How to Speak With a Real Person at Best Buy Customer Service

Sometimes the help you need doesn’t fit in one of the pre-recorded number dial options, and speaking with a human on the other line is really what you need. With Best Buy’s Black Friday in July sale on the horizon, many shoppers will likely need some assistance. I have found that it’s easy to get a hold of someone in customer service to help you—here is the easiest way to do so.

How to speak to a Best Buy customer service representative

Best Buy’s Contact Us page has a lot of different options that will make your head spin, but if you just need to talk to someone ASAP, call 1-888-BEST BUY (1-888-237-8289). When the recording picks up, say “speak with a live agent” or press “0.” You’ll have to narrow down your reason why you’re calling to get to speak to someone, or Best Buy will hang up on you. This will be the fastest way to speak with someone who can answer most of your account questions.

Of course, if your question does fall under one of the pre-recorded options, it’s better to be directed to one of those specialists after dialing “0.” The Contact Us page also has a useful “Chat now” option if you prefer to chat online with a live agent.

NBA, the Sequel: Dylan Harper, son of ex-Lakers guard Ron Harper, joins jam-packed second-gen fraternity

Dylan Harper hugs supporters after being selected second overall by the San Antonio Spurs in the NBA draft. (Adam Hunger / Associated Press)

Second-generation NBA players are plentiful, and why not?

Dads can pass down their height, dedication and athleticism. Dad’s handsome compensation can afford a son the opportunity to follow in his footsteps. And Dad’s drive can serve as a road map.

Dylan Harper, the second pick in the NBA Draft on Wednesday, is the latest budding star whose father was decorated before him. Ron Harper capped a 15-year NBA career by winning five NBA championships in his last six seasons, back-to-back titles with the Lakers in 2000 and 2001 after three with the Chicago Bulls in 1996, ’97 and ’98.

Ron Harper of the Lakers drives for a layup at Staples Center. (Paul Morse / Los Angeles Times)

Dylan, a 6-foot-5 guard out of Rutgers, was drafted by the San Antonio Spurs. His brother, Ron Harper Jr., also is in the NBA, having played in 11 games for the Detroit Pistons and Toronto Raptors the last three years.

In any other sport, the progeny of a former star player ascending to the highest level would be especially noteworthy. That Ron Harper’s sons are on the cusp of similar careers as their dad was nothing out of the ordinary.

Read more:2025 NBA draft: Clippers select Penn State center Yanic Konan Niederhauser

LeBron James and his oldest son, Bronny, famously became the first father-son duo to take the court at the same time in the Lakers’ season opener last October. But that is just one of the many dynamics of a son choosing the same career path to the NBA as his dad.

Lakers forward LeBron James greets his son and teammate Bronny James, right, during warm-ups. (Gerald Herbert / Associated Press)

The phenomenon goes back a long way. Two sons of Minneapolis Lakers legend George Mikan — a five-time All-NBA center in the early 1950s — were drafted into the NBA, with one, Larry, playing 53 games in 1970-71.

During a 15-year career that ended in 1964, Hall of Fame center Dolph Shayes averaged 18.5 points and 12.1 rebounds a game. His son, Danny Shayes, outdid Dad in career longevity, playing 18 years through 1999 for seven teams, including a short stint with the Lakers.

Butch Van Breda Kolff played four seasons in the 1940s and in 1976 his son, Jan, became the first player to face a team coached by his father when Jan played for the New York Nets while Butch coached the New Orleans Jazz. Butch also coached the Lakers to the NBA Finals in 1968 and ’69, where they lost to the Boston Celtics both times.

Other sons who faced teams coached by their fathers — who also played in the NBA — include Mike Dunleavy Jr. and Sr., Coby and George Karl, and Austin and Doc Rivers.

Austin Rivers also became the first to play for his father in an NBA game when he was traded to the Clippers in 2015. At first, he wasn’t thrilled when his dad called to alert him of the proposed deal.

“He called me up and he asked me if ‘this was something you might be interested in because we need you,’ ” Austin said at his introductory news conference. “When I heard that, it was one of those things where I just kind of had to think, take a day to myself and be like, ‘Could this work?’

“And it does, just because of the relationship I have with him. It’s already kind of basketball oriented … It’s not so much like father-son. It’s just kind of like coach-player and then off the court, we deal with that a different way.”

Sons who achieved more than their father abound. Dell Curry was no slouch, averaging 11.7 points and earning $19.8 million over a 16-year NBA career that ended in 2002. One son, Seth, is in his 11th season, having averaged 10 points while earning $45 million.

Toronto Raptors’ Dell Curry lands on top of Trail Blazers’ Damon Stoudamire as he drives to the hoop during their NBA game Wednesday, Dec. 6, 2000, in Portland, Ore.
JACK SMITH/ASSOCIATED PRESSGolden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry drives past Houston Rockets forward Amen Thompson (1) during the second half of Game 5 of an NBA basketball first-round playoff series, Wednesday, April 30, 2025, in Houston.
David J. Phillip / Associated Press

Dell’s other son, Stephen, is a certain Hall of Famer, recognized as perhaps the best pure shooter in history. He’s led the Golden State Warriors to four NBA titles while averaging 24.4 points and earning $357.8 million over 16 seasons.

Klay Thompson was a teammate of Steph Curry on all four Warriors championship teams, and he’s averaged 19.1 points while earning $268.8 million over 12 seasons. That easily eclipses the exploits of his loquacious father, Mychal Thompson, who won two titles with the Lakers before becoming a broadcaster with the team as well as a radio personality.

The list of father-son duos is too long to mention them all. Here are a handful.

Three sons of Hall of Fame guard Rick Barry played in the NBA, with Brent enjoying the most success. UCLA product Mike Bibby outdid his dad by playing 14 years to Henry’s nine. Kevin Love outplayed his father, but Stan Love’s association with the Beach Boys stood out.

Read more:Plaschke: Bill Walton’s kindness and wonderful wackiness made us the grateful ones

The father-son combos include a host of juniors in addition to the Harpers and Dunleavys, among them the Larry Drews, the Patrick Ewings, the Rich Dumases, the Matt Guokases, the Tim Hardaways, the Gerald Hendersons, the Jaren Jacksons, the John Lucases, the Wes Matthewses, the Larry Nances, the Gary Paytons, the James Paxsons, the Scottie Pippins, Glen Rice, Glenn Robinson, the Wally Szczerbiaks, the Gary Trents and the Duane Washingtons.

And, of course, there are more Lakers ties.

Luke Walton matched his father with two NBA championships and also coached the Lakers, but couldn’t attain the cult status of Bill Walton, a UCLA legend whose quirky, outsized personality transcended his achievements on the court.

The former Laker who did indeed transcend not only his father’s career but that of nearly every player was Kobe Bryant. His father, Joe (Jellybean) Bryant, died last July, four years after his son tragically died in a helicopter crash that also took the lives of his daughter, Gianna, and seven others.

The fractious relationship between Kobe and his father is well-chronicled, and they rarely spoke after Kobe married his wife, Vanessa.

Dylan Harper’s relationship with his father is stronger, although Ron Harper divorced Dylan’s mother in 2012. She raised her two sons and a daughter as a single mom who also happened to coach high school basketball and run a travel program.

Maria Harper, a former Division I player at the University of New Orleans, was an assistant boys’ coach when her sons played at Don Bosco Prep in New Jersey.

“She was hard but loving,” Dylan told the Athletic in 2023. “She wasn’t just tough on me, either. Everyone got a little bit of it.”

Ron Sr. moved near his ex-wife in 2007. Yet he pointed recruiters to Maria when Dylan was being wooed by colleges.

“Don’t get me wrong, I’m proud of him, but I don’t want this to be about me,” he said at the time.

Yet like any father, Ron Sr. was proud of his son’s accomplishments.

“When Dylan was 5 years old, I told people he was going to be really good,” he said. “He reminded me of me.”

Dylan Harper might exceed his father’s accomplishments in the way that Bryant and Curry did — or fail to do so. In addition to winning five titles, Ron Harper averaged 13.8 points and 3.9 assists in 1,009 NBA games.

Either way, Dylan is about to join a lengthy list of players whose fathers blazed a trail they followed.

Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Top NBA free-agent centers: Would Myles Turner really leave an NBA Finalist?

The NBA’s runners-up have some business to tend to in a surprisingly deep — for this year’s class — positional group.

Let’s break down the potential top available centers in this year’s free-agent market, with the negotiating window opening at 6 p.m. ET June 30.

(Note: Positions are being determined off Basketball-Reference’s positional breakdowns, meaning a player will be listed at the position in which he played the most minutes.)

Free-agent position rankings: Point guards | Shooting guards | Small forwards | Power forwards


Status: Unrestricted free agent

Rule of thumb: When you’ve been historically underpaid, you’re the starting center for a Finals team, you’re one of the best defenders in the league, and you’re in your prime, you’re in line for a raise.

Turner, one of the league’s most potent 3&D centers, has undergone an offensive transformation over the past few years, to the point where the Pacers cannot lose him.

What makes sense: With not a lot of money on the market, and the fact that both sides seem motivated to continue their partnership, expect Turner and Indiana to find common ground on a new deal that looks significantly richer than the ones before.

Status: Player option
Value of option: $15,022,464

There’s no question some teams will view Reid as a starting center, especially given his touch from the outside. Yet, the Wolves have used him in a backup capacity throughout his career, which makes you wonder if Reid himself is open to chasing a starting role.

Reid is ingrained in the local community and seems to genuinely treasure being a Timberwolf. Of course, that doesn’t mean he’ll just sign whatever is in front of him, but it does seem likely he could be willing to sacrifice something to stick around.

What makes sense: The best path forward could be to wait until next summer by picking up his option and hope more teams have money to spend. That also gives him another year of data to determine whether he indeed wants to be a career backup.

Status: Unrestricted free agent

Lopez might be 37. He might be slow. He might be declining. But the man is still a physical behemoth who will clog the paint, block shots and drain a ton of 3-pointers.

Those are valuable marks in today’s NBA, even if Lopez doesn’t necessarily fit into the “switch everything” ideology. As such, there should be a market for a team, especially among good teams looking for someone reliable who has championship experience.

What makes sense: Staying with the Bucks another year isn’t a bad play, but if Lopez is looking for another title run, he’ll have to look outside of the organization and identify a team that’s closer.

Status: Unrestricted free agent

Capela is getting older and less dynamic, but he’s still a tough rebounder who challenges shots at the rim and remains a solid lob threat.

While his compensation level will diminish due to his age and a starting role no longer being a sure thing, plenty of teams should give him a look.

What makes sense: The Los Angeles Lakers will unquestionably have internal meetings about Capela, considering his theoretical fit with Luka Dončić. Should that be the path Capela chooses, there’s a world where he once again will produce impressive box scores.

Status: Team option
Value of option: $11,000,000

Wagner tore his ACL in December, so we should see teams offer him deals that greatly benefit them in terms of flexibility.

If we assume he returns to full health, Wagner immediately becomes one of the best backup scoring big men in the league, with the capability of stretching the floor and providing necessary spacing.

What makes sense: Despite the injury and the fact that he could be an unrestricted free agent next summer, the Magic should try to keep him long term. Perhaps Wagner is inclined to agree to a longer deal worth less money than he’s earning now in the hope that he can bounce back after his injury.

Status: Unrestricted free agent

Using last year’s Olympics as a display window, Yabusele made the most of his NBA return, becoming a key offensive contributor for the Sixers.

The 29-year-old, affectionately known as The Dancing Bear, is at a stage in his career when optimizing his own salary and role should be his top priority.

What makes sense: Yabusele should hear out the Sixers but absolutely seek the biggest payday possible, regardless of team, since he’s closing in on 30. For a guy like him, who can occasionally play recklessly, securing his own future is the goal.


Status: Team option
Value of option: $2,187,699

Williams, who was drafted in the second round in 2022, is in an interesting situation. If the Thunder pick up his option, he’ll enter 2026 as an unrestricted free agent. If they don’t, he’ll become a restricted free agent this summer. Williams is a solid talent, even if he isn’t playing a ton of minutes. The 6-foot-9 big man has multiple double-doubles to his name, which underlines the vastness of his skill set. Plenty of teams should have an eye on him.

Status: Player option
Value of option: $5,000,000

One of the greatest rebounders of his generation can dictate his own future, but the market for him hasn’t been strong these past few years.

If he sticks in Philadelphia, it’s likely he’ll get a ton of minutes should Joel Embiid not be available.

You Can Force Your Router to Prioritize Your Game Downloads

Hideo Kojima’s latest package delivery/tar-based afterlife simulator is finally out today. It’s also a massive download, like most AAA games these days. If you’re impatient, or just want to be a bit more considerate of other people on your network, don’t forget that your router can (probably) give your console a bit of a boost.

Most wifi routers—including our picks for the best Wi-Fi 6 routers and best mesh wifi systems—have features that let you prioritize certain devices on your network. Under normal circumstances, your router tries to make sure every device has a roughly equal chance at a solid connection, but by prioritizing certain devices, your router can favor them with faster downloads or more reliable connections.

This is handy when you’re downloading a huge game on a console, since your download speed won’t slow down when someone else starts streaming a movie. Conversely, if you’re more patient, you can use this feature to prioritize your TV so your streams don’t get interrupted while your console chugs away downloading all that data.

The process for enabling this feature varies by model, but if you have an app to control your routers, you can usually find it in this app’s settings. For example, I use a Nest Wifi Pro router. In the Google Home app, you can tap Wifi > Devices, then search for the device you want to prioritize and set it to receive priority for a short duration.

Some routers also allow you to prioritize certain types of traffic, rather than specific devices. In Eero’s app, for example, head to Settings > Network settings, and choose Smart Queue Management (or SQM). This feature lets you prioritize traffic for online gaming, video streaming, or conference calls. If you want to make sure that meeting with your boss doesn’t degrade because of the game you’re planning to play as soon as the call is done, this can be a handy trick.

NBA Draft 2025: Did the Hornets reach for Kon Knueppel? And why the Spurs did the right thing with Dylan Harper

The first round of the 2025 NBA Draft is officially in the books, and with the second round projecting as one big, enormous “meh,” it’s probably fair to say the most exciting part of the draft has now passed.

(This raises the question of whether the NBA should continue with the two-day draft format. It’s two rounds, for Pete’s sake!)

With the first round concluded, thoughts are gathered. Good thoughts, bad thoughts, critical thoughts, and whatever thoughts I had when Pelicans head honcho Joe Dumars decided to make himself a villain in this story.

So, let’s get to it.

“““““`

For a while now, I’ve been skeptical of whether the sweet-shooting wing should be a top-5 selection.

The shooting upside is indeed ridiculous: 40.6% from 3-point range and 91.4% from the foul line.

But what will the role be? If he’s to become primarily an off-ball shooter, picking him fourth is high, to the point where you have to wonder if Charlotte trading down would have made more sense, perhaps to target Tre Johnson or another alternative.

Knueppel will essentially have to become a No. 2 guy, or at worst a supercharged tertiary option, to justify that draft slot — not that where he’s picked is within his control, of course.

Does the 6-5 wing with the T-Rex wingspan have it in him to consistently create on the ball at the NBA level? Guess we’ll find out. I’m rooting for him to silence my skepticism because I actually like him a great deal.

Collin Murray-Boyles fits virtually everywhere, due to his playmaking upside, defensive impact and bully-ball capabilities on the offensive end.

In my eyes, we’re talking about a guy who stands a good chance at being a top 3-5 player from this draft.

Yet, the Raptors might be the lone place where the do-it-all power forward won’t be able to spread his wings.

The organization traded for, and later extended, Brandon Ingram at the deadline, while already being in possession of Scottie Barnes and RJ Barrett. That’s three players best suited to play small forward who will have to steal significant minutes at the four out of sheer necessity.

Murray-Boyles played a lot of center at South Carolina, but at 6-foot-7 that’s probably not something he can get away with at the NBA level, at least not permanently. So that avenue isn’t super attractive.

Of course, free agency has yet to hit us, so perhaps team president Masai Ujiri has something up his sleeve to move players around. But we can only go off the current roster construction, and that’s certainly not optimized for someone like Murray-Boyles.

Great value at No. 9, but the projected implementation looks worrying to say the least.

While we can’t credit them for the quote above, the Spurs did indeed stick to a simple playbook by doing two simple things.

1. They kept their picks

2. They chose the best player available

Instead of getting concerned about fit, at No. 2 they grabbed Dylan Harper, a 6-6 lead guard with All-NBA upside who projects as a wonderful building block with Victor Wembanyama.

Harper’s shooting concerns (33.3% from longe range) could have seen a lesser franchise chicken out of the selection, but the Spurs trust their coaching staff and their process.

Oh, right, at No. 14 they also took Carter Bryant, who should immediately enter the rotation based on his 3&D capabilities.

Bryant was not only the best player left on the board, but also the best theoretical fit for San Antonio. Unsurprisingly, the Spurs are already winners.

Look, every new lead executive wants to make a splash, but this isn’t how you do it.

Joe Dumars, who recently took over day-to-day operations of the Pelicans, came out swinging aggressively and ending up smacking himself right in the face with his own bat.

After acquiring No. 23 from Indiana during the Finals — and giving back the Pacers’ own pick next season — he was already behind the curve, with Tyrese Haliburton tearing his Achilles and likely missing all of next season.

Had Dumars waited until after the Finals, he would have seen how much more valuable the pick is now.

But no, he made sure to lose the next deal as well, which also featured No. 23, just to streamline things.

Dumars sent that selection, plus an unprotected 2026 first-round pick swap — the best of New Orleans’ own or Milwaukee’s — to the Atlanta Hawks for No. 13.

Yes, he traded away a potentially juicy pick, entirely unprotected, just to move up 10 spots in the draft.

Let’s pause there and acknowledge that type of package should fetch far more than just the 13th friggin’ selection. That’s a package that gets you into the high lottery, potentially in the top 5-6 range.

If that wasn’t bad enough, Dumars spent his selection on Derik Queen, a center who doesn’t defend nor shoot 3-pointers. In the year 2025.

My great colleague Dan Devine called this “interesting” because he’s a polite and proper human being.

I’m not.

Dumars just took a sledgehammer to the future flexibility of the Pelicans, solely to have the opportunity to be outrageously optimistic on a player who goes against where the NBA is headed.

For this to work, Queen has to become an absolute star. And even if he does, the process is so egregious, Pelicans fans should have every right to attend games next year wearing paper bags over their heads.

With Dumars at the helm, odds are good the Pelicans will paint themselves completely into a corner and lose whatever fan interest is left.

We don’t know what the future holds for Isaiah Hartenstein, who might become too expensive to retain down the line, and Chet Holmgren tends to get injured.

Strengthening the center rotation is never a bad idea, and the Thunder just got one of the best damn big men in the draft at No. 15.

Sorber is 6-11 and has a 7-6 wingspan. He’s also 263 pounds. Basically, he’s an enormous human being.

More than that, though, he’s agile, has surprisingly solid mobility, and he leans into doing the so-called “big-man stuff,” such as rebounding (8.5 per game), blocking shots (two per game) and generally protecting the paint.

Rock solid bit of business there by the Thunder.

Oh, Bulls. At the very least, your indifference about everything remains the same year after year.

At No. 12 the team chose Frenchman Noa Essengue, who is just 18 years old. That would surely signal a willingness to think long term, right?

Well, the Bulls traded No. 45 for No. 55 and cash Thursday, once again underlining how their process is never about basketball, but instead about the bottom line.

Any good team worth its salt will look under every rock and scour the world for talent. The Bulls are fine just picking whomever drops to them and then save money.

There’s no added effort. There’s no expansive search for a difference-maker.

As such, it shouldn’t come as a surprise general manager Marc Eversley more or less admitted in his end-of-season new conference that the same team will return next year.

Get ready to revisit the play-in, Bulls fans. Aren’t you excited?

Nets 2025 NBA Draft: Every pick from Brooklyn

Here are all of the Nets‘ picks from both rounds of the 2025 NBA Draft at Barclays Center in Brooklyn…


Round 2

No. 36 pick: Traded to the Phoenix Suns

Brooklyn is dealing its only pick in the second round of the draft on Thursday to the Suns in exchange for two future second-round picks, according to ESPN’s Shams Charania.

Round 1

No. 27 pick: F/C Danny Wolf, Michigan

The 6-foot-11, 252-pound big man is more of a point-forward than he is a center with his versatile skillset. He was named to the All-Ivy First Team and was the Ivy League Tournament Most Outstanding Player during his sophomore year at Yale before transferring to Michigan for the 2024-2025 season.

Wolf averaged 13.2 points, 9.7 rebounds, 3.6 assists, and 1.4 blocks per game over 37 games for the Wolverines. He earned All-Big Ten Second Team and Big Ten All-Tournament Team honors while helping Michigan reach the Sweet Sixteen before losing to top-ranked Auburn.

NBA.com: Wolf has interesting versatility with his 7-foot frame, able to dribble and pass in the halfcourt and in transition. He also makes up in footwork and physicality what he lacks in athleticism. His jumpshot can come and go, but his touch is good enough to be a strong baseline for further development. Wolf has shown enough in most aspects of the game to play both on and off the ball.

No. 26 pick: G Ben Saraf, Israel

Saraf, 19, began his professional career at 16 years old in the second-division Israeli Basketball National League before joining Elitzur Kiryat Ata of the Israeli Basketball Premier League ahead of the 2023-2024 season. He averaged 10.7 points, 3.7 assists, and 3.2 rebounds and was named Israeli League Premier Rising Star.

Playing for Israel, Saraf led the 2024 FIBA U18 EuroBasket tournament in scoring with 28.1 points per game and was named tournament MVP. The guard joined Ratiopharm Ulm of the German Basketball Bundesliga for the 2024-2025 season, averaging 12.3 points, 4.3 assists, 2.6 rebounds, and 1.1 steals per game.

NBA.com: Passing is his best skill and the lefty Saraf is an excellent playmaker. He has above-average height, can make almost every type of pass and makes reads with ease. Saraf drives often, focusing on downhill moves and change of direction rather than shifting left to right on the perimeter. He pulls up with confidence from the mid-range and has a solid form that could lead to improved 3-point shooting as he develops.

No. 22 pick: G/F Drake Powell, UNC

Acquired on Tuesday along with Terance Mann in a three-team deal with the Boston Celtics and Atlanta Hawks, the Nets used their third first-rounder on the freshman from UNC. Powell became the first player from North Carolina drafted in the first round since, coincidentally, the Nets took Day’Ron Sharpe with the No. 29 pick in the 2021 NBA Draft.

The 6-foot-6 and 190-pound wing was a top-15 ranked, five-star recruit and 2024 McDonald’s All-American and stayed in his home state of North Carolina to play for the Tar Heels. He was a bit inconsistent during his freshman season, averaging only 7.4 points, 3.4 rebounds, and 1.1 assists across 25.6 minutes in 37 games, but still showed off his athleticism and potential. He came on stronger toward the end of the season, including a 16-point performance against Miami. Overall, Powell shot 48.8 percent from the field and 37.9 percent from three.

NBA.com: Powell’s offensive game is still developing. He has a knack for finishing through contact and plays with an aggressive motor, which combines well with his elite athleticism. He’s also a connective playmaker. Powell can also get the job on defense due to his instincts and his athleticism, and his reads should improve as he gets more experience under his belt. As raw as he is, the potential is there.

No. 19 pick: G Nolan Traoré, France

Traoré, listed at 6-foot-5 and 175 pounds, is an athletic guard from France. He averaged 11.7 points, 1.7 rebounds and 5.1 assists across 22.8 minutes per game in 29 contests with Saint-Quentin of the LNB Élite.

In 2024, the then-18-year-old set an Adidas Next Generation Tournament (ANGT) Finals single-game record with 45 points in U18 PFBB INSEP Paris’s 101-96 victory over U18 FC Barcelona.

NBA.com: Scouts will rave about Traoré’s potential and athleticism, as he’s a player who looks more than ready to play at the NBA level from a physical perspective. He has excellent vision for his age, above-average speed and an elite acceleration that makes him not only the fastest player in this class, but one of the fastest players in the NBA if he ends up being drafted. Plus, he also has an outstanding bounce and physical abilities that should get most scouts excited. He also understands how to create his own shot, and his playmaking ability is above-average as well. There are areas in which he needs to improve, though, most notably his defense.

No. 8 pick: G Egor Demin, BYU

While many thought GM Sean Marks would make a splash and trade up, the team kept the eighth overall pick and used it on guard Egor Demin from BYU. The 19-year-old from Russia played for Real Madrid before his lone season of college basketball, in which he averaged 10.6 points, 5.5 assists, and 3.9 rebounds per game over 33 contests.

Demin showed why he was a five-star prospect and took home Big 12 All-Freshman Team and All-Big 12 Honorable Mention honors. He totaled 180 assists to set a BYU single-season record by a freshman and will get plenty of opportunities to run the show in Brooklyn.

NBA.com: Demin is a 6-foot-9 point forward with some of the best passing skills in the draft. He has the vision, size and creativity to make almost every type of pass with accuracy and seems to prefer setting up his teammates rather than scoring. While Demin isn’t a great jump shooter, he is crafty around the basket and in the mid-range area with fakes and a soft touch. Defensively, he’s at his best anticipating the offense, jumping into passing lanes and using active hands to generate steals and blocks.

NBA Draft recap, Celtics being punished for success, best NBA Draft class and Jared Greenberg was right

On this episode of Good Word with Goodwill, Vince and Jared Greenberg react to the NBA Draft and debate if the San Antonio Spurs are under pressure to make the playoffs next season.

Next, Vince and Jared discuss the risky trade the New Orleans Pelicans made on draft night and unpack why the Boston Celtics are trading key pieces from last year’s championship team.

Later, Vince and Jared make their picks for the best draft class in NBA history and Jared gets to gloat about being right about the Houston Rockets and Kevin Durant.

(2:41) Should the Spurs have traded No.2 pick?

(8:09) Victor Wembanyama is ready to win

(13:47) Sixers pass on Ace Bailey

(19:28) Pelicans make questionable draft day trade with Hawks

(32:59) Celtics trade Jrue Holiday, Kristaps Porzingis

(37:07) Celtics being punished for drafting well

(43:00) Nuggets owner mentions odd scenario with Nikola Jokic

(50:15) Best NBA Draft Class Ever

(56:05) Jared gloats about being right about Kevin Durant

Cooper Flagg drafted No.1 overall to the Dallas Mavericks. (Photo by Mike Lawrie/Getty Images)
(Photo by Mike Lawrie/Getty Images)

🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at Yahoo Sports Podcasts

Royals star Bobby Witt Jr. returning to Team USA for 2026 World Baseball Classic

Bobby Witt Jr. was the youngest player on Team USA during the 2023 World Baseball Classic. The Kansas City Royals shortstop could be a multi-time All-Star by the time he plays in the next iteration of the international baseball tournament.

Witt announced Thursday that he’ll be running it back with Team USA for the 2026 World Baseball Classic.

Only this time, rather than a 22-year-old bench player, the 2024 AL MVP runner-up will be a pivotal part of the American roster, which will be captained by New York Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge. Witt is the third Team USA player to announce his participation in the 2026 WBC, joining Judge and Pittsburgh Pirates flame-throwing ace Paul Skenes.

The trio headlines a group that will try to avenge Team USA’s defeat in the 2023 WBC final, a cinematic showdown with Japan that saw two-way phenom Shohei Ohtani secure a 3-2 Team Japan victory by striking out his then-Los Angeles Angels teammate, Mike Trout.

“It’s an honor,” Witt said of playing in another WBC, via MLB.com. “And last time we did it, we fell a little short. So I just wanted to help the team win gold and help the country win gold.”

Witt, 25, broke out last season. He won the MLB batting title with a .332 average, made his first All-Star Game and earned his first Gold Glove Award. He finished the regular season with 32 home runs and 109 RBI and helped the Royals return to the postseason for the first time since they won the World Series in 2015.

In other words, Kansas City got an immediate payoff on the 11-year, $288.8 million contract extension Witt signed the previous February.

While the Royals are currently below .500 and tied for third in the AL Central, Witt is enjoying another productive season in 2025. He’s slashing .282/.338/.484 with 10 home runs, 40 RBI and 21 stolen bases.

He has a good chance to make his second All-Star team this season. And Witt already has a spot on Team USA for the 2026 WBC.

The tournament will take place in March 2026, with the championship set for loanDepot Park in Miami. Team USA will compete in Pool B in Houston, along with Mexico, Italy, Great Britain and Brazil.

WhatsApp Found Another Way to Cram AI Into Your Chats

Meta, the company that owns Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, has been adding more and more AI features into its apps as of late, whether you asked for them or not. WhatsApp in particular has received a lot of Meta’s AI attention in recent times, with the addition of a dedicated Meta AI button in the app and the search bar doubling as a place to ask Meta AI to generate text, advice, or jokes. The company continues to push AI into the heart of WhatsApp, as it’s now added an optional feature that lets you summarize your conversations in the app

WhatsApp calls this feature Message Summaries, and it’s currently rolling out in the U.S. in English. Once it rolls out to you, you’ll be able to access it via a Summarize privately button at the top of your chat. The company says it’s designed to help you catch up with tons of messages without reading every single one of them.

In theory, this is a good idea. If you’re a part of group chats, you’ll know that some of them can absolutely spiral out of control. I’m a part of a few such groups, where people post non-stop during Apple events, sports games, or when we want to discuss a fun topic. There have been times when I’ve woken up to hundreds of unread texts, and I don’t always have the time or energy to go through each of these messages myself. For times like these, WhatsApp’s AI summaries could help.

In practice though, there are some legitimate accuracy and privacy concerns here. First, as with all AI, there’s always the risk of hallucination, so you might have to double check your summaries anyway. On the privacy front, while WhatsApp is famously end-to-end encrypted, Meta’s AI features so far haven’t had the same level of security. Given the company’s long history of collecting user data, as well as surprises like the recent move to bring ads to WhatsApp, it’s natural to be skeptical.

For what it’s worth, though, Meta says that the Message Summaries feature does not allow it or WhatsApp to see your messages or the summaries Meta AI generates. “Message Summaries uses Private Processing technology, which allows Meta AI to generate a response without Meta or WhatsApp ever seeing your messages or the private summaries. No one else in the chat can see that you summarized unread messages either,” the company says in its blog post announcing this feature. You can read more about how Private Processing works in Meta’s engineering blog and technical whitepaper

It’s also worth noting that the feature is not enabled by default. Unfortunately, it also doesn’t seem to be processed on-device, which would have been even better for your privacy since it would mean that no information leaves your phone, but also would have limited the feature to devices powerful enough to run it.

Still, I’ll be skeptical until I can actually try this myself. If you’re like me, you do have options. You can stop anyone from using Meta AI in your WhatsApp chats with them by tapping the name of the contact or group, selecting Advanced Chat Privacy, and enabling Advanced Chat Privacy. Unfortunately, though, you have to manually do this for every single chat—there’s no easy way to disable Meta AI entirely.

While Message Summaries for WhatsApp is already rolling out in English to the U.S., Meta says it’ll be made available to users in other countries starting later this year. 

Vladimir Guerrero Jr., José Ramírez both forced to leave game after Guardians-Blue Jays bean-ball episode

Tensions reached a boiling point as the Cleveland Guardians and Toronto Blue Jays went at it Thursday. The team’s two biggest stars — Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and José Ramírez — were forced to leave the 6-0 Blue Jays win after being hit by pitches.

The issues began in the top of the third inning. With the Blue Jays up 3-0, Guerrero was hit on the right forearm by a 96-mph fastball from Guardians starter Tanner Bibee. Guerrero immediately recoiled in pain and shot a glance at Bibee before walking to first base. 

It marked the second time in the past two games that Guerrero was hit by a pitch. That, combined with the speed and location of Bibee’s pitch Thursday, likely led to Guerrero’s reaction.

Guerrero initially remained in the game and ran the bases. He even appeared on defense in the bottom of the inning. But when the Blue Jays took the field in the bottom of the fourth, Guerrero was removed from the contest due to injury.

The Guardians’ next batter was Ramírez, who was hit in the right forearm by the first pitch of the inning from Blue Jays starter Kevin Gausman. Both teams were warned by the umpire after Ramírez was hit.

Like Guerrero, Ramírez stayed in the game to run the bases. He managed to steal second base but was stranded there as the Guardians failed to capitalize on the early baserunner. 

When the Guardians took the field for the top of the fifth, Ramírez was no longer in the game. Guardians manager Stephen Vogt went to the umpire to announce the defensive change and made sure to let Blue Jays manager John Schneider know the Guardians were upset about the situation

While both Guerrero and Ramírez were forced out of the contest, it appears they avoided serious injury. Both players were ruled out due to forearm injuries, and X-rays came back negative on both injuries.

Despite the early frustrations, both teams maintained their composure the rest of the way. The game remained 3-0 thanks to a gem by Gausman, who tossed eight scoreless innings. The Blue Jays added three more runs in the ninth inning, putting the game out of reach.

Both teams will move on and begin a new series Friday. The Blue Jays and Guardians will not meet again in the regular season.