2020 N.B.A. Free Agency Updates: Trades and Signings
The Bucks are trying to satisfy Giannis Antetokounmpo, the Warriors are scrambling and the Rockets are dealing with two unhappy stars. More
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The Bucks are trying to satisfy Giannis Antetokounmpo, the Warriors are scrambling and the Rockets are dealing with two unhappy stars. More
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The Toronto Raptors are heading south for the winter — at least for the start of it.The Raptors announced Friday that they would begin the 2020-21 season based in Tampa, Fla., amid concerns about the coronavirus pandemic’s impact in Canada. In a statement, Masai Ujiri, the Raptors’ president of basketball operations, left open the possibility that the team could return to Toronto at some point this season. The Raptors are the only N.B.A. team based outside of the United States, and Canada has imposed strict measures about travel between the two countries. Cases of the coronavirus in the U.S. continue to skyrocket.“So we’ll be away from our home and our fans for now,” Ujiri said in the statement. “They say absence makes the heart grow fonder. I’m not sure that’s possible for us — we love Toronto and Canada, and we know we have the best fans in the N.B.A. For now, I’ll ask you to cheer for us from afar, and we’ll look forward to the day we are all together again.”The team had been trying to work out a deal with the Canadian government so that it could play its home games in Toronto. But a spokesman for Patty Hajdu, Canada’s health minister, said “a decision was made to not allow the Raptors to play in Toronto at this time” based on advice from the federal public health agency.“We are going to continue our dialogue with the Raptors and look forward to the safe return of N.B.A. basketball in the future,” Cole Davidson, the spokesman, said in an email.The Toronto Blue Jays faced a similar predicament this summer ahead of the start of the Major League Baseball season, ultimately opting to play the majority of their home games in Buffalo, N.Y.The N.B.A. season begins Dec. 22, with players arriving for training camps on Dec. 1.The Raptors had been working with government officials for weeks to try to find a way to play games in Toronto this season. Ujiri even wrote an op-ed for the Toronto Star last week to make a public plea for his case. He referred to the lessons the team — and the rest of the league — had learned from playing out the remainder of last season in a bubble at Walt Disney World outside of Orlando, Fla.“We’ve provided detailed proposals to governments about how we, and the teams that visit us, could play safely in Toronto,” he wrote.For now, though, the Raptors will be based in the U.S. More
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Obi Toppin’s fairy-tale path from a skinny high school tweener without a single offer from a four-year college to an N.B.A. lottery pick began with a promise. He made it four years ago to Rodrick Harrison, the basketball coach at Mount Zion Prep near Washington.It came after the disappointment of Toppin’s senior year at Ossining High School in Westchester County, N.Y., when, according to Harrison, Toppin did not get even get a scholarship offer from a Division II college. Toppin did have one option at a junior college, until a mutual friend suggested that Toppin deserved the chance at a year playing for Harrison at Mt. Zion in Lanham, Md.Harrison watched one game at Ossining and instantly fell in love with Toppin’s ability and hard work. Later that day, the two spoke on the phone.“He told me, ‘Coach, if you give me an opportunity, I promise I won’t fail,’ ” Harrison recalled during a telephone interview Thursday. “ ‘I’ll work as hard as a I can. I will do whatever you need me to do.’ That’s when it clicked for me. When someone is that humble and they have that much talent, it’s like he’s a blank canvas.”Toppin made the most of his one year at Mt. Zion, parlaying it into an offer from the University of Dayton in Ohio, where he played two seasons, averaged 20 points per game in his final year, and then was drafted by his hometown Knicks with the No. 8 overall pick in the N.B.A. draft Wednesday night.The Knicks also are expected to acquire Immanuel Quickley, a top shooting guard out of the University of Kentucky who was selected with the 25th pick by the Oklahoma City Thunder.It was an unusual draft, held remotely because of the pandemic, and several players were overwhelmed on the occasion, including Toppin. He broke down in tears when he was interviewed on ESPN, both because he was returning to New York — he grew up in Brooklyn — and because he had emerged from almost total obscurity to become a top-10 pick.“Hearing my name called is a blessing,” he told reporters. “A lot of people dream of this, and there’s only 60 picks, and I was one of those picks.”When Toppin first walked through the doors at Mt. Zion, he stood 6-foot-5, weighed about 185 pounds and had trouble getting the attention of the best A.A.U. teams in his area. Today he is 6-foot-9, weighs 220 pounds and is the holder of the 2020 John R. Wooden Award for college player of the year after he led the Flyers to a 29-2 record last season.He shoots from long range and midrange, and slashes to the rim, and he is known to electrify audiences with his innovative and acrobatic dunks.“I don’t rank his dunks,” said Anthony Grant, the head coach at Dayton, “but he will definitely excite a crowd with his explosiveness, variety and showmanship. He’s fun to watch; must-see TV.”Toppin tried to showcase his talent for years when few were watching, so when he does get the opportunity, he does not squander it. At Mt. Zion, when he had begun the process of stretching another four inches in height and blossoming into a remarkable player, he finally began to draw the attention of colleges around the country. A group of coaches from state universities like Minnesota and Wyoming came to watch him practice one day in February 2017. But Toppin had injured the thumb on his shooting hand during a tournament the day before. Harrison told all the disappointed coaches not to expect much.Toppin practiced anyway and put on a show by shooting left-handed. Harrison said he went 6 for 8, all with his off hand.“That’s unheard-of, right there,” Harrison said. “I was like, ‘Why didn’t you tell me you can shoot with your left hand, Obi?’ But he wasn’t afraid to do it.”By April of that year, Toppin was still available, and that is when Grant persuaded him to go to Dayton.Grant recalled a game last year at St. Louis, when Toppin had a poor first-half performance. The visitors’ bench was right next to the student section and the students were riding Toppin hard as the Billikens took a 13-point lead midway through the second half.But Toppin was fueled by the taunts. During a timeout, he emphatically told his teammates that they would not lose the game. He scored 8 points in the final four minutes of regulation to help force overtime, and Dayton won. But it was more than just the points: His demeanor and confidence permeated the entire team.“The things he did to get us to overtime and then win the game,” Grant said, “and to be able to handle what was coming at him, that really impressed me.Toppin said he modeled his game after Anthony Davis, the multi-tooled center for the Los Angeles Lakers, but acknowledged that he has a long way to go before he can match Davis as a defensive stalwart.Defense is indeed the one aspect of Toppin’s game that needs work, but he will be tutored by the Knicks’ Tom Thibodeau, one of the best defensive coaches in the N.B.A. A lot of defense is about hard work and commitment, and Grant said that when Toppin was at Dayton, he was always eager to learn and quick to figure things out.“I don’t see Obi being the defensive player of the year in the league,” Grant said. “But I also think he can be a great player and an asset. He’ll be everything that he’ll need to be to help the Knicks be successful. I still think he hasn’t scratched the surface.” More
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Darsch turned Ohio State into a powerhouse, helped two U.S. teams win Olympic gold and was one of the original coaches in the W.N.B.A., leading the New York Liberty. More
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James Wiseman went to the Golden State Warriors at No. 2, and the Charlotte Hornets picked LaMelo Ball at No. 3. More
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The Houston Rockets’ two stars want out, but the market for Westbrook is lukewarm and dependent on what happens with James Harden. Plus: the latest on LaMelo Ball and the N.B.A. draft. More
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It has taken months of watching film, traveling the country and conducting interviews on video, but Minnesota is just about ready to make the first pick in the N.B.A. draft — or trade it away. More
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Isaiah Stewart is ready to make his mark on the N.B.A. after a down season at Washington led many to overlook him. “I just have to remind them,” Stewart said. “I have to wake them back up.” More
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