Grizzlies Sign Jaylen Wells To Four-Year Deal

4:50pm: Wells’ deal is official, the Grizzlies confirmed in a press release (Twitter link).


3:21pm: The Grizzlies are signing their second-round pick Jaylen Wells to a four-year, $7.9MM contract, a source informs Jonathan Givony of ESPN (Twitter link). That total suggests a minimum-salary agreement, which would be worth $7,895,796.

Givony notes that the first two seasons of the deal are fully guaranteed. The fourth year will be a team option, since it will be signed using the second-round pick exception.

Wells was selected with the No. 39 pick in this summer’s draft out of Washington State. He kicked off his collegiate career with Sonoma State before transferring to the Cougars last season. In 34 games (20 starts) in 2023/24, Wells posted averages of 12.6 points, 4.6 rebounds, 1.2 assists and 0.5 steals in 29.2 minutes per contest. The 6’7″ small forward had a shooting line of .436/.417/.814.

We’re tracking all of this year’s draft pick signings right here.

Magic Renegotiate, Extend Jonathan Isaac’s Contract

JULY 6: The renegotiation and extension of Isaac’s contract is now official, the Magic announced today in a press release (Twitter link).

According to Michael Scotto of HoopsHype (Twitter link), Orlando bumped up Isaac’s salary to $25MM this season. That figure will be fully guaranteed, as will his $15MM salary in 2025/26. His $14.5MM salary in ’26/27 will be partially guaranteed for $8MM, while the last two years ($15MM and $14.5MM, respectively) will be non-guaranteed.

In total, it appears the forward received $66.6MM in new money and $84MM overall (including his original $17.4MM salary for the coming season). Of that $84MM, $48MM is guaranteed.


JULY 2: The Magic have agreed to renegotiate and extend Jonathan Isaac‘s contract, according to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski, who tweets that the deal will be for five years and $84MM.

Jake Fischer of Yahoo Sports first reported on Monday that the Magic were exploring a renegotiation and extension for the veteran forward.

Isaac had a non-guaranteed $17.4MM salary for next season, which was due to be fully guaranteed in January, so his new deal likely includes $66MM+ in new money.

The breakdown for the deal hasn’t been made public yet, but a team is permitted to use cap room to renegotiate a contract in order to give a player a current-year raise and Orlando has a chunk of room left over following a series of free agent agreements with Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, Moritz Wagner, Goga Bitadze, and Gary Harris.

[RELATED: Hoops Rumors Glossary: Renegotiations]

The Magic could reduce Isaac’s salary by up to 40% in the first year of an extension, so it looks like they’ll essentially give him a bonus this season in order to lock him up to a more team-friendly (possibly descending) deal beginning in 2025/26.

The No. 6 pick of the 2017 draft, Isaac missed two seasons and most of the 2022/23 campaign while recovering from a torn ACL. He appeared in 58 games last season and averaged 6.8 points, 4.5 rebounds and 1.2 blocks to help Orlando reach the playoffs. He also appeared in seven postseason contests, including three starts, while averaging 6.3 points, 4.9 rebounds and 1.3 blocks.

A talented, versatile defender, Isaac will once again back up at the power forward spot and can also slide over to the center position.

It’s unclear whether or not Isaac’s new extension will include injury-related language protecting the team like his current deal did, but it at least seems unlikely that all four years will be fully guaranteed.

Thunder Sign Draft Picks Nikola Topic, Dillon Jones, Ajay Mitchell

The Thunder have signed first-round picks Nikola Topic and Dillon Jones to rookie scale contracts, the team announced in a press release. Second-round selection Ajay Mitchell inked a two-way deal.

Chosen with the 12th pick, Topic was originally viewed as a potential top-five selection, but a partially torn ACL caused his draft stock to tumble. The 6’6″ point guard averaged 15.1 points, 5.9 assists and 3.2 rebounds for Crvena Zvezda this year in the Adriatic League. He’s not expected to play next season, giving the injury plenty of time to heal.

Jones, the 26th overall pick, was acquired from New York in a draft night trade. The 6’5″ small forward out of Weber State led the Big Sky Conference in scoring this season at 20.8 PPG, while adding 9.8 rebounds, 5.2 assists and 2.0 steals per night. He was a finalist for the Julius Erving Small Forward of the Year Award.

Mitchell, a 6’4″ shooting guard out of UC Santa Barbara, was the 38th pick in the draft. He averaged 20.0 points, 4.0 rebounds, 4.0 assists and 1.2 steals this season and was a First Team All-Big West selection the past two years.

Assuming they both got the maximum rookie contract they were eligible to receive, Topic will earn about $4.9MM in his first season and $23MM across four years, while Jones will be paid $2.6MM as a rookie and $13.5MM on his four-year deal. Oklahoma City will have third- and fourth-year team options on both players.

Pistons, Wolves, Grizzlies, Raptors Complete Four-Team Deal

The Pistons, Timberwolves, Grizzlies, and Raptors have folded a series of separate trade agreements into a single four-team trade, which is now official, the Wolves announced today in a press release.

The Pistons and Timberwolves initially agreed to a deal sending Minnesota’s Wendell Moore to Detroit in exchange for a second-round pick swap, with the Pistons moving up from No. 53 to No. 37.

The Wolves subsequently traded the No. 53 pick to Memphis in exchange for No. 57 and a future second-rounder. Then Minnesota traded No. 57 to Toronto for a reported $1MM in cash.

The end result is as follows:

  • Pistons acquire Moore and the draft rights to Bobi Klintman (No. 37 pick).
  • Timberwolves acquire a future second-round pick (from Grizzlies) and cash ($1MM; from Raptors).
  • Grizzlies acquire the draft rights to Cam Spencer (No. 53 pick).
  • Raptors acquire the draft rights to Ulrich Chomche (No. 57 pick).

The Pistons are taking a chance on an inexpensive former first-rounder in Moore ($2.54MM salary in 2024/25) while having moved up in the second round to select a prospect higher on their draft board; the Wolves, who are operating over the second apron, save some money while having swapped out their No. 37 pick for a future second-rounder; and the Grizzlies and Raptors gave up minor assets to trade into the back end of the second round of the draft.

The one missing detail is here is which future second-round pick the Grizzlies are sending Minnesota. We’ll update our tracker of 2024 offseason trades with that information once it’s reported.

Heat Sign Isaiah Stevens To Exhibit 10 Contract

The Heat have signed undrafted former Colorado State guard Isaiah Stevens, Miami announced in a team press release.

According to Anthony Chiang of The Miami Herald (Twitter link), Stevens’ new contract is an Exhibit 10 deal.

The six-footer, a five-time All-MWC honoree during his tenure with the Rams, finished his college career as Colorado State’s all-time leading scorer (with 2,350 career points) and passer (863 career assists), while also making the most three-pointers (253) in team history.

Last season, Stevens averaged 16.0 points per game on a .474/.440/.836 shooting line. He also dished out 6.8 dimes, pulled down 6.8 boards, and swiped 1.2 steals per night.

At present, all three of the Heat’s two-way player slots are occupied. Stevens is the team’s second reported Exhibit 10 signing, along with Bryson Warren.

An Exhibit 10 contract is a non-guaranteed minimum-salary deal that doesn’t count against a team’s cap unless the player makes the regular season roster. It can be converted to a two-way contract before the season begins or can put a player in line to earn a bonus of up to $77.5K if he’s waived and then spends at least 60 days with his team’s G League affiliate.

Spurs Trade Graham, Second-Round Pick To Hornets; Graham Waived

3:35pm: After officially waiving three players to create additional cap room, the Hornets have completed their trade for Graham and New Orleans’ 2025 second-round pick, per a team release. They sent out cash to San Antonio and immediately waived Graham, as expected.


2:26pm: The Hornets will receive New Orleans’ 2025 second-round pick in the deal, while the Spurs receive cash, sources tell Andrew Lopez of ESPN (Twitter link).


12:41pm: The Spurs are trading Devonte’ Graham and a second-round draft pick to the Hornets, one of the veteran guard’s former teams, reports Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN (Twitter link).

Graham won’t be back in Charlotte for long, though. According to Wojnarowski, the Hornets plan to waive Graham, making him an unrestricted free agent. The guard’s $12.65MM is partially guaranteed for $2.85MM, so Charlotte will have to take his fully salary into its cap room but will only end up on the hook for $2.85MM.

The 6’1″ Kansas alum, 29, played sparingly with the Spurs last season, averaging just 5.0 points per game on a .352/.301/.813 shooting line. He appeared in just 23 contests, logging 13.6 minutes per night.

Graham kicked off his NBA career with the Hornets, for whom he played from 2018-21. He spent 2021/22 and part of ’22/23 with the Pelicans before being traded to San Antonio midway through that season. During his best year, 2019/20, Graham finished fifth in Most Improved Player voting, averaging 18.2 points, 7.5 assists, 3.4 rebounds and 1.0 steals per game.

As cap expert Yossi Gozlan notes (via Twitter), this deal will give San Antonio some additional cap relief — the team now projects to have up to about $19MM in cap space.

As Gozlan notes, the Spurs could theoretically take back the mid-sized contract of a veteran wing like Harrison Barnes or Kevin Huerter to help orchestrate a three-team sign-and-trade with the Bulls and Kings to send All-Star wing DeMar DeRozan to Sacramento. San Antonio likely has something specific up its sleeve that will require a bit of extra breathing room below the cap, since Graham’s $2.85MM partial guarantee was pretty minimal.

The Hornets are reportedly waiving Davis Bertans in order to open up the cap room necessary to take on Graham’s salary.

Hornets Cut Aleksej Pokusevski, Bryce McGowens

3:34pm: Pokusevski and McGowens have officially been waived, according to a release from the Hornets.


2:40pm: The Hornets will create some additional salary cap flexibility by waiving two more players on non-guaranteed contracts. The team is cutting forward Aleksej Pokusevski, according to Shams Charania of The Athletic (Twitter link), as well as wing Bryce McGowens, per Rod Boone of The Charlotte Observer (Twitter link).

The 17th pick in the 2020 draft, Pokusevski spent three-and-a-half seasons in Oklahoma City before being waived by the Thunder in February. He caught on with the Hornets a few days later and played a regular role off the bench in Charlotte down the stretch, averaging 7.4 points, 4.4 rebounds, and 1.7 assists in 19.2 minutes per game across 18 appearances.

McGowens, meanwhile, has played in Charlotte for the past two seasons after being drafted 40th overall in 2022. The 21-year-old appeared in 59 NBA games last season, averaging 5.1 PPG, 1.7 RPG, and 0.9 APG with a .439/.333/.776 shooting line in 14.9 MPG.

Both Pokusevski ($2.27MM) and McGowens ($2.02MM) were on non-guaranteed minimum salary contracts. Cutting them is necessary to accommodate a series of moves the Hornets are completing using cap room, including trading for Devonte’ Graham, Josh Green, and Reggie Jackson. The club is also waiving Davis Bertans, whose salary is only partially guaranteed.

If Pokusevski and McGowens don’t catch on with another team right away and there’s mutual interest in a return to the Hornets, there would be no rule stopping Charlotte from re-signing them on new minimum deals. But it’s unclear whether or not that’s the plan for either player.

Hornets Waive Davis Bertans

3:33pm: The Hornets have cut Bertans, the team confirmed in a press release. He’s on track to clear waivers on Monday.


1:01pm: The Hornets will waive veteran power forward Davis Bertans, reports Shams Charania of The Athletic (Twitter link).

Bertans has a $16MM salary for 2024/25, but only $5.25MM of that total is guaranteed. Charlotte will be on the hook for that partial guarantee, creating more than $10MM in cap room in the move.

Ahead of Charania’s report, cap expert Yossi Gozlan had speculated (via Twitter) that Charlotte might make this move to accommodate the incoming salary of veteran point guard Devonte’ Graham in its trade with the Spurs. The Hornets are acquiring their former guard in exchange for a second-round draft pick from San Antonio. Graham is slated to be waived as well.

Bertans, 31, was dealt to the Hornets from the Thunder midway through the 2023/24 season in the Gordon Hayward trade. He saw his role expand on a lottery-bound Charlotte squad, averaging 8.8 points on a .394/.375/.889 shooting line.

A career 39.6% percent shooter on 4.7 long-range attempts a night, the 6’10” vet could have a decent market for his services as a floor-spacing stretch four. Given that this is at this point his only true skill and he’s now over 30, Bertans will probably be on the hunt for a veteran’s minimum-level deal.

Wizards Acquire Jonas Valanciunas In Sign-And-Trade

JULY 6: The Wizards have officially added Valanciunas, completing the signing via sign-and-trade, the team announced today in a press release.

Washington was able to take on Valanciunas using a $9.8MM trade exception created in last July’s Monte Morris trade, preserving its full $12.9MM mid-level exception.

In exchange for accommodating the Wizards, the Pelicans received the Bulls’ top-50 protected 2027 pick. That pick may not actually convey, but New Orleans will also create a trade exception of its own equivalent to Valanciunas’ outgoing salary, which will be around $9.9MM, per Christian Clark of NOLA.com (Twitter link).

Valanciunas’ contract will be fully guaranteed for the first two years and non-guaranteed in year three, tweets Michael Scotto of HoopsHype.


JUNE 30: The Wizards have found a new starting center, having agreed to terms with Jonas Valanciunas on a three-year, $30MM contract, sources tell Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN (Twitter link).

According to Josh Robbins of The Athletic, it’s a straight three-year deal, with no player or team option (Twitter link).

Jake Fischer of Yahoo Sports linked Valanciunas to the rebuilding Wizards just before free agency opened. The Lakers were reportedly among the other suitors for the 32-year-old.

As cap expert Yossi Gozlan tweets, Washington has a couple options to complete the move. The most straightforward way would be to use the non-taxpayer mid-level exception. However, the Wizards also have a trade exception that could be used to acquire Valanciunas via sign-and-trade, which could be help the Pelicans — Valanciunas’ former club — find a starting center to replace the veteran big man if the deal is expanded. Either scenario would see the Wizards hard-capped at the first tax apron.

One of the NBA’s best rebounders on a per-minute basis, Valanciunas is a throwback center who primarily operates out of the low post, relying on size and strength rather than agility and athleticism. He has been quite durable over the course of his 12-year career, including playing all 82 games for New Orleans in 2023/24.

Overall, Valanciunas averaged 12.2 PPG, 8.8 RPG and 2.1 APG on .559/.308/.785 shooting in 23.5 MPG last season.

While he has his limitations, primarily on defense, Valanciunas will provide veteran leadership, professionalism, toughness, and production in the middle for a young Wizards team that added its presumptive center of the future (Alex Sarr) on Wednesday with the No. 2 overall pick in the draft.

Pascal Siakam Signs Sign Four-Year Max Deal With Pacers

JULY 6: Siakam has officially re-signed with the Pacers, according to the NBA’s transaction log. Assuming Siakam got the full max, as expected, the deal is worth approximately $188.95MM over four years.


JUNE 19: Siakam intends to sign a four-year, maximum-salary contract with the Pacers after the July moratorium ends, according to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski (via Twitter). As outlined below, a four-year max deal would be worth $189.5MM based on the most recent cap projections.


JUNE 18: The Pacers and star forward Pascal Siakam are nearing an agreement on a long-term contract, reports Scott Agness of Fieldhouse Files (Twitter link).

The No. 3 free agent on our top-50 list, Siakam was traded from Toronto to Indiana in January after spending the first seven-and-a-half seasons of his NBA career in Toronto, where he earned two All-Star berths, two All-NBA nods, a Most Improved Player award, and a championship.

In his first 41 regular season games as a Pacer, the 30-year-old averaged 21.3 points, 7.8 rebounds, and 3.7 assists in 31.8 minutes per game with a shooting line of .549/.386/.699. Siakam was Indiana’s leading scorer in both the regular season and the playoffs — he averaged 21.6 PPG on 54.1% shooting in the postseason and helped lead his new club to series victories over Milwaukee and New York, resulting in the franchise’s first appearance in the Eastern Conference finals in 10 years.

The expectation is that Siakam, who is coming off a four-year, maximum-salary rookie scale extension, will once again get the max or something very close to it on his new deal with the Pacers, though no terms have been reported yet. A max contract for Siakam projects to be worth approximately $189.5MM over four years or $245.3MM over five.

The NBA and NBPA agreed to a rule change that goes into effect this offseason, allowing teams to begin negotiating with their own free agents on the day after the end of the NBA Finals instead of on June 30.

Technically, the Pacers were allowed to talk to Siakam even before Tuesday, since he has been extension-eligible since arriving in Indiana. However, a player’s years and dollars in an extension are capped for six months after a trade, so Siakam will likely end up becoming a free agent and then signing a new contract instead of extending his current deal. That means that even if he and Indiana reach an agreement shortly, it’s unlikely to become official until July 6, after the moratorium ends.

With a new deal for Siakam on the books and Tyrese Haliburton‘s own five-year, maximum-salary extension taking effect in 2024/25, the Pacers won’t have any cap room available this offseason, barring cost-cutting moves. They’ll have some breathing room below the luxury tax line for now, but will have a few more contract decisions to make after they work out a deal with Siakam — Obi Toppin will be eligible for restricted free agency, Jalen Smith holds a $5.4MM player option that he may decline, and T.J. McConnell will be extension-eligible beginning in July.