Saturday, September 27, 2025

Gio-ing Deep: Notes from NFL Weeks 1-3 in 2025

We are now fully back! I'm not going to be writing these type of posts as often this season since things can change so much week to week in the NFL, but being three weeks in now gives us a decent sample size to look at. These deep dives are meant to look beyond the regular box scores and instead focus on how teams are utilizing their skill position players. These underlying peripherals can often be a better indicator of what is to come than the raw numbers that have been put up so far.

Like last year, I'm using fantasy data (PPR scoring) and standard stats from ESPN and Pro-Football-Reference.com while snaps, routes run, and positional alignment come from Pro Football Focus (PFF).

  • Let's start with arguably the best player in fantasy football: Christian McCaffrey. The only thing ever stopping him from being the #1 pick each year are questions about his health, and despite a calf scare right before Week 1, he's ironically been one of the only healthy 49ers so far. And the team definitely isn't worried about trying to preserve him as the dual-threat RB once again has an elite role.

    Through three games, McCaffrey has played 81.13% of the snaps, run a route on 81.60% of the drop backs, been given. 75.36% of the RB carries, and seen an absurd 29.09% target share. Once more for emphasis: he's getting the targeted at the rate of an elite WR as a running back! As a result, he's averaging 23.3 points per game despite not finding the end zone on the ground yet and only scoring one receiving touchdown. The target share will come down once more receiving options get healthy, but with the track record that both this offense and he has, the TDs will come.
  • A more split backfield is happening in Houston, and it's been interesting to see the progression of the group. The Texans initially had four RBs see at least 7 snaps in Week 1 before making Dameon Pierce inactive in Week 2, and now in Week 3 it was down to just two 'backs getting snaps.

    Veteran Nick Chubb has been solid with a consistent role, playing over half the snaps in all three games (52% overall) with his route participation rate progressing from 26.47% to 30% to 39.53% (32.71% overall). That's led to an increase in target share from 3.7% to 8.7% to 11.11% (8.14% overall) to go along getting 66.67% of the RB carries, resulting in 9.4 points per game.

    Chubb's never been a big contributor in the passing game, though, so more intriguing is the role increase for rookie Woody Marks, who I was high on in this class as a pass-catcher. From snaps (11.11% to 26.53% to 47.62%) to routes (8.82% to 23.33% to 44.19%) to RB carry share (14.29% to 20% to 40%) to target share (0% to 4.35% to 5.56%), his usage numbers have gone up across the board week over week. If this can stay around an even split with Marks getting most of the receiving work, he could become an underrated contributor.

Thursday, September 4, 2025

Top NFL Rookie WRs for 2025

It's been a while! I meant to get this out not much longer after the rookie running backs and TEs posts in May, but the NBA offseason having action start sooner than ever threw me off before travel plans over the summer. Now the 2025 NFL season is here, so I'll will fire through this wide receiver class that's not as awesome as recent years but still has a lot to like.

As a reminder, a lot of what I base profiles on comes from JJ Zachariason's prospect guides over the years with certain statistical lenses to look through. I also tend to look at athleticism testing a little more than he does, but Ryan Heath's research at Fantasy Points indicates findings that it shouldn't be too much of a factor in success compared to other positions. Still, I'll be referencing physical traits (ideally from the NFL combine, with pro day results from Dane Brugler's The Beast); draft day age; breakout age; production profiles based on yards per route run (YPRR) via Pro Football Focus, yards per team pass attempt (Y/TPA), and market share rates; and then situation comes in at the end.


1. Tetairoa McMillan - 1st round, 8th overall, 2nd WR drafted - Panthers

There is a lot to like about McMillan's complete profile. He broke out as a true freshman (albeit as a 19 year old) largely based on accounting for 30.77% of Arizona's touchdowns. He really took off as a sophomore with an elite 3.02 yards per team pass attempt, a great 2.79 yards per route run, and strong market shares across the board with 27.11% of the team's catches, 34.98% of the yards, and 27.78% of the TDs. Finally, he maintained his production as a junior with a nearly identical 3.02 Y/TPA, 2.87 YPRR, and per game averages even as the team wasn't as good around him, resulting in improved rates of 32.06%, 44.34%, and 44.44%.

McMillan brings great size at 6'4.125" and 219 lbs, and although he didn't work out at the combine, he reportedly ran a more than adequate 4.53 40 yard dash at his pro day. That combination along with his track record of production means that he has all the traits to become an alpha receiver, and getting picked in the top-10 by a team who needs just that is enticing. Head coach Dave Canales has talked about running his passing attack through his top outside target and showed that through the beginning of last season with Diontae Johnson (before he apparently crashed out across multiple teams) and the prior year as offensive coordinator in Tampa Bay with Mike Evans. Adam Thielen getting traded last week opens up even more target opportunity, so McMillan should be the clear cut top rookie WR this season.


2. Travis Hunter - 1st round, 2nd overall, 1st WR* drafted - Jaguars (traded up)

The reigning Heisman Trophy winner is of course a fascinating case since he will be playing cornerback in addition to wide receiver, hence the asterisk above. The fact that Jacksonville gave up a king's ransom to move up to take him with the #2 pick gives a good idea of their big plans for him, so he could end up being the better long-term investment in dynasty over McMillan. We don't know just how many of the offensive snaps that Hunter will be playing compared just yet, and his statistical profile won't overwhelm you, which is understandable given how he pulled double duty.

Only a month younger than McMillan, Hunter broke out as a 20 year old sophomore upon transferring to Colorado after shocking the world by initially going to HBCU Jackson State as the #1 recruit in the nation. He only had 2.04 Y/TPA and 2.17 YPRR, however, with a 23.36% reception share, 26.06% yards share, and 21.74% touchdown share. Those improved across the board last season to 2.61, 2.51, 27.20%, 30.43%, and especially to 40.54%, but that still isn't necessarily elite anywhere.

The scouts rave about Hunter's traits, though, and Reception Perception guru Matt Harmon mentioned his fluid movements in the same breath as a young Odell Beckham Jr. They have similar size with Hunter 6'0.375" and 188 lbs to OBJ's 5'11.25" and 198, and perhaps with more focus on developing more as a receiver, the comparisons could continue. The Jaguars already have Brian Thomas Jr. as a #1 option for the foreseeable future after an outstanding rookie year, but there is a ton of opportunity for targets behind him with the departures of Christian Kirk, Gabe Davis, and Evan Engram. New head coach Liam Coen brings an exciting element to this offense now after he followed in Canales' footsteps as the Buccaneers OC for one year before a promotion, and Hunter could end up playing a large role in it.

Thursday, June 26, 2025

2025 NBA Draft Summary

This year's NBA draft is officially in the books! With their being so many moves during the event, I like to have this post separate from my offseason tracker to really dig into the moves around the board. While I make sure to give proper reporting credit in that tracker, it gets a lot messier trying to list that here with so many trades and the main news coming from one source earlier before small details come from another. So overall just shoutout to Shams Charania, Jake Fischer, Michael Scotto, Brett Siegel, Jon Krawczynski, and Anthony Slater for providing which future picks and/or draft rights exchanged hands throughout the event.

For now, here is a list of every selection and trade made (in excruciating detail) from Wednesday afternoon through Thursday evening. If you're curious about how teams had some of these picks from previous trades (and boy were there a lot of them), I broke it down in the second half of my lottery reaction post.


Dallas Mavericks
  • #1 Cooper Flagg

San Antonio Spurs
  • #2 Dylan Harper
  • #14 Carter Bryant
  • Traded #38 for the Kings' 2030 2nd round pick and cash considerations

Philadelphia 76ers
  • #3 VJ Edgecombe
  • #35 Johni Broome

Charlotte Hornets
  • #4 Kon Knueppel
  • Traded Mark Williams for #29 Liam McNeeley and a 2029 1st round pick (Worst of Cavaliers, Jazz, Timberwolves [protected 1-5])
  • #33 Sion James
  • #34 Ryan Kalkbrenner

Utah Jazz
  • #5 Ace Bailey
  • Traded #21, #43, and 2031 and 2032 2nd round picks for #18 Walter Clayton
  • #53 John Tonje

Saturday, June 14, 2025

2025 NBA Offseason Tracker

The buzz around this year's NBA offseason is that the action could happen earlier than usual, so I'm just going to start my annual tracker now. This way I can list any players under contract that get traded during the draft here instead of having those in my separate post about every team's picks. 

The Rockets got things started already with the first extension reached right in the middle of the Finals, so I may as well get started now! As usual, players already under contract have their figures listed based on Keith Smith's work at Spotrac.com while salaries in bold italics are my own estimates based on reported numbers and the standard 5% or 8% raises that teams could give. Salaries are also color coded if they are a player option, a team optionnot fully guaranteed, or mutual option. Since this post will be constantly updated throughout the summer, I'll be adding the latest news at the top to be readily available upon revisiting this page. Or if you want to go in chronological order, start at the bottom.

6/30 Update: The NBA officially announced that this year's salary cap is set at $154,647,000 with the tax line at $187,895,000, which is right at the expected 10% growth from last year. That means the the full Mid-Level Exception can have a starting salary of $14,104,000 and can top out at 4 years, $60,647,200; the Taxpayer MLE can start at $5,685,000 and go to 2 years, $11,654,250; the Room MLE can start at $8,781,000 and go to 3 years, $27,660,150; and the Bi-Annual Exception can start at $5,134,000 and go to 2 years, $10,524,700. Notably, Marks reports that the salary cap is only projected to go up by 7% raises instead of the maximum of 10% like this year, which could throw a wrench into team's budgets.


Jovic extends with the Heat: 4 years, $62.4 million (Shams 10/1)
Nikola Jovic$4,445,417$13,928,571$15,042,857$16,157,143$17,271,429

I thought that the last key free agent signing his deal earlier today would mean the end of updating this tracker, but I guess there are still some rookie extensions to work out like this. Jovic hasn't been able to put it together over consistent periods of time for various reasons, but he can be valuable front court option with his versatility. The outside shooting seems legit with a 37.1% mark while increasing the attempts to 4.1 per game after making 39.9% on 3.5 before, so locking in this deal at around MLE money makes sense.


Grimes accepts the Qualifying Offer with the 76ers: 1 year, $8,7 million (Shams 10/1)
Quentin Grimes$8,741,209

There never seemed to be any momentum in these negotiations given the aforementioned restricted free agent market, so Grimes settling for this before the deadline to accept tonight was the expected outcome. 

Known more as a 3+D wing, he was a revelation with more freedom upon being traded to Philadelphia, where he averaged 21.9 points with 5.2 rebounds, 4.5 assists, and 1.5 steals on 46.9%/37.3%/75.2% shooting in 33.7 minutes. Those numbers went up even higher in his final 18 games after Tyrese Maxey was lost for the season: 24.8, 5.0, 5.2, and 1.8 in 34.6 minutes with 45.6%/37.1%/78.5% shooting. The team only went 3-15, however, so it'll be interesting to see how Grimes fits in next to their stars...assuming they're ever healthy at the same time.


Kuminga re-signs with the Warriors: 2 years, "$48.5 million" (Shams 9/30)
Jonathan Kuminga$23,317,308$25,182,692

Jonathan Kuminga$22,500,000$24,300,000

Finally, our long national nightmare is over. There was a lot of agent spin in Shams' reporting, but it would appear that the Warriors pretty much called the bluff of agent Aaron Turner when he went on a podcast tour this month since this basically the offer that's been on the table all summer with the team option on the second season.

Holding out this long only got Golden State to bump it up from a reported $45 million to this $48.5 number, which is about $1.7 million more guaranteed depending on the structure with the option. It never made sense for Kuminga to play on just a $7.9 million Qualifying Offer instead of this pay bump for the same time period just to get an implicit no trade clause, especially if his goal is to get to another team to spread his wings anyway. It could be debated whether this was the better path than the reported 2+1 deal for $75.2 million since that would have around $48.3 million guaranteed, but this allows him to potentially reach unrestricted free agency sooner.

Now the Warriors have a much higher salary slot for trade purposes once he becomes eligible to be moved on January 15th (instead of the typical December due to a pay raise this large). In the mean time they'll have a long runway to see how a forward of his ability fits in next to Butler and Draymond Green in the front court, with Kuminga healthy from the start this time compared to when Butler arrived. Assuming that Horford's deal will now be finalized for the entirety of Taxpayer MLE ($5,685,000 and $5,969,250) as mentioned below, whether or not Melton signs a multiyear deal (as Siegel reported as a possibility) that comes with a higher cap hit will determine how long Golden State will have to wait before they can sign a 15th player to the roster at the prorated minimum.

Update: Shams now reports that Seth Curry is in fact signing with the Warriors now, even after his ESPN article mentioned how the team would need to wait until mid November to fill out the roster to make the math work. Maybe it's a non-guaranteed training camp deal just to have him practice for now before waiving and re-signing, or maybe Kuminga's number is actually lower than what was reported to make the agent look good (again).

2nd Update: Stein confirmed my theory that Seth is only getting a non-guaranteed camp deal to get him acclimated before being cut and re-signed. Marks also provided clarification that Kuminga's starting salary is only $22.5 million, which is the number mentioned in the actual ESPN article about the contract and in one of Siegel's tweets, and the reported "$48.5 million" is based on the Trade Kicker included. So it's really a $46.8 million pact, which means that no matter how much Shams spins it, this long holdout added around $900K more guaranteed than the much discussed $45 million offer...This lower starting salary helps provide some more breathing room under the Second Apron to give Melton the reported two years at the minimum since the prorated cap hits only apply to one year deals. His cap hit will instead count for his full salary as a seven year vet, with Siegel reporting that the second year is a player option:

De'Anthony Melton$3,080,921$3,451,780


Horford signs with the Warriors: "multiyear deal" (Shams 9/28)

Shams going with the all caps "BREAKING" on this was unintentionally funny considering everyone has known that this deal, along with the ones with veteran guards De'Anthony Melton and Gary Payton II coming back to Golden State (per Siegel and Shams), was basically agreed to since July. While the latter two are likely for the veteran minimum, Horford notably still lacks financial details due to the Kuminga situation still being resolved.

That's what has held up the Warriors from making any moves since they didn't want to make anything official until they knew whether they had to operate with a hard cap at one of the Aprons or not. I've been guessing that Horford is getting the Taxpayer MLE on a 1+1 deal for $11.65 million, which would trigger the Second Apron, but if Kuminga ends up taking the qualifying offer, Golden State could offer some or all of the full MLE while staying under a subsequent First Apron hard cap. I do wonder if 2nd round pick Will Richard also getting a standard deal today as opposed to a Two-Way could be a sign that they needed to sign a cheaper rookie contract like his instead of the veteran minimum in order to fit a Kuminga deal under an Apron. If these four players get the amounts that I expect, then the estranged restricted free agent could get a starting salary up to around $25 million on whatever contract structure that both sides end up agreeing to before Wednesday's QO deadline if they leave the 15th roster spot open. If cool heads prevail and they do reach a deal, keeping it to about $23 million for this season is what is needed to still sign another veteran such as rumored target Seth Curry.

9/30 Update: Scotto reports what's been expected: it's "$12 million" over two years with the second year a player option (as seemingly every Taxpayer MLE deal ends up being). 

Al Horford$5,685,000$5,969,250

The big man may have just turned 39 this summer, but he's still very effective on both ends in limited minutes. And one skill that should age well is Horford's outside shooting that is key to have next to a non-shooter like Green. Upon his return to Boston four years ago, Horford has managed to increase his 3-point percentage to 39.2% even while also pumping up the volume to 4.5 attempts in only 28.5 minutes.

Also as an aside, everyone remembers the famous "Tobias Harris over ME?!" line, but the 76ers signing Horford in that big summer of 2019 also played a big role in Butler's departure from Philly. Now they'll be playing together in Golden State instead.


Brogdon signs with the Knicks: 1 year deal (Shams 9/11)
Malcolm Brogdon$2,296,274

This will also be for the minimum like Shamet, and I believe that New York will actually need to make another move in order to even fit that under the Second Apron since they could only sign one of their 2nd rounders to the minimum as things were. As a nine-year veteran, Brogdon is set to earn $3.3 million, and although health is always the question mark with him, this is an absolute bargain for the former Sixth Man of the Year if he is able to play. Funnily enough, he won that award over Immanuel Quickly...who was on the Knicks at the time.

Now that we're fully in minimum contract-only signings, this tracker is just about done. I'll update it whenever we finally get resolution with the big restricted free agents, Kuminga and Grimes, but that'll likely be it.


Shamet re-signs with the Knicks: 1 year deal (Shams 9/11)
Landry Shamet$2,296,274

This is almost assuredly a minimum contract given New York's proximity to the Second Apron, and at that price, you could do a lot worse than a veteran shooter like Shamet. He even got some minutes off the bench in the playoffs last year, which is saying something considering how much they rode their starters. As a veteran with seven years of experience, he'll make $3.08 million with the subsidized cap hit above on the one year minimum.


Giddey re-signs with the Bulls: 4 years, $100 million (Shams 9/9)
Josh Giddey$22,321,429$24,107,143$25,892,857$27,678,571

Finally, a restricted free agent gets an actual deal done. Based on previous reporting, this $25 million average looks to be right in the middle of what Giddey was hoping for and what Chicago was offering, so it's nice to see cooler heads prevail and reach an agreement that makes sense.


Thomas accepts the Qualifying Offer with the Nets: 1 year, $6 million (Shams 9/4)
Cameron Thomas$5,993,172

With the restricted free agent market so frigid this summer, Thomas will just bide his time for this season before becoming unrestricted next year.


Washington extends with the Mavericks: 4 years, "$90 million" (Shams 9/3)
P.J. Washington$14,152,174$19,813,044$21,398,087$22,983,131$24,568,174

A new deal between these sides had been rumored for a little while, but going the full $88,762,435 that I believe is the most that Washington could extend for is a bit much. Dallas is almost comically invested in the front court now between trading Doncic for Davis, miraculously winning the Flagg lottery, extending Gafford, and now this extension, while also still having Lively as a core piece.


Smith to sign with the Heat: 3 years, $7.9 million (Shams first, Scotto details 8/16)
Dru Smith$2,378,870$2,584,538$2,934,743

Smith has had to overcome both a torn ACL and Achilles the last couple of years but has been a nice developmental guard in the Miami machine. He was a restricted free agent coming off of his Two-Way contracts, so they were able to lock him down for the minimum amount for a player with three years of experience like him. I wouldn't be surprised if there are partial guarantees or a team option at the end given his injury history, but it appears to be some nice guaranteed money for the former undrafted 27 year old.

9/2 Update: Keith Smith reports that the latter two years are non-guaranteed with late June guaranteed dates. Having those that early in the calendar could be helpful for him getting his deals picked up.

Thursday, June 5, 2025

Roster Analysis: How PG13 and Sabonis Influenced This Finals Matchup

With the NBA Finals about to start, I want to expand on something I put out there once the Conference Finals matchups were set: both the Thunder and Pacers ended up with their star guards thanks to trading Paul George. And really, Domantas Sabonis also has a key role in all of this, but I haven't seen his name thrown out there as often online by people having the same thought after me. There's also been a graphic going around tracing Oklahoma City's core to Rashard Lewis and the three 1st round picks that Sam Presti wound up with thanks to Kurt Thomas, which I wrote about all the way back in 2012 before their last Finals appearance.
I think going that far into the past is a little bit of a stretch, and it's actually both of these teams that can look back at a series of trades involving the same key pieces that started the path to this point nine years ago. I'll stick with the Thunder to start and will keep using screenshots from my past transaction tracker posts as references since that's kind the whole point of why I write them: to look back on how moves were made. Thankfully, I've used the same usual color key of player options/team options/not fully guaranteed/cap holds all these years.

Draft night 2016: In the wake of losing the Western Conference Finals and just weeks away from Kevin Durant's free agency, Presti decided to make a big change by dealing away Serge Ibaka ahead of his own free agency in 2017. The Orlando Magic, coming off of a 35-47 season and desperate to end their post-Dwight Howard rebuild, traded former #2 pick Victor Oladipo (also going into the last year of his contract) and the draft rights to the #11 pick pick that was used on Sabonis, with Ersan Ilyasova's non-guaranteed contract included to match salary before he was traded at the start of the season. 

Saturday, May 31, 2025

Top NFL Rookie TEs for 2025

Teams across the NFL have begun their OTAs, so now is a good time to continue looking at this rookie class. After the running backs that I started with, I'd say that tight ends are the next strongest group this year. To reiterate, this isn't necessarily a ranking for dynasty football but more of an exercise to talk through who I think the top options are and how much they could contribute as rookies.

And once again, the basis of what I look for originates from JJ Zachariason's prospect guides over the years, although TEs are newer to his model. Based on his research and Ryan Heath's at Fantasy Points, athleticism matters the most at this position compared to running backs and especially compared to wide receivers. I'll be weighing physical traits (ideally from the NFL combine, with pro day results from Dane Brugler's The Beast) and draft day age before production profiles based on career yards per route run (YPRR) via Pro Football Focus, and then situation comes in at the end.


1. Colston Loveland - 1st round, 10th overall pick, 1st TE drafted - Bears

The week of the draft, I posted in my work's "Hot Take Board" that although Tyler Warren will be drafted first, Loveland has the highest upside of this class and will end up as the TE1...and then Chicago made me look smart by taking Loveland first despite all of the mock drafts and rankings out there. He didn't give us any athleticism measurements but did come in at an impressive 6'5.75" and 248 lbs while only turning 21 just a few weeks before the draft.

That youth makes it even more impressive how efficient Loveland was in a limited Michigan passing attack. As a sophomore, he caught 45 passes for 649 yards and 4 touchdowns in 15 games for the national champions, and while that might not sound like much at the surface level, that's where YPRR tells more of the story given how little his team threw the ball. His 2.38 mark that year is pretty elite, and it was even better last season, 2.67, when his raw totals were 56 catches, 582 yards, and 5 scores in only 10 games. Overall, he finished with 2.22 YPRR for his career before getting awesome draft capital as the first pick of Ben Johnson's career as a head coach. The hottest offensive coordinator on the market, Johnson ran the show in Detroit when Sam LaPorta shockingly led the position in total points as a rookie two years ago, and while I wouldn't expect that lofty of a season due to the WR target competition, Loveland certainly is in line to pace his 2025 peers.

2. Tyler Warren - 1st round, 14th overall pick, 2nd TE drafted - Colts

Warren was widely expected to be the first TE off the board after he had 104 catches, 1,233 yards, and 8 TDs last year with an additional 218 yards and 4 scores on 26 carries, but I'm not entirely surprised that he fell slightly since that came somewhat out of nowhere as a redshirt senior. As a high school quarterback who joined a position group at Penn State that contained three other NFL players (Pat Freiermuth, Brenton Strange, and Theo Johnson), it's understandable that he was a late bloomer, having just turned 23 this past week compared to Loveland.

It all came together last year for 2.78 YPRR after being at 1.41 and 1.34 the previous two seasons, and that brought his career rate to a strong 1.98. Neither of these top-two TEs gave us athletic testing, but you can see on film how much Warren beasted opponents at 6'5.5" and 256 lbs. The problem in the immediate future is that he landed in Indianapolis, where either Anthony Richardson or Daniel Jones will be throwing passes to him as a rookie. While I already would've had him as #2 in this class, I think that drops him to a tier by himself after Loveland.

Tuesday, May 13, 2025

2025 Lottery Reaction & the Results of Traded Picks

I say it every year, but lottery is always one of the most fun dates on the NBA calendar...even if I absolutely hated this year's results. Whether it's winning the game of capture the Flagg with the #1 pick this year or a team's pick moving in or out of its crucial protection range, it's amazing to see front offices that meticulously plan and maneuver be at the mercy of random ping pong ball combinations. And after I described last year's edition as absolute chaos, this year's was was pure pandemonium with all of the movement.

As has become custom, here's a rundown of rapid fire reactions to the drawing, followed by a final tally of how all of the previously traded 1st rounders turned out. There have been so many picks dealt over the last handful of years that over half of those league's selections are not with their own teams in each round.
  • To start things off, Dallas aficionado Marc Stein pointed out that this is the first time in Mavericks history that they even moved up at all in the lottery. Them winning the #1 pick was probably the most controversial result possible after stunning the basketball world with the Luka Doncic trade earlier this year...and then continually compounding it by badmouthing his work ethic afterwards and making idiotic statements like not knowing how important he was to the fan base. You hate to see stupidity rewarded, especially when there was just a 1.8% chance of this outcome.

  • Amazingly, Dallas made that trade with a win-now mindset yet gets the long-term gift of Duke forward Cooper Flagg after they ended up only making the Play-In tournament. They finished tied for the 11th-best lottery odds and won a coin flip as the tiebreaker to have 18 of the 1,000 four-digit ping pong ball combinations. Chicago received 17...and the wrong half of the set of numbers that were divided between the two teams, it turns out. 

  • The 10 spot jump tied the 1993 Magic for the highest among lottery winners, and that team famously winning back to back years, despite just a 1.52% chance, prompted the league to change the format. The only other teams to win with longer odds than the Mavs' 1.8% were the 2008 Bulls and 2014 Cavaliers (also back to back winners), who both hit the 1.7% chance of moving up from the #9 pick in the previous system.

  • There's naturally going to be talk of the NBA rigging the system to give Dallas a new star in exchange for putting Luka in the glamour LA market like how New Orleans won the 2019 lottery to set up Anthony Davis going to the Lakers in the first place. Watching the videos of the actual drawing that the league posts every year, though, I have no idea how they would actually do it.