NBA teams, assemble! The 2024-25 season is just weeks away and all eyes can now turn toward Opening Night on Oct. 22.
It’s been an eventful offseason that was capped by a blockbuster trade this weekend with the New York Knicks acquiring Karl-Anthony Towns from the Minnesota Timberwolves. Towns is the latest All-Star bound for a new team, a group that also includes Klay Thompson, Paul George, and Chris Paul.
Oh, and LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers will have a familiar face as a new coach — as well as a new teammate in Bronny James.
Before the real games begin, players and coaches from 28 teams gathered on Monday for media day ahead of training camp. The other two teams — the Boston Celtics and the Denver Nuggets — held their media day activities last week prior to traveling to Abu Dhabi for a pair of preseason games.
In Denver, three-time NBA MVP Nikola Jokic (sporting a nifty goatee) spoke about getting the Nuggets back on top after an early playoff exit last season. As for the Celtics, Jayson Tatum said he’s focused on bringing another title to Boston after an eventful summer that included a historic $315 million extension and an Olympic gold medal.
Our NBA insiders were on site Monday with the key teams that are primed to create plenty of buzz this season. Here’s what caught their attention from media day.
Mutombo’s legacy remembered in Philadelphia
CAMDEN, N.J. — As the 76ers were beginning their quest to win the franchise’s first championship in over 40 years and reach the NBA Finals for the first time since 2001, the news of Dikembe Mutombo’s death rippled throughout the team’s practice facility.
It was one that hit home in Philadelphia. Mutombo was a midseason addition to that 2001 team who, alongside Allen Iverson, led Philadelphia to the Finals against the Los Angeles Lakers. For a team that’s lost in the first or second round each of the past seven years, that’s a place the 76ers are spending every day focused on reaching.
Born in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Mutombo has a prominent place in African basketball history, making him a role model and hero for 76ers center Joel Embiid, a native of Cameroon.
“It’s a sad day, especially for us Africans — and really the whole world — because, other than what he’s accomplished on the basketball court, I think he was even better off the court,” Embiid said Monday. “He’s one of the guys that I look up to, as far as having an impact, not just on the court, but off the court. He’s done a lot of great things. He did a lot of great things for a lot of people, so he was a role model of mine. It’s a sad day.”
Last week, Embiid was on a stage at the United Nations alongside Toronto Raptors president of basketball operations Masai Ujiri talking about potential growth opportunities in Africa — something no one embodied more than Mutombo.
76ers president of basketball operations Daryl Morey was pulled off the stage during his news conference with coach Nick Nurse and was told about Mutombo’s death by a team official.. When he returned, tears were in his eyes as he spoke about what Mutombo meant to him personally, after working with him in his first season in charge of the Houston Rockets in 2007.
“There aren’t many guys like him,” Morey said. “Just a great human being. When I was a rookie GM in this league, my first chance in Houston, he was someone I went to all the time. … His accomplishments on the court, we don’t need to talk about too much. Just an amazing human being, what he did off the court for Africa. Rest in peace, Dikembe.” — Tim Bontemps
With KAT in the house, Knicks are ‘unofficially’ excited
GREENBURGH, N.Y. — Knicks wing Josh Hart simply decided to lean all the way into the elephant in the room after a while.
With Karl-Anthony Towns –the club’s new but still unofficial star — at the team’s practice facility on Monday, Hart eventually spoke on how the pending trade would shake up the Eastern Conference race.
“It’s definitely gonna be tougher. A lot of teams made big moves this offseason. It’s not gonna be easy. It’s not gonna be a cakewalk,” he said. “But we’re extremely confident in what we have. Both officially and unofficially.”
As he finished speaking, Hart smiled and looked over at the team’s public relations official, as if to get clearance to say what’s all but certain at this point: Towns is going to be a Knick.
Julius Randle and Donte DiVincenzo, key members of the club from last season, won’t be. Both realities figure to shake up the club in a number of ways; particularly on offense.
Nearly everyone-from coach Tom Thibodeau to captain Jalen Brunson to Hart-alluded to the fact that New York would be playing a lot more five-out offense this season with a stretch big like Towns. Brunson, coming off a season in which he went on an offensive onslaught after benefitting from more space after the OG Anunoby trade-now figures to have even more room to break down opposing defenders. Thibodeau on Monday cited the team’s top-10 rating in both offensive and defensive efficiency last season, saying he felt the club could be even better on both ends this season.
Hart and Brunson spent time talking about Randle and DiVincenzo, cycling between how integral they were to last season’s 50-win team, and how this is the difficult, often ugly side of the business.
But with Towns, and the added spacing he’ll provide for the team’s offense, the Knicks also clearly see the potential for a higher ceiling this season. — Chris Herring
Edwards, Gobert brace for new era after ‘brother’ KAT’s trade
MINNEAPOLIS — The Timberwolves media day got off to an awkward start when both head coach Chris Finch and team president Tim Connelly refused to comment on the Karl-Anthony Towns trade to the Knicks, even though hours earlier the former franchise anchor had posted a photo of himself in New York City.
“I can’t comment on anything that’s yet to happen,” Connelly said .
But Towns’ former teammates were not bashful about their sadness and the impact the loss will have on the franchise that will get Donte DiVincenzo, Julius Randle and a future first-round pick in exchange for the seven-footer who has made more than 40% of his 3-point attempts in his nine-year career.
“It was a big surprise,” Rudy Gobert said. “It’s not something anyone expected a few days before training camp. I’m still processing it. [Towns] is someone I have a lot of respect for. We had two years together and I’m really grateful for the time that we spent together. From the time I got here, from day one, he embraced me. He did everything he could to help me be the best version of myself, on and off the court.”
Gobert’s somber tone was a sentiment that hovered over the team on Monday.
While Anthony Edwards has enjoyed the praise he has received as he potentially enters his superstardom phase — Connelly said the team believes he can become one of the greatest players in NBA history — he also said it’s a difficult moment without his “brother.”
“I feel like it’s kind of weird to talk about it because he just got traded,” Edwards said. “That’s my dog, man. It wasn’t like a one or two situation. It was we both were the one. We just played off of each other. So, I mean, I’m happy to be [whoever] they want me to be now, but [Towns and I] were just together, so it’s hard.” — Myron Medcalf
Pop responds to France coach’s interest with Spurs
SAN ANTONIO — From the striking size difference between Victor Wembanyama and veteran point guard Chris Paul to coach Gregg Popovich’s insistence on standing for his 14-minute new conference, the Spurs media day featured plenty of notable sights.
But one small nugget gained traction Monday due to San Antonio’s longtime appreciation of contributions from international players.
Former France men’s basketball coach Vincent Collet, who led the team to a silver medal this summer in the 2024 Paris Olympics, recently expressed interest in coaching in the NBA, particularly for Popovich and the Spurs.
“He’s a good friend. He’s a great coach,” Popovich said. “And he’s like many coaches in Europe. You don’t have to be an American to coach in the NBA. It’s sort of a little unintended prejudice just like it used to be with players. ‘Those guys can’t play here. They won’t adjust culturally. They don’t play defense.’ Whatever it was. Then we all started bringing them over and realized that was baloney.
“It’s the same with the coaches. There are a bunch of coaches over there that could be doing as good or a better job than we’re doing. Coach Collet is definitely in that category.”
Throughout Popovich’s tenure with the Spurs, the organization has gained a reputation for bringing both international players and coaches to San Antonio. The team currently features at least three international staffers in assistant Matt Nielsen (Australia) and athletic performance coaches Carlos Sosa Marin (Spain) and Guillaume Alquier (France).
“I haven’t thought about it, Wembanyama said of the possibility of Collet joining the Spurs’ staff, “but it would be cool.” — Michael C. Wright
Pistons want to join Lions, Tigers as Detroit’s next playoff team
DETROIT — Pistons star Cade Cunningham, fresh off signing a five-year, $224 million extension this offseason, has personal goals this season.
He wants to become a All-Star and All-NBA player under new Pistons head coach J.B. Bickerstaff — and he is drawing motivation from witnessing the recent success of the NFL’s Detroit Lions and NBA’s Detroit Tigers.
The Tigers clinched their first playoff berth since 2014 this weekend while the Lions, who are viewed as Super Bowl contenders after reaching the NFC Championship Game last season, will host the Seattle Seahawks on Monday Night Football this evening.
“It’s a challenge that we definitely want to take on for sure,” Cunningham said. I was there at the game on Friday when the Tigers clinched so watching that, I’m in the building watching how the stadium was reacting to that. It gave me chills.
“So, that’s what we want to do for the Pistons fans, for the city, on the basketball side,” he said. “We want to bring that same excitement and that same joy to the Pistons. It’s a challenge that we’re all excited to take on and I’ll be the head of that snake.”
The Pistons have finished .500 or worse in eight consecutive seasons in addition to going 16 consecutive seasons without a playoff win, the longest active drought in the NBA.
However, president of basketball operations Trajan Langdon are committed to revitalizing the franchise. Langdon visited the Lions’ training camp over the summer where he spoke with Lions GM Brad Holmes and is hoping to emulate that same foundation while developing the current Pistons’ identity.
“He’s done some amazing things here that hopefully I can learn from,” Langdon said of Holmes. — Eric Woodyard