There has been no shortage of free agent signings across the NBA since the trade deadline, but several clubs still have at least one open roster spot as we near the home stretch of the season.
Using our roster counts tracker, let’s check in on which teams have openings and which are most likely to fill them in the short term.
Teams with multiple open spots on their standard 15-man rosters:
- New Orleans Pelicans
- Sacramento Kings
The Pelicans and Kings are both currently carrying 13 players on standard contracts, which teams are permitted to do for up to 14 days at a time or 28 days in total during a season.
New Orleans dipped down to 13 players last Thursday by buying out Javonte Green, which means the club will have until next Thursday (March 6) to get back to 14 players. Two-way player Brandon Boston is considered a strong candidate for a promotion, though he’s still eight games away from his 50-game limit because he has been out since February 8 with a sprained ankle.
Sacramento, meanwhile, dropped to 13 players when Daishen Nix‘s 10-day contract expired last Monday night. The Kings need to re-add a 14th man by next Tuesday (March 4) in order to adhere to the NBA’s roster rules.
Teams with one open spot on their standard 15-man rosters:
- Atlanta Hawks
- Boston Celtics
- Golden State Warriors
- Note: Two of the Warriors’ 14 players are on 10-day contracts.
- Indiana Pacers
- Milwaukee Bucks
- Minnesota Timberwolves
- New York Knicks
The Celtics, Bucks, Timberwolves, and Knicks are all deep into luxury tax territory and may not be in any rush to add a 15th man, since that player would cost exponentially more once tax penalties are taken into account. New York is currently restricted by a hard cap but could sign a player as soon as February 28.
The Hawks and Pacers have enough breathing room below the tax not to worry about surpassing that line, so they may look to add someone sooner rather than later, perhaps on a 10-day contract.
The Warriors, meanwhile, will dip back to 12 players once the 10-day contracts for Kevin Knox and Yuri Collins expire this Friday night. Golden State has some hard-cap issues to navigate for the rest of the season and might not want to get back to 14 players right away.
Teams with full standard 15-man rosters that include one 10-day contract:
- Brooklyn Nets
- Cleveland Cavaliers
- Dallas Mavericks
- Memphis Grizzlies
- San Antonio Spurs
- Toronto Raptors
- Utah Jazz
- Washington Wizards
These teams each have 14 players on standard contracts and one on a 10-day deal. With one exception, they’re all below the tax line and could continue cycling through 10-day signings or add a player on a rest-of-season contract when their current 10-day deals expire.
The one exception is Dallas. The Mavericks are right up against their hard cap, so once Moses Brown‘s 10-day contract ends, they won’t be able to bring in a new 15th man (or bring Brown back) until April 10.
Teams with an open two-way slot:
- Brooklyn Nets
- Golden State Warriors
The Warriors will reportedly fill their open two-way slot with Australian guard Taran Armstrong, so the Nets are really the only team with a two-way spot available, having promoted Tyrese Martin to a standard contract last Thursday.
It’s a pretty safe bet Brooklyn will fill that opening at some point before March 4, which is the deadline for two-way signings. You can also count on several other teams promoting, waiving, and signing two-way players before that deadline.
Does this mean Knicks can’t sign TJ Warren till April 10. Seems TJ is their only option at this point. Thanks
Their hard cap isn’t quite as restrictive as Dallas’ — they can sign someone as of Feb. 28 (just added that to the story).
I think the Nets will use their open two-way spot on Tyson Etienne since he has generated some interest around the league with his shooting.
I believe the NYK will add a 15th man (Warren probably) as soon as they’re able to under the hard cap. The “exponentially more” would only apply to 500K or so, which I can’t see it being a driving factor.
Gui Santos is not on a 10 day Contract; you mean Yuri Collins.
With the Warriors firing on all cylinders, and JK coming back soon, they should try out players on 10-day contacts for next season. Trying to get a new player this late in the season is probably not a good idea. The chemistry would be all off.
Thanks. That’s been fixed.
Not much is out there but a list of names currently avail before Mar 1 might be a good article broken down by positions
Not a fun article to write/research, maybe the interns got some free time!