Killian Hayes made his Nets debut on Thursday, recording five points, three assists and a block in 21 minutes off the bench. A former lottery pick, the French guard was recently given a 10-day contract by Brooklyn after spending the entire season with the team’s G League affiliate in Long Island.
“I felt very grateful,” Hayes said, per Collin Helwig of NetsDaily. “I felt like a lot of work got put into this, and I’m just very grateful for this opportunity.”
As Helwig notes, the last game of Hayes’ 10-day deal is March 1 against the Pistons, the team that cut him last February after spending most of four seasons in Detroit. For now, the 23-year-old says he’s trying to take things one day at a time.
“My goal is to stay in the NBA, make a mark for myself,” Hayes said. “But I think my short-term goals are, you know, just be a team player, show what I can do in these 10 days I have, and just keep going from there. Just helping my teammates, being a great teammate, being a great locker room guy, and just do what I have to do.”
Here’s more from Brooklyn:
- Hayes wasn’t the only player who earned a promotion on Thursday, as Tyrese Martin was also converted from his two-way contract to a two-year, standard deal. Martin’s career has taken a circuitous route to reach this point, and he admits a weight was lifted after learning of the news, according to Helwig. “Just coming in every day, with a great mindset, just trying to get one percent better,” Martin said of his journey. “You know, being a great person and just being the best teammate I could be even when things might not be going how I want them to go. So I just stuck to those three things and, you know, it just panned out the way for me the way I wanted it to.” Head coach Jordi Fernandez praised Martin for his work ethic and character, Helig adds, stating that the 25-year-old wing has consistently done an “amazing job” since he’s been with the team.
- Veteran forward Cameron Johnson was heavily involved in trade rumors leading up to the deadline, but the Nets wound up hanging onto him. Explaining that decision in a team-produced interview (YouTube link), general manager Sean Marks praised Johnson’s fit both on and off the court. “With Cam, there was a lot of interest in him just as there was with a lot of our guys but we like Cam and we think Cam fits multiple builds that we are doing,” Marks said (story via NetsDaily). “He’s a voice of reason. He’s well-respected within that locker room. He’s a pro’s pro. So if people can learn from somebody, they learn from Cam Johnson. That’s a great guy to pick up habits from.”
- If the Bucks decide to entertain offers for Giannis Antetokounmpo this offseason, the Nets could be the frontrunners to land the two-time MVP due to all the draft assets they control, according to Brian Lewis of The New York Post. “You have to be poised and position yourself to be able to have that opportunity,” Marks told The Post earlier this season. “We’re going to give ourselves the best chance to do that. Now, on whom and when, that’s TBD.” As Lewis writes, Shams Charania of ESPN recently reported that Antetokounmpo won’t be content if Milwaukee suffers another early postseason exit, though there’s no indication that he’d request a trade in that scenario. “Everyone knows Giannis Antetokounmpo loves the Bucks, but I’m here to tell you, he loves winning more,” Charania said. “That’s why everyone in that Bucks organization knows what’s at stake: the pressure. Every summer, when Giannis looks around and looks at the Bucks’ roster, he looks at sustained, long-term winning and where he would be able to find that. And he has said audibly on the record that if he feels like that’s not attainable anymore in Milwaukee, he will look elsewhere.”
- In case you missed it, we passed along a handful of other notes related to the Nets on Thursday night, including that Cam Thomas is nearing a return from a left hamstring strain that has kept him on the shelf since Jan. 2.
Giannis values winning, so send him to Brooklyn. Makes sense.
The only caveat being that they have done this before by creating cap room and bringing in 2nd and third stars. So yeah on the surface it makes zero sense, but could they bring in someone besides Giannis? No idea who that would be, but guess you never know.
3 necessary criteria for GA trade would be:
1-Able to win the ship 2026
2- Can afford to send the package and still meet 1
3- Have the assets to appease MIL (this ones Big)
Only 5 teams meet all them Imo-
OKC HOU SAS MEM ORL
OKC and Hou trump everyone if super dedicated, if your Mil your goal is to get those 2 in a bidding war
Typically superstars direct where they’re traded to, so again i don’t get Brooklyn. I think Butler was using them as leverage if he was even asking to go there. I get they’re a big market, but come on. I do agree with your assessment especially bc the best free agents this summer have player options and could dictate where they go as well or just seem like they’ll have other plans
Yes, Brk is laughable and correct GA will have his ultimate say and it will have to be a turn-key destination. * Orl kinda shaky above but wanted to inc a East team
A lot of agents will be using Brk as the boogie man this year as the only cap team. In a way its necessary and useful to the market to not give teams carte blanche on squeezing their own players too much
I think Marks might try to make his mark on the RFA market this year a little w the 60 M. Always interesting to watch those markets play out
* If I was Marks Id set my sights on guys like NAW and Naz perhaps even on small overpays to beat the full MLE market and really put TWolves in (more of) a bind
Naz and Ty Jerome should be their 2 FA targets and given that the Nets will have more cap space than everyone else by a wide margin that’s a realistic scenario. Then add 4 1sts on top of that to the young core and they can be good very quickly. The one thing missing is a legit star but they’d be very good nonetheless.
Giannis tells reporters he’s never asking out and the next few days are followed by media trade speculation… awful journalism.