We’re now a month-and-a-half into the 2022 free agent period, and all but one of the NBA’s 30 teams have signed at least one free agent (the Pelicans are the only one that hasn’t). With training camps set to tip off next month, Hoops Rumors is here to help you keep track of which players are heading to which teams this offseason.
To this end, we present our Free Agent Tracker, a feature we’ve had each year since our inception in 2012. Using our tracker, you can quickly look up deals, sorting by team, position, free agent type, and a handful of other variables.
A few notes on the tracker:
- Some of the information you’ll find in the tracker will reflect tentative agreements, rather than finalized deals. As signings become official, we’ll continue to update and modify the data as needed.
- Similarly, contract years and dollars will be based on what’s been reported to date, so in some cases those amounts will be approximations rather than official figures. Salaries aren’t necessarily fully guaranteed either.
- Players who have reportedly agreed to training camp/Exhibit 10 deals won’t be added to the tracker until those deals become official.
- A restricted free agent who signs an offer sheet won’t be included in the tracker right away. We’ll wait to hear whether the player’s original team will match or pass on that offer sheet before we update our tracker, in order to avoid any confusion.
- If you’re viewing the tracker on our mobile site, be sure to turn your phone sideways to see more details.
Our 2022 Free Agent Tracker can be found anytime on the right sidebar of our desktop site under “Hoops Rumors Features,” and it’s also under the “Tools” menu atop the site. On our mobile site, it can be found in our menu under “Free Agent Lists.”
The tracker will be updated throughout the offseason, so be sure to check back for the latest info. If you have any corrections, please let us know right here.
Our lists of free agents by position/type and by team break down the players who have yet to reach contract agreements.
Which area produces the best lead guards historically, NorCal (Kidd/KJ/Dame/etc), SoCal (Westbrook/Ball bros/BDavis/etc), Chi (Zeke/Wade/Rose/etc) or North Carolina (Paul/Curry/Wall/etc)?
@Sankara
What? No love for NY? Bob Cousy, Tony Archibal, Mark Jackson, Kenny Anderson, Steph Marbury, Rod Strickland, Lenny Wilkens, Kemba Walker, Donovan Mitchell, Richie Guerin, Dick McGuire and Kenny Smith. not to mention those that CERTAINLY benefited from that NY city tap water during their early developmental years that gave them their special powers like Jordan. And we can’t forget those guys who may not have been NBA starters but most certainly have been influential to the NBA ball handling culture like Rafer “Skip 2 my Lou” and the creator of one of the most devastating moves used in the NBA to create separation, The “shammgod” created by God Shamgod. Add thrre colorful, infamous and notorious baller turned drug kingpin Peewee Kirkland to the list of hardwood ball handlers that influenced future generation of nba guards.
Let me edit myself. I don’t want to pull a Christopher Columbus on anyone. Shammgod didn’t CREATE the move called the Shammgod here in the US. There were a couple of Euro players in the 80s and 90s that used it first but God Shammgod was the first American ballplayer to use it and use it frequently during his high school and college age years. He only spent 1 year in the nba.
So no answer to the question?