Celtics Sign Lonnie Walker To Exhibit 10 Deal

AUGUST 30: Walker’s Exhibit 10 deal is official, according to RealGM’s transaction log.


AUGUST 28: The Celtics are signing free agent shooting guard Lonnie Walker IV, reports Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN. According to Shams Charania of The Athletic (via Twitter), Walker will receive an Exhibit 10 training camp contract.

The 6’4″ swingman will be competing for the reigning champs’ 15th and final regular season roster spot. If Walker is waived before the regular season begins and decides to play in the G League with the Celtics’ affiliate, his Exhibit 10 contract would make him eligible for a bonus worth up to $77.5K.

Should he make Boston’s regular season roster, Walker could actually compete for rotation minutes off the bench, at least during the regular season. Kevin O’Connor of The Ringer notes (via Twitter) that the veteran wing connected on almost 40% of his catch-and-shoot three-point tries across his past two seasons, while with the Lakers and Nets.

The 25-year-old is also deceptively athletic, and can finish effectively around the rim when given more extended time on the ball.

The high-flying guard spent his first four pro seasons with the Spurs, who selected him with the No. 18 pick out of Miami in 2018. He spent 2022/23 with the Lakers, providing useful bench minutes sporadically during L.A.’s run to the Western Conference Finals. In 2023/24, while on the lottery-bound Nets, Walker averaged 9.7 points, 2.2 rebounds, 1.3 assists and 0.6 steals across 17.4 minutes per game, with a shooting line of .423/.384/.763.

Boston’s interest in Walker dates back at least to last season. Ahead of February’s trade deadline, the Celtics inquired with Brooklyn about a potential deal for Walker, tweets Jake Fischer of Yahoo Sports.

NBA’s Top 50 Highest-Paid Players For 2024/25

Many of the NBA’s highest-paid players are on contracts considered maximum-salary deals, but the 2024/25 salaries for those players vary significantly depending on when the player signed his contract and how much NBA experience he has. That’s why a player like Stephen Curry will earn nearly $22MM more than Deandre Ayton in ’24/25 despite both players technically being on max deals.

When a player signs a maximum-salary contract, he doesn’t necessarily earn the NBA max for each season of that contract — he earns the max in year one, then gets a series of identical annual raises. In Curry’s case, his 2024/25 salary actually exceeds this year’s maximum, since the annual cap increases since he began earning the max haven’t kept pace with his annual 8% raises.

Listed below, with some help from Spotrac‘s salary data, are the top 50 highest-paid NBA players for the 2024/25 season. The players on this list don’t necessarily have the contracts with the largest overall value. This top 50 only considers the current league year, with the player’s ’24/25 base salary listed.

Additionally, we’ve noted players who could potentially increase their earnings via incentives or trade bonuses. We didn’t add those notes for players like Curry or Jaylen Brown, who have trade bonuses but are already earning the maximum — their salaries for this season can’t increase beyond their max.

Here are the NBA’s 50 highest-paid players for the 2024/25 season:


  1. Stephen Curry, Warriors: $55,761,216
  2. Joel Embiid, Sixers: $51,415,938
    Nikola Jokic, Nuggets: $51,415,938
  3. Bradley Beal, Suns: $50,203,930
  4. Kevin Durant, Suns: $49,856,021
    • Durant can earn another $1,323,000 in likely incentives.
  5. Devin Booker, Suns: $49,205,800
    Jaylen Brown, Celtics: $49,205,800
    Paul George, Sixers: $49,205,800
    Kawhi Leonard, Clippers: $49,205,800
    Karl-Anthony Towns, Timberwolves: $49,205,800
  6. Jimmy Butler, Heat: $48,798,677 (15% trade kicker)
  7. Giannis Antetokounmpo, Bucks: $48,787,676 (15% trade kicker)
    Damian Lillard, Bucks: $48,787,676
  8. LeBron James, Lakers: $48,728,845 (15% trade kicker)
  9. Rudy Gobert, Timberwolves: $43,827,586
  10. Anthony Davis, Lakers: $43,219,440 (15% trade kicker)
  11. Zach LaVine, Bulls: $43,031,940 (15% trade kicker)
    Luka Doncic, Mavericks: $43,031,940
    Trae Young, Hawks: $43,031,940
  12. Fred VanVleet, Rockets: $42,846,615
  13. Anthony Edwards, Timberwolves: $42,176,400
    Tyrese Haliburton, Pacers: $42,176,400
    Lauri Markkanen, Jazz: $42,176,400
    Pascal Siakam, Pacers: $42,176,400
  14. Ben Simmons, Nets: $40,338,144
  15. Kyrie Irving, Mavericks: $40,000,000 (15% trade kicker)
    • Irving can earn another $1,000,000 in likely incentives and $1,000,000 in unlikely incentives.
  16. Domantas Sabonis, Kings: $39,200,000
    • Sabonis can earn another $1,300,000 in likely incentives and $1,300,000 in unlikely incentives.
  17. Darius Garland, Cavaliers: $36,725,670
    Ja Morant, Grizzlies: $36,725,670
    Zion Williamson, Pelicans: $36,725,670
  18. OG Anunoby, Knicks: $36,637,932 (15% trade kicker)
  19. Brandon Ingram, Pelicans: $36,016,200 (15% trade kicker)
    Jamal Murray, Nuggets: $36,016,200
  20. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Thunder: $35,859,950
    Michael Porter Jr., Nuggets: $35,859,950
  21. Donovan Mitchell, Cavaliers: $35,410,310
  22. LaMelo Ball, Hornets: $35,147,000
    Tyrese Maxey, Sixers: $35,147,000
  23. Jayson Tatum, Celtics: $34,848,340 (15% trade kicker)
    Bam Adebayo, Heat: $34,848,340
    De’Aaron Fox, Kings: $34,848,340
  24. Desmond Bane, Grizzlies: $34,005,250 (15% trade kicker)
    • Bane can earn another $1,141,750 in unlikely incentives.
  25. Deandre Ayton, Trail Blazers: $34,005,126
  26. James Harden, Clippers: $33,653,846 (15% trade kicker)
  27. CJ McCollum, Pelicans: $33,333,333
  28. Immanuel Quickley, Raptors: $32,500,000
    • Quickley can earn another $2,500,000 in unlikely incentives.
  29. Khris Middleton, Bucks: $31,000,000
    • Middleton can earn another $666,667 in likely incentives and $2,333,334 in unlikely incentives.
  30. Isaiah Hartenstein, Thunder: $30,000,000
    Jrue Holiday, Celtics: $30,000,000
  31. Jerami Grant, Trail Blazers: $29,793,104

The cutoff point for this year’s top-50 list very nearly reached $30MM for the first time in NBA history. And it’s actually possible that cutoff will exceed $30MM by the time the season concludes.

A handful of players who just missed the top 50 have the ability to earn more than Grant’s $29.8MM base salary if they achieve certain performance incentives during the coming season.

Here are the players who could break into the top 50 by season’s end:

  • Jordan Poole, Wizards: $29,651,786
    • Poole can earn another $3,750,000 in unlikely incentives.
  • Devin Vassell, Spurs: $29,347,826
    • Vassell can earn another $2,391,303 in unlikely incentives.
  • Tyler Herro, Heat: $29,000,000
    • Herro can earn another $2,500,000 in unlikely incentives.
  • Julius Randle, Knicks: $27,561,600 (15% trade kicker)
    • Randle can earn another $1,378,080 in likely incentives and $1,378,080 in unlikely incentives.
  • Dejounte Murray, Pelicans: $24,799,600
    • Murray earned an additional $4,017,535 via a trade bonus on top of his base salary; he can also earn another $699,999 in likely incentives and $1,399,998 in unlikely incentives.

And-Ones: 2025 Storylines, Media News, G. Davis

With few major offseason storylines left to resolve in 2024, Bobby Marks of ESPN (Insider link) takes an early look at the 2025 landscape, forecasting which stories will dominate NBA headlines next summer.

As Marks details, LeBron James will be one of the top free agents to watch for a second straight offseason, since he holds a 2025/26 player option. However, the rest of the 2025 free agent class isn’t particularly star-studded, with Jimmy Butler, Julius Randle, and Brandon Ingram among the top players to keep an eye on.

Barely any teams project to have 2025 cap room at this point, Marks notes, so high-level free agents who want to change teams may require a sign-and-trade. The one team that projects to have significant cap space is Brooklyn, so it could be a big summer for the Nets, who will be in position to be one of the league’s most active teams even if they don’t pursue top free agents.

Cooper Flagg‘s destination, the ongoing impact of the 2023 Collective Bargaining Agreement, and a 2025 rookie scale extension class headlined by Paolo Banchero are a few of the other storylines previewed by Marks.

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

  • A pair of notable NBA news-breakers are making career changes ahead of the 2024/25 season, according to reporting from Ryan Glasspiegel of The New York Post. Shams Charania is leaving Stadium, while Chris Haynes is parting ways with TNT Sports, per Glasspiegel, who says Charania remains under contract with The Athletic and FanDuel TV, though those deals are up soon as well. As Glasspiegel points out, NBC and Amazon Prime Video will likely be seeking NBA reporters and analysts as they prepare to broadcast games beginning in 2025, so it’s possible Charania and/or Haynes could be targeted by one of those new league partners.
  • In other NBA media news, Grant Hill, Richard Jefferson, Tim Legler, and Jay Bilas are among the top candidates to replace J.J. Redick on the top ABC/ESPN broadcast crew for the NBA Finals, sources tell Andrew Marchand of The Athletic. It’s possible ABC/ESPN will try a two-person booth of Mike Breen and Doris Burke, but the network would ideally like a three-person broadcast team, Marchand adds.
  • Amazon has scrapped its plans to make a $115MM investment in Diamond Sports Group to help lift the company out of bankruptcy, as Tom Friend of Sports Business Journal reports. Friend and Evan Drellich of The Athletic explores what that lost investment means for Diamond, which still controls regional sports networks that air games locally for 13 NBA teams.
  • A New York judge ruled this week that former NBA forward Glen Davis can wait until October 22 to begin serving his 40-month prison sentence for fraud, Larry Neumeister of The Associated Press. That judge postponed Davis’ deadline to report to prison by seven weeks to allow him to finish a documentary film project about his life.

Evan Fournier Reportedly Considering EuroLeague Offers

Since having his 2024/25 team option turned down by the Pistons and becoming an unrestricted free agent, Evan Fournier has been seeking out potential NBA opportunities. But with no deal having materialized stateside approximately two months later, the French swingman is “seriously considering” the possibility of returning to Europe, reports Michalis Stefanou of Eurohoops.

According to Stefanou, EuroLeague teams based in Spain, Italy, and France have either made a contract offer to Fournier or expressed interest in signing him.

As Stefanou points out, Fournier tweeted back in 2022 that if he were ever to return to the EuroLeague, his top choice would be Olympiacos, but it’s unclear whether the Greek club is among those teams with interest in the veteran wing.

Before being selected with the 20th overall pick in the 2012 draft by the Nuggets, Fournier spent time with JSF Nanterre and Poitiers Basket 86 in France, so the 31-year-old is no stranger to playing overseas. However, he has been in the NBA for the past 12 seasons, appearing in more than 700 total regular season games for Denver, Orlando, Boston, New York, and Detroit.

Fournier was a reliable starter and scorer for several years in his prime, averaging over 15 points per game for six consecutive seasons from 2015-21 and setting a Knicks team record for most three-pointers in a single season in 2021/22 with 241 (Donte DiVincenzo broke that record this past season).

However, he fell out of Tom Thibodeau‘s rotation in New York during the ’22/23 season, and after eventually getting the change of scenery he sought, he struggled to make an impact in Detroit during the second half of the ’23/24 campaign, averaging just 7.2 points in 18.7 minutes per game across 29 outings, with a .373/.270/.794 shooting line.

Marc Stein reported during the second week of July that the Wizards may have interest in Fournier as a potential veteran mentor to young Frenchmen Alex Sarr and Bilal Coulibaly. Nothing came of that though, and there haven’t been any reports since then linking Fournier to any specific NBA teams.

He probably didn’t help his stock much by posting modest numbers (9.8 PPG on 34.0% shooting, including 32.4% on three-pointers) during France’s silver medal run at the Paris Olympics.

Omer Yurtseven Signs With Panathinaikos

Free agent center Omer Yurtseven has signed a contract with Panathinaikos, the Greek club announced today in a press release. The two sides worked out an agreement after Panathinaikos’ interest in Yurtseven was reported several weeks ago, finalizing a two-year deal that includes a second-year option.

Yurtseven, 26, spent the past three seasons in the NBA, appearing in a total of 113 games for the Heat and Jazz during that time and posting averages of 5.0 points and 4.6 rebounds in 11.8 minutes per contest.

The seven-footer showed promise as a rookie in 2021/22, earning backup center minutes for the Heat for a significant chunk of the season, but was limited to just nine appearances the following year due to an ankle injury. He inked a multiyear contract with the Jazz during the 2023 offseason, but it wasn’t guaranteed for 2024/25, so Utah cut him loose at the start of free agency.

Yurtseven’s deal with Panathinaikos will reunite him with head coach Ergin Ataman, who also coaches the Turkish national team. In a statement passed along by the team, the big man cited Ataman’s presence as a “very important” factor in his decision to join the Greek club.

Panathinaikos is coming off a dominant season in which it went 26-1 in Greek League play and defeated Olympiacos to win the championship. The team also had a 23-11 regular season record in EuroLeague competition and knocked off Maccabi Tel Aviv, Fenerbahce, and Real Madrid in the postseason to win its seventh EuroLeague title.

Bruno Caboclo Signs With Hapoel Tel Aviv

Former NBA first-round pick Bruno Caboclo has signed with Hapoel Tel Aviv, the Israeli club formally announced today (via Twitter). According to a Sport5 report relayed by Sportando, the contract covers two seasons. Previous reporting indicated the second year would be a team option.

Caboclo was said to be working out with the Warriors this week in the hopes of landing an NBA contract. While it’s possible Caboclo’s deal includes an NBA opt-out clause in the event that he receives an offer from Golden State or another team, the fact that he’s officially moving forward with Tel Aviv suggests that no NBA opportunity he likes has materialized.

The 20th overall pick in the 2014 draft, Caboclo spent parts of seven seasons in the NBA, but appeared in just 105 total games for the Raptors, Kings, Grizzlies, and Rockets from 2014-21. He averaged 4.2 points and 2.6 rebounds in 12.3 minutes per contest.

Caboclo has been more effective on the international stage, winning a German League (BBL) title in 2023 with Ratiopharm Ulm and earning All-EuroCup Second Team honors that season before spending the 2023/24 campaign with Partizan Belgrade in the EuroLeague. He also represented Brazil in this year’s Olympics, leading the national team with 17.3 points and 7.0 rebounds in 22.1 minutes per game across four outings.

Hapoel Tel Aviv, which is aiming to earn a promotion to the EuroLeague by winning a EuroCup title in 2024/25, also added NBA veterans Patrick Beverley and Ish Wainright earlier this summer.

Amir Johnson Reportedly Joining Clippers’ Staff

Former NBA big man Amir Johnson is joining the Clippers‘ coaching staff under head coach Tyronn Lue in a player development role, according to Law Murray of The Athletic (Twitter link).

A 14-year veteran, Johnson appeared in a total of 870 NBA regular season games for the Pistons, Raptors, Celtics, and Sixers from 2005-19. The 37-year-old averaged 7.0 points, 5.4 rebounds, and 1.0 block in 21.1 minutes per night over the course of his career

When his NBA opportunities dried up, Johnson caught on with the G League Ignite, first as a player and veteran mentor for the team’s young prospects, then as an assistant coach in 2023/24.

As Murray observes, current Clippers assistant Jay Larranaga was a member of the Celtics’ staff during Johnson’s two seasons in Boston from 2015-17. Larranaga has worked with the Clippers’ big men since 2021.

Johnson, who was with the Clippers in Las Vegas at Summer League last month, figures to supplement Larranaga’s work with the bigs in his new role with the organization.

Longest-Tenured NBA GMs/Presidents

NBA teams don’t replace their top front office decision-makers as often as they swap out their head coaches, but it’s still an achievement to spend more than five seasons as a team’s head of basketball operations. Currently, only a third of the league’s top executives (10 of 30) can make that claim, with another four set to enter their sixth season in 2024/25.

Although only one person holds a team’s head coaching job, that same team might carry a variety of front office executives with titles like general manager, president of basketball operations, or executive VP of basketball operations. In some cases, it’s not always which clear which executive should be considered the club’s head of basketball operations, or which one has the ultimate final say on roster decisions. That distinction becomes even more nebulous when taking into account team ownership.

For our list of the longest-tenured GMs/presidents in the NBA, we’ve done our best to identify the top exec in each front office, but if a situation isn’t entirely clear-cut, we’ve made a note below.

One team whose exact hierarchy is unclear is the Spurs. Head coach Gregg Popovich has long held the title of president of basketball operations, though it’s a safe bet he isn’t overly involved in day-to-day front office operations. While general manager Brian Wright and CEO RC Buford are also believed to have significant voices in personnel decisions, we’re considering Popovich to be the head of basketball operations in San Antonio based on his title, meaning he tops the list, narrowly edging out Heat president Pat Riley.

Here’s the list of the NBA’s longest-tenured heads of basketball operations, along with their respective titles and the dates they were hired or promoted:


  1. Gregg Popovich, Spurs (president): May 31, 1994
    • Brian Wright has been the Spurs’ general manager since July 2019 and is believed to lead most front office business, but Popovich’s title indicates he’s above Wright in the basketball operations hierarchy.
  2. Pat Riley, Heat (president): September 2, 1995
  3. Sam Presti, Thunder (GM/executive VP): June 7, 2007
  4. Masai Ujiri, Raptors (president): May 31, 2013
  5. Sean Marks, Nets (GM): February 18, 2016
  6. Kevin Pritchard, Pacers (president): May 1, 2017
  7. Jeff Weltman, Magic (president): May 22, 2017
  8. Jon Horst, Bucks (GM): June 16, 2017
  9. Koby Altman, Cavaliers (president): June 19, 2017
  10. Lawrence Frank, Clippers (president): August 4, 2017
  11. Rob Pelinka, Lakers (GM/VP): April 9, 2019
    • Pelinka has been the Lakers’ GM since February 2017, but was below Magic Johnson in the front office hierarchy until Johnson resigned on April 9, 2019.
  12. James Jones, Suns (president): April 11, 2019
    • Jones began serving as the Suns’ co-interim GM alongside Trevor Bukstein in October 2018, but was named the lone, permanent head of basketball operations on April 11, 2019.
  13. Zach Kleiman, Grizzlies (executive VP): April 11, 2019
  14. David Griffin, Pelicans (executive VP): April 17, 2019
  15. Leon Rose, Knicks (president): March 2, 2020
  16. Arturas Karnisovas, Bulls (executive VP): April 13, 2020
  17. Monte McNair, Kings (GM): September 17, 2020
  18. Rafael Stone, Rockets (GM): October 15, 2020
  19. Daryl Morey, Sixers (president): November 2, 2020
  20. Brad Stevens, Celtics (president): June 2, 2021
  21. Nico Harrison, Mavericks (GM/president): June 28, 2021
  22. Joe Cronin, Trail Blazers (GM): December 3, 2021
    • Cronin assumed the job on an interim basis on December 3, 2021. He was named the permanent GM on May 10, 2022.
  23. Danny Ainge, Jazz (CEO/alternate governor): December 15, 2021
  24. Tim Connelly, Timberwolves (president): May 23, 2022
  25. Calvin Booth, Nuggets (GM): May 23, 2022
  26. Landry Fields, Hawks (GM): December 21, 2022
  27. Michael Winger, Wizards (president): May 25, 2023
  28. Mike Dunleavy Jr., Warriors (GM): June 16, 2023
  29. Jeff Peterson, Hornets (executive VP): March 5, 2024
  30. Trajan Langdon, Pistons (president): May 31, 2024

Information from Basketball-Reference was used in the creation of this post.

Pistons Notes: Fan Survey, Langdon, Hardaway Jr., Beasley

Pistons fans made it known in an annual survey conducted by James Edwards III of The Athletic that this is somewhat of a make-or-break year for the franchise.

Only 35.8% of the more than 2,000 fans who cast their votes believe the team is headed in the right direction, while 38.7% said they were unsure. The remaining 25.4% believe the Pistons aren’t on the right path. Edwards notes that in previous surveys he’s conducted with the fans, they tended to be more optimistic.

Regarding the question of which player needs to take the biggest leap during the upcoming season, 69% chose either Jalen Duren and Jaden Ivey. Both players had uneven second seasons under previous head coach Monty Williams and will be eligible for rookie scale extensions during the 2025 offseason. It shows that the fans believe this is a pivotal season for both lottery picks, Edwards notes.

As for this summer, the best move wasn’t a player acquisition, according to a majority of fans. Instead, the firing of former GM Troy Weaver received 62.7% of the votes.

We have more on the Pistons:

  • Trajan Langdon‘s personnel moves this summer showed that the new president of basketball operations is taking a long-range approach toward building the franchise, according to Pistons.com’s Keith Langlois. Langdon added a number of veterans on one- and two-year deals to improve the team’s short-term prospects but didn’t take any roll-of-the-dice gambles that might have hindered the long-term vision. Langlois notes that the next two draft classes are deeper with more projected franchise-altering prospects than 2024’s class featured.
  • Tim Hardaway Jr. and Malik Beasley are two of the offseason acquisitions who might be flipped at the trade deadline, depending upon how the first 50 games shake out, according to Omari Sankofa II of the Detroit Free Press (subscription required). Hardaway, acquired in a salary dump from Dallas, and Beasley, who signed a one-year contract as a free agent, are proven gunners who could help a contender if their efficiency holds up.
  • Did you miss any of the Pistons’ offseason moves? You can find our Offseason Check-In right here.

Stephen Curry Signs One-Year Extension With Warriors

6:33pm: Curry has signed the extension, the team’s PR department announced (via Twitter).


11:28am: Two-time MVP Stephen Curry has agreed to a one-year, $62.6MM extension with the Warriors, agent Jeff Austin tells Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN (Twitter link).

Curry was limited to a one-year extension due to the Over-38 rule. He was already under contract for the next two seasons, with salaries of $55.8MM in 2024/25 and $59.6MM in 2025/26. His new extension will cover the 2026/27 campaign, meaning he won’t hit free agency until 2027.

Curry’s salary on the one-year extension won’t be affected by where the ’26/27 cap lands, since he’ll be eligible for a 5% raise on his previous salary, even though that figure will exceed that season’s league-wide maximum.

Widely regarded as the greatest shooter in basketball history, Curry holds career averages of 24.8 points, 4.7 rebounds, 6.4 assists and 1.5 steals on .473/.426/.910 shooting in 956 regular season games (34.2 minutes per contest). The 10-time All-NBA guard, who has won four championships and made six NBA Finals appearances, has spent his entire 15-year career with Golden State.

The Warriors had an up-and-down season in ’23/24. They went 46-36 and were eliminated in the play-in tournament by the Kings. The 36-year-old still performed at a very high level though, averaging 26.4 points, 4.5 rebounds and 5.1 assists on .450/.408/.923 shooting in 74 regular season games (32.7 minutes). Curry earned an All-NBA Third Team nod for his efforts.

Curry is coming off a star showing at the 2024 Olympics in Paris, when he was dominant in both the semifinal (vs. Serbia) and final (vs. France) en route to his first gold medal with Team USA. He had struggled for much of the tournament leading up to those games, but obviously stepped up in a major way when he was needed most.

As ESPN’s Bobby Marks tweets, Curry will surpass $500MM+ in career on-court earnings with the new extension, joining LeBron James and Kevin Durant as the only players to reach that threshold.

Curry, general manager Mike Dunleavy Jr., and owner Joe Lacob have all expressed a desire for the 6’2″ guard to remain with the Warriors for the rest of his illustrious career. The extension agreement has both sides one step closer to achieving that goal.