Southeast Notes: Bitadze, Carter, Jovic, Love, Sarr

Magic center Goga Bitadze, who stepped up when Wendell Carter was injured and started 33 games last season, finds himself in a similar position this fall. With Carter on the shelf due to left foot plantar fasciitis, Bitadze has started the past four games for Orlando and has averaged a double-double (10.5 points, 10.5 rebounds) to go along with 3.0 assists and 1.8 blocks per night in those starts.

“He’s just steady,” head coach Jamahl Mosley said on Sunday, per Jason Beede of The Orlando Sentinel (subscription required). “He just stays ready the entire time. Doesn’t say a word when he’s asked to do something; he goes out and does it. He’s a great rim protector, does a great job in the pick and roll … He’s a facilitator on offense, getting guys in position in places on the floor. He just stays ready and that’s part of this team. We always talk about the next man up and guys are starting to step up into that role with other guys being out.”

As Beede writes, Bitadze was a free agent over the summer and potentially could’ve found a larger role and/or more money outside of Orlando, but he chose to stick with the Magic on a three-year, $25MM deal. The big man feels comfortable with the team that took a shot on him in February 2023, days after he was cut by Indiana.

“The guys (and) the coaching staff make it easy,” Bitadze said. “When you’re having joy every single practice, every single day with these guys, playing time is not that important, if you understand what I mean. It’s not that hard.”

Here’s more from around the Southeast:

  • Carter is “doing well” and “slowly progressing” in his recovery from his foot ailment, according to Mosley, but the Magic center will miss his fifth consecutive game on Tuesday as Orlando faces Charlotte, tweets Beede.
  • Heat forward Nikola Jovic came off the bench for the first time this fall on Sunday in Minnesota, but ended up having his best game of the young season, helping Miami claim a one-point win with 15 points and seven rebounds. After the game, head coach Erik Spoelstra challenged Jovic to maintain that level going forward. “This is the standard now,” Spoelstra said, according to Anthony Chiang of The Miami Herald. “I don’t want to retreat, I don’t want to have to do things to get something out of players. He was very good tonight from the detail standpoint, the effort standpoint, rebounding, size, defending multiple efforts.”
  • Heat forward/center Kevin Love, who made his season debut on Sunday following an early-season absence due to a personal family matter, lauded the organization for giving him the time off he needed, Chiang writes for The Herald. “They were so amazing in supporting me, letting me have my time and allowing me to come back refreshed in my mind,” Love said. “… The support was unbelievable from my teammates, coaching staff, organization. … Now that I’m back, I’m just trying to add that freshness, that lightness to the locker room and hopefully help out there, as well.”
  • After making just 2-of-9 shots from the field on Monday, rookie big man Alex Sarr has a .330 FG% and a .186 3PT% for the season. That’s okay with the Wizards, who knew Sarr’s offense was well behind his defense and are prepared to be patient with the No. 2 overall pick, writes Varun Shankar of The Washington Post. “This is part of the maturation of going through this league,” head coach Brian Keefe said. “You have to see all these different types of matchups. I’ve coached a lot of great players in this league … and you have to go through the fire. And you learn by doing and being out there and seeing what it feels like.”

Suns’ Collin Gillespie Fractures Right Ankle

Suns guard Collin Gillespie has been diagnosed with a right ankle fracture, the team announced today in a press release (Twitter link via Duane Rankin of The Arizona Republic).

According to the Suns, Gillespie will be reevaluated in four weeks. That doesn’t necessarily mean he’ll be ready to return at that point — just that he’ll be examined at that time.

Gillespie, who is on a two-way contract with Phoenix, had appeared in only one NBA game so far this season, logging 3:26 of game action in an October 26 win over Dallas. He suffered the injury in the G League season opener on Friday, just two minutes into his debut for the Valley Suns.

The Suns initially listed Gillespie’s injury as a sprain, but Valley Suns head coach John Little said on Monday that the 25-year-old was still undergoing tests to determine the severity of the injury (Twitter video link via Gerald Bourguet of PHNX Sports).

Gillespie’s absence won’t have any real impact on the Suns’ NBA rotation, since he had several players ahead of him on the depth chart, but it’s an unfortunate turn of events for a young player who already lost one full season due to an injury. The former Villanova standout missed his entire rookie season in 2022/23 as a Nuggets two-way player after suffering a lower leg fracture while helping out with a practice at his alma mater.

Pelicans’ Jose Alvarado Expected To Miss Six Weeks

12:09pm: The Pelicans have officially announced that Alvarado has been diagnosed with a left hamstring strain (Twitter link).

According to the team, the guard will be reevaluated in three weeks, though that doesn’t mean he’ll be ready to return at that time. As noted below, Charania cited sources who estimated a six-week recovery timeline.


11:17am: The bad news just keeps on coming for the Pelicans, who are already missing several rotation players due to injuries and have now lost another one. According to Shams Charania of ESPN (Twitter link), guard Jose Alvarado is expected to be out for six weeks due to a hamstring injury.

Alvarado typically plays a relatively modest rotation role off the bench for the Pelicans, but has started seven of 11 games and logged major minutes this season due to the team’s injury woes.

In his last six full games prior to injuring his hamstring on Monday, the 26-year-old had averaged 17.2 points, 5.7 assists, 3.7 rebounds, and 1.7 steals in 33.3 minutes per night, with a shooting line of .422/.447/.800.

Alvarado is one of six Pelicans starters or rotation players currently sidelined. The team is also operating without Zion Williamson (hamstring), Dejounte Murray (hand), CJ McCollum (adductor), Herbert Jones (shoulder), and Jordan Hawkins (back) as a result of multi-week injuries. Additionally, Trey Murphy (hamstring) missed the team’s first 10 games before making his season debut on Monday.

Teams can apply for a hardship exception allowing them to add an extra player to their 15-man roster if they have four players who have missed at least three games due to injuries and are expected to remain out for at least two more weeks.

The hardship exception allows for an extra temporary roster spot for each additionally unavailable player beyond that minimum four-player threshold, meaning the Pelicans could qualify for multiple hardship exceptions once Williamson and Alvarado have missed at least three games apiece. If Hawkins is also expected to miss an extended period, New Orleans could be eligible for as many as three extra roster spots, though the recovery timeline originally reported for Hawkins was just a week or two.

Of course, it’s also worth noting that hardship signings will count toward the Pelicans’ team salary for cap and tax purposes and the club is currently operating about $2.8MM over the luxury tax line, as Bobby Marks of ESPN tweets. New Orleans, having never paid the tax, will likely try to sneak below the threshold later in the season, so the team may be wary about adding additional salary to its books, even on 10-day hardship contracts.

After Monday’s loss to Brooklyn, the Pelicans are 3-8, placing them in a tie with Portland for the No. 13 seed in the Western Conference. New Orleans has a challenging stretch of games on tap that includes matchups with the Thunder, Nuggets, Lakers, Mavericks, Cavaliers, Warriors, and Pacers in the next two weeks.

Hoops Rumors Front Office Subscriber Chat: 11/12/2024

Hoops Rumors’ Arthur Hill held a live chat today exclusively for Trade Rumors Front Office subscribers. Topics included whether Houston is the best spot for Giannis Antetokounmpo, the Pistons' options in speeding up their rebuild, a potential coaching change in New Orleans, the Bucks' early-season dilemma, a possible dark horse winner for the in-season tournament and more!

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Hoops Rumors Glossary: Luxury Tax Penalties

NBA teams can become hard-capped during a given league year if they use specific cap exceptions or make certain transactions, but the league doesn’t have a hard cap in place for all its teams.

However, in addition to its soft cap, the league does have a luxury tax threshold, which serves to discourage excessive spending. When a team’s total salary is over that line at season’s end, the NBA charges a tax for every surplus dollar the club spends.

The luxury tax line is set each season at 121.5% of the salary cap threshold, rounded to the nearest thousand. In 2024/25, the league’s salary cap is set at $140,588,000, so the luxury tax threshold is $170,814,000. That means any team whose total ’24/25 salary exceeds $170,814,000 on the last day of the regular season is subject to a tax bill.

The NBA’s luxury tax system is set up so that the penalties become more punitive the further teams go beyond the tax line. Teams who are in the first tax bracket will pay a significantly less significant tax rate per dollar than teams operating in the third or fourth bracket (or beyond).

In 2023/24, the amount of each tax bracket was $5MM, which meant a team faced an increased tax rate once its total salary surpassed $5MM over the tax, $10MM over the tax, $15MM over the tax, and so on.

In 2024/25 and in subsequent seasons, the size of those tax brackets will increase at the same rate as the salary cap. For example, since the cap rose by about 3.36% from ’23/24 to ’24/25, the size of each tax bracket increased by 3.36% too, from $5MM to $5,168,000.

Here’s what the luxury penalties will look like in 2024/25:

Tax bracket
Amount above tax line
Tax rate (per $)
Maximum penalty
1 $1 – $5,168,000 $1.50 $7,752,000
2 $5,168,001 – $10,336,000 $1.75 $9,044,000
3 $10,336,001 – $15,504,000 $2.50 $12,920,000
4 $15,504,001 – $20,672,000 $3.25 $16,796,000

For each additional $5,168,000 above the tax line beyond $25,840,000 a team operates, its tax rates increase by $0.50 per dollar of team salary. So, the penalty is $3.75 per dollar between $20,672,001 and $25,840,000, $4.25 per dollar between $25,840,001 and $31,008,000, and so on.

Here’s a practical example of how the tax penalties work. The Nuggets currently have a team salary of $182,574,315, which is above this season’s tax line by $11,760,315, putting them in the third tax bracket. Denver’s total salary will likely move up or down before the season is over, but the team’s current projected tax bill is $20,356,788. That’s based on a penalty of $7,752,000 from the first tax bracket, $9,044,000 from the second, and $3,560,788 from the third (a penalty of $2.50 per dollar on $1,424,315).

The rates listed above apply to most taxpayers, including 10 of the 14 teams currently in the tax for 2024/25: the Nuggets, Suns, Timberwolves, Celtics, Knicks, Heat, Sixers, Mavericks, Pelicans, and Cavaliers. However, a team can become subject to a more punitive “repeater” penalty if it paid the tax in at least three of the previous four seasons.

This scenario currently applies to four teams — the Warriors, Clippers, Bucks, and Lakers paid the tax at least three times from 2021 to 2024, which means they’ll be repeat offenders this season.

Here are the penalties that apply to repeat taxpayers in 2024/25:

Tax bracket
Amount above tax line
Tax rate (per $)
Maximum penalty
1 $1 – $5,168,000 $2.50 $12,920,000
2 $5,168,001 – $10,336,000 $2.75 $14,212,000
3 $10,336,001 – $15,504,000 $3.50 $18,088,000
4 $15,504,001 – $20,672,000 $4.25 $21,964,000

As is the case with the standard penalties, the tax rate continues to increase by $0.50 per tax bracket, so a repeater taxpayer in the fifth bracket would face a tax rate of $4.75 per dollar; that would increase to $5.25 per dollar in the sixth tax bracket, and so on.

The Clippers are currently carrying $173,279,116 in total salary, surpassing the tax line by $2,465,116. Because they’re charged $2.50 per dollar as a repeater taxpayer, their projected tax bill is $6,162,790 instead of the standard rate of $3,697,674.

The further into tax territory a team goes, the greater the difference between the repeater rate and the standard rate becomes. For instance, the Bucks’ projected tax bill at the moment is $74,837,699. If they weren’t subject to repeater penalties, it would be just $52,554,394.

The 2024/25 season is the last one in which the rates outlined above will apply. Beginning in 2025/26, the NBA is adjusting the tax rates to make them even more punitive for repeater taxpayers and heavy spenders. Conversely, the penalties for standard taxpayers who finish the season in one of the first two tax brackets will be lowered.

Here are the changes coming next season:

Tax bracket
Standard tax rate (per $)
Repeater tax rate (per $)
1 $1.00 $3.00
2 $1.25 $3.25
3 $3.50 $5.50
4 $4.75 $6.75

These rates will continue to increase by $0.50 per tax bracket beyond the fourth bracket.

The goal of these tweaks is to discourage teams from soaring way beyond the luxury tax line without making the tax line itself a major deterrent.


Since luxury tax penalties are calculated by determining a team’s total cap hits at the end of its season, a team that starts the year above the tax line could get under it before the end of the season by completing trades or buyouts. The Pelicans did just that in 2023/24, moving out of tax territory by salary-dumping Kira Lewis‘ expiring contract in January.

New Orleans is one of just two NBA teams that has never been a taxpayer (Charlotte is the other) and is operating only narrowly above the tax line this season, so it wouldn’t be a surprise to see the team make another mid-season deal to duck the tax.

It’s also worth noting that team salary for tax purposes is calculated slightly differently than it is for cap purposes. Here are a few of the adjustments made at season’s end before a team’s tax bill is calculated:

  • Cap holds and exceptions are ignored.
  • “Likely” bonuses that weren’t earned are removed from team salary; “unlikely” bonuses that were earned are added to team salary.
    • Note: Bonuses based on playoff-related criteria can be removed or added to team salary after the regular season ends. In that scenario, a team’s tax bill is based on its salary at the end of the team’s season (ie. its playoff run), not the end of the regular season.
  • If a player with a trade bonus is acquired after the final regular season game, that trade bonus is added to team salary.
  • If a rookie or second-year player signed a minimum-salary free agent contract, the applicable minimum-salary cap charge for a two-year veteran is used in place of that player’s cap charge.
    • Note: This “tax variance” rule only applies to free agents, not drafted players.

So let’s say that five teams finish the season owing a total of $75MM in taxes. Where does that money go? Currently, the NBA splits it 50/50 — half of it is used for “league purposes,” while the other half is distributed to non-taxpaying teams in equal shares. In our hypothetical scenario, the 25 non-taxpaying teams would receive $2MM apiece.

As cap expert Larry Coon explains in his CBA FAQ, “league purposes” essentially covers any purpose the NBA deems appropriate, including giving the money back to teams. In recent years, the NBA has used that money as a funding source for its revenue sharing program.

Coon also notes that the CBA technically allows up to 50% of tax money to be distributed to non-taxpaying teams, but there’s no obligation for that to happen — in other words, the NBA could decide to use 100% of the tax money for “league purposes.”


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 Salary Cap FAQ was used in the creation of this post.

Earlier versions of this post were published in previous years.

And-Ones: 2025 Draft, Flagg, All-Star Game, Coaches

With the NCAA men’s basketball season underway, draft experts Jonathan Givony and Jeremy Woo have updated their 2025 NBA mock draft at ESPN.com (Insider link), projecting next June’s top 30 picks based on their own scouting and intel from executives around the league.

There are no surprises at the top of ESPN’s latest mock draft. The projected picks at No. 1 (Cooper Flagg), No. 2 (Ace Bailey), and No. 3 (Dylan Harper) remain unchanged since Givony and Woo published a mock in June, and V.J. Edgecombe and Nolan Traore are still in the top five.

Still, there are some notable risers or fallers elsewhere in the first round. Duke freshman Kon Knueppel (No. 17 in June) is up to No. 6, while Ratiopharm Ulm guard Ben Saraf comes in at No. 13 after not showing up in June’s mock draft. Conversely, Real Madrid wing Hugo Gonzalez has slipped from seventh to 12th, while Miami freshman Jalil Bethea is down to 25th after having placed 13th in June.

Here are more odds and ends from around the basketball world:

  • In a separate story for ESPN.com, Baxter Holmes takes a closer look at Flagg’s journey from growing up in a small town in Maine to becoming a Duke Blue Devil and basketball’s top prospect. Holmes’ feature includes several entertaining anecdotes, including one about how a 13-year-old Flagg “dominated” a Boston-area pickup game run by former NBA forward Brian Scalabrine.
  • While commissioner Adam Silver recently acknowledged that the NBA is weighing the idea of using a new format for this season’s All-Star Game, veteran NBA insider Marc Stein (Substack link) says he doesn’t expect the league to opt for a U.S. vs. the World matchup in February. Still, sources tell Stein that format is a possibility that has been discussed within the league office, so it may still be in play for future seasons.
  • Michael Scotto of HoopsHype spent 24 hours this fall behind the scenes with the Pacers‘ coaching staff and shares his takeaways and insights on what a day in the life of an NBA coach looks like.

Central Notes: Lillard, Cavs, Atkinson, Garland, Ball

Bucks point guard Damian Lillard has entered the NBA’s concussion protocol and will miss Tuesday’s game vs. Toronto, the team announced (Twitter link via Tim Bontemps of ESPN).

Sources tell NBA insider Chris Haynes (Twitter link) that Lillard was hit in the head near the end of the third quarter of Sunday’s game against Boston. After he experienced headaches and dizziness on Monday, testing confirmed he has a concussion.

It’s possible Lillard will be able to return in time for Wednesday’s game vs. Detroit, Haynes says, but he’ll have to pass all the tests in the concussion protocol in order to receive medical clearance. That process often takes at least a few days.

We have more from around the Central:

  • The Cavaliers pushed their season-opening win streak to a dozen games with a win over Chicago on Monday, becoming the first team to start a season 12-0 or better since the 2015/16 Warriors (who went 24-0). “It’s great. We’re playing well, vibes are good, but we have to continue to be this team,” star guard Donovan Mitchell said, according to Jamal Collier of ESPN. “That’s been my message to the guys in the locker room. This is great. We’re going to get teams’ best shots. We’re going to get tested early, but are we going to continue? And I never — no doubt we will — but that’s been my thing. Are we going to continue to be this team January, February, March, April? I think the guys all feel it, but it’s great to enjoy these moments too while you’re still having a humble approach to it.”
  • In a subscriber-only story for Cleveland.com, Chris Fedor takes a look at how new head coach Kenny Atkinson‘s creativity and experimentation has helped spur the Cavaliers‘ early-season success. Meanwhile, Jeff Zillgitt of USA Today explores how reigning Eastern Conference Player of the Week Darius Garland has rediscovered his joy and love for the game this fall under Atkinson.
  • Bulls point guard Lonzo Ball, who is recovering from a right wrist sprain, is out of his brace and will begin dribbling in the coming days to see how the wrist responds, head coach Billy Donovan said on Monday, per Joe Cowley of The Chicago Sun-Times. “I do think he has some soreness, (and) certainly it’s been a slow progression for him,” Donovan said. “But he has gotten better.”

Kings’ Top Reserve Malik Monk Out At Least Two Weeks

Malik Monk didn’t play against San Antonio on Monday and the Kings guard will miss several more games. He has been diagnosed with a moderate right ankle sprain and will be reevaluated in two weeks, according to James Ham of The Kings Beat via a team press release (Twitter link).

X-rays revealed no structural damage to the ankle, which he injured during the second quarter against Phoenix on Sunday.

Monk, one of the NBA’s top reserves, is averaging 12.6 points, 3.0 rebounds and 2.8 assists in 10 games this season. He had a career year last season, averaging 15.4 points, 2.9 rebounds and 5.1 assists in 72 games off the bench. Monk parlayed that into a four-year, $78MM contract during free agency over the summer.

The Kings also offered two other injury updates. Big man Orlando Robinson is progressing from the left MCL sprain he suffered during training camp on Oct. 3. He has been cleared for contact and the team will update his status in the coming days.

First-round pick Devin Carter is progressing from left shoulder surgery he underwent in July. After a four-month follow-up appointment with a medical specialist, he was cleared for unrestricted shooting. Additional updates will be provided in January. The club offered a timetable of six months following the surgery.

Western Notes: Lively, Timberwolves’ Ownership Dispute, Williamson, Finch

Mavericks second-year big man Dereck Lively could return to action on Tuesday, Tim MacMahon of ESPN tweets. Lively had missed last four games due to sprained right shoulder. He told MacMahon he had a “good practice” on Monday in San Francisco and hopes to play against the Warriors.

“Just got to see how I feel when I wake up, but it’s been steady progress and I’m feeling good,” said Lively, who is listed as questionable to play.

We have more from the Western Conference:

  • The three-person arbitration panel is deliberating after last week’s hearings regarding the Timberwolves’ ownership dispute, Jon Krawczynski of The Athletic tweets. Krawczynski hears that it could take a few months before a ruling is handed down. A group led by Alex Rodriguez and Marc Lore is trying to gain majority ownership while current owner Glen Taylor is seeking to retain control.
  • The Timberwolves are off to a ho-hum 6-4 start and head coach Chris Finch is starting to second-guess some of his moves, Krawczynski writes. In a one-point loss to Miami, Finch pulled Nickeil Alexander-Walker for Mike Conley with his team up by three points. Conley missed all three of his shots after returning to the game and also had a turnover. “I probably should’ve stuck with Nickeil,” Finch admitted after the game. “He was playing really well.”
  • Zion Williamson felt discomfort in his left hamstring on Thursday, the day before the Pelicans faced the Magic, Christian Clark of the New Orleans Times Picayune reports. “We kind of pulled him out of practice,” head coach Willie Green said. “Sat him the next game. He got a scan. We found out the severity of what his injury was.” Williamson was diagnosed on Saturday with a left hamstring strain that will sideline him indefinitely.

Eastern Notes: Nets Vets, Johnson, Thompson, Mathurin

The Nets have been surprisingly competitive during the early going and they have veterans Dennis Schröder, Cameron Johnson and Dorian Finney-Smith to thank for it, Brian Lewis of the New York Post writes. Schröder entered Monday’s game against the Pelicans fifth in the league in minutes logged at 352. Johnson was tied for 13th (340), while Finney-Smith is fourth on the team at 289, Lewis notes. Finney-Smith missed the game with an ankle sprain, Lewis tweets.

That trio headed into the week averaging a combined 47.5 points per game. Any or all of them could end up getting dealt before February’s trade deadline.

We have more from the Eastern Conference:

  • Johnson headed into Monday’s contest with an impressive streak, Lewis notes. He hadn’t turned the ball over in any of the past seven games, making him the first player in NBA history to log at least 30 minutes without a giveaway in a seven-game stretch. He has never averaged more than 1.1 turnover per game in any season. That could be underrated aspect of his appeal as a trade candidate. Johnson has two more years left after this season on his four-year, $90MM+ contract.
  • Pistons forward Ausar Thompson, who had been sidelined by blood clotting issues, has been officially cleared to return to action by the NBA’s Fitness-to-Play panel. The team will slowly ramp up his workload as he prepares for his season debut, Omari Sankofa of the Detroit Free Press reports. Thompson is thrilled by the decision. “It feels great,” Thompson said. “The last seven to eight months have been a lot of work, and I had all the support from my family and team. Feels good to have the opportunity to go out there and play again.”
  • Bennedict Mathurin is eligible for a rookie scale extension next summer and the third-year swingman is enhancing his resume with his early-season performances. He led the banged-up Pacers to a win over the Knicks on Sunday with a career-best 38 points. “Benn Mathurin was absolutely breathtaking,” Pacers coach Rick Carlisle told Dustin Dopirak of the Indianapolis Star. “Efficient. Tough physically. … When he gets it going like he does today, he’s a bucket. He’s gonna be a bucket.” Mathurin is averaging 23.0 points and 7.6 rebounds in five starts.