Nets' Michael Porter Jr. posts vlog of first day in Brooklyn
"Excited. (I) got my first lift today. My first little core workout, you know what I mean? So, I came here to grind. (I) got to get better," Porter said during his vlog of his first day in Brooklyn posted to his "Curious Mike" YouTube channel. Porter's vlog shows him getting a tour of the Nets' practice facility that he will be familiarizing himself with over the course of the upcoming season.
"I'm not even going to lie, it's a whirlwind getting traded," Porter said following the conclusion of the tour. "To figure out the new facility, your new space, how you get to the arena, all that little stuff. It takes a minute. It took me about 3 years to learn how to get from my crib to the Denver airport with no GPS. So, it's definitely going to be a little adjustment period."
Porter, 27, spent his first seven years in the league as a member of the Denver Nuggets before being traded to the Nets earlier this offseason. Porter, the 14th overall pick in the 2018 NBA Draft, said during his time watching Brooklyn play in the Las Vegas Summer League that he's excited to show what he can do in an expanded role after seeing his game "plateau" in Denver.
Porter previously posted a video on his YouTube channel about how being traded away by the Nuggets was a shock to him and was unexpected given how the summer had been progressing. Despite the suddenness of the trade, Porter is getting to work. "I'm not even going to lie. They got me working probably as hard as I've ever worked, but I'm making progress. Um, I'm excited, man. This is an amazing opportunity," Porter said in his vlog following a workout.
This article originally appeared on Nets Wire: Nets' Michael Porter Jr. posts vlog of first day in Brooklyn

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

NBC Sports
26 minutes ago
- NBC Sports
Steelers will induct Ben Roethlisberger, Joey Porter Sr., Maurkice Pouncey into their Hall of Honor
The Steelers announced plans to honor three former members of the team during the 2025 season. Quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, linebacker Joey Porter Jr., and center Maurkice Pouncey will be inducted into the team's Hall of Honor during their Monday night game against the Dolphins on December 15. 'It's special,' Steelers president Art Rooney II said in a statement. 'Just to welcome a group of guys that mean so much to Steelers football, mean so to our fans. These three guys made a difference for us over the course of their careers. This group is a pretty special group and belong in there with the rest of them.' Roethlisberger won two Super Bowls during an 18-year run with the team that started when they selected him with the 11th overall pick of the 2004 draft. He is the franchise leader in all significant passing categories and will be eligible to be voted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2027. Porter was a 1999 third-round pick who had 60 sacks and won a Super Bowl in eight seasons with the Steelers. His son Joey is now a Steelers cornerback and the Hall of Honor announcement came on the younger Porter's 25th birthday. Pouncey started 134 regular season games and eight playoff games after the Steelers took him in the first round in 2010. He was a two-time All-Pro selection during his time in Pittsburgh.
Yahoo
37 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Isiah Thomas recalled a high school Kevin Garnett dominating in a pick-up game vs. Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen: "It was one of the most poetic, beautiful experiences I had"
Isiah Thomas recalled a high school Kevin Garnett dominating in a pick-up game vs. Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen: "It was one of the most poetic, beautiful experiences I had" originally appeared on Basketball Network. Kevin Garnett's leap from high school straight into the NBA in 1995 wasn't a gamble but a moment that had been simmering behind the curtain for years, witnessed by those who could already see the future. One of them was NBA Hall of Famer Isiah Thomas, whose history in the game goes beyond his playing days and deep into the fabric of talent evaluation and legacy-building. Thomas' observation Thomas was no longer donning the Detroit Pistons jersey but navigating the infancy of the Toronto Raptors. His eye was cast far and wide for someone who could serve as the soul of a new franchise. And then came Garnett. "I had targeted him as the person that I wanted to draft and start our franchise with," Thomas said of Garnett. "Being in his presence... it was overwhelming. You felt his energy, his intensity, his passion, his love for his craft in high school, beyond anybody else who was in the gym." "It was one of the most poetic, beautiful experiences I had had or felt from a young player," he added. This wasn't flowery praise. It was a window into the exact kind of conviction that defined Thomas as both a player and an executive. He saw Garnett not just as a talented big man but as a force of nature in motion. The gym where this impression was cemented wasn't just any gym. It was in Chicago, and the pickup game featured none other than Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen, two icons who had already rewritten the rules of excellence by then. Thomas, who grew up on the west side of Chicago himself, knew exactly what a gym like that meant. Those kinds of gyms had always birthed legends, men whose names lived on in whispered stories long after the lights dimmed. Garnett walked into that same space with no professional contract, shoe deal and draft buzz. Just raw will. What Garnett did in that pickup game was not merely impressive; it shifted the temperature in the room. He didn't defer. He didn't ask for space. He took it. The game, according to Thomas, was supposed to showcase dominance, not discover it. Yet he made the kind of statement that validated every whisper coming out of Farragut wasn't waiting for permission In 1995, Garnett became the first player in two decades to leap from high school straight into the league. The last to do so had been Darryl Dawkins and Bill Willoughby in 1975. The landscape had changed dramatically since then, with the league having become far more technical, media-dense and physically unforgiving. For Garnett to enter through that door meant he had to redefine what readiness looked like. The 1995 draft eventually saw the Minnesota Timberwolves take him with the fifth overall pick. Thomas didn't get his man. But the memory remained. That moment in Chicago, that burst of energy and purpose, stuck with him, not just as a scout or executive but as someone who had lived through every kind of basketball war and still felt something new that day. Isiah already understood that Garnett's greatness was never theoretical. It had already been tested, in a no-frills gym with Jordan and Pippen on the floor, where reputations are either built or burned. What made Garnett stand out was talent and the refusal to be intimidated by proximity to greatness. That defiance would become his signature. In Boston, it would show up in his defensive scowls and locker-room sermons. In Minnesota, it would fuel his loyalty through years of franchise hardship. The high schooler Thomas once watched in a Chicago gym had become the blueprint for the next generation of prep-to-pro stars: Kobe Bryant, LeBron James, Dwight Howard. But even among them, Garnett was different. He hadn't walked through the NBA's doors quietly; he had kicked them story was originally reported by Basketball Network on Jul 26, 2025, where it first appeared.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Lakers jersey history No. 0 — Jalen Hood-Schifino
Through the 2024-25 season, the Los Angeles Lakers have had a total of 506 players suit up for them, going back to their days in Minneapolis. Some were forgettable, some were serviceable, some were good and a select few were flat-out legendary. As the Lakers approach their 80th season of existence (they were founded back in 1946 as the Detroit Gems in the National Basketball League), LeBron Wire is taking a look at each player who has worn their jersey, whether it has been a purple and gold one or the ones they donned back in the Midwest during their early years. We now take a look at Jalen Hood-Schifino, who played a season and change with the Lakers very recently. Hood-Schifino, a 6-foot-5 guard, played one season in the NCAA at Indiana University and averaged 13.5 points, 4.1 rebounds and 3.7 assists a game while shooting 41.7% from the field and 33.3% from 3-point range. The Lakers took him with the No. 17 pick in the 2023 NBA Draft, which made some scratch their heads, especially since the team wasn't in great need of guard help. He struggled a lot as a rookie and went back and forth between the NBA and the G League. While in the big leagues, he got just 5.2 minutes a game, mostly in garbage time, and had tons of trouble getting any shots to fall, as evidenced by his 22.2% shooting percentage. In 15 games with the South Bay Lakers, he put up 22.0 points, 4.7 rebounds and 5.3 assists per game and shot 47.3% overall and 43.2% from downtown. On Feb. 1, 2025, Los Angeles traded Hood-Schifino to the Utah Jazz as part of the three-team deal that brought it Luka Doncic. He was waived shortly afterward and signed a two-way contract a few weeks later with the Philadelphia 76ers. With the 76ers dealing with lots of injuries, Hood-Schifino got 23.2 minutes a game of playing time with them, but he didn't take advantage, as he shot just 37.1% overall and 30.4% from beyond the arc. This article originally appeared on LeBron Wire: Lakers jersey history No. 0 — Jalen Hood-Schifino