Bucks’ Jon Horst Discusses Trent, Wright, Pistons’ Interest, More

In addition to declaring that the Bucks have no interest in trading starting center Brook Lopez, general manager Jon Horst touched on several more topics in a wide-ranging interview with Eric Nehm of The Athletic, expressing no regrets about last fall’s trade for Damian Lillard and conveying optimism about Milwaukee’s chances of being a title contender in 2024/25.

Asked by Nehm if the Bucks belong in the conversation with the defending champion Celtics and other Eastern Conference contenders like the Sixers and Knicks, Horst said there’s no question Milwaukee is in that tier.

“Yeah. I mean, honestly, it’s just whether or not those other teams belong in the conversation with us,” Horst said. “We’re the winningest team in the league and the conference the last seven or eight years. We still have our place there. We still have the best player in the world. We’ve got two top-75 players (of all-time) as our lead duo. We gotta be healthy. We gotta be lucky. We gotta be good. We’re definitely good enough. The guys are going to put in the right work. Hopefully we’re healthy enough and lucky enough and we’ll see.”

Horst also discussed the Bucks’ cap and tax situation, suggesting that the front office has no concerns about operating over the second tax apron and noting that it wouldn’t be hard to get out of apron territory if ownership wanted to do so. For now though, the goal is championship contention, which means spending well into the tax.

“When you have a team that is as talented as ours — I don’t say this boastfully, I just say this more matter-of-factually — we don’t have a bad contract on our roster,” Horst said. “All of our players are good players, good people on good-to-great contracts. So we can get anywhere at any time we want in the CBA, anywhere from a room team to a second-apron team. I think it’s never an issue for us to go where we want in terms of the CBA limits or aprons or thresholds. But the goal is not that. The goal has been, and will continue to be, to try to figure out how to win, to be the best team and organization in professional sports.”

Here are a few more highlights from Horst’s Q&A, which is worth checking out in full if you’re a subscriber to The Athletic:

On being able to sign Gary Trent Jr. to a minimum-salary contract:

Gary is a legit starting two-guard option that we’re very fortunate to be able to add to our group in a position of need. … He’s an almost 40-percent three-point shooter for his career. … He has a defensive component to his game that I think we can help flourish and grow more in our system. We’ve been able to do that with players, not only grow players offensively, but grow them defensively. And I just think he’s a great fit.

“He didn’t have the market that he probably wanted, but he also wasn’t a minimum player. Gary could have signed for more money elsewhere. He chose us for the opportunity that he thinks that we can give him, but also, he wants to win. So, it says a lot about him that we were able to secure him here in free agency.”

On why the Bucks prioritized Delon Wright in free agency:

“Delon is a really successful, versatile player. We targeted him because he can start at or back up two positions, maybe even three. He’s a big guard. He’s a defensive-minded guard. He’s playoff proven. He’s able to kind of generate turnovers, which is another thing that Gary does also. Both those guys are guys that generate turnovers on the ball and off the ball in the backcourt, something that we struggled with last year and we think helps in the playoffs. He’s capable of playing on the ball in pick-and-roll. He’s capable of playing off the ball as a catch-and-shoot threat from three. He can finish around the rim.

“So, for us, the versatility of Delon being able to play at either backcourt positions as a starter, as a backup, just with his experiences, was an absolute no-brainer. He was a high, high target for us and we were very fortunate that we were able to get him early.”

On the Pistons’ reported interest in talking to Horst about their president of basketball operations job:

“I never spoke to the Pistons. The Bucks didn’t allow me to, but they also expressed why they made that decision and how much they value me and want me here in Milwaukee, so it was pretty quick on my end. When the Pistons came to the Bucks about their interest in me, I had a brief conversation with our ownership group, they told me how they felt and how they were going to approach it and very quickly, our conversation shifted to the team this offseason.

“(Bucks co-owner) Wes (Edens) and I actually ended up talking for 45 minutes about how we were going to have a killer offseason and the types of guys we need to get and how we don’t want to be in this position again, and how much it sucks watching someone else play. We just talked about our team and that honestly was about the depth of the entire Detroit thing between me and the ownership group.”

Spurs Re-Sign David Duke Jr. On Two-Way Deal

3:40pm: The Spurs have officially re-signed Duke to a two-way contract, the team confirmed today in a press release.


1:54pm: Free agent guard David Duke Jr. will return to San Antonio, having agreed to sign a new two-way contract with the Spurs, agents Todd Ramasar and Mike Simonetta tell Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN (Twitter link).

Duke, 24, signed a two-way deal with the Spurs last December and spent the rest of the season on that contract. He appeared in just four games at the NBA level for San Antonio, with all of those appearances coming during the final week of the regular season.

Up until that point, Duke had been playing for the Austin Spurs in the G League. He appeared in 34 regular season contests for the NBAGL club, averaging 19.9 points, 6.7 rebounds, and 4.5 assists in 33.3 minutes per game, with a shooting line of .449/.377/.788.

The Spurs issued Duke a qualifying offer at the end of the season, and while they withdrew it to maximize their cap room, they clearly maintained interest in bringing him back. Since the 6’5″ guard spent two seasons in Brooklyn from 2021-23 to start his career, his two-way contract will only cover the 2024/25 season — he wouldn’t be eligible for a two-way deal in ’25/26 once he has four years of NBA service under his belt.

Duke will join Jamaree Bouyea as the Spurs’ two-way players for now. Second-round pick Harrison Ingram is considered the favorite to fill the third open two-way slot.

Warner Bros. Discovery Sues NBA; Barkley Listening To ESPN, NBC, Amazon

Warner Bros. Discovery, the parent company of TNT Sports, has filed a lawsuit against the NBA, alleging that the league is in breach of contract after it refused to recognize TNT’s right to match Amazon’s offer for NBA broadcast rights, reports Baxter Holmes of ESPN.

The lawsuit was filed in New York Supreme Court. Daniel Wallach of The Athletic (Twitter link) shares a copy of the summons, which states that the NBA has 20 days to respond.

TNT Sports issued a statement confirming it has taken legal action against the NBA (Twitter link via Steve Bulpett of Heavy.com):

“Given the NBA’s unjustified rejection of our matching of a third-party offer, we have taken legal action to enforce our rights. We strongly believe this is not just our contractual right, but also in the best interest of fans who want to keep watching our industry-leading NBA content with the choice and flexibility we offer them through our widely distributed WBD video-first distribution platforms – including TNT and Max.”

According to Holmes, NBA spokesperson Mike Bass responded to the suit by stating, “Warner Bros. Discovery’s claims are without merit and our lawyers will address them.”

[RELATED: NBA Announces Details Of Media Deals With Disney, NBC, Amazon]

A longtime broadcasting partner of the NBA, TNT Sports was given some form of matching rights in their current deal with the league. However, we don’t know the exact terms of those rights or how they’d apply in this case, given that Amazon’s agreement with the league will feature different methods of distribution and a different set of games than TNT’s previous deal. The lawsuit could lead to a settlement between Warner Bros. Discovery and the league, either in the form of other NBA rights or financial compensation.

Meanwhile, Charles Barkley – an analyst on TNT’s popular Inside The NBA studio show – issued a statement calling into question whether the NBA was ever negotiating with the network in good faith (Twitter link via Bleacher Report).

“Clearly the NBA has wanted to break up with us from the beginning. I’m not sure TNT ever had a chance,” Barkley said. “TNT matched the money, but the league knows Amazon and these tech companies are the only ones willing to pay for the rights when they double in the future. The NBA didn’t want to piss them off. It’s a sad day when owners and commissioners choose money over the fans. It just sucks.”

While Barkley has previously stated that he intends to retire as a broadcaster when TNT’s deal expires after the 2024/25 season, he’s drawing serious interest from the NBA’s other media partners – ESPN/ABC, NBC, and Amazon – according to Michael McCarthy of Front Office Sports, who says that both ESPN and Amazon Prime Video are eyeing the entire Inside the NBA panel (Barkley, Ernie Johnson, Kenny Smith, and Shaquille O’Neal).

Speaking on Friday to Andrew Marchand of The Athletic and Dan Patrick of The Dan Patrick Show (Twitter video link), Barkley confirmed that he’s been open to pitches from other networks, saying he’d be “stupid” not to listen, especially if TNT doesn’t fully pay out the rest of his 10-year, $210MM contract with the network. However, he said his plan for now is still to retire.

While Marchand’s sources say that one of the league’s other TV/streaming partners could obtain the rights to the Inside the NBA studio show and simply let them continue working out of their current Atlanta studio, Barkley doesn’t believe that Johnson would leave TNT. He said he hasn’t spoken to Smith or O’Neal about the possibility of extending the show beyond 2025 on a new network, telling Marchand that the plan is to “go out with a bang” next season.

Barkley added that he’s not optimistic anything will come of TNT’s lawsuit.

“The NBA clearly wanted to break up with us,” he told Marchand. “I don’t want to be in a relationship where I have to sue somebody to be in it. That makes zero sense. If you have to sue somebody to stay in a relationship, do you think that is a healthy relationship?”

Stein’s Latest: LaVine, Vucevic, Nembhard, Morris, C. Jones, More

While Zach LaVine and Nikola Vucevic remain trade candidates, it appears increasingly likely that both players will open the 2024/25 season as Bulls, Marc Stein writes in his latest Substack story.

League sources tell Stein that the Bulls are “resigned” to the fact that they’re unlikely to find a deal they like for LaVine before opening night and may have to try to help him rebuild some trade value early in the season.

As for Vucevic, his contract (two years for about $41MM) should be easier to move than LaVine’s, but the expectation is that it will be easier for Chicago to find a deal sometime after the season begins than before that, Stein explains.

Here are a few more items from within Stein’s latest look around the NBA:

  • According to Stein’s sources, Pacers guard Andrew Nembhard was only willing to accept a three-year extension from Indiana rather than a four-year deal. The contract will put Nembhard in position to sign his next contract in 2028 when he’s 28 and presumably right in his prime.
  • The Mavericks remain committed to re-signing forward Markieff Morris, even after filling their 15-man roster by adding Spencer Dinwiddie, Stein reports. As Stein observes, A.J. Lawson is the most vulnerable of the 15 players on standard contracts, since his 2024/25 salary is non-guaranteed.
  • Former NBA guard Carlik Jones, a key member of the South Sudan Olympic team, is committed to playing for KK Partizan next season after not exercising his NBA out by the July 25 deadline, according to Stein, who notes that Donta Hall‘s new two-year contract with Baskonia has an NBA out after the 2024/25 season.
  • Evan Fournier and Patty Mills, who finished last season on NBA rosters but don’t have contracts for 2024/25, are among the notable free agents to watch at the Olympics, according to Stein. Stein is also curious about whether a strong showing from Nets guard Dennis Schröder in Paris could help boost his trade value as the German enters a contract year.

Mavericks To Sign Kessler Edwards To Two-Way Contract

Free agent forward Kessler Edwards has agreed to a sign a two-way contract with the Mavericks, reports Shams Charania of The Athletic (Twitter link).

Edwards, who will turn 24 in August, spent the last season-and-a-half in Sacramento and appeared in 54 games for the Kings last season. However, his role was extremely limited. He averaged just 5.1 minutes per game off the bench, often seeing action in garbage time.

The 6’8″ forward had his best season in the NBA as a rookie in 2022/23, when he averaged 5.9 points and 3.6 rebounds in 20.6 minutes per game across 48 outings (23 starts) for the Nets. He posted a .412/.353/.842 shooting line that season.

Edwards was eligible for restricted free agency this summer, but the Kings opted not to issue him a qualifying offer, making him an unrestricted free agent.

A former Pepperdine standout, Edwards will join Alex Fudge and Brandon Williams as Dallas’ players on two-way contracts.

Latest On Cavaliers RFA Isaac Okoro

Nearly four weeks after the NBA’s free agent period opened, Isaac Okoro is the only standard restricted free agent who remains unsigned. And with little cap room still available around the league and few teams seemingly inclined to use their full mid-level exception, the Cavaliers have “a ton of leverage” in their negotiations with the RFA forward, Chris Fedor of Cleveland.com stated in the latest episode of the Wine & Gold Talk podcast (YouTube link).

“The sense that I get in talking to a lot of people around the NBA, I’m not sure what the offer is specifically that the Cavs have made to Isaac, (but) they believe that it’s a fair offer. It’s a multiyear offer,” Fedor said (hat tip to HoopsHype). “It’s what they think he’s worth based on the construction of this particular roster and based on the role that he’s going to have for this roster. I don’t know exactly what the offer is that they have made, but the sense that I get in talking to people around the NBA is that it’s a multiyear offer in the annual range of $8 to $10 million.

“If it gets to a point where Isaac and his people are looking for multiple years around $12 to $15 million, right around the mid-level exception, that’s not a number that the Cavs would be comfortable with moving forward.”

After signing Evan Mobley and Donovan Mitchell to lucrative new long-term extensions this offseason, the Cavs will have three maximum-salary players on their roster beginning in 2025/26. With stricter spending restrictions in effect under the league’s new Collective Bargaining Agreement, the team is wary about committing an annual salary well into the eight figures for a player like Okoro who doesn’t project to be a starter, per Fedor.

As Fedor explains, Cleveland would be comfortable with Okoro accepting his qualifying offer, which would pay him $11,828,974 in 2024/25 and would put him on track for unrestricted free agency next summer. While they’d be reluctant to pay him that amount for several seasons, the Cavs are OK with that number for one year before the rest of the roster gets more expensive.

Okoro, meanwhile, will have to determine whether he likes the idea of betting on himself by taking a higher 2024/25 salary and returning to free agency in about 11 months, or if he prefers the security of a multiyear deal that will pay him a little less next season.

Of course, it would be ideal for Okoro if another suitor swooped in to put pressure on the Cavaliers, but given that no team has emerged to this point to aggressively pursue him, that suitor may not be out there. I’ve speculated a couple times that Detroit would be a fit for the former No. 5 overall pick, given the J.B. Bickerstaff connection, the Pistons’ remaining cap room (approximately $11MM), and the fact that Detroit could afford to be patient with Okoro’s development on offense. But there have been no real indications that the Pistons are interested.

Okoro is an excellent point-of-attack defender whose offensive contributions remain relatively limited. The 23-year-old knocked down a career-high 39.1% of his three-point attempts last season, but that was on low volume (1.2 makes per game), with opposing defenses often sagging off of him.

The Cavs are currently operating about $9.7MM below this season’s luxury tax line, with 12 players under contract. If they sign a minimum-salary player as their 13th man and leave their 15th roster spot open, they could sign Okoro for about $25MM over three years or $34MM over four and remain barely below the tax line. However, the fact that they’re willing to live with Okoro signing his $11.8MM qualifying offer suggests the Cavs aren’t necessarily committed to staying out of tax territory.

Pacers Sign Andrew Nembhard To Three-Year Extension

JULY 26: Nembhard’s extension with the Pacers is official, according to NBA.com’s transaction log.


JULY 24: The Pacers and guard Andrew Nembhard have agreed to terms on a three-year contract extension, agents Todd Ramasar and Jaafar Choufani tell ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski.

The new deal will begin in 2025/26, replacing Nembhard’s team option for that season. According to Wojnarowski, it’ll be worth the maximum amount that the Pacers guard can receive on a three-year extension based on NBA rules (140% of this season’s $12.93MM estimated average salary, with 8% annual raises).

Nembhard will earn a starting salary of approximately $18.1MM in ’25/26 and a total of $58.65MM across the three seasons. The 24-year-old is making a minimum salary of about $2.02MM in the final year of his current contract in ’24/25.

The 31st overall pick in the 2022 draft, Nembhard has started 110 of 143 games for the Pacers since entering the league, posting averages of 9.3 points, 4.3 assists, and 2.4 rebounds in 26.4 minutes per contest, with a shooting line of .467/.353/.797.

While he typically starts alongside star point guard Tyrese Haliburton, the former Gonzaga standout also shares backup point guard duties with T.J. McConnell, taking on additional ball-handling responsibilities when he’s not on the floor with Haliburton.

As Wojnarowski points out, Nembhard was Indiana’s top performer when Haliburton was unavailable in Games 3 and 4 of the Eastern Conference Finals this spring due to an injury. He averaged 28.0 PPG, 9.5 APG, and 5.0 RPG on .564/.538/1.000 shooting in those two single-possession losses to the eventual champion Celtics.

Nembhard’s deal will be the third long-term contract handed out to a key rotation piece by the Pacers this offseason. Pascal Siakam received a four-year, maximum-salary deal, while Obi Toppin signed a four-year, $58MM pact. Haliburton’s five-year max extension, signed in 2023, also takes effect this season.

Nembhard will be suiting up at the Olympics in Paris this summer, providing depth in a loaded Canadian backcourt headlined by Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jamal Murray.

Horst: Bucks Have “Zero Intentions” Of Trading Brook Lopez

Bucks center Brook Lopez was cited as a potential offseason trade candidate at the start of the summer, but we haven’t heard any rumors about the big man since the end of June and it doesn’t sound like that will change anytime soon.

Speaking to Eric Nehm of The Athletic, Bucks general manager Jon Horst said the team has no intention of trading Lopez, whom he called a “core part” of the roster.

“First of all, rumors and chatter are what makes the league so interesting and so fun, so people are always going to speculate and talk about it. And I typically don’t talk about any of this stuff with the media, but I will say, because Brook is so core to who we are, we have zero intentions of trading Brook,” Horst said. “Of course he has value around the league. That’s a credit to him. But we’ve not engaged in any real conversations about trading Brook. There are teams that have a lot of value and interest in him. It’s my job to take calls, receive calls, have conversations, but Brook has been and will continue to be core to who we are.

Lopez is earning $23MM this season in the final year of his current contract, so he’ll become an unrestricted free agent this summer. He’ll also turn 37 next April, so the idea that the Bucks could consider shopping him for younger pieces isn’t outrageous.

Still, the veteran center remains a crucial part of Milwaukee’s starting lineup whose production wouldn’t be easy to replace. Lopez serves as a defensive anchor on one end of the floor, having finished second in Defensive Player of the Year voting in 2023, and a floor-spacing threat on the other — he has made 36.9% of his three-pointers over the past three seasons.

“I hope that Brook retires as a Milwaukee Buck,” Horst said. “That’s been the goal since we originally got him. His impact on our team defensively and rebounding is elite. It only gets better. It’s not declining. I mean, he’s an anomaly in how he just continues to get better and better and better.

“For (head coach) Doc (Rivers), who got to spend time with Brook personally last year, Brook holds an incredible value for Doc for what he does defensively and rebounding and offensively, the spacing he gives us, and especially Giannis (Antetokounmpo), is unique.”

Serge Ibaka Signs With Real Madrid

Veteran forward/center and former NBA champion Serge Ibaka has signed a one-year contract with Real Madrid, the Spanish team announced on Friday in a press release. The agreement was initially reported in early June.

Ibaka, who will turn 35 in September, last played in the NBA in 2022/23, when he appeared in 16 games for Milwaukee. He spent the ’23/24 season with Bayern Munich and won a German League championship with the team.

A three-time All-Defensive player who received votes for Defensive Player of the Year for four consecutive seasons from 2011-14, Ibaka averaged 12.0 points, 7.1 rebounds, and 1.9 blocks in 27.3 minutes per game across 919 NBA regular season appearances from 2009-23.

Although he was a key rotation player for the Raptors’ 2019 title team and remained productive for a couple more seasons after that, the big man was eventually slowed by back issues that limited his availability and his effectiveness.

However, Ibaka had a nice bounce-back season in Germany in 2023/24, averaging 12.6 PPG, 6.8 RPG, and 1.3 BPG with a shooting line of .598/.480/.667 in 28 EuroLeague games for Bayern Munich.

Ibaka, who had a brief stint with Real Madrid during the 2011 NBA lockout, is one of two veteran NBA bigs who has long been expected to join the Spanish club this offseason. There have also been reports that Usman Garuba will land in Madrid, though nothing is official yet on that front.

Both Ibaka and Garuba have represented Spain in international competition, with Garuba playing for the Spanish team at this year’s Olympics.

Olympic Notes: Top Medal Contenders, Jovic, Murray, Nembhard

The men’s basketball event at this summer’s Paris Olympics has a good chance to be the most competitive international men’s tournament of all-time, contends Brian Windhorst of ESPN. As Windhorst writes, just making the 12-team field is an accomplishment in itself, given that plenty of worthy clubs didn’t make the cut, such as Luka Doncic and the Slovenians, who reached the semifinals at the last Olympics in Tokoyo.

While Team USA will enter the event as the significant favorite to win gold, the Americans will face stiff competition from Canadian and Australian squads heavy on NBA talent, Serbian and Greek teams headed up by superstars (Nikola Jokic and Giannis Antetokounmpo) with multiple MVP awards under their belts, a German club coming off World Cup gold in 2023, and a host team (France) anchored by the NBA’s top two finishers in Defensive Player of the Year voting (Rudy Gobert and Victor Wembanyama), Windhorst writes.

Windhorst identifies USA vs. Serbia on Sunday as the biggest pool-play game to watch this weekend, and singles out a pair of crucial Group A showdowns – Spain vs. Greece and Canada vs. Australia – to watch on Tuesday.

Here’s more on the Olympic men’s basketball tournament, which tips off on Saturday:

  • Nikola Jovic‘s availability for the Olympics appeared to be up in the air in recent weeks due to a foot/ankle injury, but the Heat forward was included on Serbia’s 12-man roster and expects to play off the bench on Sunday in the team’s pool-play opener vs. Team USA, tweets Tim Reynolds of The Associated Press. “I really feel good now,” Jovic said. “Life is great. I may not be in the best shape, but I’ll be ready for the game.”
  • As noted earlier this week, Jamal Murray hasn’t seen much action during Team Canada’s pre-Olympic tune-ups, raising questions about how ready the Nuggets guard will be when the Canadians’ Olympic schedule tips off on Saturday. However, according to Michael Grange of Sportsnet.ca (Twitter link), word from the team’s scrimmage vs. Brazil on Wednesday was that Murray’s minutes got “into the teens” and he looked “great.”
  • In a feature for Sportsnet.ca, Grange takes a closer look at Pacers guard Andrew Nembhard, a rising star on the Canadian national team who just agreed to a three-year extension with Indiana. The 24-year-old wasn’t on the roster for last year’s World Cup, but is expected to play a significant role in Paris. “He plays with the highest of IQs, he’s probably one of my favorite players in the NBA right now, he’s just very underrated,” Murray said of Nembhard. “He’s very good defensively, he’s very deceptive on both ends of the court. He plays the passing lanes and he’s physical for his size … And he can lead a unit better than people give him credit for. I’m excited to play alongside him.”
  • In case you missed it, we have the full 12-man rosters for each team participating in the Olympic men’s basketball tournament right here. The list of 144 players includes 82 who are currently on NBA rosters or have previous NBA regular season experience.