Post-Deadline Notes: 2027 Draft, Tanking, Pacers, More

Two teams near the bottom of the NBA’s standings, the Wizards and Jazz, raised eyebrows this week by making blockbuster deals for veterans stars Anthony Davis and Jaren Jackson Jr., respectively.

According to Tim Bontemps of ESPN, Washington’s and Utah’s willingness to push their rebuilds forward by sacrificing 2026 cap room and attempting to contend next season reflects not just the lack of top-level free agents expected to be available this summer but a league-wide lack of enthusiasm about the 2027 draft class.

While the 2026 draft is viewed as especially strong, the same can’t be said for ’27 or ’28 — sources tell Bontemps that neither year rates nearly as high as the ’26 class. In other words, after this year, there will be less incentive for teams like the Wizards and the Jazz to remain deep in lottery territory, pursuing high draft picks.

Still, the key caveat there is “after this year.” As Sam Vecenie of The Athletic writes, the NBA’s race to the bottom might get ugly in the next couple months, with the Wizards and Jazz still extremely motivated to hang onto their top-eight protected 2026 first-rounders while other sub-.500 clubs like the Kings, Pacers, Nets, Mavericks, Grizzlies, Bucks, and Bulls also have incentive to lose as much as possible.

The NBA is reportedly considering rule changes to discourage tanking and already has the ability to penalize teams for resting certain healthy players and/or mischaracterizing injuries. But teams will likely be willing to push the boundaries of the current rules and risk facing fines if it helps them secure a top 2026 pick, Vecenie writes.

“The value of confirming a top-five pick or improving your chances at a top-two pick in this draft class is very large,” one executive told The Athletic. “Is it worth $5 million if you keep getting fined by the PPP (player participation policy) and the price tag rises? Is it worth $10 million if you’re successful? We haven’t done modeling on that, but it wouldn’t surprise me if a team has and comes to the conclusion that getting access to one of the top players in this draft is worth a certain amount in fines.”

Here are a few more notes related to this year’s trade deadline and what’s to follow:

  • In another story for ESPN.com, Bontemps spoke to scouts and executives about their impressions of the trade deadline, which included lottery teams emerging as buyers and many of the top contenders standing pat or making minimal roster adjustments. “These aprons are tough to build around,” one Western Conference scout told ESPN. “It means teams are going to have to negotiate harder moving forward.”
  • Bontemps adds that people around the league are debating whether the Pacers will tank the rest of the way in the hopes of keeping their top-four protected 2026 first-round pick or go all-out in an effort to move up the standings in the hopes of pushing the pick to its other protected range (10-30). “If it was me, I would tank and get the best possible odds at the high pick,” an Eastern Conference executive said. “But if they choose to get to 10, I think they could.” The Clippers pushed for that 10-30 protection, according to Tony East of Circle City Spin, since they’d rather take their chances on an unprotected 2031 first-rounder if it doesn’t land between No. 5 and No. 9.
  • The trades that didn’t get done at this season’s deadline could set the stage for a “wild” summer, ESPN’s Brian Windhorst said during a TV appearance on Thursday. “There’s a lot of unfinished business that didn’t get done,” Windhorst said, per RealGM, pointing to the Heat, Timberwolves, Knicks, and Cavaliers as some candidates to shake up their rosters if their postseason runs don’t go as planned. “… You will see a revisiting of the Giannis (Antetokounmpo) situation in the summer. “We know that the Clippers are now in the middle of a controlled tear-down. I don’t want to use the word ‘rebuild.’ What about Kawhi Leonard? And then you look at Domantas Sabonis — he was being floated and they couldn’t do a deal for him. None of that mentions Ja Morant.”
  • This year’s “weird” trade deadline was characterized by “too-late” trades, according to John Hollinger of The Athletic. As Hollinger explains, players like Davis, Trae Young, Jonathan Kuminga, and a handful of Bulls would’ve been warranted stronger packages if they had been moved earlier, but those teams instead settled for modest returns.

Peyton Watson Out At Least Four Weeks With Hamstring Strain

February 6: Watson is expected to be reevaluated in four weeks, reports Michael Scotto of HoopsHype (Twitter link).


February 5: Nuggets forward Peyton Watson has been diagnosed with a Grade 2 left hamstring strain and is expected to be sidelined for an extended period, league sources tell Tony Jones of The Athletic (Twitter link).

It’s a tough blow for both Watson, who will be a restricted free agent this summer, and the Nuggets, who have dealt with several injuries to key rotation players throughout the 2025/26 season.

Watson suffered the injury in the fourth quarter of Wednesday’s loss at New York. Head coach David Adelman indicated Watson would be undergoing an MRI, which reportedly revealed the Grade 2 strain.

Waiting to see the MRI,” Adelman said after the game. “But just seeing so much of this this year. I just feel bad for the guys in the locker room. It’s deflating when you keep seeing people go down around you when you’re trying to build towards something.”

Watson was in the midst of a breakout fourth season for Denver, averaging 14.9 points, 4.9 rebounds, 2.0 assists, 1.2 blocks and 1.0 steal on .496/.417/.727 shooting in 49 appearances (30.7 minutes per game). The 23-year-old wing has been particularly effective since the start of January, averaging 21.4 PPG, 5.3 RPG, 2.9 APG, 1.6 BPG and 1.1 SPG on .486/.457/.711 shooting in 18 outings (36.1 MPG).

Watson is now the second Nuggets forward recovering from a hamstring stain, as Aaron Gordon is out several weeks after aggravating a hamstring injury on his right leg. Cameron Johnson (right knee bone bruise) remains out as well — he last played on December 23.

Nikola Jokic (knee), Christian Braun (left ankle sprain) and Jonas Valanciunas (calf strain) all missed extended time this season as well, though they’re all active now.

Southwest Notes: Sochan, Spurs, Mavs, Pelicans

The Spurs were widely expected to make a move this week involving fourth-year forward Jeremy Sochan, who had “hoped to find a new home” at Thursday’s trade deadline, writes Jared Weiss of The Athletic. Instead, Sochan remains in San Antonio, as the Spurs were one of just three teams around the NBA not to make a single deal during the days leading up to the deadline.

According to Weiss, the Spurs talked to the Knicks about Guerschon Yabusele and Pacome Dadiet, the Bulls about Dalen Terry and Julian Phillips, and the Suns about Nick Richards, but they didn’t find a deal they liked and didn’t feel compelled to move Sochan without getting value in return.

Although Sochan may not be part of the Spurs’ plans beyond this season, he has no plans to negotiate a buyout and should finish the season in San Antonio, a source tells Weiss. The Spurs may have another chance this summer to recoup some value for the former No. 9 overall pick in a sign-and-trade scenario.

Here’s more from around the Southwest:

  • Count star big man Victor Wembanyama among those who are pleased that the Spurs didn’t make any roster changes at the trade deadline. “What I love is that the front office trusts these guys just like I do,” Wembanyama said, per Jeff McDonald of The San Antonio Express-News (subscription required). “We’re on the same page.” Stephon Castle, De’Aaron Fox, and Harrison Barnes were among the other Spurs who voiced support for the front office’s approach. “When you’re in a situation where you’re winning games, you don’t feel like you have to make a lot of moves,” Barnes said. “We’re happy to live with that and continue to build with that.”
  • The Mavericks and Wizards originally had exploratory Anthony Davis trade talks in early November before eventually reaching an agreement this week, reports Christian Clark of The Athletic. As Clark details, the Mavs were happy that word of those talks didn’t leak and that they were able to inform Davis of the deal face-to-face before word broke publicly. Mike Curtis of The Dallas Morning News (subscription required), meanwhile, writes that the team accomplished its goals of creating cap flexibility, adding draft assets, and addressing the point guard spot (by looping Tyus Jones into the deal).
  • Reacting to the Pelicans‘ relatively quiet trade deadline, Rod Walker of NOLA.com (subscription required) says it wasn’t a surprise that the team moved on from Jose Alvarado, who can become a free agent this summer, but acknowledged that fans may be frustrated to lose a key spark plug while the front office was inactive on other fronts. Besides Zion Williamson, Herbert Jones, and Trey Murphy III, who had seemed off-limits for weeks, rumored trade candidates Jordan Poole, Jordan Hawkins, Yves Missi, Saddiq Bey, and Dejounte Murray also didn’t go anywhere.
  • The Pelicans are taking steps toward relocating their G League team – which currently plays in Birmingham, Alabama – to Louisiana, writes Patrick Magee of NOLA.com (subscription required). According to Magee, the Kenner City Council gave its unanimous approval on Thursday to a proposal that would bring the Squadron to the city’s Pontchartrain Center. The tentative plan is for the Pelicans’ G League team to begin playing in Kenner, a suburb of New Orleans, in 2026/27.

Grizzlies Waive Eric Gordon

February 6: Gordon has been placed on waivers, the Grizzlies confirmed today in a press release (Twitter link).


February 5: The Grizzlies are likely to waive veteran guard Eric Gordon, sources tell Kelly Iko of Yahoo Sports (Twitter link).

An 18-year veteran, Gordon was traded from Philadelphia to Memphis in a salary-dump move which saw the Grizzlies acquire a second-round pick swap from the 76ers. He has only made six appearances this season.

Gordon is making $3.6MM this season on a minimum-salary contract, but only carries a $2.3MM cap hit. Assuming he’s released by Memphis, the 37-year-old would be eligible to sign with any team except for Philadelphia.

The seventh overall pick in the 2008 draft, Gordon has averaged 15.2 points, 2.7 assists and 2.3 rebounds on .430/.373/.809 shooting over the course of 931 regular season games (31.1 minutes per contest). However, it’s been a couple years since he was a rotation regular, and it’s unclear if he’ll attract any interest on the open market at this point in his career.

Thunder Waive Youngblood, Sign Boeheim To Two-Way Deal

The Thunder have made a change to one of their two-way contract slots, announcing today in a press release that shooting guard Chris Youngblood has been waived and swingman Buddy Boeheim has been signed to replace him.

Youngblood, who will turn 24 on Monday, joined the Thunder last summer as a rookie free agent after going undrafted out of Alabama. Although the 6’4″ guard signed a two-way contract, he was used frequently by Oklahoma City during the first half of the season.

Youngblood was used so frequently, in fact, that he reached his limit of 50 games on the Thunder’s active roster on Wednesday in San Antonio. If OKC had wanted to continue playing him, he would’ve needed to be promoted to a standard contract, but the team doesn’t have any obviously expendable players on its 15-man squad after sending out Ousmane Dieng and bringing in Jared McCain prior to Thursday’s trade deadline.

With no path to promote him, the Thunder decided to waive Youngblood, freeing him up for a new opportunity, rather than having him finish the season in the G League with the Oklahoma City Blue. The club could’ve made him a restricted free agent at season’s end if he’d remained on the roster but will instead free him up to join a new team.

Boeheim has been playing for the Blue in recent years, including this season. Across nine outings in 2025/26, he has averaged 15.6 points, 4.6 rebounds, and 3.8 assists in 30.4 minutes per game, with a shooting line of .375/.351/1.000.

The former Syracuse sharpshooter, who appeared in 20 NBA regular season games for the Pistons from 2022-24, will be eligible to be active for as many as 19 games for OKC the rest of the way.

Mike Conley Plans To Rejoin Timberwolves

Veteran point guard Mike Conley intends to re-sign with the Timberwolves after he clears waivers, sources tell ESPN’s Shams Charania (Twitter link).

Conley was traded twice this week. Minnesota originally sent him to Chicago in a salary-dump deal on Tuesday, then the Bulls flipped him to Charlotte along with Coby White. The Hornets subsequently cut him.

NBA rules prohibit a player who is traded and then waived to immediately re-sign with the team that traded him away. However, that restriction doesn’t apply to the Timberwolves because Conley was traded twice. Once he clears waivers and becomes a free agent, he’d be ineligible to re-sign with the Bulls, the last team that traded him away, but nothing would be standing in the way of a reunion with Minnesota.

Conley, who is in his 19th NBA season, became the Wolves’ starting point guard when they acquired him at the 2023 trade deadline and maintained that role through last season. However, he ceded his starting role to Donte DiVincenzo this fall and has averaged a career-low 18.5 minutes per night in 44 outings (nine starts) so far this season. His 4.4 points and 2.9 assists per game are also career lows, as is his 32.2% field goal percentage.

Despite Conley’s declining production, there were rumblings ahead of the trade deadline that the team wasn’t eager to move the 38-year-old due to his locker room leadership. With that in mind, getting the opportunity to move off of the guard’s $10.8MM expiring contract and then bring him back on a prorated minimum-salary deal represents the best of both worlds for the Wolves.

Minnesota has two open spots on its 15-man roster following its deadline moves, so no corresponding move will be necessary to create room for Conley.

According to Charania, the two sides are working on the timing of the deal. Conley will clear waivers on Saturday afternoon, but the Wolves may not re-sign him immediately since doing so would increase their projected luxury tax penalty and move them closer to the first tax apron.

Magic, Jevon Carter Agree To Rest-Of-Season Deal

The Magic intend to sign point guard Jevon Carter for the rest of the season, agents Mark Bartelstein and Reggie Brown tell Shams Charania of ESPN (Twitter link).

Carter was cut by the Bulls earlier in the week in order to accommodate the acquisition of Dario Saric, the first of seven trades Chicago made between Sunday and Thursday. Having been placed on waivers five days ago, the 30-year-old guard went unclaimed on Tuesday and became an unrestricted free agent.

An eighth-year NBA veteran, Carter has appeared in 435 regular season games for Memphis, Phoenix, Brooklyn, Milwaukee, and Chicago since entering the league as a second-round pick in 2018. He had his best season in 2022/23 in Milwaukee, starting 39 of 81 games and averaging career highs in points (8.0), assists (2.4), and rebounds (2.5) per game.

That performance earned Carter a three-year, $19.5MM deal with Chicago that summer, but he ended up playing a limited role in a crowded Bulls backcourt. In 23 games (11.0 MPG) this season, he scored 5.4 PPG on .398/.410/1.000 shooting.

The Magic’s lone move at this week’s trade deadline was to send Tyus Jones and his $7MM salary to Charlotte along with a pair of second-round picks. That move allowed Orlando to duck below the luxury tax line but also removed a veteran point guard from the roster, so adding Carter will help fill a hole on the depth chart.

As a result of the Jones trade, the Magic moved approximately $1.4MM below the tax threshold and opened up a second spot on their 15-man roster. Carter will fill one of those two openings and – if he officially signs on Friday – would carry a prorated minimum-salary cap hit of $871K. That will allow Orlando to stay out of the tax and potentially sign a 15th man later in the season.

While Carter’s cap hit will be $871K, his rest-of-season salary will be approximately $1.17MM, with the NBA making up the gap between the two figures.

Grizzlies Plan To Trade Ja Morant In Offseason

Two-time All-Star Ja Morant was among the most notable trade candidates who wasn’t on the move this week, but the Grizzlies‘ decision to hang onto him after trading away Jaren Jackson Jr. shouldn’t be viewed as a change in the team’s direction, writes Joe Vardon of The Athletic.

League sources tell Vardon that the Grizzlies will revisit Morant trade talks during the 2026 offseason and intend to move him at that time.

Vardon’s report comes as no surprise. Memphis acquired a total of seven first-round picks and a first-round swap in trades involving Desmond Bane (last summer) and Jackson (on Tuesday), and has clearly pivoted to rebuilding around its younger core, led by Cedric Coward, Zach Edey, and Jaylen Wells.

Still, it will be interesting to see how Memphis handles Morant in the next couple months. The 26-year-old is currently sidelined due to a sprained elbow, but that injury likely isn’t significant enough to end his season.

The Grizzlies – who have slipped out of the play-in picture at 20-29 – may be inclined to tank down the stretch in the hopes of maximizing their draft lottery position, which could mean holding out Morant for longer than they normally would. But they’ll have to weigh the merit of that approach against the possible benefits of reinserting the point guard into their lineup and giving him the opportunity to rebuild his trade value — at least to some extent.

Chris Mannix of SI.com wrote earlier this week that “availability, attitude and diminished production” are among the concerns potential suitors had about Morant, and it’s safe to assume his maximum-salary contract – which will pay him $87MM for the two seasons after this one – is another red flag. He wouldn’t be able to assuage all of those concerns with a strong finish to the season, but it might help improve offers from potential trade partners this summer.

Those offers were reportedly too underwhelming for the Grizzlies to seriously consider making a deal prior to Thursday’s deadline, despite the fact that they signaled they’d be willing to take on long-term salary if it came attached to stronger draft compensation.

The Heat, Kings, Bucks, and Timberwolves were linked to Morant this week. That list of possible suitors could grow – or at least change – this summer, depending on which direction certain teams take and which clubs become more motivated to shake up their rosters as a result of early postseason exits.

Injury Notes: Poeltl, Murray-Boyles, White, Wagner, McBride, Duren

The back issues that have limited Jakob Poeltl to just 21 games this season were a major reason why his trade value was so low at the deadline, preventing the Raptors from gaining traction in their talks for Domantas Sabonis. However, Poeltl – who last played on December 21 – may not be out much longer, per Blake Murphy of Sportsnet.ca (Twitter link).

As Murphy relays, Poeltl is said to be ramping up and reacting “really well” as he works his way back. Toronto has just two more games between now and the All-Star break – Sunday vs. Indiana and next Wednesday vs. Detroit – but the team thinks there’s a chance he could return during that time.

Meanwhile, Raptors rookie big man Collin Murray-Boyles remains active after missing four games in late January due to a left thumb ailment, but that injury is still bothering him, according to Murphy, who notes (via Twitter) that he’ll have to wear a protector on the thumb for five more weeks. Still, Murray-Boyles powered through in Thursday’s win over Chicago, scoring 17 points on 8-of-9 shots from the field in 37 minutes of action.

“I give him a lot of credit,” head coach Darko Rajakovic said (Twitter link via Michael Grange of Sportsnet.ca). “… He’s having trouble dribbling the ball, catching the ball, (but) he’s playing through that.”

Here are a few more injury-related notes from around the NBA:

  • Newly acquired Hornets guard Coby White had played in 11 of Chicago’s last 12 games before being traded to Charlotte, but president of basketball operations Jeff Peterson said White is dealing with some calf issues, which the Hornets will tread carefully with. According to Rod Boone of The Charlotte Observer (Twitter link), the 25-year-old may not play for his new team until after the All-Star break.
  • Magic forward Franz Wagner is “very close” to returning from the left ankle injury that has sidelined him since January 18 and caused him to miss 24 of the team’s past 26 games, president of basketball operations Jeff Weltman said on Thursday (Twitter link via Jason Beede of The Orlando Sentinel). Orlando plays three more times before the All-Star break.
  • A pair of doctors who spoke to Jared Schwartz of The New York Post suggest that the full recovery period for a sports hernia procedure like the one Miles McBride is undergoing is usually close to 12 weeks. Reports on Thursday indicated there’s optimism the Knicks guard will be back for the postseason, which will begin in about 10 weeks.
  • Pistons center Jalen Duren didn’t play in the second half of Thursday’s loss to Washington due to right knee soreness, per the team (Twitter link). According to head coach J.B. Bickerstaff, that knee soreness has been an issue for Duren for “a little bit,” but there’s no indication yet whether it will cost him any additional time (Twitter link via Hunter Patterson of The Athletic).

Luka Doncic To Undergo MRI On Left Hamstring Injury

February 6: Doncic will undergo an MRI on his left hamstring on Friday, head coach JJ Redick confirmed after Thursday’s victory, per ESPN’s Dave McMenamin.

“Yeah, he felt some soreness in his hamstring, so he didn’t feel like it was good enough to go back in,” Redick said. “Neither did (our) medical (staff), so we held him out. And he’ll get some imaging. I mean, too early to say if there’s an injury, but just had a sore hamstring.”


February 5: Lakers star Luka Doncic experience left leg soreness in Thursday’s game vs. Philadelphia and has been ruled out for the remainder of the contest, the team announced (Twitter link via ESPN’s Dave McMenamin).

According to Jovan Buha (Twitter link), the Slovenian guard was grabbing at his hamstring for a couple of possessions prior to leaving the court. He was also holding his hamstring when he went to the locker room with 3:03 remaining in the second quarter, tweets Brad Turner of The Los Angeles Times.

Obviously, any type of hamstring injury is very concerning for an athlete. The Lakers will be hoping Doncic’s soreness is simply that and not a strain, which would likely sideline him for multiple weeks.

Doncic, 26, has missed eight games to this point in 2025/26. Through 41 appearances, the NBA’s leading scorer has averaged 33.4 points, 8.7 assists, 7.9 rebounds and 1.5 steals in 36.0 minutes per game. His shooting slash line is .475/.348/.779.

Austin Reaves is currently on a minutes restriction in his second game back from a calf strain, but he’s a candidate for more on-ball responsibilities if Doncic misses additional time. LeBron James and trade addition Luke Kennard are among the other Lakers who could receive more usage depending on the severity of Doncic’s injury.