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Warriors, Paul Agree To Push Guarantee Date Back To Sunday

The Warriors and Chris Paul have agreed to push back his salary guarantee deadline from Friday to Sunday, according to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski (Twitter link).

Paul’s $30MM salary for 2024/25 will now become fully guaranteed if he remains under contract through June 30 rather than June 28. The move will give Golden State a couple more days to continue exploring trades involving Paul’s expiring contract.

[RELATED: Early NBA Salary Guarantee Dates For 2024/25]

Paul, who turned 39 in May, remained productive in 2023/24, averaging 9.2 points, 6.8 assists, and 3.9 rebounds in 26.4 minutes per game in 58 appearances (18 starts) for the Warriors. He posted a shooting line of .441/.371/.827.

While those are solid numbers for a backup point guard, they don’t warrant a $30MM investment. Still, rather than simply waiving the 12-time All-Star, the Warriors have been scouring the trade market to see if they can use his expiring salary to accommodate a trade.

The NBA’s salary-matching rules only count the guaranteed portion of a player’s cap hit for outgoing purposes in a trade (his incoming value for a trade partner would be his full $30MM), so in order to use CP3 as a trade chip, Golden State will have to partially or fully guaranteed the contract. That scenario would benefit Paul, who wouldn’t make any of that $30MM otherwise if he’s waived, so he has some incentive to lend the Warriors a hand by giving them more time to find a deal.

Paul George is one possible trade candidate who has been linked to the Warriors this week, with Marc Stein reporting on Substack that Golden State has been “prioritizing the pursuit of George above all other business.” The Clippers forward would have to pick up his 2024/25 player option and request a trade for that to be a feasible possibility.

What happens with Paul could have an impact on the Warriors’ negotiations with Klay Thompson. The team will be hard-capped at the second tax apron in 2024/25 after agreeing to send out cash in a trade on Thursday, so there may not be room under that apron to acquire another player with a significant salary and then re-sign Thompson.

Suns’ Josh Okogie To Decline Player Option

Suns guard Josh Okogie will turn down his $2.95MM player option for next season and test free agency, sources tell Michael Scotto of HoopsHype (Twitter link).

Okogie, 25, came to Phoenix as a free agent in 2022 and re-signed with the team last summer on a two-year deal that included the option. The Suns used him mainly in a backup role, as he averaged 4.6 points, 2.6 rebounds and 1.1 assists in 60 games this season while playing 16 minutes per night.

A recent report indicated that Phoenix was hoping Okogie would exercise the option to help with roster stability. Only seven members of this year’s 15-man roster are currently under contract for 2024/25.

The Suns still want to re-sign the veteran wing, according to Gerald Bourguet of PHNX Sports, who suggests (via Twitter) the team has interest in a deal a little above the veteran’s minimum. Phoenix holds Okogie’s Early Bird rights.

Okogie was selected by Minnesota with the 20th pick in the 2018 draft. He spent four years with the Wolves before accepting an offer in Phoenix.

Okogie joins Suns teammates Eric Gordon and Drew Eubanks in declining their options for next season. The team is still awaiting a decision from Damion Lee, who must determine whether to pick up his $2.8MM option by Saturday.

Hawks Trade AJ Griffin To Rockets In Three-Team Deal

6:42pm: The trade is now officially complete, according to press releases from the Hawks and Rockets. Because Atlanta ended up trading the No. 44 pick (Pelle Larsson) and cash to Miami in exchange for No. 43 pick Nikola Djurisic, that trade agreement between the Heat and Hawks has been folded into this one, making it a three-team deal.


1:14pm: The Hawks and Rockets have agreed to a trade that will send forward AJ Griffin to Houston in exchange for the No. 44 pick in Thursday’s draft, reports Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN (Twitter link).

Griffin, the 16th overall pick in the 2022 draft, had a promising rookie season in which he averaged 8.9 points per game with a .465/.390/.894 shooting line in 72 contests (19.5 MPG).

However, he missed time due to leg and ankle issues and personal reasons in 2023/24 and didn’t play much when he was available, averaging just 8.6 minutes per contest in 20 appearances. His scoring numbers cratered to 2.4 PPG on 29.0% shooting (.256 3PT%).

Despite his forgettable sophomore season, Griffin had been a player of interest in Houston for a while, according to Kelly Iko of The Athletic (Twitter link).

The Rockets, who will be operating over the cap but have plenty of breathing room below the luxury tax line, will be able to acquire the 20-year-old without sending out a player because they have a $4.5MM trade exception from last year’s Kevin Porter trade that Griffin will fit into, as Bobby Marks of ESPN tweets. Using a trade exception created last year will hard-cap Houston at the first tax apron for 2024/25.

Griffin will earn a guaranteed $3.89MM salary for next season and the Rockets will have until the end of October to decide whether or not they want to exercise his $5.97MM team option for the ’25/26 season.

The Hawks have been exploring possible deals involving Griffin since February’s trade deadline, per Jake Fischer of Yahoo Sports (Twitter link). The move will help them out a bit financially — as Marks tweets, Atlanta’s projected team salary is now right at the luxury tax line, though it would increase to first tax apron territory in the event that Saddiq Bey gets a qualifying offer.

The Hawks, whose own second-round pick at No. 40 is controlled by Portland, will now have the opportunity to select a player in a similar range at No. 44 tonight.

2024 NBA Draft Results

The 2024 NBA draft is in the books, and we tracked all of this year’s picks in the space below, taking into account each trade agreed upon over the course of the draft.

Here are 2024’s NBA draft results:


First Round:

  1. Atlanta Hawks: Zaccharie Risacher, F, JL Bourg (story)
  2. Washington Wizards: Alexandre Sarr, F/C, Perth (story)
  3. Houston Rockets (from Nets): Reed Sheppard, G, Kentucky (story)
  4. San Antonio Spurs: Stephon Castle, G, UConn
  5. Detroit Pistons: Ron Holland, F, G League Ignite
  6. Charlotte Hornets: Tidjane Salaun, F, Cholet
  7. Portland Trail Blazers: Donovan Clingan, C, UConn
  8. Minnesota Timberwolves (from Raptors via Spurs): Rob Dillingham, G, Kentucky
  9. Memphis Grizzlies: Zach Edey, C, Purdue
  10. Utah Jazz: Cody Williams, G/F, Colorado
  11. Chicago Bulls: Matas Buzelis, F, G League Ignite
  12. Oklahoma City Thunder (from Rockets): Nikola Topic, G, Crvena Zvezda
  13. Sacramento Kings: Devin Carter, G, Providence
  14. Washington Wizards (from Warriors via Trail Blazers): Carlton Carrington, G, Pittsburgh
  15. Miami Heat: Kel’el Ware, C, Indiana
  16. Philadelphia 76ers: Jared McCain, G, Duke
  17. Los Angeles Lakers: Dalton Knecht, F, Tennessee
  18. Orlando Magic: Tristan Da Silva, F, Colorado
  19. Toronto Raptors (from Pacers): Ja’Kobe Walter, G, Baylor
  20. Cleveland Cavaliers: Jaylon Tyson, G, California
  21. New Orleans Pelicans (from Bucks): Yves Missi, C, Baylor
  22. Denver Nuggets (from Suns): DaRon Holmes, F/C, Dayton
  23. Milwaukee Bucks (from Pelicans): AJ Johnson, G, Illawarra
  24. Washington Wizards (from Mavericks via Knicks): Kyshawn George, G, Miami
  25. New York Knicks: Pacome Dadiet, G/F, Ratiopharm Ulm
  26. Oklahoma City Thunder (from Clippers via Wizards and Knicks): Dillon Jones, G/F, Weber State
  27. Minnesota Timberwolves: Terrence Shannon, G, Illinois
  28. Phoenix Suns (from Nuggets): Ryan Dunn, F, Virginia
  29. Utah Jazz (from Thunder): Isaiah Collier, G, USC
  30. Boston Celtics: Baylor Scheierman, G/F, Creighton

Second Round:

  1. Toronto Raptors (from Pistons): Jonathan Mogbo, F/C, San Francisco
  2. Utah Jazz (from Wizards): Kyle Filipowski, F/C, Duke
  3. Milwaukee Bucks (from Trail Blazers): Tyler Smith, F, G League Ignite
  4. New York Knicks (from Hornets via Trail Blazers): Tyler Kolek, G, Marquette
  5. Indiana Pacers (from Spurs): Johnny Furphy, G, Kansas
  6. San Antonio Spurs (from Raptors via Pacers): Juan Nunez, G, Ratiopharm Ulm
  7. Detroit Pistons (from Grizzlies via Timberwolves): Bobi Klintman, F, Cairns
  8. Oklahoma City Thunder (from Jazz via Knicks): Ajay Mitchell, G, UC Santa Barbara
  9. Memphis Grizzlies (from Nets): Jaylen Wells, G, Washington State
  10. Phoenix Suns (from Hawks via Trail Blazers, Thunder, and Knicks): Oso Ighodaro, F, Marquette
  11. Philadelphia 76ers (from Bulls): Adem Bona, C, UCLA
  12. Charlotte Hornets (from Rockets): KJ Simpson, G, Colorado
  13. Atlanta Hawks (from Heat): Nikola Djurisic, G, Mega Basket
  14. Miami Heat (from Warriors via Rockets): Pelle Larsson, G, Arizona
  15. Toronto Raptors (from Kings): Jamal Shead, G, Houston
  16. Los Angeles Clippers (from Pacers): Cam Christie, G, Minnesota
  17. New Orleans Pelicans (from Magic): Antonio Reeves, G, Kentucky
  18. San Antonio Spurs (from Lakers): Harrison Ingram, F, UNC
  19. Indiana Pacers (from Cavaliers): Tristen Newton, G, UConn
  20. Indiana Pacers (from Pelicans): Enrique Freeman, F, Akron
  21. Dallas Mavericks (from Suns via Wizards and Knicks): Melvin Ajinca, G, Saint-Quentin
  22. Golden State Warriors (from Bucks via Warriors, Thunder, and Trail Blazers): Quinten Post, C, Boston College
  23. Memphis Grizzlies (from Knicks via Pistons and Timberwolves): Cam Spencer, G, UConn
  24. Boston Celtics (from Mavericks): Anton Watson, F, Gonzaga
  25. Los Angeles Lakers (from Clippers): Bronny James, G, USC (story)
  26. New York Knicks (from Timberwolves via Nuggets and Suns): Kevin McCullar, G/F, Kansas
  27. Toronto Raptors (from Thunder via Grizzlies and Timberwolves): Ulrich Chomche, C, NBA Academy Africa
  28. New York Knicks (from Celtics via Mavericks): Ariel Hukporti, C, Melbourne

Lakers Select Bronny James With No. 55 Pick

The Lakers have drafted All-NBA Los Angeles forward LeBron James‘ son, Bronny James, with the No. 55 pick out of USC.

Bronny James served as a backup combo guard on a middling Trojans team in 2023/24. USC finished with a 15-18 record and missed the NCAA Tournament, with former head coach Andy Enfield departing for SMU in the offseason.

Across his 25 healthy contests last season, the 6’4″ guard averaged just 4.8 points on .366/.267/.676 shooting splits, along with 2.8 rebounds, 2.1 assists and 0.8 steals a game. His season got off to a late start because he needed to be cleared after suffering cardiac arrest last July.

Isaiah Collier, who started ahead of James and had been considered a possible lottery prospect heading into 2023/24, fell to the Jazz with the No. 29 pick on Wednesday night.

James’ agent, Klutch Sports CEO Rich Paul, was apparently contacting rival clubs during the draft to dissuade them from selecting Bronny prior to the Lakers’ pick. According to Bob Myers of ESPN (Twitter video link), Paul informed other teams that, if drafted ahead of Los Angeles’ pick, Bronny would explore pro opportunities with the NBL in Australia.

Now, Bronny James join a revamped Lakers team – coached by former NBA-sharpshooter-turned-analyst-and-podcaster J.J. Redick – that is angling for an extended playoff run in the West. How many minutes the younger James will earn as likely a deep-bench reserve remains to be seen. LeBron has been vocal in the past about hoping to play alongside his son, and the second they step foot on the floor together, it will be the first time in league history that a father-son duo has achieved that feat.

LeBron James has a $51.4MM player option to return to L.A. next season. With his former podcast co-host coaching the team and his son now joining the team’s roster, it seems like to help the Lakers’ cause.

Nuggets To Trade Reggie Jackson To Hornets

The Nuggets have agreed to trade veteran point guard Reggie Jackson to the Hornets, according to Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN (Twitter link), who hears from a source that Charlotte will also receive three second-round picks in the deal.

The Nuggets will send out their own 2025, 2029, and 2030 second-round picks in the swap, reports Jake Fischer of Yahoo Sports (Twitter link). They’ll receive cash from the Hornets, tweets Matt Moore of Action Network.

The news comes just three days after Jackson picked up his $5.25MM player option with Denver for the 2024/25 season.

Jackson, who originally signed with Denver on the buyout market in February 2023, struggled down the stretch during the Nuggets’ championship season, making just 38.3% of his field goal attempts (27.9% of his three-pointers) in 16 regular season games before falling out of the rotation for the playoffs.

However, the Nuggets opted not only to retain him for the 2023/24 season but to give him a raise, signing him to a two-year, $10.25MM contract using their taxpayer mid-level exception. The 34-year-old responded with a strong bounce-back season, averaging 10.2 points, 3.8 assists, and 1.9 rebounds in 22.2 minutes per game, with a shooting line of .431/.359/.806.

Despite that solid ’23/24 season, the Nuggets are essentially moving Jackson in a salary-dump deal, attaching future draft assets to move him and create some additional breathing room below the tax aprons.

According to Bobby Marks of ESPN (Twitter link), Denver’s team salary is now right around the $171MM tax line and approximately $19MM below the second apron. If the club wants to remain below that second apron and re-sign veteran wing Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, who is declining his $15.4MM player option, additional cost-cutting moves would likely be required.

It’s unclear whether or not Jackson will be in the Hornets’ plans for 2024/25. The team is expected to operate under the cap this offseason, so it could use cap room to take on the guard’s expiring contract. The $8MM room exception can also be used to acquire players via trade now, as cap expert Yossi Gozlan tweets.

Jamal Murray Expected To Agree To Four-Year Max Extension

The Nuggets and point guard Jamal Murray are making progress toward a four-year, $208.45MM maximum contract extension this offseason, Shams Charania of The Athletic reports (Twitter link). The Nuggets will present the offer to Murray and both sides expect an agreement.

Murray is entering the final season of a five-year, $182.8MM contract. He’s due to make $36MM in 2024/25

Under the terms of the extension, Murray would make approximately $46.53MM in 2025/26, $50.25MM in 2026/27, $53.97MM in 2027/28 and $57.7MM in 2028/29, according to cap expert Yossi Gozlan. He could’ve added a fifth year worth $61.4MM if he re-signed as a free agent in 2025, according to Gozlan, but Murray has apparently chosen to lock into the long-term security now (Twitter link).

These salary estimates are based on a $141MM cap in 2024/25, then a 10% increase in 2025/26.

Murray won a championship with the Nuggets in 2023 and is generally considered the best active player never to be selected as an All-Star. During the title run, Murray averaged 26.1 points, 5.7 rebounds and 7.1 assists in 20 games.

Injuries limited him to 59 regular-season games this past season, when he averaged 21.2 points, 4.1 rebounds and a career-best 6.5 assists. In Denver’s 12 postseason games, he averaged 20.6 points, 4.3 rebounds and 5.6 assists.

He’s a career 45.2% shooter, including 38% from beyond the 3-point line. A 2016 lottery pick, Murray is still just 27 years old.

Kentavious Caldwell-Pope To Decline Option, Become Free Agent

Kentavious Caldwell-Pope has decided to decline his $15.4MM player option with the Nuggets for the 2024/25 season, according to Shams Charania and Tony Jones of The Athletic, who report (via Twitter) that the veteran wing will become an unrestricted free agent.

The decision doesn’t necessarily mean Caldwell-Pope won’t return to Denver, but the Nuggets figure to face plenty of competition for the three-and-D specialist. Multiple teams with cap room are expected to pursue him, per Charania and Jones.

Caldwell-Pope, 31, played an important role on the Lakers team that won a title in 2020 and the Nuggets squad that won the 2023 championship. He has knocked down 40.3% of his three-point attempts over the last five seasons and is a strong perimeter defender.

While Denver would obviously like to bring back its starting shooting guard, a strong offer for Caldwell-Pope would likely push the team’s salary above the restrictive second tax apron. Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, Nuggets general manager Calvin Booth expressed a desire to re-sign Caldwell-Pope but suggested that the team has contingency plans prepared – including potentially sliding Christian Braun into the starting five – in the event that KCP leaves.

“I think we have to look at everything, and the nature of free agency is, he’s unrestricted,” Booth said. “So we can try to bring him back, and if he doesn’t want to come back or opts to go somewhere else, that’s his prerogative. So we’ll have to work with that. But I think we’re prepared to plug and play, so to speak.”

The Sixers and Magic are among the cap-room teams who have been mentioned as possible suitors for Caldwell-Pope, the No. 11 free agent on our top-50 list.

Suns’ Eric Gordon To Opt For Free Agency

Suns veteran wing Eric Gordon will turn down his $3.36MM player option for the 2024/25 season and become an unrestricted free agent, reports Shams Charania of The Athletic (Twitter link).

While a recent report from The Athletic had indicated that Gordon was “50-50” on his player option decision, plugged-in local reporter John Gambadoro of Arizona Sports 98.7 subsequently stated that he didn’t expect the 35-year-old to be back in Phoenix next season. According to Charania, multiple contenders are expected to pursue Gordon.

Gordon is no longer the 20+ PPG scorer that he was earlier in his career, but the 16-year veteran has remained a reliable rotation piece for contending teams in recent years. After accepting a minimum-salary contract to join the Suns last summer, he averaged 11.0 points, 2.0 assists, and 1.8 rebounds in 27.8 minutes per game, with a shooting line of .443/.378/.797.

During his foray into free agency in 2023, Gordon prioritized the ability to play a significant role for a contending team over seeking out the most lucrative offer, since he almost certainly could’ve earned more than the veteran’s minimum from another club. We’ll see if his priorities remain the same this summer.

Gordon is one of four Suns who had a player option decision to make by June 29 and will join Drew Eubanks among those who are opting out. Josh Okogie‘s and Damion Lee‘s decisions have yet to be reported.

Wolves Trading Wendell Moore Jr. To Pistons In Pick Swap

The Pistons will acquire shooting guard Wendell Moore Jr. and the 37th pick in today’s draft from the Timberwolves, according to Shams Charania of The Athletic (Twitter link). Minnesota will receive the 53rd selection in return.

The trade serves as a slight salary dump for the Wolves, who unload Moore’s $2.5MM contract for next season and will likely fill that roster spot with a minimum-salary player. Minnesota picked up the third-year option on Moore last October.

Moore, 22, was drafted by Dallas with the 26th pick in the 2022 draft and was shipped to Houston and then Minnesota in a pair of draft-day trades. He has seen limited playing time at the NBA level, appearing in 54 total games, including 25 this past season when he averaged just 3.0 minutes per night.

The Pistons will move up 16 spots in the second round, putting them in position to grab a player ranked higher on their board without sacrificing much of their projected cap room. They’re still on track to create over $60MM in room once the new league year begins.

Detroit will have until the end of October to decide whether or not to exercise the $4.57MM option on Moore’s contract for the 2025/26 season. Turning down that option would put him on track for unrestricted free agency next summer, while picking it up would set him up for possible restricted free agency in 2026.

This is the first reported deal on what is expected to be an active day of trading as the NBA draft has expanded to two days for the first time.