a decade. It reached the Eastern Conference finals for the first time in 25 years. Both Brunson and Towns earned All-NBA honors. GO DEEPER Knicks' vibes weren't always immaculate, but this historic season gave plenty of hope Yet, the vibe around the organization wasn't that of one that just reached new heights. For most of the second half of the season, the team spoke about pushing egos to the sides. They spoke about sacrificing. The Knicks were a collection of talented players that never consistently jelled as one. 'We have a bunch of great guys in that locker room,' Towns said. 'We hope to put ourselves in this position again and succeed next time.' Advertisement The trade helped them go further than they have in decades, and they still weren't satisfied. They fired Thibodeau after the season ended with a Game 6 loss to the Pacers in the Eastern Conference finals and will continue their journey toward the elusive NBA title with a new voice on the sideline. Whomever takes over as head coach has to find a way to maximize a core that had a negative net rating from Jan. 1 on. The new coach has to find a way to hide the defensive deficiencies of its two star players. With that said, it's not out of the realm of possibility for New York to follow up its coaching decision with major roster moves. Towns, based off his contract alone, could be a casualty if the Knicks decide to go big-game hunting. Overall, though, Towns' first season in New York was a success. He was one of the 15 best players in the NBA, finished second in the league in rebounding with 12.8 rebounds per game and delivered one of the most memorable moments of the season when he scored 20 points in the fourth quarter of Game 3 of the Eastern Conference finals to rally the Knicks to a win over the Pacers. He was given the nickname 'Bodega KAT,' his Dominican roots and late mother's affinity for the Knicks fostering a natural connection with the city. However, with the franchise's determination to bring a championship back to the Mecca for the first time in over 50 years, anything could be on the table this summer. 'Our organization is singularly focused on winning a championship for our fans,' Rose said in a statement following the firing of Thibodeau, the most successful Knicks coach this century. Zooming out, both teams came out winners in the trade, a rarity for a deal of this magnitude. They were two of the NBA's final four, thrilling their fan bases with exhilarating rides to the conference finals. And yet, they both feel like unfinished products, still searching for the final pieces to move them from contenders to champions. (Illustration: Demetrius Robinson / The Athletic; top photos: Al Bello / Getty Images, Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images)


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Tyrese Haliburton, fueled by slights, just keeps burning brighter
OKLAHOMA CITY — If the rest of Tyrese Haliburton's magical evening went according to plan, he would spend those early-morning hours celebrating his Indiana Pacers' remarkable Game 1 NBA Finals win over the Oklahoma City Thunder, and his latest feat of playoff clutchness, at … Waffle House. As the willowy Pacers point guard sat shirtless and supremely satisfied at his locker, just minutes removed from the shot that left the place they call 'Loud City' stunned silent and sealed the Pacers' comeback from 15 points down in Thursday's 111-110 win, he discussed a possible postgame plan with a cameraman for Netflix's 'Starting 5' series, on which he'll be featured in the coming months. Advertisement 'Don't say that too loud,' he said with a smile about the proposed itinerary. 'Someone will put that out (publicly).' If ever there was a sign that the 25-year-old is still a star on the rise, famous enough to worry about his postgame hang being crashed by fans but still determined to sneak in a slice of normalcy at the restaurant once memorialized by the Jonas Brothers, this was it. LeBron James can't pop into that sort of storied establishment without getting mobbed by the masses — no matter the hour. Ditto for Steph Curry, Kevin Durant and all the other NBA old-heads who have long since become household names on a global scale. And after the late-game wizardry that Haliburton has pulled off in these playoffs, with his pull-up jumper over Cason Wallace with 0.3 seconds left marking his fourth game-winning/overtime-forcing bucket in these past two postseason months, he's heading down that path to peak prominence as well. Now raise your hand if you saw this sort of star turn coming when he was traded to Indiana back in February 2022. The Sacramento Kings certainly didn't. When the Pacers did the deal that landed them Haliburton, it was the end result of a years-long process in which the Kings tried so desperately to figure out how to form their backcourt of the future. De'Aaron Fox was the clear priority for much of that time, with former general manager Vlade Divac famously passing on Luka Dončić in the 2018 draft, in large part, because he couldn't envision them co-existing. But by the time 2022 came, when then-general manager Monte McNair and assistant general manager Wes Wilcox were looking for ways to turn their middling team into a playoff contender, Fox's market value had plummeted to the point where Haliburton became the focal point of their rebuilding efforts. League sources say the Kings explored trades involving Fox, who had recently signed a five-year, $160 million deal, but simply didn't find a suitable return. Advertisement The discussions with the Pacers, league sources say, were two-pronged but quickly turned from Fox to Haliburton when it was clear that was the only real avenue to a deal. In turn, with first-year Indiana coach Rick Carlisle on the lookout for a point guard who could push the pace and help them return to contention, the Pacers sent All-Star big man Domantas Sabonis, Jeremy Lamb, Justin Holiday and a 2027 second-round pick to the Kings in exchange for Haliburton, Buddy Hield and Tristan Thompson. Yet while that deal looked like a win-win for both sides when the Kings were enjoying their 'Beam Team' run two years ago, it has since become one-sided in the kind of way that reflects incredibly well on the quality of the Pacers program (and, conversely, not so well on the Kings in light of their latest coaching change in December, decision to trade Fox to San Antonio in February, a second consecutive playoff absence in April and yet another front-office change shortly thereafter). With longtime Pacers president of basketball operations Kevin Pritchard and general manager Chad Buchanan at the helm, Indiana made the bold move to add Pascal Siakam (via trade with Toronto) in January 2024, then gave him a max deal the following summer that — in light of his dynamic playoff run — has aged very well. The Pacers, with a longtime owner in Herb Simon who has always preferred retooling over rebuilding, went from missing the playoffs for three consecutive seasons to back-to-back Eastern Conference finals appearances and this NBA Finals run that they hope ends with the franchise's first title. And Haliburton, the two-time All-Star out of Iowa State who was drafted 12th overall by the Kings in 2020, has been the one leading the way. 'Our team was kind of at a crossroads,' Buchanan told The Athletic by phone on Friday while reflecting on the Haliburton trade. 'We didn't really have a guy, like a young player, that you could really build around. Now Domas (Sabonis) was a terrific player and a very productive player. But we felt like in today's modern NBA, it's hard to build around a center unless you've got, like, a (Denver Nuggets star Nikola) Jokić — an MVP-caliber center. So we tried to target some young guards, playmaking guards around the league that we thought maybe fit the bill. They're very hard to acquire, obviously. 'We felt like Tyrese, with the way Rick wanted to play, and how we want to build a team in the modern NBA — playing faster, playing a little more random. Tyrese was one of the ideal targets to try to build that type of system around. That's what coach Carlisle values, and has developed his philosophy (around) over the years and where we're at today. It was just a great fit from that standpoint.' Advertisement When it came to the Pacers' view of Haliburton's competitive fiber, they were well aware that he had a chip-on-the-shoulder ethos. From his recruiting status heading into college to his NBA Draft position and beyond, he has been vocal about feeling slighted since those early years. But what they couldn't have seen coming, and what was on such full display this season, was the way in which the continued disrespect in some circles would inspire him to reach even greater heights. Exhibit A: His infamous selection as the league's 'Most Overrated Player' in The Athletic's anonymous player poll earlier this spring. Haliburton is well aware that the sample size of the exercise is small, with a total of 13 players voting for him among the 90 who took part in that specific question. Still, he leaned into the storyline as if it were part of one of those WWE productions he loves so much. Haliburton, whose affinity for pro wrestling has led to his inclusion in the latest edition of WWE2k25 video game, has no problem playing the heel. For the league's promotional purposes, that's the part where Game 1 was a best-case scenario in every imaginable way. Even beyond the discussion about ratings, what the NBA needs now is for the young stars in this matchup to show the mainstream masses why their teams are on this storied stage. That's how a small-market matchup can help grow the game in the long term. So recently named MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (who is also one of the five players featured on the second season of Netflix's show) showed out like he almost always does, finishing with 38 points before missing several late buckets that could have turned the tide. Haliburton's late heroics meant he earned the spotlight afterward, when he showcased his flashy side by donning sunglasses at the news conference podium and shamelessly promoted his new signature sneaker that — talk about timing — launched on that same day. Like him or not, all of his most marketable qualities were there for all to see. Best sneaker rollout EVER? Tyrese Haliburton hit an NBA Finals game-winner in the same game he debuted his first signature shoe…then he put the shoes on FULL DISPLAY ON THE TABLE at the postgame press conference 😂😂 — Hater Report (@HaterReport_) June 6, 2025 Regardless of what comes next, the Indiana win in the series opener quieted all that noise about these NBA Finals being a Thunder coronation while legitimizing the Pacers in a way few saw coming. And Haliburton, who plays this underdog role so well, isn't about to go quietly. If he goes at all. 'After you have a run like last year and you get swept in the Eastern Conference finals, and all the conversation is about how you don't belong there and how you lucked out to get there and that it was a fluke, guys are going to be pissed off,' he said after Game 1. 'You have an unsuccessful first couple months (the Pacers started 10-15), and now it's easy for everyone to clown you and talk about you in a negative way, and I think as a group we take everything personal. … It's not just me. It's everybody. I feel like that's the DNA of this group, and that's not just me. … We do a great job of taking things personal, and that gives this group more confidence. Advertisement 'I'm really proud of this group. We've just all got each other's back at every point. Any negative thing that's said about anybody, we've got full belief in each other. So the more that's talked about, like right now, we're whatever underdog that gives us more confidence as a group. We enjoy that.' Especially when it ends like this. watching Tyrese Haliburton's game winner on repeat 🔁 — Indiana Pacers (@Pacers) June 6, 2025 'Tyrese has a special energy to him,' Buchanan said. 'You know that, when the game is really on the line, (that) he's got a lot of self-belief. But I think the most important part is he feels it from everybody else around him, a belief in him and that we trust he's gonna make the right play when the ball's in his hands. 'When you feel that from the people around you, that they know you and trust you and believe in you, that just gives you a little extra confidence and sometimes the great things like you're seeing right now (happen).' Tyrese Haliburton is unique in every single way as a playmaker. Because of that, so are his Indiana Pacers. (Top photo of Tyrese Haliburton: Gregory Shamus / Getty Images)