Raptors Waive Colin Castleton

Raptors Waive Colin Castleton

The Toronto Raptors have waived center Colin Castleton. In 26 games (four starts) with Memphis, Philadelphia and Toronto last season, Castleton averaged 4.7 points, 4.7 rebounds, 1.1 assists and 16.6 minutes.

Castleton signed consecutive 10-day contracts with the Raptors in March before signing a standard NBA contract Apr. 13, the final day of the regular season.

Luka Doncic: 'Just visually, I would say my whole body looks better'

Luka Doncic: 'Just visually, I would say my whole body looks better'

Nothing motivates the greats quite like the quest to prove someone wrong. When the Dallas Mavericks shocked the NBA by trading Luka Doncic to the Lakers, it was followed up by spin out of Dallas about GM Nico Harrison and the franchise’s concerns about Doncic’s lack of commitment to conditioning, taking care of his body and defense.

This summer, we have seen “skinny” Luka on social media as he works out to get in shape. Doncic spoke about that with Men’s Health Magazine.

” Just visually, I would say my whole body looks better…

“Every summer I try my best to work on different things. Obviously, I’m very competitive. This summer was just a little bit different, you know. It kind of motivated me to be even better…

“Obviously, be the best that I can be, take care of myself. This year, with my team, I think we did a huge step. But this is just the start, you know. I need to keep going. Can’t stop.”

The Mavericks were not wrong to have concerns about Doncic’s conditioning, it certainly has not been consistent throughout his career. (It’s still a massive leap from having concerns to trading a top-five player in the world as he enters his prime because of it.) Doncic has improved his conditioning in the past, but due to injuries and other reasons, it has never stayed at the level Dallas’ Harrison — a Kobe Bryant guy — expected.

What should scare the Mavericks is that they have just become the motivation he needed to genuinely change. If the disrespect from Dallas, combined with being on a new team and watching LeBron James’ commitment to his body and conditioning daily, changes Doncic’s habits, then the Mavericks have unleashed a monster on the league.

Doncic had spent the summer back in Europe with family and friends, but landed back in the United States in the last 48 hours for a Jordan Brand promotional shoe tour. After that tour, he returns to Slovenia to lead his national team in the EuroBasket that starts at the end of this month.

Doncic is eligible for a contract extension this summer: On Aug. 2, the Lakers can offer him a four-year, $223 million extension. They will, and Doncic is expected to re-sign with the team, although most likely on a three-year, $165 million max contract (or three plus a player option) because in three years he will have reached 10 years of service in the league and then can sign for up to 35% of the salary cap (the most the Lakers could offer right now is 30%). Expect that deal to be finalized before the season starts (possibly this week, while he is in the USA on a shoe tour, or perhaps closer to Lakers training camp).

Golden State Valkyries receive terrible news amid special season

Golden State Valkyries receive terrible news amid special season

Golden State Valkyries v Seattle Storm
Photo by Scott Eklund/NBAE via Getty Images

Kayla Thornton, the Valkyries’ leading scorer and first-ever All-Star, is out for the season after undergoing right knee surgery.

It’s been a special year for the Golden State Valkyries, who currently sit just one game out of the playoff race and have exceeded expectations in their franchise’s inaugural season. But on Friday, the team announced some devastating news: Kayla Thornton, the team’s leading scorer and rebounder, is out for the remainder of the season after undergoing knee surgery.

Thornton was in the midst of the best season of her WNBA career — and fresh off her first All-Star appearance at age 32 — when she injured her right knee in practice earlier this week.

The Valkyries did not share what exactly Thornton injured, but did write: “Thornton will be out for the remainder of the 2025 WNBA season and will begin the rehabilitation process immediately.”

Before her injury, Thornton averaged 14 points, 7 rebounds, and 1.3 steals — all team highs. She’s appeared in all 22 of the Valkyries games and recorded 15 points in last week’s All-Star game in Indianapolis.

Thorton was selected by the Valkyries in their expansion draft in December after being left unprotected by the New York Liberty, with whom she won a championship last year.

Who will step up in Kayla Thornton’s absence?

While her absence undoubtedly sets the Valkyries back, Golden State has been one of the most evenly balanced teams in the league. With Thornton sidelined, Tiffany Hayes (12.8 points per game), Veronica Burton (11 points), and Janelle Salaun (9.7 points) will likely all up their production.

Forwards Cecilia Zandalasini and Monique Billings, center Temi Fagbenle, and guards Kate Martin and Carla Leite could also all see increased opportunity.

No traction toward deals with Warriors’ Jonathan Kuminga, Nets’ Cam Thomas in restricted free agency

No traction toward deals with Warriors’ Jonathan Kuminga, Nets’ Cam Thomas in restricted free agency

Restricted free agency is a state of limbo that players try desperately to avoid, as the rules are heavily tilted in favor of the teams. This year, in particular, is tough because there were so few teams with cap space, meaning the player had even less leverage. If you need proof, the cases of the Warriors’ Jonathan Kuminga and the Nets’ Cam Thomas are perfect examples of how a player can get stuck in restricted free agency.

In the end, the smart money is on Kuminga and Thomas returning to play for their current teams, which could create an awkward dynamic. In both cases, it would be for considerably less money than they think they deserve, and on shorter contracts that could help facilitate a trade.

There have been updates on both in recent days, here is where things stand.

Jonathan Kuminga

The pace of talks around the Warriors forward has picked up, but that doesn’t mean the sides are closer to a deal. While Warriors’ general manager Mike Dunleavy made what the team considered a fair offer, Kuminga told ESPN’s Anthony Slater that the offers the Warriors have made do not come close to what he is seeking.

But Kuminga hasn’t found anything they presented appealing, he said, so the drawn-out negotiations will remain motionless, likely keeping the Warriors’ other offseason business on pause. They are the only NBA team not to sign or trade for a player this summer.

There are two reasons why Kuminga is stalled: money and role. On the money side, Kuminga is reportedly seeking a contract in the $30 million a season range, while the Warriors are offering shorter deals, two or three years, in the low $20 million a season range. That’s a huge gap.

The other part is the role. Kuminga wants a larger one, to have the ball in his hands more, something he has not consistently had under Steve Kerr in Golden State (even after stretches where he has played well).

That’s why the original hope for both sides had been to find a sign-and-trade deal that would get Kuminga to a new situation and the Warriors a first-round pick and a player — except that trade was not out there. Phoenix remains interested and could offer Kuminga a larger role, but they lack a first-round pick to trade and are not exactly deep with talent they want to move anymore. Slater summed it up this way at ESPN.

“Kuminga is in search of a more guaranteed, consistent starting role and featured opportunity, sources said. That’s something the Suns and Kings have pitched. Kuminga would be a significant part of the Warriors’ rotation to open next season, and they’d need his supplementary scoring on nights when Steph Curry, 37, or Jimmy Butler, 35, rest. That’s something coach Steve Kerr has told Kuminga in recent weeks… But Kuminga no longer wants to be a secondary option or a fallback plan, fearing a minimization in important moments.”

In the end, the most likely outcome is Kuminga signing a two-year, $45-50ish million contract — then Kerr has to showcase Kuminga, even if Curry and Butler are healthy. The Warriors will need that added shot creation with their current roster, but it also showcases Kuminga as a potential trade asset at the deadline or next summer.

For now, with the NBA season almost three months away from starting, there is no pressure to finalize a deal quickly. So the stalemate continues.

Cam Thomas

Cam Thomas is a bucket getter — 24 points a game last season when healthy, shot 34.9% from 3, and is a guy who draws doubles — and he wants to be paid like an elite scorer.

The Nets don’t see it that way, and so the sides are at a stalemate. Thomas is hoping for a contract that averages more than $20 million per season, but the Nets have not offered anything exceeding $14 million per season, according to Jake Fischer of Bleacher Report.

“I have not heard that Brooklyn has offered Cam Thomas anything further than a two-year deal with a team option on the second (year) that I don’t believe is going much north – if north at all – of the $14.1 million mid-level exception…

“Cam Thomas thinks of himself as one of the most elite play-maker scorers in the NBA, and he wants to be compensated as such… I definitely believes he wants north of $20 (million per year).”

Where the disconnect lies in Thomas’ value concerns his level of efficiency in getting buckets and his defense, rather than anything else — teams think he is a one-trick pony, even if it’s a really good trick. Thomas got mad at The Ringer’s Zach Lowe when he said the league consensus on Thomas was that of an “empty calorie ball hog.” Thomas should not like that, but it doesn’t mean Lowe is wrong — that absolutely is the perception of Thomas, fair or not. Thomas said in his defense, “This is most likely the same consensus teams who can’t guard me and send double teams from jump ball . Why are we double teaming a guy who’s ‘not that good’ make it make sense please.” While nobody is saying Thomas is ‘not that good,’ the reason teams send doubles is that they don’t fear him passing out of it and making the defense scramble (there also isn’t a lot of other shot creation on the Brooklyn roster).

There is real value for Thomas around the league, but he needs to get out of Brooklyn, and right now, there is no trade that gets him to someone who will pay him. Expect the sides to settle on a two-year contract, one that (much like Kuminga) is very tradable at the deadline or next summer, to get Thomas somewhere he wants to be.

Shaq details why ‘I f–king hate’ Rudy Gobert in wild rant as bad blood intensifies

Shaq details why ‘I f–king hate’ Rudy Gobert in wild rant as bad blood intensifies

Shaquille O’Neal’s longstanding feud with Timberwolves center Rudy Gobert took an even more drastic twist.

Caitlin Clark OUT vs. Las Vegas as Indiana Fever provide injury update

Caitlin Clark OUT vs. Las Vegas as Indiana Fever provide injury update

AT&T WNBA All-Star Game 2025
Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images

Caitlin Clark continues to rehab a groin injury as the star’s frustrating sophomore season continues.

Caitlin Clark entered the 2025 WNBA season with a lot of pressure on her shoulders. Of course, her name alone brings eyes to everything she touches — her team, the WNBA, women’s basketball as a whole. After a rookie season of record-breaking and the levelling up the Indiana did in the offseason, Clark’s Indiana Fever were expected to soar this season.

Instead, they’ve sputtered, and Clark’s repetitive injuries have been the source of frustration. It’s the fault of no one, especially not Clark, as injuries are an inevitable and unfortunate aspect of sports. Yet, the nature of the specific injuries Clark has had this year has meant there is no definite path for quick recovery.

That was the reminder provided by the Fever’s Thursday update on Clark, who was again ruled OUT for the team’s game against the Las Vegas Aces. The team announced that Clark had undergone further evaluation after she seemed to re-aggravate her groin injury last week and sat out of the team’s final game before the All-Star Break.

No additional damage or injury was found, which is good news.

The “bad” news is that this makes recovery timelines murky. There’s nothing they can do except treat her pain and have her rest until she feels better. The Fever said just that, that Clark will continue her recovery with the team’s medical staff, with no timeline available for when she could re-enter the lineup.

Indiana also said that no further details will be released, and that updates will now be made as necessary. Basically, they said “stop asking about it.” They will likely only update now when Clark moves from rehabbing to conditioning and preparing to rejoin the team on the court. It could be days, weeks, or longer, as groin injuries are notoriously nagging and unpredictable.

What does this mean for the Indiana Fever? Well, as of Thursday morning, the team is in 7th place in the WNBA standings with a record of 12-12. They head into a very important game against the Las Vegas Aces on Thursday night, the results of which will likely have implications for the team’s final spot in the standings.

The Aces sit just half a game ahead of the Fever currently, and the two teams have had razor-thin margins between them all season. Whoever wins this game will have a one-game edge over the other, which could be huge when it comes to end-of-season standings. With both teams on that bubble of making the playoffs, having one game come between making the playoffs or not would be crushing.

Regardless of all these implications, thoughts continue to go back to Clark. It’s not normal to have the amount of pressure she has on her shoulders. People travel long distances and pay lots of money just to see her play, meaning that when she’s hurt, sometimes fans can overreact and be mean. The hope would be that neither Clark, as the competitor she is, nor the Fever, worried about these monetary implications, would try to rush her back onto the court before she is healed. Her long-term health is most important, and despite the pressure she may feel to please paying fans, to help her team win, and live up to the expectations placed on her, she needs to sit out as long as she needs to.

Athletes often say the mental aspect of injuries is worse than the physical pain they endure, and it wouldn’t be shocking if that was especially true for Clark. While rational observers understand that the WNBA will survive while she rests, many are outspoken (and, again, mean) about their belief in the opposite. As much as she is idolized, Clark’s injury struggles this year prove what people often forget — that she is a human being and not invincible. Hopefully, she gives herself the grace to remember that as well, and knows that she doesn’t need to rush back to prove otherwise.