Kyle Hines

Nets Notes: Bogdanovic, Simmons, Finney-Smith, Hines

The Nets got off to a better-than-expected start under new head coach Jordi Fernandez this season, winning five of their first 11 games after entering the season with the NBA’s lowest projected win total. But they were on the wrong end of a blowout on Wednesday, falling at home to the defending champion Celtics by 25 points. As Brian Lewis of The New York Post writes, Fernandez wasn’t happy with his team’s effort.

“I’m OK with losing, but I’m not okay with, at one point in the game, not fighting,” Fernandez said. “You can never, ever, ever, quit or look defeated, whatever the case may be. We have to continue to do things the right way, and if one night the other team is better than you, then you gotta respect it. But this — flashes of not doing the right things — this is not what we want to be at all.

“And we haven’t done it. It’s just easier against adversity. Whatever you want to call ‘adversity,’ to me, it’s all excuses. The NBA, it is what it is. Everybody deals with stuff and you don’t want to be like, finding the excuse. We have more than enough to be better than this. To me, that’s plain and simple.”

Fernandez’s players didn’t disagree with his assessment.

“S–t. He just pretty much stood on business,” center Nic Claxton said when asked about his coach’s comments. “We need to play hard. That’s not the way you lose. Of course, you never want to lose games. But that’s not the way that you lose. We didn’t fight all the way through.”

Here’s more out of Brooklyn:

  • The Nets haven’t provided any official update on injured forward Bojan Bogdanovic, who continues to recover from offseason surgery on his foot. Lewis hears from a source that no formal update is anticipated until sometime in December, but Fernandez addressed Bogdanovic’s progress on Wednesday. “I saw him on the court shooting (Wednesday). But playing 5-on-5 and in a real game, he’s progressing well. We’re not gonna give an exact date, but he’s doing good,” the Nets’ coach said. “He’s in good spirits, he had a good week. He was with us on the road. Having him around is important because he’s a veteran. He’ll talk in huddles, he gives guys tips on what to do and his involvement is very important.”
  • Ben Simmons (left calf tightness) and Dorian Finney-Smith (left ankle sprain) both missed Wednesday’s game vs. Boston, with Simmons undergoing an MRI on his calf, Lewis notes. Fernandez downplayed both ailments, referring to Simmons’ MRI as “precautionary” and suggesting that the former No. 1 overall pick is day-to-day. As for Finney-Smith, Fernandez said his ankle sprain isn’t serious and the team simply wants him to be “200 percent and ready to go” before he’s cleared to return.
  • Kyle Hines, a former UNC Greensboro standout who had a long, successful career in Europe, winning four EuroLeague championships, has joined the Nets’ coaching staff, according to agent Misko Razanatovic on Instagram (hat tip to Eurohoops). Hines’ exact title and role in Brooklyn is unclear.

And-Ones: Hines, NBL Blitz, Diamond Sports, Milestones

Former UNC Greensboro standout and four-time EuroLeague champion Kyle Hines announced on Wednesday that he has decided to retire as a player at age 38 (Instagram link).

Hines, who won a pair of EuroLeague titles with Olympiacos (in 2012 and 2023) and two more with CSKA Moscow (2016 and 2019), also spent time with Veroli (Italy), Brose Bamberg (Germany), and Olimpia Milano (Italy) during his 16-year professional career.

The 6’6″ forward was named to the EuroLeague’s All-Decade team for the 2010s, claimed Best Defender honors in 2016, 2018, and 2022, and will retire as the EuroLeague’s all-time leader in games played (425). He also excelled in domestic competitions, winning three Italian League (LBA) championships to go along with six titles in the Russian League (VTB United) and one in the Greek League (GBL).

“When I didn’t get drafted (in 2008), what I thought would be one of the biggest disappointments in my life turned out to be my biggest blessing,” Hines wrote within a longer statement. “Coming to Europe gave me the opportunity to grow as a person. It allowed me to compete at the highest level. It allowed me to become a competitor, a leader, and champion. Off the court it has given me the opportunity to travel the world, meet so many great people, and share in some amazing memories that will last a lifetime.”

Here are more odds and ends from around the basketball world:

  • Australia’s National Basketball League is expecting 25 NBA scouts and executives – representing 22 separate teams – to visit the Gold Coast to attend the league’s preseason tournament, the NBL Blitz, reports Olgun Uluc of ESPN. The eight teams not sending representatives are expected to scout NBL talent at a later date — the Trail Blazers, for instance, will instead attend the HoopsFest in Perth later this month, per Uluc. Nets general manager Sean Marks is among the most notable NBA executives expected to be at the NBL Blitz, according to Uluc, who notes that NBA teams will be able to scout draft-eligible prospects for 2025 and 2026 in addition to veterans who could eventually come stateside.
  • A federal bankruptcy judge signed off on Diamond Sports Group’s new agreements with the NBA and NHL on Tuesday and approved the company’s parting of ways with the Pelicans and Mavericks, reports Anthony Crupi of Sportico. The same judge will preside over a status conference in early October, with a date for a final confirmation hearing expected to be set at that session. Diamond Sports – the owner of the Bally Sports networks that will regionally broadcast 13 NBA teams’ games in 2024/25 – is looking to exit bankruptcy this fall.
  • An ESPN.com story explores a handful of individual NBA milestones that may be reached during the 2024/25 season, including Lakers star LeBron James potentially passing 50,000 career points (for the regular season and postseason) and becoming the league’s all-time leader in regular season minutes. James needs 1,364 more total points and 850 more regular season minutes to achieve those feats.