Basketball Intelligence For 11/28/25
Today's Best NBA Reporting And Analysis
LEAGUEWIDE
Which teams are better or worse than their records say?
John Schuhmann, NBA.com
How a Paris basketball team set Tuomas Iisalo and Tiago Splitter on the road to the NBA
Eduardo Tansley, The Athletic
Can The Nuggets Afford A Peyton Watson Breakout, Jordan Goodwin Hitting The Glass, Kon The Screener, And More
Nick Thoreson, The Waive And Stretch
How Offensive Hubs Shape Today’s NBA
Iztok Franko, digginbasketball
Which players can carry an elite offense
LeBron’s fitting in, Magic’s smash-mouth offense and more NBA trends
Fred Katz, The Athletic
Western Conference surprises
Kelly Dwyer, KD On Hoops
NBA Power Rankings
Marc Stein, The Stein Line
Mapping out all scenarios for the Black Friday NBA Cup games
John Hollinger, The Athletic
Rookies who are performing better than expected, Part One
Morten Stig Jensen, Forbes
Is the NBA at a breaking point?
Paul Forrester, NY Post
Some NBA teams poised to go worst to first?
Joe Cowley, Chicago Sun-Times
USA Basketball is set to open World Cup qualifying in Nicaragua, and Brandon Knight can’t wait
Tim Reynolds, AP
TEAM-SPECIFIC
BKN: Jordi Fernandez benched Nets’ Ziaire Williams in hopes of sparking his defensive potential
Brian Lewis, NY Post
BOS: Two-way rookie steps up in upset of Pistons
Zack Cox, Boston Herald
BOS: These next two weeks could be a defining stretch for the Celtics
Chris Forsberg, NBC Sports
CHI: Bulls on their heels, and the rest of the league is taking notice
Joe Cowley, Sun-Times
The lack of physicality the last week is alarming for coach Billy Donovan and the Bulls, and now the question is simple: Who steps up?
CLE: Quarterly Observations and What Must Improve for the Cavaliers
Danny Cunningham, The Inside Shot
DAL/LAL: Where Lakers and Mavericks stand 10 months after Luka Dončić blockbuster trade
Christian Clark/Dan Woike, The Athletic
GSW: Dubs-Rockets videos/interviews/transcripts
Poor Man’s Commish, Let’s Go Warriors
GSW: Why do the Warriors only have one Curry right now? Blame the NBA hard cap
Danny Leroux, The Athletic
GSW: How Will Richard’s year in Nashville set him on path to Warriors
Joseph Dycus, Mercury News
Before his star turn at Florida, Will Richard began his college career at small private school Belmont
GSW: Stephen Curry will be sidelined at least a week with a quad injury
Janie McCauley, AP
GSW: Pat Spencer will now see a legitimate role in the Warriors rotation
Peter O’Keefe, Blue Man Hoop
IND: Pacers renew trade interest in league-wide coveted player inexplicably buried on Kings bench
Yasmin Edanol, Clutch Points
Keon Ellis has become one of the league’s most coveted under-the-radar guards, especially for a Pacers group starving for defensive balance. He averaged 8.3 points, 2.7 rebounds, 1.5 assists, and 1.5 steals last year, and he shot a sharp 43.3 percent from three, production that has kept Indiana interested through every trade cycle. But his role has shrunk dramatically. He is logging just 17.4 minutes per game in 17 appearances this season, far from the 24.4 minutes he earned a year ago, a drop that only strengthens the Pacers’ belief that he’s being underused. Executives expected Sacramento to decline his $2.3 million option and negotiate a new deal as a restricted free agent. Instead, the Kings prioritized staying $3.2 million below the luxury tax. Now Ellis is set to enter unrestricted free agency in 2026, and whichever team acquires him will hold his Bird Rights.
Indiana needs defensive stability. They need guards who can survive chaos. They need someone who doesn’t flinch when the crowd roars. That’s where Ellis fits. Doesn’t chase noise: that’s his game. His value appears in the small possessions that tilt momentum. With the ability to guard wings and point guards using the same stubborn edge, he gives coaches a level of trust they can feel. And that quiet, winning style is the piece the Pacers have been missing all season.
LAC: The Clippers look dry and overcooked
Mirjam Swanson, OC Register
Coach Tyronn Lue has worked wonders before, but the players are either past their prime or not ready for prime time
LAC: Clippers look to turn rough start around
Janis Carr, OC Register
MEM: The Grizzlies are Prioritizing Passing
Statssac, Grizzly Bear Blues
MIN: Meet the Timberwolves’ new point guard: Anthony Edwards
Jon Krawczynski, The Athletic
MIN: Timberwolves mandatory team dinner first step in turning things around
Chris Hine, Star Tribune
MIN: Anthony Edwards and the Timberwolves are being tested
Steve Jones, Yahoo Sports
MIN: Timberwolves need a season-changing Jaden McDaniels adjustment
Eamon Cassels, Dunking With Wolves
NYK: Josh Hart has vision to enhance future NBA Cups
Stefan Bondy, NY Post
NYK: Knicks have lineup plan as Mike Brown owns mistake he won’t repeat
Stefan Bondy, NY Post
OKC: Jalen Williams injury update: OKC Thunder star available vs Suns to make season debut
Justin Martinez, The Oklahoman
ORL: Wagner brothers are teammates, roommates and best friends living out their NBA dream with the Magic
Rob Maaddi, AP
PHI: NBA intel: Maxey-Edgecombe comps, Embiid-PG plans, 76ers’ ceiling
Tim Bontemps, ESPN
PHI: Observations after Sixers get crushed by 41 points and injury list grows
Noah Levick, NBC Sports
PHX: Suns ready for ‘great test’ with 18-1 Oklahoma City Thunder
Duane Rankin, Arizona Republic
SAC: Kings seem intent on trading Keon Ellis (and someone needs to stop them)
Ian Goodwillie, A Royal Pain
With a much overdue rebuild on the horizon for the Sacramento Kings, the team has made it clear that they are open for business on basically the entire roster. Except for a few players, of course. One name who likely should be on the no-trade list is Keon Ellis, and no one really knows why he isn’t.
(it) increasingly seems like Ellis is a likely trade option for the Kings. Domantas Sabonis, DeMar DeRozan, and Zach LaVine are also high-priority trades, but their suitors are limited at best. Half the league is reputedly interested in Keon Ellis, and for good reason.
SAC: A Frustrated Zach LaVine Sounds Off After Another Tough Outing
James Mccauley, Sports Illustrated
The brief postgame for the Kings swingman ended with an inquiry into his frustration level. Put bluntly, LaVine said it was “not good. Guys are frustrated we’re not winning, guys are frustrated they’re not playing right, or playing in the way that would best suit them. . .we’re all trying our heart out though.”
Not too surprising of an answer from the Kings swingman here. Just about everyone with a working set of eyes can see this is one of the most imbalanced rosters in recent memory. For a team that is not trying to process-level-76ers tank, the roster construction is curious at best. Even tanking teams generally try to run out lineups that make sense, but that has simply not been the case in Sacramento.
SAS: The numbers that explain the Spurs’ success
JeJe Gomez, Pounding The Rock
SAS: Spurs’ Cup dreams stay alive
Matthew Tynan, Corporate Knowledge
TOR: The Raptors are better than everyone thought
Samson Folk/Caitlin Cooper, Raptors Republic
TOR: How Brandon Ingram has catalyzed Raptors’ offensive surge
Ian Finlayson, Sportsnet
TOR: Point guard finally a Raptors strength again thanks to Immanuel Quickley, Jamal Shead
Ryan Wolstat, Toronto Sun
TOR: Raptors problem solve, Ingram hits game winner, on their way to 9th straight win
Samson Folk, Raptors Republic
TOR: Raptors’ resurgence: Is Toronto a real threat in the East?
Sam Oshtry, The Score
THE DRAFT
Draft Scouting Files 11/18 - 11/25
Tyler Metcalf, No Ceilings
Potential first rounder Tounde Yessoufou raises some questions about his offensive game in the first month
Sam Vecenie, Game Theory
Hannes Steinbach
Rowan Kent, No Ceilings
Potential No. 1 pick Cam Boozer stars against Arkansas, proves that any team who doesn’t double him does so at its own risk
Sam Vecenie, No Ceilings

