Jaden Ivey will receive the full remaining portion of his $10.1MM salary for 2025/26 after being waived by the Bulls on Monday, writes Mike Vorkunov of The Athletic.

Ivey’s salary has been fully guaranteed since Detroit exercised his fourth-year rookie scale team option back in the fall of 2024, but in instances where a player is accused of “conduct detrimental to the team,” a team can attempt to recoup some of the money it owes him. That won’t happen in this case, Vorkunov explains.

Asked on Monday about the Bulls’ decision to waive Ivey, Bulls head coach Billy Donovan spoke in more general terms rather than getting into specifics, as Vorkunov relays.

“I think there’s a certain level of standards and expectations that are here,” Donovan said. “I mean, we have people from all different walks of life working in the building and players from all different walks of life, right? So, the first thing is, everybody comes with their own personal experiences. But one is, we’ve got to all be professional. I think there’s got to be a high level of respect for one another, and we got to help each other and then be accountable to those standards.”

The decision to waive Ivey was reportedly connected in large part due to several appearances on Instagram Live, where he has made inflammatory remarks about religion and the LGBTQ community, among other things. According to Joel Lorenzi of The Athletic, Ivey was once again streaming on social media just hours after being cut by the Bulls on Monday.

“They’re liars, bro. This is lying,” Ivey said on Instagram Live. “They’re lying saying my conduct is detrimental to the team. That’s a lie. Ask any one of them coaches in there, ‘Was I a good teammate?’ All I’m preaching about is Jesus Christ and they waived me. They say I’m crazy, right? I’m psycho.”

Here’s more on the Ivey situation:

  • Describing the decision to trade for Ivey last month as another poor one by Arturas Karnisovas and the Bulls’ front office, Joe Cowley of The Chicago Sun-Times says there were rumblings prior to the deal that the former No. 5 overall pick was a “preacher.” Those rumblings undersold it, Cowley writes, adding that Ivey’s interviews with the media “became sermons” and that he asked team reporters if they’ve been “saved” and whether they’ve “fornicated before marriage.” According to Cowley, “Not one Bulls player was shedding a tear for Ivey’s removal from the roster.”
  • Julia Poe of The Chicago Tribune also published a column critical of Karnisovas and the front office, describing the trade to acquire Ivey as an “unnecessary risk on a clearly troubled player.” According to Poe, religion isn’t considered a taboo subject in NBA locker rooms, where players “read the Bible before games and praise Jesus after them.” However, Ivey became increasingly insistent on preaching his beliefs in professional settings and “lost the ability to provide basic answers to the media without redirecting the topic to religion,” Poe writes.
  • Ivey took to Instagram Live again on Tuesday to describe the reaction to his comments, per Lorenzi. “Those who are around me, those who are my family members betraying (me) because of what I spoke,” Ivey said. “The truth. Betraying me. Saying that I’m losing my mind. Saying that I’m crazy. Saying that I don’t know the truth. These are my own family members who love me. My blood. Those who raised me saying that I don’t know the truth. ‘Man, he’s psycho.’ He’s this, he’s that. Those are my own household. All because of the gospel. All because I said the truth.”
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