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NBA Finals 2025 - What we're hearing on Durant, Giannis, Knicks coach search
Esports

NBA Finals 2025 – What we’re hearing on Durant, Giannis, Knicks coach search

by admin June 14, 2025


  • Tim Bontemps

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    Tim Bontemps

    ESPN Senior Writer

      Tim Bontemps is a senior NBA writer for ESPN.com who covers the league and what’s impacting it on and off the court, including trade deadline intel, expansion and his MVP Straw Polls. You can find Tim alongside Brian Windhorst and Tim MacMahon on The Hoop Collective podcast.
  • Brian Windhorst

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    Brian Windhorst

    ESPN Senior Writer

    • ESPN.com NBA writer since 2010
    • Covered Cleveland Cavs for seven years
    • Author of two books

Jun 13, 2025, 08:00 AM ET

The NBA world will be focused on Indianapolis’ Gainbridge Fieldhouse on Friday night, when the Oklahoma City Thunder will attempt to bounce back against Tyrese Haliburton and the Indiana Pacers and tie the suddenly fun Finals at two games apiece.

But for the 28 teams not taking part, business hasn’t stopped. So, with less than two weeks until what could be a very eventful NBA draft, and less than three weeks until the start of this year’s free agency period, here’s our latest look at the happenings around the league.

And, with trade chatter involving Kevin Durant, Giannis Antetokounmpo and other stars, the spiraling New York Knicks coaching search and some early free agency buzz, there is no shortage of storylines outside of the Pacers-Thunder Finals duel.

Where is the Giannis saga headed?

Until either a trade materializes involving Antetokounmpo or there is definitive word out of Milwaukee that the two-time MVP will be staying, the offseason’s biggest headline is the Greek Freak’s future.

There are few players in league history of Giannis’ caliber. The chance to potentially acquire him — in his prime at 30 years old no less — is a tantalizing possibility for opposing teams and fans alike.

Game 1: Pacers 111, Thunder 110
Game 2: Thunder 123, Pacers 107
Game 3: Pacers 116, Thunder 107
Game 4: at Pacers, Friday, 8:30 p.m.
Game 5: at Thunder, Monday, 8:30 p.m.
Game 6*: at Pacers, Thu., June 19, 8:30 p.m.
Game 7*: at Thunder, Sun. June 22, 8 p.m.
* If necessary | All times Eastern

• More NBA playoffs from ESPN

A possibility is far from a certainty. And, as things stand today, the expectation is that Antetokounmpo will start next season as a Buck, sources told ESPN. To be clear, the emphasis is on today. There’s still a lot of road to be walked this offseason, and it’s hard to know exactly how everything will shake out.

In meetings with ownership since the end of the season, Bucks coach Doc Rivers and recently extended general manager Jon Horst have presented plans to keep the core of the team intact around Antetokounmpo, with a goal of competing for a top-six playoff spot and with a hope Damian Lillard could return from his Achilles recovery before the end of next season. The Bucks went 10-4 without Lillard to close the regular season as he dealt with a blood clot. That, plus Antetokoumpo’s larger role of keeping Milwaukee afloat, were the cornerstones of the team’s projection.

With Jayson Tatum facing his own Achilles rehab, the Boston Celtics perhaps cutting payroll around him, the uncertainty facing Joel Embiid’s health and several East teams still rebuilding, there is a pathway for the Bucks to ride their MVP back into contention.

play

1:12

JWill: Giannis handles things differently than other players

Jay Williams weighs in on Giannis Antetokounmpo’s future in the NBA and how he handles things differently than other players.

Will the Bucks be willing to go into the luxury tax next season to do so? That’s been an open question around the league for months, with starting center Brook Lopez set to be a free agent and with Bobby Portis facing a decision on his $13.4 million player option.

If Lopez is re-signed, Milwaukee doesn’t have many realistic options to get under the tax. If he enters free agency, the Bucks can easily avoid it. Sources said the franchise is prepared to once again enter the tax after spending more than $200 million in luxury tax alone over the past few seasons — more than every team but the Golden State Warriors, LA Clippers, Brooklyn Nets, Los Angeles Lakers and Phoenix Suns since 2012, per Spotrac.

Rival teams suspect the Bucks will end up in the tax but keep their payroll below the $196 million first apron, which would open their ability to access more of the $14 million midlevel exception. They might need a large chunk of it for a starting point guard in place of Lillard, with the candidates including free agents such as Dennis Schroder, Tyus Jones and Malcolm Brogdon.

Much more will be known once Milwaukee’s roster comes into focus after the draft and free agency, and then we’ll have a better sense of where the Bucks stand — and how real the hopes of competing next year with Antetokounmpo really are.

Where will Durant land?

Unlike Antetokounmpo’s, there isn’t much ambiguity around Durant’s situation, with ESPN’s Shams Charania reporting Wednesday that the Suns and Durant are sifting through trade offers.

Charania listed five teams that have registered interest in Durant — the Houston Rockets, San Antonio Spurs, Minnesota Timberwolves, Miami Heat and New York Knicks — and added that several other clubs have checked in on the 36-year-old Durant.

For Phoenix, a trade will be very complex for a trio of reasons.

  • Given the two sides are working together on a potential deal, Durant has to land somewhere he’s invested in going.

  • That team will likely need to be willing to consider giving Durant an extension of more than $60 million per season for his age-38 and age-39 seasons.

  • Perhaps most importantly, the Suns will need to get enough in return in a deal to satisfy owner Mat Ishbia and his front office.

For all of Durant’s brilliance across his career, that’s not going to be an easy task to marry those three things into a deal that works for everyone.

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At the February trade deadline, the Suns talked to a handful of teams about Durant without his knowledge. When he found out, just as the Suns and Warriors were nearing coming to terms, Durant blew up the talks. There was some disagreement within the team, sources said, about how that process was handled. It was one of the reasons new general manager Brian Gregory and Ishbia have repeatedly, ad nauseum, emphasized the promise of “alignment” in various news conferences since the end of the season.

What’s most important now is keeping Durant in the loop. Though whether there needs to be true alignment with Durant on the eventual deal is yet to be seen. The Suns need a favorable trade more than they need to keep Durant happy. If both can be achieved, terrific.

Besides the Warriors, the team that appeared to be the most serious about trading for Durant four months ago was the Minnesota Timberwolves. At the time, the Wolves and Suns were second apron teams, and it made a deal too complex to happen. But with several Wolves potentially opting out of their contracts (namely Julius Randle and Naz Reid) and Rudy Gobert taking a small pay cut as part of his new deal, Minnesota potentially has more flexibility to execute such a transaction.

play

1:28

Shams shares Kevin Durant’s main trade suitors with McAfee

Shams Charania tells Pat McAfee that Kevin Durant is the biggest trade domino, with five teams interested: Rockets, Spurs, Heat, Timberwolves and Knicks.

One additional team to monitor, sources said, is the Clippers, who have the contracts to make another move to augment the roster around Kawhi Leonard and James Harden, presuming the latter either opts into his contract or signs a new deal this offseason.

Multiple league sources said they were skeptical that the price for Durant in a trade would get to a place where Phoenix would be satisfied with it.

What does seem clear is that this saga could easily be wrapped up on, or by, draft night on June 25. And with the weak free agent class and the lack of teams with cap space, one source said this year’s draft could easily wind up being an even busier night than normal — and it could be the high point of activity this summer.

Who, exactly, will coach the Knicks?

Wednesday morning, former Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau did an incredibly classy thing. He put out a full-page ad in The New York Times celebrating his time in New York and thanking the organization, players and fans for his five years in a job he grew up dreaming of having as a kid in Connecticut.

By the end of the day, any dreams the Knicks had of this being a smooth search to replace Thibodeau — already a difficult task, considering he finished his tenure as the fourth-winningest coach in franchise history — had been replaced by what’s quickly becoming a nightmare.

In the span of 24 hours, New York remarkably found itself being rejected by five teams in attempts to speak to their head coaches: the Atlanta Hawks (Quin Snyder); Chicago Bulls (Billy Donovan); Dallas Mavericks (Jason Kidd); Rockets (Ime Udoka); and Timberwolves (Chris Finch). This sort of thing simply doesn’t happen, and it has left plenty of people around the league shaking their heads in amusement. Or, in the case of some of the teams involved in denying permission, anger over the way it’s been handled.

From the play-in tournament to the NBA Finals, ESPN has you covered this postseason.

• Game 3 takeaways: Pacers strike back
• Paine: Five biggest Finals outliers
• Shelburne: Jenny Boucek’s path to Pacers
• MacMahon: Why Finals are a full-circle moment for Alex Caruso
• Shelburne: Tyrese Haliburton’s superstar ascension

Typically, a team in the Knicks’ situation — moving on from a coach who had won a series in three straight playoffs and coming off its first conference finals in 25 years — knows exactly who it is targeting in a new coach.

What has become abundantly clear: New York did not have a plan in place when the decision was made to move on from Thibodeau.

So what happens now? For starters, sources said, there’s some belief that things could change in the cases of Kidd in Dallas and Donovan in Chicago. Kidd has a long history of fiery departures from prior stops — including in 2014, when he wound up getting permission to leave the Brooklyn Nets to join the Bucks. Kidd also has a lot of relationships in New York from his year playing there in 2012-13 and has a relationship with Jalen Brunson from coaching him in Dallas before the guard came to New York three years ago as a free agent.

play

3:00

Stephen A.: Knicks’ head coach search is ‘pathetic’

Stephen A. Smith breaks down why the Knicks’ head coach search looks so bad, calling it desperate and pathetic.

Donovan, meanwhile, is a Long Island native who played 44 games with the 1987-88 Knicks after starring at Providence College. He would undoubtedly be the kind of hit the Knicks are looking for locally after moving on from Thibodeau.

But if neither of those scenarios change, where do the Knicks go from there? Perhaps it’s someone like Taylor Jenkins, Mike Brown or Michael Malone, all proven coaches currently without a job. Maybe it’s Cleveland Cavaliers assistant coach Johnnie Bryant, who was a finalist for the Suns job that went to fellow Cavs assistant Jordan Ott last week, and who spent the few seasons before this one working for Thibodeau in New York. Maybe it’s someone completely off the radar.

Right now, the only thing that’s clear about this coaching search is that it’s not going the way the Knicks had hoped.

What will happen with Ty Jerome?

While this summer features a very light free agency class, at least one player will have an intriguing market around him: Cavaliers guard Ty Jerome.

Coming off a top-three finish for Sixth Man of the Year for the 64-win Cavaliers, Jerome averaged 12.5 points in fewer than 20 minutes per game, shooting over 51% from the field and over 43% from 3-point range. His return from an ankle injury that forced him to miss virtually all of the 2023-24 season was a catalyst for Cleveland’s explosion to the East’s No. 1 seed.

The Cavs are wary of losing him and fellow key reserve free agent Sam Merrill, a shooting specialist who could have suitors as a fellow unrestricted free agent.

Jerome, who was on a $2.5 million deal this past season with the Cavaliers, is in line for a very hefty raise from that number, sources said. The expectation around the league is that it will take the full midlevel exception — roughly $14.1 million — to get Jerome signed. Cleveland, however, is hoping to get him to return for a bit less, sources said, as it attempts to navigate the second luxury tax apron and the team-building challenges that go along with it.

Team president Koby Altman has said he has clearance from owner Dan Gilbert to go deep into the luxury tax. But as this new CBA era is showing, the deeper a team goes into the aprons, the harder it is to escape. And all second apron teams have the same desire: Get out as soon as possible.



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June 14, 2025 0 comments
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Knicks fire Tom Thibodeau - What's next for New York's open job?
Esports

Knicks fire Tom Thibodeau – What’s next for New York’s open job?

by admin June 3, 2025


What lies ahead for the New York Knicks after the franchise fired head coach Tom Thibodeau on Tuesday?

Thibodeau guided the Knicks to their first Eastern Conference finals since 2000, defeating the Detroit Pistons in the first round and dethroning the defending champion Boston Celtics in the second round before falling in Game 6 to the Indiana Pacers. He finishes his tenure in New York with 24 playoff wins, 17 more than the team’s past 13 coaches combined, according to ESPN Research.

Why fire Thibodeau now, and where could the front office turn in its search? Which high-profile names could be available? And what other moves might follow now that one of the most successful runs in franchise history has ended without a title, extending the Knicks’ championship drought to 52 seasons?

Our NBA insiders examine every angle of the Thibodeau firing, including what could be next for the 67-year-old coach.

Why did the Knicks fire Tom Thibodeau now?

The theory of Occam’s Razor says that when trying to solve a problem, the simplest solution is likely the correct one.

In this case, Thibodeau’s time in New York ended because of the first line of the statement the Knicks released in response to his firing: “Our organization is singularly focused on winning a championship for our fans.”

That, sources around the league said, is why a change was made. The Knicks decided a new voice was needed to lift this franchise to the next level, despite Thibodeau leading the Knicks to their best stretch of play this century, including winning a playoff series in three consecutive seasons and advancing to the conference finals for the first time in a quarter century.

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After making a pair of splashy moves to land Mikal Bridges and Karl-Anthony Towns last summer, New York often felt like it was less than the sum of its parts. The starting lineup of Bridges, Towns, Jalen Brunson, Josh Hart and OG Anunoby was outscored by 31 points in over 300 minutes in the playoffs, and was outscored from Jan. 1 through the end of the regular season.

The defense was at times an issue — particularly against the Pacers in the conference finals — though that also shouldn’t come as a huge surprise with Brunson and Towns operating as the team’s point guard and center (and it’s not like Thibodeau isn’t regarded as one of the best defensive coaches of his generation). New York could also shoot more 3-pointers and adopt a faster pace offensively.

Plenty of teams have made the same choice New York has. In the cases of Steve Kerr replacing Mark Jackson with the Golden State Warriors in 2014, or Nick Nurse replacing Dwane Casey with the Toronto Raptors in 2018 — it resulted in a championship. Others, like when Adrian Griffin replaced Mike Budenholzer with the Milwaukee Bucks, or when Fred Hoiberg replaced Thibodeau himself with the Chicago Bulls, things went in a very different direction.

— Tim Bontemps

Who should the Knicks consider for the vacancy?

The most obvious candidate is Michael Malone, who led the Denver Nuggets to the 2022-23 title before a surprise firing with three games left in the regular season in April. Over the past eight seasons, Malone’s Nuggets led all Western Conference teams with 401 wins — 28 more than the second-place LA Clippers — which emphasizes his consistency as a coach. Malone wouldn’t be able to rely on Nikola Jokic in New York, but his success working with offensive stars who have defensive question marks would make him a solid fit for the Knicks roster.

It must be said, however, that the demanding Malone has a similar personality to Thibodeau, which could be a point against him if Knicks management wants to go in a new direction. If not Malone, both Mike Budenholzer and Frank Vogel have also won titles this decade, and their inability to wrangle the messy Phoenix Suns shouldn’t be held against them.

play

1:48

What’s next for Knicks after firing Tom Thibodeau?

Shams Charania reports on what the Knicks are looking for in a new coach after firing Tom Thibodeau and whether Michael Malone is an option.

Ultimately, the Knicks might be able to cast as wide a net as they desire, as the glamor and prestige of the job could attract just about any candidate Leon Rose is interested in interviewing. Could Jay Wright — who won NCAA titles with Josh Hart, Jalen Brunson and Mikal Bridges at Villanova — be coaxed out of retirement for his first NBA job? What about fellow two-time national champion Dan Hurley, who flirted with the Lakers gig last summer before signing a new contract at Connecticut?

All options are on the table for the most attractive NBA coaching job available: a reigning conference finalist with bona fide stars, competing in a weak conference in the biggest market in the country.

— Zach Kram

What will the Knicks’ next coach need to focus on?

Perhaps this is obvious after watching the conference finals play out, but finding a way to get more out of a group that plays Brunson near the point of attack and Towns closer to the rim.

Neither player is well-equipped to handle those respective tasks: Brunson is undersized on that end, while Towns isn’t the most “fleet of foot” and often commits silly fouls that leave him heading to the bench at inopportune times.

In the Pacers’ series specifically, the Knicks were twisted into defensive pretzels with how Indiana was forcing their defense to stay in rotation. “You can stop one action, but then it’s the next action, and the next action,” Josh Hart said of the Pacers’ game plan.

New York scrambled to stay connected. In many cases — the Game 2 loss in particular — Towns seemed lost trying to stay with Indiana’s fast-paced, spaced-out attack. If this rotation is back fully next season, the next coach will need to consider changes to the starting lineup. Someone like Mitchell Robinson would give Towns a back-end defender more along the lines of a Rudy Gobert. Or perhaps there’s another rangy wing defender that could bolster what Bridges and Anunoby seek to do to cover for Towns and Brunson’s shortcomings.

Either way, the fix on defense figures to be a heavier lift than what’s necessary on offense.

— Chris Herring

Are there more dominoes to fall in New York?

There is an old mantra in sports that you can’t fire the players, so you fire the coach. The Knicks’ decision to fire Thibodeau is the latest example.

A change at coach does not absolve New York for its roster flaws, which were evident despite a 51-win season and became glaring in the conference finals loss to Indiana. President of Basketball Operations Leon Rose and his front office have work to do in building a bench better than the one that was barely used by Thibodeau.

Knicks reserves averaged the fewest minutes and points among all teams this season, while the team’s starters averaged the second-most points per game of any team since 1986-87.

play

1:33

Why Stephen A. is upset by Knicks’ decision to fire Tom Thibodeau

Stephen A. Smith voices his disappointment in the Knicks for firing Tom Thibodeau.

Finding capable role players could prove to be difficult for New York this offseason. While the team’s top two reserves, Miles McBride and Mitchell Robinson, are under contract next season, New York has only the veteran minimum exception and part of the $5.7 million tax midlevel exception available to use in free agency. They will need to convince established veterans to sacrifice money elsewhere for a chance at competing for a championship.

The trades to bring in Bridges and Towns last summer left the Knicks depleted in draft assets and top-heavy in salary, making a more seismic change difficult. New York has only one tradeable first-round pick in the next seven years, a 2026 top-8 protected first from Washington. They have five players next season who will earn over $20 million: Towns, OG Anunoby, Jalen Brunson, Bridges and Josh Hart.

— Bobby Marks

What is Thibs’ legacy in New York and what could be next for him?

Thibodeau spent his career building up to the point where he got this job. A Connecticut native who grew up a Knicks fan, Thibodeau understood everything that came with the job — the intense scrutiny it brings, along with the notoriety that accompanies both success and failure.

And despite the immediate sting of losing the job, Thibodeau’s tenure will increasingly be viewed with fondness as time passes. The Knicks had won just one playoff series this century before Thibodeau led them to at least one in each of the past three years.

play

1:22

Perk: Thibs didn’t deserve to lose his job!

Kendrick Perkins sounds off on the Knicks parting ways with Tom Thibodeau after five seasons.

He instilled an identity and a work ethic into the franchise that resonated with the city and was a natural callback to the glory days of the ’90s, given his time with the franchise as an assistant coach under Jeff Van Gundy.

The better question is what could be next for him. Thibodeau had already finished the season as the NBA’s oldest coach, and he doesn’t always get enough credit for shifting toward the modern game because of the heavy minutes he plays his starters.

But Thibodeau has a very long and established track record of turning teams around and raising ceilings, and it’s also hard to believe that his passion for coaching has dimmed even slightly. That’s particularly true after this charmed run for the Knicks was capped off by Thibodeau returning to the conference finals for the first time since 2011, his first season with the Bulls.

— Bontemps



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June 3, 2025 0 comments
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