Hoops Rumors Originals

Community Shootaround: Ben Simmons

Throughout the offseason, there have been indications that Nets guard Ben Simmons has overcome the physical issues that cut short his 2022/23 season and that he’ll be healthy and ready to go when training camp opens.

Brooklyn general manager Sean Marks started the speculation at his end-of-season press conference after the team was eliminated from the playoffs in April. Marks told reporters that Simmons didn’t appear to need another back surgery and would likely be fully healthy by the start of September.

Simmons got some social media buzz in June when he posted workout photos on Instagram, and a month later, Marc J. Spears of Andscape shared a quote from a source who said Simmons is “as healthy as he has ever been since his last year in Philly.” A day later, Ian Begley of SNY.tv reported that Simmons had fully completed rehab following a back nerve impingement that sidelined him for the last six weeks of the season.

In early August, teammate Cameron Johnson said in an interview that he expects Simmons to be “if not full form, pretty close to it.” He added that he had recently talked to Simmons and believes he’s in “a good place.”

A healthy Simmons would obviously make a huge difference for the Nets, who are trying to establish a new identity after trading Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving in February. Johnson, Mikal Bridges and Nic Claxton are the foundation of the team, and Simmons could turn them into a legitimate contender if he becomes anything close to the All-Star that he was in Philadelphia.

Of course, there are caveats. Simmons decided not to join the Australian team for the World Cup after raising the possibility in May. He came to an agreement with the national team that he would skip the tournament while continuing to prepare for the upcoming NBA season while leaving open the possibility of playing in the 2024 Olympics.

Anyone who has followed the Nets since Simmons was acquired in February of 2022 knows there have been other encouraging health reports, which are eventually followed by setbacks.

Simmons is owed $37.9MM for the upcoming season and $40.3MM for 2024/25. The contract is considered among the worst in the league, but only because Simmons hasn’t been able to play. It becomes much more reasonable — and possibly even tradable — if he gets to be healthy and productive again.

We want to know what you think. Will Simmons be able to get back to normal after two straight seasons marred by injuries and off-court issues, or is the All-Star version of Simmons gone forever? Please leave your comments in the space below.

Teams Have Until Next Thursday To Stretch 2023/24 Salaries

Thursday, August 31 is the last day that an NBA team will be able to waive a player who has a guaranteed salary for 2023/24 and stretch that player’s ’23/24 salary across three seasons.

[RELATED: Hoops Rumors Glossary: Stretch Provision]

A player who is waived between September 1 and the end of the 2023/24 season can still have his cap hit(s) for 2024/25 and future seasons stretched across multiple years, assuming he’s owed guaranteed money beyond this season. But his ’23/24 cap charge would remain unchanged in that scenario, unless he reaches a buyout agreement with his team.

The stretch provision allows teams to gain some short-term relief at the cost of reduced long-term flexibility. It’s used most frequently by teams in the luxury tax that want to either lower their tax bill (or duck out of tax territory entirely) or by teams that want to create a little extra cap room to accommodate a specific roster move.

Teams haven’t employed the stretch provision all that frequently in recent years. In fact, it hasn’t been used at all so far this offseason.

However, the Mavericks reportedly intend to utilize it when they waive center JaVale McGee, who is owed a $5,734,280 guaranteed salary for 2023/24 and holds a $6,007,341 player option for ’24/25.

Since the stretch provision allows a team to spread the player’s remaining salary across twice his remaining years, plus one additional year, Dallas would be able to stretch McGee’s $11,741,621 over five seasons. That would work out to annual dead-money cap hits of $2,348,324 through 2027/28.

There aren’t many other obvious candidates to have their 2023/24 salaries stretched, but the deadline is still worth keeping in mind for the possibilities it will take off the table. Any player on a guaranteed expiring contract who is waived after August 31 will have his remaining salary count entirely against his team’s ’23/24 books.

NBA Teams With Fewest Players On Guaranteed Contracts

As of Wednesday, 11 of the NBA’s 30 teams are carrying at least 15 players on guaranteed contracts and are unlikely to have many additional offseason acquisitions in store. Another 11 teams are carrying either 13 or 14 players on guaranteed deals.

As our roster counts page shows, that leaves eight clubs carrying 12 or fewer players on fully guaranteed deals. That doesn’t necessarily mean that all eight of those teams will sign free agents to guaranteed contracts before the regular season begins, but it’s worth checking in on them to take a closer look at their roster situations.

[RELATED: 2023/24 Non-Guaranteed Contracts By Team]

Boston Celtics

The only team with just 11 players on fully guaranteed contracts, the Celtics are also carrying Dalano Banton and Luke Kornet on partially guaranteed or non-guaranteed deals. Banton and Kornet seem like good bets to make the 15-man regular season roster, but Boston would still have to add a 14th man for opening night.

Based on recent reports, it sounds like the Celtics are eyeing forwards and wings for that 14th spot, with T.J. Warren, Lamar Stevens, and Louis King among the free agents working out for the club.

Charlotte Hornets

Although they only have 12 players on fully guaranteed contracts, the Hornets have no shortage of candidates for their final two or three roster spots. P.J. Washington is a restricted free agent and still seems more likely to return than to head elsewhere — he would take the 13th slot.

Charlotte also has Frank Ntilikina, Kobi Simmons, and JT Thor on partially guaranteed or non-guaranteed salaries, with Theo Maledon still a two-way restricted free agent. So even if No. 31 overall pick James Nnaji becomes a draft-and-stash player and doesn’t sign an NBA contract immediately, the Hornets have plenty of options to fill out their roster without making outside additions.

Cleveland Cavaliers

The Cavaliers have 12 guaranteed contracts on their books, with Sam Merrill on a non-guaranteed minimum deal as their 13th man. Cleveland is a safe bet to make at least one more free agent addition — the club is said to be on the lookout for solid veteran depth, without a specific position in mind. The Cavs will likely wait out the market and see which of the top remaining free agents are willing to accept minimum-salary offers.

Houston Rockets

Although the Rockets only have 12 players on fully guaranteed contracts, Aaron Holiday – whose partial guarantee exceeds $1MM – will likely make the roster as a 13th man. Houston still has a good deal of room to maneuver below the luxury tax line and could easily add two more players without any financial concerns.

Perhaps one of the team’s four Exhibit 10 players or three two-way players will earn a promotion with a strong preseason, but it’s still worth keeping an eye on the Rockets to see if they have one more move up their sleeves in free agency or on the trade market.

Miami Heat

The Heat have a full 21-man offseason roster, but only 12 of those players have guaranteed standard contracts.

Orlando Robinson, who has a small partial guarantee, should make the 15-man roster, and two-way player Jamal Cain is a candidate to be converted to a standard deal, but Miami has more ambitious targets in mind. If the Heat make a trade for Damian Lillard, they’ll likely send out more players than they take back and could fill out their roster with veteran free agents.

New York Knicks

Even with Jericho Sims‘ salary for 2023/24 now fully guaranteed, the Knicks have just 12 players on guaranteed contracts. Isaiah Roby, DaQuan Jeffries, and Duane Washington are in the mix for 15-man roster spots on their non-guaranteed deals.

New York also has a pair of two-way players – Nathan Knight and Dylan Windler – with multiple years of NBA experience, so they may be candidates for promotions. The Knicks are likely keeping their options open for possible Evan Fournier trades too, recognizing that they could potentially use his pseudo-expiring $18.9MM contract to take back two or three players in a trade.

Portland Trail Blazers

Like the Heat, the Trail Blazers are in a bit of a holding pattern while they wait to see how the Lillard situation plays out. For now, they have 12 players on guaranteed contracts, with Moses Brown on a partially guaranteed deal. But if they end up acquiring, say, three players in exchange for Lillard, their projected 15-man roster will fill up in a hurry.

Utah Jazz

Of all the teams listed in this article, the Jazz may have the fewest roster decisions to make before the season. In addition to their 12 players on guaranteed salaries, they’re carrying Kris Dunn, Omer Yurtseven, and Luka Samanic on partially guaranteed or non-guaranteed contracts. Utah may simply hang onto those three players and set its 15-man regular season roster without any further tweaks.

Poll: Will Team USA Win 2023 FIBA World Cup?

The 2023 FIBA World Cup will begin on Friday, with Team USA’s schedule tipping off on Saturday when the Americans face New Zealand in the first of three group-play games. The 32-team field will be narrowed to 16 teams at the end of the first group-play stage, then eight of 16 teams will advance from the second group-play stage to the single-elimination knockout round.

In the last World Cup, in 2019, a heavily favored Team USA squad advanced to the eight-team knockout round, but lost to France in the quarterfinals and then to Serbia in a consolation contest before defeating Poland to claim seventh place.

This time around, the U.S. is once again missing its very best players, but has put together a talented, balanced roster led by rising stars such as Anthony Edwards, Mikal Bridges, and Brandon Ingram. Team USA went 5-0 in exhibition play leading up to the World Cup and will once again enter the tournament as an overwhelming frontrunner.

The oddsmakers at BetOnline.ag list the U.S. as a -120 favorite, with no other country given better than +800 odds to win the title. France and Canada are considered the next-best bets behind Team USA.

The French club is headed up by several veterans of international play, including NBAers like Rudy Gobert, Evan Fournier, and Nicolas Batum. France placed third in the 2019 World Cup after knocking off Team USA in the quarterfinals and will be looking to move up the podium this time around.

Canada doesn’t have a recent history of success in international competitions, but will have one of the most NBA-heavy rosters in the tournament, with an All-NBA First Teamer (Shai Gilgeous-Alexander) leading the way. As Michael Grange of Sportsnet.ca tweets, the Canadian 12-man roster, finalized on Wednesday, also features RJ Barrett, Luguentz Dort, Dillon Brooks, Kelly Olynyk, Nickeil Alexander-Walker, and Dwight Powell.

According to BetOnline.ag, the other teams that make up the top eight contenders for this year’s World Cup are Australia, Spain (the defending champions), Serbia, Slovenia, and Germany.

As we noted earlier today, the Australians have finalized a talented 12-man roster that features Josh Giddey, Dyson Daniels, Joe Ingles, Matisse Thybulle, Josh Green, and Patty Mills.

Spain is missing 2019 World Cup MVP Ricky Rubio, while the Serbians are without reigning NBA Finals MVP Nikola Jokic, but both countries still have enough talent to be considered serious threats. Slovenia is led by perennial NBA All-Star Luka Doncic, while the German team includes NBAers like Franz Wagner, Moritz Wagner, and Dennis Schröder.

We want to know what you think. With the U.S. team considered a slight favorite vs. the rest of the field, do you like Team USA to take home the gold after its disappointing finish in 2019? Or do you think another team – perhaps one whose roster has had a chance to develop more chemistry in international games – will knock off the Americans and claim the title?

Vote in our poll, then head to the comment section below to share your predictions!

Hoops Rumors Glossary: Veteran Contract Extension

An NBA team that want to re-sign a player before he reaches free agency can do so, but only at certain times and if his contract meets specific criteria.

Rookie scale extensions, which can be completed for former first-round picks between the third and fourth years of their rookie scale contracts, were the NBA’s most common form of extension in the past. But the league relaxed its criteria for veteran extensions in its 2017 Collective Bargaining Agreement and loosened them further in the 2023 CBA, resulting in a significant increase in those deals in recent years. They’ve now overtaken rookie scale extensions as the league’s most frequently signed extensions.

[RELATED: 2023/24 NBA Contract Extension Tracker]

A veteran extension is any contract extension that tacks additional years onto a contract that wasn’t a rookie scale deal. Even if the player is still on his first NBA contract, he can technically receive a “veteran” extension if he was initially signed as a second-round pick or an undrafted free agent rather than via the league’s rookie scale for first-rounders.

Here’s a full breakdown of how players become eligible to sign veteran extensions, and the limits that come along with them:


When can a player sign a veteran contract extension?

A team that wants to sign a player to a veteran extension wouldn’t be able to simply complete that extension one year after the initial contract was signed. The team must wait a specified period of time before the player becomes extension-eligible, as follows:

  • If the player initially signed a three- or four-year contract: Second anniversary of signing date.
    • Note: The second anniversary date also applies if the player previously signed an extension that lengthened his contract to three or four total seasons.
  • If the player initially signed a five- or six-year contract: Third anniversary of signing date.
    • Note: The third anniversary date also applies if the player previously signed an extension that lengthened his contract to five or six total seasons.
  • If the player previously renegotiated his contract and increased his salary by more than 10%: Third anniversary of renegotiation date.

A contract that only covers one or two seasons is ineligible to be extended.

The anniversary dates for signings have been complicated in recent years by the COVID-19 pandemic that forced the NBA to adjust its usual calendar during the 2019/20, ’20/21 and ’21/22 league years. For instance, the 2020 free agency period was delayed until November 21 instead of beginning on July 1.

Anthony Davis signed a five-year free agent contract on December 3, 2020, which would normally make him ineligible to be extended until December 3, 2023. However, the NBA adjusted that three-year waiting period to better reflect certain stages of the offseason rather than adhering to specific dates on the calendar. As a result, Davis was able to sign a new extension with the Lakers this year on August 4.

Going forward, the usual two- and three-year waiting periods will once again apply. For instance, after signing a three-year extension that lengthened his contract to five total seasons, Davis will become extension-eligible again on August 4, 2026.

It’s worth noting that an extension signed between October 2 and the start of the regular season is considered – for the purpose of determining its anniversary – to have been signed on October 1.

How many years can a player receive on a veteran extension?

A veteran extension can be for up to five years, including the year(s) remaining on the previous contract. The current league year always counts as one of those five years, even if an extension is agreed to as late as June 30.

For instance, when Bogdan Bogdanovic signed an extension in March with the Hawks, he was in the final year of previous contract, which ran through 2022/23. He added four extra years via the extension, maxing out at five years overall.

If a player signs a “designated” veteran extension, he can receive up to six total years, as we cover in a separate glossary entry. Devin Booker, Karl-Anthony Towns, and Nikola Jokic all took this route during the 2022 offseason after meeting the super-max criteria; Jaylen Brown has been the lone super-max recipient in the 2023 offseason.

How much money can a player receive on a veteran extension?

The first-year salary in a veteran extension can be worth up to 140% of the salary in the final year of the player’s previous contract or 140% of the NBA’s estimated average salary, whichever is greater. Annual raises are limited to 8% of the first-year extension salary.

When Dejounte Murray signed an extension with the Hawks this offseason, he added four extra years to the one year and $17,714,000 (base salary) remaining on his previous deal. Because that $17.7MM cap hit greatly exceeds the league’s estimated average salary, Murray was eligible to earn up to 140% of his final-year salary in the first year of his extension. As such, his new contract begins next season with a base salary of $24,799,600, with 8% annual raises from there.

In 2023/24, the NBA’s estimated average salary is $11,958,000, so a player earning less than that amount would be eligible to receive an extension worth up to 140% of that figure. That would work out to a starting salary of $16,741,200 and a four-year total of about $75MM.

A contract extension can’t exceed the maximum salary that a player is eligible to earn, so there are some instances in which a player won’t be able to get a full 40% raise on a new extension.

For instance, Davis’ new three-year extension should technically award him up to a 40% raise on his $43,219,440 salary in 2024/25. However, that would work out to a $60,507,216 salary in 2025/26 — even if the salary cap increases by the maximum allowable 10% in each of the next two summers, Davis’ maximum salary in ’25/26 would be $57,604,894 (35% of the cap). So he won’t receive a full 40% raise on his new deal.

Because a player’s own personal maximum salary on an extension is always at least 5% of his salary in the previous season, there are scenarios in which a player could exceed the league-wide maximum salary. But given the rate at which the cap has increased in recent years, there aren’t any practical examples of that at this point.

Designated veteran extensions and renegotiated contracts have slightly different rules for salaries and raises than standard veteran extensions. You can read about those differences in our glossary entries on those subjects.

Can a player sign a veteran extension as part of a trade?

The NBA’s Collective Bargaining Agreement does allow for extend-and-trade transactions, but the rules governing them are more limiting than for standard veteran extensions.

A player eligible for an extension can sign one in conjunction with a trade, but he would be limited to three overall years and a starting salary worth 105% of the final-year salary on his previous deal. Subsequent annual raises are limited to 5% as well.

A player who receives an extension that exceeds those extend-and-trade limits becomes ineligible to be traded for six months. Conversely, a player who is involved in a trade becomes ineligible to sign an extension for six months if the extension would exceed the extend-and-trade limits.

Kristaps Porzingis‘s two-year extension with the Celtics is an example of a recent extension that didn’t exceed the extend-and-trade limits — he took a pay cut from $36,016,200 to $29,268,293 and the deal lengthened his contract to three total years. Because that extension fell within the extend-and-trade parameters, Porzingis was permitted to sign it less than a month after being traded.

Conversely, since Davis’ new extension lengthens his total contract to five years and will feature raises exceeding 5%, he’ll be ineligible to be traded until February 4, six months after he signed the deal.

These extend-and-trade restrictions will be modified beginning at the start of the 2024/25 league year. At that time, the extend-and-trade limits will increase from three total years and a starting salary up to 105% of the player’s previous salary to four total years and a starting salary up to 120% of the player’s previous salary (or 120% of the estimated average salary, for players earning below the average). The maximum 5% annual raise will remain in place.

Players who renegotiate their current-year salary as part of an extension can’t be traded for six months. This applies to players like Domantas Sabonis and Jordan Clarkson this summer.

An extension-eligible player can’t be extended-and-traded between the end of the season and June 30 if there’s a chance he could become a free agent that July. That rule applies to both veterans on expiring contracts and veterans with team or player options that have yet to be exercised.

For instance, prior to being traded to Boston, Porzingis wouldn’t have been eligible to sign an extension with the Wizards until he had exercised his player option for 2023/24.

What are the other rules related to veteran extensions?

There are many more minor rules and guidelines related to veteran extensions, including several involving bonuses and option years. A full breakdown can be found in Larry Coon’s CBA FAQ, but here are some of the notable ones most likely to come into play:

  • A contract with an option can be extended if the player opts in or the team picks up the option.
  • A contract with an option can also be extended if the option is declined, as long as the extension adds at least two new years to the deal and the first-year salary isn’t worth less than the option would have been. The only exception to this rule involves an early termination option — a contract with an ETO can’t be extended if the ETO is exercised, ending the contract early. This is why Davis waived his ETO when he signed his extension with the Lakers earlier this month.
  • A newly signed extension can contain a player or team option, but not an early termination option.
  • If a contract contains incentive bonuses, a veteran extension must contain the same bonuses. The bonus amounts can be increased or decreased by up to 8%, but they must still be part of the deal. An extension also can’t contain bonuses that weren’t part of the original contract.
  • If a contract includes an unearned trade bonus, it doesn’t necessarily have to be applied to the extension. If the team and player elect not to carry over the trade bonus to the extension and the player is dealt before the extension takes effect, the application of the bonus would ignore the extension.

Note: This is a Hoops Rumors Glossary entry. Our glossary posts will explain specific rules relating to trades, free agency, or other aspects of the NBA’s Collective Bargaining Agreement. Larry Coon’s CBA FAQ was used in the creation of this post.

Previous versions of this post were published in 2019 and 2022.

Hoops Rumors’ 2023 NBA Free Agent Tracker

We’re nearly two months into the 2023 free agent period, and while the news cycle has slowed down drastically since early July, contract agreements continue to be announced and/or reported on a near-daily basis.

Hoops Rumors is here to help you keep tabs on which players are heading to which teams this offseason, using our Free Agent Tracker, a feature we’ve maintained 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 are 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 2023 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.

Where Thunder’s Roster Crunch Stands

At this time last week, the Thunder were carrying 20 players on standard contracts, meaning they needed to trade or waive five of those players before opening night in order to meet the NBA’s regular season roster requirements.

Oklahoma City is now two-fifths of the way there, having recently waived TyTy Washington Jr. and Usman Garuba, two players who were acquired in salary-dump trades last month. The Thunder signed Lindy Waters and Olivier Sarr to two-way contracts with their newly opened roster spots and now have 18 players on standard deals, with three on two-way pacts.

That leaves three more players for the Thunder to waive or trade before the season begins, and while they have plenty of time to make those decisions, they won’t necessarily be easy ones.

Victor Oladipo and Davis Bertans look like obvious release candidates. Oladipo tore his left knee patellar tendon in the spring and is on an expiring contract, so it seems unlikely that he has a place in the Thunder’s short- or long-term plans. Bertans averaged a career-low 10.9 minutes per game last season and was another salary-dump acquisition whose days in OKC are probably numbered.

However, Oladipo’s $9.45MM expiring salary and Bertans’ $17MM cap hit could be useful if the Thunder want to make a bigger trade before February’s 2024 deadline. Plus, Bertans is owed a partial guarantee of $5MM on his $16MM salary for 2024/25, so Oklahoma City would have to eat that dead money by waiving him now. The club may prefer to hang onto him to see if he can be used as a trade chip down the road.

Theoretically, Isaiah Joe, Aaron Wiggins, and Jack White make sense as release candidates. They’re the only three of the Thunder’s 18 players on standard contracts who don’t have guaranteed salaries for 2023/24. Joe and Wiggins have non-guaranteed minimum-salary deals, while White’s minimum salary is partially guaranteed for $600K.

But Joe was one of the NBA’s best three-point shooters in 2022/23, knocking down 40.9% of his outside attempts in a regular rotation role for OKC. Wiggins was a valuable rotation piece too, posting an impressive shooting line of .512/.393/.831 in 70 games (18.5 MPG).

And while White doesn’t have that same track record of success, the Thunder went out of their way to sign him away from the Nuggets this offseason after Denver issued him a two-way qualifying offer. He would be ineligible for a two-way deal with Oklahoma City if he’s cut, so it appears the club is serious about giving him a shot at a 15-man roster spot.

Among the Thunder’s other players with guaranteed salaries, Tre Mann, Jeremiah Robinson-Earl, and Aleksej Pokusevski may not have roster spots locked up.

A 2021 first-round pick, Mann had a promising rookie year but took a step backward in 2022/23 as his three-point rate dipped from 36.0% to 31.5% and he saw his role reduced. He’s owed $3.2MM this season and Oklahoma City will have to decide by October 31 whether to exercise a $4.9MM team option for 2024/25.

Robinson-Earl, another 2021 draftee, has been relatively productive in two NBA seasons, averaging 7.2 PPG and 4.9 RPG on .427/.344/.781 shooting in 92 games (20.7 MPG). But his $1.9MM salary would be easy enough to move on from, especially since he’s not owed any guaranteed money beyond this season. Jaylin Williams has passed him on the frontcourt depth chart and Chet Holmgren will also be in the mix in 2023/24.

Pokusevksi, meanwhile, has flashed tantalizing upside since being drafted in the first round in 2020 and boosted his shooting percentages significantly in 2022/23, posting career highs of 43.4% from the floor and 36.5% on threes. However, he still hasn’t really put it all together for an extended period, and he’s on an expiring $5MM contract — it’s unclear if the Thunder envision keeping him beyond his current deal. If he remains on the roster, he’d be eligible for a rookie scale extension this offseason or restricted free agency next summer.

While no one else on the Thunder’s roster is a legitimate release candidate, it’s possible the team could consider trading someone else – perhaps Kenrich Williams – though a handful of players (Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Josh Giddey, Jalen Williams, etc.) are untouchable.

If I had to make a prediction today, I’d project Oladipo and Mann as the first two odd men out, with Bertans, White, or Robinson-Earl as the third roster casualty. It would surprise me if Joe, Wiggins, or Pokusevski is waived, though a trade involving one of those players certainly isn’t out of the question.

What do you think? Which three (or more) of the Thunder players currently on standard contracts won’t be on the team’s 15-man roster when the season begins in October? Head to the comment section below to share your thoughts.

Hoops Rumors Community Shootaround: Hornets’ Offseason

The Hornets had a 27-55 record last season, 16 fewer victories than the previous season, but they’ve been relatively quiet this summer.

Perhaps the biggest news to come out of Charlotte this offseason was Michael Jordan’s decision to sell his majority stake in the team. The roster looks much like it did at the end of last year.

The most significant developments were signing LaMelo Ball to a five-year max extension and getting the No. 2 pick in the draft. The Hornets used the No. 2 selection on Brandon Miller, who will likely jump right into the starting lineup at one of the forward spots.

Miles Bridges, who missed all of last season due to legal issues, accepted his qualifying offer as he tries to rebuild his value en route to becoming an unrestricted free agent next summer. Bridges and Miller could form the starting forward duo, though Gordon Hayward and P.J. Washington may have something to say about that. Shoulder, hamstring and ankle injuries limited Hayward to 50 games last season but he started every game he was in uniform.

Washington remains a restricted free agent, though it appears the most likely outcome is that he also accepts his qualifying offer or works out a new deal with the Hornets.

Terry Rozier and Cody Martin — limited to seven games last season due to knee issues — are 1-2 on the depth chart at shooting guard, though Bridges could see some time there. Everything revolves around Ball and the Hornets will be much more dangerous if he can stay on the court. The star point guard was limited to 36 games last season. Nick Smith Jr, the team’s other first-round pick, could emerge as his backup.

That leads us to today’s topic: What do you think of the Hornets’ offseason? With the return of Bridges and the addition of No. 2 overall pick Miller, are they a playoff team this upcoming season? Or are they destined for another trip to the lottery?

Please take to the comments section to weigh in on this topic. We look forward to your input.

Traded Second Round Picks For 2024 NBA Draft

We’re using the space below to keep tabs on each NBA team’s second round pick for 2024, continually updating it as necessary throughout the year. Our list of traded first round picks for 2024 can be found right here.

We’ve listed all 30 teams here, so even if a team hasn’t traded its second round pick, that will be noted. We’ll also provide details on protections for each traded pick, including what happens to the pick in 2025 if it doesn’t change hands in 2024.

Here’s the full breakdown on the status of each 2024 second-round pick:


Atlantic

  • Boston Celtics: Traded to Mavericks.
  • Brooklyn Nets: Traded to Grizzlies or Rockets (55-58 protection).
    • If this pick lands in the top 54, the Grizzlies will receive the most favorable of the Warriors’ and Nets’ 2024 second round picks and the Rockets will receive the least favorable; if this pick lands between 55-58, the Nets would keep it and their obligation to Memphis or Houston would be extinguished.
  • New York Knicks: Traded to Pistons.
  • Philadelphia 76ers: Own pick.
  • Toronto Raptors: Traded to Pacers or Clippers.
    • Details at bottom of page.

Central

  • Chicago Bulls: Traded to Sixers, Pacers, or Warriors.
    • The Sixers will receive the most favorable of the Bulls’ and Pelicans’ 2024 second round picks; the Pacers will receive the least favorable of the two. The Pacers may subsequently flip their pick to the Warriors (details at bottom of page).
  • Cleveland Cavaliers: Traded to Knicks, Clippers, Pacers, or Warriors.
    • Details at bottom of page.
  • Detroit Pistons: Traded to Raptors.
  • Indiana Pacers: Traded swap rights to Clippers.
    • Details at bottom of page.
  • Milwaukee Bucks: Traded to Pacers or Warriors.
    • Details at bottom of page.

Southeast

  • Atlanta Hawks: Traded to Trail Blazers.
  • Charlotte Hornets: Traded to Trail Blazers or Nuggets.
    • The Trail Blazers will receive the most favorable of the Hornets’ and Timberwolves’ 2024 second round picks; the Nuggets will receive the least favorable of the two.
  • Miami Heat: Possibly traded to Hawks or Knicks.
    • The Hawks would receive this pick if it lands between 51-55; the Knicks would receive it if it lands between 56-58; the Heat would keep it if it lands in the top 50. If the Heat keep the pick, their obligations to the Hawks and Knicks would be extinguished.
  • Orlando Magic: Own pick.
  • Washington Wizards: Traded to Jazz or Timberwolves.
    • The Jazz will receive the most favorable of the Wizards’ and Grizzlies’ 2024 second round picks; the Timberwolves will receive the least favorable of the two.

Northwest

  • Denver Nuggets: Traded to Suns.
  • Minnesota Timberwolves: Traded to Trail Blazers or Nuggets.
    • The Trail Blazers will receive the most favorable of the Timberwolves’ and Hornets’ 2024 second round picks; the Nuggets will receive the least favorable of the two.
  • Oklahoma City Thunder: Traded to Grizzlies.
  • Portland Trail Blazers: Traded to Bucks.
  • Utah Jazz: Traded to Knicks, Clippers, Pacers, or Warriors.
    • Details at bottom of page.

Pacific

  • Golden State Warriors: Traded to Grizzlies, Rockets or Cavaliers.
    • If this pick lands in the top 55, the Grizzlies will receive the most favorable of the Warriors’ and Nets’ 2024 second round picks and the Rockets will receive the least favorable; if this pick lands between 56-58, the Cavaliers would receive it. The Warriors’ obligation to the team that doesn’t receive the pick will be extinguished.
  • Los Angeles Clippers: Traded to Lakers.
  • Los Angeles Lakers: Traded to Spurs.
  • Phoenix Suns: Traded to Wizards.
  • Sacramento Kings: Own pick.

Southwest

  • Dallas Mavericks: Traded to Celtics.
  • Houston Rockets: Traded to Hornets.
  • Memphis Grizzlies: Traded to Jazz or Timberwolves.
    • The Jazz will receive the most favorable of the Grizzlies’ and Wizards’ 2024 second round picks; the Timberwolves will receive the least favorable of the two.
  • New Orleans Pelicans: Traded to Sixers, Pacers, or Warriors.
    • The Sixers will receive the most favorable of the Bulls’ and Pelicans’ 2024 second round picks; the Pacers will receive the least favorable of the two. The Pacers may subsequently flip their pick to the Warriors (details at bottom of page).
  • San Antonio Spurs: Possibly traded to Suns or Celtics.
    • The Suns would receive this pick if it lands between 50-54; the Celtics would receive it if it lands between 55-58; the Spurs would keep it if it lands in the top 49. If the Spurs keep the pick, their obligations to the Suns and Celtics would be extinguished.

Here are the details on how the Raptors‘, Cavaliers‘, Pacers‘, and Jazz‘s second round picks will be distributed:

The Knicks will receive the most favorable of:

  1. The Jazz’s 2024 second round pick.
  2. The Cavaliers’ 2024 second round pick.

The Pacers will receive the most favorable of:

  1. The Raptors’ 2024 second round pick.
  2. The most favorable of the Pacers’ 2024 second round pick and the Jazz/Cavaliers 2024 second round pick that the Knicks didn’t acquire.

If the Pacers don’t receive the Raptors’ 2024 second round pick, the Clippers will receive it and the Pacers will end up with the other two picks. If the Pacers do receive the Raptors’ 2024 second round pick, the Clippers will receive the most favorable of the two remaining picks and the Pacers will receive the least favorable.

From there, the Pacers will send the least favorable of the following picks to the Warriors:

  1. The least favorable pick of the two they receive based on the guidelines outlined above.
  2. The least favorable of the Bulls’ and Pelicans’ picks.
  3. The Bucks’ pick.

Information from RealGM was used in the creation of this post.

Only Two NBA Teams Control Their Own 2024 Second-Round Picks

As we noted earlier this week when we took a closer look at the 30 trades that have been completed so far during the NBA offseason, second-round picks have become a more popular form of currency than ever, with 54 second-rounders (50 unprotected) included in summer deals.

It’s perhaps no surprise then that nearly every NBA team has either traded away its 2024 second-round pick or could lose it or swap it if certain conditions are met.

The Magic and Kings are currently the only two NBA teams that fully control their own second-round picks in 2024.

The Sixers also haven’t traded away their own ’24 second-rounder, but will have to forfeit it as a result of an NBA investigation into free agency gun-jumping last year.

Of those two clubs that have unconditional control of their second-round picks in next year’s draft, Orlando is the only one that has never traded that 2024 second-rounder at any time. Sacramento sent its ’24 second-round selection to Detroit in a 2021 deal for Delon Wright, then reacquired it a year later in the trade that sent Marvin Bagley III to the Pistons.

Of the NBA’s 27 other teams outside of Detroit, Sacramento, and Philadelphia, a total of 22 will definitely send their second-round picks to another team next June, having traded them without protections or swap rights.

The Nets will, in all likelihood, join that group. They’d keep their own second-round pick if it ends up between Nos. 56 and 59, but if it’s in the top 55, it will be sent to Houston.

The Heat and Spurs, meanwhile, have traded away their 2024 second-round picks with protection. Miami will keep its second-rounder if it’s in the top 50, but would otherwise have to send it to Atlanta or New York. San Antonio will hang onto its ’24 second-rounder if it’s in the top 49, but would otherwise have to send it to Phoenix or Boston.

Given the expectations for those two teams in 2023/24, the Spurs appear far more likely than the Heat to hang onto their own pick.

Finally, the Pelicans and Pacers have given up swap rights to their second-round picks, but will still control a second-rounder, even if it’s not their own. New Orleans will receive the least favorable of its own ’24 second-rounder and Chicago’s pick. Indiana will end up with the least favorable of its own selection, Cleveland’s second-rounder, Utah’s second-rounder.

We’ll publish a full post this afternoon breaking down all the details on 2024’s traded second-round picks.