Suns Sign Alex Schumacher To Exhibit 10 Contract

The Suns have signed free agent guard Alex Schumacher to a training camp contract, per Paul Garcia of Spot Up Shot (Twitter link). It’s an Exhibit 10 deal, tweets Keith Smith of Spotrac.

Schumacher, who went undrafted out of Seattle University in 2024, spent his first professional season in the G League, appearing in a total of 48 games for the Windy City Bulls and the Valley Suns, who acquired his rights in a March trade. The 24-year-old averaged 8.2 points, 3.1 assists, and 2.7 rebounds in 22.6 minutes per game for the two teams, posting a shooting line of .395/.241/.825.

The Suns’ signing of Schumacher is almost certainly designed to ensure that he receives a bonus for returning to the Valley Suns this fall. His Exhibit 10 deal will make him eligible for a bonus worth up to $85,300 on top of his standard NBAGL salary as long as he spends at least 60 days with Phoenix’s affiliate.

With Schumacher on the roster, the Suns are carrying 19 players, two shy of the offseason limit.

Clippers Owner Denies Any Wrongdoing In Kawhi Leonard’s Deal With Aspiration

Clippers owner Steve Ballmer explained the origins of Kawhi Leonard‘s endorsement deal with Aspiration during an interview with Ramona Shelburne of ESPN Thursday night on SportsCenter, but he denied that the team did anything inappropriate to circumvent the salary cap.

During the 16-minute interview, Ballmer said the company asked him to provide an introduction to Leonard, which he did in November 2021, shortly after Leonard agreed to a four-year, $176MM contract with the team. Ballmer added that he didn’t have any knowledge of the terms of the endorsement contract that Leonard eventually signed and stated that he had no further role in that process.

Two months before that introduction, Aspiration reached a $300MM deal with the Clippers that included sponsorship in their new arena and a jersey patch. Ballmer told Shelburne that Aspiration was hoping to acquire naming rights for the arena and offered more money than Intuit, which was ultimately chosen.

“We were done. We were done with Kawhi, we were done with Aspiration. The deals were all locked and loaded,” Ballmer said. “Then, they did request to be introduced to Kawhi, and under the rules, we can introduce our sponsors to our athletes. We just can’t be involved.”

Ballmer also detailed his involvement in a Department of Justice investigation into Aspiration, which filed for bankruptcy in March. Its list of creditors includes KL2 Aspire LLC, with Leonard named as the manager or member. The company owed $7MM to KL2 Aspire LLC.

Aspiration co-founder Joe Sanberg pleaded guilty in August to two counts of wire fraud for defrauding investors and lenders of more than $248 million.

“We even found the email that makes the first introduction. It was early November,” Ballmer said. “The introduction got made and then they were off to the races on, on their own. We weren’t involved. I eventually learned that they had reached a deal. I have no idea what the deal was.”

Ballmer added that he has no further knowledge of the arrangement between Leonard and Aspiration, which was brought to light in a report by Pablo Torre earlier this week claiming that it was a “no-show” deal and Leonard didn’t actually perform any services for the company.

“These were guys who committed fraud. Look, they conned me. They conned me,” Ballmer said. “I made an investment in these guys thinking it was on the up-and-up, and they conned me at this stage. I have no ability to predict why they might have done anything they did, let alone the specific contract with Kawhi.”

Shelburne points out that there have been numerous allegations about Leonard’s dealings with the Clippers since he joined the team as a free agent in 2019. The NBA conducted an investigation into charges that he and his uncle, Dennis Robertson, made improper requests while negotiating with teams that summer. Those requests reportedly included part ownership of the team, use of a private plane, a house and guaranteed endorsement deals.

Shelburne adds that the Clippers were cleared of any wrongdoing, but the league indicated that it was willing to reopen the investigation if any new information came to light.

“They know the rules,” Ballmer said. “They meaning Kawhi and his representatives, including his uncle. We know the rules. And if anything’s not clear, we remind ourselves what the rules are and we make absolutely clear we’re going to abide by those rules and they understand them as well. And it’s important for them to abide by them, which they have.”

Ballmer also stated that he hasn’t talked to Leonard about Torre’s accusations and he doesn’t plan to, per Law Murray of The Athletic.

“It’s really his business with Aspiration,” Ballmer said. “So I wouldn’t ask about it, no.”

The NBA has opened an investigation into the Clippers’ and Leonard’s dealings with Aspiration, and Ballmer suggested that he welcomes the probe, telling Shelburne that if a similar story had surfaced about another team and its star player, he’d want the league to “investigate (and) take it seriously.”

Mason Jones To Sign With Perth Wildcats

After finishing the 2024/25 season on a two-way contract with Sacramento, free agent guard Mason Jones is in the process of finalizing a deal with the Perth Wildcats of Australia’s National Basketball League, reports Olgun Uluc of ESPN.

A 6’4″ shooting guard who went undrafted out of Arkansas in 2020, Jones has spent most of his professional career bouncing back and forth between the NBA and the G League, having seen action in 51 total regular season games for the Rockets, Sixers, Lakers, and Kings. He has played sparingly at the NBA level, averaging 4.4 points, 1.5 rebounds, and 1.2 assists in 9.0 minutes per contest, with a .427/.329/.663 shooting line.

Jones, who also had a brief stint overseas with Darussafaka in Turkey in 2023, signed a two-year, two-way contract with Sacramento in February 2024 and played out that deal, which expired this summer. The 27-year-old had a big year for the Stockton Kings in 2024/25, averaging 23.6 PPG, 7.9 APG, and 5.1 RPG on .492/.447/.790 shooting in 27 outings.

Jones earned a spot on the All-NBAGL second team and was named the Most Valuable Player of the G League Finals after Stockton captured the league’s 2025 title.

Uluc had reported earlier this week that Perth was considering a number of NBA veterans for its final import spot, with Kobi Simmons and Yuri Collins among the other free agents who had recently received some interest. The Wildcats are coming off an 18-11 season in which they were eliminated from the NBL playoffs in the semifinals by Melbourne United.

Latest On Kawhi Leonard, Clippers

Following up on Pablo Torre’s report on the possibility of salary cap circumvention involving the Clippers and star forward Kawhi Leonard, John Karalis of Boston Sports Journal provides some fascinating additional details, citing a “high-level” source who says Leonard made a side deal with the company Aspiration to receive an additional $20MM in company stock on top of the $28MM from his original endorsement agreement.

Co-founder Andrei Cherny didn’t run the $28MM endorsement deal Leonard signed by the company’s board of directors, according to Karalis, who says the agreement was presented to Aspiration’s executive team “as is,” without consulting them or giving them an opportunity to be involved in negotiations. If the executive team had been privy to the talks, it would have advised against the deal, Karalis explains, since management viewed it as a “poor use of cash resources.”

While Cherney signed the deal against the wishes of management, Aspiration’s marketing and management teams saw “no brand synergy” with Leonard and and opted against using his services, preferring to work with climate-focused influences, Karalis continues.

Regarding the $50MM that Clippers owner Steve Ballmer invested in Aspiration, Karalis says that investment was described as having been made with “light-to-no diligence” and came at a rate higher than the one Oak Tree Capital Management had paid during the company’s rounds of fundraising. As Karalis observes, it wouldn’t have been unusual for a well-known investor like Ballmer to be offered a discounted share price, since his involvement would create positive buzz for the company. Instead, the $11 he paid per share was a dollar higher than what Oak Tree paid.

Here’s more on the Leonard situation:

  • Although the Clippers asserted in a statement on Wednesday night that there’s “nothing unusual or untoward about team sponsors doing endorsement deals with players at the same time,” rival executives who spoke to Sam Amick of The Athletic pointed out that Ballmer’s investment in Aspiration and the size of Leonard’s endorsement deal are red flags on their own, even before taking into account the fact that the star forward did no promotional work for the company. “This (sort of endorsement deal) does not happen,” one general manager told Amick.
  • Executives who discussed the issue with Chris Mannix of SI.com conveyed a similar sentiment. “If this is what it looks like, I think (commissioner) Adam (Silver) has to make an example of them,” one team executive said.
  • It’s worth noting that the Clippers were previously investigated in 2019 due to rumors that Leonard’s uncle Dennis Robertson was asking teams for improper benefits during Kawhi’s free agency negotiations that summer. John Gambadoro of Arizona Sports 98.7 (Twitter link) hears that Leonard was seeking an extra $15MM in endorsement money from the Raptors that offseason, while Bruce Arthur of The Toronto Star cites sources who say “Uncle Dennis” was asking for an ownership stake in the NHL’s Toronto Maple Leafs during talks with the Raptors.
  • Nate Jones, who works as an agent and marketer at Goodwin Sports, shared some insights into the situation in a Twitter thread, explaining why the Clippers, Ballmer, and Leonard may all have plausible deniability if there’s no smoking gun laying out a quid pro quo arrangement. Still, as Kurt Helin of NBC Sports relays, citing Zach Lowe’s podcast, the NBA’s Collective Bargaining Agreement allows for cap circumvention to be proven by circumstantial evidence if the terms of a deal “cannot rationally be explained in” another way.

And-Ones: Carmelo, Howard, 2026 Draft, Raveling, Armani

Ahead of Carmelo Anthony‘s induction into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame this weekend, Dave McMenamin of ESPN revisits the forward’s impressive career at the college, NBA, and international levels, laying out why he was a “no-brainer” choice to make the Hall of Fame.

Meanwhile, ESPN’s Zach Kram makes a similar case for another of this weekend’s inductees, detailing why center Dwight Howard, a three-time NBA Defensive Player of the Year, is a worthy first-ballot Hall-of-Famer. In Kram’s view, Howard has actually become somewhat underrated, since his drop-off in production during his 30s made it easy to forgot how high his peaks were in his prime.

Here’s more from around the basketball world:

  • With the start of the 2025/26 college basketball season around the corner, Jonathan Wasserman of Bleacher Report has updated his 2026 NBA mock draft, running through all 60 hypothetical picks, from Kansas guard Darryn Peterson at No. 1 to Connecticut big man Tarris Reed Jr. at No. 60.
  • After longtime college basketball coach and Nike sports marketing director George Raveling died on Monday at age 88, NBA commissioner Adam Silver put out a statement lauding Raveling for his “influence on the game of basketball at every level” and sending condolences to his family and friends (Twitter link).
  • Giorgio Armani passed away on Thursday at the age of 91, as Eurohoops relays. While he’s more known for his role in the fashion world than for his contributions to basketball, Armani had owned the EuroLeague club Olimpia Milano since 2008. In a statement issued on Thursday, the EuroLeague credited the Italian fashion designer for “ushering in a new golden era” for Olimpia Milano during his tenure as owner, which included six Italian League championships and the team’s first EuroLeague Final Four appearances in nearly three decades.

Free Agent Notes: Giddey, Lyles, Bacot, Gallinari

The Bulls‘ have increased their offer to restricted free agent guard Josh Giddey since they reportedly proposed a four-year deal worth $20MM annually the start of free agency, according to ESPN’s Bobby Marks (YouTube link). However, it remains well below the price that Giddey and his camp are reportedly seeking.

“He was offered four years, $80 million when free agency started,” Marks said. “That number has gone up to four years, $88MM.”

As Marks points out, that $22MM-per-year figure would be at the low end of the spectrum for starting point guards. Giddey’s representatives have reportedly been seeking $30MM annually since they discussed a potential rookie scale extension with the Bulls last fall. While Giddey may not ultimately get that sort of commitment from Chicago, Marks believes the team should be willing to further increase its offer if it views the 22-year-old as an important long-term building block.

“If you think that he’s your point guard of the future, then you sign him to what point guard money is,” Marks said. “And I’m not saying you sign him to Immanuel Quickley money at $32.5MM (per year) or five years, $160MM. But you sign him in that $26-28MM (per year range) and you do it for three years or four years. And if it’s four years, $100MM or four years, $110MM, it’s still good value going forward.”

Some sort of resolution is expected within the next few weeks for Giddey and the Bulls, since training camps open by the end of the month and October 1 is the deadline for a restricted free agent to accept his qualifying offer.

Here are a few more notes on free agents from around the basketball world:

  • While the exact terms are unclear, veteran forward Trey Lyles has an NBA out clause in his new deal with Real Madrid that “ensures he retains flexibility should an opportunity arise to return during the 2025/26 season,” Grant Afseth writes for RG.org. Before agreeing to sign a one-year contract reportedly worth $3MM with the Spanish club, Lyles drew interest from the Heat, Kings, and other EuroLeague teams, including Fenerbahce, sources tell Afseth.
  • Speaking of Fenerbahce, the Turkish club has signed former North Carolina standout Armando Bacot to a one-year contract, according to a press release. Bacot, who inked an Exhibit 10 contract with the Grizzlies and then played for the Memphis Hustle last season after going undrafted out of UNC, will be paid more than $1MM on his deal with Fenerbahce, per Jeff Goodman of Field of 68 (Twitter link).
  • Although Danilo Gallinari has stated his intention to retire from the Italian national team after this year’s EuroBasket tournament, the longtime NBA forward is leaving his options open when it comes to extending his professional career beyond this summer, as Michalis Gioulenoglou of Eurohoops relays. “I said anything is possible,” Gallinari replied when asked about the possibility of playing in the EuroLeague again. “I’m not thinking about anything. I didn’t think about anything yet. I didn’t make any plans, so we’ll see.” The 37-year-old, who has made 777 career regular season appearances, recently expressed some interest in the idea of joining an NBA team as a veteran leader.

Longest-Tenured NBA Head Coaches

For the first time since we began taking an annual look at the NBA’s longest-tenured head coaches a decade ago, Gregg Popovich‘s name doesn’t sit atop the list.

The longtime Spurs head coach had been on the sidelines in San Antonio for nearly three decades, having taken over coaching duties in December 1996. However, he gave way to assistant Mitch Johnson last November after suffering a stroke and then announced this spring that he had decided to end his coaching career at age 76.

Popovich retires from NBA coaching as the league’s all-time leader in regular season wins (1,390) and overall victories (1,560). He was also the oldest coach in league history and was the NBA’s longest-tenured coach by over a decade.

The shake-up at the top of our list starts with Popovich, but definitely doesn’t end there. In total, four of the NBA’s six longest-tenured head coaches have been replaced since we checked in last summer, with Michael Malone of the Nuggets (June 2015), Taylor Jenkins of the Grizzlies (June 2019), and Tom Thibodeau of the Knicks (July 2020) having been dismissed by their respective teams in recent months.

While the total number of coaching changes in the past year – six – isn’t abnormally high, it’s unusual for us to be removing so many names at the top of our list.

With all that in mind, here’s the current breakdown of the NBA’s longest-tenured head coaches by team:


  1. Erik Spoelstra, Heat: April 2008
  2. Steve Kerr, Warriors: May 2014
  3. Billy Donovan, Bulls: September 2020
  4. Tyronn Lue, Clippers: October 2020
  5. Mark Daigneault, Thunder: November 2020
  6. Chris Finch, Timberwolves: February 2021
  7. Rick Carlisle, Pacers: June 24, 2021
  8. Chauncey Billups, Trail Blazers: June 27, 2021
  9. Jason Kidd, Mavericks: June 28, 2021
  10. Jamahl Mosley, Magic: July 11, 2021
  11. Willie Green, Pelicans: July 22, 2021
  12. Will Hardy, Jazz: June 2022
  13. Joe Mazzulla, Celtics: September 2022
    • Mazzulla became the Celtics’ interim head coach in September 2022 and was named the permanent head coach in February 2023.
  14. Quin Snyder, Hawks: February 2023
  15. Ime Udoka, Rockets: April 2023
  16. Nick Nurse, Sixers: June 1, 2023
  17. Darko Rajakovic, Raptors: June 13, 2023
  18. Brian Keefe, Wizards: January 25, 2024
    • Keefe became the Wizards’ interim head coach in January 2024 and was named the permanent head coach in May 2024.
  19. Doc Rivers, Bucks: January 26, 2024
  20. Jordi Fernandez, Nets: April 2024
  21. Charles Lee, Hornets: May 2024
  22. J.J. Redick, Lakers: June 24, 2024
  23. Kenny Atkinson, Cavaliers: June 28, 2024
  24. J.B. Bickerstaff, Pistons: July 2024
  25. Mitch Johnson, Spurs: November 2024
    • Johnson took over as the Spurs’ acting head coach in November 2024 after Gregg Popovich suffered a stroke; he was named the permanent head coach in May 2025 when Popovich stepped down from the position.
  26. Doug Christie, Kings: December 2024
    • Christie became the Kings’ interim head coach in December 2024 and was named the permanent head coach in May 2025.
  27. Tuomas Iisalo, Grizzlies: March 2025
    • Iisalo became the Grizzlies’ interim head coach in March 2025 and was named the permanent head coach in May 2025.
  28. David Adelman, Nuggets: April 2025
    • Adelman became the Nuggets’ interim head coach in April 2025 and was named the permanent head coach in May 2025.
  29. Jordan Ott, Suns: June 2025
  30. Mike Brown, Knicks: July 2025

Spoelstra is the new name at the top of the list of longest-tenured coaches, with a comfortable six-year margin between him and second-place Kerr. Incredibly, the gap of six-plus years between Kerr and third-place Donovan is larger than five-year gap between Donovan and Brown, the head coach most recently hired.

In other words, Spoelstra and Kerr are now the only coaches in the NBA who have been with their respective teams for longer than five years, which is a testament to just how difficult it is for a head coach to stick in one place.

Knockout Round Set For EuroBasket; Spain Fails To Qualify

Led by a double-double from Jazz center Jusuf Nurkic (15 points, 12 rebounds), Bosnia and Herzegovina defeated Georgia by a score of 84-76 on Thursday morning to become the 15th team to qualify for the EuroBasket knockout round, as Michalis Gioulenoglou of Eurohoops writes.

Raptors big man Sandro Mamukelashvili finished with a game-high 20 points for Georgia.

Despite the loss, Georgia became the 16th and final team to qualify for the round of 16 later in the day after Spain fell to Greece, FIBA announced (via Twitter). Led by Bucks star Giannis Antetokounmpo, who had a team-high 25 points, 14 rebounds, and nine assists, Greece eked out a 90-86 victory to claim the top spot in Group C.

Spain and Georgia finished with identical 2-3 records in Group C and Spain had a far better point differential (+43 vs. -19), but the Georgians defeated the Spaniards in their head-to-head matchup, earning the tiebreaker.

It’s a disappointing exit for the defending champions — the Spanish national team has been a perennial powerhouse in both European and international competitions, having won four of the previous six EuroBasket tournaments, including the most recent one in 2022. According to Armando Caporaso of Sportando (Twitter link), it has been nearly 50 years since Spain failed to advance past the first stage of the tournament (1977).

The matchups and the full bracket for the EuroBasket’s single-elimination round of 16 have now been set. The breakdown is as follows:

  • First quarter of bracket:
    • Lithuania (B2) vs. Latvia (A3)
    • Greece (C1) vs. Israel (D4)
  • Second quarter:
    • Turkey (A1) vs. Sweden (B4)
    • Poland (D2) vs. Bosnia and Herzegovina (C3)
  • Third quarter:
    • Germany (B1) vs. Portugal (A4)
    • Italy (C2) vs. Slovenia (D3)
  • Fourth quarter:
    • Serbia (A2) vs. Finland (B3)
    • France (D1) vs. Georgia (C4)

The win-or-go-home games involving teams from Groups A and B will take place on Saturday, while the teams in Groups C and D will square off on Sunday. The full schedule for the weekend, including tip-off times, can be viewed here.

The quarterfinals in the top half of the bracket will be played next Tuesday, followed by the quarterfinals from the bottom half of the bracket on Wednesday. The teams that come out of the first and second quarters will face one another in one of the semifinals next Friday, while the winners of the third and fourth quarters will face off in the other semifinal on the same day. The final will be played on Sunday, September 14.

FIBA has also confirmed the final placement of the teams eliminated prior to the round of 16. Those teams, who were classified based on their group position, overall record, and point differential, were ranked as follows:

  1. Spain (2-3 record, +43 point differential)
  2. Belgium (2-3, -40)
  3. Estonia (1-4, -45)
  4. Montenegro (1-4, -77)
  5. Great Britain (1-4, -130)
  6. Iceland (0-5, -76)
  7. Czechia (0-5, -96)
  8. Cyprus (0-5, -165)

While Grizzlies forward Santi Aldama (Spain), Bulls center Nikola Vucevic (Montenegro), and Hawks guard Vit Krejci (Czechia) have been eliminated from the tournament and Wizards center Alex Sarr (France) and Clippers guard Bogdan Bogdanovic (Serbia) have been ruled out due to injuries, the remaining 23 active NBA players in the tournament should all be in action this weekend.


Luke Adams contributed to this story.

Grizzlies Sign Olivier-Maxence Prosper To Two-Way Deal

3:59pm: Prosper’s two-way deal with the Grizzlies is official, the team announced (via Twitter).


11:48am: Free agent forward Olivier-Maxence Prosper intends to sign a two-way contract with the Grizzlies, agents Todd Ramasar and Mike Simonetta tell Shams Charania of ESPN (Twitter link).

According to Charania, Prosper mulled multiple contract offers before ultimately choosing Memphis. The Grizzlies were among the teams that conveyed interest in acquiring Prosper via trade before Dallas decided to waive and stretch his contract last Friday, Charania adds (via Twitter).

However, the Mavericks were said to be reluctant to part with one of their two remaining second-rounders to shed Prosper’s salary, and instead stretched it over three years, with annual cap hits of about $1MM through 2027/28.

Dallas needed to open up room under the second tax apron — at which the team is hard-capped — to re-sign Dante Exum.

Prosper has been an unrestricted free agent for a handful of days after being cut by the Mavs. The 6’8″ Canadian spent one year at Clemson and two seasons at Marquette prior to being selected No. 24 overall in the 2023 draft.

Prosper played a very modest role over his first two NBA seasons, averaging just 3.5 points and 2.2 rebounds in 10.0 minutes per game across 92 regular season outings, with a .396/.260/.658 shooting line.

He also played 25 G League games with the Texas Legends as a rookie in 2023/24. The 23-year-old averaged 18.3 PPG, 7.8 RPG, 2.0 APG and 0.9 SPG on .498/.418/.762 shooting in those contests.

As our tracker shows, Prosper will fill the Grizzlies’ third and final two-way spot.

Latest On Nets, Cam Thomas

Cam Thomas‘ decision to sign his one-year qualifying offer (worth nearly $6MM) was a reflection of the fact that he didn’t receive much external interest as a restricted free agent this summer, numerous scouts and league executives told Brian Lewis of The New York Post.

According to Lewis, Thomas has “fans at the highest level in the Nets front office,” but the team clearly wasn’t willing to bid against itself and evidently wasn’t comfortable offering the 23-year-old a long-term deal.

As Lewis writes, there’s risk for both sides now that Thomas is back under contract. From Brooklyn’s perspective, Thomas has an implied no-trade clause, meaning he would have to approve any deal during the 2025/26 season — if that happens, the team that acquires him would only have his Non-Bird rights.

Thomas, meanwhile, reportedly sacrificed short-term money to keep that built-in no-trade clause. General manager Sean Marks targeted multiple play-making guards during the draft, Lewis notes, and the Nets may prioritize their development over more shots for Thomas.

On a team that’s not trying to win and doesn’t care, if he signs the qualifying offer he runs the risk they don’t feature him after October,” a league source had told The Post before the move. “A team that isn’t trying to win, you’re stuck.”

According to Yossi Gozlan of Third Apron (Substack link), the Nets will be approximately $7MM below the 2025/26 minimum salary floor if they re-sign Ziaire Williams to the same two-year, $12.5MM contract that Day’Ron Sharpe received and waive a few of their non-guaranteed deals before the season begins. That would put Brooklyn in a good position to add assets in another salary-dump deal before the season begins, but a major trade appears unlikely.

Gozlan hears Sharpe will earn $6.25MM each of the next two seasons. As previously reported, the contract features a second-year team option, so it’s only guaranteed for ’25/26.