The Charlotte Hornets missed the playoffs for the ninth consecutive season last year as they continue to be stuck in a rebuild. Despite this, Charlotte has created a solid core led by LaMelo Ball, Brandon Miller and Miles Bridges and they also made some notable additions to their roster this offseason.
The Charlotte Hornets are trying to figure out how to get their young roster into a position to contend for the playoffs. They haven't had a taste of the playoffs since Kemba Walker was the point guard.
We're going to see a lot from the Charlotte Hornets in 2025-26, and hopefully, some of it is good. It's certainly not going to be all good, but some of it will be.
Each stadium around the NBA holds a story. The TD Garden in Boston, while not the original Boston Garden that hosted Bill Russell and Larry Bird, has 24 championship banners between the Boston Celtics and the Boston Bruins.
The Charlotte Hornets aren't really positioned to be making huge trades by themselves right now. Aside from LaMelo Ball, who isn't going to be traded, they don't have the pieces for a stunning blockbuster move.
Which former NBA players watch today's game and think to themselves, Man, I would have been awesome in today's game? Probably all of them. But how many of them are right?
NBA money has never been higher. It's resulted in players making contracts that have raised eyebrows, and we almost constantly see "highest paid player in NBA history" every offseason.
The Charlotte Hornets only have three nationally-televised games on their 82-game schedule, but don't let that discourage you into thinking that LaMelo Ball and Co.
Even if you’re rooting for the Charlotte Hornets to hold onto LaMelo Ball (like the author of this piece is), it’s only natural to wonder — given his name always popping up in trade rumors — what sorts of Melo deals would make sense for Charlotte.
Jeff Peterson was busy this summer. The Charlotte Hornets GM made trades, draft picks, and even signed some players in free agency. But busy doesn't always mean good, because the moves you make have to improve the team or the outlook.
The Charlotte Hornets are back in the national headlines, but not for a reason anyone saw coming. In fact, it’s not even about someone currently in the organization — it’s about one of the NBA’s biggest “what if” stories.
The Charlotte Hornets just got named a team with one of the best jerseys in the NBA. They were ranked fourth, behind only the San Antonio Spurs, Chicago Bulls, and the Boston Celtics in that particular list.
The Charlotte Hornets have had two major problems over the last couple of seasons: perimeter defense and shooting. Kon Knueppel, the shiny new toy the Hornets picked up with the fourth overall pick, will fill one of those needs, but he won't help the other.
The Charlotte Hornets have really not been healthy, at least as it pertains to their best players, in a long time. Every season, it seems, is marred by a major injury to one or more key players.
The city of Charlotte was abuzz when Jeff Peterson made four selections in the 2025 NBA Draft. After weeks of trade speculation about the three selections the Hornets owned heading into draft day, Peterson did swing a deal...that added another 2025 draft pick to his arsenal.
The 2026 NBA Draft is said to hold as many as three No. 1-level prospects per draft experts, meaning teams will be lining up to leave with potential superstar-level talent.
The Charlotte Hornets are in the midst of a roster reconstruction, seeming to gear up for a potential playoff push after three consecutive seasons under the 30-win threshold.
Basketball season is around the corner, which means fantasy basketball drafts will start happening in the next few weeks (if they haven't already happened – looking at you, DraftKings best ball players).
The Charlotte Hornets added some real talent in the 2025 NBA draft, and the future is exciting for Charles Lee’s squad. On the other hand, this is a franchise currently constructed around a young star whose durability remains unproven.
The Charlotte Hornets have been rebuilding for as long as we can remember, prompting ESPN analysts Tim Bontemps, Brian Windhorst, and Tim MacMahon to question the team’s long-term plans.
Sometimes the NBA calendar delivers storylines you cannot script even if you tried. The NBA has several promotional nights that they try to market, but teams also have their own events.
The Charlotte Hornets are still in the middle of a rebuild and they have not made the playoffs since the 2015-16 season. For Charlotte, they do enter the 2025-26 season with a solid young core of players led by LaMelo Ball, Brandon Miller, Mile Bridges and Tidjane Salaun and they also added some players to their roster this offseason.