As was the case a year ago, some of the players eligible for rookie scale extensions this fall are seeking new deals with an average annual value of $30MM, according to Jake Fischer of The Stein Line (Substack link).
One of those players, Fischer writes, is Nuggets wing Christian Braun. League sources who have spoken to Fischer suggest that the low end of an extension for Braun could be in the neighborhood of $25MM annually.
Braun, 24, made a strong case for a lucrative new contract in his first season as a full-time starter in 2024/25, averaging 15.4 points, 5.2 rebounds, 2.6 assists, and 1.1 steals in 33.9 minutes per game. All of those numbers were career highs, as were his shooting percentages of 58.0% from the floor, 39.7% on three-pointers, and 82.7% from the free throw line.
While Braun is a viable candidate for a new deal ahead of the October 20 deadline, teammate Peyton Watson appears unlikely to be extended before the season, according to Fischer, who explains that Denver’s cap and tax situation going forward will make the club reluctant to lock in too many role players on guaranteed multiyear deals.
Here’s more from Fischer:
- The Suns aren’t considered likely to work out a rookie scale extension with center Mark Williams this month, Fischer reports. Sources tell The Stein Line that Phoenix would prefer to continue evaluating Williams during the 2025/26 season and see whether he can have a healthier year after not playing more than 44 games in any of his first three NBA seasons. The big man would be a restricted free agent next summer.
- Confirming a prior report from The Athletic, Fischer writes that the Jazz and Walker Kessler have no momentum toward a rookie scale extension and that the young center is expected to become a restricted free agent in 2026. Not extending Kessler now would also make him easier to trade during the season if Utah decides to go in that direction. The Lakers have repeatedly been identified as a team with interest, and Fischer hears the Suns eyed Kessler before trading for Williams in June.
- While the Jazz remain open to listening to inquiries on Lauri Markkanen, they’re not actively looking to move the standout forward, says Fischer. In the short term, Kevin Love is the more obvious trade candidate in Utah, Fischer continues, observing that Love’s 20-minute stint in Wednesday’s preseason opener had teams wondering if the Jazz were trying to showcase him for potential suitors. While I’d be surprised if Utah is able to get anything for Love on the trade market, finding a team willing to sign him to a minimum-salary contract could benefit the Jazz, since he’d be more inclined to give up money in a buyout if he has a new destination lined up.
kessler is going to be a problem for the jazz. He will get paid this offseason with so many teams wanting a center. Lakers will have money avaialble to offer him a strong offer. If jazz resigns him they will lose a big chunk of the flexability they have.
Writing is on the wall: the Jazz buy out Love, and GSW picks him up for the minimum.
Warriors need some size and floor spacing to back up at PF and C. And Love reduces the average age of Kerr’s rotation.
Stop it.
Nobody is going to sign a 38-year-old 6-8 power forward. Even a team as desperate as the Warriors.
Love was amazing player when he was younger. Premier defensive rebounder and stretch 4 with the three point shot. Great vision known for his outlet passes and always had strong fundamentals.
Great player 10 years ago.
Had a role five years ago.
Provides nothing in the current day.
You of all people should be able to detect tongue-in-cheek.
The main point is that he brings down our average age.
And he’s 37, not 38.
He’s going to Lakers …. or Clippers and finish his career in LA. Can still shoot and rebound, smart player.
He was a no defense stat-padder 10 years ago. Now he’s just a locker room guy.
Kessler and Hendricks for Clingan and Reath