Hawks’ Bogdanovic, Bufkin, Krejci Will Be Out Multiple Weeks

Hawks wing Bogdan Bogdanovic will be sidelined for at least a month, the team announced in a press release on Tuesday.

Bogdanovic underwent a non-surgical procedure on Monday. He missed the team’s game on Sunday with what the team labelled right hamstring tendinopathy. He will be reevaluated in approximately four weeks.

The team also provided updates on three other players.

Guard Kobe Bufkin (right shoulder subluxation) has begun treatment and rehabilitation. Like Bogdanovic, he will be reevaluated in approximately four weeks. Bufkin suffered a partially dislocated shoulder in practice last week.

Guard/forward Vit Krejci sustained a right adductor strain during Monday’s game against Washington. He will be reevaluated in two weeks.

Guard Dyson Daniels has a right hip flexor strain, which also occurred on Monday. He’s out for Wednesday’s game at Washington and will continue to receive treatment.

The news regarding Bogdanovic, who is in the second year of a four-year, $68MM contract, is the most significant. He averaged a career-best 16.9 points, 3.4 rebounds, 3.1 assists and 1.2 steals last season while appearing in 79 games. He’s one of the top three-point shooters in the league, making 38.4% for his career.

The injuries on the backcourt and wing will mean more playing time for Garrison Mathews and Keaton Wallace.

Sixers Fined $100K For Statements About Embiid

The Sixers have been fined $100K by the NBA for violating league rules, including its player participation policy, according to a press release.

Philadelphia had been the subject of a league investigation after holding Joel Embiid out of games during the first week of the season for what the team dubbed “left knee injury management.”

According to today’s announcement from the NBA, the 76ers weren’t fined for resting Embiid, but for public statements that club representatives – including general manager Daryl Morey and head coach Nick Nurse – made about his status.

Nurse told reporters last week that Embiid hadn’t suffered any setbacks after injuring his left knee last season and suggested that the star center’s absence during the first few days of the season was part of the team’s plan for managing his workload.

“The league’s investigation also confirmed that Embiid has been unable to play in the 76ers’ regular season games this season due to a left knee condition, and therefore his games missed have not violated the Player Participation Policy,” the NBA’s statement reads.

While a team is considered to have violated the player participation policy and is subject to a fine for holding a healthy player out of nationally televised game (like last Wednesday’s Sixers/Bucks contest), a team can also be fined for inconsistent statements that don’t accurately represent a player’s health. The NBA made this ruling based on the latter rule, not the former.

As Bobby Marks of ESPN tweets, a $100K fine is the standard for an initial violation of the player participation policy. Those fines would escalate for subsequent violations, beginning with a $250K penalty for the second strike.

Wizards Won’t Exercise Options On Davis, Baldwin

The Wizards have decided not to exercise their 2025/26 team options for guard Johnny Davis and forward Patrick Baldwin Jr., a league source tells Josh Robbins of The Athletic.

Rather than having the fourth-year salaries in their respective rookie scale contracts become guaranteed, Davis and Baldwin will be on track to become unrestricted free agents in July 2025, assuming they play out the 2024/25 season on their current deals.

Davis’ fourth-year option for 2025/26 would have been worth $6,746,229, while Baldwin’s was for $4,420,156. It doesn’t come as a huge surprise that the Wizards were unwilling to lock in those salaries, since neither player has established himself as a reliable, productive role player to this point. Davis was also drafted by Washington’s previous front office regime.

The 10th overall pick in the 2022 draft, Davis has appeared in a total of 80 games for the Wizards, averaging just 4.0 points and 1.7 assists in 13.1 minutes per night, with a shooting line of .392/.279/.549. Baldwin, the 28th overall pick who began his career in Golden State and was traded to D.C. along with Jordan Poole last summer, has averaged 4.2 points and 2.4 rebounds per contest on .390/.348/.676 shooting in 71 total games (10.3 MPG).

By rule, the Wizards won’t be able to offer Davis or Baldwin a starting salary exceeding their 2025/26 option salaries next summer. That restriction only applies to the team that ends the season with the player on its roster — for instance, is Davis is traded and finishes the season with another club, that club would be prohibited from offering a starting salary worth more than $6,746,229.

Davis and Baldwin are two of the three Wizards players whose contracts include rookie scale team options for ’25/26. The Wizards have, unsurprisingly, picked up the third-year option on Bilal Coulibaly, the team confirmed in a press release. That option is worth $7,275,600.

The No. 7 overall pick in last year’s draft, Coulibaly averaged 8.4 PPG, 4.1 RPG, and 1.7 APG as a rookie in 63 games (27.2 MPG). He’s off to a good start this season, having boosted those averages to 16.0 PPG, 4.7 RPG, and 3.3 APG on .500/.357/.813 shooting through Washington’s first three games.

Spurs Notes: Branham, Paul, Vassell, Cissoko, G League

It remains to be seen whether there will be a regular role for him once the Spurs‘ roster is fully healthy, but Malaki Branham continues to take advantage of an early-season opportunity and is making a case for consistent playing time, writes Jeff McDonald of The San Antonio Express-News.

After providing the Spurs with 14 solid minutes on Saturday, Branham had his best game of the season in Monday’s five-point loss to Houston, scoring 15 points on 5-of-8 shooting in just under 17 minutes of action. His plus-22.6 net rating through three contests is easily the best mark of any San Antonio rotation player — the team’s overall rating is minus-6.0.

“He’s been a pro,” head coach Gregg Popovich said of the third-year guard. “He’s done what he needed to do at practice and shootarounds. He came in and was ready to go. A class act.”

Here’s more on the Spurs:

  • In an entertaining feature story for The Athletic, Fred Katz takes an in-depth look at Chris Paul‘s history of mentorship, speaking to former teammates like Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Cameron Johnson, Mikal Bridges, and Cameron Payne about what they learned from the future Hall of Famer and exploring how the Spurs will benefit from his presence. “There has been a mentorship dynamic with everybody because Chris is Chris,” Popovich said. “His experience and his intelligence, as we know, is off the charts. … He talks to everybody on the court: big, little. (He’s) just been fantastic in that regard.”
  • The Spurs are sending Devin Vassell and Sidy Cissoko to Austin to participate in training camp with their G League team, tweets Tom Orsborn of The San Antonio Express-News. Vassell is in the final stages of his rehabilitation following offseason foot surgery, while Cissoko hasn’t seen any game action yet this season for San Antonio and could use the reps.
  • Speaking of the Austin Spurs, they officially announced their training camp roster on Tuesday (via Twitter). Malachi Flynn, Jamaree Bouyea, and Jameer Nelson Jr. (the son of former NBA point guard Jameer Nelson) are among the notable names on the 14-man squad.

Raptors Pick Up Options On Ochai Agbaji, Gradey Dick

The Raptors have exercised their fourth-year option on shooting guard Ochai Agbaji and their third-year option on shooting guard Gradey Dick, the team announced today in a press release.

Both options are for the 2025/26 season, locking in the duo for at least the next two years. Agbaji’s option will pay him a guaranteed salary of $6,383,525, while Dick’s is worth $4,990,560.

Agbaji has been traded twice since being selected 14th overall in the 2022 draft out of Kansas. He was sent from Cleveland to Utah in the Donovan Mitchell blockbuster that offseason, then was flipped to Toronto along with Kelly Olynyk at the 2024 trade deadline. The third-year wing is off to a strong start this season, with averages of 12.3 points, 5.8 rebounds, and 1.5 steals per game and a shooting line of .588/.455/.571 through four contests.

Dick, another former Kansas Jayhawk, got off to a slow start last season and spent some time in the G League, then began to find his footing in the second half. Known as a sharpshooter, the 13th overall pick in the 2023 draft made 36.5% of his attempts from beyond the arc as a rookie and has been part of the Raptors’ starting lineup this fall. He’s averaging 16.0 PPG on .431/.346/1.000 shooting through four games.

Agbaji will now become eligible for a rookie scale extension during the 2025 offseason. The Raptors will have to make a decision on Dick’s fourth-year option for 2026/27 by October 31, 2025.

We’re tracking all of this year’s rookie scale team option decisions, which are due on Thursday, right here.

Sixers Notes: Gordon, Martin, Embiid, George, Nurse

Tyrese Maxey led the way in the Sixers‘ overtime win over Indiana on Sunday, with a game-high 45 points in his 48 minutes of action. But the team likely wouldn’t have gotten its first victory of the season if not for a pair of offseason additions, according to Keith Pompey of The Philadelphia Inquirer, who highlights the contributions of Eric Gordon and Caleb Martin.

Gordon scored 15 points and was a plus-17 in 32 minutes off the bench, while Martin had a double-double (17 points, 12 rebounds) in 37 minutes.

Joel Embiid and Paul George will be back in the 76ers’ lineup at some point, but it won’t happen on Wednesday vs. Detroit. As Kyle Neubeck of PHLY Sports tweets, while the two stars participated in portions of practice on Tuesday, they’ve been ruled out for tomorrow’s game and will be reevaluated again later this week.

With or without those stars healthy, the club will need major contributions from its role players, Pompey writes. Sunday’s win showed what that could look like, and Gordon is confident that Philadelphia’s supporting cast will only improve as the season progresses.

“We are going to continue to get better,” Gordon said. “This is the worst, you know? You can never panic in this league. There’s too many games, an 82-game season. It’s too early. And we’re going to continue to get better and better. We’ve got guys with great attitudes who are wanting to win.”

Here’s more on the Sixers:

  • No team brought back fewer players from last season’s roster (seven) than the 76ers. That – along with Embiid’s and George’s absences – has created an early-season challenge for head coach Nick Nurse, who is still getting accustomed to his new-look squad and determining the strengths and weaknesses of certain lineups, writes Gina Mizell of The Philadelphia Inquirer. “I’ve got to learn what’s going on with this team,” Nurse said during Sunday’s post-game media session. “… I’m trying to learn what looks good, and what doesn’t.”
  • Embiid hasn’t suited up for a game yet this fall, but he’s already been hit with his first technical foul of the season. According to Tim Bontemps of ESPN (Twitter link), the league announced on Monday that Embiid was assessed a technical for waving a towel on the bench while Andrew Nembhard was shooting free throws on Sunday.
  • Patrick McCaw, Marcus Bagley, and Isaiah Mobley are among the notable names on the training camp roster announced on Monday (via Twitter) by the Delaware Blue Coats, Philadelphia’s G League affiliate. McCaw won three NBA championships with Golden State and Toronto during the first three years of his playing career, while Bagley and Mobley are the brothers of established NBA players (Marvin Bagley III and Evan Mobley).

Lakers’ Koloko Receives Medical Clearance From NBA

Big man Christian Koloko, who is on a two-way contract with the Lakers, has received medical clearance from the NBA’s Fitness-to-Play panel that will allow him to resume his career, according to Shams Charania of ESPN (Twitter link).

Koloko missed all of the 2023/24 season due to a career-threatening blood clot issue. His agent, Calvin Andrews, said over the summer that the former Raptor underwent corrective surgery to address that issue.

After being cleared to resume working out and scrimmaging, Koloko caught on with the Lakers, signing a two-way contract last month with the club. However, he still required formal clearance from the league, whose Fitness-to-Play panel (which consists of three physicians) has the final say in instances of career-threatening health conditions.

Now that he has gotten the go-ahead from the league, Koloko will start practicing with the Lakers this week and is set to begin his ramp-up process toward game action, says Charania.

I’d expect the 7’1″ center to spend some time in the G League before he makes his Lakers debut at the NBA level, but we’ll have to wait to see what L.A.’s plan is. The South Bay Lakers’ season doesn’t begin until November 9 and the NBA’s Lakers are missing some depth up front with Christian Wood recovering from knee surgery.

The 33rd overall pick in the 2022 draft, Koloko appeared in 58 games (19 starts) for the Raptors as a rookie, averaging 3.1 points, 2.9 rebounds, and 1.0 block in 13.8 minutes per contest. He was the Pac 12’s Defensive Player of the Year and Most Improved Player in his final college season at Arizona in 2021/22

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Rudy Gay Announces Retirement

Rudy Gay has decided to call it a career, according to Shams Charania of ESPN, who reports (via Twitter) that the veteran NBA forward is retiring. Gay confirmed the news with an article in The Players’ Tribune.

Gay, 38, was the eighth overall pick in the 2006 draft out of UConn. He began his professional career with the Grizzlies and spent his first six-and-a-half seasons in Memphis before being sent to the Raptors ahead of the 2013 trade deadline.

The forward was flipped to Sacramento less than a year later and spent three-and-a-half seasons with the Kings (2013-17) before moving onto San Antonio during the 2017 offseason. He wrapped up his NBA career by playing for the Spurs for four seasons (2017-21) and the Jazz for two years (2021-23).

Gay was in camp with the Warriors during the fall of 2023, but didn’t make the regular season roster and hasn’t played for an NBA team since then, though he was still being paid by the Thunder in 2023/24 after being waived in July 2023 with guaranteed money left on his contract.

Over the course of his 17 NBA seasons, Gay compiled 17,642 career points, which places him 91st on the league’s all-time scoring list, right behind Magic Johnson and Shawn Marion. Gay averaged 15.8 PPG across 1,120 total regular season outings (779 starts), with a shooting line of .452/.346/.799. He also chipped in 5.6 rebounds, 2.0 assists, and 1.1 steals per contest.

Gay still ranks among the Grizzlies’ all-time franchise leaders in a handful of statistical categories, including points (fifth), rebounds (fifth), and steals (fourth). He averaged at least 20 points per game in three separate seasons, including in 2014/15, when he put up a career-best 21.1 PPG for the Kings.

The 6’8″ forward never made an All-Star Game, but finished third in Rookie of the Year voting in 2007 and was named to the All-Rookie First Team. His career earnings exceeded $184MM, per Basketball-Reference.

“I’m 38 years old,” Gay wrote in his Players’ Tribune article. “That’s nowhere even near mid-career for most people’s professional lives. So, the way I see it, I’ve got a lot of work ahead of me. I just need to figure out what exactly that means.

“Maybe it’s public speaking, or media, or business. We’re gonna see. I have a contracting company, a real estate company. I have the PickUp USA Fitness gym in Towson, Maryland. There are a bunch of things I’ve already begun devoting some time to. Now it’s just a matter of finding one big new thing that I love, and then throwing my energy into it.”

Central Notes: Garland, Atkinson, Mathurin, Vucevic

Following a disappointing 2023/24 season in which he dealt with a major jaw injury and the death of his grandmother, Cavaliers guard Darius Garland entered this fall intent on having a bounce-back year. So far, so good, as Chris Fedor of Cleveland.com writes in a subscriber-only story.

The sample size is small, but through four games (all Cavaliers wins), Garland has been red hot, averaging 19.3 points per game on .547/.500/1.000 shooting. Monday’s performance in New York was his best game yet this season, as he poured in 34 points on 12-of-19 shooting in a six-point win over the Knicks. He also came up big on defense, with two steals and a pair of blocked shots.

As Fedor details, there was plenty of speculation in the spring and summer that the Cavaliers might look to trade Garland in order to balance the roster, but Donovan Mitchell has always believed in his backcourt mate and was confident in Garland’s ability to regain his All-Star form this season.

“I’m happy for him because he went through a lot of BS last year,” Mitchell said. “You have to learn from it, and you have to grow. Sometimes it’s going to suck, and I think he felt that. It’s a four-game sample, but I have no doubt that’s who he is going to be for us this season. That’s who he was when he was drafted. That’s who he was when he was an All-Star. I know what type of player he is. I know we can fit together. You’re seeing it.

“This is probably the best four games that we have continually put together. That is going to continue because we are going to continue to believe in what we can do. There is a confidence about him this year.”

Here’s more from around the Central:

  • New head coach Kenny Atkinson is having a positive early impact on the 4-0 Cavaliers, according to Stefan Bondy of The New York Post. “You feel (Atkinson’s presence), you see it in the group,” Mitchell said. “Just the motion of the offense. You can tell it’s already different.” Garland agreed, adding that Atkinson is “really good for us” and gives the Cavs’ stars “a lot of freedom” on offense.
  • Returning from a shoulder injury that sidelined him for the last month-plus of the 2023/24 regular season and all of the postseason, Pacers wing Bennedict Mathurin has seen his playing time decline in every game since he logged 28 minutes in the team’s opener last Wednesday. As Alex Golden of Setting the Pace tweets, head coach Rick Carlisle cited rebounding and defense as reasons why Mathurin only played 14 minutes in Monday’s loss to Orlando, adding during an appearance on 107.5 FM in Indiana that there are only so many bench minutes to go around. (Ben) Sheppard ended up getting more of the minutes than Mathurin and (Jarace) Walker (on Monday),” Carlisle said. “It’s just kind of part of this whole thing. Mathurin is obviously a very important guy and he scored the ball well in the first two games, but this not only about scoring.”
  • Veteran center Nikola Vucevic is off to a strong start this season for the Bulls, averaging 20.8 points per game on .517/.424/.909 shooting through four outings. If Vucevic’s strong play continues, it could boost his value ahead of February’s trade deadline, but he continues to insist he’s not thinking about the possibility of being dealt, per Joe Cowley of The Chicago Sun-Times. “I see and hear the rumors. People in my life talk to me about it, but I don’t get involved in it too much,” Vucevic said. “I suppose if something were to happen or get more serious, they would come to me, talk to me, but at this moment I don’t think about it.”