logo
Knicks-Grizzlies Trade Report Surfaces After Desmond Bane Move

Knicks-Grizzlies Trade Report Surfaces After Desmond Bane Move

Yahoo16-06-2025

Knicks-Grizzlies Trade Report Surfaces After Desmond Bane Move originally appeared on Athlon Sports.
The NBA offseason hasn't started, but that didn't stop the Memphis Grizzlies from making the summer's first blockbuster trade on Sunday. They sent guard Desmond Bane to the Orlando Magic for four first-round picks, a first-round pick swap, guard Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, and guard Cole Anthony.
Advertisement
This continues a transitional time for the Grizzlies, as they named Tuomas Iisalo their new head coach in May after he was the interim coach following Taylor Jenkins' firing. Now they'll be without their third-leading scorer from this season, as Bane averaged 19.2 points on 48.4 percent shooting (39.2 percent 3 PT) over 69 games.
However, Memphis may not stop there, as the New York Knicks have an eye on one of its stars, via ClutchPoints' Kris Pursiainen.
Memphis Grizzlies forward Jaren Jackson Jr. drives past Utah Jazz forward Kyle Filipowski at FedExForum on Jan. 25, 2025.Petre Thomas-Imagn Images
"But sources familiar with the situation tell ClutchPoints that at least one key member of the Knicks' front office has long been interested in [forward Jaren] Jackson Jr. as a trade target," he reported on Monday morning.
Advertisement
"The Knicks' acquisition of Karl-Anthony Towns last offseason didn't nullify this interest, either," he continued. "League sources say that a Jackson Jr. and Karl-Anthony Towns frontcourt would be a 'dream' pairing for New York in their starting lineup."
Jackson's father, Jaren Jackson Sr., was an assistant coach for New York's G-League affiliate from 2021-23. Knicks president Leon Rose was also the younger Jackson's agent when he worked for Creative Artists Agency (CAA), alongside fellow agent Austin Brown. The two-time All-Star is still represented by Brown.
Jackson signed with Rose and Brown for representation before getting drafted in 2018. Rose then took the New York job in March 2020.
Advertisement
Jackson will make $23.4 million next season, the last on his rookie extension.
Related: Scotty Pippen Jr. Facing Backlash for Ja Morant Message After Grizzlies' Loss
Related: UConn's Dan Hurley is Trending After Major Knicks Coaching News
This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 16, 2025, where it first appeared.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NFL offseason power rankings: No. 27 New York Giants have a coach and GM on the hottest seat
NFL offseason power rankings: No. 27 New York Giants have a coach and GM on the hottest seat

Yahoo

time23 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

NFL offseason power rankings: No. 27 New York Giants have a coach and GM on the hottest seat

Other NFL team previews: 32. Titans | 31. Saints | 30. Browns | 29. Panthers | 28. Jets Nobody had to put New York Giants coach Brian Daboll and general manager Joe Schoen on the hot seat. Their boss did. Advertisement The Giants went 3-14 last season. Giants co-owner John Mara decided Daboll and Schoen deserved another season, but he didn't seem too excited about it. 'It better not take too long because I've just about run out of patience,' Mara said. "That'll be a good sound bite for you tonight, huh?" Mara's meeting with the media after the announcement that Daboll and Schoen would return was weird. It seemed apologetic. He said he knew it was "not the most popular decision" among Giants fans. His meeting with the media was to "face the music." His assessment of the 2024 Giants was that "we stunk this year." The tone was so funereal you'd have guessed Mara was forced into the decision, instead of being the one who made it. "I'm going to have to be in a better mood this time next year than I am right now," Mara said. Advertisement That set the tone for the Giants season. It's all about whether Daboll and Schoen can survive again. It won't be easy. The owner is on edge. The fan base was already there. The Giants' solution at quarterback was signing two veterans who weren't wanted back by their previous teams and drafting a quarterback who will need some work. On top of it all, the Giants have the toughest schedule in the NFL, and by a pretty wide margin based on the projected betting win totals of their opponents, via Sharp Football Analysis. It seems like Daboll and Schoen are dead men walking into a season with a roster that would need some help to get out of last place in the NFC East. So why bother bringing them back at all? Can New York Giants head coach Brian Daboll (left) and general manager Joe Schoen (right) show enough improvement this season to keep their jobs? (Photo by Andy Lewis/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) (Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) Mara acknowledged the results weren't good enough, but gave Schoen credit for a good 2024 draft class and solid additions in free agency. Mara liked the way players still respond to Daboll, and he was the NFL's Coach of the Year just three seasons ago. It seemed in a way like Mara felt forced into being patient after the team went through four coaches, counting an interim, in six years after Tom Coughlin stepped down under pressure. The duo will need to show some progress this season, even if the record isn't that much better. Advertisement Jaxson Dart is the best path to showing that progress. Dart is an interesting first-round pick out of Ole Miss. He will take some time to learn an NFL offense, but he has enticing skills. Russell Wilson and Jameis Winston were signed before Dart was picked, and presumably Wilson will begin the season as the starter. If the Giants aren't much better than last season, the biggest question will be when to give Dart a shot. The reality is that decision will be made by a coach and general manager who are in self-preservation mode. Whatever is best for their survival will play a role in that decision. The Giants have a really good defensive line, a secondary that has gotten an influx of talent, a future star in receiver Malik Nabers and not much else. There's still a long way to go before the Giants are contenders again. Daboll and Schoen need some results this season to stick around for those better days. Offseason grade The Giants had a good draft last year and got top grades for their draft class this year. The Giants got the second-best consensus grade among draft analysts. Defensive end Abdul Carter didn't fill a need, because the Giants already had a strong defensive line, but he was an easy pick at No. 3 overall. The Giants traded up for quarterback Jaxson Dart in the first round, and he provides some hope for fixing a broken quarterback situation. The big free agent additions were cornerback Paulson Adebo and safety Jevon Holland, who should make the secondary better. Russell Wilson and Jameis Winston were signed to be stopgap solutions at quarterback, and neither is too exciting. Overall, it's clear to see the Giants' roster improving, and that will accelerate if Dart is a hit. Advertisement Grade: B+ Quarterback report The Steelers showed zero desire to bring Russell Wilson back. The Browns chose to sign 40-year-old Joe Flacco over matching the two-year, $8 million deal Jameis Winston got from the Giants. The Giants didn't have many great options at quarterback in free agency, and those two veterans will probably deliver predictable results. Wilson played pretty well for a few weeks for the Steelers last season but faded by the end, a reminder that his game isn't aging well as he approaches 37 years old. Winston is what he is, a sometimes exciting player who can't avoid turnovers. The odds of either starting through the season are long. Jaxson Dart should start at some point this season. He is a good athlete with a strong arm. Consistency can be an issue, but in college he was good at pushing the ball downfield and creating explosive plays. If the Giants get off to a slow start, it will be tough to resist the urge to speed up Dart's timetable and put him into the lineup. BetMGM odds breakdown From Yahoo's Ben Fawkes: 'The New York Giants signed QBs Russell Wilson and Jameis Winston this offseason, before drafting Ole Miss QB Jaxson Dart in the first round in the 2025 NFL Draft. They're hoping to have the short- and long-term solutions at QB, but there's also a chance they have neither. With a win total of just 5.5 at BetMGM, the Giants' schedule is brutal – New York is favored in just one game and has the toughest schedule according to opponent win totals in the NFL. Will the defense be good enough to overcome the team's likely offensive shortcomings?" Yahoo's fantasy take From Yahoo's Scott Pianowski: "Malik Nabers is currently the WR7 off the board in Yahoo drafts. The market might be missing an opportunity here. New York's quarterback room is complicated, but at least things are upgraded from last year's medley of Daniel Jones, Drew Lock and Tommy DeVito. And the Brian Daboll scheme will force the ball to its best players — Nabers was second in the NFL in targets last year despite missing two games. Normally the goal with your early picks is to target the best players on the best teams, but Nabers is likely too big to fail. If you sneak him in the second half of your first round, you've done well." Stat to remember Malik Nabers, the sixth pick of last year's NFL Draft, was second in the NFL with 170 targets last season. Only Ja'Marr Chase, who won the receiving triple crown, had more with 175. Chase played two more games than Nabers, who played 15 games and had 10 or more targets in 10 of them. He had seven in his first game and never fewer than eight the rest of his rookie season. In other words, Nabers was the epicenter of the Giants' offense from his first day on the job. He was productive too, with 109 catches for 1,204 yards. The Giants did nothing to upgrade the receiving room in the offseason, meaning that there is little to keep a healthy Nabers from the rare level of 200 targets this season. As long as the Giants' quarterback play is reasonable, Nabers could lead the NFL in receptions and yards. Advertisement Burning question How will the Giants use all their pass rushers? Once Travis Hunter went with the second pick of the NFL Draft, the Giants didn't have much choice but to take Penn State edge rusher Abdul Carter at No. 3. He was clearly the best player available, and would have been a reasonable first overall pick. But it did create some questions. The Giants already had two top edge rushers in Brian Burns and Kayvon Thibodeaux. The Giants could use all three at once, pushing one of them inside. But the Giants don't want to limit any of those three talented players to less than 70% of the team's defensive snaps. Something has to give, though it is a good problem to have. Those three rushers along with elite defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence II make up one of the best defensive lines in football, regardless of how the playing time is divvied up. Best-case scenario When the Giants made the playoffs in Brian Daboll's first season as coach, they caught a lot of breaks. The Giants won plenty of close games and then beat a similarly lucky Vikings team in the playoffs. Theoretically that could happen again, but it's unlikely. It's a roster that still has questions at secondary, offensive line, running back, receiver outside of Malik Nabers and linebacker outside of Bobby Okereke. And, of course, that lingering question at quarterback. Jaxson Dart could prove himself to be the answer at QB and if that's the only positive thing to happen for the Giants this season it would be a reason to celebrate. It's hard to envision the Giants being a playoff team. Maybe that will cost Daboll and Joe Schoen their jobs. But if Dart shows some promise, that might be enough for New York to feel good about its direction going forward and stick with the plan. To many Giants fans, that's not the best-case scenario. Advertisement Nightmare scenario The Giants' schedule is brutal. NFL analyst Warren Sharp had it as the toughest in the league based on sportsbooks' win totals, and the eye test confirms it. The Giants are favored in only one game all season (Week 5 at New Orleans). It's possible the Giants are buried by November, and there would be a lot of pressure on ownership to make a midseason change at coach and GM. It's possible Brian Daboll and Joe Schoen never get to experience Jaxson Dart starting a regular season game, if everything goes wrong. And it could. Outside of the obvious quarterback issues, the offensive line could be a problem again, the lack of playmakers other than Malik Nabers is glaring and a defense that was 28th in DVOA last season might not be much better. Trying to figure all of that out against the toughest schedule in the NFL will be a chore. The Giants went 3-14 last season, and they could easily be that bad again. Though if that happens, at least Giants fans would get their wish and see the team reset at coach and GM. The crystal ball says On one hand the Giants are getting better. They had a good offseason last year and this year's draft and free agency seemed to be strong as well. But there are still many holes, which speaks to how much work the roster needed even as the Giants made the playoffs in 2022. The Giants should want Jaxson Dart to sit as long as possible, though it will be tough to resist putting him in as the losses pile up. The team has a Week 14 bye, and giving Dart the final four games to show what he can do seems right. What happens in those final four games will be crucial in determining the future of the franchise, including the job status of the coach and general manager. The Giants are in for another losing season, and that seems more likely than not to be bad news for Brian Daboll and Joe Schoen. Dart might be able to save them, and reinvigorate the fan base, by showing some promise late in the season.

What is Derrick White's trade value to the Boston Celtics?
What is Derrick White's trade value to the Boston Celtics?

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

What is Derrick White's trade value to the Boston Celtics?

What is Derrick White's trade value to the Boston Celtics after the Memphis Grizzlies trade of Desmond Bane to the Orlando Magic? Whatever the offer, it had better be a huge one, given the Colorado native has a boatload of value to his current team. Meaning it would likely have to be on par or even better than the four first round picks and solid salary coming back in the Bane deal. But is there really a ball club out there that would spend that sort of draft capital on a player like White? Or is the market for such players more context dependent than the swap that landed the Griz guard in Orlando might seem to suggest to us? The hosts of the CLNS Media "How Bout Them Celtics!" podcast, Jack Simone and Sam LaFrance, took some time on a recent episode of their show to talk it over. Check it out below! If you enjoy this pod, check out the "How Bout Them Celtics," "First to the Floor," and the many other New England sports podcasts available on the CLNS Media network:

The Yankees have Aaron Boone to blame for Friday's pummeling
The Yankees have Aaron Boone to blame for Friday's pummeling

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

The Yankees have Aaron Boone to blame for Friday's pummeling

It was a night that began with hope. The New York Yankees led 5-2 after five innings, as the dugout roared. But baseball, like life, has a cruel way of humbling you when you least expect it. One minute, you're high-fiving everybody, and the next, you're staring into the unforgiving abyss of an 8-5 loss. Advertisement Friday's series opener against the Los Angeles Dodgers had the makings of a statement win. Instead, it turned into a case study in how not to manage a baseball game. Credit: Jason Parkhurst-Imagn Images Max Fried falters at the worst possible time When the Yankees landed Max Fried in free agency, it was a $218 million bet that he'd be their ace. Until Friday, he had mostly delivered. But against the Dodgers, the wheels came off in the sixth inning. Fried allowed a solo shot to Shohei Ohtani, then gave up two singles and a double. It was the dreaded third time through the order, yet manager Aaron Boone stuck with him. The result? Four runs, some of which scored after Fried exited, and a once-safe 5-2 lead was suddenly dust in the wind. Advertisement Boone's decision not to pull Fried earlier left fans frustrated. It wasn't just hindsight. It was a glaring mistake in real time. Ohtani and the Dodgers' offense feast Shohei Ohtani didn't just show up — he erupted. Two towering home runs echoed through Dodger Stadium like thunderclaps. Freddie Freeman was laser-focused, collecting three hits and two doubles. Andy Pages drove in three, and even without Mookie Betts, the Dodgers' top five hitters looked like a buzzsaw. Combined, Ohtani, Freeman, Teoscar Hernández, Will Smith, and Pages went 10-for-21 with seven runs and six RBI. It was offensive poetry, and the Yankees had no answers. Advertisement You could feel the momentum shift. Every hit felt like a gut punch, and once the Dodgers took the lead, the Yankees never really recovered. Boone's head-scratching decisions fuel the collapse If baseball is a chess match, Boone was playing checkers on Friday night. Why leave Fried in after Ohtani's homer? Or, in any case, why not take him out after the single he gave up immediately after that? Or when he allowed yet another single? Fried really, really shouldn't have faced Freeman for a third time, no matter the lefty-on-lefty advantage. Why trust Yerry De Los Santos, a low-leverage reliever, in the seventh inning of a one-run game? He promptly allowed three straight hits that added two insurance runs and buried New York's hopes. Advertisement Why pinch-hit DJ LeMahieu for J.C. Escarra with runners in the corners and two outs in the eighth after Dodgers manager Dave Roberts brought in Tanner Scott to face Escarra? LeMahieu, running a .494 OPS, flied out to end the threat. It's these moments that separate wins from losses, contenders from pretenders. Boone has managed plenty of good games this year. But this wasn't one of them. Credit: Jay Biggerstaff-USA TODAY Sports Yankees' loss stings as bigger questions loom At 35-21, the Yankees are still in a good place. But this loss, this squandered opportunity, will leave a mark. Fried will bounce back. The offense will have better days. But when your manager's decisions directly cost you a win, it lingers. Advertisement There's a rhythm to baseball — a tempo, a heartbeat. And when that gets disrupted by poor choices, everything spirals. Friday night was that kind of storm. And when you lose a game you should have won, it feels less like a loss and more like a lesson. Popular reading: Yankees' dynamic infielder could be back at third base as soon as Tuesday

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store