Advertisement - scroll for more content
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Duane Rankin: “I’m extremely grateful to my teammates, coaching staff put me in great opportunities, but would've liked to get a win. That was the main thing." Collin Gillespie on becoming Suns single-season leader in made 3s as he has 227 to pass Quentin Richardson (2004-05) at 226. Suns lost 127-107 to Hornets as Gillespie went 2-of-7 on 3s tonight. "As the game went on, we struggled to get stops. I think our communication has to raise to another level, physicality, knowing what these last few games are going to be like moving into the play-in, playoffs. We've just got to continue to talk to each other. Just find ways to speed that process up. Communication to go to another level. Physicality for sure has to as well. "
Phoenix guard Collin Gillespie set the Suns' franchise record for 3-pointers in a season on Thursday night. Gillespie set the mark in the second quarter of the Suns' 127-107 loss to the Charlotte Hornets. He hit his 227th 3-pointer from the wing, surpassing the record of 226 3s, set by Quentin Richardson in the 2004-05 season.
Duane Rankin: Collin Gillespie on being nine 3s away from setting Suns single-season record for most made 3s: "Definitely something I never thought about, but it'd be really cool." Has 218. Quentin Richardson has single-season record of 226 set in 2004-05 season. On being aggressive as Suns face Nuggets tonight: "If I'm passing up shots, it's not doing really any good for our team. No matter who is out there, I got to be aggressive, especially when I first catch the ball because that's the most open I'll be." #Suns
Collin Gillespie on being nine 3s away from setting Suns single-season record for most made 3s: "Definitely something I never thought about, but it'd be really cool."
— Duane Rankin (@DuaneRankin) March 24, 2026
Has 218. Quentin Richardson has single-season record of 226 set in 2004-05 season.
On being aggressive as… pic.twitter.com/tEZH5f1NAo
What started as a normal golf tournament has turned into an Orlando Magic fan’s golf dream. Golfers will have the chance to share the course with five former Magic players — Vince Carter, Grant Hill, Quentin Richardson, Courtney Lee and Bo Outlaw. As part of the fundraising effort, golfers can purchase a $100 raffle ticket for a chance to have one of the five players, chosen at random, join their foursome for all 18 holes of the event.

It is unknown when Mutombo first started doing this but another player claims he was the originator of the taunt. Last year Derrick Coleman, who was the 1991 Rookie of the Year, said he was the first to do it. While speaking on the Knuckleheads podcast with Darius Miles and Quentin Richardson, Coleman was describing his dunk on Shaquille O'Neal during the 1992-93 season. After the dunk, Coleman wagged his finger at O'Neal. "I hit him with that [finger wave]," Coleman said. "See, Dikembe stole that from me."
Advertisement
During an appearance on Quentin Richardson and Darius Miles' "Knuckleheads Podcast" on Tuesday, Deng opened up on the situation: "I ended up missing the playoffs," Deng said. "And what happened was that year there was a dispute going on with the NBPA and so on about me suing the Bulls because of what took place. "But I knew that if I sued the Bulls, I would either not play basketball ever again in order to win the case, to prove that things didn't go well and this could be career-ending but wanted to hoop so I said, 'Yo, I'm not suing anyone. I'm just going to hoop. I'm just going to come back.'"
Tomer Azarly: This is now the 13th season for you guys hosting the Knuckleheads podcast. Did you think it would go this long when you guys started it? Darius Miles: Well, I definitely thought we had something like a lot of people received it very well. So that put us in the right direction. Now, I couldn't put a time limit on it and I couldn't think that we'll be doing it the last five years or so forth on. But it's a blessing. But I definitely thought we had something that people loved and appreciated when we first started.
What inspired you to put the Knuckleheads podcast together and just talk about whatever you guys wanted to? Darius Miles: Q. did the Players' Tribune article. And I was going through whatever I was going through, and I moved to Florida. And he was just encouraging me and just telling me, like, ‘bro, when you ready to tell your story, I got a nice platform for you to tell the story. And we did the collab. We could kind of collab with me on telling my story. So we both got, for both our stories, we both got a lot of love from former players. Just a lot of people appreciated the story and so forth on. And Q. was talking about, ‘man, we need a show.' And he kept on telling Players Tribune we probably should do a show. They came back with a podcast, which we never heard of podcasts back then.

Do you guys have a favorite episode or a favorite guest on Knuckleheads over the years? Darius Miles: A favorite guest? Alright, a special guest was Kobe [Bryant] for sure. I think that was like, the respect we have for Kobe and his game and what he's done in the NBA, for him to reach out to us and appreciate what we was doing, and wanted to be on the show, I feel like that was real special, and a special moment. We was real hyped after, we was hyped going into it, and we was hyped after we got it. Real hyped for him, so I think Kobe is the one for me.
Quentin Richardson: Yeah, like, it's tough for me to say, but I mean, like you said, if we got to pick one, gotta be Kobe. Just because what he means to the game, who he is in the game, and like we're of that era, so we know he was the dude, he was the guy. And when you play in the era, you respect who those dudes were. He was the top of the food chain in our era. So to get to holler at him. Like you said, he reached out because he saw what we was doing and wanted to be on there, and that was my first time ever getting that type of chance to sit down and chop it up with him on that level where it's like we're not opponents and we can all appreciate each other. So that was super dope.
Advertisement
In that vein, Cassell believes "The Dream" would have had his way with any defender the Bulls had on their roster during that time. Remember, the Bulls didn't have Dennis Rodman back then, as he joined the organization in 1995. Instead, they had the likes of Horace Grant, Luc Longley, Stacey King, and Will Perdue. "They had Michael Jordan that no one could stop, right? But we had that African that no one could stop," Cassell told Darius Miles and Quentin Richardson.

Tim Reynolds: Among the former Heat players expected to attend tomorrow in support of Udonis Haslem on the jersey night: Jason Williams, Goran Dragic, Dorell Wright, Tim Hardaway, Mario Chalmers, Dwyane Wade, Quentin Richardson and Shane Battier.

During a recent conversation with ex-NBAers Quentin Richardson and Darius Miles on their show Knuckleheads Podcast, Howard's former Orlando Magic coach Stan Van Gundy opined that not only did Howard deserve a spot in the league's recent "NBA 75" (a group of players the league named as its best-ever to commemorate its 75th anniversary last year), but he deserved it in spite of his own Los Angeles teammate, Anthony Davis. SVG's relationship with Howard famously did not survive their time together in Orlando. "To me, the only guys you could even talk about in his league at that time [of Howard's peak, from roughly 2008-12] were LeBron and Kobe," Van Gundy opined. "I think Anthony Davis is great, but at the time they selected [the NBA's 75th anniversary team in 2022] I mean, it's not close." "You cannot make a case that Anthony Davis had a better career than Dwight Howard, that's absolutely ridiculous."