Jeff Teague offered a funny but revealing take on what a future NBA team in Las Vegas could mean for the league. In his view, Vegas would instantly become one of the toughest road environments in basketball, not because of the arena itself, but because of everything surrounding the city. His argument was simple: visiting teams would have to deal with a place built on distraction, late nights, and temptation before they ever stepped on the floor.
The NBA’s Board of Governors is expected to discuss expansion again next week, with Las Vegas and Seattle positioned as the two target markets if the league moves forward. That does not mean expansion is finalized yet, but it does mean the idea of a team in Las Vegas is no longer just a talking point. It is now part of a very real league conversation.
What Teague did well in his quote was frame Las Vegas not simply as a business opportunity, but as a basketball environment with its own identity. Home-court advantage is usually discussed in terms of crowd noise, travel, altitude, or tradition. Vegas would bring a different kind of pressure. The city’s entire atmosphere could become part of the challenge for opponents, turning every road trip there into something that feels bigger, louder, and harder to control.
Jeff Teague on Las Vegas getting a NBA team:
“That’s where I would love to play, if I was playing is Vegas. That’s the greatest home court advantage besides Miami, Atlanta. It’s probably greater because soon as people touched down in Vegas, they on the tables, they’re going to… https://t.co/4RWWdFA7XX pic.twitter.com/3sYIXdC9oD
— NBA Courtside (@NBA__Courtside) March 19, 2026
