It’s Not Just You, Microsoft 365 Is (Still) Down

Heads up, workers of the world: Microsoft 365 is currently down. Microsoft’s flagship work suite, which includes tools like Microsoft Teams and Microsoft Outlook, is currently experiencing issues impacting users. It’s not yet clear exactly why these problems are occurring, but according to Downdetector (owned by Lifehacker parent company Ziff Davis) thousands of users are reporting issues.

There are any number of causes that could trigger a widespread outage like this, and in all likelihood, Microsoft will have the issue isolated and fixed soon—especially considering how many companies and users rely on Microsoft 365 to function. But it does follow a number of high-profile outages this week. Yesterday, Yahoo! and AOL were both down. Last week, X experienced an outage, as did Verizon—quite famously, I might add. And this morning, Instagram was also down.

But joining that list as well is none other than Microsoft itself. These services were all down yesterday, too, making this the second day in a row. Again, it’s not clear why Microsoft is experiencing these issues, but while we wait for a fix, there’s not much you can do on your end. If your Microsoft apps are acting up, you can try to work with any of the offline tools you have access to. If you have other means of communication other than Teams, run with that. There’s nothing short of Microsoft issuing a patch on its end that will bring back online functionality here.

This Script Removes the AI Features From Chrome, Edge, and Firefox

Tech companies are getting increasingly pushy with their large language models—prominent buttons for these AI features coat every surface designers can think of, including in three of the most prominent browsers: Chrome, Edge, and Firefox.

If you want these AI features to go away, and stay away, there’s a script for that. JustTheBrowser is a free and open source tool from developer and tech blogger Corbin Davenport that removes AI features, telemetry data reporting, sponsored content, product integrations, and other annoyances from Chrome, Firefox, and Microsoft Edge. Basically, you can run this once and never think about these features again.

To get started, head to the JustTheBrowser homepage. There are scripts to copy (which I’m not going to include here in case they change in the future).


Credit: Justin Pot

Windows users will need to run PowerShell as an admin—the easiest way to do that is by right-clicking PowerShell in the start menu and clicking “Run as administrator.” There is a different script for Mac and Linux users—that one just needs to be copied into a regular Terminal.

Either way, you will be asked which browser you’d like to update the settings for—just hit the number corresponding to what you want to do.


Credit: Justin Pot

In my testing, the process was very simple on Windows—just click the number and the script will do its thing. On macOS, I needed to follow a few instructions to enable a configuration policy in the Settings app, something that only took a couple of clicks. After that, Chrome was free of any and all references to AI.


Credit: Justin Pot

A number of other features were also gone, including those annoying prompts to switch my default browser.

The way this works is kind of interesting: it uses features intended for large organizations. Basically all major browsers allow for group settings, which is how IT departments control what you can and can’t do with your browser. Among these settings are ones to disable AI features.

It’s an interesting workaround, and hopefully one that keeps working. There is always a chance that browser companies make it so even IT departments can’t disable AI features, at which point we’ll all need to find a new solution (or switch to an alternative browser).

Mets Trade for Ace Freddy Peralta, Brewers Eye Future With New Prospects & Yankees Reunite With Cody Bellinger

When the New York Mets signed Bo Bichette and traded for Luis Robert Jr., many wondered if President of Baseball Ops David Stearns was finished making major moves this offseason. On Wednesday night though, Stearns had one more big surprise up his sleeve when he acquired someone from his past days in Milwaukee.

On this episode of Baseball Bar-B-Cast, Jake Mintz and Jordan Shusterman discuss the big trade that saw the Mets deal for Milwaukee Brewers ace Freddy Peralta and Tobias Myers in exchange for a package of top prospects Brandon Sproat and Jett Williams. With Peralta now headlining the Mets’ starting rotation, does this addition make them a World Series contender again? Also, how will the new additions to the Brew Crew’s prospect pipeline help them in the immediate future?

Later, Jordan and Jake talk about the New York Yankees and Cody Bellinger reuniting after his impressive 2025 season in pinstripes on a five-year, $162.5 million contract. The move further solidifies the Yankees’ belief in their offense, essentially running it back from last season—but could Brian Cashman and company have one more front-page deal before Spring Training kicks off? The guys then close the show by making their picks for this week’s edition of The Good, The Bad & The Uggla.

2:03 – The Opener: Freddy Peralta to the Mets

29:43 – Jordan’s Prospect Hut: The Brewers’ return

38:28 – Yankees re-sign Cody Bellinger

52:00 – Scott Boras Scoreboard update

54:37 – The Good

1:01:13 – The Bad

1:06:44 – The Uggla

Photo by Vincent Carchietta/Getty Images
Photo by Vaughn Ridley/Getty Images
Photo by Vincent Carchietta/Getty Images
Photo by Vaughn Ridley/Getty Images
Photo by Vincent Carchietta/Getty Images Photo by Vaughn Ridley/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 yahoosports.tv

10 Google Search Hacks Everyone Should Know

It’s not just you. Google Search has become significantly worse in recent years. In the past, you only had to watch out for low-quality content filled with SEO-bait keywords. Today, you have to be wary of AI-generated garbage, misinformation, and a generally worse UI. Still, it’s not impossible to find good search results on Google. I’ve found a number of tricks that have helped me reduce the number of low-quality entries Google returns for my searches. Here are 10 such tips everyone should know about before their next search:

Remove AI from results


Credit: Pranay Parab

I’m still annoyed by Google’s decision to slap AI right at the top of search results, and I make it a point to get rid of it every time I use a new browser or a new device. Doing this is much harder if you’re using the Google Search app, so stick to web browsers if you want to rid yourself of AI results. To that end, there are actually a few easy ways to remove AI from Google’s results. The quickest is to add -ai to your search queries and Google will remove AI results. Alternatively, you can try using the Hide Gemini browser extension.

Google’s best days were when it showed a simple page with 10 blue links the moment you searched for anything. If you want to return to that simplicity, you can use the Web search filter in Google. Once you search for something on Google, click the More button below the search bar up top, and select Web. This will remove all the clutter from Google Search and return 10 webpages at a time. If you use Chrome, you can simply type “web” in the address bar to start a Web search.

I’ve also written about a browser extension called Lucky, which does the same thing in Safari for iPhone. Lucky is available at a one-time fee of $3, and, in my opinion, it’s well worth the price.

Search a particular domain

If you know the domain you want to visit, you can limit your search to that domain alone. For example, you could restrict results to .gov if you only want to look at official US government sites, or .fr if you only wish to search websites registered in France. Just add site:.gov (or any other domain of your choice) to your search queries, and you’ll find better results that way. It’s also useful if you want to restrict searches to .ac.uk or .edu sites, which are more education-focused.

Restrict results to one website

If you’ve found a trusted source that you like, such as Lifehacker, you can use Google to restrict your results only to that website. You can add site:lifehacker.com to your queries on Google, and it’ll only show you results from this website. Just replace the name of the site with whichever one you like. This method is often better than using that site’s internal search tools, too.

Look for specific file formats

When you’re looking for specific information, you may be better off searching for a particular file format. For instance, if you’re looking for scientific articles, you may have a better chance of finding a pdf file than a web result. In these cases, you can use the filetype:pdf filter to locate pdf files, and you can replace the file type to locate results in a different file format.

Google has easily accessible filters

If you’re finding significantly worse results using Google search, you can try to refine the results by using Google’s built-in filters. Just below the search bar, you’ll see a few tabs such as All, News, More, Tools, etc. Click through each of these to eliminate certain types of results. Specifically, the Tools tab lets you refine results by date, and even allows you to remove results for related search terms and focus only on exact matches.


Credit: Pranay Parab

Sometimes, basic Google search tools just aren’t good enough to find what you need. This is particularly true when your search terms include words that are popular for other reasons. For instance, you’re searching “president,” but not the president of your country. This is where advanced search could help you remove unwanted results. You can go to the Google Advanced Search page and use all the filters there to find what you need. Each filter has a helpful description right next to it, which makes it easy to figure out what you’re doing.

Google also allows you to upload files and images to find results. Open Google search and click the + button in the search bar to upload a file or an image. You can attach a query to the image, and Google will help answer that question, or you can even look for images similar to the one you’ve uploaded. This can be useful if you want to detect fake profiles online, as scammers often steal profile photos from others to create a fake identity.

Use content blockers to hide unwanted results

If you can’t always be bothered with using various manual methods to hide all the junk from your Google Search results, consider using a content blocker to do so. My favorite has long been uBlock Origin, which is available on desktop and on mobile. It’ll remove all sponsored results, unwanted product listings, and most types of junk from your Google results.

Set your favorite websites as preferred sources

If you really like and trust certain websites, you should add those as preferred sources on Google. This will ensure that results from those sites are highlighted among search results and the Top Stories section in your search results. Google rolled this feature out in 2025, and it’s the most effective way to find information from higher quality websites. If you’d like, you can click this link to add Lifehacker as a preferred source.

NBA midseason grades: Report cards for every West team, plus each roster’s MVP so far

Every NBA team in the Western Conference has played 41 games and most have played more, which means we are due for a midseason report card.

(Check out our East report card and midseason awards, too.)

The Oklahoma City Thunder (37-8) went 6-6 over a three-week stretch during the holidays and still hold a commanding lead on the conference’s No. 1 seed. That stretch, though, included four losses to would-be challengers, leaving open the possibility they aren’t such a clear-cut favorite.

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The Denver Nuggets (29-15), who are surviving a spell without Nikola Jokić, the world’s best player, look every bit the contender when healthy. The San Antonio Spurs (30-14) handed OKC three of those losses, making clear that they could compete in a seven-game series with the defending champions. The Minnesota Timberwolves (27-17) also recently upset the Thunder.

Each of those four teams, all serious contenders, warrants an A. The West also boasts the one F from our midseason report card, but before we give away too much, let us get to the grades.

Dallas MavericksDenver NuggetsGolden State WarriorsHouston RocketsLos Angeles ClippersLos Angeles LakersMemphis GrizzliesMinnesota TimberwolvesNew Orleans PelicansOklahoma City ThunderPhoenix SunsPortland Trail BlazersSacramento KingsSan Antonio SpursUtah Jazz

(First-quarter grades can be found here.)

(Mallory Bielecki/Yahoo Sports Illustration)

  • Midseason MVP: Cooper Flagg (19-6-4 on 48/29/81)

  • Offensive rating: 110.4 (27th) • Defensive rating: 112.6 (7th)

  • Best lineup: Flagg • Ryan Nembhard • Naji Marshall • P.J. Washington • Anthony Davis (+29 in 47 minutes)

  • Against .500+ teams: 9-15 • Against losing teams: 9-11

Comments: Anthony Davis is one of the few true game-changing forces in the NBA, only he cannot stay healthy, and he turns 33 years old in March. … This time, it is a hand injury that will keep him out through the All-Star break. … Shop him? For what? … The alternative: Keep him, get Kyrie Irving healthy, and see what you have with them and Cooper Flagg(!) next season. … What is the point of chasing a play-in bid? May as well add another high pick to their mix.


  • Midseason MVP: Nikola Jokić (30-12-11 on 61/44/85)

  • Offensive rating: 121.5 (1st) • Defensive rating: 117.0 (24th)

  • Best lineup: Jokić • Jamal Murray • Christian Braun • Cam Johnson • Aaron Gordon (+42 in 159 minutes)

  • Against .500+ teams: 13-8 • Against losing teams: 16-7

Comments: Nikola Jokić leads the NBA in assists and rebounds per game and true shooting percentage. Needless to say, nobody has done that. … He is nursing a knee injury, and Denver (somehow) is 7-5 in his absence, holding on to the No. 3 seed in the West. … It speaks to the team’s depth this season. … The emergence of Peyton Watson (22-6-3 on 50/42/71) over those last 12 games is beyond helpful. … When healthy, this is as true of a contender as there is in the league. 


  • Midseason MVP: Stephen Curry (27-4-5 on 47/39/93)

  • Offensive rating: 115.8 (12th) • Defensive rating: 112.8 (9th)

  • Best lineup: Curry • Brandin Podziemski • Jimmy Butler • Jonathan Kuminga • Draymond Green (+25 in 65 minutes)

  • Against .500+ teams: 11-15 • Against losing teams: 14-5

Comments: Man, news of Jimmy Butler’s torn ACL is a bummer. … The framework of these Warriors, knocking on the door of the top-10 on both offense and defense, was a good one. … Stephen Curry is a shooting machine. This is not normal for a 37-year-old. … Yet, Golden State has been outscored by 2.7 points per 100 possessions when Butler is not on the court. … The dynasty, for all intents and purposes, is completely cooked, if it wasn’t already. … This is sad.


  • Midseason MVP: Kevin Durant (26-5-5 on 51/40/89)

  • Offensive rating: 118.9 (3rd) • Defensive rating: 112.4 (5th)

  • Best lineup: Durant • Amen Thompson • Josh Okogie • Jabari Smith Jr. • Alperen Şengün (+36 in 276 minutes)

  • Against .500+ teams: 14-8 • Against losing teams: 12-7

Comments: Without the injured Fred VanVleet, the Rockets lack an organizer of a point guard, and they have done quite well to survive it, posting the NBA’s third-rated offense. … Still, there are times in the clutch, where the Rockets are 10-12, when it is clear they need one. … It helps to have Kevin Durant, one of history’s most lethal isolation scorers — still, at 37 years old. Not normal, either, by the way. … It would be nice if coach Ime Udoka trusted Reed Sheppard more.


  • Midseason MVP: Kawhi Leonard (28-6-4 on 50/40/94)

  • Offensive rating: 115.5 (13th) • Defensive rating: 116.8 (22nd)

  • Best lineup: Leonard • James Harden • Kris Dunn • John Collins • Ivica Zubac (+10 in 250 minutes)

  • Against .500+ teams: 9-17 • Against losing teams: 10-7

Comments: The Clippers earned an F on our first-quarter report card and deserved it. … Since then, they are 13-8, outscoring opponents by 2.7 points per 100 possessions — something like a playoff team. … Only their terrible start has left them clutching to a play-in tournament berth. … It is incumbent upon the Clippers to make the playoffs, if only so they do not hand their lottery pick to the Thunder. … Kawhi Leonard’s knee is acting up again. … The team is, plainly, too old.


  • Midseason MVP: Luka Dončić (34-8-9 on 47/34/79)

  • Offensive rating: 116.9 (8th) • Defensive rating: 117.3 (25th)

  • Best lineup: Dončić • Austin Reaves • Marcus Smart • Rui Hachimura • Deandre Ayton (+31 in 81 minutes)

  • Against .500+ teams: 10-11 • Against losing teams: 16-5

Comments: The Lakers are 13-1 in the clutch, because they have Luka Dončić, LeBron James and Austin Reaves, an incredible offensive trio, who know how to close games. … This is how they are in fifth place, in line to make the playoffs, despite a negative point differential. … When James, Dončić and Reaves share the floor, the Lakers allow 118.7 points per 100 possessions, the equivalent of a bottom-five defense. … This is, to be clear, a fatal flaw. JJ Redick knows this.


  • Midseason MVP: Jaren Jackson Jr. (19-6-2 on 48/37/77)

  • Offensive rating: 112.9 (23rd) • Defensive rating: 114.0 (14th)

  • Best lineup: Jackson • Vince Williams • Cedric Coward • Jaylen Wells • Zach Edey (+27 in 102 minutes)

  • Against .500+ teams: 5-20 • Against losing teams: 13-4

Comments: In two games since returning to Memphis’ lineup, Ja Morant has totaled 47 points and 25 assists. … It feels like an audition for the rest of the league. … After all, the Grizzlies are reportedly listening to offers for Morant, and he seems ready to move on from Memphis, too. … The market is tepid. For now. … Too bad Zach Edey cannot stay on the court. It is actually intriguing how good the Grizzlies can be at full force. … But it is always something with Morant.


  • Midseason MVP: Anthony Edwards (30-5-4 on 50/41/79)

  • Offensive rating: 117.5 (6th) • Defensive rating: 112.9 (10th)

  • Best lineup: Edwards • Donte DiVincenzo • Jaden McDaniels • Julius Randle • Rudy Gobert (+85 in 424 minutes)

  • Against .500+ teams: 10-12 • Against losing teams: 17-5

Comments: The goal of these Timberwolves was to reestablish themselves as the team that has reached consecutive conference finals — with a chance to get further — and they have done that, even beating the Thunder in one of their two matchups. … Did the Wolves win their trade of Karl-Anthony Towns? Julius Randle has been just as good, if not better, and Donte DiVincenzo is a nice added bonus. … Anthony Edwards deserved a start in the All-Star Game.


  • Midseason MVP: Trey Murphy III (22-6-4 on 49/38/90)

  • Offensive rating: 111.9 (25th) • Defensive rating: 119.0 (27th)

  • Best lineup: Murphy • Jeremiah Fears • Herbert Jones • Saddiq Bey • Derik Queen (+15 in 113 minutes)

  • Against .500+ teams: 2-27 • Against losing teams: 8-9

Comments: Rookie Derik Queen is good, averaging a 13-7-4 on almost 50% shooting. … That still does not excuse the Pelicans’ decision to trade their unprotected 2026 first-round pick for him. That selection, belonging to Atlanta, is one of the single-best assets in the NBA. … Zion Williamson has played 20 straight games and still New Orleans stinks. … Might the Pelicans finally trade him?Trey Murphy is the real prize. Just about every NBA team could use him.


  • Midseason MVP: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (32-4-6 on 56/40/89)

  • Offensive rating: 118.5 (5th) • Defensive rating: 105.2 (1st)

  • Best lineup: Gilgeous-Alexander • Cason Wallace • Lu Dort • Jalen Williams • Chet Holmgren (+69 in 117 minutes)

  • Against .500+ teams: 16-7 • Against losing teams: 21-1

Comments: The Thunder, still the favorites, no longer seem invulnerable. For almost a month, they played .500 basketball. … Still they lead the West by 6.5 games. Still they are on a 68-win pace. … Since then, they are 7-1, losing only by two to the Heat in Miami, reestablishing the defending champions as the team to beat. … Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is on pace to become the first player to average 30 points in four straight seasons since Michael Jordan.


  • Midseason MVP: Devin Booker (25-4-6 on 45/30/86)

  • Offensive rating: 114.9 (14th) • Defensive rating: 112.2 (4th)

  • Best lineup: Booker • Collin Gillespie • Dillon Brooks • Royce O’Neale • Mark Williams (+48 in 231 minutes)

  • Against .500+ teams: 12-13 • Against losing teams: 15-4

Comments: Nobody figured these Suns for a guaranteed playoff spot in the crowded Western Conference, but there they stand through the season’s first half. … The effort of Dillon Brooks, their surprising culture-setter, is contagious. … Jalen Green is finally back, and he looked pretty good in his return. … How well he fits their newfound culture is a question. … The Suns have played well enough to warrant an upgrade at the deadline, though they have few picks to trade.


  • Midseason MVP: Deni Avdija (26-7-7 on 47/36/80)

  • Offensive rating: 113.5 (21st) • Defensive rating: 115.4 (17th)

  • Best lineup: Avdija • Shaedon Sharpe • Kris Murray • Toumani Camara • Donovan Clingan (+15 in 106 minutes)

  • Against .500+ teams: 12-16 • Against losing teams: 10-6

Comments: Deni Avdija should be an All-Star if we are basing our selections on how well they have played this season. … It is a good thing, too, because none of their recent first-round picks has established himself as a star. … There are a lot of players to like, though, including Caleb Love, who is averaging a 16-3-3 on 45/39/71 shooting splits in his last 15 appearances. … What does more of the same get them? More middling. It is painful to be stuck in the NBA’s middle.


  • Midseason MVP: DeMar DeRozan (19-3-4 on 51/36/87)

  • Offensive rating: 109.4 (29th) • Defensive rating: 119.1 (28th)

  • Best lineup: DeRozan • Russell Westbrook • Zach LaVine • Keegan Murray • Maxime Raynaud (+14 in 90 minutes)

  • Against .500+ teams: 8-24 • Against losing teams: 4-9

Comments: What to say about these Kings. Did they really think the combination of DeMar DeRozan, Zach LaVine and Russell Westbrook would bear fruit? … At least Domantas Sabonis is back from a knee injury, though he has yet to make a start in his return. … Everybody on the team is available in a trade. … What young player would you want from this roster? Maybe Keegan Murray or Maxime Raynaud? … Their saving grace: They own their first-round pick.


  • Midseason MVP: Victor Wembanyama (24-11-3 on 51/38/84)

  • Offensive rating: 116.6 (9th) • Defensive rating: 111.6 (3rd)

  • Best lineup: Wembanyama • De’Aaron Fox • Stephon Castle • Julian Champagnie • Harrison Barnes (+42 in 84 minutes)

  • Against .500+ teams: 14-12 • Against losing teams: 16-2

Comments: Victor Wembanyama is a walking top-flight defense at 22 years old. The Spurs own the equivalent of the NBA’s best defense (104.5 points allowed per 100 possessions) when he is on the court, and they operate like the league’s 14th-rated outfit when he is on the bench. (Still not bad, by the way.) … Stephon Castle has made a leap. Dylan Harper appears ready to make one. … San Antonio is waaaaaaaay ahead of schedule on the quest to build its next contender.


  • Midseason MVP: Keyonte George (24-4-7 on 46/38/90)

  • Offensive rating: 114.4 (17th) • Defensive rating: 122.2 (30th)

  • Best lineup: George • Brice Sensabaugh • Svi Mykhailiuk • Lauri Markkanen • Jusuf Nurkic (+2 in 47 minutes)

  • Against .500+ teams: 7-20 • Against losing teams: 8-9

Comments: The emergence of Keyonte George is a franchise-altering development. … Whereas once it made sense to trade Lauri Markkanen, now there is at least reason to believe the two of them could form the basis of a competitive team. … Their defensive rating is somehow worse than the league’s best offensive rating. … It would be nice if Markkanen played. … But their mission is clear, since the Jazz owe a top-eight protected pick to OKC.

Zion? Anthony Davis? Stand pat? 3 paths forward for Steph Curry’s Warriors

As soon as Stathead.com tracking. Scoring this much at this age is not something LeBron, KD, MJ or Kobe has ever done. To put it in perspective, Ray Allen, to whom Curry was often compared to earlier in his career, never averaged 27 points per game, period.

Which is why the Warriors have a tough decision ahead of them. Do they maximize Curry’s title window or preserve the post-Curry war chest?

Here are three pathways for the Warriors in the aftermath of Butler’s injury.

The Jimmy Butler trade last year had its doubters, but you can’t deny he changed the Warriors’ trajectory. Over the last two seasons, with Butler in the lineup, the Warriors are 44-16, which translates to a 55-win pace over 82 games. Without Butler in the lineup, the Warriors are 3-6, which … not good.

For Warriors owner Joe Lacob and general manager Mike Dunleavy Jr., the Curry-Butler-Draymond Green trio is worth clinging to, at least in theory. Butler’s contract owes him $54 million this season and $57.1 million next season, and there was always a downside that, for all of Butler’s talents, things could go poorly. Trading for a 35-year-old with hard miles on the tires always comes with risk, even for someone as competitive and fiery as Butler.

But the research of Jeff Stotts of InStreetClothes.com can’t be ignored. Since Stotts has meticulously kept tabs on NBA injuries since the 2005-06 season, no player has ever come back from an ACL injury at Butler’s age. At 36, Butler is the second-oldest player to have suffered the injury, behind only Chris “Birdman” Andersen, who tore his ACL in December 2016 at 38 years old. Andersen never played again.

There is reason for optimism, though. Andersen was never the caliber of player that Butler is. When Andersen tore his ACL, he was playing on a one-year commitment signed for the veteran’s minimum. Without a contract in hand, it’s understandable why Andersen hung it up for good. Butler, on the other hand, has the opportunity to come back to a team led by Curry and Green for one last hurrah. Notably, all three players are on expiring deals next season.

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Dunleavy has made sure to keep the powder keg dry. The only pick the Warriors owe is a top-20 protected 2030 pick to Washington as part of the Chris Paul trade that will simply convert to a second-round pick if it doesn’t convey. For his part, Dunleavy has said he plans on Butler coming back to the Warriors next season.

Dunleavy’s unwillingness to trade first-round picks down the road is a signal that he wants to maintain long-term sustainability rather than go all in for the twilight of Curry’s career. You can read it that way. But there may be another way to view it.

An alternate interpretation of the Warriors’ stingy handling of first-round picks: They need them for one last big swing. The Butler contract, with one more year left after this season, could be appealing if another team needs to pivot away from a star player and wants to offload long-term money. Luckily for the Warriors, there are a few options here.

Let’s run through a couple.

The Anthony Davis trade (and Klay reunion)

  • Warriors receive: Anthony Davis, Klay Thompson, Dante Exum

  • Mavericks receive: Jimmy Butler, Jonathan Kuminga and a top-four protected 2028 first-round pick from Golden State

  • Nets receive: D’Angelo Russell and a lottery-protected 2026 first-round pick from Golden State

Is it risky for Golden State? Yes. Is it sentimental? Sure. Is it a bad idea? I don’t think so. Keeping Butler for the next two seasons may be the easiest but also the worst option on the table. You have to do right by Curry. If he wants to keep contending at the highest level in Golden State, this is a no-brainer. 

Especially since Davis and Curry have a relationship already. Davis, Curry and coach Steve Kerr won gold together at the 2024 Paris Olympics, so it’s not like this would be the first time they’ve come together to win it all. 

It needs to be pointed out that Davis is out for at least another month with a hand injury. While that timetable is not ideal, one month is way better than the potential 12-month layoff for Butler at the same salary. At 32 years old, Davis is hardly the most reliable star from a player health standpoint, but at least the finger injury won’t affect his wheels. The same can’t be said for Butler upon his return.

Like Butler, Davis would be a floor-raiser star for the Warriors, who are operating on a much different timeline than Dallas now that the Mavs have Cooper Flagg. Davis has a $62.8 million player option for 2027-28, which may not be palatable for Dallas. In Golden State, with Curry still playing at a high level, that might be the price of maximizing Curry’s pursuit for a fifth championship.

[Get more Warriors news: Golden State team feed]

The Davis acquisition would also help keep Green fresher since neither of them wants to play the 5 full time and they can share the burden of the center position. With Davis occupying the block, a floor-spacing wing like Thompson becomes even more essential. His emotional return would be icing on the cake both in nostalgia and need. With deals all expiring in 2026-27, I could see Curry, Green and Thompson taking below-market deals to keep it going.

On the Dallas side, the Mavs free themselves of Davis’ monster player option in 2027-28 and take a low-commitment chance on Kuminga, who is still 23 years old. Butler’s expiring contract could be flipped again at next year’s deadline to a contender with draft assets. In the meantime, Butler and Kyrie Irving could both rehab from their respective ACL tears. Without control over their first-round picks from 2027-30, the time for Dallas’ ping-pong prioritization is now.

To facilitate the deal, the Nets receive D’Angelo Russell for a third time. Because why not. They could either waive him or keep him for yet another go-round on the Russell carousel. For their services, the Warriors would send a heavily protected first-round pick.

The Zion Williamson and Trey Murphy III trade (and Kevon Looney reunion)

  • Warriors receive: Zion Williamson, Trey Murphy III and Kevon Looney

  • Pelicans receive: Jimmy Butler, Jonathan Kuminga, two first-round picks (2026 and 2032) and a 2027 first-round pick swap

  • Nets receive: Jordan Hawkins and a 2028 top-20 protected pick

Dunleavy told reporters Tuesday he wouldn’t be looking to trade a post-Steph first-round pick unless he was getting a big-time player in return.

“If we’re talking about trading draft picks that will be going out when Steph isn’t here, it’s going to have to be a player that we think we’ll be getting back that is going to be here when those picks are going out,” Dunleavy said. “That player’s going to have to be pretty impactful. It would take a good amount — positionally, play style, archetype, all that. I would leave it pretty broad and open.

“But if there’s a great player to be had, we’ve got everything in the war chest that we would be willing to use.”

Do Zion Williamson or Trey Murphy III qualify? Maybe not individually. But if you’re getting both? Absolutely. 

According to Chris Haynes, the Pelicans are not trading their core group, but goodness gracious, the Zion Williamson experience has run its course in New Orleans. The team has lost 14 of its last 16 games with Williamson in uniform (he left Wednesday’s game early with an illness). The only wins have come against … Brooklyn and Washington. It’s way past time to blow it up and move on from the former No. 1 overall pick now that he’s healthy and easier to trade.

Williamson and Murphy are both 25 years old and too talented to be floundering on a team clearly building around rookies Jeremiah Fears and Derik Queen. Insert Zion and TM3 in the Warriors’ championship culture and it wouldn’t surprise me at all to see them blossom into winning contributors on a playoff team. As a bonus, they’re young enough to be the bridge to the post-Steph era and experienced enough to be win-now players.

Of course, like Davis, Williamson is an injury wild card. Taking on a talent like Williamson would be a bet on Warriors director of sports medicine and performance Rick Celebrini to get Williamson back on track and keep him there. It’s a risk, but would you rather have Butler’s lost salary and Kuminga or the upside of Williamson and Murphy? I know what I would choose. And Kevon Looney coming back to the Bay? Imagine that standing ovation.

As for the Pelicans, they can use the Warriors’ unprotected 2026 pick as a soft landing from the fallout of trading its 2026 “super first” pick to Atlanta that has Milwaukee swap rights. As of now, the Pelicans have no first-round pick in the 2026 draft; the Warriors can change that. While they unload two lob threats for Queen, they acquire one in Kuminga, who is younger, similarly athletic and needs a fresh start.

Butler’s contract seems like an albatross now, with over $100 million combined coming to him this season and next. But as soon as the NBA fiscal calendar turns this offseason, Butler’s expiring contract could become a lot more appealing to teams looking to cleanse their long-term cap sheet. 

Would Utah want to move Lauri Markkanen’s long-term deal? What about Cleveland and Evan Mobley if they flame out again? What about Giannis? Those questions may get a hard “no” now, but that calculus could change over the summer. Especially if Kuminga balls out the rest of the season.

While it seems like the Warriors caught a break by having this injury happen now rather than after the deadline, two weeks may be too quick for a Butler market to materialize. There are so many unknowables right now. I would be shocked if Butler hung it up for good like Andersen, especially since he vowed on Instagram to “be back before you know it.”

Questions will be surrounding him for the foreseeable future. How’s his rehab going? Will he be back in time for the 2026-27 deadline? Will he be back at all for next season?

These are questions that don’t have answers now. But this summer, a return-to-play program will come into focus and help teams chart their future. Any team looking to play Butler next season or flip him to a contender will want to know his plan and status for next season as soon as possible. In that sense, two weeks doesn’t seem like a lot of time at all. 

If they take this path, the Warriors could look at the rest of the 2025-26 season as something of a reset. Don’t run Curry and Green into the ground and keep an eye for the future. If it ends up delivering more ping-pong balls on draft night, so be it.

Another thing: if the Warriors go all in now, the 2026 first-round pick becomes less attractive to teams. As I mentioned earlier and outlined on the Big Number on Wednesday, the Warriors are 3-6 without Butler in uniform since they acquired him at last year’s trade deadline. If they continue at a similar pace, they could end up with a lottery pick. Any trade talks involving absorbing Butler’s contract will become that much sweeter if it’s a known lottery pick as opposed to a late first-rounder. 

With that said, of all the options outlined here, I’m pushing hard for Path 2. Stephen Curry is the principal reason the Warriors currently rank as the most valuable franchise in the sport. They have to do right by him and go for it while he’s still (inexplicably) an All-NBA player. If I’m the front office, I’d call up Pelicans president of basketball operations Joe Dumars and go for the Pelicans move as a top priority now. If talks don’t result in a move now, it could happen later. Sometimes the trade deadline is just setting the stage for summer fireworks. Stay tuned.

Jalen Brunson, Knicks cruise to franchise-best 54-point blowout over Nets days after players-only meeting

Jalen Brunson’s players-only meeting seems to have worked.

Brunson and the New York Knicks cruised to a blowout 120-66 win over the Brooklyn Nets on Wednesday night, which snapped a four-game losing skid. The 54-point win was the largest in franchise history.

“A win. That was the most important thing, just finding a way to break the ice and get one in the left column,” Karl-Anthony Towns said, via The Associated Press. “So good game, good day for us to show what we’re capable of, but consistency is what makes champions and we’ve got to find that consistency and bring this kind of intensity and energy and execution every single night.”

The Knicks led almost the entire way on Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden, and they opened the contest on an 18-6 run. They held the Nets to just 18 points in the second quarter, which sent them into the locker room with a 22-point lead, and then pushed that to 32 points by the end of the third period.

Brunson and the rest of the Knicks starters were pulled at that point, but their reserves still opened the fourth quarter on a 16-0 tear to secure the blowout win.

Brunson had 20 points and five assists to lead the Knicks. Landry Shamet added 18 points off the bench, shooting a perfect 6-of-6 from behind the arc, and Towns added 14 points and eight rebounds. The Knicks shot 50% from behind the arc, and more than doubled the Nets up on the glass.

Michael Porter Jr. led the Nets with 12 points and six rebounds. Ziaire Williams was the only other player to hit double figures with his 11 points off the bench. The Nets have now lost 13 straight to the Knicks. Their last win in the series came back in January 2023.

While a singular blowout win over the Nets is one thing, it came on the heels of what has been a rough stretch for the Knicks. The team entered Wednesday night having lost nine of their last 11 games, and they were booed heavily at Madison Square Garden in each of their last two losses. After Monday’s loss to the Dallas Mavericks, Brunson called a meeting to try and turn things around.

“I’d be booing us too, straight up,” Brunson said on Monday night.

The Knicks now hold a 26-18 record entering Saturday night’s contest with the Philadelphia 76ers. That game, while just a mid-January bout, will be a better measure of if the meeting actually did its job.

“This was a good step for us, but we’ve got to continue to press the issue of getting better every single day,” Brunson said.

Mets reportedly acquire All-Star ace Freddy Peralta in trade with Brewers

The New York Mets acquired All-Star right-handed pitcher Freddy Peralta in a trade with the Milwaukee Brewers on Wednesday, ESPN’s Jeff Passan reports.

The Brewers will receive infielder Jett Williams and right-handed pitcher Brandon Sproat in return, per the report. Both were rated by MLB as top-five prospects in the Mets’ system. The trade marks the third significant acquisition for the Mets in the past week.

On Friday, the Mets agreed to a $126 million free-agent deal with All-Star shortstop Bo Bichette, formerly of the Blue Jays. On Tuesday, they acquired high-upside former All-Star center fielder Luis Robert Jr. from the White Sox in a trade. And on Wednesday, they added a 29-year-old starting pitcher in his prime who made his second All-Star team last season.

The Mets have suffered their share of losses in free agency, including All-Star slugger Pete Alonso departing to the Orioles and All-Star closer Edwin Díaz joining the Dodgers. But they’re making moves late in the offseason to set themselves up to compete for the NL East crown and beyond.

Peralta is an eight-year MLB veteran who has played his entire career with the Brewers. The ace of the Brewers’ pitching staff, Peralta was integral to Milwaukee’s run to the 2025 NL Central title and the NLCS, in which the Brewers were swept by the eventual World Series champion Dodgers. 

Last season, Peralta posted a career-best 2.70 ERA alongside a 1.075 WHIP with 204 strikeouts and 66 walks in 176 2/3 innings pitched. He led the NL with 17 wins as the Brewers raced to baseball’s best record at 97-65.

Peralta immediately provides the Mets with a starting pitcher for the top of their rotation. For the Brewers, consequently, his exit creates a significant hole in the pitching staff for a team with aspirations of building on last season’s success. 

Yahoo Sports’ Russell Dorsey reported in November that a trade of Peralta was “likely,” despite last season’s success.

Meanwhile, Brewers president of baseball operations Matt Arnold said this about Peralta at the general manager meetings in November.

“Clearly, there’s a lot of interest in Freddy,” Arnold said. “He means a lot to our group, but certainly a ton of interest there. And I’ve said before, we can never shut the door on anything with anybody in our market.

“We’ve had to make some very tough decisions over the years. … I mean, we want to try to compete next year, and I think he could be a really big part of that, like he has for a long time.”

It turns out that the interest in Peralta was too strong to turn down.

Peralta is due only $8 million in 2026, per a club option on the final year of his contract. Barring him signing an extension, he’ll become a free agent next winter. So rather than risk losing him in free agency for nothing, the small-market Brewers got two top prospects in return for one year of Peralta’s services.

Williams, 22, is a former first-round draft pick and was New York’s No. 3-rated prospect and the No. 30 overall in baseball, according to MLB. He has speed, patience at the plate and home-run pop, recording a .263/.425/.451 slash line, 13 home runs, 104 walks and 45 steals in New York’s minor-league system last year, and he can play multiple positions.

Sproat, 25, was New York’s No. 5-rated prospect. He’s not rated among MLB’s top 100 prospects from 2025. A 6-foot-3 right-hander, Sproat throws a fastball up to 98 mph and also has a curveball, slider and changeup in his arsenal. He could join the Brewers’ rotation next season.