Pacers vs. Thunder NBA Finals: Alex Caruso has been giving OKC a little bit of everything — including a lot more minutes

OKLAHOMA CITY — Through the first seven and a half months of this NBA season, Alex Caruso had only topped 30 minutes in a game twice.

The first: a late-March meeting with the Los Angeles Clippers, when injuries to Jalen Williams and Chet Holmgren pressed him into duty in the Thunder’s starting lineup. The second: Game 4 of the 2025 Western Conference finals, when the veteran super-sub skittered all over the court, guarding Anthony Edwards, Rudy Gobert and every Timberwolf in between in a hard-fought 128-126 win that drew Oklahoma City within one win of the 2025 NBA Finals.

Now that the Thunder are actually in the 2025 NBA Finals, though? Caruso has played 30-plus twice in four Finals games — the last two, now that you mention it.

As the philosopher once said, “There are no coincidences.”

That philosopher’s name? Alex Caruso.

Oklahoma City Thunder guard Alex Caruso has risen to the occasion in the NBA Finals. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)
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Caruso cracking 30 minutes just twice in his first 72 appearances this regular and postseason was emblematic of the Thunder’s big-picture plan of attack for a player they’d targeted in a key trade last summer to be the missing piece of a hoped-for championship puzzle … but also a player whose now-legendary relentlessness had led to multiple injuries that cost him significant time over the course of his seven-year NBA career.

“Yeah, I mean, it’s a double-edged sword,” Caruso said after Oklahoma City’s Game 2 win. “Some of that is I play a pretty erratic style regardless if it’s Game 1 [of the season] or if it’s Game 2 of the Finals. I just only have one gear — I don’t know how to play at 75%. Some of that was keeping me out of my own way, out of harm’s way. I don’t do a good job of that on my own.”

Some of it, though, came down to Oklahoma City being friggin’ awesome, with a ton of dudes capable of contributing when given the chance.

“We won 68 games in the regular season,” Caruso said after Game 2.” We had a 12-, 13-man rotation through the year, depending on who was hurt, different teams we played. That just comes with the nature of having a really good, deep team.”

The Finals have a way of winnowing down a team’s depth, though — of erasing the opportunities to see what a precocious rookie might be able to provide you, of rendering more limited contributors particularly vulnerable and thus unviable, of paring a team down to its most essential elements.

“It’s the ultimate effort, endeavor, whatever you want to call it,” Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said after Game 4. “I mean, it’s long. It’s arduous. But it’s the greatest opportunity going. … It’s really hard, and it’s supposed to be hard.”

It’s a crucible: a 24/7 stress test that spotlights and punishes weakness, and that rewards versatility and skill, a game without holes, and an iron constitution.

In other words: It’s a series built for Caruso, and that Caruso is built for.

“Yeah, you know, I’m a complete basketball player,” he said Sunday. “There’s a lot of things that I do really, really good.”

Caruso showcased the diversity of his skill set in Game 4. Everybody knows, at this point, that he’s one of the best defenders on the planet, equally adept at chasing jitterbug guards around screens and aggressively bodying up Nikola Jokić in the post. What many might not have been aware of, though, was that he’s also a more-than-capable initiator of Oklahoma City’s offense, with more touches and time of possession than any Thunderer besides Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams in Game 4, and with more passes thrown than even OKC’s two on-ball All-Stars.

Or that, when the moment calls for it, he’s got enough shake to his handle to be able to get from Point A to Point B off the bounce and make something happen once he gets there:

“Over my career, my abilities have gotten better through some work ethic and a little bit of confidence and understanding the moment and having success in the moment,” Caruso said after Game 4. “… This series — this playoffs, really — teams are forcing me to try and score the ball. That’s something that I’ve been working on for the last three, four years of my offseason. It’s been long offseasons not in the playoffs, so I’ve had a lot of time to work and prepare.”

That preparation, combined with countless catch-and-shoot reps that have turned him into a 43.2% marksman from 3-point range in this postseason, makes Caruso a legitimate complementary offensive threat playing off the likes of Gilgeous-Alexander, Williams and Chet Holmgren. And that, combined with his ability to defend all across the positional spectrum — and his propensity for wreaking havoc while doing so, in the form of steals, deflections, blocked shots and blown-up possessions — makes him an exceptionally additive player in just about any context you could conjure.

“He is a gamer — you plug him in anywhere, any lineup, feels like any group, he makes a difference,” Gilgeous-Alexander said Sunday. “Makes everyone else around him better. He is always talking. He always knows where we’re supposed to be, where the other team is supposed to be. He has instincts that are special. I don’t think you can teach things like that. He just knows where the ball is going, where a rebound is bouncing to, how to get a deflection, timely steals.”

That all-around difference was palpable late in Game 4. Caruso contributed a little bit of everything — strong shot contests, aggressive rebounding on both ends, smart cuts, timely help rotations, excellent on-ball defense — as part of the small-ball defensive look Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton said “got us stagnant there,” and helped set the table for the comeback effort that got OKC even in the best-of-seven series:

“He has a championship ring for a reason,” Gilgeous-Alexander said after Game 4. “It’s no coincidence. He knows what it takes. He put the work in. He’s proving it every night.”

Caruso has proven plenty for Oklahoma City, both over the course of the season and in this series, where he has the best on-court/off-court splits of any Thunder rotation regular besides Holmgren. In a gotta-have-it Game 4, Oklahoma City outscored Indiana by 14 points in Caruso’s 30 minutes; through four games, 17 of 26 Thunder lineups that have outscored the Pacers have included Caruso.

“He just has amazing feel for the game and is an insane competitor,” Gilgeous-Alexander said Sunday. “I think you add those two things together, and no matter where you drop him in the world, any basketball game, he is going to make a difference.”

The question facing Daigneault and his coaching staff heading into Game 5 of a 2-2 series: Could Caruso make an even bigger difference in even bigger minutes? Like … for example … starter’s minutes?

Daigneault’s proven very willing to tinker with his starting lineup, shifting away from a more traditional two-big look with Isaiah Hartenstein alongside Holmgren before the series in favor of moving Cason Wallace into the first five to better match speed on the perimeter with Haliburton, Andrew Nembhard and Indiana’s high-octane ball- and player-movement game. Daigneault then shifted back to the double-big unit for Game 4, as part of a reorientation of Oklahoma City’s rotation and substitution pattern aimed partly at counteracting the Pacers’ defensive strategy on Gilgeous-Alexander, thus ensuring the MVP had a bit more gas in the tank come crunch time than he had in Game 3. (Mission accomplished.)

“Every game is different,” Daigneault said Sunday. “Like, we’ve done it after wins, after losses, throughout these series — we move things around pretty quickly to try to stay unpredictable and also try to scrape for every advantage we can in what turn out to be close games.”

Few players in the league are better equipped to scrape out those advantages than Caruso, and with the Finals knotted up and a title just two wins away, Daigneault sounded Sunday like a coach prepared to lean even harder in his direction.

“I think this is the time you’ve got to do everything you can to try to win the games and pull out all the stops. That’s been the mentality,” he said. “He’s been great. Extra rest in the Finals for all the players is a consideration, and you get a lot of rest between games. There’s advantages and disadvantages. But one of the advantages is for everybody to recover and be as fresh as possible going into the game.”

With an extra day of rest between Games 4 and 5, and with a shot at a second date with the Larry O’Brien Championship Trophy getting closer by the possession, Caruso plans to be ready to put his fingerprints on the game, no matter how many minutes Daigneault needs him to play come Monday night in Bricktown.

“These are the games you are judged on … this is the time of year that I live for,” Caruso said Sunday. “This is the time of the year where games matter, stakes are high, wins and losses are more important. So being prepared for this is important.”

Texas rookie Kumar Rocker keeps scoreless start intact with help from pickle juice

ARLINGTON, Texas — Texas Rangers rookie Kumar Rocker kept a scoreless start intact by working through an eventful fifth inning that included downing three small bottles of pickle juice, the last of which resulted in a mound visit charged to a ball boy.

The 25-year-old right-hander apparently cramped up after striking out White Sox outfielder Michael A. Taylor for the first out of the fifth Sunday, prompting a visit from the trainer along with manager Bruce Bochy and pitching coach Mike Maddux.

During the roughly five minutes the staff and the infielders were at the mound, first baseman Jake Burger went to the dugout, grabbed two small bottles of pickle juice and jogged back to the mound.

Rocker quickly downed both bottles, then stretched his legs and threw several warmup pitches, with another break in between for another chat with the trainer.

Rocker stayed in the game and gave up a single to Josh Rojas. With Mike Tauchman at the plate, a ball boy jogged to the mound with a third bottle of pickle juice, which Rocker promptly drank and gave back to him.

Home plate umpire Marvin Hudson, the crew chief, huddled with the other three umpires, and they ruled the Rangers should be charged with a mound visit for the ball boy’s trip.

Rocker retired Tauchman on a grounder to Burger, and after another trip to the mound from the trainer, Rocker got out of the inning with a groundout from Chase Meidroth.

Getting through the fifth gave Rocker a shot at being in the winning pitcher. The Rangers led 2-0 when Rocker was replaced by Chris Martin to start the sixth. Martin gave up a solo homer to Miguel Vargas.

Rocker started in place of right-hander Tyler Mahle on the same the day that Mahle was placed on the injured list with right shoulder fatigue.

Rocker allowed four singles and a walk in five innings. He struck out six.

Rays sweep Mets as Griffin Canning trends down, bats get blanked to cap worst series of season

The Mets lost Sunday’s series finale against the Tampa Bay Rays, 9-0, amid right-hander Griffin Canning‘s worst start of June and the offense’s poorest performance in almost a month.

New York is on the wrong side of a sweep for the first time in the 2025 season and enters June’s second half with questions that need answers as a six-game NL East road trip looms.

Takeaways

  1. Pitching could be a problem. The Mets have depth to potentially withstandKodai Senga‘s injury, but Canning’s latest outing continued a concerning trend. With June 4 at the Los Angeles Dodgers as the exception, four of his past five starts have seen him struggle. After the Rays (39-32) totaled six runs on four hits in 4.1 IP, he has now allowed 10 earned runs and 11 hits (two homers) over 9.2 IP of his past two starts. Before his six scoreless innings at the Dodgers, he logged just 5.2 IP across his May 23 (Dodgers) and May 28 (Chicago White Sox) outings, allowing eight runs (six earned) on four hits while battling walks (eight). Canning (6-3, 3.80 ERA) is ultimately heading in the wrong direction at a time when the Mets need him to step up.
  2. Even if Canning were to have pitched better, the offense did not give the Mets (45-27) a chance. Aside from Brandon Nimmo, Ronny Mauricio, Luisangel Acuña and Francisco Alvarez — who each singled, including Acuña’s two — New York had no answer for opposing starter Shane Baz and Tampa Bay’s bullpen.
  3. Mauricio — his knock came during a pinch-hit situation when he led off the seventh inning but went to waste after the Rays subsequently retiredAlvarez, Acuña and Francisco Lindor in order — has two hits over the past two games, including Saturday’s fifth-inning home run. Mauricio replaced an 0-for-2 Brett Baty as the New York lineup’s seventh batter and was a bright spot in a game where there were virtually none.
  4. The Mets remain in first place in the division with a 2.5-game lead over the second-place Philadelphia Phillies, who are 42-29. Getting swept stings, and New York must reset, but it will soon have a chance to make up direct ground against the Phillies with its matchup later this week.

Who’s the MVP?

Baz, who walked four Mets but struck out six and allowed only three hits while throwing 60 strikes on 106 pitches in 6.2 scoreless innings.

Highlights

What’s next

The Mets get Monday to regroup before a three-game series at the Braves (31-39) Tuesday through Thursday.

Left-hander David Peterson (5-2, 2.49 ERA) and Spencer Schwellenbach (5-4, 3.11 ERA) are projected to start Tuesday’s 7:15 p.m. opener on SNY.

New York subsequently stops in Philadelphia for a three-game set with the Phillies next Friday through Sunday before returning to Citi Field and playing Atlanta four more times.

Diamondbacks sign veteran pitcher Anthony DeSclafani

PHOENIX — The Arizona Diamondbacks have signed free-agent pitcher Anthony DeSclafani and placed him on the major-league roster Sunday.

DeSclafani, 35, recently opted out of a minor-league deal with the New York Yankees. He pitched for their Triple-A team at Scranton, where he had a 4.50 ERA in five starts.

Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo said before Sunday’s game against San Diego that the veteran right-hander will work out of the bullpen.

In a corresponding move, Bryce Jarvis was optioned to Triple-A Reno, and to make room on Arizona’s 40-man roster, Justin Martínez was moved to the 60-day injured list. Martínez will undergo surgery to repair his ulnar collateral ligament and miss the rest of this season.

Arizona has also lost Corbin Burnes (Tommy John surgery) and A.J. Puk has been sidelined since April 17 with elbow inflammation. Puk was shut down from his rehab program last week after experiencing discomfort in his elbow and is consulting about possible surgery.

DeSclafani is 54-56 with a 4.20 ERA in his career. He was 13-7 with a 3.17 ERA for San Francisco in 2021, but last pitched in the majors in July 2023. He was sidelined all of last season after having flexor tendon surgery on his pitching arm.

Yankees fall 2-0 as Red Sox complete three-game sweep

The Yankees fell flat at the plate as the Boston Red Sox completed a three-game sweep of their AL East rivals with a 2-0 win at Fenway Park.

New York squeezed out just five hits, but went 0-for-5 with runners in scoring position, left six runners on base in the final, and struck out 11 times on the afternoon. The Yankees, swept for the first time on the year, never led in the series and fell to 42-28 as the Red Sox improved to 37-36.

Max Fried pitched well, scattering six hits over seven frames, but a pair of two-out extra-base hits proved to be his side’s downfall. 

And while it was Father’s Day, as the game progressed, it became evident Sunday was also Pitcher’s Best Friend Day as the two teams combined to bounce into five double plays.

Here are the takeaways…

Aaron Judge struck out the first three times he came up against Boston starter Brayan Bello: swinging when he couldn’t hold up on a cutter off the plate with a runner on second in the first, swinging through a fastball on the outside corner with a runner on first in the third, and swing at a down-and-in sinker to leadoff the fifth.

His biggest chance of the game came with runners on first and second and one out in the top of the eighth. After swinging through a 96.7 mph fastball above the zone from Red Sox reliever Garrett Whitlock, Judge rolled over on a slider to hit into a 5-4-3 inning-ending double play. 

He finished the series 1-for-12 with nine strikeouts. The one hit, was a solo homer in the ninth of Friday night’s loss.

Anthony Volpe booted a grounder on the second pitch of the game for his eighth error of the year. But he made up for it by fielding a 6-3 double play on the very next pitch. He made another good play, picking a short hop on a 96.5 mph hit starting at 6-4-3 double play to end the fourth. 

At the plate, things didn’t go his way: He grounded out the first three times he was up, including a 6-4-3 twin killing in the fourth and struck out swinging for the game’s final out.

– An error on the bases cost the Yanks for the second straight day. With runners on first and second and two out in the third, Ben Rice was caught off second by Bello and nabbed at third to end the inning.

– Up 2-0, Boston went to the bullpen for the eighth, and Aaron Boone went to his bench. At first, the Yanks’ manager got the edge when Paul Goldschmidt (batting for Oswald Peraza) singled on the first pitch reliever Brennan Bernardino threw. And after Trent Grisham singled to bring the go-ahead run to the plate DJ LeMahieu (for Rice) went down looking at a 3-2 sinker right over the plate before Judge couldn’t capitalize.

– Fried needed three pitches to get two outs in the first, pitching around an error with a double-play off Rafael Devers’ bat. Romy Gonzalez then lined a triple into the corner in right as the ball bounced past Cody Bellinger. (Gonzalez stayed in the game despite face-planting on his head-first slide.) The lefty made a good pitch to Trevor Story, but he muscled the ball off his hands just into the left field grass for a two-out RBI single. A slow curve to Abraham Toro for strike three ended the inning.

Fried got Jarren Duran swinging on a 96 mph sinker and Ceddanne Rafaela swinging at a 95.7 mph fastball in a 1-2-3 second. After the 11-pitch inning, the lefty issued a leadoff walk on a 10th pitch to start the third. Rob Refsnyder‘s first-pitch single through the left side gave Devers a big opportunity, but the Sox’s slugger bounced into another double-play, this time 5-4-3. After walking Gonzalez to put two on, pitching coach Matt Blake was out for a visit. But Fried’s slow curve froze Story to strand two runners on his fourth strikeout of the afternoon.

Fried allowed a pair of singles to right sandwiched around a strikeout in the fourth, but got another double play on a hard-hit ball to end the threat. After getting the first two in the fifth on eight pitches, Devers finally cracked the Yanks’ lefty, driving a 369-foot home run that just snuck over the Green Monster. Fried’s first-pitch 93.6 mph fastball down and over the plate was jumped on for Devers’ 15th of the season to the opposite field. A homer in just two parks, Wrigley Field the other.

Fried retired his final seven batters after the dinger to finish the day with a final line of 7.0 innings, two runs, six hits, two walks, nine strikeouts on 106 pitches (72 strikes). He got 15 whiffs on 56 swings and another 16 called strikes on the day.

– Grisham clanked a double off the Green Monster scoreboard in left center to lead off the day, but he was left stranded. He finished the day 2-for-4, reaching on error with two down in the fifth, as well.

Rice popped out to short in the first with a runner on second, and cracked a one-out single in the third through the right side of the infield before his costly base running mistake. He went 1-for-3. 

– Bellinger took a four-pitch walk in the first and nabbed an infield single off the pitcher’s glove with two down in the third. Finished 1-for-3 with a strikeout and a walk.

Jazz Chisholm Jr. grounded out to second to strand runners on first and second in the first, worked a walk to start the fourth, struck out looking at a sinker on the inside corner to end the sixth, and was caught looking again in the ninth. 

Jasson Dominguez went 0-for-3 with a strikeout swinging on a down-and-in cutter to end the fourth.

J.C. Escarra came a half foot from a double into the left-field corner, but worked a walk with two out in the second. Finished 0-for-2 with a strikeout and a walk.

Giancarlo Stanton worked out at Yankee Stadium on Sunday and faced the Angels’ pitching staff on the Trajekt machine, Boone said before the game. The expectation is that Stanton will be back in the lineup on Monday or Tuesday.

Game MVP: Brayan Bello

Bello allowed just three hits and three walks over seven innings with eight strikeouts on 114 pitches (72 strikes).

What’s next

The Yanks return to the Bronx for a four-game set against the Los Angeles Angels.

Right-hander Clarke Schmidt (3.60 ERA, 1.236 WHIP) will climb the hill for his 11th start. He will go against José Soriano (3.86 ERA, 1.500 WHIP), making his 15th start of the season for the visitors.

Pacers vs. Thunder NBA Finals: Indiana coach Rick Carlisle calls criticism of referee Scott Foster “awful,” “stupid”

OKLAHOMA CITY — Indiana Pacers head coach Rick Carlisle on Sunday decried the swell of public criticism of the officiating that flowed following the Oklahoma City Thunder’s Game 4 win in the 2025 NBA Finals, describing the carping on perceived mistaken calls and non-calls — specifically those involving longtime NBA referee Scott Foster — as, among other things, “awful” and “stupid.”

During his news conference at Indiana’s Sunday practice session ahead of Game 5 on Monday, Carlisle fielded a question about how much of a role he felt the officiating played in Game 4, which featured 53 personal fouls, two flagrant fouls, two technical fouls and 71 total free throws — all high-water marks for the series. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander shot 10 of those free throws, including eight in the fourth quarter, as part of a 15-point final frame that helped Oklahoma City erase a 10-point third-quarter deficit to tie the series at two games apiece.

Pacers head coach Rick Carlisle speaks with referee Josh Tiven during the second half of Game 4 of the NBA Finals against the Oklahoma City Thunder, Friday, June 13, 2025, in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)
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Foster, who’s been officiating NBA games since 1992, called 23 of those fouls, according to analysis by Yahoo Sports contributing NBA writer Tom Haberstroh:

Some fans and pundits called foul on the elevated total number of calls in general, and the number of times Foster blew his whistle in particular. Carlisle made clear on Sunday he found the critiques offensive.

“As far as officiating, I think it’s awful, some of the things I’ve seen about the officiating, and Scott Foster, in particular,” Carlisle said. “I’ve known Scott Foster for 30 years. He’s a great official. He’s done a great job in these playoffs. We’ve had him a lot of times, and the ridiculous scrutiny that’s being thrown out there is terrible, and unfair, and unjust. It’s stupid.”

Asked which critiques specifically he’d seen and was referring to, Carlisle declined to elaborate.

“I’m not getting into it,” he said. “I’ve said what I’m going to say.”

After Game 4, Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said he didn’t see anything untoward in the uptick in whistles — referred to by one reporter as “a crap-ton of free throws.”

“Well, there were a crap-ton of fouls — that’s why there were a crap-ton of free throws,” Daigneault said. “I thought the refs did a good job tonight. Both teams shot a lot of free throws. It was physical. That was what the game was. It was a physical game on both ends of the floor for both teams.”

Pacers vs. Thunder NBA Finals: Indiana coach Rick Carlisle calls criticism of referee Scott Foster “awful,” “stupid”

OKLAHOMA CITY — Indiana Pacers head coach Rick Carlisle on Sunday decried the swell of public criticism of the officiating that flowed following the Oklahoma City Thunder’s Game 4 win in the 2025 NBA Finals, describing the carping on perceived mistaken calls and non-calls — specifically those involving longtime NBA referee Scott Foster — as, among other things, “awful” and “stupid.”

During his news conference at Indiana’s Sunday practice session ahead of Game 5 on Monday, Carlisle fielded a question about how much of a role he felt the officiating played in Game 4, which featured 53 personal fouls, two flagrant fouls, two technical fouls and 71 total free throws — all high-water marks for the series. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander shot 10 of those free throws, including eight in the fourth quarter, as part of a 15-point final frame that helped Oklahoma City erase a 10-point third-quarter deficit to tie the series at two games apiece.

Pacers head coach Rick Carlisle speaks with referee Josh Tiven during the second half of Game 4 of the NBA Finals against the Oklahoma City Thunder, Friday, June 13, 2025, in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)
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Foster, who’s been officiating NBA games since 1992, called 23 of those fouls, according to analysis by Yahoo Sports contributing NBA writer Tom Haberstroh:

Some fans and pundits called foul on the elevated total number of calls in general, and the number of times Foster blew his whistle in particular. Carlisle made clear on Sunday he found the critiques offensive.

“As far as officiating, I think it’s awful, some of the things I’ve seen about the officiating, and Scott Foster, in particular,” Carlisle said. “I’ve known Scott Foster for 30 years. He’s a great official. He’s done a great job in these playoffs. We’ve had him a lot of times, and the ridiculous scrutiny that’s being thrown out there is terrible, and unfair, and unjust. It’s stupid.”

Asked which critiques specifically he’d seen and was referring to, Carlisle declined to elaborate.

“I’m not getting into it,” he said. “I’ve said what I’m going to say.”

After Game 4, Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said he didn’t see anything untoward in the uptick in whistles — referred to by one reporter as “a crap-ton of free throws.”

“Well, there were a crap-ton of fouls — that’s why there were a crap-ton of free throws,” Daigneault said. “I thought the refs did a good job tonight. Both teams shot a lot of free throws. It was physical. That was what the game was. It was a physical game on both ends of the floor for both teams.”

Desmond Bane traded to Orlando Magic: Fantasy Basketball Fallout

I was enjoying a nice little Father’s Day brunch when Shams Charania interrupted my meal and libations to announce that the Memphis Grizzlies traded Desmond Bane to the Orlando Magic in exchange for Kentavious Caldwell Pope, Cole Anthony, four first-round picks and a pick swap.

On the surface, that’s a lot of picks to give up for a player who hasn’t been an All-Star in his five years in the league. But let’s look beyond that — Bane is exactly what the Magic needed and coveted this offseason. They were last in the league in 3-point shooting, and Bane is shooting 41% from beyond the arc in his career. They also needed a guard capable of facilitating the offense. Bane is coming off two straight seasons of averaging over five assists per game. 

And while some may view the loss of KCP as a negative defensively, Bane holds his own on that side of the ball as well. Is he a lockdown defender? No. But he’s 6-foot-5, swole AF and can guard 1 through 3 without issue. 

The Magic, willing to trade their near-term draft capital for Bane, signals that Orlando isn’t messing around and will be a force in the East. I love the core of Jalen Suggs, Paolo Banchero, Franz Wagner and Bane. The center spot is the weakness, but I doubt Orlando is done making moves.

Back to the draft compensation. The 2026 Phoenix or Washington pick swap could be valuable, but the remaining picks offered in the trade, if conveyed, would be of the late-round variety. This also assumes the Magic are healthy and successful over the next few seasons.

I thought it was more likely that Ja Morant would be traded. So, now that Bane is gone, Morant and Jaren Jackson Jr.’s usage and stock are up. Low-key, this is a win for Scotty Pippen Jr. as well. 

Now, it begs the question: With all these new draft assets, is Memphis moving toward a rebuild? They have wing depth, but could they still be buyers and refactor this team to remain competitive?

It’s not as if Bane isn’t used to deferring a bit, but this configuration is different. The Grizzlies had moments this year as one of the best teams in basketball, and that often occurred when Bane was the primary facilitator, allowing Morant to move more off the ball. We should see plenty of that with Bane’s versatility, but let’s not get it twisted. He should feast on any kickouts and gravity that Paolo or Franz bring. Another 19/5/5 campaign is doable, and I’d still be good taking him in the early few rounds of 9-cat drafts because he’s efficient, even if there’s a slight dip in production. 

Magic reportedly acquire Desmond Bane: Fantasy impact

While the Indiana Pacers and Oklahoma City Thunder are still competing in the NBA Finals, the rest of the NBA is focused on the future. For the Memphis Grizzlies and Orlando Magic, that meant making a significant trade on Sunday, according to ESPN’s Shams Charania. Headed to Orlando is shooting guard Desmond Bane, and the Magic gave up a lot to acquire his services. Here’s a look at how the trade impacts fantasy basketball in 2025-26.

Orlando receives:

Desmond Bane

While his scoring average decreased this season, Bane’s availability improved after being unable to hit 60 games in either of the prior two campaigns. In 69 appearances, he averaged 19.2 points, 6.1 rebounds, 5.3 assists, 1.2 steals and 2.4 three-pointers in 32.0 minutes. Shooting 48.4 percent from the field, 39.2 percent from three and 89.4 percent from the foul line, Bane was a third-round player in eight- and nine-cat formats. Heading to a team that’s in dire need of perimeter shooting may raise his fantasy ceiling, even with Paolo Banchero and Franz Wagner due to have the basketball in their hands quite often. Bane entered last season with a Yahoo! ADP of 44; he may go a bit earlier in standard league drafts.

Having a shooter of Bane’s caliber in the lineup should improve the spacing for Wagner and Banchero, with the former averaging a career-high 4.7 assists per game this season. Banchero has been a better option for points leagues than category leagues for much of his NBA career, but he did provide top-100 value in eight-cat formats in 2024-25. Also worth watching from a fantasy standpoint will be Jalen Suggs, who was a sixth-round player before going down with a season-ending quad injury in early March. Playing alongside Bane should also benefit Suggs, but he’s only exceeded 55 games once in his first four seasons.

Memphis receives:

Kentavious Caldwell-Pope

Cole Anthony

2025 first-round pick

2026 first-round pick via Phoenix

2028 first-round pick

2030 first-round pick

2029 first-round pick swap (lightly protected)

The Grizzlies’ decision to part ways with Bane nets the franchise a significant haul in terms of draft capital; are they done, or will some of those picks be used to add a star to the lineup? The 2025 pick gets Memphis back into the first round after sending their pick (18th overall) to Washington as part of the Marcus Smart trade consummated at the February deadline.

As for the players Memphis has acquired, Caldwell-Pope appears well-positioned to slot into the spot left vacant by Bane. KCP struggled in Orlando this season, averaging 8.7 points, 2.2 rebounds, 1.8 assists, 1.3 steals and 1.5 three-pointers in 77 appearances. While solid defensively, Caldwell-Pope’s scoring average was his lowest since his rookie season (2013-14). Also, his 34.2 percent mark from beyond the arc was KCP’s lowest since 2015-16. He would finish the regular season outside the top-150 in eight- and nine-cat formats. The change of scenery may be a positive for Caldwell-Pope, but he should once again be no better than a late-round option in standard leagues.

Anthony may also benefit from a move, as the 2024-25 season was his least productive in five years with the Magic. Appearing in 67 games, he averaged 9.4 points, 3.0 rebounds, 2.9 assists, 0.9 steals and 1.1 three-pointers in 18.4 minutes, shooting 42.4 percent from the field and 82.3 percent from the foul line. Due to Suggs’ injury-related absences, Anthony made 22 starts, but he was not productive enough to become a reliable streamer in most leagues. Anthony finished the season ranked well outside the top-200 in eight- and nine-cat formats, and that does not appear likely to change in Memphis.

In addition to having Ja Morant, the Grizzlies’ confidence in Scotty Pippen Jr. increased throughout the 2024-25 season. By the end of his time in Orlando, Anthony was not a lock for rotation minutes, and he may be headed for a similar situation with the Grizzlies.

Report: Orlando acquires Desmond Bane from Memphis for Caldwell-Pope, Cole Anthony, four firsts

Orlando Magic President of Basketball Operations Jeff Weltman said this offseason it was time to “turn the page” on the Magic’s rebuild and become a win-now team.

On Sunday he did just that, agreeing to a trade that is all-in: Memphis is trading guard Desmond Bane to Orlando for Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, Cole Anthony, four unprotected first-round picks and one first-round pick swap, reports Shams Charania of ESPN.

The first reaction to this trade: Bane is a perfect fit for what Orlando needs, but that is a very steep price to pay.

Orlando needs shooting more than anything and Bane brings that, knocking down 39.2% of his 3-pointers last season, and for his career is a 41% shooter from beyond the arc. More than just a gunner, Bane was a secondary shot creator in Memphis who averaged 19.2 points, 6.1 rebounds and 5.3 assists a game last season. Put him next to a healthy Paolo Banchero and Franz Wagner and the Magic offense should make a leap from its 27th-in-the-league ranking a year ago, especially with Banchero and Wagner setting screens for Bane (that will be very difficult to defend). Bane is also a solid defender who will fit in with the Magic’s elite unit on that end.

Weltman and Orlando surveyed the East, saw that it feels more wide open in the wake of the Jayson Tatum and Damian Lillard injuries, and decided now was the time to push their chips into the middle of the table. Orlando could well be a top-four team in the East next season and a playoff threat.

What is jaw-dropping about the trade is the four unprotected first-round picks.

That’s a lot to surrender for a player who has never been an All-Star before, especially in a trade where the Magic had to throw in two quality veterans.

In Memphis, it feels like more moves are on the way, the four picks give them flexibility to make future trades to lower payroll, clearing the way for a massive Jaren Jackson Jr. extension this summer.

While Bane played a key role in the offense when Ja Morant has been out, Caldwell-Pope steps in as a rock-solid starter at the two and Anthony can be a good first guard off the bench for the Grizzlies. However, it’s the picks that give them flexibility to make future trades or use those picks to add depth over time.