The NBA's latest on-court fashion fad has caught Jimmy Butler. The Philadelphia 76ers star wore a wide headband that ties in the back during his team's 114-106 win over the Orlando Magic on Tuesday night, a look first made popular by New Orleans Pelicans guard Jrue Holiday that has swept across the league in the interim.

One of Butler's teammates, though, apparently couldn't help but wonder if the negatives of wearing the NikeCourt DriFit 2.0 outweigh the positives. Does Amir Johnson think that Butler should abandon the headband given the risk of what it could potentially do to his hairline, though? Not quite.

Jimmy Butler had 14 points, four assists, and three steals on 5-of-10 shooting against the Magic, while Johnson played perhaps his best game of the season as Joel Embiid continues to recover from nagging left knee pain, finishing with 13 points and five rebounds in 20 minutes of play.

Butler first began wearing headbands this season shortly after he was traded to Philadelphia from the Minnesota Timberwolves. Ben Simmons followed suit, leading Brett Brown to suggest in December that the look is a “bonding of defensive brothers”

“They are defensive brothers. They’re blood brothers — that band to me signifies a bonding, a defensive bonding,” he explained of Butler and Simmons, per NBC Sports' Noah Levick. “I’ve asked Jimmy to put Ben under his wing and really help Ben be all he can be defensively. Ben was our bell ringer tonight. … I thought he was excellent. So that’s what it is. It’s a bonding of defensive brothers, the headband.”

Will Simmons don the new-age headband next? Considering the 22 year old probably has more time to worry about hair loss than Jimmy Butler, wby not?