Monday, April 13

The biggest surprises of the NBA season so far


The Pulse Newsletter 📣 | This is The Athletic’s daily sports newsletter. Sign up here to receive The Pulse directly in your inbox.


Good morning! Shoot some hoops today.


Roundball: What the NBA season has told us so far

By the end of the weekend, every NBA team will have played 15 percent of its regular season. What’s 15 percent of a season? Enough time to make decisions, apparently. The Mavericks already made the year’s first splashy firing, of flailing GM-turned-fall guy Nico Harrison.

Other big developments so far:

  • The Eastern Conference is ripe for someone to reach out and grab it, and the Pistons — winners of nine straight for the first time in 17 years — look like a good candidate. Detroit is 11-2, leading the conference while getting supreme play from Cade Cunningham and breakout center Jalen Duren, who is still just 21. The Pistons have even shown they can win without both of those guys, among several others. Here’s a breakdown of how the team has been this great.
  • The reigning champion Thunder still look like kings of the West. OKC is off to a 12-1 start, and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is settling in for another two-man MVP race with Nikola Jokić. I assume you are shocked to be reading this.
  • The poor Pacers, the other half of last year’s Finals, are already down in Wizards territory at 1-11 as Tyrese Haliburton (torn Achilles) misses the season.
  • The Lakers, yet to get a minute out of the rehabbing LeBron James, are 9-4. It turns out that Luka Dončić is good. Harrison now has more time to watch his games.

There’s a lot to take in, though. So I asked Zach Harper, author of our free NBA newsletter, what’s catching his eye. We did a lightning round.

Zach, which of your preconceptions about this season are you already ditching? 

💬 I’m absolutely abandoning the idea that the Clippers and Pacers are still built to withstand injuries. It’s not so bad for the Clippers, but Chris Paul looks washed, pressed and folded, Bradley Beal is out for the season and John Collins is not that guy. Indiana has had too many injuries to reasonably expect them to survive, but I still didn’t think they’d be this bad. I thought they’d be sneaky-dangerous as a Play-In team.

What were you right about, and how has the season confirmed your genius? 

💬 I never bought the Hawks as someone who would make the leap, because they’re still the Hawks. They can’t beat good teams, and I don’t believe Trae Young missing is the reason. They just don’t have an identity or culture. I’m also sticking with “Victor Wembanyama is going to eat this planet.” He’s a top-five player, and there is nothing anybody can do to stop him.

Has the Lakers’ performance without LeBron changed how you feel about their outlook? Or his?

💬 Not really. We knew Luka was elite, so his play hasn’t changed anything. Austin Reaves is definitely taking a leap. That was expected in a contract year, but maybe not to this degree. I’m impressed, but in a playoff scenario, they still don’t have enough defense or size. LeBron coming back at 41 years old with sciatica isn’t fixing either of those issues. It’s a really good regular-season team, though.

Thanks to Zach. We’ll check in all season, and you can find him all the time in The Bounce.


News to Know

A YouTube TV-Disney deal, finally

At long last, YouTube TV and Disney have put an end to their standoff. The two sides reached a deal last night to restore ESPN, ABC and other channels to YouTube TV after a two-week hiatus 
 and ahead of a stacked college football slate on ABC today. (More on that shortly.) The agreement also gives YouTube TV subscribers access to ESPN’s new direct-to-consumer service. Andrew Marchand has all the details in his full report.

‘Last Chance U’ coach killed

John Beam, the former Laney College football coach featured in the Netflix docuseries “Last Chance U,” was shot and killed on the school’s campus yesterday. A 27-year-old suspect was taken into custody in connection to the shooting, with police claiming it was a targeted incident. More details here.

Those around the sports world paid their respects to Beam, who had become a legend in Oakland and the Bay Area for his efforts in coaching and mentoring the community’s youth.

More news:

  • New Jersey Devils center Jack Hughes suffered a hand injury in a “freak accident” at a team dinner. More here.

  • Bill Belichick shut down rumors connecting him to the New York Giants’ head coach opening in a statement yesterday. We’ll see about that.

  • Former NBA guard Patrick Beverley was arrested in Texasfollowing a “family violence incident.”

  • A hilarious story revealed by The Athletic’s Jon Krawczynski this week: LaMelo Ball reportedly scared off the Timberwolves in a pre-draft interview when he revealed his aspirations to be president of the United States.
  • Kai Trump, the 18-year-old granddaughter of President Donald Trump, finished dead last in her LPGA debut this week. The tournament may have lost the plot by granting her a sponsor exemption, as Hugh Kellenberger writes.

Watch Guide

đŸ“ș NWSL: Portland Thorns at Washington Spirit 

12 p.m. ET on CBS

The Spirit are the No. 2 seed in the NWSL playoffs, and the Thorns are No. 3. Whoever wins will probably be favored in next Saturday’s NWSL Championship, now that No. 1 seed Kansas City is out. The Spirit might just be built for this.

đŸ“ș CFB: No. 9 Notre Dame at No. 22 Pitt 

12 p.m. ET on ABC 

Notre Dame is playing for its Playoff life. Pitt, because this isn’t an ACC game, is not. This contradiction made Pitt’s coach say a bizarre thing this week: “I’d gladly get beat 103 or 110 to 10 in that game. They could put up 100 on us as long as we win the next two after that.” đŸ€”

đŸ“ș CFB: No. 11 Oklahoma at No. 4 Alabama 

3:30 p.m. ET on ABC 

Bama’s running game has been mediocre all year. Oklahoma leads college football in defensive success rate against the run. This seems concerning for Alabama, no?

đŸ“ș CFB: No. 10 Texas at No. 5 Georgia 

7:30 p.m. ET on ABC 

Arch Manning will be the focus here, and he’s trending in a good direction lately. But so has Gunner Stockton, the latest Kirby Smart QB to figure it out after a choppy transition period.

Want tickets? Try StubHub.


Pulse Picks

As a rookie in 2008, Cliff Avril was on the 0-16 Lions. He then won a Super Bowl with the 2013 Seahawks. Read his thoughts on the difference between winning and losing cultures.

Ken Rosenthal joined “The Sports Gossip Show” to discuss MLB’s gambling scandal, but also shared his favorite piece of sports gossip — and his bowtie origin story. Fun.

Who among us hasn’t stood in Costco, looking over unbeatably cheap wool socks and a multi-pack of underwear, wondering whether these clothes are worth taking home? Call me Captain Kirk, because I lived in every single piece of clothing from Costco’s Kirkland Signature menswear line — and found some hidden gems. — Alexander Aciman

Over in The Athletic FC newsletter, Caoimhe O’Neill has a great explainer on the big changes to MLS’ calendar we mentioned yesterday.

Start the holiday season of terrible Christmas movies right with “A Very Jonas Christmas Movie,” available to stream as of yesterday. This is a blind recommendation, but no doubt it will be terribly wonderful. — Emily Olsen

After announcing a split with Under Armour this week, Steph Curry’s brand and appeal are reaching a new test, as Jason Jones writes.

In honor of the Wirecutter 2025 Marinara Champion let me rec this incredibly easy pasta. You can sub a non-meat sausage if you want and gnocchi for the noodles. Can’t mess it up. (Really.) — Chris Sprow

Most-clicked in the newsletter yesterday: Curry ending his Under Armour partnership. He dropped 49 points in Nike shoes last night.

Most-read on the website yesterday: What happens when college football games are only for the rich? It’s a reality.

Ticketing links in this article are provided by partners of The Athletic. Restrictions may apply. The Athletic maintains full editorial independence. Partners have no control over or input into the reporting or editing process and do not review stories before publication.

(Top photo: David Jensen / Getty Images)



Source link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *