Tahaad Pettiford Withdrawing From Draft, Returning To Auburn
After testing the NBA draft waters following his freshman year at Auburn, Tahaad Pettiford has decided to pull out of the draft pool and return to the Tigers for the 2025/26 season, he tells Jonathan Givony of ESPN (Twitter link). Pettiford confirmed the news with a post on his Instagram account.
[RELATED: 2025 NBA Draft Early Entrants List]
Pettiford, a 6’1″ point guard who will turn 20 in August, earned a spot on the SEC’s All-Freshman Team after averaging 11.6 points, 3.0 assists, and 2.2 rebounds in 22.9 minutes per game in 38 appearances (one start) in 2024/25.
He posted a solid shooting line of .421/.366/.804 and helped Auburn earn a No. 1 seed and make a deep run in the NCAA tournament. The Tigers were defeated by eventual champion Florida in the Final Four.
Pettiford was considered a strong candidate to be drafted but was less likely to be a first-round pick. He came in at No. 38 on the most recent update of ESPN’s big board of 2025 prospects.
According to Givony, Pettiford is expected to enter his sophomore season as a projected first-rounder in the 2026 draft.
Jamir Watkins To Remain In 2025 NBA Draft
Jamir Watkins will keep his name in the 2025 NBA draft, he tells Jon Rothstein of CBS Sports (Twitter link).
Watkins, who played two seasons for VCU and two for Florida State, had one year of college eligibility remaining and had entered the transfer portal this spring, but will go pro rather than returning to school for another season.
A 6’7″ forward, Watkins averaged 18.4 points, 5.7 rebounds, 2.4 assists, and 1.2 steals in 30.9 minutes per game across 32 outings (all starts) for the Seminoles in 2024/25. He posted a shooting line of .427/.321/.747 and was named to the All-ACC second team.
Watkins began his college career in 2020/21, which didn’t count toward his four years of eligibility because the season was shortened due to COVID-19. He was then sidelined for all of ’21/22 due to a knee injury, earning him a redshirt year. As a result of his extended college career, he’ll turn 24 this July, which will limit his appeal to NBA teams looking for a young player with untapped upside.
Still, Watkins’ experience at the college level puts him in position to potentially emerge as an immediate contributor at the next level. He was ranked as the No. 65 overall prospect on ESPN’s latest big board, and a few prospects ahead of him on that list have since withdrawn their names from the draft.
As we outlined earlier today, NCAA early entrants who want to maintain their college eligibility will have to withdraw from the draft by the end of the day on Wednesday.
Warriors Announce Details For 2025 California Classic Summer League
The seventh annual California Classic Summer League will take place this summer on July 5, 6, and 8 at Chase Center, the Warriors announced today in a press release.
According to today’s announcement, the Warriors will be joined at this year’s event by the Heat, Lakers, and Spurs. Each team will face every other club once over the course of the three-day event.
San Antonio owns the No. 2 overall pick in the 2025 draft, so it’s possible Dylan Harper – who is considered the overwhelming favorite to be selected at that spot – will make his Summer League debut at this year’s California Classic.
The California Classic, which is held days before the league-wide Las Vegas Summer League, was launched by the Kings in 2018, and has been held in either Sacramento or San Francisco in recent years, with the Kings and Warriors trading hosting duties back and forth.
The event expanded from four teams to six in 2023 and then to eight in 2024, with China sending its national team to participate. However, it seems it will revert to just four squads again in 2025. The Warriors, Lakers, and Heat typically participate every year, while the Spurs have competed since 2023. This will be the first time the Kings aren’t involved in the event.
The California Classic will take place at the same time as the Jazz are hosting the Salt Lake City Summer League in Utah. The Vegas Summer League, which features all 30 NBA teams, will be played from July 10-20.
Pelicans Hire Troy Weaver As Senior VP Of Basketball Operations
May 28: The Pelicans have formally confirmed the addition of Weaver to their front office, announcing that he’s the team’s new senior VP of basketball operations.
New Orleans also announced Jason Hervey as the team’s director of player personnel and Davis Smith as basketball operations manager. The club’s deal with Hervey was previously reported by Michael Scotto of HoopsHype.
April 23: The Pelicans are hiring former Pistons general manager Troy Weaver, according to Marc J. Spears of Andscape, who reports (via Twitter) that Weaver will be named the senior vice president in New Orleans’ basketball operations department under new executive VP Joe Dumars.
In a full story on ESPN.com, Spears says Weaver will also hold the title of Pelicans general manager.
Weaver spent more than a decade in the Thunder’s front office before being hired by the Pistons as their general manager in 2020. He oversaw the rebuilding project in Detroit for four years, but was removed from his position last spring after the team posted a franchise-worst 14-68 record in 2023/24.
As poor as the Pistons’ record was during Weaver’s tenure, he perhaps deserves partial credit for the team’s renaissance this season, which was led by a handful of his draft picks, including star point guard Cade Cunningham, center Jalen Duren, and swingman Ausar Thompson.
Following his exit from Detroit, Weaver joined the Wizards last summer as a senior advisor. He’ll be leaving that role to join the Pelicans’ front office, says Spears.
Although both Dumars and Weaver are former heads of basketball operations in Detroit, their stints with the club didn’t overlap at all. Dumars led the Pistons’ front office from 2010-14, departing the organization while Weaver was still in Oklahoma City.
Withdrawal Deadline Looms For NCAA Early Entrants
The deadline for players who declared for the 2025 NBA draft as early entrants to withdraw their names from the pool is June 15 at 4:00 pm Central time.
A player who withdraws from the 2025 draft by that deadline would be eligible to be drafted in a future season — that could happen as early as 2026 if the player declares again as an early entrant or is automatically draft-eligible next year, or he could become draft-eligible in 2027 or beyond.
However, the NCAA sets its own withdrawal deadline each year. While the NBA’s deadline comes 10 days before the start of the draft, the NCAA’s deadline occurs just 10 days after the combine ends. This year, the NCAA’s withdrawal deadline is May 28 (today) at 10:59 pm CT.
A college player who is testing the draft waters could technically put off his decision for another two-and-a-half weeks, but if he withdraws from the draft pool on June 15, he would lose the ability to return to an NCAA program for the 2025/26 season. That route would only make sense for a player who had lined up a non-college opportunity, such as playing in a professional league overseas.
In other words, nearly all of the college players who declared for this year’s draft as early entrants will finalize their decisions on whether to return to school or go pro by the end of the day on Wednesday. As our tracker shows, there are still a number of prospects whose intentions haven’t been confirmed, so we’ll be keeping tabs on any updates that come in over the next 11 hours or so.
Here are a few of the latest updates:
- Forward Toibu Lawal is removing his name from the 2025 NBA draft pool and will return to Virginia Tech for his senior year, a source tells Jeff Goodman of The Field of 68 (Twitter link). After transferring from VCU to Virginia Tech for the 2024/25 season, Lawal was a full-time starter, averaging 12.4 points and 7.0 rebounds per game with a .559/.371/.641 shooting line in 30 contests.
- Brandon Walker is pulling out of the draft, he tells Jon Chepkevich of DraftExpress (Twitter link). Walker, who has spent the past two seasons playing for Montana State, is still in the transfer portal and plans to announce a commitment to a “high-major program” soon, Chepkevich notes. The 6’7″ forward put up 14.7 PPG and 4.9 RPG with a .528/.386/.545 shooting line as a junior last season.
- After withdrawing from the transfer portal earlier this spring, wing Raysean Seamster has now withdrawn from the draft as well and will return to UT Arlington for his senior season, Chepkevich reports (via Twitter). Seamster was a starter for the Mavericks in 2024/25, averaging 11.4 PPG and 4.9 RPG in 30 games (25.7 MPG).
Russell Westbrook Undergoes Hand Surgery
5:45 pm: Westbrook’s right hand surgery was to repair multiple ligament tears, according to the Nuggets, Bennett Durando of the Denver Post tweets. He underwent the procedure today, as expected.
11:37 am: Veteran guard Russell Westbrook is undergoing surgery on his right hand on Tuesday morning, he announced today in the latest installment of his personal newsletter (hat tip to Law Murray of The Athletic).
According to Westbrook, the procedure will repair two breaks in the hand that occurred during the season. The 36-year-old doesn’t provide information on any sort of formal recovery timeline, but says he’s optimistic about being back to 100% “soon.”
Hand injuries are nothing new for Westbrook, who had surgery to repair a fracture in his right hand in 2014 and underwent procedures on his left hand in 2019 and 2024 to address ligament damage and a fracture, respectively.
Westbrook played a major role in 2024/25 for the Nuggets after signing a two-year, minimum-salary contract that features a second-year player option. He averaged 13.3 points, 6.1 assists, 4.9 rebounds, and 1.4 steals in 27.9 minutes per game across 75 appearances (36 starts), with a shooting line of .449/.323/.661.
The Nuggets had a better net rating with Westbrook off the court (+8.6) than on it (-0.6), but he received positive reviews in Denver due to the energy and leadership he provided off the bench, as well as his performance filling in for injured starters (including Aaron Gordon) over the course of the season.
Westbrook will have to make a decision in the coming weeks on his $3.47MM player option in the coming weeks. His projected minimum for 2025/26 as a free agent is $3.63MM, so even if he wants to return to Denver and is willing to settle for another minimum-salary deal, it might make sense for him to opt out in order to sign a new contract.
2025 NBA Offseason Preview: Dallas Mavericks
For basketball fans outside of Dallas, it has become easy to forget that the Mavericks were the Western Conference's representative in the NBA Finals less than one year ago. It feels like another lifetime ago, given everything that has gone down in Dallas not just since last June, but in the past four months alone.
In an alternate universe, the Mavericks had a solid but unspectacular 2024/25 season en route to another playoff appearance. In that universe, Luka Doncic and Kyrie Irving led Dallas to a first-round victory - or at least a competitive first-round series - but couldn't get the team back to the Finals. In that universe, the Mavs own, say, the No. 20 pick in the NBA draft and we'd be talking now about whether they might include that pick in a trade package to acquire another veteran player who could solidify their place as a legitimate contender as they prepare to put a super-max offer on the table for Doncic.
That's not the universe we live in though. In this one, Mavericks president of basketball operations Nico Harrison shocked the basketball world - all of the sports world, really - by trading Doncic to the Lakers in February without any advance warning, giving up the chance to lock up a perennial First-Team All-NBA player for the long term.
Harrison's thinking in that trade, which sent Anthony Davis and Max Christie to Dallas, was that it would make the Mavericks better equipped for title contention in the short term, even if it might shrink their championship window in the long run. So it was a serious problem when Dallas' rotation was decimated by injuries shortly after they acquired Davis.
You could make a case that the Mavericks' string of major injuries was simply bad luck, and there's certainly some truth to that. But Davis has admitted he probably came back too early from the adductor injury he was recovering from at the time of the trade. His eagerness to quell the fan unrest in the days following the Doncic trade likely factored into the decision to rush his Mavs debut. And even though Irving's ACL tear was more about taking one wrong step than persistent overuse, his spike in usage rate without Doncic likely increased his injury risk.
This isn't to say that the Doncic trade can be blamed for everything that went wrong in Dallas for the rest of the season, but it did seem to create a domino effect that saw things go from bad to worse for the Mavs down the stretch, scuttling any hopes they had of repeating their NBA Finals appearance -- which is why it was such an incredible boon for the organization to win the draft lottery earlier this month.
There will be Mavs fans who never forgive the organization for the decision to trade Doncic, but short of winning a championship, getting the opportunity to replace him with an elite 18-year-old prospect like Cooper Flagg is the best-case scenario the club could have hoped for after pulling the trigger on that controversial deal nearly four months ago.
Suddenly, a team that looked in danger of becoming too old and injury-prone to vie for a title has a reason for long-term optimism again. Now, it's up to Harrison to do what he can to earn back at least some level of trust from Mavs fans who felt burned by him in February. With the right moves this summer, the idea of Dallas reemerging as an NBA Finals threat next season doesn't feel quite so far-fetched.
The Mavericks' Offseason Plan
While the majority of the Mavericks who suffered second-half injuries were able to return before the end of the season and should be just fine this fall, Irving is the glaring exception. His recovery from ACL surgery is expected to extend well into 2025/26, which creates two significant issues for the Mavs -- they need to determine how to handle his contract situation this summer while also adding a player capable of filling in at the point during Kyrie's lengthy recovery process.
Shams: LeBron James Likely To Opt In For 2025/26
Asked during an appearance on The Pat McAfee Show on Tuesday about LeBron James‘ future, ESPN’s Shams Charania said the Lakers star appears likely to exercise his $52.6MM player option for the 2025/26 season (YouTube link).
“I’m told he’s likely to opt in. … That’s likely, that’s the plan,” Charania said. “But his option date is June 29, so he still has about a month to figure it out. There’s going to be some hard conversations that are going to happen between him (and) the Lakers, seeing what this team looks like. Because whether he plays one more season or a few more seasons, he wants to be in a competitive environment.
“… He’s probably going to opt in because the option is so big. And then that gives you flexibility to figure out, do you extend off that number or…if this is the last hurrah, essentially.”
When the Lakers’ season came to an end a few weeks ago, James expressed uncertainty about his NBA future and didn’t confirm that he’d return to Los Angeles in 2025/26 or even continue his playing career at all.
However, it has always seemed highly unlikely that James would announce his retirement this summer, and there has been no indication in recent years that he has any interest in leaving L.A., despite some up-and-down seasons during his time with the Lakers. With Luka Doncic now in the picture, there’s a newfound reason for optimism for the franchise, seemingly reducing the odds of a LeBron exit.
[RELATED: LeBron James Says MCL Sprain Is ‘Getting Better’]
Given that context, Charania’s report makes sense, though it’s worth noting that if he opts in, James would be earning less than his maximum salary (projected to be $54.1MM) and wouldn’t have the ability to sign an extension before that contract expires next summer. So even if he wants to just commit for one more season with the Lakers and then leave his options open in 2026, he could still end up turning down his player option in order to sign a new one-year contract.
Assuming James returns for the ’25/26 season, it would be his 23rd year in the NBA, which would be a new league record. LeBron’s 22 seasons in the NBA puts him in a tie with Vince Carter for the current mark.
Florida’s Alex Condon Among Latest To Withdraw From Draft
Florida big man Alex Condon is removing his name from the 2025 NBA draft pool and returning to the Gators for his junior year, he informs Jonathan Givony of ESPN. Condon was a member of the team that won a national championship last month and will be looking to pull off the feat again next season.
[RELATED: 2025 NBA Draft Early Entrants List]
“It’s a really good situation waiting for me there,” Condon said. “A great coach with Todd Golden. Teammates I won a national championship with. I have great chemistry with those boys. We have a good transfer class coming in. I expect guys to make a leap. My big man coach Carlin Hartman is returning, so I will keep developing my game with him.”
A 6’11” forward/center from Australia, Condon was elevated to Florida’s starting lineup as a sophomore in 2024/25 after coming off the bench as a freshman. In his second college season, he averaged 10.6 points, 7.5 rebounds, 2.2 assists, and 1.3 blocks in 24.9 minutes per contest in 37 games (35 starts), earning third-team All-SEC honors.
Condon conducted private workouts for eight NBA teams during the pre-draft process, he told Givony. The big man was the No. 31 prospect in the last update of ESPN’s big board, though in today’s news story, Givony refers to him as ESPN’s No. 38 player. Either way, Condon was far from a lock to be a first-round pick, which factored into his decision to return to school.
Condon is one of several draft prospects reported in recent hours to be withdrawing from the NBA draft. Here are a few others:
- After testing the draft waters following his freshman season, guard Joson Sanon is headed back to school, reports Jon Rothstein of CBS Sports (Twitter link). Sanon, who averaged 11.9 points per game on .422/.369/.714 shooting for Arizona State in 2024/25, is transferring to St. John’s for his sophomore year.
- Ohio State guard Bruce Thornton has officially withdrawn from the draft and is rejoining the Buckeyes for one more season, a source tells Rothstein (Twitter link). As a junior in 2024/25, Thornton put up 17.2 points, 4.6 assists, and 3.4 rebounds per game in 32 outings (all starts), earning a spot on the All-Big Ten second team.
- Forward Devon Pryor, who is transferring from Texas to Oregon for his junior year, is opting out of the draft, per Jon Chepkevich of DraftExpress (Twitter link). Pryor didn’t see much action for the Longhorns last season, averaging just 12.1 minutes per game in 23 appearances.
- Elijah Fisher, a 6’6″ wing, has withdrawn from the draft and will join his fourth school in four years, according to Chepkevich (Twitter link). After spending one season apiece with Texas Tech, DePaul, and Pacific, Fisher has committed to Seton Hall for the 2025/26 campaign.
- Chris Howell is exiting the draft and transferring from UC San Diego to New Mexico, reports Chepkevich (Twitter link). As a junior last season, the 6’6″ guard averaged 5.6 points, 3.8 rebounds, 3.0 assists, and 2.2 steals per game in 35 starts for the Tritons.
- Guard Dominick Harris, who has one year of NCAA eligibility remaining, will pull out of the draft and transfer from UCLA to Loyola Chicago, tweets Chepkevich. Harris has also played for Gonzaga and Loyola Marymount since beginning his college career in 2020.
Yaxel Lendeborg Withdrawing From Draft, Transferring To Michigan
Yaxel Lendeborg, projected to be a first-round pick next month, is withdrawing from the 2025 NBA draft and transferring from UAB to Michigan, he tells Jonathan Givony and Shams Charania of ESPN.
“While it’s been and still is a dream of mine to play in the NBA, I feel the development and growth as a player and a person I will gain at the University of Michigan will be very beneficial,” Lendeborg explained to ESPN.
There will be no shortage of college early entrants pulling out of the NBA draft ahead of the NCAA’s withdrawal deadline on Wednesday, but Lendeborg will almost certainly be one of the highest-rated prospects to forgo the professional route. He had been listed as the No. 26 overall prospect on ESPN’s 2025 big board and was also the 26th player selected in the site’s most recent mock draft.
[RELATED: 2025 NBA Draft Early Entrants List]
A 6’9″ forward, Lendeborg made the All-AAC first team in 2024 and 2025 and was named the conference’s Defensive Player of the Year in both seasons as well. As a senior this past season, he averaged 17.7 points, a conference-leading 11.4 rebounds, 4.2 assists, 1.8 blocks, and 1.7 steals in 33.6 minutes per game across 37 outings (all starts). He posted a strong shooting line of .522/.357/.757.
According to Givony, Lendeborg joined elite company by registering at least 600 points, 400 rebounds, and 150 assists a single season in 2024/25 — Larry Bird is the only other player in Division I history to accomplish that feat.
Lendeborg has one year of NCAA eligibility remaining before becoming automatically draft-eligible in 2026. He told ESPN that he got excited about the idea of joining the Wolverines after seeing how they deployed big man Danny Wolf as a ball-handler and facilitator.
“It’s amazing what Dusty May did with Danny Wolf,” Lendeborg said. “I would watch his games this season and say, ‘Man, I wish that was me.’ I’m trying to bring the same type of versatility he brought to Michigan.”
