
Nets hoping to beat NBA draft lottery odds, change franchise — like they did 25 years ago
All of the Nets tanking and retooling was about Monday, about getting to the 2025 NBA Draft Lottery and, hopefully, winning it as they did a quarter century ago.
That started their turnaround from also-rans to conference champs. Can it happen again?
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The Nets head to Chicago with the sixth-best odds to win the lottery — a 9 percent chance of winning the right to select Cooper Flagg.
Coach Jordi Fernández will be their representative on the dais — and hopefully bring them good fortune.
'We're just ready to be lucky,' Fernández said recently.
Right before the Knicks will tip off their huge Game 4 playoff tilt against Boston in the Eastern Conference semifinals, the Nets will face a defining moment of their own, hoping to see deputy commissioner Mark Tatum reveal their logo for the first pick.
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4 Jordi Fernandez will represent the Nets at the NBA Draft Lottery on Monday.
JASON SZENES/ NY POST
The Nets can end up almost anywhere from first to 10th, with seventh or eighth likelier than all other spots combined. Their odds of each spot are as follows:
No. 1: 9 percent
No. 2: 9.2 percent
No. 3: 9.4 percent
No. 4: 9.6 percent
No. 5: zero percent
No. 6: 8.6 percent
No. 7: 29.7 percent
No. 8: 20.6 percent
No. 9: 3.7 percent
No. 10: 0.6 percent
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This will be the first lottery pick they've possessed since 2010. Where it lands Monday will go a long way toward determining their future.
Winning could be franchise-altering — as it was when they beat even worse odds back in 2000.
Playing in New Jersey then, the Nets went into the lottery with the seventh seed and just a 4.4 percent chance of winning. Tucked away in the NBA's Secaucus, N.J., offices just four miles from the Meadowlands, they got lucky when one of their 44 number combinations — 6-8-9-14 — was drawn in the pingpong ball lottery.
4 Sean Marks addresses the media at the Brooklyn Nets HSS Training Center in Brooklyn, New York, USA, Monday, April 14, 2025.
JASON SZENES/ NY POST
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'Being in the room as deputy commissioner Russ Granik started pulling them out … I shouted 'bingo' as they fell our way,' then-Nets co-chairman Finn Wentworth recalled to The Post.
But Wentworth, locked away in a secure location with the other team representatives, couldn't share the news with the rest of the Nets brass. In another room on another floor, they didn't find out until the envelopes were opened and principal owner Lewis Katz started joyously pumping his fist in the air.
'I was sequestered in the secure room upstairs in Secaucus NBA offices,' Wentworth said. '[I] had to wait approximately two hours after pulling 'bingo,' until halftime of [the] Knicks-Houston playoff game, for envelopes to be opened downstairs … and Russ Granik finally releasing me and other team reps to share the Nets joy downstairs.'
Unlike this loaded class — with Flagg backed up by the likes of Dylan Harper, Ace Bailey and VJ Edgecombe — that group 25 years ago was notably weak. Still, the Nets' lottery luck let them not only draft their top prospect, but land somebody even more important.
'Fortunately, the best player was Kenyon Martin, and we got him,' Wentworth said. 'Not only did we get Kenyon, but with the No. 1 draft [pick], I was able to attract Rod Thorn out of [the] NBA [league office] where he was 'Dean of Discipline' to become the president of Nets before the actual NBA draft.'
Thorn coming aboard was the jumping off point for consecutive NBA Finals berths.
'With Kenyon onboard, it was Rod who truly turned around the Nets with his trade to acquire Jason Kidd for Stephon Marbury the following year,' Wentworth told the Post. 'Next stop, golden era of Nets basketball.'
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4 New Jersey Nets to introduce number one draft pick Kenyon Martin. ( L-R ) Rod Thorn, Nets President, Kenyon Martin, and Byron Scott, Head Coach.
New York Post
4 Devils forward Cooper Flagg (2) shoots over Alabama Crimson Tide forward Mouhamed Dioubate (10) in the second half of the NCAA Division I East Regional Final at the Prudential Center, Saturday, March 29, 2025, in Newark, NJ.
Corey Sipkin for the NY POST
These Nets are further along the path already.
Fernández earned high marks in his first season. And general manager Sean Marks has amassed the most draft capital in the league and finished eighth in NBA Executive of the Year balloting.
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Monday will decide what kind of star they get to build around.
'The Nets beat the lottery odds before,' Wentworth said. 'And it could happen again.'
If the 76ers finish outside the top six, their pick conveys to Oklahoma City, and the Nets get their first-rounder next year. But if Philadelphia lands inside the top six, the selection coming to Brooklyn will be pushed back to 2028.
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Newsweek
an hour ago
- Newsweek
NBA Finals Game 2 Betting Odds, Picks, Best Bets: OKC Heavy Home Favorites
After a stunning comeback win in Game 1, the Pacers are once again heavy underdogs vs. the Thunder in Game 2 of the NBA Finals on Sunday night. After a stunning comeback win in Game 1, the Pacers are once again heavy underdogs vs. the Thunder in Game 2 of the NBA Finals on Sunday night. Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The Pacers continued their remarkable run of dramatic upsets this postseason on Thursday night in Game 1 of the NBA Finals. On the road against a Thunder team that has been heavily favored to win the NBA Finals for months, Indiana trailed 94-79 with just under 10 minutes to play in Game 1. But the Pacers once again refused to quit, and they ended up outscoring the Thunder 35-25 in the fourth quarter. 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DK FD bet365 IND spread +11 (-112) +11 (-110) +11 (-110) OKC spread -11 (-108) -11 (-110) -11 (-110) IND ML +390 +410 +425 OKC ML -520 -560 -575 Total 228.5 (o-112; u-108) 228.5 (o-114; u-106) 228.5 (o-110; u-110) How to Watch NBA Finals Game 2: Pacers vs. Thunder Tipoff: 8 p.m. ET Channel: ABC NBA Finals Series Winner Odds: OKC Remains Heavy Favorite Oklahoma City's odds to win the Finals are much shorter than they were prior to Game 1, but the Thunder remain heavily favored in this series. DraftKings : OKC -300; IND +245 FanDuel : OKC -330; IND +265 bet365 : OKC -330; IND +265 NBA Finals Game 2 Betting Picks, Analysis Why The Thunder Could Win (And/Or Cover) The Thunder lost Game 1 largely because they went cold (7-for-19, 0-for-5 from 3 in the fourth quarter) while allowing the Pacers to get hot at the wrong time (4Q FG shooting: 12-for-24, 6-for-10 3pt). OKC had a number of other issues in Game 1, though, but those problems should be fixable for a team that has been dominant throughout the regular season and playoffs. First of all, the Thunder allowed the Pacers to grab 13 offensive rebounds on just 43 missed shots in Game 1. That includes nine OREBs by Indiana on just 23 missed FGs in the second half. On the other end, the Thunder recorded just 10 offensive rebounds on 59 missed shots The Pacers were 29th in the league in offensive rebounding rate in the regular season, so it's hard to imagine OKC losing this battle throughout the series. In Game 1, Indiana not only got big rebounding nights from bigs Myles Turner (9 boards, including 5 offensive) and Pascal Siakam (10 rebounds, including 4 offensive), but also forward Aaron Nesmith (12 rebounds) and Haliburton (10 rebounds). The turnover battle will be the bigger talking point tonight. Though they already pulled it off once, the Pacers are (obviously) unlikely to upset OKC again if they regularly turn the ball over. But my question is about what OKC does with those Pacers TOs. In Game 1, Indiana survived its 24 turnovers largely because the Thunder only turned those into 11 points off turnovers. Will OKC be able to take better advantage of the turnovers it forces tonight? The last reason to like the Thunder tonight (and in this series) comes with a caveat. If we assume Jalen Williams (17 points on 6-for-19 shooting) and Chet Holmgren (6 points on 2-for-9 shooting, including an abysmal 2-for-8 from within 4 feet of the rim) will play as well as they're capable of playing throughout the rest of this series, OKC should have too much firepower for the Pacers. Related: as a team, the Thunder shot just 22-for-47 (46.8 percent) from less than 10 feet in Game 1, per Indiana went 15-for-29 on its shots from less than 10 feet. 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