Grizzlies Sign Rayan Rupert To Two-Way Contract

1:59 pm: Rupert has officially re-signed with Memphis on a two-way deal, the team announced in a press release (Twitter link).


1:37 pm: Less than 24 hours after his 10-day contract with the team expired, the Grizzlies will re-sign guard Rayan Rupert to a two-way deal, sources tell ESPN’s Shams Charania (Twitter link).

The 43rd overall pick in the 2023 draft, Rupert averaged just 3.2 points and 1.8 rebounds in 12.0 minutes per game across 139 appearances in two-and-a-half seasons with Portland. The 21-year-old Frenchman was cut by the Trail Blazers last month when they promoted Sidy Cissoko to their 15-man roster and almost immediately caught on with Memphis after clearing waivers.

Rupert played big minutes off the bench for the Grizzlies during his first 10 days with the club, averaging 10.4 PPG, 5.8 RPG, and 1.6 SPG in 26.8 MPG, with a shooting line of .452/.353/.800.

Memphis entered the day with all three of its two-way slots filled, but created an opening by promoting Olivier-Maxence Prosper to a standard contract. The team will essentially flip Prosper’s and Rupert’s spots on the 18-man roster, with Prosper going from a two-way to a standard deal, while Rupert goes from a 10-day to a two-way.

Rupert will be able to appear in a maximum of 11 more games at the NBA level for the rest of the season, a prorated portion of the usual 50-game limit for two-way players.

Nuggets To Sign David Roddy, Waive Tamar Bates

The Nuggets are making a change to one of their two-way contract slots ahead of Wednesday’s deadline, according to Michael Scotto of HoopsHype, who reports (via Twitter) that current two-way player Tamar Bates is being waived in order to create space for the team to sign forward David Roddy.

Roddy, who will turn 25 later this month, has played for five NBA teams since being selected 23rd overall in the 2022 draft, making 168 appearances in total for Memphis, Phoenix, Atlanta, Philadelphia, and Houston. However, he hasn’t been on a roster at all this season since spending training camp with the Raptors and being waived at the end of the preseason.

Outside of a brief recent stint with USA Basketball for a pair of World Cup qualifying games, Roddy has spent the 2025/26 season with the Raptors 905 in the G League. In 34 total outings for Toronto’s NBAGL affiliate, he has averaged 12.3 points, 5.9 rebounds, and 3.6 assists in 27.8 minutes per game while making 47.5% of his shots from the floor, including 39.2% from beyond the arc.

Roddy played well for Team USA in those recent qualifiers vs. the Dominican Republic and Mexico, totaling 28 points on 9-of-12 shooting. He led the team with 20 points in Sunday’s blowout victory over Mexico.

Bates, meanwhile, quickly caught on with the Nuggets on a two-way deal last summer after going undrafted out of Missouri, but his rookie season was derailed in December when he underwent surgery to repair a fracture in his left foot. The 6’4″ guard hasn’t played at all since then and was limited to 12 appearances in the G League before that point. Although he has yet to make his regular season NBA debut, he averaged 19.6 PPG on .550/.442/.900 shooting for the Grand Rapids Gold before getting hurt.

Roddy can be active for up to 11 games for the Nuggets for the rest of the regular season and won’t be eligible to play in the postseason. As Blake Murphy of Sportsnet.ca points out (via Twitter), Roddy is the third Raptors 905 regular to be called up to a new NBA team this week, joining Julian Reese and Olivier Sarr, who were signed to two-way deals by the Wizards and Cavaliers, respectively.

Warriors GM Dunleavy Talks Curry, Kerr, Kuminga, Porzingis

If Milwaukee had been willing to make a deal at last month’s trade deadline, the Warriors likely would’ve given up several of their future first-round picks – and swaps – to acquire star forward Giannis Antetokounmpo. However, speaking to Tim Kawakami on his TK Show podcast (Spotify link) on Tuesday, general manager Mike Dunleavy Jr. pointed to the health issues currently afflicting his top players as an example of why surrendering significant future draft capital carries significant risk.

“I think going back to the Jimmy (Butler) trade last year, that’s why we loved the trade so much, because we’re getting a great player and we’re only giving up that year’s pick. There’s nothing out in the future,” Dunleavy said, according to Kawakami. “…I think we’re always being disciplined about using those picks, considering them in trades, things like that. But when you’re put in a situation like this, where your best players are out and you’re struggling to win games, I think you appreciate having that draft capital moving forward.”

In addition to missing Butler (torn ACL) and Kristaps Porzingis (illness), the Warriors are currently playing without their top scorer, Stephen Curry, who has been out since January 30 due to a knee issue. Asked by Kawakami if there’s any possibility that Curry gets shut down for the rest of the season, Dunleavy didn’t rule it out, but said it would be “very surprising” if that happens.

“I’m not a doctor and things can go a certain way,” he said. “I don’t want the headline to be, ‘Steph may be done for the year’ because I’m not ruling it out. But just because he’s not playing right now, I just have to acknowledge that, ‘Yeah, sure, there’s a chance.’ But we don’t expect that.”

Here are a few more of Dunleavy’s most notable quotes from his appearance on The TK Show:

On whether he expects Steve Kerr to be the Warriors’ head coach in 2026/27:

“I don’t see why not. I think Steve’s mentioned wanting to get to the end of the season and figure it out. I think things, for him, are going well. We’ll figure all that out when it comes. I think it’s been interesting, like the focus for us internally between myself, (team owner) Joe (Lacob), the players, Steve, has really been on like getting this thing right the rest of the season. So we haven’t put a whole bunch of thought into it.

“But you know, obviously, on a personal level, (I) love having Steve here. Yeah, I would project that he’s our coach next year. But again, we’re going down to absolute certainties, and a lot of it’s in his court, so we’ll have to see.”

On whether the Warriors seriously considered hanging onto Jonathan Kuminga through last month’s trade deadline:

“I think you guys know, it’s been put out there about (Kuminga’s) trade demand, and I think any time a player wants that, I want to try to accommodate. You want people who want to be here. And for that reason, we felt it was the right time to move on. I think JK’s happy about it, I think we’re in the right spot for it, it was just kind of the right thing to do at the time.”

On whether he’s satisfied with the information-gathering process that led to the Warriors acquiring Porzingis (who has been limited to a single outing since the trade due to health issues):

“That’s a great question, it’s a fair question. I think it’s really, really complicated. This is a unique situation. I’d say from our end, I feel good about, from the information we had, I feel good about our evaluation of what that was on the medical side. And for that reason, that’s why we made the trade.”

Cavaliers Add Olivier Sarr On Two-Way Deal

March 4: The Cavaliers have officially signed Sarr to a two-way contract, the team confirmed in a press release.


March 3: The Cavaliers and big man Olivier Sarr have agreed to a two-way deal, according to Michael Scotto of HoopsHype (Twitter link). To make room for Sarr, Cleveland has waived guard Darius Brown II.

Sarr played for the Thunder for parts of three seasons from 2021-24, averaging 4.8 points and 3.5 rebounds in 13.8 minutes per game across 46 outings, before spending last season in the G League. He was on the Raptors’ training camp roster last fall but was waived before opening night.

Sarr then joined Toronto’s G League club, the Raptors 905. Through 39 games, Sarr has averaged 11.2 points, 7.1 rebounds and 1.3 blocks in 23.7 minutes per contest.

Brown signed his two-way contract last week and it turned out to be a temporary stay. He’s played 36 games for the Cleveland Charge this season and will likely head back to that G League club.

Hawks Sign Keshon Gilbert To Two-Way Contract

March 4: Gilbert has officially signed his two-way contract with the Hawks, according to the team.


March 3: The Hawks will sign rookie point guard Keshon Gilbert to a two-way contract, league sources tell Jake Fischer of The Stein Line (Twitter link).

Gilbert, who went undrafted in 2025 out of Iowa State, signed a non-guaranteed Exhibit 10 contract with the Wizards last September and was waived at the start of training camp, lining him up to play for Washington’s G League affiliate, the Capital City Go-Go.

The 6’4″ guard has spent most of the season with the Go-Go, averaging 13.7 points, 5.5 assists, 4.3 rebounds, and 1.6 steals in 27.4 minutes per game at the G League level. He has posted a shooting line of .456/.210/.789 in 30 outings for Capital City and earning a brief call-up to the Wizards last month, signing a 10-day deal with the club and appearing in three NBA games.

The Hawks have had an empty two-way slot since they promoted Caleb Houstan to the standard roster last month, so no corresponding roster move will be necessary to add Gilbert. The 22-year-old will join Christian Koloko and RayJ Dennis as Atlanta’s two-way players.

Assuming Gilbert’s two-way contract is officially finalized on Tuesday, he’ll be eligible to be active for up to 12 regular season games for the Hawks for the rest of 2025/26. Atlanta will have a full 18-man roster once the deal is complete.

Central Notes: Strus, Ivey, Bulls, Rollins

Cavaliers wing Max Strus still isn’t ready to make his season debut following offseason foot surgery, but recent imaging on his foot has shown “progressive healing” and he has advanced to participating in individual on-court workouts, the team announced on Tuesday in a press release.

According to the Cavs, Strus will go through a “structured ramp-up program” that will include controlled team activities and practices at both the NBA and G League level.

There are now just five-and-a-half weeks left in the regular season, so while head coach Kenny Atkinson said recently that he still expects Strus to return before the postseason, time is running out for the 29-year-old to make an impact on the 2025/26 Cavaliers.

We have more from around the Central:

  • Bulls guard Jaden Ivey won’t travel with the team on its five-game road trip that begins on Thursday in Phoenix and runs through next Friday in L.A., but it doesn’t as if the club has seriously considered shutting him down for the rest of the season, writes Brian Sandalow of The Chicago Sun-Times. Head coach Billy Donovan added that forward Patrick Williams (quad) and big man Jalen Smith (calf) both have a chance to play during the upcoming trip.
  • These Bulls, who have lost 12 of its last 13 games, seems as far away from contention as any version of the team in recent years, but Josh Giddey remains hopeful that it won’t take long for the front office to rebuild a roster capable of contending, per Joe Cowley of The Chicago Sun-Times. “When I was in Oklahoma, we went from the worst team in the league to the best team in the league in 24 months,” Giddey said. “We did it pretty quickly. A lot of rebuilds don’t necessarily happen that fast. Obviously, with the people and personnel we had it got sped up pretty quickly. Over those three years, we built a lot of really good habits, winning habits.” Cowley notes that replicating what the Thunder did is “completely unrealistic” for the Bulls, but suggests there’s no reason why the team needs to spend the next several years deep in lottery territory.
  • Bucks guard Ryan Rollins spoke to Marc J. Spears of Andscape about turning things around after a challenging start to his NBA career, which included being cut by Washington in January 2024 at around the same time he was charged with seven counts of petit larceny for shoplifting. Now in his fourth NBA season, Rollins has emerged as a candidate for Most Improved Player by averaging 16.8 points, 5.4 assists, 4.6 rebounds, and 1.5 steals per game on .466/.411/.761 shooting this season. “I always knew I was this good,” he said. “I just needed the opportunity and needed a coach to trust me to be able to let me work through my mistakes and grow. I always knew my capabilities.”

Grizzlies Sign Olivier-Maxence Prosper To Two-Year Contract

11:11 am: Prosper’s new contract is official, according to the Grizzlies (Twitter link).


10:54 am: The Grizzlies are promoting forward Olivier-Maxence Prosper from his two-way contract to their 15-man roster, according to ESPN’s Shams Charania (Twitter link), who hears from agents Todd Ramasar and Mike Simonetta that the two sides have agreed to a new two-year deal.

No corresponding roster move will be necessary for Memphis, since a spot opened up on the standard roster when Rayan Rupert‘s 10-day contract expired on Tuesday night.

Prosper, the 24th overall pick in the 2023 draft, spent his first two NBA seasons in Dallas, but became a cap casualty last offseason and was waived in August when the Mavericks needed to create enough space below their hard cap to re-sign Dante Exum. Less than a week after he was cut by the Mavs, Prosper caught on with the Grizzlies on a two-way deal.

The 6’7″ Canadian forward didn’t have a major role at the NBA level during the first half of the season, but has become a fixture in the rotation in recent weeks. Since making his first start of the season on February 6, Prosper has averaged 13.9 points, 4.3 rebounds, 1.7 assists, and 1.1 steals in 24.7 minutes per game across 10 outings (seven starts), with a scorching-hot shooting line of .611/.432/.867.

In 36 total NBA appearances in 2025/26, the former Marquette standout holds averages of 7.6 PPG, 3.1 RPG, and 0.9 APG in 15.8 MPG on .541/.389/.873 shooting. Each of those per-game averages and shooting percentages would be a career high.

Prosper was active for a 45th game on Tuesday, moving him just five games away from reaching his limit as a two-way player. Promoting him to a standard contract will allow the Grizzlies to eliminate that games-played cap, freeing him up to be active for the rest of the season. It will also make him postseason-eligible, though that’s unlikely to matter, since Memphis has fallen five games out a play-in spot.

Prosper’s new contract figures to be a minimum-salary deal, since the Grizzlies used their full room exception last summer to sign Ty Jerome and don’t have the bi-annual available this season.

Converting Prosper to the 15-man roster before the end of the day will position the Grizzlies to back-fill his two-way slot with a newcomer ahead of Wednesday’s deadline for two-way signings.

Nuggets’ Aaron Gordon Aiming To Return Friday

Nuggets forward Aaron Gordon has Friday’s game vs. New York circled as a target date for his return from a hamstring injury, a source close to the player tells Sam Amick of The Athletic.

While Gordon hopes to be back on the floor for that contest, Amick cautions that he’ll need to get clearance from the Nuggets, who are being “understandably cautious,” given that the veteran forward has dealt with repeated hamstring issues this season.

Gordon initially sustained a Grade 2 right hamstring strain in November and missed 19 games as a result of the injury before returning in early January. After a few weeks back in Denver’s lineup, he aggravated the strain on January 23 and was once again ruled out for at least four-to-six weeks. He has been out for the team’s past 16 contests.

While Gordon isn’t an All-Star like Nikola Jokic or Jamal Murray, he’s a crucial role player for the Nuggets, who have badly missed him in his absence, Amick notes. The Nuggets are 17-6 in games Gordon has played and have a +14.0 net rating in his 642 minutes of action this season. By contrast, the club is 21-18 without him and has a modest +1.9 net rating when he’s not on the court.

Head coach David Adelman expressed optimism last week that injured players like Gordon and Peyton Watson – who is recovering from a hamstring strain of his own – would be able to return with roughly 20 games left in the Nuggets’ season. The club played its 62nd game on Monday in Utah, and a report on Sunday indicated that both Gordon and Watson were ramping up their activities and would be reevaluated this week.

The Nuggets, who have held a top-three spot in the Western Conference for most of the season, have slipped to fifth in recent days, having been surpassed by Houston and Minnesota, so they’ll be eager to get Gordon and Watson back in the rotation and try to move back up the standings.

Pelicans Signing Josh Oduro To Two-Way Contract

The Pelicans have reached an agreement on a two-way deal with big man Josh Oduro, reports Shams Charania of ESPN (Twitter link).

A 6’9″ forward/center who went undrafted out of Providence in 2024, Oduro had brief stints with the Pelicans during each of the past two preseasons and has spent his pro career to date with the Birmingham Squadron, New Orleans’ G League affiliate.

In 35 games this season for the Squadron, the 25-year-old has averaged 14.3 points, 7.3 rebounds, 1.7 assists, 1.3 blocks, and 1.3 steals in 28.6 minutes per contest, making 56.0% of his shot attempts from the floor and 63.3% from the free throw line.

As we noted earlier this morning, the Pelicans entered the day as the only team with an open two-way slot. Given that Wednesday is the last day for teams to sign players to two-way contracts during the 2025/26 regular season, an update on New Orleans’ plans had been expected.

Oduro will join guard Trey Alexander and center Hunter Dickinson as the Pelicans’ two-way players and will be eligible to be active for up to 11 regular season games for New Orleans for the rest of the season.

Pelicans Only Team With Two-Way Opening As Deadline Looms

It’s Wednesday, March 4, which means today is the last day that teams can sign players to two-way contracts for the 2025/26 season, as we outlined earlier this week.

As the day begins, 87 of the 90 two-way slots around the NBA are currently occupied, with two more set to be filled shortly. The Hawks and Cavaliers both have two-way openings, but Atlanta is reportedly signing guard Keshon Gilbert and Cleveland is set to add big man Olivier Sarr.

That leaves the Pelicans as the league’s only team with a two-way contract spot available. In all likelihood, New Orleans will fill that slot by the end of the day on Wednesday, since the financial cost would be minimal and the cap impact would be nonexistent.

That doesn’t necessarily mean the Pelicans will be the only team to make a two-way roster move today. Other clubs could make some last-minute changes by either waiving current two-way players or promoting them to standard contracts in order to back-fill their two-way slot with a newcomer. While two-way players can be elevated to the 15-man roster anytime up until the last day of the regular season, a team that does so after Wednesday wouldn’t be able to sign a new two-way player in his place.

Trail Blazers guard Caleb Love, Grizzlies forward Olivier-Maxence Prosper, and Mavericks big man Moussa Cisse are among the notable players on two-way contracts who are nearing their respective games played limits and could be candidates for promotions, though not all of those clubs currently have space available on their 15-man rosters.

A year ago on March 4, seven players officially signed new two-way contracts, with one two-way player waived and four others promoted to standard contracts. Two years ago, March 4 brought six two-way signings and a pair of cuts involving two-way players.

It remains to be seen how busy today will be relative to the last couple two-way contract deadline days, but we’ll be monitoring transaction reports and announcements throughout Wednesday and bringing you all the latest updates.