yahoo - 6/15/2026 6:58:37 AM - GMT (+2 )
We’ve tried to write this in our head more than a few times after last night, but each time we failed. Some times our thoughts were too negative. Other times too positive. So we took a different tack.
In the end, it is what it is and overall, there was an indisputable wonder to it all. New York erupted last night in ways we can’t ever remember. This city, so often under siege in the last quarter century, felt a collective relief. not a sigh but rather an extended, sustained joy. Much of it was the joy of youth, but it was more than that. The community pride that pulls New Yorkers of all ages, genders, races, ethnicity, origin through the tough days and nights was palpable. The civic religion of basketball, so deliriously described in The City Game about a past Knicks title, once again showed itself. It was grand.
Critics can and will say the fans of the Brooklyn Nets are left in the inevitably irrelevant lurch because this day is solely the property of the long-suffering New York Knicks fans. There is indeed a strong case for that. The Nets are at the NBA’s opposite pole from their neighbors. But at least in our mind, that’s secondary. Individual team and player fortunes rise and fall, sometimes inexplicably and at a moment’s notice. We know this. So do the more honest of the Knick fans. But the city goes on forever. We love New York and we love hoops so we’re happy for it and congratulate the Knicks and their fans.
And hope our time will come soon, just as it came for them, just as it came for the Liberty last year after 28 years of futility. Will the city react the same as it did last night should the Nets win? Almost certainly not. The Knicks have been part of the city for 80 years, the Nets 15. The Knicks play in midtown Manhattan, the center of the known universe, the Nets in Brooklyn, hip and hot but … It is what it is. Like we said.
Bottom line for the Brooklyn Nets in all of this is that they decided in June 2024 to go deep into a rebuild, hoping that by exchanging picks with the Rockets and adding picks from the Knicks, they’d be able to come away with top picks in two deep and potentially generational drafts in 2025 and 2026 and hedge their bets by acquiring other picks in the Mikal Bridges deal. They wound up with the eighth and sixth picks and some Knicks picks that aren’t looking so good in the short term. A lot of that was simply bad luck and we will soon see just how bad or good starting June 23.
If you’re wondering if there could be changes coming in the front office, we see no indications of that. Indeed, the recent decisions by ownership to extend and give raises to Jordi Fernandez and all nine assistants then promote capologist Makar Gevorkian to assistant GM are indications of confidence in decision-making. Could that change if the plan doesn’t work out? Of course. The rebuild can’t go on forever. But the watch words now are patience and the plan.
Now back to the weeds!
Will Mikel Brown be out of Nets range?Increasingly, it looks like the top five picks of the NBA Draft are set even if the order isn’t. For weeks, maybe months, A.J. Dybantsa, Darryn Peterson, Cam Boozer and Caleb Wilson were seen as the leading men of this play. The storyline may be up for debate, but not the cast of characters. Now, Mikel Brown Jr. once seen as part of a group of four or five minor characters, seems to be joining the top picks at No. 5. As Sean Farnham of ESPN said three days ago to M.J. Acosta…
"[Mikel Brown Jr.] has now moved his name up and the momentum is on his side."@SeanFarnham joins @MJAcostaTV to discuss the latest surrounding the fifth pick in the NBA draft 👀 pic.twitter.com/KWk8gobQL2
— NBA on ESPN (@ESPNNBA) June 12, 2026
That of course is not good for the Nets who, the Lottery be damned, finished No. 6. The Nets seem quite enamored of Brown who they’ve reportedly seen twice already, once at home in Orlando, then again this week in Brooklyn. The 6’5” Louisville lead guard checks every Nets box from skills to character. Here’s what Rafael Barlowe told our Connor Long a couple of days ago when asked about the in-home visit.
“It’s a good sign of the interest level that the Nets have,” Barlowe said. “From what I understand, it was Jordi, it was Sean Marks, it was the assistant general manager, just trying to get a feel for the kid and the situation. From what I hear or what I heard, not only did he kill that interview, he’s killed every interview…”
Brown has something else as well: star quality. IF the Nets are going to catch the Knicks, they’ll need a lot of that.
Can the Nets jump to No. 5 by sending the Clippers some assets, presumably draft picks? Hard to tell right now. We don’t how much in love the Clipper front office is with the Florida native. Also, it’s hard to know how big a hammer Adam Silver will drop on Steve Ballmer et al regarding the Aspiration scandal. In short, the mega rich Ballmer (as compared to the super rich Joe Tsai) reportedly sent money to a company called Aspiration which in turn paid Kawhi Leonard eight figures for what sure looks like a no-show job. As we noted a couple of reports back, that could affect the Clippers thinking since historically the way the league punishes such transgressions is by docking the offending team future draft picks. A generation ago, Silver’s predecessor David Stern assessed the Timberwolves five years worth of first round picks along with fines, suspensions, etc.
Here’s some possibilities that could affect any discussions between Sean Marks and Lawrence Frank, the Clips GM:
- Might the Clippers decide to resist trade offers for the fifth pick, understanding their cache of picks could be diluted by the league and so, hang on to what they got? That would limit the Nets ability to move up.
- Might they decide to trade the fifth pick for future firsts to lessen the pain of future losses? With the Nets having the most draft assets in the NBA by far, could that provide an opportunity for Brooklyn?
- Might they decide to use the fifth pick in a trade for a star, forgetting any semblance of an organic route contention, knowing how constrained that route will become? That would also eliminate the possibility of a trade and add a new player and new needs to the mix at the top of the Draft.
Complicating matters is that the league is unlikely to make any move before the first night of the draft on June 23 so the Clippers won’t have any intelligence on what’s going to happen. A big new New York law firm, Wachtell Lipton, has been investigating the scandal for months and although Silver said on June 6 that “We need to wrap this up,” he also indicated Wachtell wasn’t done yet. After he receives the report, of course, Silver will have to decide on punishments.
Adding to the uncertainty is that the Clippers have already dispatched some of their firsts in previous trades. The Clippers don’t have clear title to their own first rounder till 2029. If the commissioner pulls Clippers firsts starting in 2029, that’s a lot easier to deal with.
A far less complicated possibility is what Yossi Gozlan proposed in his Third Apron review of the Nets situation: a couple of potential salary dumps that might be appealing to the Clippers.
[T]hey could make that happen by taking on negative-value contracts like Bradley Beal ($5.6 million) and Isaiah Jackson ($7 million) while sending out a minor asset. The last time two teams next to each other in the middle of the lottery swapped picks was in 2023, when the Wizards gave the Pacers two second-round picks to move up from No. 8 to No. 7.
So what happens if the Nets can’t get their hands on Brown? We simply don’t know how they feel about that Acuff, Wagler or Flemings although in previous discussions three weeks ago, Ben Pfeiffer of Sportscasting suggested to Erik Slater that Nets had interest in Flemings. Of those four, we believe that only Acuff has been in. Flemings and Wagler were supposed to be in but scheduling issues intervened. Then, there’s the two big men the Nets paired off last Tuesday: Nate Ament and Karim Lopez. No one — at this point — believes either is likely to be taken as high as No. 6 but there’s always the possibility that the Nets move down or acquire a later first rounder.
‘F*ck them picks’Josh Hart’s now famous analysis of the picks the Nets got for Mikal Bridges resonates Sunday. As we tweeted numerous times, any time a team makes a trade that leads to a championship, that team is the winner, period. There’s no counter argument and despite some (typical) inconsistent play by Bridges in the Finals, he will be sitting in a float no doubt with his fellow Villanovans Thursday.
All that said, where do all them f*uckin’ picks stand? Here’s how it started:
- Nets traded Mikel Bridges and Keita Bates-Diop as well as the least favorable of Bucks, Magic, Pistons second round picks and the draft rights to Juan Pablo Vaulet.
- Knicks traded Bojan Bogdanovic, Shake Milton and Mamadi Diakite to the Nets along with four unprotected first-round picks in 2025, 2027, 2029 and 2031 and the Bucks 1-4 protected pick in 2025, an unprotected first round swap in 2028 and the Nets 2025 second rounder which the Knicks had acquired.
So where do we stand now, two years after?
The Nets used two of the first round picks in 2025 to take Nolan Traore at No. 19 (the Bucks pick) and Ben Saraf (the Knicks pick) at No. 26. They traded the 2025 second rounder — No. 36 — to the Suns who sent back a 2026 Clippers second rounder which is currently the No. 43rd pick in this year’s draft and the Celtics 2030 second rounder. The Suns ultimately sent the pick to the Lakers who chose Adou Thiero.
The Nets sent Diakite and his partially guaranteed deal to the Grizzlies along with the draft rights to Nemanja Dangubic, acquiring Ziaire Williams and the Mavericks 2030 second rounder. They also sent Milton to the Lakers along with Dorian Finney-Smith for D’Angelo Russell, Maxwell Lewis and three Lakers second rounders 2027, 2030 and 2031. Russell’s contract was not renewed and Lewis was waived.
The Knicks sent the second round pick acquired from the Nets to the Pelicans as part of the package for Joe Alvarado. New York sent New Orleans another second plus cash considerations.
So what’s left?
Three unprotected Knicks firsts in 2027, 2029 and 2031, an unprotected first round swap in 2028 and number of seconds that are by-products of the trade, including the Clippers pick (No. 43) in this year’s draft plus two second round picks — the Celtics and Mavericks — in 2030. Also, there’s Ziaire Williams.
The Knicks picks will likely increase in value. New York was the fourth oldest team in the NBA last season. A dynasty seems unlikely, but who knows.
Draft Sleeper of the WeekFor weeks, Sergio De Larrea has been linked to the Nets in more than one mock draft at No. 33, the first of their two second rounders. However, in recent weeks, we’ve seen the 6’7” Spanish point guard start to sneak into the first round. While Mexican Karim Lopez is generally seen as the top international prospect and a lottery pick, De Larrea is the top European this year in a less than stellar group. However, he has a lot of supporters…
NEWS: Valencia's Sergio de Larrea, a projected first round pick, is staying in the 2026 NBA Draft, a source tells DraftExpress.
— Jonathan Givony (@DraftExpress) June 13, 2026
The 6'7 Spanish PG, 20, averages 8.9 points, 3.3 assists in 18 minutes in the ACB for Euroleague Final Four participant Valencia, shooting 39% from 3. pic.twitter.com/2SfWB3TYpB
His draft status is somewhat uncertain in part because he is still playing for Valencia in the Spanish League. Per the Rookie Wire’s Cody Taylor, he’s unlikely to be available for any workouts until next weekend, days before the Draft, if then.
De Larrea is averaging 7.1 points, 2.8 assists and 2.2 rebounds while shooting 39.5% from 3-point range in 67 games across all league competitions. He has registered three 20-point games, including a season-high 23-point performance on Oct. 3.
The 6-foot-7 de Larrea helped Valencia advance to the ACB Finals on Sunday after sweeping Joventut Badalona 3-0 in their series. The group, which has homecourt advantage, will face Barcelona in the best-of-five championship, beginning on Thursday.
(That’s not necessarily a no-go for the Nets. They drafted Ben Saraf, a similarly sized European guard, last season without working him out. Saraf played in the German league finals after being drafted! Of course, Jordi Fernandez, with his Spanish basketball roots, is likely to have a good read on De Larrea.)
His strengths and weaknesses can best be summed up by Matt Babcock of Babcock Hoops:
“I’m intrigued by De Larrea’s size and craftiness with the ball. However, his lack of athleticism and defensive limitations are concerns, at least to some degree. Regardless, he’s an interesting prospect who should generate plenty of draft interest.”
SB Nation’s Graham Chapple has some of the same concerns, but likes his shooting skills.
Offensively, 3-point shooting is De Larrea’s best strength right now, and that will hold value to NBA teams. De Larrea can hit threes both off of the dribble and in catch-and-shoot scenarios — I suspect the latter will be called upon more in his rookie season than creation off the dribble. Nevertheless, the ability to rise into a three off of the dribble — while not perfected — is still be a useful tool in De Larrea’s arsenal.
Some highlights from earlier this season in the Spanish League.
Should De Larrea wind up in Brooklyn, he’s likely to serve an apprenticeship on Long Island. Same with the No. 43 pick. The Nets have a lot of kids.
Final NoteSo what’s the Nets and their fans’ best response to gloating by Knicks gloating about their first title in 53 years? Norman Oder, the critic and chronicler of Atlantic Yards, had the best suggestion we’ve seen…
The Nets might legitimately say: we promise it will take less time
— Norman Oder (@AYReport) June 14, 2026
Works for us.
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