Nuggets Waive Three Camp Invitees

The Nuggets have waived forwards Gabe McGlothan and Jaylin Williams, along with guard Jahmir Young, according to NBA.com’s official transaction log. McGlothan, Williams, and Young were in camp with Denver on Exhibit 10 deals.

With the Nuggets carrying 15 players on guaranteed contracts and three on two-way contracts, it always appeared the plan was to have the trio eventually report to the Grand Rapids Gold, Denver’s G League affiliate. That’s likely to be the next stop for all three players, who will receive Exhibit 10 bonuses worth $77.5K apiece if they spend at least 60 days with the Gold.

Young got a chance to play 14 minutes in the team’s second exhibition game in Abu Dhabi against Boston on Sunday and delivered eight points, two rebounds, and two assists. However, Williams (not to be confused with the Jaylin Williams in Oklahoma City) didn’t see action in either of those preseason contests and McGlothan appeared only very briefly in Friday’s game, checking in with three seconds left in the fourth quarter.

The cuts leave Denver with 18 players on its roster, three shy of the preseason limit. The Nuggets have reportedly reached an agreement to sign big man Charles Bediako and it wouldn’t be a surprise if they rotate other players in and out of those back-end roster spots before the season begins, primarily for G League purposes.

Signing and waiving players on Exhibit 10 contracts before the season allows teams to secure players’ NBAGL rights and/or ensure those players will receive bonus money for spending 60+ days with the team’s G League affiliate.

Bulls Sign, Waive Ben Coupet Jr.

OCTOBER 8: As expected, Coupet has officially been waived, according to the transaction log at NBA.com.


OCTOBER 6: Free agent shooting guard Ben Coupet Jr. has signed an Exhibit 10 contract with the Bulls, according to Michael Scotto of HoopsHype (Twitter link).

The 6’7″ swingman, a Chicago native, went undrafted out of Southern Illinois in 2022. He averaged 11.0 points on .449/.411/.761 shooting, along with 4.6 rebounds, 0.9 assists and 0.5 steals per game during his 2021/22 senior season with the Salukis.

Coupet has since been plying his trade for Chicago’s G League affiliate squad, the Windy City Bulls, for the past two years. Across a total of 52 regular season bouts (16 starts), Coup has averaged 6.9 PPG, 2.5 RPG, and 0.7 APG with a shooting line of .446/.377/.793.

Scotto notes that Coupet is expected to be waived ahead of Chicago’s 2024/25 regular season, and rejoin Windy City as an affiliate player.

Should he remain with Windy City for at least 60 days, Coupet will be eligible for a bonus worth as much as $77.5K as a result of his Exhibit 10 deal.

Atlantic Notes: Fernandez, Barrett, Shead, Sixers’ Wings

New Nets head coach Jordi Fernandez has established a rugged tone in training camp, Brian Lewis of the New York Post writes.

“Probably one of the most unique, and hardest training camps I’ve been through in these 12 years now,” guard Dennis Schröder said. “Like it, though, so far. Everybody’s buying into it. Coach and coaches are doing a great job of keeping us organized and together. It’s been great.”

Forward Dorian Finney-Smith shared similar thoughts on the first week of camp.

“We’re going to be well-conditioned,” Finney-Smith said. “The people I talk to around the league, they all had great things to say about him, so I knew what to expect. I heard he was a hard worker and he’d want us to compete. That’s what he’s been asking us.”

We have more from the Atlantic Division:

  • RJ Barrett didn’t play in the second half of the Raptors’ preseason game against Washington on Sunday due to a bruised right shoulder, according to Michael Grange of Sportsnet. Prior to the injury, Barrett scored 17 points in 14 minutes. He’ll be reevaluated early this week.
  • Second-round pick Jamal Shead showed off his defensive skills in the same game. He matched up against fellow rookie Carlton Carrington, who missed all six of his shots and committed three turnovers. “Me and him have a little bit of a history, he got the best of me in a pre-draft workout,” Shead told Grange. “So I had to come out and make it as hard as possible … he’s going to be really good, but I had to give him a taste of NBA-ready defense.”
  • The Sixers have a lot of versatility, especially at the wing spots, Keith Pompey of the Philadelphia Inquirer notes. They are projected to start three wing players in Paul George, Caleb Martin, and Kelly Oubre. They also have options coming off the bench in Eric Gordon, Ricky Council IV, and KJ Martin. “I like to be super versatile, and you got to be able to shift people all over the place,” coach Nick Nurse said. “We do have a lot more in the middle that we can shift around.”

Pacific Notes: Kuminga, Harris, Crawford, James Duo, Suns

Jonathan Kuminga has high expectations for himself this season. The Warriors forward has set an individual goal of making his first All-Star appearance, he told Marc Spears of Andscape.

“That is my trajectory. That is what I’ve been working towards,” Kuminga said. “I did as much as I could working out, getting my body ready, learning the game, working on things on defense. It’s just a matter of when we start playing now and I can show what I’ve been working on and how my game has grown.”

The Warriors and Kuminga have an Oct. 21 rookie scale extension deadline and the forward will be a restricted free agent next summer if he doesn’t sign an extension.

“My agent is taking care of that. I need to focus on what I’m trying to accomplish. The more I accomplish, the more things like that handle themselves,” Kuminga said.

We have more from the Pacific Division:

  • The Kings’ NBA G League affiliate, the Stockton Kings, have named Gabriel Harris as general manager and Quinton Crawford as head coach, according to a team press release. Harris, 33, served as the assistant GM for Stockton last season. Crawford, 34, was an assistant coach with the Suns. He also served as an assistant with the Mavericks in 2022-23 and the Lakers from 2019-2022.
  • LeBron James and Bronny James made history Sunday night as the first father and son to play together in an NBA game. They were on the court together at the start of the second quarter during the Lakers’ preseason game against the Suns. It coincided with Bronny’s 20th birthday. “For a father, it means everything,” LeBron said, per Ramona Shelburne of ESPN. “For someone who didn’t have that growing up, to be able to have that influence on your kids and have influence on your son. Be able to have moments with your son. And ultimately, to be able to work with your son. I think that’s one of the greatest things that a father can ever hope for or wish for.”
  • The Suns shot 41% on 3-point attempts in their 118-114 win over the Lakers on Sunday. Kevin Durant saw some good signs offensively, Duane Rankin of the Arizona Republic tweets. “I liked that we generated good shots. We are able to get (21) 3s up in the 1st half,” he said. “Defensively, pick-and-roll coverage, it’ll get better. That’s where we struggled at the most.”

Wendell Carter Signs Three-Year Extension With Magic

Wendell Carter Jr. has signed a three-year, $58.7MM contract extension with the Magic, Shams Charania of ESPN tweets. The Magic confirmed the signing in a press release.

Carter is entering his third year of a four-year, $50MM contract that was front-loaded. The new deal will begin in 2026 and will keep him under contract through the 2028/29 season.

According to ESPN’s Bobby Marks, Carter will make approximately $18.1MM in 2026/27, $19.6MM in 2027/28 and $21MM in 2028/29 (Twitter link).

It’s the most money Carter could have received for a three-year extension — his 2025/26 salary is below the estimated average salary, so he was eligible for up to 140% of the average. Given the rising salary cap, Carter’s salary is a reasonable cost for a starting center.

The Magic now have both of their top big men under long-term deals. Franz Wagner signed a five-year, maximum-salary extension in July. By signing the extension at this time, Carter will be ineligible to be traded this season due to extend-and-trade rules.

This is Carter’s seventh NBA season, but he’s still just 25. He has averaged 12.5 points and 8.5 points in 27.6 minutes through 315 regular-season games. Carter has battled a variety of injuries throughout his career — he’s never appeared in more than 62 games in a season.

Carter played 55 times last season (48 starts), averaging 11.0 points and 6.9 rebounds in 25.6 minutes. He also made his playoff debut earlier this year, averaging 7.6 points and 6.3 rebounds in 26.4 minutes over seven games.

Carter underwent surgery on his left hand after the postseason. The preventive procedure involved inserting a plate at the site of a fracture on Carter’s hand. He suffered the fracture in early November and had it surgically repaired at the time. He also missed some games last season due to right knee inflammation.

As our extension tracker shows, Carter’s contract is essentially identical to those signed in recent months by Pacers guard Andrew Nembhard and Clippers center Ivica Zubac, though Carter’s will begin a year later.

Knicks Sign Boo Buie On Exhibit 10 Deal

The Knicks have added Boo Buie on an Exhibit 10 contract, the team’s PR department tweets.

Buie was expected to sign a similar contract with the Suns after he went undrafted in June but it never became official. Buie did appear in five Summer League contests for Phoenix, averaging 9.0 points, 2.0 assists and 1.4 rebounds in 21.1 minutes per game.

Buie, a 6’2″ two-time All-Big Ten guard, scored a total of 2,187 points during his five seasons with Northwestern. In 2023/24, he posted a career-high 19.0 points per game on .438/.434/.858 shooting. His 5.0 assists, 3.3 rebounds, and 1.4 steals per game in 34 appearances last season also represented career highs.

Exhibit 10 agreements are non-guaranteed, but can be converted into two-way contracts before the start of the regular season. If Buie is waived and then remains with the G League’s Westchester Knicks for at least 60 days, he’s eligible to earn a bonus up to $77.5K.

Cavs’ Emoni Bates Undergoes Knee Surgery

Cavaliers two-way wing Emoni Bates underwent arthroscopic surgery on Monday to treat a torn meniscus in his right knee, according to a team press release. Bates will be reevaluated in approximately one month, the release adds.

Bates posted a picture of himself in a hospital bed with a smile on his face, stating he had a “slight tear” and that he’d “be back stronger n better.” (Twitter link).

Bates was also on a two-way deal last season as a rookie. He was re-signed in August as a restricted free agent after Cleveland extended a qualifying offer.

A former five-star recruit, Bates was selected 49th overall in the 2023 draft following a pair of up-and-down college seasons at Memphis and Eastern Michigan. The 20-year-old appeared in just 15 games for Cleveland as a rookie, averaging 2.7 points per game on 30.6% shooting in 8.9 minutes per night.

In 27 Showcase Cup and regular season G League games for the Cleveland Charge, Bates showed more promise, putting up 21.6 PPG and 5.7 RPG with a .414/.371/.814 shooting line.

Luke Travers and JT Thor are the other two-way players for the Cavs.

Central Notes: Trent Jr., Wiseman, Giddey, Vucevic

Gary Trent Jr.‘s preseason debut for the Bucks didn’t go well. The former Toronto guard suffered a hyperextension of his left elbow when he ran into the Pistons’ Jalen Duren, who was setting a screen late in the first half, The Athletic’s Eric Nehm notes. Trent, who made two of his three shot attempts before he exited, signed a one-year deal with Milwaukee in July.

The Bucks didn’t provide any official updates on Trent after sharing the initial diagnosis, so it remains to be seen how long the injury might sideline him for, Nehm adds.

We have more from the Central Division:

  • During a Pacers scrimmage game on Sunday, James Wiseman scored eight points and grabbed three rebounds in just eight minutes of action. The Indianapolis Star’s Dustin Dopirak believes Wiseman will push Isaiah Jackson for the backup center spot. Wiseman was signed to a two-year, minimum salary contract in July after playing for division rival Detroit last season.
  • Early in training camp, new Bulls point guard Josh Giddey has been even better than advertised in terms of his court vision and passing ability, Joe Cowley of the Chicago Sun-Times writes. Getting on the same page with his teammates is the next challenge for the former Oklahoma City guard. “I’ve got where maybe there are passes I can’t make but I think I can in my head and I try to make them that are probably not there in the moment,” Giddey said. “I guess it’s just a confidence. As a passer you can’t live on the edge.”
  • Nikola Vucevic knows that the Bulls‘ front office has explored trades for him. The veteran center says he ignores the possibility of being dealt. ‘‘I honestly don’t think about it,’’ Vucevic told Cowley. ‘‘It’s stuff that’s out of my control. My focus is on this team and to help this team be the best team we can be. Changes and all that, that’s not my job. That’s the front office’s job.” Vucevic has two years left on his contract. The Bulls have not shown a willingness to include draft capital to shed his contract, Cowley adds.

Southeast Notes: KCP, Coulibaly, Davis, Baldwin, Hornets

In an interview with David Aldridge of The Athletic, veteran wing Kentavious Caldwell-Pope explained why he chose to sign with the Magic in free agency.

The young core,” Caldwell-Pope told Aldridge. “These are most of the guys that they had last year, just adding new pieces. But that core they have, they already believe in each other, trust each other. Just watching them, the way they played, it was not ‘me, I.’ Everybody took sacrifices. For a young team to be able to grow up that fast says a lot about them and their organization. That made my decision easy.

They were one of the best defensive teams last year, and that’s what I like to do — defend. Natural fit. It was easy for me to just come in and fit right in and not try to step on anyone’s toes. When I talk to most of the young guys, it’s about defense, them helping me and what I see and they don’t see, and I’m telling them. Everybody is eager to learn, I would say.”

Caldwell-Pope, a key role player on two championship-winning teams in the past five years (the Lakers and Nuggets, respectively), was one of the top free agents to switch teams this summer, going from Denver to Orlando. He signed a three-year, $66MM deal with the Magic.

Here’s more from the Southeast:

  • Second-year wing Bilal Coulibaly and showcased his offseason improvement during the Wizards‘ preseason opener on Sunday, writes Josh Robbins of The Athletic. According to Robbins, Coulibaly appears “stronger, more confident and more skilled.” The 20-year-old grew an inch, added 10 pounds to his thin frame, won a silver medal with the French national team, and has also developed his ball-handling, particularly with his left hand, after his rookie campaign ended due to a fractured right wrist.
  • Wizards guard Johnny Davis is another player who looks improved as he enters his third season, Robbins adds. Davis struggled over his first two seasons, averaging just 4.0 PPG and 1.8 RPG on .394/.282/.549 shooting in 78 combined games (13.3 MPG). However, he reworked his shooting form over the summer with his personal trainer in Wisconsin. “The past two years,” Davis told The Athletic on Sunday night, “a development coach from each year has been tinkering with my shot, messing with it. So I came back into this year, and I said, ‘Nobody is touching my jump shot. I’m just going to leave it as it is, leave it comfortable.’ And they’ve left me alone about it. So, it feels really good right now. I’ve been working on it the whole summer, so I’m just glad to see it pay off.”
  • While it’s encouraging that Davis seems to have rediscovered some of what made him a former lottery pick (No. 10 overall in 2022), he’s still deep on the depth chart. Robbins wouldn’t be surprised if the Wizards decline their fourth-year options on Davis and Patrick Baldwin Jr., pointing out that neither player was drafted by the current front office. If that comes to fruition, both players would be unrestricted free agents in 2025.
  • The Hornets dealt with a plethora of injuries to key players last season. In their preseason opener, they had four players out: Mark Williams (left foot), Grant Williams (right hamstring), Cody Martin (right wrist, thumb) and Nick Smith (left groin strain). Head coach Charles Lee doesn’t seem worried about any of the injuries though, per Roderick Boone of The Charlotte Observer. “No concerns,” Lee said. “Everything seems like it’s minor injuries at the moment — some nicks, some bruises. Unfortunately, Grant is another guy that kind of tweaked his hamstring in the preseason, but he was a full participant in camp. There are no worries from my standpoint because a lot of these guys are following their return to play plans and it seems like they’re in a really good place.” Mark Williams is set to be reevaluated on Thursday, while Smith will be checked out in a week.

Nets’ Sharpe, Watford Out Multiple Weeks With Hamstring Strains

A pair of Nets players sustained left hamstring strains during practices last week, the team announced in a press release (Twitter link via Ian Begley of SNY.tv). According to the Nets, forward Trendon Watford will be reevaluted in two weeks, while center Day’Ron Sharpe will be reexamined in six weeks.

The timing of the injury is very unfortunate for Sharpe, who is eligible for a rookie scale extension until Oct. 21, the day before the NBA’s regular season begins. In addition to missing Brooklyn’s preseason contests, he will also be sidelined for at least 14 regular season games (through Nov. 17), and he’ll likely miss additional time beyond that, even in a best-case scenario.

Sharpe, 22, was the 29th overall pick of the 2021 draft. He appeared in 61 games for the Nets last season, averaging 6.8 points and 6.4 rebounds in 15.1 minutes per contest.

Watford’s injury appears to be far less severe. Assuming things go well in his recovery, he might only miss a few regular season games; two weeks from today is Oct. 21, a couple days before Brooklyn’s regular season opener vs. Atlanta.

If Sharpe doesn’t sign an extension in the next couple weeks, he’ll be eligible for restricted free agency next summer, while Watford will be an unrestricted free agent.

Starting center Nic Claxton is also dealing with hamstring soreness and will miss Tuesday’s preseason opener vs. the Clippers, though the injury is considered relatively minor.

With Sharpe and Watford sidelined, second-year big man Noah Clowney seems primed to earn significant rotation minutes. The 20-year-old has been one of Brooklyn’s standouts during training camp, per Brian Lewis of The New York Post.

Noah, he’s getting better, man. He’s getting real good,” veteran forward Dorian Finney-Smith gushed of Clowney. “He’s getting real good. You know, the game is slowing down for him. That tends to happen in your second year after you get some bump. He’s shooting the ball a lot more, and with a lot more confidence. So, again, he’s going to have a great year. He’s been getting better all summer.”