Fred Katz of The Athletic recently polled 16 rival NBA executives about what “fair” contracts would look like for the four primary restricted free agents who remain unsigned.
We have already relayed stories regarding Jonathan Kuminga, Josh Giddey and Quentin Grimes, with the key caveat that teams are much more likely to be conservative in their valuations than agents because they don’t want their own players to become too expensive in the future.
In today’s story, the executives weighed in on Nets guard Cam Thomas, who led Brooklyn in scoring with a career-high 24.0 points per game in 2024/25 but was limited to just 25 appearances due to hamstring issues. As Katz writes, Thomas was easily the most polarizing name of the group, and executives were uncertain about whether their views were consensus or otherwise.
“I wouldn’t be shocked if this was way lower or higher,” said one executive who proposed a two-year, $32MM deal. “His scoring is very much ‘eye of the beholder.’”
Whereas 15 of the 16 respondents proposed contracts of at least three years for each of Kuminga, Giddey and Grimes, only eight did the same for Thomas. And while most executives viewed Kuminga ($17-25MM annually), Giddey ($20-25MM) and Grimes ($12-17MM) as having relatively stable market values, the same was not true for Thomas.
In addition to various contract structures – including a one-plus-one (two years, $40MM with a team option, so only $20MM guaranteed), seven two-year deals, five three-year contracts, and three four-year proposals (no one proposed a five-year deal) – the hypothetical offers also ranged anywhere from $10MM to $30MM per year, with the average being $16.7MM annually but only $42.7MM in total guaranteed money.
According to Katz, only two executives valued Thomas in the exact same way. They were also the most bearish on him as a player, offering $20MM total over two years. And the executive who was seemingly the most bullish on the 23-year-old — deeming a three-year, $90MM deal as being “fair” — was quick to add a caveat.
“I wouldn’t personally give (it to) him … But I justified it as ‘fair’ because if I’m him, I’m saying I’m better than Jalen Green and that’s way less than he got,” said the staffer who suggested the $90MM contract, the most lucrative deal in terms of both total money and annual average value.
As Katz points out, Green received a three-year, $105MM rookie scale extension last October. But other score-first guards, like Collin Sexton and Norman Powell, have been traded for relatively modest returns, and the Jazz couldn’t find a taker for Jordan Clarkson, who reached a buyout and signed a minimum-salary deal with the Knicks.
The Nets need someone to score points next season, even if they’re clearly more focused on the 2026 draft than their results in the standings, and Thomas is the player best equipped to do that, Katz writes. But Brooklyn also has a lot of leverage as the only team which can currently make Thomas a strong offer, something it reportedly has shown little interest in doing to this point.
All the guys of his ilk have been dealt.
Thomas, Giddey, Kuminga and Quickly all sign and trade for $25M a year in a 4-way trade = perfect ending to this drama
Teams can be fickle.. one day they seem to value defense, the next day it’s a high volume scorer… these valuations seem to swing back forth. A guy like Dennis Schroder seemed to be undervalued for several years and now at 31, he scores a 3 year deal.
Schroder turned down 4/84 from Lakers because he wanted 4/100.
I bet Dennis remembers the 4y/84m contract he declined from the Lakers.
Bet he doesn’t….like Kuminga and his agent, what contract?
OKC showed teams that people like Dort or Caruso are where real value is. Cam is a bench player guy, $15m tops.
Don’t kid yourself.. a team full of Dorts and Carusos will only go so far. That’s kind of the point… it takes a blend of skills to mesh together and compliment each other to win. The Thunder aren’t going far without having the bucket makers also.
Remind us what Caruso’s last team was up to?
Might as well be comparing Derrick White and Jaylen Brown. Role players need Volume scorers just as much as they do. It’s a 5v5 game.
Thomas isn’t an MVP-caliber shot creator but he’s a lot closer to being 30-40M players like Tyler Herro, Jordan Poole, or Brandon Ingram than he is Ty Jerome.
Anyone who doesn’t understand what a 2way sport means. Should really go watch Tennis. You will see more offense there …….
I have been coming here a long time on and off. And it amazes me how there is still this dismissive attitude towards defense in basketball. Just the way the term gets used on this board. Just shows the ignorance towards the game. Do you really watch the NBA.
Do you know who the Thunder are. Do you understand what won in the playoffs last year. Just amazing !!!
Cam Thomas is not only a oneway player. He doesn’t even understand what a team offense is. He only gives up ball if he feels he doesn’t have shot. He is what you call a nut in the parks. If he isn’t dropping buckets. Then he is useless. I would never want this kind of player on my team. I have no use for him. Just stay away from Knicks.
Curious what your thoughts on RJ Barrett were lol
Nevermind Carmelo Anthony
Las ofertas calificadas deberian ser mejor pagadas para que no tengan dudas sobre si los vale o no los vale el jugador
Cam is a tough one because I think he could have value to a contender but he’d never sign a deal a contender would offer. But I think he could help a more offensively challenged team as a bench gunner
A salary dump with some picks as sweeteners is the route I envision for him. Lots of teams need bench gunners. Sign and trade next off-season in a salary dump + picks makes a lot of sense for all parties.
I could see him getting paid around the high end of the predictions and traded to a mid-contender for a bad contract and a couple protected firsts. Would be a win-win-win in the short term. As long as it’s kept to 2-3 years guaranteed, the contract shouldn’t be debilitating. lots of teams need bench scoring, analytically pretty, or not. Indiana makes some sense.
Most basketball fans are prisoners of the moment that push whatever they are peddled.
Six months ago people were advocating Norm Powell for an All-Star nod. Those same people are bashing Cam Thomas without a second thought.
Maybe Cam should see if there are any open roster spots in Miami.