Raptors Rumors

Raptors Sign Jahmi’us Ramsey To 10-Day Contract

4:54pm: Ramsey has officially signed his 10-day contract, according to NBA.com’s transaction log.


1:48pm: The Raptors intend to sign free agent guard Jahmi’us Ramsey to a 10-day contract, sources tell Shams Charania of The Athletic (Twitter link).

A former second-round pick (43rd overall in 2020) who played one season of college basketball at Texas Tech, Ramsey spent his first two NBA seasons with the Kings prior to being waived in February 2022. He appeared in 32 games with Sacramento, averaging 3.1 PPG in just 7.1 MPG.

Ramsey has spent the past two seasons playing for the Oklahoma City Blue, the Thunder’s NBA G League affiliate. In 30 Showcase Cup and regular season games with the Blue in 2023/24, the 22-year-old shooting guard has averaged 20.6 PPG, 7.8 RPG, 3.6 APG and 1.1 SPG on .531/.406/.699 shooting in 29.5 MPG.

Toronto has an opening on its standard roster and won’t need to release anyone to add Ramsey, who will earn $116,075 over the course of his 10 days with the team.

Raptors Sign Gueye To Two-Way Deal, Waive Nowell

1:40pm: The Raptors have officially signed Gueye to a two-way deal. To create roster space, they waived Nowell.


11:02am: G League forward Mouhamadou Gueye will return to the Raptors on a two-way contract, tweets Shams Charania of The Athletic.

Gueye, 25, signed a 10-day deal with the team last month and appeared in one game. He was also in training camp on an Exhibit 10 contract, but was waived before the start of the season.

Gueye has been playing for the Raptors 905, where he’s averaging 14.0 points and 8.7 rebounds in 21 regular season games. This is his second season in the G League after spending last year with the Texas Legends.

After signing D.J. Carton to a two-way deal over the weekend, the Raptors have all three of their two-way slots filled, so another move will have to be made before Gueye’s contract can become official. Markquis Nowell and Jontay Porter are also on two-way contracts and Toronto has an open roster spot, so one of them could be converted to a standard deal.

This is the last day of the season that players can be signed to two-way contracts, so any move will have to be finalized today.

Scottie Barnes' Injury Creates Opportunity for Ochai Agbaji

  • Raptors coach Darko Rajakovic said “nothing is off the table” in terms of treatment for Scottie Barnes, who fractured a bone in his left hand last week, according to Michael Grange of Sportsnet.ca. Barnes’ absence has already created an opportunity for Ochai Agbaji, acquired from Utah at the trade deadline, who made his first start with Toronto Sunday night.

Draymond Green Raves About Scottie Barnes' Potential

  • Raptors star Scottie Barnes is out indefinitely after fracturing his hand on Friday and may have played his last game of the 2023/24 season. However, Warriors forward Draymond Green believes Barnes is capable of great things next year and beyond, as Michael Grange of Sportsnet.ca relays. “Scottie is an incredible player,” Green said on Friday. “… Me playing the point forward position, I’m not going to sit up here and act like I was the first one to ever do it, but I think I’ve done it a little differently than most. And he’ll take that to another level. … I think Scottie will do way more than I ever did.”
  • Barnes’ injury was unfortunately timed, given that the new-look Raptors were beginning to show some promise, according to Josh Lewenberg of TSN.ca, who explores what the All-Star’s absence means for the team going forward.

Raptors Re-Sign D.J. Carton On Two-Way Contract

After his 10-day contract with the team expired earlier this week, guard D.J. Carton has returned to the Raptors on a two-way deal, the club announced today in a press release.

Carton has spent nearly his entire professional career in the G League since going undrafted out of Marquette in 2021. After one year with the Greensboro Swarm, he has spent the past two seasons with the Iowa Wolves, Minnesota’s NBAGL affiliate.

In 29 games this season for Iowa, Carton averaged 18.6 points, 5.7 assists, 3.4 rebounds, and 1.6 steals in 35.4 minutes per contest, with a strong shooting line of .527/.395/.796.

That performance earned him a call-up to the NBA on a 10-day deal with the Raptors on February 21. He appeared in two games with Toronto during those 10 days, scoring eight points and handing out a pair of assists in 11 minutes of action.

The Raptors opened up a two-way slot on their roster by promoting Javon Freeman-Liberty to a standard contract on Friday night — Markquis Nowell and Jontay Porter are the team’s other two-way players.

Following Carton’s signing, Toronto now has 17 of its 18 total roster spots filled, with one standard spot still available.

Scottie Barnes Out Indefinitely With Fractured Hand

Forward Scottie Barnes sustained a fracture to the third metacarpal bone of his left hand in the second quarter of Friday’s loss to Golden State, the Raptors announced in a press release. He’s out indefinitely.

It’s a tough blow for the former Rookie of the Year, who is averaging career highs in every major statistic this season, including points (20.0), rebounds (8.3), assists (6.1), steals (1.3) and blocks (1.5) though 59 games. His shooting slash line in those contests was .474/.340/.781.

An All-Star for the first time in 2023/24, Barnes has assumed a larger role on both ends of the court for Toronto in 2023/24 after the team lost Fred VanVleet in free agency last summer and then decided to trade impending free agents Pascal Siakam and OG Anunoby during the season.

Since the team is now built around Barnes, who was the fourth overall pick in 2020, it’s hard to say who will take on larger roles in his absence. Trade additions Immanuel Quickley and RJ Barrett seem like obvious candidates, but neither has Barnes’ size or unique skill set.

If the team elects to go with smaller wings, Gradey Dick, Bruce Brown and Ochai Agbaji could receive more run. If the Raptors want to go bigger, they could play Kelly Olynyk more minutes in the frontcourt alongside Jakob Poeltl.

At 22-38, the Raptors were already on the outside looking in of the postseason picture, currently trailing the Hawks by 4.5 games for the final spot in the East’s play-in tournament. With Barnes sidelined, their odds of making the playoffs — slim as they were — are all but eliminated.

Barnes, 22, will be eligible for a rookie scale extension in the offseason, and there’s a very good chance he’ll receive a maximum-salary offer from Toronto.

Raptors Promote Javon Freeman-Liberty To Standard Deal

5:58pm: Freeman-Liberty has officially been converted to a standard deal, Toronto announced in a press release.


4:53pm: The Raptors are giving Javon Freeman-Liberty a promotion, according to Shams Charania of The Athletic, who reports (via Twitter) that the 24-year-old will receive a multiyear standard deal. Freeman-Liberty is currently on a two-way contract.

A Chicago native who played four years of college ball at Valparaiso and DePaul, Freeman-Liberty went undrafted in 2022, later signing an Exhibit 10 contract with his hometown Bulls. He spent his first pro season playing for the Windy City Bulls, Chicago’s NBA G League affiliate, and had an impressive Summer League run in 2023, which led to a two-way deal with Toronto.

Freeman-Liberty, a 6’4″ guard, has only played four total minutes across two appearances with the Raptors in 2023/24, which is technically his rookie season. He’s been a standout at the NBAGL level for the Raptors 905, however, averaging 23.8 PPG, 6.8 RPG, 4.2 APG and 1.5 SPG on .461/.345/.830 shooting in 25 Showcase Cup and regular season games (35.2 MPG).

Javon is quiet guy who came into camp and made a lot of noise,” head coach Darko Rajakovic said. ” … We’re really proud of what he’s accomplished this year” (Twitter links via Michael Grange of Sportsnet.ca and Josh Lewenberg of TSN.ca).

Rajakovic added that he hopes to get Freeman-Liberty some playing time with the NBA club at some point this season.

The Raptors currently have 13 players on standard contracts, and a 14th — D.J. Carton — on a 10-day deal, which expires tonight. That means they won’t have to waive anyone to convert Freeman-Liberty, since standard rosters can hold up to 15 players.

New Lineup Looking Cohesive

Optimism For Kelly Olynyk Extension With Raptors

An agreement on a contract extension between the Raptors and Kelly Olynyk will likely be reached at some point, according to Doug Smith of The Toronto Star (Twitter link). Michael Grange of Sportsnet.ca agrees, tweeting that there is “lots of optimism” about the two sides striking a deal, though the timing is yet to be determined.

Olynyk began the season in Utah, but was sent to Toronto in a deadline deal along with teammate Ochai Agbaji in exchange for a package that included a first-round pick. The Raptors likely would’ve been less willing to give up that 2024 first-rounder if they weren’t relatively confident about their chances of retaining Olynyk – a Toronto native – beyond the expiration of his current contract this summer.

Olynyk, who has averaged 9.4 points, 3.4 rebounds, and 2.7 assists in 18.9 minutes per game across his first 17 appearances as a Raptor, will be extension-eligible all the way up until June 30, though he’ll only be able to tack up to two years onto his current deal and won’t be eligible for a raise greater than 5% due to the NBA’s extend-and-trade rules.

The Canadian big man will turn 33 in April and is earning approximately $12.2MM this season, so those limitations may not be an issue. Grange suggests that a two-year deal in the neighborhood of $25MM might be about right for the 11-year veteran. His max extension prior to free agency would be worth $26.25MM over two years.

A new deal for Olynyk isn’t expected to have any direct impact on Jakob Poeltl‘s future in Toronto, since the two centers have different skill sets and will play different roles. The Raptors presumably don’t envision Olynyk taking the starting job from Poeltl, who has three years and $58.5MM left on his contract beyond this season (those figures include a 2026/27 player option).

While Olynyk could end up signing an extension at some point in the coming days or weeks, it wouldn’t be a surprise if negotiations go well into the spring or even the summer. After the Raptors acquired Thaddeus Young at the 2022 trade deadline, for instance, they waited until the evening of June 30 to announce an extension of the forward’s expiring contract.

If Olynyk decides he’d prefer to test the market, perhaps to seek more than two years or a starting salary higher than $12.8MM on his next contract, he could opt for free agency and sign a new deal with the Raptors or another team in July.

And-Ones: LeBron, Bronny, Draft, Stephenson, Cap Space

LeBron James was unhappy that son Bronny James was removed from ESPN’s 2024 draft projections and instead placed in a 2025 mock draft, according to Alex Andrejev and Sam Vecenie of The Athletic. The ESPN story had the younger James going in the second round in 2025.

“Can y’all please just let the kid be a kid and enjoy college basketball,” LeBron wrote in since-deleted posts on social media, adding, “These Mock Drafts doesn’t matter one bit! I promise you! Only the WORK MATTERS!! Let’s talk REAL BASKETBALL PEOPLE!”

LeBron has often stated he wanted to stay in the league long enough to play with his son. Bronny, a freshman at USC, is averaging a modest 5.5 points, 2.8 rebounds and 2.5 assists per game through 19 contests and is no longer considered a lock to be a one-and-done prospect.

We have more from around the basketball world:

  • Speaking of this year’s draft class, ESPN’s Jonathan Givony and Jeremy Woo address a number of topics, including the potential of UConn’s Stephon Castle and Donovan Clingan, Houston’s Jamal Shead and Weber State’s Dillon Jones.
  • Lance Stephenson, 10-year NBA veteran, is currently playing for the NBA G League’s Iowa Wolves. Stephenson feels he could help an NBA team in numerous ways if given a chance to play in the league again. “Leadership. Definitely, helping young guys. Winning mentality, just that edge on the defensive end,” Stephenson told Sam Yip of Hoops Hype. “A lot of teams need help with defense, especially during the playoffs. Tough guys that can play defense and lock down and win games. I can bring any edge that a coach needs.”
  • Several teams could have major cap space this summer, with the Sixers, Pistons, Raptors and Magic well-positioned to do some major spending. Hoops Hype’s Mark Deeks breaks down what every team’s cap situation will look like when the offseason arrives.