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.
Robinson held an early termination option ahead of the ’25/26 season rather than a traditional player option. They have similar functions, but in order to become a free agent, Robinson will technically exercise the option to terminate his contract early, rather than declining that option and playing out his contract. If it were a traditional player option, exercising it would mean opting in.
9:47 am: The Thunder declined their minimum-salary team option on big man
Finney-Smith’s decision will make him an unrestricted free agent and multiple teams are expected to pursue him when the free agent period officially opens on Monday evening, per Charania. However, a return to the Lakers remains in play for the 32-year-old as well.
“An investigation is not a charge,” Beasley’s attorney, Steve Haney, told Charania. “Malik is afforded the same right of the presumption of innocence as anyone else under the U.S. Constitution. As of now he has not been charged with anything.”
According to Charania, James will be closely monitoring the Lakers’ moves this summer in the hopes of vying for a title next season.
The 36-year-old forward began the season with the Nets, but he wasn’t able to play while recovering from surgeries to his left foot and left wrist. Brooklyn
June 28: The Cavaliers and free agent guard
June 28: Free agent guard