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Knicks Add Landry Shamet, Waive Matt Ryan

DECEMBER 23: The Knicks have announced the signing of Shamet (Twitter link). Both roster moves are now official.


DECEMBER 22: The Knicks have agreed to a standard contract with guard Landry Shamet, ESPN’s Shams Charania reports. It’s a one-year deal, James Edwards III of The Athletic tweets.

To make room for Shamet and remain under the second-apron hard cap, the Knicks have waived forward Matt Ryan, the team’s PR department tweets.

It’s not surprising New York brought back Shamet. who dislocated his shoulder during the preseason while participating in Knicks training camp. He remained with the Westchester Knicks in the G League while rehabbing his injury and the NBA club was simply waiting for him to get back to full strength. Coach Tom Thibodeau commented on Shamet’s status a week ago.

“It’s good to see him out there healthy again,” Thibodeau said then. “(But) there’s a number of things that have to happen before he can play with us.”

Shamet was likely to make the opening night roster prior to the injury. He  had signed a non-guaranteed, minimum-salary contract during the offseason.

He was waived before opening night. Shamet appeared in 46 games with Washington last season and averaged 7.1 points in 15.8 minutes per contest. He has also played for Philadelphia, the Los Angeles Clippers, Brooklyn and Phoenix in 348 total regular season outings.

Ryan was inked to a non-guaranteed contract in early November and appeared in nine Knicks games, but logged very few minutes in those outings.

Assuming he goes unclaimed on waivers, Ryan will count for $621,439 in dead money on New York’s books. The cap hit for Shamet’s contract will depend on when he officially signs — if it’s officially finalized on Monday, the deal will carry a cap charge of $1,343,690 for the Knicks.

Jaylin Williams Ready To Make Season Debut

Thunder big man Jaylin Williams is available to make his season debut on Monday. Williams is no longer on the injury report, Joel Lorenzi of The Oklahoman tweets.

Oklahoma City plays the Wizards on Monday. Williams had been on the road with the team the past nine days while it played in the NBA Cup semifinals and finals in Las Vegas, then embarked on a two-game road trip to Florida. He went through individual workouts during that time.

Williams originally suffered a right hamstring strain early in training camp. The team stated in early October that he would miss the remainder of camp and the entire preseason while rehabbing the hamstring. The 22-year-old suffered a setback during a workout in late October. At the time, he was expected to miss four-to-six more weeks.

Williams was a valuable backup for Oklahoma City last season, averaging 4.0 points and 3.4 rebounds per contest in 69 games while shooting 36.8% from three-point range.

With Chet Holmgren still sidelined by a pelvic fracture, Williams could jump right into the rotation.  The Thunder haven’t had their frontcourt healthy all season, with Williams sidelined until now, Isaiah Hartenstein‘s debut delayed until November 20, and Holmgren out since Nov. 10. However, they’re 22-5 and lead the Western Conference.

Williams was selected with the 34th pick in the 2022 draft. He signed a four-year contract that runs through the end of next season.

Alex Caruso Signs Four-Year Extension With Thunder

Veteran guard Alex Caruso and the Thunder have agreed to a four-year, $81MM contract extension, Shams Charania of ESPN reports. The team has officially announced the deal in a press release.

Caruso became eligible for the $81,096,960 extension on Saturday. Because it has been six months since he was traded to the Thunder, he was allowed to sign for up to 140% of this season’s estimated average salary ($12.93MM) and for up to four new years. Prior to Saturday, his maximum extension would have been worth $48,875,400 over three new years.

The extension will begin at $18,102,000 in 2025/26 and will rise annually by 8%, increasing to $22,446,480 by the final season. It’s unclear whether or not it will be fully guaranteed.

Caruso was due to become an unrestricted free agent after this season. He’s in the last year of a four-year, $36.98MM contract.

Caruso was traded straight up by the Bulls for Josh Giddey in June. He’s one of the NBA’s best perimeter defenders, earning All-Defensive team nods each of the past two seasons.

He started 57 of 71 games with the Bulls last season but has come off the bench in all 19 games in which he’s played for his new team this season. He’s averaging 5.7 points, 2.9 rebounds, 2.4 assists and a career-high 1.9 steals in 20.2 minutes per contest.

Caruso shot a career-best 46.8% from the field last season but has struggled with his shooting this season (38.5%). However, he has helped Oklahoma City become the league’s premier defensive club. The Thunder have allowed the fewest points per game in the NBA. They also lead the league in opponents’ field goal percentage and 3-point percentage.

Caruso’s extension means the Thunder no longer project to have any 2025 unrestricted free agents on their standard roster.

John Wall Still Hoping For Another NBA Opportunity

Five-time All-Star point guard John Wall hasn’t given up on his NBA dream, according to Tim Reynolds of The Associated Press.

The 6’3″ Kentucky product hasn’t played in the NBA since a brief, 34-game stint with the Clippers in 2022/23, but he continues to put in reps at the University of Miami, near his Miami offseason home, staying in game shape.

“It’d mean the world,” Wall said of a potential return to the league. “You want to go out on your own terms. I want to finish it the way I want. If I play my last game, I want to walk off the court my way.”

The 34-year-old was recently on hand at the G League’s Orlando Winter Showcase this weekend. Last year, he auditioned for attendant NBA franchises during the Winter Showcase. This season, he made his broadcasting debut, calling a pair of G League games.

“I was here last year working out for a couple teams,” Wall said. “I was on the other court, working out before games. That was fun. This was fun.”

Wall was selected with the No. 1 overall pick out of a loaded Kentucky class in 2010 by the Wizards. A nightmare in the open court, he developed as a passer and jump shooter en route to making five straight All-Star teams from 2014-18. During those five prime seasons, Wall averaged 19.9 points, 9.9 dimes, and 4.4 boards per night, with a shooting line of .436/.340/.787.

An Achilles tendon tear in 2019 forever changed his career trajectory. After sitting out the entire 2019/20 season, Wall was eventually traded to the Rockets ahead of the 2021/22 season. He agreed to a contract buyout with Houston in the summer of 2022 and subsequently signed with the Clippers.

Magic’s Moritz Wagner Tears ACL, Will Miss Rest Of Season

Reserve Magic center Moritz Wagner has been diagnosed with a torn ACL in his left knee and will miss the rest of his club’s 2024/25 season, sources inform Shams Charania of ESPN.

The Michigan alum departed the club’s eventual comeback victory against the Heat on Saturday after injuring the knee. There was immediate concern among Magic players and head coach Jamahl Mosley that the injury was significant.

Across what will wind up being his only 30 games of the season, Wagner averaged a career-best 12.9 points on .562/.360/.718 shooting splits, along with 4.9 rebounds, 1.4 assists and 0.8 steals per night.

Losing the 27-year-old frontcourt standout is another early-season blow for the rising Magic. Orlando is 18-12 on the year despite currently being without both of its top two players, All-Star forward Paolo Banchero and forward Franz Wagner, Moritz’s younger brother. Unlike Moritz, however, Franz and Banchero are expected to return this season from their right oblique tears.

This injury now casts some uncertainty on Moritz Wagner’s long-term future with the club. The veteran big man inked a two-year, $22MM contract with the club as a free agent this past summer, but his $11MM salary for 2025/26 is a team option.

Given that it often takes players a full calendar year – or more – to recover from ACL tears, Wagner’s availability for the start of next season is up in the air, so the Magic may be reluctant to bring him back at that $11MM price point — declining the option and re-signing him to a more team-friendly deal could be one option Orlando considers.

The Magic have the ability to apply for a disabled player exception as a result of Wagner’s injury. It would be worth $5.5MM and would allow the team to acquire a player on an expiring contract via trade or waiver claim or to sign a free agent to a rest-of-season deal.

Spurs Positioning Themselves To Target De’Aaron Fox

Star guard De’Aaron Fox‘s agent — Klutch Sports founder and CEO Rich Paul — met with Kings general manager Monte McNair and assistant general manager Wes Wilcox on Thursday. According to The Athletic’s Sam Amick and Anthony Slater, the meeting focused on what the long-term plan around Fox would be.

Fox declined a three-year, $165MM extension from the Kings in the offseason and isn’t interested in fighting for a lower-seed playoff spot for the rest of his career. He recently discussed the decision to turn down that extension, explaining that he wants the club to show it’s capable of seriously contending for a championship.

While Fox hasn’t asked for a trade, Amick and Slater write that the Kings star and his agent are reading the room to see what the Kings’ vision is. Fox has another year left on his deal and would qualify for a five-year, $345MM super-max contract if he makes an All-NBA selection this year.

The Kings aren’t a bad team, but they’ve been inconsistent in the first half and there’s little room for inconsistency in a competitive Western Conference, where they rank 12th at 13-15. Fox has stated multiple times that he likes the idea of spending his entire career with one franchise and he has been a major force in the local community. But with Sacramento stuck on the outside looking in for now, opposing teams have started to circle.

League sources tell Amick and Slater that the Spurs are “positioning themselves” to pursue a trade for Fox should he become available, eyeing him to be a long-term partner with Victor Wembanyama. Other teams would likely join San Antonio as suitors if Sacramento considers a trade.

While the Kings have shortened the rotation and their record isn’t inspiring thus far, they are still just three games out of a top-five seed in the West. They’re armed with proven NBA players like Domantas Sabonis, DeMar DeRozan, Keegan Murray and Malik Monk, among others, and they’ve suffered several tight losses, with a 3-9 record in games decided by five points or less.

The Kings know they need an upgrade and are specifically targeting backup centers and wings. Among the names on their short list are Trail Blazers forward Jerami Grant, Jazz forward John Collins, Wizards center Jonas Valanciunas, Wizards forward Kyle Kuzma, and Nets forward Cameron Johnson, according to Amick and Slater. They’ve also expressed some lesser interest in Nets forward Dorian Finney-Smith, while a bigger trade for Brandon Ingram or Zach LaVine seems unlikely at this juncture.

Fox is having one of his most productive seasons yet, averaging 26.2 points, 6.1 assists, 5.0 rebounds and 1.7 steals per game. But while his production is up, head coach Mike Brown has challenged him to do even more. As Amick and Slater report, there’s some pressure on the Kings to further fortify their roster to convince him to re-up long term.

Grizzlies’ Vince Williams Out 3-6 More Weeks

Grizzlies wing Vince Williams still isn’t close to returning to action and will remain sidelined into the new year, according to a press release from the team (Twitter link).

Williams sustained a Grade 3 right ankle sprain on November 19. The Grizzlies announced two days later that the third-year swingman would be reevaluated in four weeks.

According to today’s update, Williams is making good progress in his recovery from his sprained ankle, but it’s expected to be another three-to-six weeks before he’s able to play again.

Even in a best-case scenario, a three-week timeline would put Williams on track to miss 10 more games and then make his return on January 11. If he requires six weeks to get healthy enough to suit up, the 24-year-old would be unavailable for the next 20 games and would remain on the shelf for all of January.

Williams took advantage of an opportunity for playing time last season when several Grizzlies regulars dealt with injuries of their own and averaged 10.0 points, 5.6 rebounds, and 3.4 assists in 27.6 minutes per game across 52 outings (33 starts). He posted a solid shooting line of .446/.378/.800 and appeared poised to be part of Memphis’ rotation this season even with the roster healthier.

However, Williams missed the first 12 games of the season due to a stress reaction in his left leg and then sprained his ankle in just his third game back.

The good news for the Grizzlies is that they’ve had the depth this season to handle a few injuries to rotation players and remain extremely competitive in the Western Conference. After blowing out Golden State on Thursday, Memphis holds the No. 2 seed in the West with a 19-9 record and ranks in the top five of the league in both offensive rating (117.0; fourth) and defensive rating (107.9; fifth).

If the Grizzlies continue to play that well and stay relatively healthy, Williams may have to fight to earn consistent rotation minutes when he returns in the new year.

Spencer Dinwiddie Blasts Nets In Podcast Appearance

Spencer Dinwiddie doesn’t have many fond memories of his days with the Nets, especially his most recent go-round, writes Lucas Kaplan of NetsDaily. In an appearance on the Run Your Race podcast hosted by former teammate Theo Pinson, Dinwiddie said the time he spent in Brooklyn left him “extremely scarred.”

The 31-year-old guard, who now plays for the Mavericks, recalled being acquired by the Nets at the 2023 trade deadline. He walked into a difficult situation after the team had just parted with Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving and needed a veteran presence to hold the young players together. Fans were turning against the organization and there was a feeling that more of its prominent players were on their way out.

“You asked me to do a very specific task, and I did it,” Dinwiddie said. “‘We need to stay in the playoffs. You need to help feature our trade pieces.’ ‘Okay, I will do what you ask of me.’ And then the reward that they gave me was, ‘we’re going to kick you out the door.’”

Dinwiddie was referring to being shipped to Toronto at the 2024 deadline after a tumultuous year in which he became a target of fan anger and reportedly clashed with coach Jacque Vaughn. Dinwiddie believes people in the Nets organization added to the negative reputation he developed during his time with the Wizards.

“To go back to a team that you spent like five years at, had a lot of success at, basically lead the league in assists because they asked you to help feature their trade pieces and whatnot,” Dinwiddie said, “and then basically kicked out the door — and for them to re-bring up the ‘cancer’ label because of what happened in [Washington] D.C., if another team doubles down on that, it effectively kills your career.”

The Raptors waived Dinwiddie immediately after the trade, but he was only out of the league for a couple of days before signing with the Lakers. After playing a bench role for the rest of the season in L.A., he moved on to Dallas this summer and is earning rotation minutes with the defending Western Conference champions.

Kaplan points out that the Nets gave Dinwiddie his first NBA opportunity when they signed him off Chicago’s G League affiliate in 2016. He became a fixture during a rebuilding process and remained with the team until the summer of 2021 when he agreed to a sign-and-trade that sent him to Washington as part of a five-team deal.

Dinwiddie covers some other ground during the podcast, including the surprising 2019 playoff run when he says, “We didn’t know the business enough to know that we were supposed to be bad” and the 2021 team with Durant, Irving and James Harden that Dinwiddie believes could have won a title if not for injuries.

However, Dinwiddie also believes that the Nets spread negative gossip about him around the league, even though Kaplan notes that the team never made any negative public statements. Kaplan adds that Nets officials refused to respond to Dinwiddie’s podcast comments.

“There was already things that were taking place while I was in Brooklyn the first time that you rise above, you get past, you’re learning the NBA, you’re a kid, you chalk it up as a learning experience,” Dinwiddie said. “But now you’re on the other side of that, and all the apologies and things for everything that happened the first time … I said, ‘Guys, listen, you remember what happened the first time. It was it was rocky the first time. Just, you know, please. Please, don’t, don’t do that.’”

Hawks Reportedly Want To Trade Clint Capela Before Deadline

The Hawks hope to trade starting center Clint Capela before his $22.27MM contract expires in the offseason, sources tell Jake Fischer of The Stein Line (Substack link).

Atlanta has seven weeks to try to move Capela, with the trade deadline set for 2:00 pm CT on February 6.

According to Fischer, the Hawks’ willingness to deal Capela is at least partially motivated by their confidence in young backup center Onyeka Okongwu, a former lottery pick who is in the first season of a four-year, $62MM rookie scale extension. Okongwu will miss at least the next four games due to left knee inflammation, but he’s reportedly viewed as a long-term part of the team’s core.

After playing a career-high 33.6 minutes per game during the 2018/19 campaign, Capela has seen his playing time decline in each of the past six seasons. He’s averaging 23.0 MPG in ’24/25, the third-lowest mark of his 11-year career.

Capela’s minutes may have been steadily dwindling over the past several seasons, but he remains quite productive, with his per-36 averages for ’24/25 right in line with his career rates. In 27 games this season, he’s averaging 10.0 PPG, 9.4 RPG and 1.0 BPG.

A 30-year-old big man from Switzerland, Capela has popped in several trade rumors in recent years. He’s in his sixth season with the Hawks, who acquired him in a four-team deal in February 2020.

As Fischer observes, the tricky part for Atlanta is Capela’s cap hit is pretty significant. It’s understandable that the Hawks would want to get something in return for him if they don’t plan to re-sign him (they already have a lot of money committed to their roster in ’25/26), but it might be difficult to get solid value back for Capela, given his salary, expiring contract, and the fact that center is a pretty deep position in the NBA.

Antetokounmpo Headlines All-Tournament Team For NBA Cup

The NBA announced the All-Tournament Team for the NBA Cup on Thursday, with Giannis Antetokounmpo headlining the five-player group (Twitter link). The Bucks superstar was named tournament MVP after Milwaukee defeated Oklahoma City in Tuesday’s final.

Here’s the full team, along with the amount of votes each player received (in parentheses) from a group of 20 media members:

All five players advanced to at least the semifinals of the league’s second in-season tournament. Antetokounmpo and Gilgeous-Alexander were unanimous selections, while Lillard fell one vote shy.

According to the full voting results, Thunder big man Isaiah Hartenstein (5), Magic forward Franz Wagner (5), Hawks forward Jalen Johnson (4) and Thunder forward Jalen Williams (3) narrowly missed out on making the team. Six other players received one vote apiece.

The voting for the team is based on each player’s performance over the entire NBA Cup, including group play and the knockout round games. The Bucks went undefeated (7-0) to claim the trophy.