SB Nation    •   11 min read

Offseason acquisitions thrilled to join Brooklyn Nets

WHAT'S THE STORY?

The Brooklyn Nets’ Las Vegas Summer League squad had plenty of support from the sidelines for their second contest...

In fact, every single member of the big league roster aside from Ziaire Williams and Cam Thomas, who remains unsigned, was sitting courtisde on Sunday evening.

That includes both Terance Mann and Michael Porter Jr., the two newest Nets, acquired this summer as

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salary dumps that each granted Brooklyn a first-round pick. While Mann and MPJ are negative assets, they are no less excited to be Nets. At least, that’s what they told media while the Summer League team was hooping.

“It’s been a whirlwind, you know, physicals and everything,” said Porter Jr. “But everybody’s been over the top taking care of me and just introducing me to how they work and everything. And it’s been great so far, you know, I already feel like I know these guys to an extent, and I’m excited to work with them.”

Taking the 2023 NBA champion at his word, it doesn’t seem like he’ll have a very stressful time fitting in with his new team: “I kind of flipped the script in my head pretty quick. Honestly, I’m not like a super anxious guy or anything like that. So on the plane when I found out, I was kind of just like, ‘well, I’m traded,’ and took a nap afterwards.”

Of course, as a Denver Nugget, Porter Jr. played under Jordi Fernández for the first four years of his career. Aside from an easygoing attitude, he professed excitement to play for a coach he knows so well: “It’s been great. I’m excited to be back with Jordi. I know he has these guys playing hard, and he’s implemented a lot of similar things from Denver, so I don’t feel like it’s a huge shift from some of the things I’m familiar with. So I kind of saw that in practice today a little bit, and I think it’ll be an easy transition for me with the principles. And yeah, he’s a great guy and a great coach, so it’ll be a great fit.”

Porter Jr. may also be excited to have a more featured role in the Brooklyn Nets’ offense. He recognized that he joined a championship contender with perhaps the best player in basketball in Nikola Jokić, and felt he sacrificed some opportunities for the betterment of the Nuggets: “ I just think for me, you know, I averaged 21 one year. I think last year, I was around 18 as the third option. I just feel like, you know — I just feel like I have more in my tank still. I don’t feel like I’ve reached my peak, and I’m excited to grow my game, expand my game, explore my game, and see what I could do.”

Will Nets fans enjoy Porter Jr. isolating into tough jumpers in the 2025-26 season? Will he get the opportunity to, if that’s what he’s hinting at? These are questions for another day; Summer League is all about the brighter side of life...

For example. Terance Mann is back in Brooklyn, the borough he lived in for the first 11 years of his life, while his mother was a basketball coach at LIU, just down the street from his new home arena.

“it’s just crazy to think about, I grew up around there,” he said on Sunday. “I remember being little, my mom was a coach at LIU Brooklyn. I used to walk around the area before Barclays was even built. I used to be around there, walking around, always asking like, ‘what are they building here?’ My mom’s like, ‘I think Jay-Z is bringing the Nets from New Jersey.’ That was the talk in Brooklyn at the time.”

And Mann isn’t shying away from a potentially uncomfortable fact: At 29 years old, he’s the oldest player on the roster. According to the Brooklyn native, that comes with a certain responsibility: “I think just lead as best I can. You know, I think that’s really one of the main focuses I’m going to try and take on with this group. And then, you know, on the court stuff, whatever coach wants me to do, I’m going to do. And I’ve always been that type of player.”

Just maybe, the Brooklyn Nets will have the right environment for their five first-round picks to walk into in the fall. Day’Ron Sharpe, despite being just 23 years old, will have to create that environment for his newest teammates after signing a two-year, $12 million deal to open free agency.

And while he was a restricted free agent, Brooklyn never presented him the qualifying offer, meaning he was, for a brief stretch, an unrestricted free agent. Sharpe could have gone anywhere in the league, or at least tried to. So, did he think about it?

He says no: “I just felt like it was best option for me, and I wanted to go with the best option. And that was the Brooklyn Nets.”

But come on Day’Ron, didn’t you at least think about it for that brief second in unrestricted free agency? “I don’t know, you know?”

Then he let out a sheepish laugh, and effectively ended the conversation: “I just decided what I decided.”

With the summer league team showing flashes, and the big-league squad tied for first-place in the 2025-26 regular season, the vibes are once again strong. Sharpe, Mann, and Porter Jr. are excited to be Brooklyn Nets, not an insignificant feat for a team that went 26-56 last season.

Will this energy lead to more wins, or to the development of the prized 2025 draft class? We won’t know until the rubber hits the road, but Summer League optimism abounds.

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