So it’s the New York Knicks vs. the San Antonio Spurs for all of Adam Silver’s marbles, rings and trophies. After record-breaking TV audiences justified by great games, the Spurs joined the Knicks Saturday in the NBA Finals will begin Wednesday night in San Antonio. Then after two games in Texas, the best-of-seven heads to New York a week from Monday.
Expect the Garden and the city to be wild, particularly if President Trump holds to his plan to attend. (If the Finals reach Game 6 on June 16, things
will get really interesting. That afternoon, France, home of Victor Wembanyama, will play Senegal at MetLife Stadium. Will Wemby attend? He’ll have plenty of time to make it across the river. World Cup begins at 3:30 p.m.; the Finals at 8:30 p.m.)
If that makes you feel irrelevant in New York sports, you have a case. At this point in time, the Brooklyn Nets are the most irrelevant franchise among the nine New York area teams from the Islanders in the east to the Devils in the west, It can be argued that the Liberty currently is more relevant. In the NBA, they may not be the most irrelevant — Thank you, Vivek Ranadive — but not a lot of people are opening conversations this summer with the line, “how about them Nets?!?” Considering how well the Knicks are playing, don’t expect to hear it for a while either. As we’ve written, the Nets are spending millions of dollars on “generational fandom” — getting New York kids while they’re young — but having the Finals in New York is going to likely trump that (sorry.)
So, we wait: to see what the Brooklyn brass from Joe Tsai and Sean Marks down to the scouting staff are planning for the franchise’s next big milestone: what they will do in the NBA’s second straight consecutive generational draft: stay put, move up, move down, acquire a second first round pick, etc. Lottery luck is a sunk cost — very sunk — right now, but don’t expect them to dwell on it.
There’s been little intelligence on where they stand, but you can get a bit of a hint of how the process works if you got back to last year’s SCOUT docu-series, the fourth episode in particular. It opens with the May scouting meeting, Sean Marks presiding:
The episode focuses on the final month of the Draft process, from the Lottery to Draft Night. The May meeting, Marks tells his scouts, is “one of the last times you guys will be together here.” It features snippets of debates on what appears to be multiple prospects who unfortunately are not identified. The debates include comments on a player’s skillsets, willingness to touch the paint, etc. as well as their basketball intelligence and their general intelligence. There were — and are again no doubt — debates we don’t see on aspects of the process like prospects character, fit. etc. At one point, Marks divides the scouts up to see if they can get a consensus on a prospect. (About half the scouts in the video are still around.)
You also see snippets of the team’s interviews of the prospects they ultimately chose at Nos. 8, 19, 22, 26 and 27, surrounded by Marks, his assistant GMs, Jordi Fernandez and his assistant coaches. Then it’s flash forward to Draft Night itself where franchise officials are given the privilege of calling the picks into the league office and the celebrations that followed after each pick. Some in the media criticized those moments, but when you’ve had as few picks of your own — and no lottery picks — over the previous 15 years, seize the moment.
Draft Night 2026, or should we say Nights since the 60 selections are now broken into two nights, should be interesting since virtually every draftnik, a subset of pundits, have their own opinion on what the Nets will do, what’s a good offer, etc. Last year, the Nets tried to move up, didn’t like the price they would’ve had to pay and essentially chose quantity over quality. Since we don’t know what they considered pricey, we can’t even debate their wisdom.
Two years ago, Simone Casali, the Nets well respected chief international scout, spoke with a reporter for the Italian basketball federation about the pitfalls of a typical Draft Night riven by surprises.
“There, mistakes are the order of the day because there are things that you cannot predict, or that you predict from one perspective and not another,” said Casali who’s worked with the Nets since Marks has been GM.
The key he said is being prepared as best you can and not have improvise on the fly.
“In the NBA, a lot can change from one moment to the next, I cannot know when we will have a choice available and how high. It can happen, for example, that on the night of the Draft you suddenly find yourself with choices available as a result of a trade: you cannot afford to improvise.”
The surprises, he argued, don’t stop on Draft Night.
“We must not underestimate how history is full of players who struggled in their first team and then exploded in the second because there they found the right situation and the right context. You can make mistakes for no reason or get it right simply by luck,” he told Dario Ronzulli of FIP.it.
Word to the wise.
Now arriving at HSS Training Center?
We still don’t have a read on who among the top prospects have been in or who’s been scheduled. There were reports that A.J. Dybantsa might even be willing to work out. That decision ultimately will rest with him and more likely his agent. Agents don’t want their clients to waste time or risk injury by scheduling workouts with teams that are unlikely to be on the board when Adam Silver starts to read off names. So IF Dybantsa does show his wares at HSS Training Ceneter, that MIGHT mean his agent thinks anything is possible… or not.
In the meantime, what we have seen and are seeing, particularly this weekend, is a stream of tweets mostly from draftniks identifying lower ranked prospects taking the elevator at 168 39th Street to the eighth floor and that dramatic view.
Among those we’ve seen linked to the Nets as we noted last week is Keba Keita, the 6’9” BYU center who played with both Dybantsa and Egor Demin. He’s not not on anyone’s top 100 Big Board, let alone mock draft. There’s a lot.
Other unranked players who’ve been in or have been scheduled, according to reports, include local product Cruz Davis, Hofstra’s high scoring 6’3” lead guard; Malik Dia, a 6’9” 3-and-D type who played four years at three southern schools, Vanderbilt, Belmont, then his final two years at Ole Miss; and Grant Newell, a similar sized forward who played at California, North Texas and most recently Western Kentucky. None mocked nor Big Board ranked.
Jaden Henley, Grand Canyon’s 6’7” wing, is ranked in the top 100, just short of the second round at No. 67. According to our Connor Long, he too has been in. Then, there’s 3-point specialist Isaac McKeenly, Mikel Brown’s 6’4” backcourt running mate at Louisville. He’ll be in Monday, according to reports. He’s listed at No. 89 by ESPN’s Woo but others have him a late second rounder.
Why are the Nets, currently with picks at Nos. 6, 33 and 43, working out players who’ll likely be sitting at home on Draft Night rather than in the NBA Draft Green Room at Barclays? That need to be ready for any eventuality Simone Casali spoke about is one reason. The Nets also are looking for players to fill out the two Summer League rosters. the training camp invite list and the Long Island Nets roster.
For example, with back-to-back Summer Leagues in Sacramento and Las Vegas from July 4 through 19, expect rosters with less overlap than you might think. But the key reason for so many is simple: NBA teams like setting up scrimmages for the bigger prospects and so there’s a need to fill out those mini-rosters, sometimes on short notice.
Draft Sleeper of the Week: Karim Lopez
Karim Lopez is a 6’9.5” (in sneakers) Mexican hooper who’s played last two seasons with the New Zealand Breakers of the Australian National League. So he’s been around. He is the most likely international player to make the Lottery this season. He’s also among the youngest players in the Draft, having just turned 19 on April 12. Plus, his hands are the second biggest ever measured at the NBA Draft Combine, a fingernail short of Kawhi Leonard whose nickname is “The Claw.” Certain other elements of his game may very well appeal to the Nets, like his quick thinking with the ball, position-less resume’ and an ability to use those hands, a near 7-foot wingspan and near 9-foot standing reach to protect the rim.
Take a look at his highlights:
And no, there is no indication that the Nets are planning to take him at No. 6. Not that we know anyway. But in the darker regions of Nets Twitter, some fans rank that fear nearly as high as their concern last year that Sean Marks would move up only to choose Kon Knueppel. How’d that work out, sports fans?
Jeremy Woo reported this week the Nets are indeed interested in him, calling him a “development bet,” so short of a “sure thing” that depending on who you read or talk to descibes Darius Acuff, Mikel Brown, Kingston Flemings or Keaton Wagler (alphabetical order, we note. We’re not giving anything away.)
Lopez is drawing interest from a number of teams in the lottery, including the Clippers, Nets, Bucks and Warriors, with rival teams viewing him as more of a trade-back candidate later on in the case of the Clippers and Nets.
He was helped by his combine measurements, affirming his size to play both forward positions capably and massive hands. He continues to improve and has positioned himself as an intriguing development bet coming off a strong second season in the NBL.
“Trade back?” That suggests Woo may have some insight into the Nets plans. Currently, most mock drafts have Lopez in a narrow range, from as high at No. 10 to a low of 17. One team, the OKC Thunder, just happens to have two picks at Nos. 12 and 17 and multiple rationales to move out of one of those spots. The combined first year salaries of those picks is $10 million. Include them in the Thunder’s payroll calculations and OKC will be nearly $40 million over the second apron at $261 million, per Bobby Marks. They’re also thinking of salary dumps and who has $30 million in cap space?
Moreover, the Thunder have two 20-year-olds, Thomas Sorber and Nikola Topic, who sat out all (Sorber) or most (Topic) of last season due to injury and illness. Who knows, Nets and Thunder might have other things to talk about…
As one NBA decision-maker told ND re all those Nes draft assets and cap space the Nets have accumulated has one overarching advantage. They’re not going to use all of them.
“No, the only reason you bank firsts like that is be able to strike opportunistically,” he said and moving up, down or around qualifies.
One thing we also know is that Sean Marks personally scouted Lopez — twice, once when he was 17 in September 2024 at the NBL Blitz showcase on Australia’s Gold Coast, then again last January at the Blitz in Perth in Western Australia. Perth is 11,627 miles from Brooklyn. Although Marks says that, generally, basketball in Australia (and his homeland of New Zealand) is too good to be ignored, it’s a good bet that few if any NBA general managers have ever traveled that far to look at a prospect or prospects. (The other top Australian target he saw in January, Dash Daniels, Dyson’s brother dropped out recently.)
Some Nets fans claim Marks interest and his travel can be dismissed because, after all, he still has family and friends Down Under. They contend, without any evidence, that this could be no more a personal trip with scouting thrown in. Well, there is video evidence that scouting was a priority. Again, here’s SCOUT, episode 1 (about 11 minutes in), showing Marks and then scout Richard Midgley in Australia two years ago attending games and talking prospects.
Was Marks talking about Lopez when he told Midgley, “It’s important to get here early and see guys?” And indeed, Marks and Midgley’s trip came a month after Lopez signed with the Breakers. (Or maybe we’re just trolling… again.)
Do Nets have best trade assets going forward?
Jack Hughes of Bleacher Report this week ranked the teams with the five best trade assets in the NBA. The Thunder was No. 2, the Spurs No. 3, the Hornets No. 4, the Grizzlies at No. 5. At No. 1 in Hughes’ rankings … drum roll … are the Nets. While the teams just beneath them include teams with stars like Ja Morant or De’Aaron Fox who could get their clubs big returns, the Nets top ranking is dependent on their draft stash and particularly the picks acquired in the Mikal Bridges and Cam Johnson trades.
Writes Hughes:
That 2027 Knicks selection may not land near the front of the first round, but each of the other three could be highly valuable lottery tickets. With the new lottery odds set to take effect and a pair of costly rosters in Denver and New York that may need to be torn down before the decade is out, Brooklyn is positioned to cash in.
He is not one to dismiss the remaining haul from the Bridges trade either, despite Bridges heroics for the Knicks.
The Mikal Bridges trade is the gift that keeps on giving, as the Nets have three totally unprotected future firsts coming from the New York Knicks. Those picks will convey in 2027, 2029 and 2031. After that, Brooklyn will collect the spoils of last offseason’s Michael Porter Jr. deal, which secured it the rights to the Denver Nuggets’ unprotected 2032 first-rounder.
He also looks at the Thunder situation and those two first round picks discussed above:
They’ll select 12th and 17th in the upcoming draft and could certainly look to move both of those picks for additional value. It’s easy to forget, but the Thunder’s last two first-rounders—Nikola Topić and Thomas Sorber—have played a combined 10 professional games due to injury. If OKC believes either of them is rotation-worthy going forward, it could easily flip its picks in the 2026 draft. Or, those two prospects could head out in a deal to make room for new rookies.
Of course, as we keep saying, the Nets certainly have all the tools to move forward and with some luck, quickly, but the question will remain execution, how they use those assets. We will start to get a good read on that question, starting in a little more than three weeks.
Final Note
Feeling more relevant? Hope so.











