Mastodon
@Brooklyn Nets

Reaction to Kyrie Irving's suspension, future with Kevin Durant & Brooklyn Nets | Hoops Tonight



Jason Timpf reacts to Kyrie Irving getting suspended for at least 5 games by the Brooklyn Nets. He discusses whether he thinks Kyrie will ever suit up again for the Brooklyn Nets and what the future holds for both him and Kevin Durant. He also mentions how the Nets could be having second thoughts about potentially hiring Ime Udoka after the firing of Steve Nash.

Bet with us at FanDuel Sportsbook:
https://www.fanduel.com/volume

Download the Action Network app:
https://www.sw4trk.com/cmp/2989N1/27W1G/

Subscribe to our newsletter: https://bit.ly/SubscribeToTheVolumeEmailNewsletter

Follow us on social media:
https://www.instagram.com/thevolumesp…

https://www.facebook.com/TheVolumeSports
https://www.tiktok.com/@thevolumesports

Learn more about the Volume:
https://www.thevolume.com

40 Comments

  1. The Nets after a five game suspension will need Kyrie to play just as much as people think he will not play another game in Brooklyn. Minnesota could use a guard like Kyrie. Also, depending on the health of L Ball the Bull could use him Kyrie, Derozan and Levine sweet.

  2. I actually think Portland would be the best spot for KD. They have the young talent and picks to offer up especially after we get to mid January. If Portland keeps their head above water through December, given their fast start, KD would definitely put them in contention.

  3. Free Speech is the right to offend! If you can't have the wrong opinions, then every other right is fake as well.

    The media has had it in for Kyrie since the pandemic. They are feral, partisan and no good for the average American

  4. Haha. I hope he reruns to the nets to make sure they continue to disappoint the expert who keep thinking talented losers like Kyrie and Durant can win a championship

    Kyrie is an idiot who thinks a college vocabulary makes him smart

  5. If they get to the play offs they’ll have their other players back. You would really choose Cleveland or Toronto against a healthy Brooklyn team?

  6. Slavery started in the New World in 1555 in England. Than when they colonized America they used slaves. There were not many Jews in America until they started immigrating around 1880 way past slavery days. Now what has happened is now people will go read the book or see the movie because of the fire storm that the media has started. And people being dumb about history will believe much of the trash in the book. And why is Amazon evening having a link to the book and movie.

  7. Kyrie is the Antonio Brown of the NBA. Drama, headaches, a head-case, cuckoo for coco puffs!

  8. An opinionated black man who doesn't just fall in line like the rest of the sheep. This is what the powerful elites and media fear the most. I hope Kyrie doesn't bow down to those that want to control his thoughts and skew his opinions.

  9. There’s something so off-putting about someone that can never admit when they’re wrong. This Instagram post isn’t going to cut it.

    I’ll need to see it on camera

  10. The problem is gigantic. You can't trust him to be professional. That is deadly for the team deadly for the future of the Nets. That movie tweet is only a symptom of the problem no matter how much he apologizes. He is Over as an trustworthy agent.

  11. Kyrie seems sincere in his apology on Instagram. Kyrie said he felt like he was labeled Anti-Semitic. He was being defensive rather than addressing his stance and what he believes in the documentary. He was very vague in his stance on the documentary. Why leave room for speculation? He advocates spreading positivity. Being spiritual etc. I'm not here to discuss what is right or what is wrong. I'm ignorant when it comes to Jewish history. I don't advocate for hate of what is said in the documentary. It does not make sense to post a documentary and not be clear about what your stance is. He expected us to read his mind or something. Thinking on our own. When you not explaining why you post it. Especially something controversial. It leads to hate if you are not clear about what you post. AS A PUBLIC FIGURE YOU HAVE TO BE DISCREET ABOUT WHAT YOU SAY.

  12. I agree that Kyrie is done in Brooklyn, what I'm not so sure about the the KD trade part. Doesn't feel like that much has changed since the offseason, do you think the Nets are going to ask for less for KD this time around?

  13. Snyder wouldn’t go through a rebuild in Utah. He won’t in NJ. Their BEST bet, is Mark Jackson. From Brooklyn. He’ll shape up the system.

  14. From Hebrews to Negros, something the average Black person would have completely ignored is now on everyone's mind, good job E.S.P.N, sports center and the like. You've brought more attention to that subject than Irving ever could have, YOU ALL SHOULD BE SUSPENDED.

  15. I really appreciate your comment about your content being about basketball, and not necessarily other stuff. Very measured, appropriate response.

  16. it is funny but I find that I no longer think of KD as a Top 5 player which actually does not speak to his skill and ability but to how diminishing the circus that is Kyrie has had on his reputation. But he is also to blame in that he should have stayed out of the management side. Active players ( Lebron, KD, et al) never consider all the things necessary to build a championship team as just because someone can "ball out" does not mean that he or she is the right fit in what is a team sport. Many players become great coaches or GMs because they gain perspective with some distance. The interesting thing is that the most successful coaches who played ball are those who were not stars but role players for reasons that I think most of the readers ( and Jason) already know without me going through them

  17. Jacque Vaughn is the right head coach for the Nets now. He has a history with the team, high character, and deserve the opportunity more than anyone outside of the franchise. Lets keep things inhouse.

  18. Kyrie is not backing down, he is the Vice President of the players association. The players are silently behind him. They will loose KD soon and no black superstar will step foot in Brooklyn for the next decade.

Write A Comment