Mavericks To Waive Tyus Jones

The Mavericks intend to waive point guard Tyus Jones, reports Marc Stein of The Stein Line (Twitter link). Because the move will happen before the end of the day on Sunday, Jones will retain his playoff eligibility for his next team.

Jones, 29, is an 11th-year NBA veteran known for his ability to set up teammates and take care of the ball. He has career averages of 7.3 points, 4.3 assists, and just 0.8 turnovers in 20.7 minutes per game across 738 regular season appearances for Minnesota, Memphis, Washington, Phoenix, Orlando, and Dallas.

After four-year stints with both the Timberwolves and Grizzlies, Jones has bounced around the NBA in recent years, playing for four teams in the past three seasons. He opened this year with the Magic, having signed a one-year, $7MM deal with the team during the 2025 offseason, but had a disappointing year in Orlando, averaging just 3.1 PPG and 2.6 APG on .349/.281/.875 shooting in a bench role.

Jones was traded to the Hornets at the deadline in what was a salary-dump deal from the Magic’s perspective, allowing them to duck below the luxury tax line. Charlotte subsequently flipped him to the Mavericks in a separate trade.

At the time, reports indicated that Dallas had attempted to sign Jones last summer before ending up with D’Angelo Russell and that they’d be happy to have him on the roster for the rest of the season. However, it appears as if the guard prefers to try to catch on with a playoff team.

Waiving Jones will open up a spot on the Mavs’ 15-man roster, and Stein suggests there’s a strong chance that two-way guard Ryan Nembhard will be promoted to fill that opening. Nembhard, who can’t be active for more than 50 regular season games on his two-way contract, appeared in 33 consecutive contests from late November through early February and has been active for 44 in total, but has been on Dallas’ inactive list since Feb. 5.

If the Mavs were to convert Nembhard to a standard contract in the coming days, it would remove his games-played cap for the season and would allow the club to back-fill his two-way slot by the March 4 deadline for two-way signings.

Besides Jones, veteran forward Khris Middleton is another buyout candidate in Dallas. The team has reportedly left the decision up to him, with Denver said to be among his potential suitors.

Cooper Flagg (Foot Sprain) Likely Out At Least Two More Games

Mavericks forward Cooper Flagg continues to deal with a left midfoot sprain. Last year’s No. 1 overall pick missed his sixth consecutive game on Friday due to the injury and is expected to be sidelined for at least two more, writes Grant Afseth of Dallas Hoops Journal.

Probably not that he will play,” head coach Jason Kidd replied when asked if Flagg would be active for Tuesday’s road game in Charlotte.

The Mavs host Oklahoma City on Sunday before embarking on a six-game road trip, which begins on Tuesday against the Hornets. Flagg’s primary competition for Rookie of the Year is Hornets wing Kon Knueppel, his former teammate and roommate at Duke.

As Afseth notes, Dallas initially thought Flagg would return to action immediately after the All-Star break, but that didn’t happen. The 19-year-old last played on February 10, when he sustained the injury, which was confirmed by an MRI.

There has been some speculation around the league that the Mavericks might shut Flagg down for the rest of the season to preserve his long-term health and improve their odds of landing a top draft pick, Afseth writes. The team hasn’t addressed that speculation publicly and Kidd hasn’t given any indication that Dallas is considering going that route, per Afseth.

Flagg has appeared in 49 games (34.1 MPG) this season for Dallas, averaging 20.4 points, 6.6 rebounds, 4.1 assists and 1.2 steals on .482/.302/.804 shooting splits.

Cam Thomas On Nets: ‘They Don’t Believe In Nobody’

Speaking to Stefan Bondy of The New York Post (subscriber link) prior to Milwaukee’s lopsided loss to New York on Friday, Bucks guard Cam Thomas said his departure from the Nets was “absolutely” because the team didn’t believe in him. However, Thomas said that lack of belief wasn’t exclusive to him.

That’s just who they are,” Thomas told The Post. “They don’t believe in nobody.”

After failing to find a suitable deal involving Thomas, the Nets waived him shortly after the trade deadline passed on February 5. He had a de facto no-trade clause after signing his $6MM qualifying offer as a restricted free agent last summer.

Thomas’ representatives preferred that outcome so he could pick his next team; he signed a minimum-salary deal that covers the rest of the season with Milwaukee a few days later.

Asked by Bondy why the Nets didn’t believe in him, Thomas said he was more focused on the present than the past.

I never asked. I don’t even care anymore. I’m on a different team. I don’t want to talk about them much. But that’s what it was. They didn’t believe,” Thomas said. “Always thought — I don’t know. They always thought something was better, I guess. I don’t know. Always chasing something.”

According to Bondy, the former first-round pick said “nothing” came to mind when he was asked to reflect on his four-and-a-half years in Brooklyn.

As Bondy writes, Thomas’ Nets tenure was marked by a significant amount of roster turnover, which may explain his opinion that the team doesn’t believe in anybody. He also played for four different head coaches in Brooklyn.

Thomas, 24, will be an unrestricted free agent this summer.

Heat Notes: Bam, Balance, Jaquez, Riley, LeBron

Thursday’s game at Philadelphia was an important one for the Heat and for the 76ers, who are both looking to avoid the play-in tournament, writes Ira Winderman of The South Florida Sun Sentinel. The No. 8 Heat lost to the No. 6 Sixers and are now 2.5 games behind Philadelphia for the Eastern Conference’s final outright playoff spot.

I don’t want to be in that s–t no more,” big man Bam Adebayo said after the Heat lost 124-117. “We’re better than being in the play-in for the last four years.”

As Winderman notes, Miami has made the play-in tournament in each of the past three seasons and is projected to be in it again in 2025/26. The upcoming home stand could prove important — seven of the team’s next eight games are in Miami, though the Heat will be without leading scorer Norman Powell for at least four of those contests because of a Grade 1 right groin strain.

We’ve already been struggling on the road,” Adebayo said, “so we go home, win some games, you know, be in our atmosphere, be in our habitat where our fans are cheering for us, and see if we can string some W’s together.”

Here’s more on the Heat:

  • Head coach Erik Spoelstra is still trying to find the optimal balance of developing the Heat’s several young players while the team looks to make the playoffs for the seventh straight year, according to Anthony Chiang of The Miami Herald. “I have to do a better job with this group,” Spoelstra said. “We have the potential that we can see. We have the explosiveness, we have the defense. It’s a matter of consistency. And that’s what I’m here for, to be able to help bridge that along with the veterans, to be able to help our consistency. But also to hold the young guys accountable. And we have more of them than we’ve had in recent history, but also develop them and infuse confidence in them. And that’s a fine balance. But again, that’s what I’m here for. I want to take that challenge, and I want to be better with that.”
  • Jaime Jaquez Jr. is no longer the betting favorite for the Sixth Man of the Year award, having been leapfrogged by Naz Reid and Keldon Johnson. As Winderman writes for The Sun Sentinel, the third-year forward said that he’s more focused on helping the team win than individual accolades, and while he views himself as a starting-caliber player, he has adapted to the key role off the bench. “I’m embracing my role. It’s pretty defined right now, so I’m just making the most of it,” Jaquez said. “I take pride in it. I take pride in our second unit. I try to be vocal, talk to guys, and try to lead the best I can, especially in that second unit. I really just embrace that role, for sure.”
  • Heat president Pat Riley was honored with a statue outside the Lakers’ arena on Sunday. The 80-year-old executive reflected on what could have been for Miami had LeBron James decided to stay with the Heat in the summer of 2014, as Chiang of The Miami Herald relays. “I thought getting the big three — Dwyane (Wade), Chris Bosh and especially LeBron — that we had finally put together what I thought could become a dynasty,” Riley when asked during a news conference in Los Angeles what James’ four-year run with the Heat meant to him. “It was. Four trips to the Finals in a row, two world championships. It was an incredible run. And as a coach and somebody who really thought about how to build that particular team and had built it, I saw something that could have lasted eight to 10 years.”
  • James was asked about Riley’s comments on Sunday, Chiang adds in the same story. “I never said I’m going to go there four years and decide to go somewhere else,” said James, who referred to Riley as “one of the all-time greats.” “That’s just how the cards were played. But, yeah, it’s human nature to look back and say what could have been. But that’s part of life. I thought the four years that we had were great, obviously. We were able to pick up two championships, we lost two of them, unfortunately. But a lot of great memories, a lot of great time there. It would have been interesting to see what could have happened.

Keegan Murray (Ankle Sprain) To Be Reevaluated In Two Weeks

Kings forward Keegan Murray has been diagnosed with a mild left ankle sprain and will be reevaluated in two weeks, the team announced in a press release (Twitter link via James Ham of The Kings Beat).

While it’s a little unusual to see a team refer to an injury as “mild” and then say a player is going to miss at least two weeks, there are multiple reasons why Sacramento has no reason to rush Murray back. For starters, he just returned on February 19 after missing a month-and-a-half with a moderate left ankle sprain.

Murray re-injured his left ankle in the first quarter of Wednesday’s loss in Houston (Twitter video link via NBC Sports California). He rolled his ankle when he landed after jumping to contest a drive to the basket by Clint Capela.

The second reason the Kings have no reason to push Murray is the lottery-bound team views the fourth-year forward as one of its long-term cornerstones, having signed him last fall to a five-year, $140MM rookie scale extension that will go into effect this July.

After appearing in 80, 77, and 76 regular season games over his first three years in the NBA, Murray has been beset by health problems in 2025/26. The 25-year-old’s season debut was delayed until November 20 after he underwent surgery on his left thumb; he later missed a pair of games in December due to a mild calf strain; then he missed several weeks with the initial left ankle sprain.

Murray will miss at least six games as a result of re-injuring his left ankle, with March 14 at the Clippers likely the earliest he could return.

The fourth overall pick in the 2022 draft, Murray has been limited to 23 appearances this season, averaging 14.0 points, 5.7 rebounds, 1.6 blocks and 1.0 steal on .420/.277/.776 shooting in 34.5 minutes per game. 1.6 BPG would represent a career high for the former Iowa standout, though his FG% and 3PT% are at career low rates.

Sacramento is currently 14-47, which is the worst record in the NBA.

Pacers, Jalen Slawson Agree To Two-Way Contract

The Pacers plan to sign free agent forward Jalen Slawson to fill the two-way contract slot previously held by Quenton Jackson, a league source tells Tony Forbes of Forbes and Circle City Spin (Twitter link). Jackson is being converted to a three-year standard deal.

The 54th overall pick in the 2023 draft after starring in college at Furman University, Slawson spent his rookie NBA season on a two-way deal with the Kings. He only appeared in 12 games for Sacramento in 2023/24, and has been plying his trade in the G League the last two years, suiting up for the Osceola Magic in ’24/25 and the Noblesville Boom — Indiana’s affiliate team — in ’25/26.

Slawson, who signed Exhibit 10 deals with the Magic and Pacers the past two falls before being waived, is having a strong season for the Boom. In 35 games in ’25/26, the 6’7″ wing is averaging 18.8 points, 7.2 rebounds, 5.3 assists, 2.1 blocks and 1.3 blocks in 34.2 minutes per contest, with a shooting line of .486/.348/.775.

Since he has been out of the league since ’23/24, this will technically be Slawson’s second year in the NBA. It wouldn’t be surprising if his contract covers two years, as has often been the case with recent two-way agreements.

In late December, Keith Smith of Spotrac referred to Slawson as “the best all-around player” to that point in the NBAGL season. That was at the conclusion of the Tip-Off Tournament (Slawson had played 10 games at that point) and prior to the regular season.

Pacers Promoting Quenton Jackson To Three-Year Standard Deal

The Pacers are giving Quenton Jackson a promotion, according to Shams Charania of ESPN, who reports (via Twitter) that the two-way guard will be converted to a three-year standard contract. Jackson’s agents at Klutch Sports informed Charania of the deal.

Jackson, a four-year veteran, admitted to Tony Easy of Forbes and Circle City Spin that he had been thinking about the possibility of being promoted by Indiana (Twitter link).

I’ve thought about it. It’s hard not to think about it,” Jackson said. “But at the same time, I wouldn’t say I wrap my head around it too much. In this game, it’s best to think about the things that you can control.”

A league source tells East (Twitter link) that Jackson’s new deal will be partially guaranteed in 2026/27 and non-guaranteed for the ’27/28 campaign.

A 27-year-old point guard, Jackson went undrafted in 2022 out of Texas A&M. He has made 30 appearances this season for the Pacers, averaging 9.2 points, 2.2 rebounds and 2.1 assists in 17.3 minutes per game. His shooting line is a very solid .489/.409/.810.

Jackson’s two-way deal expires at season’s end. And because this is his fourth NBA season, he wouldn’t be eligible for another two-way contract in 2026/27, so Indiana needed to move him to the standard roster in order to retain him beyond this year.

General manager Chad Buchanan, Dustin Dopriak of The Indianapolis Star, and most recently East previously identified Jackson as a candidate to be promoted. The Pacers were carrying an open standard roster spot, so no corresponding move was needed to convert Jackson.

Buchanan told East a couple weeks ago that Jackson was “a big part of our culture in our locker room” and lauded the fourth-year guard’s energy, toughness, and positive attitude. For his part, Jackson said he loved Indiana and his fit within the team’s offense.

Promoting Jackson will create a two-way opening for the Pacers, which they’ll have until next Wednesday to fill. Taelon Peter and Ethan Thompson currently hold Indiana’s other two-way spots.

Heat’s Norman Powell Week-To-Week With Grade 1 Groin Strain

All-Star wing Norman Powell has been diagnosed with a Grade 1 right groin strain after undergoing an MRI, the Heat announced on Friday (Twitter link).

According to the team, Powell is considered week-to-week with the injury.

As Ira Winderman of The South Florida Sun Sentinel writes, the veteran guard/forward expressed some annoyance about the series of nagging injuries he’s dealt with this season prior to Thursday’s game in Philadelphia. Powell, who was initially listed as questionable for yesterday’s contest, has previously missed time due to ailments involving his right groin, left groin, left ankle and back.

It’s really frustrating,” Powell said Thursday of the accumulation of the minor injuries. “But at this point in the season, I feel like everybody’s going through something. So it’s all about pain tolerance and management. For me, you guys know, I’m going to always try to push through, and I have a very high pain tolerance. I try to push my body as much as I can.”

The 32-year-old added that his most recent right groin strain, which forced him to leave the loss to the Sixers after playing just 10 minutes, was something that had been bothering him for a while. Head coach Erik Spoelstra said a specific play caused Powell to exit Thursday’s game early, per Anthony Chiang of The Miami Herald.

We’re going to have to evaluate that when we get back in Miami,” Spoelstra said following Thursday’s loss. “It wasn’t that he couldn’t [play], it was that one slide against [Tyrese] Maxey, and he overextended it. So that’s the same one that he’s been dealing with, and we’ll just have to see what it is.”

Powell is averaging a career-high 22.5 points per game in 2025/26 while also contributing 3.6 rebounds, 2.6 assists and 1.2 steals through 49 games with Miami (30.0 minutes). His shooting slash line is .473/.390/.827.

The Heat will likely be without their leading scorer for at least four games. Powell, who is earning $20.5MM this season, will be an unrestricted free agent this summer.

Nikola Jovic will also be out on Saturday vs. Houston because of lower back injury management, per the team. It will mark the fourth straight absence for the fourth-year forward.

Bulls Notes: Losing Streak, Williams, Smith, Simons

The Bulls entered the month of February with a 24-25 record and a relatively firm grip on a play-in spot in the Eastern Conference. Eleven games later, Chicago is still stuck on 24 wins and is five games out of the play-in picture, having just endured the worst month in franchise history at 0-11, writes Joe Cowley of The Chicago Sun-Times.

That 11-game losing streak is the third-longest in Bulls history, though – as Cowley points out – the organization probably didn’t mind that the latest defeat on Thursday night came at the hands of the Trail Blazers. Chicago will receive Portland’s 2026 first-round pick if it’s outside of the lottery, so the Bulls will be rooting for the Blazers to earn a playoff spot.

Of course, while the Bulls’ trade deadline moves may have signaled that the front office is comfortably tanking down the stretch, head coach Billy Donovan insists that’s not how he’s operating and it’s not the message management has conveyed to him.

“The discussions I had with (the players) when the trade deadline was finalized was, ‘Nothing has changed, try and get these guys to play to the best of their ability; we know it’s going to be somewhat challenging with seven new players,'” Donovan said, per Cowley. “Even talking to ownership, it’s been, ‘Hey, go out there and do your very best.’ There has been no indication from ownership or the front office of, ‘Hey, listen, if we finish here, here or here’ or ‘Listen, don’t worry about playing these guys; just play these guys.’ There’s been none of that at all.

“Philosophically, I get the dynamics once June, whatever date that draft date is, I get how that impacts all of that. It’s not like I’m sitting over there saying, ‘Well, it’s a close game right now, let’s sit Josh (Giddey) and Tre (Jones) and Jalen (Smith).’ There has not been that. And I think if I did do that, they would say, ‘Listen, you need to put the best guys out there.'”

Here’s more on the Bulls:

  • Bulls forward Patrick Williams, who underwent imaging on his right quad injury, is expected to be out for at least a week, Donovan said on Thursday, according to Cowley. “It could be longer, although I think they would try to ramp him up and do some more in about a week (after they) can get it to calm down,” Donovan explained.
  • Jalen Smith has missed the past two games due to a right calf strain and is on a similar timeline to Williams, Donovan added. He’s about a week away from starting to get reconditioned, Cowley writes. With Zach Collins out for the season, Chicago has been starting Guerschon Yabusele at the five, with sixth-year center Nick Richards playing significant minutes off the bench.
  • Although there’s no official timeline for Anfernee Simons‘ return after he aggravated a broken bone in his wrist, an injury he initially sustained in training camp with Boston, Donovan says surgery isn’t being considered right now and is optimistic the impending free agent guard will return in 10-to-14 days, writes Julia Poe of The Chicago Tribune. “I don’t think there’s anything to do (regarding surgery),” Donovan said. “Maybe at the end of the year, if it’s still causing a problem. We haven’t even talked about that yet. I don’t even know if surgery is an option or not. Right now, what we’re doing is trying to let it calm down. … But if he gets hit again, he’s probably going to have to do the same thing.” Donovan added that Simons’ injury, which is technically a left ulnar styroid fracture (Twitter link via Joel Lorenzi of The Athletic), is a matter of pain tolerance.

Rory Maher contributed to this post.

Suns Waive Cole Anthony

As expected, the Suns have waived guard Cole Anthony, reports Shams Charania of ESPN (Twitter link). Reporting shortly after the trade deadline indicated that Phoenix was expected to cut Anthony after acquiring him in a salary-dump deal.

According to John Gambadoro of Arizona Sports 98.7 (Twitter link), the Suns didn’t make the move right away because they were waiting to see if a buyout was possible. Gerald Bourguet of Suns After Dark (Twitter link) adds that Phoenix was also in no rush to waive Anthony until two-way guard Jamaree Bouyea got closer to his games-played limit.

Meanwhile, head coach Jordan Ott suggested this week Anthony was still on the roster in part to provide emergency depth due to Phoenix’s backcourt injuries, though the former first-round pick had yet to actually report to the Suns and never seemed likely to suit up for the team.

The 15th overall pick in the 2020 draft, Anthony spent his first five NBA seasons with Orlando, averaging 12.5 points, 4.3 rebounds and 3.8 assists in 24.8 minutes per contest on .419/.345/.847 shooting in 320 total games. However, his minutes have declined over the past few years and he was traded to Memphis in the 2025 offseason as part of the Desmond Bane blockbuster.

Anthony reached a buyout agreement with the Grizzlies and signed a one-year, minimum-salary contract with the Bucks. He averaged 6.7 PPG, 2.5 RPG and 3.5 APG on .424/.306/.615 shooting in a career-low 15.1 minutes per game in 35 appearances with Milwaukee this season. The Bucks traded him and Amir Coffey to Phoenix in a three-team deadline deal that allowed the Suns to duck below the luxury tax line.

As both Gambadoro and Bourguet note, the expectation is that the Suns will use the newly opened roster spot to promote Bouyea to the standard roster, making him their new 15th man. That would open up a two-way slot, which Phoenix would have until next Wednesday to fill.

As for Anthony, he’ll clear waivers on Sunday if his minimum-salary contract goes unclaimed. Because he was waived by March 1, he’ll retain his playoff eligibility if he catches on with a new NBA team between now and the end of the regular season.