
about 2 months ago
De’Aaron Fox Happy With 61 Wins, but Says Championship Is Ultimate Goal
Fox is happy to be at 61 wins for the season, tied for 5th in Spurs history. However, he doesn't view 61 wins as an accomplishment, but considers it a stepping stone on the road to a bigger goal. "We're trying to compete for a championship, and there’s banners [up there] we’re trying to chase," he said.
By Pranay Mukherjee
Other articles from NBA
about 2 months ago
Jayson Tatum Credits Celtics Trainer Nick Sang as Essential to His Road to Recovery
"I've just been real fortunate that my trainer is one of my best friends and somebody that I know has my best interests at heart," Tatum said of Sang. "He didn't think that he knew everything and he called every specialist around the world... to put me in the best spot and get me back to myself."
By Adit Pujari
about 2 months ago
Jeff Teague Says the NBA Draft Lottery Is Rigged and Has Three Examples to Prove It
"No disrespect to the league, I feel like it's no way you trade Luka, AD get hurt, s**t hit the fan... all of a sudden we going to give y'all Cooper," Teague said. "New Orleans, Chris Paul leave, they f**ked up, they get Anthony Davis. Derrick Rose go to Chicago. Come on man."
By Adit Pujari
about 2 months ago
Dan Hurley: Braylon Mullins Could Make More at UConn Than as No. 15 Pick
Hurley said today’s NIL landscape has changed Mullins’ decision. Unless a player is a clear lottery or top-15 pick, leaving too early can be a mistake. “Players like Braylon,” Hurley said, “he’d probably make more money at UConn next year than he would if he’s the 15th pick,” making a return a real option. 15th Pick in 2025 made $4M.
By Raahib Singh
about 2 months ago
Dan Hurley Says Transfer Portal Chaos Is Forcing College Programs to Operate Like Pros
Hurley called the current transfer portal grind “terrible” and said college staffs can’t keep handling roster building alone after a full season. He praised NIL for helping players without hurting commitment, but said the workload has become overwhelming. “College programs,” Hurley said, “got to start being run like an NBA organization or a pro sports organization.”
By Raahib Singh




