Wizards Waive Jared Butler
The Wizards have waived guard Jared Butler, according to a press release from the club. Michael Scotto of HoopsHype first reported (via Twitter) that Butler was being cut by Washington.
The 40th overall pick in the 2021 draft, Butler spent time with Utah and Oklahoma City before playing for the Wizards in 2023/24. He was on a two-way contract for most of the season before being converted to a multiyear standard contract in April.
Butler appeared in a total of 40 NBA games last season, averaging 6.3 points, 3.2 assists, and 1.5 rebounds in 14.2 minutes per night, with a .488 FG%. He also had a strong preseason this month, with averages of 6.8 PPG and 4.2 APG on .536/.400/.667 shooting in five games (14.3 MPG).
Reporting leading up to the roster cut-down deadline indicated that the Wizards wanted to find a way to keep Butler, but he was on a non-guaranteed contract and the team is carrying 15 players on fully guaranteed deals. Hanging onto Butler would’ve meant trading or waiving a player with a guaranteed salary.
The front office explored the market to try to find a trade involving a player like Johnny Davis or Patrick Baldwin Jr., tweets Keith Smith of Spotrac, but wasn’t willing to give up a draft pick to move off either player or to eat money this early in the season by cutting one of them. That made Butler the victim of the roster crunch in D.C.
Butler is a candidate to be claimed on waivers, but if he becomes a free agent, he could return to the Wizards on a two-way contract. He’ll likely draw interest from other teams as a two-way target too.
Cavs’ Strus Expected To Miss At Least Six Weeks With Ankle Sprain
Max Strus sprained his right ankle during individual workouts on Thursday, according to the Cavaliers, who announced in a press release that the veteran swingman underwent an X-ray and an MRI to confirm the severity of the sprain.
The plan is for Strus to be reevaluated after going through six weeks of treatment and rehabilitation, per the team. That timeline suggests he’ll remain sidelined for all of November in addition to the rest of this month. The Cavaliers will play 20 games during that time.
Strus had missed some time this preseason due to a right hip contusion, but appeared to be on the verge of making it back for the team’s regular season opener, so this is a disappointing setback for him and for the Cavs, who had the 28-year-old in their starting lineup for 70 regular season games and 12 more playoff contests last season.
Strus was a solid contributor in his first year in Cleveland after signing a four-year, $62MM contract in free agency. He averaged 12.2 points, 4.8 rebounds, and 4.0 assists per game with a .351 3PT%.
With Strus on the shelf, the Cavs will likely lean more on sixth man Caris LeVert, who could move into the starting lineup. Sam Merrill, Dean Wade, Georges Niang, and Ty Jerome are among the other candidates for increased roles.
Suns Cut Frank Kaminsky
The Suns have placed veteran big man Frank Kaminsky on waivers, league sources tell Michael Scotto of HoopsHype (Twitter link). Duane Rankin of The Arizona Republic first reported (via Twitter) that Kaminsky wouldn’t make Phoenix’s opening night roster.
An eight-year veteran who has appeared in 413 regular season games, Kaminsky has a solid career résumé that includes averages of 8.8 points and 3.8 rebounds in 19.8 minutes per game, along with a three-point rate of 34.9% on 3.0 attempts per contest.
However, he was out of the NBA last season, which he spent in Serbia with Partizan Belgrade. On top of that, hanging onto him would cost the Suns exponentially more in projected tax penalties beyond his minimum-salary contract, so he was considered more of a luxury than a necessity.
It’s worth noting that Kaminsky’s training camp contract included Exhibit 10 language, which suggests he may be open to the idea of reporting to the Valley Suns and trying to earn another shot in the NBA by impressing at the G League level.
Having already waived their other non-guaranteed players, the Suns are now carrying 14 players on standard contracts and three on two-way deals, so their roster looks ready for the regular season.
Knicks Waive Landry Shamet, Chuma Okeke, T.J. Warren
3:53pm: The Knicks announced that they’ve officially waived Shamet, Okeke, and Warren (Twitter link).
Okeke and Warren were always considered long shots to make the team once Shamet emerged as the frontrunner, but if Shamet requires a lengthy recovery process, it’s possible one of them could return to the Knicks 14 days into the season when they need to add a 13th man (Ariel Hukporti is expected to be promoted from his two-way deal to become the 14th man).
Warren plans to join the Westchester Knicks and will be a candidate for a promotion at some point this season, Ian Begley of SNY.tv confirms (via Twitter).
3:44pm: The Knicks are waiving injured guard Landry Shamet, sources tell Shams Charania and Bobby Marks of ESPN (Twitter link).
As we covered in detail this week, Shamet left Tuesday’s preseason game against Charlotte with an injury and was subsequently diagnosed with a dislocated right shoulder. Prior to going down in that game, he appeared on track to make the Knicks’ roster on his non-guaranteed minimum-salary contract, having enjoyed a solid preseason in which he averaged 10.8 points per game in four appearances.
However, the Knicks have very little roster and financial flexibility — after accounting for their 12 players on guaranteed contracts, they’re only about $3.58MM away from their hard cap, which they can’t surpass at any point during the 2024/25 season. As such, hanging onto Shamet and continuing to pay him while he recovers from his shoulder injury isn’t the best use of the team’s limited resources.
According to Charania, the Knicks will likely open the season with just their 12 players on standard guaranteed contracts. They’re allowed to carry fewer than 14 players for up to two weeks at a time and for up to 28 total days during the 2024/25 season, so they’ll have to add 13th and 14th men during the first week of November. They’d like to eventually bring back Shamet when he recovers from his shoulder injury, Charania adds.
Because Shamet had Exhibit 9 language in his training camp contract, the Knicks were protected in the event of a preseason injury and will only owe the 27-year-old just $15K rather than having to continue to pay his minimum salary until he’s healthy.
While Charania and Marks didn’t explicitly report it, Charania’s claim that New York will likely open the season with just 12 players on standard deals suggests that the team will also waive Chuma Okeke and T.J. Warren, the other veterans on non-guaranteed contracts.
Magic Cut Jarrett Culver, Three Others
The Magic have waived four players ahead of the regular season, announcing in a press release that they’ve cut swingman Jarrett Culver, forward Jalen Slawson, and guards Alex Morales and Ethan Thompson (Twitter link).
Culver is the most notable name in the group, given that he’s a former No. 6 overall pick. However, he was out of the league last season, instead spending the year with the Rio Grande Valley Vipers in the G League. The former Texas Tech standout averaged 20.7 points, 6.7 rebounds, 3.6 assists, and 1.7 steals in 31.1 minutes per game across 45 outings for the Rockets’ G League team, posting a shooting line of .472/.362/.693.
Of the other three players, only Slawson has any NBA experience. Last year’s No. 54 pick spent his rookie season on a two-way contract with Sacramento, appearing in 12 games for the Kings.
A 6’6″ shooting guard, Morales has played for the Magic’s G League team in each of the past two years while also suiting up for Osos de Manati in Puerto Rico during the NBA offseason.
Thompson, a 6’5″ shooting guard who went undrafted out of Oregon State in 2021, has primarily played in the G League since going pro, spending time with the Windy City Bulls and Mexico City Capitanes. He also played in Puerto Rico for Osos de Manati earlier this year.
While Culver wasn’t eligible for a two-way contract due to his four years of NBA service, the other three were, so it’s notable that all three were waived instead — even after converting Mac McClung to a two-way contract, Orlando still has one two-way spot open. The team may look outside the organization to fill that opening.
Culver, Slawson, Morales, and Thompson will all be eligible for Exhibit 10 bonuses if they report to the Osceola Magic and spend at least 60 days with Orlando’s G League team.
Wizards Waive Butler, Funk, Gueye
The Wizards have requested waivers on center John Butler Jr., forward Taylor Funk, and forward Mouhamadou Gueye, according to RealGM’s transaction log.
Butler, Funk, and Gueye were on non-guaranteed Exhibit 10 contracts and are now candidates to report to the Capital City Go-Go. Washington’s G League affiliate controls the returning rights for all three players, who would earn bonuses worth $77.5K apiece if they spend at least 60 days with the Go-Go.
Butler, 21, started last season on a two-way contract with the Wizards, but was waived in early December. He joined Capital City, where he averaged 6.7 points and 3.2 rebounds in 33 regular season games. Butler has previous NBA experience with Portland, appearing in 19 games during the 2022/23 season, and he was a member of the USA’s 3×3 U23 Men’s National Team that competed in Mongolia this summer.
Funk, 26, also played for the Go-Go last season after being acquired in a December trade with the Maine Celtics. He signed an Exhibit 10 deal with Boston last September, but was waived before the start of training camp. Funk averaged 9.4 points and 3.1 rebounds in 34 regular season games with Capital City.
Gueye, who went undrafted out of Pitt in 2022, saw his first NBA action last season after joining the Raptors on a 10-day deal in February and a two-way contract in March. The 26-year-old appeared in 11 games down the stretch for Toronto, averaging 2.4 points, 2.1 rebounds, and 1.6 blocks in 10.9 minutes per contest. In 39 Showcase Cup and regular season outings for the Raptors 905 – Toronto’s G League affiliate – he averaged 14.2 PPG, 7.9 RPG, and 2.6 BPG in 31.0 MPG, making 56.1% of his shots from the floor but just 49.5% of his free throw tries.
Washington is now carrying 19 players, including 15 on guaranteed contracts and three on two-way deals. Jared Butler has a non-guaranteed salary, but the Wizards would reportedly like to keep him — to do so, they’ll have to either trade or waive a player from their 15-man roster or cut him and attempt to re-sign him to a two-way contract. The latter route is riskier since another team could claim him off waivers.
Trail Blazers Exercise 2025/26 Team Options On Three Players
The Trail Blazers have picked up their 2025/26 team options for three players who are on rookie scale contracts, the team announced today in a press release.
The options exercised by Portland are as follows:
- Scoot Henderson (third year, $10,748,040)
- Shaedon Sharpe (fourth year, $8,399,983)
- Kris Murray (third year, $3,132,000)
None of the decisions come as a surprise. Henderson and Sharpe project to be long-term cornerstones for the Blazers, while Murray showed some promise in his rookie season and has a salary not far above the veteran’s minimum.
Henderson, 20, had an up-and-down rookie campaign after being selected third overall in the 2023 draft. He finished last season with averages of 14.0 points, 5.4 assists, and 3.1 rebounds in 28.5 minutes per game (62 games) and an underwhelming shooting line of .385/.325/.819. However, the Blazers remain confident that he’s capable of much more going forward.
Sharpe has been bitten by the injury bug in the past year. He was limited to 32 games last season due to health issues, including core muscle surgery, and is currently on the shelf due to a shoulder ailment. He averaged 15.9 PPG, 5.0 RPG, and 2.9 APG on .406/.333/.824 shooting when healthy last season.
Murray averaged 6.1 PPG, 3.6 RPG, and 1.3 APG in 62 games (21.7 MPG) as a rookie, with a shooting line of .396/.268/.661.
Sharpe will now become eligible for a rookie scale extension during the 2024 offseason, while the Blazers will have decisions to make on fourth-year options for Henderson and Murray by October 31, 2025.
Bucks Give Robbins Two-Way Deal, Cut Pasecniks
2:53pm: Robbins’ two-way contract is now official, according to the transaction log at NBA.com.
1:52pm: The Bucks are making a change to their two-way players ahead of the regular season, with Shams Charania of ESPN reporting (via Twitter) that the team has decided to convert Liam Robbins‘ Exhibit 10 contract to a two-way deal while waiving big man Anzejs Pasecniks.
Robbins, a seven-foot center who played his college ball at Vanderbilt, was born in Wisconsin and grew up a Bucks fan, so he’ll be sticking with his hometown team after a solid preseason in which he averaged 4.0 points, 2.8 rebounds, 1.5 assists, and 1.5 blocks in 11.7 minutes per game across four outings.
Robbins missed part of his final college season in 2022/23 with a right leg fracture, which required surgery. A second surgical procedure was required this past January due to an issue with a plate that was inserted in his leg. But after a lost rookie season, he said this fall that he’s fully healthy and has no limitations.
A first-round pick in the 2017 draft, Pasecniks has only appeared in 28 total NBA regular season games – all with the Wizards – and has spent the past three seasons in Europe, playing for Real Betis (Spain), Metropolitans 92 (France) and Palencia (Spain). It remains to be seen whether he’ll head back overseas or if he’ll remain stateside and look to earn a shot with another NBA team.
Robbins joins Ryan Rollins and Stanley Umude as Milwaukee’s two-way players.
Raptors Cut Branden Carlson, Two Others; Convert Jamison Battle To Two-Way
The Raptors have placed three players on waivers, according to Blake Murphy of Sportsnet.ca (Twitter link), who says that center Branden Carlson and guards Jared Rhoden and Jahmi’us Ramsey are the roster casualties in Toronto.
Carlson was on a two-way contract, while Rhoden and Ramsey were in camp on non-guaranteed Exhibit 10 contracts.
Forward Jamison Battle, the team’s other Exhibit 10 recipient, has had his contract converted into a two-way deal, replacing Carlson, Murphy adds.
Battle, who went undrafted out of Ohio State in June, impressed the Raptors at the Las Vegas Summer League, where he averaged 7.4 points per game on .565/.600/1.000 shooting in five outings (14.0 MPG). He also had a strong preseason, putting up 6.4 PPG in just 9.8 MPG in five appearances off the bench, with a .545 FG% (and a .571 3PT%).
Battle will help provide depth early in the season on the wing, where RJ Barrett and Bruce Brown are among the projected rotation players dealing with injuries.
As Murphy tweets, Rhoden will likely report to the Raptors 905, since they control his rights, and the team should have the ability to designate Carlson as an affiliate player even though he was on a two-way deal. Ramsey’s returning rights are still controlled by the Oklahoma City Blue, so the 905 would have to acquire them in order to get him on their roster.
Toronto is now carrying 14 players on fully guaranteed contracts, plus Bruno Fernando on a non-guaranteed deal, and three players on two-way pacts. Assuming Fernando makes the opening night roster, his full minimum salary will become guaranteed.
Grizzlies Convert Yuki Kawamura To Two-Way Deal
2:49pm: Kawamura has officially been promoted to a two-way contract, per NBA.com’s transaction log.
1:24pm: The Grizzlies intend to convert non-guaranteed camp invitee Yuki Kawamura to a two-way contract, according to Shams Charania of ESPN (Twitter link).
Kawamura, who is currently on an Exhibit 10 deal, will take the two-way slot that was previously occupied by Scotty Pippen Jr. before he was promoted to the standard roster, so no corresponding move will be necessary to make room.
The 23-year-old Japanese guard has spent the past five seasons playing in the B.League in his home country. He earned MVP honors in 2023 and averaged 20.9 points, 8.0 assists, and 3.0 rebounds in 30.6 minutes per game last season for the Yokohama B-Corsairs. He also played for Japan at this summer’s Olympics, pouring in 29 points in a near-upset of France in pool play.
Kawamura impressed his new Grizzlies teammates this fall with his competitiveness and had some strong preseason outings, handing out eight assists in last Saturday’s win against Chicago and then registering 10 points and seven assists in Monday’s victory over the Pacers.
At 5’8″, Kawamura will be the shortest active player in the NBA, tweets Charania.
Once Kawamura’s conversion is official, the Grizzlies will have 14 players on guaranteed contracts and three on two-way deals, with the club’s other Exhibit 10 signees – Miye Oni, Maozinha Pereira, Armando Bacot, and Miles Norris – seemingly on the outside looking in with the regular season roster cut-down deadline looming.
