Jazz, Jordan Clarkson Agree To Contract Buyout

6:30 pm: Clarkson has officially been bought out and waived, according to a press release from the Jazz.


1:52 pm: Veteran guard Jordan Clarkson is finalizing a buyout agreement with the Jazz, sources tell Shams Charania of ESPN (Twitter link).

According to Charania, Clarkson plans to prioritize contenders when he becomes a free agent, which will occur two days after he’s officially released by Utah. “Multiple playoff teams” are expected to be interested in the 33-year-old, Charania adds.

Clarkson was on an expiring contract that will pay him approximately $14.3MM in 2025/26. It remains to be seen how much of that he’ll be giving back, but the Jazz could have about $30MM in breathing room beneath the luxury tax line to make further moves, notes Yossi Gozlan of The Third Apron (via Twitter).

The Knicks are a team to monitor for Clarkson, according to Steve Popper of Newsday (Twitter link), who says New York has expressed a level of interest in the former Sixth Man of the Year winner in prior trade talks.

Multiple recent reports indicated that Utah was looking to find a trade partner to take on Clarkson’s contract, but the team was unable to find a deal to its liking.

A former second-round pick (46th overall in 2014), Clarkson has spent the past five-and-a-half years with the Jazz after previous stops with the Lakers and Cavaliers. He’s known for providing instant offense off the bench, but appeared in a career-low 37 games last season due to a left foot injury (Utah was also trying to improve its lottery standing).

Overall, Clarkson averaged 16.2 points, 3.7 assists and 3.2 rebounds in his 37 appearances (26.0 minutes per contest). His shooting slash line was .408/.362/.797.

The Jazz clearly plan to give major backcourt minutes to their recent draft picks for the upcoming season, having traded Collin Sexton to Charlotte for Jusuf Nurkic. They’re also waiving Johnny Juzang and, once the buyout is complete, Clarkson.

Jesse Edwards, Emanuel Miller Sign Two-Way Qualifying Offers

Timberwolves big man Jesse Edwards has accepted his two-qualifying offer and so has Bulls forward Emanuel Miller, according to Michael Scotto of HoopsHype (Twitter links). The signings are official, per NBA.com’s transactions log.

Both players were restricted free agents after their respective teams issued them qualifying offers. By accepting the QOs, Edwards and Miller will each receive a small partial guarantee of $85K, but their two-way contracts are otherwise non-guaranteed and don’t count against the salary cap, so they could still be released at any point in the coming weeks or months.

Edwards, 25, only appeared in two NBA games for Minnesota, having spent the majority of his rookie campaign with the team’s G League affiliate in Iowa. The Dutch center went undrafted last year out of West Virginia after spending his first four college seasons with Syracuse.

Miller, 25, inked a two-way deal with Chicago in December after going undrafted out of TCU. He played in six games for the Bulls but was a mainstay in the NBAGL, first with the Dallas Legends and then the Windy City Bulls.

Hornets Trade Mark Williams To Suns For McNeeley, 2029 First-Rounder

June 30: The trade is official, according to press releases issued by both the Suns and Hornets.

Williams is headed to Phoenix, while Micic, this year’s No. 29 pick (Liam McNeeley), and a 2029 first-round pick (least favorable of Utah, Cleveland and Minnesota) are going to Charlotte.

Rather than the swap of second-rounders (outlined below), the Hornets sent the Suns their own 2029 second-round pick in order to complete the trade.


June 25: Right around the same time they drafted Khaman Maluach, the Suns agreed to acquire another Duke center, according to Shams Charania of ESPN, who reports (via Twitter) that the Hornets are sending Mark Williams to Phoenix in exchange for 2025’s No. 29 overall pick and a 2029 first-rounder.

Sources tell Charania that the 2029 first-round pick will be the least favorable of the selections controlled by Utah, Cleveland and Minnesota (Twitter link). The Wolves’ pick is top-five protected, so it would have to fall outside of that range to be in play.

According to Jake Fischer of The Stein Line (Twitter link), Vasilije Micic is also involved in the trade, as he’ll be sent back to Charlotte, which just traded him to Phoenix in February. Micic’s $8.1MM team option for next season will have to be exercised for that to occur.

The full trade is as follows, according to Roderick Boone of The Charlotte Observer (Twitter link).

Hornets receive:

  • Micic.
  • 2025 No. 29 pick.
  • 2029 first-round pick with the least favorable language listed above.
  • 2026 second-rounder (least favorable of Golden State and Denver).

Suns receive:

  • Williams.
  • 2026 second-round pick (most favorable of Golden State and Denver).

Williams, 23, was nearly traded to the Lakers at the February deadline, but Los Angeles wound up rescinding that deal due to concerns about his physical.

A 7’0″ big man with an enormous 7’7″ wingspan, Williams was productive when healthy this past season for Charlotte, averaging 15.3 points, 10.2 rebounds, 2.5 assists and 1.2 blocks in 44 appearances (26.6 minutes per game). He shot 60.4% from the field and a career-best 80.4% from the foul line.

However, health has been a huge issue for Williams through three NBA seasons, having played a total of just 106 games. He also has been a negative defender, particularly when trying to switch onto smaller players on the perimeter.

It’s telling that Charlotte was so determined to move Williams despite his very real upside as a scorer and rebounder. The Hornets only won 19 games last season, but they were substantially worse when Williams was on the court (-12.7 net rating) compared to when he was off it (-7.7).

Obviously, Phoenix is betting that Williams and Maluach will be long-term answers in the middle. After trading away Deandre Ayton two years ago, the Suns have been lacking reliable play up front.

Interestingly, the Suns sent Josh Okogie and multiple second-round picks to Charlotte in January in order to acquire Nick Richards, whose $5MM salary for 2025/26 is non-guaranteed. Adding Maluach and Williams might signal that Phoenix will opt to waive Richards — yet another center — instead of retaining him.

Free Agency Notes: Rockets, Ty. Jones, Heat, Raptors, More

The Rockets are diligently working secure meetings with Dorian Finney-Smith, Nickeil Alexander-Walker and Luke Kennard when free agency gets underway at 5:00 pm CT, according to Kelly Iko of The Athletic (Twitter link).

Houston is viewed as the frontrunner to land Finney-Smith after the veteran forward declined his $15.4MM player option and didn’t immediately work out a new deal with the Lakers. Marc Stein has reported multiple times that the Rockets are prepared to offer the 32-year-old a four-year deal worth most of the non-taxpayer mid-level exception.

Alexander-Walker, meanwhile, is expected to leave Minnesota after the Timberwolves agreed to lucrative new contracts with Naz Reid and Julius Randle. The Hawks have been rumored as the favorite to acquire the versatile guard, but several teams are said to be interested in his services.

Atlanta is also rumored to have interest in Kennard, who is the third-most accurate three-point shooter in NBA history at 43.8%. He has spent the past two-plus seasons in Memphis, but is expected to leave the Grizzlies in free agency.

Here are a few more free agency-related notes and rumors:

  • The Knicks could be a suitor for point guard Tyus Jones, per Ian Begley of SNY.tv (Twitter video link). “Tyus Jones is a name that I’m keeping an eye on,” Begley said. “Last summer, there was mutual interest…Jones was even willing to take a pay cut to come to New York. He ended up choosing Phoenix thinking it would be a very good situation for him — didn’t work out, so he’s back on the market.” New York can likely only offer the taxpayer mid-level exception or the veteran’s minimum, Begley notes.
  • The Magic also expressed prior interest in Tyus Jones and he could be a good fit with Orlando depending on how much money he’s seeking in free agency, according to Josh Robbins of The Athletic. If it’s not Jones, the Magic will likely look to add a different veteran point guard to improve their shooting and offense, Robbins writes.
  • Anthony Chiang of The Miami Herald released a guide for some of the options the Heat could explore in free agency. According to Chiang, guard Dru Smith is expected to return to Miami on a two-way deal after he was issued a two-way qualifying offer, but he has yet to accept that QO. Smith was on the verge of being promoted to a standard contract last season before suffering a torn Achilles tendon in late December.
  • As of now, Michael Grange of Sportsnet.ca expects the Raptors to be “fairly quiet” in free agency (Twitter link). Toronto will likely fill out the end of its roster with minimum-salary deals. A veteran extension for starting center Jakob Poeltl remains a possibility as well, Grange adds.
  • Zach Kram of ESPN.com lists seven “underrated players” who are about to hit the open market, including Chris Boucher, De’Anthony Melton and Gary Trent Jr.

Suns Placing Cody Martin On Waivers

The Suns are waiving Cody Martin, according to John Gambadoro of Arizona Sports 98.7 (Twitter link).

Martin’s $8.6MM salary for 2025/26 would have become guaranteed had he remained on Phoenix’s roster through June 30. Instead the Suns will cut him loose, making him eligible for unrestricted free agency in a couple days if he clears waivers, which seems likely.

Jake Fischer and Marc Stein of The Stein Line reported earlier this month that Martin had drawn interest from “several” teams as part of the wider trade talks involving Kevin Durant; the following day, Phoenix agreed to send Durant to Houston. Only one club was specifically mentioned as a possible Martin suitor at that time: the Heat.

Martin was acquired by Phoenix in February ahead of the trade deadline. He spent his first five-and-a-half seasons in Charlotte, the team that selected him 36th overall in 2019.

While the 29-year-old is a strong, versatile defender and solid play-maker, he hasn’t been much of a scoring threat in the NBA, holding career averages of 6.2 points, 3.7 rebounds, 2.2 assists and 1.0 steal on .436/.308/.661 shooting in 21.9 minutes per game across 259 appearances.

Martin has also been plagued by injuries the past few seasons, including a sports hernia ailment in 2024/25 which delayed his Suns debut. Still, he could hold appeal as a bench option for teams looking for defensive help.

Pacers Issue QOs To I. Jackson, Q. Jackson, Freeman

The Pacers have tendered qualifying offers to Isaiah Jackson, Quenton Jackson and Enrique Freeman, making all three players restricted free agents, a league source tells Tony East of Forbes (Twitter link).

Isaiah Jackson was a semi-regular rotation player for Indiana over the course of his first three NBA seasons after being selected No. 22 overall in the 2021 draft. Unfortunately, the 23-year-old center sustained a torn Achilles tendon in the Pacers’ sixth game of 2024/25 and missed the rest of the season, including the team’s run to the NBA Finals.

The decision to give Isaiah Jackson a qualifying offer is an interesting one. The Pacers are clearly confident that he’s recovering well after the major injury, but the amount of the QO — $6,422,432 — isn’t insignificant, especially with Indiana trying to re-sign starting center Myles Turner in free agency.

Perhaps the Pacers have an idea of what it will take to bring back Jackson on a team-friendly multiyear deal and issued the qualifying offer as a precaution so he remains restricted. But he could also choose to accept the QO — essentially a guaranteed one-year contract — and become an unrestricted free agent in 2026. Either scenario would push Indiana closer to the luxury tax in 2025/26, which ownership has historically been reluctant to avoid.

As for Quenton Jackson, the former undrafted free agent averaged 5.8 PPG, 1.9 APG and 1.6 RPG on .475/.375/.775 shooting in 28 games (13.6 MPG) last season while on a two-way contract with Indiana. The third-year guard’s QO is a one-year deal for his minimum-salary ($2,378,870) and has a small partial guarantee ($102K).

Freeman, meanwhile, was a rookie last season after being selected 50th overall in 2024 out of Akron. The 6’8″ forward made 22 appearances with the Pacers, averaging 2.1 PPG and 1.4 RPG in 8.2 MPG. His QO is for another two-way deal and also features a modest partial guarantee ($85K) that won’t impact Indiana’s salary cap situation.

James Harden Declines Option, Signs New Two-Year Deal With Clippers

July 6: Harden’s new contract with the Clippers is official, per a team press release.

“James takes on a tremendous workload for our team, as a play-maker and a scorer, and he does it with consistency and dependability,” president of basketball operations Lawrence Frank said in a statement. “The NBA season is grueling, and James has proven he is built for it, in a way few are.

“He loves to play. He works on his game. He positions his teammates to succeed and his team to win. He’s a true partner, as shown by this agreement, which allows us to reward James and continue building in the present and future.”

The partial guarantee on Harden’s second-year player option is worth $13.3MM, tweets Michael Scotto of HoopsHype.


June 29: Clippers guard James Harden will turn down his $36.3MM player option for the 2025/26 season in order to sign a new two-year, $81.5MM contract with the team, reports Shams Charania of ESPN (Twitter links).

According to Charania, the second year will be a player option and will be partially guaranteed if Harden opts in.

Dating back to 2022 free agency, this is the third consecutive time that Harden has inked a one-plus-one contract (two-year deal with a player option). The value of his cap hit for ’25/26 will determine how much financial flexibility the Clippers will have as they look to upgrade their roster this offseason.

Harden, who turns 36 years old at the end of August, appeared in 79 games last season, averaging 22.8 points, 8.7 assists, 5.8 rebounds and 1.5 steals on .410/.352/.872 shooting in 35.3 minutes per contest. The former NBA MVP was selected to his 11th All-Star team in 2024/25 and was also named to the All-NBA Third Team, marking the eighth time he’s been an all-league performer.

With Kawhi Leonard out for the first half of the season, Harden was the primary offensive engine for a Clippers team that performed better than expected after losing Paul George. He also had impressive chemistry with starting center Ivica Zubac, who had a career year with Harden orchestrating pick-and-rolls.

The Clippers went 50-32 last season, good for the No. 5 seed in the West, but lost their first-round playoff series against Denver in seven games.

Harden, a native of Los Angeles, was widely expected to return to the Clips in some fashion, whether by exercising his option or declining it and re-signing on a new deal. He opted for the latter route this summer, and could be a free agent again in 2026.

The move makes sense for both sides. The Nets are the only team projected to have a significant amount of cap room this offseason, and they were never going to be interested in a reunion with Harden at back end of his career, reducing his negotiating leverage.

But the Clippers also had no viable way to replace Harden’s scoring and play-making, and he has been pretty durable during his 16-year career. His contract for 2026/27 being partially guaranteed gives L.A. a little protection in the event of an injury or a decline in Harden’s play.

Harden was ranked No. 3 on on our list of this year’s top 50 free agents.

Knicks Exercising Hukporti’s Option, Declining Tucker’s

The Knicks are exercising their 2025/26 team option on Ariel Hukporti, but are declining their option on P.J. Tucker, league sources tell Ian Begley of SNY.tv (Twitter link).

Hukporti’s option is worth just under $2MM and his salary for next season will remain non-guaranteed. Tucker’s was worth about $3.5MM and also would have been non-guaranteed had it been exercised.

According to Stefan Bondy of The New York Post (Twitter link), the Knicks are also issuing a two-way qualifying offer to Kevin McCullar, making him a restricted free agent.

A 23-year-old center from Germany, Hukporti was the 58th pick of last year’s draft. He battled injuries during his rookie season, appearing in 25 regular season games with averages of 1.9 points and 2.0 rebounds in 8.7 minutes per contest.

Although he barely played for New York after signing at the end of last season and is now 40 years old, it’s technically possible that Tucker could re-sign with the Knicks on a new non-guaranteed contract for the veteran’s minimum. That would substantially lower his cap hit and actually pay him a little more money while maintaining roster flexibility for the Knicks, who reportedly valued Tucker’s leadership in the locker room.

McCullar was also a second-round pick last year, having been selected No. 56 overall. He was injured to open his rookie campaign and only made four NBA appearances for a total of 29 minutes, with the majority of that playing time coming in the regular season finale.

Celtics Exercising Team Option On JD Davison

The Celtics are exercising their 2025/26 team option on the contract of JD Davison, according to Michael Scotto of HoopsHype (Twitter link).

Davison’s $2.27MM salary for next season is fully non-guaranteed, so the move doesn’t necessarily mean that Celtics will retain the 22-year-old guard — if they wanted to, they could waive him before the season starts without incurring a cap hit.

Davison was selected 53rd overall in the 2022 draft after one college season at Alabama. He has spent virtually all of the past three campaigns on a two-way deal with Boston, but was converted to a multiyear standard contract just before the 2024/25 regular season ended.

While Davison’s NBA contributions have been very modest to this point – 36 total regular season appearances for a total of 198 minutes over the course of his three seasons – he has been a standout performer in the NBA G League, having claimed the MVP award with the Maine Celtics in ’24/25.

Davison appeared in 45 combined games with Maine last season, averaging 25.6 points, 7.7 assists, 5.1 rebounds, and 1.4 steals in 34.6 minutes per game, with a shooting line of .482/.332/.762. Maine went just 8-8 in the Tip-Off Tournament, but the 6’1″ guard led the team to a 21-13 record and a No. 3 playoff seed in the G League’s regular season.

The Celtics have three veterans (Torrey Craig, Al Horford and Luke Kornet) on standard deals heading for free agency. Second-year forward Drew Peterson, who was on a two-way contract in ’24/25, will also be a free agent.

Warriors To Pick Up 2025/26 Option On Gui Santos

The Warriors are exercising their 2025/26 team option — valued at $2.22MM — on forward Gui Santos, a source tells Anthony Slater of The Athletic (Twitter link).

Although the team option will be picked up, Santos’ salary for next season will remain non-guaranteed, Slater notes.

A 6’8″ combo forward from Brazil, Santos was the No. 55 overall pick of the 2022 draft. He spent the 2022/23 season as essentially a draft-and-stash prospect, except he was playing for the Warriors’ NBA G League affiliate in Santa Cruz rather than in another country.

Santos signed his first NBA contract in 2023, and after a limited role as a rookie in ’23/24, he was able to carve out rotation minutes this past season as a high-energy role player. In 56 games in ’24/25, he averaged 4.1 points, 3.1 rebounds and 1.4 assists in 13.6 minutes per contest, with a shooting line of .458/.330/.690.

In case you missed it, the Warriors are also exercising their team option on second-year big man Quinten Post, whose $1.96MM salary for next season is now fully guaranteed.