Atlanta Hawks Officially Announce Their 2026 Summer League Roster
Atlanta Hawks Officially Announce Their 2026 Summer League Roster
The Hawks are going to have one of the most intriguing rosters in Summer LeagueJackson Caudell|
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Atlanta HawksThe focus for the Atlanta Hawks might be on the offseason and how this team is going to improve, but Summer League is going to begin this weekend in Salt Lake City, and Atlanta is going to have one of the most intriguing rosters out there.
Today, Atlanta announced their official roster for Summer League, and it includes this year's draft picks Kingston Flemings, Zuby Ejiofor, and Henri Veesar, as well as last year's first-round pick Asa Newell.
Our Summer League roster is here! 👀 pic.twitter.com/09drkC8RCn
— Atlanta Hawks (@ATLHawks) June 30, 2026
Breaking down this roster
While Flemings, Ejiofor, and Veesaar appear to be certain to make the roster for Atlanta, the rest of these players are going to be competing for two-way contracts either with the Hawks, or perhaps with some other team around the league, if they are impressive enough.
I think this is going to be one of the best rosters in either Salt Lake City (where the Hawks are playing first) and Las Vegas.
Hawks assistant coaches Antonio Lang and Sanjay Lumpkin will serve as Atlanta’s Summer League head coaches, with Lang serving as the head coach in Salt Lake City and Lumpkin serving as the head coach when the Hawks head to Vegas.
Two players to keep an eye on are Jacob Toppin and Eli Ndiaye. Both players played with the Hawks Summer League teams last season and were on two-way contracts with the team before suffering season ending injuries.
Here is the complete roster:
F Cameron Corhen- Pittsburgh, Rookie
G RayJ Dennis- Baylor
F/C- Zuby Ejiofor- Saint Johns, Rookie
G Kingston Flemings- Houston, Rookie
G Keshon Gilbert- Iowa State
G Kobe Johnson- UCLA
G Kobe Knox- South Carolina
G Devon Higgs- Georgia Southwestern State
F Gabe Madsen- Utah
G Zeke Mayo- Kansas
G Isaac McKneely- Louisville, Rookie
F Eli Ndiaye- Senegal
F Asa Newell- Georgia
F Jacob Toppin- Kentucky
C Henri Veesaar- North Carolina, Rookie
G Isaiah Wong- Miami
Last year, the Hawks had RayJ Dennis and Keshon Gilbert on two-way contracts and both players excelled in the G-League, where Atlanta has shown a great ability to be able to develop players. Even if someone stands out in Summer League and is not able to make the roster or get a two-way contract, they could be sent to College Park to continue developing.
One key question entering Summer League is going to be how much the Hawks top players, such as Flemings, Ejiofor, Newell, and Veesaar play, given that they are not only going to be playing in Las Vegas, but have added Salt Lake City this year as well. This roster is deep enough where they could withstand some of those guys not playing however.
The Hawks will open Summer League play on Saturday, July 4 against the Utah Jazz. Utah had the No. 2 pick in this year's draft and selected Kansas guard Darryn Peterson, which would make for an excellent opening game in Salt Lake City.
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JACKSON CAUDELLJackson Caudell has been a publisher at the On SI network for four years and has extensive knowledge covering college athletics and the NBA. Jackson is also the co-host of the Bleav in Georgia Tech podcast, and he loves to bring thoughtful analysis and comprehensive coverage to everything that he does. Find him on X @jacksoncaudell
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These Whiskies From One of Scotland’s Underrated Distilleries Are the Perfect Summer Sippers
By Jonah FlickerJonah Flicker
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Fettercairn
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Whiskey brands and distilleries make a lot of claims about how they taste, but sometimes it’s all about the power of suggestion. Did you really taste Christmas cake and treacle as you sipped that single malt? Do you even know what those things taste like? In the case of this new pair of whiskies from Fettercairn, however, the claims hold true—these two single malt scotches are bursting with tropical fruit notes, making them perfect summer sippers.
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Fettercairn, a Highland distillery that is owned by Whyte & Mackay along with the Dalmore and Jura, is relatively new in the U.S. The distillery has been around for about two centuries, but the whisky only became available here last year with the launch of 24 and 28-year-old whiskies, the latter of which we found to be exceptional. It’s less common for a whisky to launch with higher age-statement expressions like these, although certainly not unheard of, but at the time a rep for the brand said younger expressions would follow. Well, they have arrived in the form of 12 and 16-year-old single malts, both of which are full of bright, fruity notes that will appeal to both newbies and seasoned whisky vets.
The distillery attributes its whisky’s tropical fruit character to the way in which it is distilled and cooled. There is a copper cooling ring near the top of the still that Fettercairn says means only the lightest vapors rise to the top, and those are said to contain the particular flavors that define the new make spirit and carry over through many years of maturation. “That process gives us a beautifully light, tropical spirit to work with, and from there, it’s about shaping that character with care—preserving its freshness while building texture and complexity through maturation,” said distillery manager Stewart Walker in a statement.
WATCHIf these technical details are a bit beyond your pay grade, try the whisky for yourself to see what you taste. The 12-year-old is aged entirely in ex-bourbon barrels and bottled at 46 percent ABV with natural color and no chill filtration. Look for notes of pineapple, banana, mango, vanilla, citrus, and ginger on the palate. The 16-year-old, also naturally colored and without chill filtration, was also aged in ex-bourbon barrels and bottled at a slightly higher 46.4 percent ABV. There’s a bit more oak on the palate here, as you might expect, along with notes of papaya, ripe pear, green apple, custard, cinnamon, and milk chocolate.
Both the 12 (SRP $55) and the 16 (SRP $90) were released in late spring and are available to purchase now from retailers around the country and at websites like Total Wine. And you can still find the excellent (and expensive) 24 and 28-year-old whiskies at websites like ReserveBar.
Authors
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Jonah Flicker
Flicker is currently Robb Report's whiskey critic, writing a weekly review of the most newsworthy releases around. He is a freelance writer covering the spirits industry whose work has appeared in…
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14 House Republicans vote down procedural rule over 'SAVE America Act,' halting week's legislative calendar

OAN Staff Brooke Mallory
4:00 PM – Tuesday, June 30, 2026
A coalition of fourteen House Republicans paralyzed the legislative floor on Tuesday, tanking a procedural vote and forcing GOP leadership to abruptly scrap the week’s legislative calendar.
The coalition, led by Representatives Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.) and Chip Roy (R-Texas), choked off legislative business as conservative holdouts dug in on demands for stricter federal voting regulations — specifically targeting the passage of the SAVE America Act.
The full list of the 14 Republicans includes:
- Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.) — Coalition co-leader
- Chip Roy (R-Texas) — Coalition co-leader
- Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.)
- Tim Burchett (R-Tenn.)
- Eric Burlison (R-Mo.)
- Eli Crane (R-Ariz.)
- Randy Fine (R-Fla.)
- Andy Harris (R-Md. )
- Thomas Massie (R-Ky.)
- Max Miller (R-Ohio)
- Keith Self (R-Texas)
- Victoria Spartz (R-Ind.)
- Mike Turner (R-Ohio)
- Steve Scalise (R-La.) — Voted “no” strictly for procedural routing
The immediate casualty of the intraparty disagreement was a $1.15 trillion defense spending bill. House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) had engineered a plan to merge the annual National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) with the SAVE America Act, packaging the conservative voting priorities into a must-pass piece of legislation before sending it to the upper chamber.
However, the faction rebelled against this strategy, sinking the routine procedural rule vote 224–198.
Luna described the leadership’s legislative bundling as a “procedural head fake,” arguing that merging the bills would make it far too easy for the Senate to simply strip the election provisions out during conference negotiations.
Instead, Luna and like-minded House members demanded that the voting regulations — including mandatory photo ID and documentary proof of citizenship to register for federal elections — be written directly into the base text of the NDAA via amendment, thus making it legally harder to unravel.
Analysts say that the legislative standoff represents a massive bottleneck for the thin Republican majority, where Speaker Johnson can only afford to lose three votes on party-line measures.
Notably, this procedural loophole allows Republican leadership to bring the rule back to the floor for reconsideration at a later date without being forced to send the massive defense package back to the House Rules Committee.
Confronted by an unyielding wall of opposition, GOP leadership admitted defeat just hours after the failed vote, canceling all remaining legislative business for Wednesday and Thursday. Lawmakers were sent home for an early Fourth of July holiday recess, postponing any further action on the defense bill or pending appropriations measures until the House reconvenes on July 13th.
A visibly frustrated Speaker Johnson defended the derailed defense package, noting that it contained roughly 65 of the Trump administration’s core priorities and executive orders (EOs). Johnson lamented that a handful of his own members chose to halt very important progress because of their grievances with Senate Democrats.
Meanwhile, thee ultimate destination for the SAVE America Act remains highly contentious.
While the bill represents a core pillar of the Trump administration’s platform, it faces friction in the upper chamber. Even if the House successfully advances the measure, Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) has struggled to gather the necessary support to cross the 60-vote filibuster threshold, with several Senate Republicans joining Democrats to vote against the measure in a recent 48–50 vote.
As the House enters a multi-week cooling-off period, Johnson indicated he would use the recess to regroup and work on the holdouts, though hardliners have pledged to block all subsequent floor traffic until their strict voting integrity parameters are met.
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