The Spurs are expected to hire Corliss Williamson to be an assistant coach on Mitch Johnson‘s new staff in San Antonio, league sources tell Marc Stein of The Stein Line (Twitter link).
A former star at Arkansas and a Sixth Man of the Year in the NBA, Williamson appeared in over 800 regular season games for four NBA teams from 1995-2007 and won championships at both the NCAA and NBA level. He transitioned into coaching in 2007 after retiring as a player, spending a few years with college programs in his home state of Arkansas before making the leap to the NBA.
Williamson, who has spent the past two years as a member of Chris Finch‘s coaching staff with the Timberwolves, has also had stints as an assistant in Sacramento, Orlando, and Phoenix.
Here are a few more items of interest from around the Western Conference:
- Checking in on where things stand with the Nuggets‘ front office search, Bennett Durando of The Denver Post (subscription required) says the club’s goal is to resolve the situation before the June 25 draft, even though Denver doesn’t control a 2025 pick. Given how little chatter there has been about outside candidates for the job, in-house executives Ben Tenzer (the current interim general manager) and Tommy Balcetis still look like the best bets for the full-time position, Durando writes, though he acknowledges it’s possible the team has just done a very good job of keeping other targets under wraps.
- While the Timberwolves will almost certainly be a taxpayer again in 2025/26, the big question they’ll have to answer is where they’ll draw the line, Yossi Gozlan writes in previewing the team’s offseason for The Third Apron (Substack link). Gozlan predicts Minnesota will try to get below the second tax apron either this offseason or at least by the end of 2025/26 to avoid having another future first-round pick frozen. He also explores how the team might handle its free agents and wonders if the Wolves could reduce their 2025/26 team salary by having Julius Randle decline his player option in order to sign a multiyear deal with a lower starting salary.
- Keith Smith of Spotrac looks ahead to what’s on tap for the Clippers this offseason, discussing James Harden‘s contract situation, considering what the team might do with its other free agents, and evaluating whether an extension for Norman Powell makes sense, among other topics. We published our own Clippers offseason preview earlier this week.
Gozlan predicts Minnesota will try to get below the second tax apron
…….., so Naz Reid has to take the pay cut
For the 2025-26 NBA season, the second apron is projected to be $207.8 million, according to ESPN.
New CBA Rules
If teams remain in the second apron for any three years in a five-year period, their upcoming first-round draft pick is automatically moved to the end of the first round.
Naz will be a free agent. He won’t take a pay cut, far from it.
After his playoffs I doubt he gets more than $15m