The NBA’s summer of player movement may be winding down, but there are still some questions looming over teams. An ESPN panel of insiders looked at some of them on Thursday (before the Lauri Markkanen–Larry Nance–Derrick Jones Jr. three team deal broke).
Among the predictions that were made: Nick Friedell believes Damian Lillard will eventually end up with the Knicks, just not in the immediate future; Kirk Goldsberry thinks that J.J. Redick will end up with the Nets; Andrew Lopez predicts Paul Millsap will start the season not on a roster, but will be picked up mid-season.
The crew also looks at which new coaches have the hardest road ahead: Chauncey Billups with the Blazers and Willie Green with the Pelicans each received two votes, while Jason Kidd with the Mavericks received one.
And, of course, the much-discussed Ben Simmons–Sixers impasse was the first topic of debate.
We have more news from around the world of hoops:
- The NBA will require its referees to be vaccinated against COVID-19, barring medical or religious exemptions, the league announced today. A report from ESPN laid out the scope of the policy, including that referees will receive booster shots once those become recommended, and that refs without an approved exemption who aren’t vaccinated will not be eligible to work games.
- Knicks center Nerlens Noel‘s lawsuit has the potential to change the NBA-agent landscape, writes Jake Fischer of Bleacher Report. Fischer writes that as opposed to the league’s tampering rules between teams and players, there are no such prohibitions on agents trying to poach clients, and that this unprecedented peek behind the curtain could give the league incentive to put some protections in place.
- John Jenkins has signed with BCM Gravelines-Dunkerque in France, reports Hoops Rumors’ JD Shaw (via Twitter). Jenkins played eight seasons in the NBA, averaging 5.0 PPG while shooting 36.7% from three on 319 career attempts. Jenkins recently participated with the Team USA select team as Team USA prepared for their eventual gold medal run.
- Dakota Mathias has agreed to sign with the G League Ignite, reports Michael Scotto of HoopsHype. The 26-year-old played eight games for the Sixers as one of their two-way contracts last season, and Scotto reports that several teams have interest in him as a two-way player again this year. Mathias averaged six PPG and 1.6 APG in 15.4 minutes a night for Philadelphia.
First! YES! Agents are like real estate brokers for sure!
you baseball guys need to get out more.
I feel embarrassed for Noel. That being said, he doesn’t come across as very sharp
I feel bad for him being lied to and cheated by rich paul, glad he’s gonna win his lawsuit against him
Noel will never win this lawsuit, is more is gonna cost him all the expenses Paul will rack up in attorneys fees, so way to go to lose even more money, some people can’t stop losing it, right?
He’s not even worth the $9M/year he got, let alone what R. Paul promised.
I can’t really see how the NBA can put any rules in place regarding which agent a player chooses to align himself with. Not saying the players always make wise choices, but if a player wants to change agents for any reason, how can the league get involved?
I could care less about anything—But Damian Lillard coming to the Knicks