Darius Garland will spend the next 4-5 months rehabbing after toe surgery. (Photo by Dustin Satloff/Getty Images)
Dustin Satloff via Getty Images
One of the Cleveland Cavaliers’ biggest stars will spend the offseason rehabbing after toe surgery. Darius Garland will miss 4-5 months after undergoing “great toe surgery” on Monday, the team announced.
The Cavaliers expect Garland to “make a full recovery and resume basketball activities by the start of training camp.” While he’s expected to take part in activities during camp, there’s a chance the injury keeps him off the court at the start of the 2025-26 NBA season, per Shams Charania.
Garland, 25, averaged 20.6 points and 6.7 assists for the Cavaliers this season. That performance earned Garland his second All-Star nod.
Garland played a key role in the Cavaliers going 64-18 and earning the No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference. As the regular season came to a close, Garland dealt with the injury, which was revealed following the team’s March 23 game in Utah. Garland was able to manage the injury down the stretch, but re-aggravated it during the playoffs. After playing in the first two games of the postseason, Garland missed Games 3 and 4 against the Miami Heat due to the injury.
The Cavaliers advanced in four games, and played the Indiana Pacers in the second round. Garland missed the first two games of that series — which Cleveland lost — before returning for Game 3.
Garland played in the final three games of the series. His presence couldn’t lift the Cavaliers, however, who fell to the Pacers in five games. Garland averaged 14 points and four assists in the series.
Garland has spent his entire six-year NBA career with the Cavaliers after the team made him the No. 5 overall pick in the 2019 NBA Draft. He’s averaged 18.9 points and 6.7 assists over his career.
Garland was reportedly a candidate to be traded in the offseason, but the injury likely ensures he’ll remain with the Cavaliers next year.
Wander Franco was charged with gun possession as he stands trail in a sexual-abuse case. (AP Foto/Ricardo Hernández)
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Tampa Bay Rays shortstop Wander Franco was charged with illegal possession of a firearm Sunday as he continues to stand trial on charges of sexual abuse, according to multiple reports.
The gun possession charge stems from a November altercation that resulted in Franco’s arrest. The 24-year-old Franco was arrested after an altercation with another man. Two guns were seized by police following that altercation, one of which was found in Franco’s vehicle.
That gun — a semiautomatic Glock 19 — is reportedly registered in Franco’s uncle’s name. Franco’s lawyer, Antonio Garcia Lorenzo, argued that since the gun is licensed, “there’s nothing illegal about it,” per reports.
Franco is currently on trial in the Dominican Republic on charges of sexual and commercial exploitation of a minor. Franco is accused of engaging in a sexual relationship with a 14-year-old girl. Franco allegedly paid the girl’s mother thousands of dollars to engage in the relationship. The girl’s mother was also charged with sexual abuse of a minor and money laundering.
Once considered the top overall prospect in the minor leagues, Franco was in the midst of a breakout season when allegations of an inappropriate relationship with a minor emerged during the 2023 MLB season. Franco was placed on the restricted list by the Rays that August as MLB investigated the situation. Shorty after that story broke, MLB placed Franco on administrative leave under the league’s joint domestic violence, sexual assault and child abuse policy. He has not appeared in an MLB game since Aug. 2023.
MLB’s investigation into Franco remains ongoing as he stands trial in the Dominican Republic. Franco — who signed an 11-year, $182 million contract with the Rays in 2021 — faces up to 30 years in prison if he’s convicted.
Starting July 6, the Knicks will be able to extend Mikal Bridges on up to a four-year, $156 million deal, and have until June 30, 2026 to do so — a day before he enters unrestricted free agency.
Historically with key players on expiring contracts, Leon Rose has either extended them (RJ Barrett, Jalen Brunson) or dealt them before they could potentially walk (Immanuel Quickley, Julius Randle), setting up a pivotal year for Bridges.
New York acquired the wing last offseason via trade, moving four unprotected first-round picks, an unprotected pick swap and a protected first to secure Brunson’s former college teammate and one of the premier 3-and-D wings in the league. While that tremendous haul (that implicitly included a Knicks-Nets and power of friendship premium) came with unfair expectations that hung over Bridges like a black cloud, he had a solid first year with room for improvement both internally and via coaching.
The Knicks made waves quickly after their Eastern Conference Finals ousting, relieving head coach Tom Thibodeau, a strong suggestion that they felt this roster wasn’t being maximized. Bridges was likely a big part of that, often looking lost in the offense and making headlines with a public criticism of Thibodeau during the regular season.
With his extension looming, New York will need to weigh giving him another half or full season under a new coach, or dealing him in the offseason.
Bridges averaged 17.6 points, 3.2 rebounds and 3.7 assists on 59.4 percent shooting from two and 35.4 percent shooting from three this season, keeping his iron man streak alive by playing all 82 games despite averaging a career-high 37 minutes a night. During the playoffs, he averaged 15.6 points, 4.5 rebounds and 2.9 assists on 51.4 percent shooting from two and 33.3 percent from three, again playing every game.
The good? Bridges was available, absolutely nasty in the mid-range, improved defensively as the season progressed, and was always in the flow of the team, never forcing things or demanding the ball be in his hands.
This was also to his detriment at times, going entire stretches without looking at the rim and fading into the background. The real red flags on his season were a major regression in his above-the-break three-point shooting and complete aversion to contact, rim attacks, and free throws.
There’s reason to expect improvement in some of these areas. Bridges is a career knockdown shooter and did some tweaking to his jump shot that likely needed some more time in the lab, and he could get more aggressive going to the rim in a different offense.
May 7, 2025; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; New York Knicks forward Mikal Bridges (25) reacts after defeating the Boston Celtics in game two of the second round for the 2025 NBA Playoffs at TD Garden. / David Butler II-Imagn Images
It’s hard to classify Bridges as anything more than an afterthought in Thibodeau’s offense, which gives high-volume scorers the freedom to create their own looks but can leave more passive players flailing. This combined with Bridges’ timidity left a lot on the table offensively, where it was clear he could be more of a contributor in the pick-and-roll and mid-post (like during his Christmas Day 41 points) if it were more of an emphasis.
Defensively, Bridges wasn’t up to snuff out of the gate but slowly came around, peaking in the postseason. While his playoff stats were underwhelming, he was big in the most clutch moments and games, such as Game 6 against Detroit, plus the comebacks against Boston.
This should give the Knicks enough confidence to bring him back for 2025-26 and potentially extend him after seeing how he looks. It would be malpractice to not hear our out trade offers on any player, but the options with Bridges are limited.
For one, consider what theoretical shooting guard the Knicks would want next to Brunson. They’d need size, the ability to shoot, defend, and be a secondary creator when called upon.
This describes Bridges to the tee when he’s at his best, which we saw plenty of. Meanwhile, there are few other two guards in the league with this portfolio. Dealing him in a one-for-two trade that nets the Knicks more depth is possible, but with most realistic ideas, it lowers their ceiling dramatically.
The wild card is if Milwaukee or Phoenix sees Bridges as a key piece of a Giannis Antetokounmpo or Kevin Durant swap. In those cases the Knicks would have to strongly consider parting with Bridges and figuring out the rest later.
Bridges may not have been a five first-round pick player for the Knicks, but he did enough to warrant committing to a long-term future with this core, especially with some potential improvements due.
Nothing is off the table in this team’s pursuit of a championship, but Bridges looks like a worthy piece to keep while chasing that goal.