Tobias Harris joining Spurs on 2-year, $31 million deal: Source
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Day 1 GradesMitchell Robinson To BostonKawhi Back To TorontoLeBron To Leave LakersTobias Harris joining Spurs on 2-year, $31 million deal: Source

Veteran forward Tobias Harris has had two separate stints in Detroit. Don Juan Moore / Getty Images
By Hunter Patterson and Jared WeissJuly 1, 2026 Updated 4:36 pm EDTTobias Harris’ second stint in Detroit is coming to an end, as the veteran forward has agreed to a two-year, $31 million contract with the San Antonio Spurs, according to a league source granted anonymity because the deal is not yet official.
Trajan Langdon, Detroit’s president of basketball operations, said in May that the Pistons had hoped to retain Harris, who turns 34 on July 15. But that won’t be the case, as he’ll now team up with Victor Wembanyama and Stephon Castle on a Spurs team that made the NBA Finals last season.
ESPN first reported the deal. Harris spent two years in Detroit (2016-18) before rejoining the Pistons as a free agent in 2024. This past season, Harris paced All-Star guard Cade Cunningham as the Pistons’ second-leading scorer during the postseason with 18.1 points per game. Harris also added 7.2 rebounds and a playoff-career-high 1.5 steals per game as the Pistons, the top seed in the Eastern Conference, won a playoff series for the first time since 2008.
Pistons coach J.B. Bickerstaff has described Harris as his “safety blanket,” and Harris has been revered as a professional who brings leadership to the locker room. For example, multiple Pistons have praised how Harris has helped younger guys on the team fine-tune their daily routines and approach recovery as a veteran should.
“That’s really my guy,” backup point guard Daniss Jenkins said of Harris after a Pistons playoff win against the Cleveland Cavaliers. “(It’s) all the little things. Just talking to me because it’s not easy playing behind the main guy when you’re in that position. So it’s just all the little things to keep my mental right. To stay with it and stay poised through all the ups and the downs.”
Harris said those bonds with his teammates bring him “a lot of life.”
“I tell my wife all the time, all the time, ‘I love being a part of this team, I love being with these guys,’” Harris said in May. “On the floor, off the floor, the communication, the way we all are friends, really. I’m the older guy, but I look at our team like life-long friends outside of hooping — that’s rare. I’ve played with a lot of guys. I’ve probably only called a few of them real friends.”
Now Harris will look to form new bonds in San Antonio. The Spurs needed a power forward who could provide good size at the position, but remain versatile: Harris fits the bill, someone who can play from the wings but also can work out of the dunker spot or post when needed. He is solid at just about everything on the court and has the size to consistently finish in the paint. The Spurs relied on Keldon Johnson when they needed physicality at the four last season, but he struggled to finish once the Spurs got deeper into the playoffs. Harris has a good driving game with decent floater touch and some creativity around the basket. He won’t need to score as much as he did in Detroit — he took 15 shots a game during the Pistons’ recent playoff run.
Harris brings the offensive polish the Spurs were missing in the frontcourt and has enough size to make a difference against teams who can win the battle in the trenches like the Oklahoma City Thunder and New York Knicks. Beyond just winning the positional battle under the rim, the Spurs really needed someone besides the guards who could get all the way to the rim and finish with composure. He should be able to operate in more space, considering the Spurs’ playmaking depth and the way Victor Wembanyama tilts the floor (Though, as of now, he is likely to come off the bench).
The Spurs re-signed Julian Champagnie to a reworked three-year deal and still have Devin Vassell locked in long-term, so there’s no need to change the starting lineup. Though Harris is a more versatile player than Champagnie, he is not a knockdown shooter of the same caliber and that is the primary skill needed around Wembanyama. Barring a trade, the Spurs will have a lot of minutes to split up in the frontcourt as Johnson enters the final year of his contract and Carter Bryant will look to take another step forward in his second season. Johnson provides the intensity, quality defense and shooting the Spurs need off the bench. Bryant is a tantalizing young defender whose shot came along last season, though he needs a lot more experience and will be in Vegas on the Spurs’ summer league team.
The Spurs remain under the luxury tax after signing Harris, so there is no financial impetus to make a consolidation trade at this point. Harris’ two-year deal will expire just as Stephon Castle would be starting a potential max extension, with Dylan Harper on track for one of his own the year after. Harris turns 34 in two weeks, so the Spurs will look to get his best years left before he approaches retirement.
Harris’ departure marks another exit for a key contributor to a Pistons team that won 60 games for the first time in 20 years. On Day 2 of the NBA Draft, the Pistons agreed to trade big man Isaiah Stewart to the Memphis Grizzlies in exchange for three second-round picks. And as free agency rolls along, the future of All-NBA center Jalen Duren continues to be unclear.
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Tagged To: NBADetroit PistonsSan Antonio Spurs‘Big Brother’ Host Julie Chen Moonves Teases ‘Controversial People’ Being ‘Factored In’ to Season 28

Julie Chen Moonves is dropping some major hints about what — or who — season 28’s “time travel” twist will bring to the Big Brother house.
“That could go forwards or backwards, and that will play into some of the competitions. Does that mean we’re going to bring back some competition you haven’t seen since season 3,2,4, [or] 5? I sure hope so,” the Big Brother host, 56, exclusively tells Us Weekly and additional outlets during a preseason roundtable. “I’m pretty sure you’re gonna [be], like, ‘Oh, they haven’t done that forever.’”
According to Chen Moonves, that’s not all that the incoming houseguests will be forced to endure.
“And then with [the] time travel theme, maybe we’ll do the new twist, which you loved that competition in season four, but they have to be in, like, I don’t know, surrounded by dinosaurs, who knows, and controversial people will be factored in,” she shares.
Related: Julie Chen Moonves Shares What Makes Some Showmances Work on ‘Big Brother’
Big Brother is a social game, and sometimes it helps to have a partner by your side. From Jeff Schroeder and Jordan Lloyd to whatever Vince Panaro and Morgan Pope had last year, showmances have been a staple of the game for almost as long as it has existed. But what makes some showmances work, […]Chen Moonves adds that what Big Brother has cooked up for season 28 will please the fans.
“It’s good TV, and if you love reality television beyond Big Brother, yes, there are other shows beyond Big Brother, you’ll be excited as well,” she says.
Big Brother’s time travel theme was revealed on Wednesday, July 1, when the official house tour dropped.
“For season 28 we’re throwing out all the rules of time and space and sending our houseguests on a journey unlike anything you’ve ever seen before,” Chen Moonves said in the trailer for the upcoming season. “From prehistoric times to iconic decades, and unforgettable moments from Big Brother history, this house is packed with surprises around every single corner.”
Fans will have to wait a little longer to see what Chen Moonves meant by “controversial people” being “factored” into the game, as the official season 28 cast has yet to be revealed. Rumors have swirled online that former houseguests could be returning to the game.
Several alums have spoken out before and since the reveal, warning fans that they should not expect to see them in the house on premiere night. Legendary player Janelle Pierzina posted online that she doesn’t have the bandwidth to play the reality TV game for a fifth time.
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Related: 'Big Brother’ Host Julie Chen Moonves Reveals if She's Going to Retire
Big Brother fans shouldn’t expect to see Julie Chen Moonves walk away from hosting the program any time soon. When asked by Entertainment Weekly if she had any intention of retiring from the show, Chen Moonves, 55, gave a pretty iconic answer. “You know what? This is a game of chicken. As long as [Jeff] […]“No, I’m not doing #BB28,” the four-time player, 46, wrote via X last month. “Between selling houses, running Airbnbs, raising three kids, and pretending I know what day it is, I don’t have time to be locked in a house for 100 days. You guys can fight over slop without me. 😂.”
Another iconic old school player, Danielle Reyes, also shared that she has other obligations this summer.
“I’m working. I’m not doing Big Brother 28,” the Traitors alum, 54, said in a video shared via X last month. “I know, I know. I appreciate you guys hoping but I haven’t been contacted by the producers. I am excited that this season is going to be the 1,000th episode of Big Brother. How exciting is that? And I haven’t been invited to do anything for this. So you guys more than likely won’t see me.”
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Even FIFA and Trump can't ruin this World Cup

Algeria fans thank the community of Lawrence, Kansas, where their team's base camp was located, before a match against Austria in Kansas City, Missouri, on June 27, 2026.Charlie Riedel/AP
Get your news from a source that’s not owned and controlled by oligarchs. Sign up for the free Mother Jones Daily.Despite the countless problematic aspects of the 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup—power-hungry fascists and the wealthy elite grabbing every ounce of political and monetary gain they can imagine at the expense of fans, national team players and staff, workers, and more—there are a few inspiring stories that I have been following.
Among them: A national team playing in its first World Cup, outplaying established opponents with their spirit and tactics; a friendship between residents of a Kansas town and the national team players training there; and a young player showing the world what his sister always saw in him.
As Jules Boykoff, a former US men’s national team and professional soccer player—and current politics professor at Pacific University in Oregon—told me just before the tournament started, soccer has the power to spark new connections within our communities and organizing. More simply, it can be fun.
Cape Verde’s ascent to the knockout stages
Cape Verde, a nation of about 530,000 people (about the same population as Atlanta), qualified for its first World Cup last year. This year, they earned draws against their three group stage opponents: Spain, one of the favorites to win the whole tournament, Uruguay, and Saudi Arabia. Vozinha, the goalkeeper, had a star performance against Spain with seven saves and gained 14 million followers on Instagram as a result, but beyond that, the Verdean team genuinely challenged Spain during the match in ways that they had no answer to.
Against Uruguay, Cape Verde scored its first two goals—including Kevin Pina’s stunning, long-distance free kick that punished their opponents’ flimsy defensive wall—and the team created much better chances to score than Saudi Arabia.
Prior to the start of the tournament, Cape Verde was projected to have the fourth-lowest chance of making it out of the group stage behind Iraq, Curaçao, and Haiti. They beat the odds with flying colors and will play Argentina, led by perhaps the greatest player of all time, Lionel Messi, on Friday.
Lawrence, Kansas, residents connect with Algerian national team players and fans
At the start of the World Cup, a video of two Lawrence residents enthusiastically welcoming Algerians to town after the national team set up their training camp there went viral. If you didn’t get the chance to watch it, one resident explains to a reporter that he attended what appears to be a fan event because he was “so happy” that “they chose our town for their base camp.” While both he and another resident said in the interview that they didn’t know much about Algeria, they were already adopting their fan chants: “1, 2, 3, vive l’Algerie,” or “1, 2, 3, long live Algeria”—a phrase with ties to Algeria’s fight for independence from French occupation.
Local outlets have done some great reporting on the new Kansas-Algeria bond, which I highly recommend you give a read.
The friendship has led to some of my favorite videos to come from the tournament:
Bless this man, his excitement about Team Algeria and their base camp in Lawrence, Kansas, is just 🤌
— Anne Thériault (@annetheriault.bsky.social) 2026-06-13T03:35:16.643Z
Algerian fans chanting THANK YOU LAWRENCE
— Rodger Sherman (@rodger.bsky.social) 2026-06-28T19:20:03.383Z
Ivory Coast’s star winger Yan Diomande plays a great tournament for his first fan
I sometimes find myself searching for the personal stories of the soccer players I enjoy watching. Diomande plays for the major German club RB Leipzig; his story in the Players’ Tribune, a platform that publishes first-person stories from athletes, really moved me.
You should take a look at it yourself—his words are so powerful that any description I come up with wouldn’t do it justice—but Diomande talks about his sister Roxanne, who believed that he would become a great soccer player, taking him to tryouts for professional teams, and about his shock and grief when Roxanne died at the age of 15 after someone spiked her drink at a party. Yan Diomande has achieved so much at just 19 and is attracting the attention of the best teams in the world.
His dribbling is mesmerizing, and his decision-making after the dribble—whether that be a pass or shot—is impressive for how early he is in his career. His Ivory Coast teammates are so cleverly organized and look to get him the ball often to cause chaos in the opposing team’s defense.
Given that, I still think about one quote from Diomande’s story, entitled “Dear Roxanne”: “Everything I do on a football pitch, it’s for you.”
Although the Ivory Coast lost 1-2 against Norway on Tuesday, he and his teammates have achieved so much, reaching the knockout stage for the first time in their World Cup history.