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			notebook: Bucks' co-owner fined over Davis comments 
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			 [February 12, 2019]  
			Milwaukee Bucks co-owner Marc 
			Lasry has been fined $25,000 for his recent remarks about Anthony 
			Davis, ESPN's Malika Andrews reported Monday. 
 Lasry's recent comments about the New Orleans Pelicans' star, who 
			requested a trade from the Pelicans prior to the trading deadline, 
			violated NBA tampering rules.
 
 There were reports that the Bucks, who enter play Monday with the 
			league's best record at 41-14, were among four teams that Davis 
			would consider joining on a long-term deal, and Lasry was asked 
			about the report when the Bucks were in New York to play the 
			Brooklyn Nets.
 
 "I saw that report, and I think it's great," Lasry told Sporting 
			News. "It's a little bit of what we want. We want players to come 
			and play in Milwaukee. And part of it is, when you're winning and 
			you're setting a standard for excellence, people see that. People 
			want to win.
 
 --Philadelphia 76ers All-Star Ben Simmons wanted to sit down with 
			Magic Johnson to discuss being a big point guard in the NBA, but 
			Sixers general manager Elton Brand said he nixed that idea. And 
			although Brand said he considers the case closed, the NBA is 
			investigating.
 
			 
			
 "The league office is looking into whether any contact took place 
			between Ben Simmons and the Los Angeles Lakers that violated NBA 
			rules," NBA spokesman Mike Bass told Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN.
 
 Johnson, the Lakers team president, said Sunday that Simmons had 
			contacted him about potentially meeting in the offseason. Johnson 
			told reporters they could not talk "if everybody doesn't sign off."
 
 --Guard Jeremy Lin and the Atlanta Hawks are finalizing a buyout of 
			his contract, and he then expects to sign with the Toronto Raptors, 
			according to an ESPN report.
 
 Agents Jim Tanner and Roger Montgomery told ESPN that Lin, who is 
			earning $12.5 million in his first season with the Hawks, could be 
			with the Raptors by the middle of the week.
 
 Lin, 30, became a household name in 2012, when a short but prolific 
			run with the New York Knicks sparked what became known as "Linsanity." 
			But since then, he has played for Houston, the Los Angeles Lakers, 
			Charlotte, and Brooklyn before arriving in Atlanta in the offseason.
 
 --Toronto Raptors guard Fred VanVleet is sidelined with a partial 
			ligament injury to his left thumb, the team announced.
 
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			Marc Lasry, CEO and Co-Founder of Avenue Capital Group, speaks 
			during the Reuters Global Investment Outlook Summit in New York, 
			U.S., November 15, 2017. REUTERS/Mike Segar 
            
			 
            VanVleet, who turns 25 on Feb. 25, is expected to wear a splint for 
			approximately three weeks and his condition will then be updated. 
			The team said he injured himself during the second quarter of the 
			Raptors' 104-99 victory on Saturday at the New York Knicks.
 In 51 games this season (22 starts), VanVleet is averaging 10.5 
			points, 4.6 assists and 2.7 rebounds in 26.8 minutes per game. He 
			has scored in double figures 30 times over the season, including a 
			career-high 30 points in a 119-101 road win over Atlanta on Feb. 7.
 
 --Los Angeles Lakers guard Josh Hart received a platelet-rich plasma 
			injection in his right knee, the team announced. Hart will be 
			re-evaluated after the All-Star Break.
 
 Hart, in his second season out of Villanova, is averaging 8.5 
			points, 3.9 rebounds and 1.5 assists, starting 21 of his 54 games 
			played. He has missed two of the past three games, including 
			Sunday's 143-120 loss at Philadelphia, because of patella 
			tendinitis.
 
 Hart has four double-doubles this season, including three in a 
			15-day span in January. His absence further thins a backcourt that 
			is missing guard Lonzo Ball because of a sprained left ankle.
 
 --The Cleveland Cavaliers have signed guard Nik Stauskas, the team 
			announced, in what has been a whirlwind week for the 25-year-old, a 
			former lottery pick.
 
 
            
			 
			Stauskas was acquired by the Cavaliers last weekend from Portland, 
			one of the players sent to Cleveland in the Rodney Hood deal. The 
			Cavaliers then sent him to Houston as part of a three-team trade, 
			and the Rockets shipped him to the Indiana Pacers before the NBA 
			trading deadline last Thursday.
 
 On Friday, Stauskas, a Michigan product, who was selected No. 8 
			overall by Sacramento in the 2014 NBA Draft, was waived by the 
			Pacers.
 
 --Field Level Media
 
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