8 minutes ago
Michael Wilbon: Kids Will Learn to Flop If Shai Gilgeous-Alexander Wins Back-to-Back
"If SGA goes back to back, and enters next season as a two-time champion and two-time MVP, guess what? There will be kids on the playground learning how to flop," Wilbon said on Get Up, adding that "winning is the deodorant that covers all stink." Jay Williams, also on the set, walked off in reaction.
By Adit Pujari
Other articles from NBA
17 minutes ago
Stephen A. Smith: Losing Game 6 Is 'Not Fatal' for OKC
"It's not fatal because the worst-case scenario is that you got a game 7 on your home turf," Smith said on First Take. Despite missing Williams and Mitchell, Smith pointed to McCain's 20 points, Caruso's 22 and Hartenstein's 15 rebounds in Game 5, with Hartenstein "suffocating the 7-foot-5 alien" as OKC leads the series 3-2.
By Adit Pujari
32 minutes ago
Stephen A. Smith Says NBA Must Evolve With Adam Silver’s AI Push
Smith backed Silver’s openness to AI helping NBA officials, saying leagues must “adapt,” “adjust,” and “evolve” as technology changes sports. He pointed to MLB’s automated ball-strike challenge system and said he will not be “archaic and stuck in my old ways,” because the world keeps moving forward and sports can introduce that shift to fans everywhere.
By Raahib Singh
about 1 hour ago
Jeff Teague Says Playing KAT at the Elbow Changed Everything for the Knicks This Season
"At one point of the season, we was talking about the Knicks, 'We was like Mike Brown about to get fired,'" Teague said. "It change everything in the season playing KAT at the elbow more where he's comfortable. We all talk about KAT get on the block, get on the block. This is his comfort zone, right here."
By Adit Pujari
about 1 hour ago
Michael Wilbon Questions Adam Silver's Plan to Separate Selling Calls From Flopping
Wilbon said Silver’s split between “selling a call” and a “true flop” sounds fair, but asking refs to spot that live adds another burden. He called NBA officiating “the hardest job” in pro sports, joked about offseason acting seminars, and noted flopping technicals already exist, leaving enforcement as the real problem for a league seeking cleaner games.
By Raahib Singh





