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Tyrese Haliburton Undergoes Surgery On Torn Achilles

10:14 pm: Haliburton has published a photo of himself in his hospital bed, post-surgery, along with a candid message to Pacers fans (Twitter link).

“Words cannot express the pain of this letdown,” Haliburton wrote, in part. “The frustration is unfathomable. I’ve worked my whole life to get to this moment and this is how it ends? Makes no sense.

“… At 25, I’ve already learned that God never gives us more than we can handle. I know I’ll come out on the other side of this a better man and a better player. And honestly, right now, torn Achilles and all, I don’t regret it. I’d do it again, and again after that, to fight for this city and my brothers. For the chance to do something special.

Indy, I’m sorry. If any fan base doesn’t deserve this, it’s y’all. But together we are going to fight like hell to get back to this very spot, and get over this hurdle. I don’t doubt for a second that y’all have my back, and I hope you guys know that I have yours.”


5:02 pm: Haliburton underwent an MRI on Monday which confirmed the injury, according to a Pacers press release. The surgery will be performed today by Dr. Martin O’Malley at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York.


12:33 pm: Pacers point guard Tyrese Haliburton has been diagnosed with a torn right Achilles tendon, sources confirm to Shams Charania of ESPN (Twitter link). Grant Afseth of RG.org, who initially reported that Haliburton suffered an Achilles tear, states that he’s traveling to New York on Monday to prepare for surgery to address the injury.

Haliburton had been playing through a right calf strain that he suffered in Game 5 of the NBA Finals. The injury likely would have sidelined him for multiple weeks had it occurred during the regular season, but he was determined to play through it and was able to finish out Game 5 and compete in Game 6 without any setbacks.

With just over five minutes left in the first quarter of Sunday’s game, Haliburton caught a pass outside the three-point line and made a move to drive toward the Thunder’s basket. However, his right leg gave way as he pushed off and he fell to the court, where he shouted in frustration, grabbing his right lower leg and then pounded his fist against the floor (Twitter video link via ESPN). He was unable to put any weight on the leg as he was helped off the court.

It immediately looked like it might be an Achilles injury and John Haliburton, Tyrese’ father, confirmed as much to ESPN’s Lisa Salters prior to the end of the first half.

While the Pacers kept the game close for a little while after their starting point guard went down, the Thunder began to pull away in the third quarter and held their lead for the rest of Game 7 to secure the 2025 NBA championship.

“It’s heart-breaking, man,” Pacers reserve center Thomas Bryant said after the game, per Dustin Dopirak of The Indianapolis Star (subscription required). “You never want to see that with any of our players, especially with Ty. He’s the heart and soul of our team. He’s our point guard. He’s our point god, you know? We all gathered around each other when he went down and said we’re trying to do this for him, man. And it just sucks that we couldn’t get that accomplished.”

“We needed Ty out there,” added forward Obi Toppin. “He’s been good for us all year. For him to go down at the beginning of the game like that, it sucked the soul out of us.”

It’s a devastating blow for the Pacers and for Haliburton not just because it came during Game 7 of the NBA Finals but because it means the 25-year-old’s availability for the entire 2025/26 season is now very much in jeopardy. It often takes a full calendar year for a player to return from an Achilles tear.

Haliburton averaged 18.6 points, 9.2 assists, 3.5 rebounds, and 1.4 steals in 33.6 minutes per game in 73 regular season starts for Indiana, with a shooting line of .473/.388/.851. While that performance earned him a spot on the All-NBA third team, he was even more impressive during the postseason, making multiple game-winning shots for the upstart Pacers, who came within one win of claiming the first NBA title in franchise history.

Haliburton is the third Eastern Conference star to tear an Achilles during this postseason, joining Celtics forward Jayson Tatum and Bucks guard Damian Lillard, whose injury occurred in the first round vs. Indiana. Haliburton is also the third Pacer to sustain that injury this season, as backup centers James Wiseman and Isaiah Jackson both did so in the span of nine days in the fall.

Haliburton is under contract with the Pacers through the 2028/29 season, so the franchise figures to continue building around him once he’s ready to return.

Rockets Likely To Decline VanVleet’s Option, Work On New Multiyear Deal

The Rockets will likely decline their team option on Fred VanVleet for the 2025/26 season in the coming days, but still intend to work toward a new multiyear contract with their starting point guard, according to Kelly Iko of The Athletic (Twitter link).

Veteran reporter Marc Stein (Twitter links) also hears that there’s a “strong expectation” the Rockets and VanVleet will agree to terms on a new deal soon, though he cautions that one source said Houston is still weighing its options and hasn’t ruled out simply exercising that option.

Whichever direction the Rockets go, VanVleet is considered a good bet to remain with the team, Stein adds (Twitter link).

[RELATED: VanVleet, Rockets Have Mutual Interest In Continuing Relationship]

Declining VanVleet’s option in order to sign him to a longer-term deal makes sense for the Rockets, since picking it up would lock in his $44,886,930 salary for 2025/26. That’s a big number for a Houston team that has agreed to acquire Kevin Durant and would likely have to operate in tax-apron territory if it brings back VanVleet on a maximum-salary cap hit.

Turning down the option and lowering the 31-year-old’s cap hit for ’25/26 would position the Rockets to remain below the aprons and potentially even to avoid the luxury tax, depending on how much of a pay cut VanVleet is willing to take. Tacking on multiple years could entice VanVleet to take a sizable haircut in year one, since a deal in the neighborhood of, say, $30MM annually over three seasons would still assure of him significantly more total guaranteed money than his option would pay him.

There had been speculation that Houston might exercise its option on VanVleet in order to include him as a salary-matching piece in a trade for Durant. However, using one of their other big contracts (like Jalen Green‘s) as a centerpiece for Durant always made more sense for the Rockets, who would have created a major hole at point guard by sending out VanVleet in the move.

A career 37.5% three-point shooter entering 2024/25, VanVleet had a down year from beyond the arc (34.5%), but led the Rockets with 5.6 assists per game, ranked third on the team with 14.1 points per contest, and served as a veteran leader and organizer for a young squad that won 52 games and claimed the No. 2 seed in a tough Western Conference.

The Rockets’ decision on VanVleet’s team option was originally due five days after the team’s season ended, but the two sides agreed last month to push it back to June 29.

Bulls’ Jevon Carter Picking Up 2025/26 Option

Bulls point guard Jevon Carter is exercising his player option for the 2025/26 season, according to Jake Fischer of The Stein Line (Twitter link). The move will lock in a salary worth $6,809,524.

Carter, who signed a three-year, $19.5MM contract with the Bulls after enjoying a career year in Milwaukee in 2022/23, hasn’t played a major role during his first two seasons in Chicago, having had a hard time earning consistent minutes in a crowded backcourt. Josh Giddey, Coby White, Ayo Dosunmu, Lonzo Ball, and Tre Jones were all ahead of him on the depth chart this past season.

Carter has averaged 4.7 points, 1.2 assists, and 0.9 rebounds in 12.3 minutes per game in total 108 outings since becoming a Bull, with a subpar shooting line of .378/.330/.706. He posted averages of 8.0 PPG, 2.4 APG, and 2.5 RPG in 22.3 MPG on .423/.421/.816 shooting in his final season with the Bucks.

While Carter doesn’t project to have a clearer path to playing time in Chicago in 2025/26, there’s some uncertainty surrounding a few of the Bulls’ guards. Giddey will be a restricted free agent, Jones will be an unrestricted free agent, and White, Dosunmu, and Ball will also be on expiring or pseudo-expiring contracts. One or two of those players could emerge as trade candidates, though Carter figures to be on the trade block himself, since his $6.8MM cap hit could help grease the wheels on a deal.

As our tracker shows, Carter is the only Bull who had a player option decision to make this month.

Wizards’ Khris Middleton Opts In For 2025/26

Wizards forward Khris Middleton has exercised his player option for the 2025/26 season, postponing his free agency until next summer, sources tell ESPN’s Shams Charania (Twitter link).

Middleton, who will turn 34 in August, was always expected to take this route, since his option will pay him $33,345,679 next season. That’s significantly more than he would’ve earned next season if he had opted for free agency, given his health issues in recent years.

A three-time All-Star between 2019 and 2022 and a key member of the Bucks team that won a title in 2021, Middleton has been slowed by wrist, knee, and ankle injuries over the past three seasons, having appeared in just 125 total regular season games since the fall of 2022. He has averaged 14.1 points, 4.8 assists, and 4.3 rebounds in 25.0 minutes per game with a .472/.356/.863 shooting line during that stretch.

Middleton showed during the 2023 and 2024 playoffs that he can still be dangerous when he’s at full health, having averaged 24.3 PPG, 7.9 RPG, and 5.4 APG on .475/.381/.883 shooting in 11 games across those two brief postseason runs. However, his inability to stay healthy and perform at that level consistently – combined with his sizable contract – prompted the Bucks to trade him to Washington at the 2025 trade deadline in February.

While Middleton is a Wizard for now, the odds are probably against him spending the full 2025/26 season in D.C. with a rebuilding team. His big expiring contract could come in handy for salary-matching purposes in a trade, either this summer or during the season, if Washington hangs onto him into the fall in the hopes of rebuilding his value. If the forward has another down year and is still on the Wizards’ roster after the trade deadline, a buyout could be in play at that point.

Even with Middleton’s $33MM+ salary locked in, the Wizards project to operate comfortably below the luxury tax line this season.

Knicks Considering James Borrego In Head Coaching Search

James Borrego could become a target in the Knicks‘ ongoing search for their next head coach, according to James L. Edwards III of The Athletic, who hears the team has “tossed around” the idea of speaking with the veteran coach.

Borrego, 47, has been an assistant to Willie Green with the Pelicans for the past two seasons. He previously spent four years as the head coach in Charlotte, compiling a 138-163 record and winning 43 games in his final season. Edwards notes that Borrego is a client of CAA, the agency formerly run by team president Leon Rose, and he has built a strong reputation for “offensive creativity and analytics-forward approach.”

Borrego has worked in the league since 2010, spending time as an assistant coach with the Hornets, Magic and Spurs before getting the head coaching opportunity. He also served as interim head coach in Orlando during the 2014/15 season, compiling a 10-20 record in 30 games.

Taylor Jenkins and Mike Brown appear to be the current front-runners for the job after interviewing with the Knicks last week, Edwards adds, but he states that the team’s interest in Mavericks head coach Jason Kidd is still worth monitoring. He notes that Kidd hasn’t received an extension in Dallas, in contrast with two other coaches New York requested permission to interview. Ime Udoka agreed to a long-term extension with the Rockets on Thursday, while Billy Donovan is reportedly working on an extension with the Bulls.

Edwards still considers Kidd to be a “long shot” to join the Knicks, even though changes are being made to his coaching staff. Edwards confirms that none of Kidd’s assistants were given extensions after the team reached the NBA Finals last season, and Sean Sweeney is leaving to become the associate head coach in San Antonio. Contracts for assistants Jared Dudley and God Shammgod will expire at the end of the month, and they have both received interest from other teams, sources tell Edwards.

Top 50 NBA Free Agents Of 2025

With the 2024/25 NBA season in the books, the offseason has begun, and so has free agency — sort of.

A tweak in the league’s most recent Collective Bargaining Agreement means that teams are permitted to begin negotiating with their own free agents one day after the NBA Finals end rather than having to wait until June 30 to do.

Clubs still aren’t allowed to talk to rival teams’ free agents until June 30, and most contracts can’t be officially signed until July 6, but some free agents will almost certainly reach tentative agreements prior to the typical opening of the free agent period.

Listed below are our top 50 free agents for the 2025/26 NBA season. Our rankings take into account both a player’s short-term and long-term outlook and lean a little more heavily toward market value than present on-court value.

Players who are under contract for next season aren’t listed here, even if their salaries aren’t fully guaranteed and they’re candidates to be waived. However, we’ll continue to update this list up until June 30, so certain players may be added or removed as option decisions are made and other roster moves are finalized.

In addition to the players listed below, there are plenty of other free agents available this summer. You can check out our breakdowns of free agents by position/type and by team for the full picture.

Here are our top 50 free agents of 2025:


1. Kyrie Irving, G, Mavericks (player option)
It’s a reflection of the relative weakness of this year’s free agent class that a 33-year-old who will spend the rest of 2025 recovering from a torn ACL tops our list. But there’s some precedent here that bodes well for Irving’s chances of scoring a big payday — Klay Thompson signed the most lucrative free agent contract of the 2019 NBA offseason (five years, $189.9MM) despite having suffered an ACL tear a few weeks earlier that would sideline him for all of 2019/20. I don’t expect Irving, who is four years older now than Thompson was in 2019, to receive quite that lengthy a commitment from Dallas, but he has a chance to top Klay’s average annual salary. After trading Luka Doncic earlier this year, the Mavericks are pot-committed to Kyrie, the only star ball-handler and play-maker on their roster, who will have some leverage in spite of his injury.
Update: Irving reportedly intends to sign a three-year, $119MM contract with the Mavericks.

2. James Harden, G, Clippers (player option)
While his field goal percentage (41.0%) and three-point percentage (35.2%) were both well below his career averages, Harden enjoyed a bounce-back year of sorts in 2024/25, registering his highest scoring average (22.8 PPG) since 2020/21 and earning a spot on an All-NBA team for the first time since ’19/20. 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. The former MVP won’t get a long-term contract as he enters his age-36 season, but I could see him getting multiple guaranteed years with a salary bump, assuming he declines his $36.3MM player option.
Update: Harden reportedly intends to sign a two-year, $81.5MM contract with the Clippers.

3. Myles Turner, C, Pacers
The top option among a solid group of free agent centers, Turner has increased his value this spring by anchoring the Pacers’ defense during their unexpected run to Game 7 of the NBA Finals. The 29-year-old isn’t perfect – notably, he’s a subpar rebounder for his size – but as a big man who can protect the rim on defense and stretch the floor on offense, Turner has a rare, coveted skill set. Brook Lopez, who has a similar game to Turner, is coming off a two-year, $48MM contract that he signed at age 35. Given that he’s six years younger than that, I expect the Pacers center to get at least three or four years and to comfortably clear Lopez’s last deal in terms of per-year salary. Indiana will have competition for him, but reports have suggested the club is willing to enter luxury tax territory for the first time since 2006 to keep their core intact. We’ll see if that’s still the case in the wake of Tyrese Haliburton‘s Achilles injury.

4. Josh Giddey, G, Bulls (RFA)
I don’t know that Giddey is a top-five player among this year’s free agents, but he’s reaching the market at age 22, making him one of the strongest candidates to sign this summer’s biggest free agent contract. He was reportedly seeking $30MM per year when he and the Bulls discussed a rookie scale extension last fall. After a slow start, he finished his contract year strong by averaging 21.2 points, 10.7 rebounds, and 9.3 assists per game on .500/.457/.809 shooting after the All-Star break. One factor potentially working against Giddey is that the Bulls may be wary of bidding against themselves again after committing five years and $90MM to restricted free agent Patrick Williams a year ago.

5. Julius Randle, F, Timberwolves (player option)
Randle wasn’t scoring or shooting as much during his first year as a Timberwolf as he had gotten accustomed to during his years in New York, but after finding his footing in Minnesota, the 30-year-old continued to be an effective scorer, rebounder, and play-maker, putting up averages of 18.7 PPG, 7.1 RPG, and 4.7 APG. Given the lack of league-wide cap room available this summer, declining his $30.9MM player option isn’t a no-brainer. If he goes that route though, Randle should be able to lock in a much bigger overall guarantee on a multiyear deal — even if it means taking a slight short-term pay cut for 2025/26.
Update: Randle reportedly intends to sign a three-year, $100MM contract with the Timberwolves.

6. Fred VanVleet, G, Rockets (team option)
An underrated point guard whose contributions go far beyond his box-score stats, VanVleet has helped transform the culture in Houston, serving as a veteran leader for a young team that improved by 19 wins in his first season as a Rocket, then by 11 more wins in his second season. The Rockets could afford to overpay VanVleet during those two years because their young players were all still on their rookie scale deals, but with the roster starting to get more expensive, the club may decline the 31-year-old’s $44.9MM team option in order to sign him to a longer-term deal with a more manageable first-year cap hit.
Update: VanVleet reportedly intends to sign a two-year, $50MM contract with the Rockets.

7. Jonathan Kuminga, F, Warriors (RFA)
The final few weeks of Kuminga’s season were a microcosm of his first four years in the NBA. After falling out of the Warriors’ rotation entirely for the regular season finale, the play-in game, and most of the first round, the 22-year-old got another opportunity in round two following an injury to Stephen Curry and took full advantage, scoring 24.3 points per contest on 55.4% shooting in Golden State’s final four games. That tantalizing upside as a big-time scorer makes Kuminga one of the year’s most intriguing free agents, even if the fit with the Warriors has been a challenge at times.

8. Naz Reid, F, Timberwolves (player option)
The NBA’s Sixth Man of the Year in 2023/24, Reid put up pretty similar numbers in ’24/25, increasing his points (14.2), rebounds (6.0), and assists (2.3) per game. A beloved Timberwolf, Reid has been the third big man in Minnesota’s frontcourt in recent years, but could be in line for a much more significant role if the team doesn’t retain Randle — or if Reid leaves the Wolves to sign elsewhere. Teams in need of a forward/center who can knock down outside shots will likely take a long look at Reid, with the Pistons said to be among his potential suitors. Still, it will take more than the non-taxpayer mid-level exception ($14.1MM) to make him a competitive offer, so Minnesota is in the driver’s seat to retain him.
Update: Reid reportedly intends to sign a five-year, $125MM contract with the Timberwolves.

9. Cam Thomas, G, Nets (RFA)
There are a lot of red flags to consider with Thomas. He’s not a great play-maker for a ball-dominant guard, isn’t a strong defender, and hasn’t shot three-pointers especially efficiently since entering the league (.345 3PT%). He’s also coming off a series of hamstring injuries that limited him to just 25 outings in 2024/25. But there are few players in the NBA who are better at simply getting the ball in the basket. Thomas has improved his scoring average every year since being drafted in 2021, establishing a new career high with 24.0 PPG this past season. The Nets, who barely have any multiyear contracts on their books, are well positioned to give the 23-year-old a lucrative multiyear deal and hope that he continues to develop the non-scoring aspects of his game.

10. Quentin Grimes, G, Sixers (RFA)
After establishing a reputation during his first three-and-a-half NBA seasons as a solid three-and-D role player, Grimes showed after being traded to the Sixers at the deadline that he’s capable of playing a featured role too, averaging 21.9 points and 4.5 assists per game on .469/.373/.752 shooting in 28 games with Philadelphia. It’s hard to know how much stock to put in those stats, given that the 76ers were very much in tank mode during that stretch of the season, but even if he returns to his complementary role, Grimes is a valuable piece. The Sixers will be looking to re-sign him without going too deep into tax-apron territory.

11. Nickeil Alexander-Walker, G, Timberwolves
The third Timberwolf on our list already, Alexander-Walker has rejuvenated his career in Minnesota after having been an afterthought in the three-team February 2023 trade that sent him from the Jazz to the Wolves. A talented perimeter defender, Alexander-Walker has displayed a reliable outside shot over the past three seasons (.385 3PT%) and will still be just 27 years old when training camps get underway this fall. I’d expect him to be a popular target for teams with the full non-taxpayer mid-level exception available, and he could even end up exceeding that figure.

12. Santi Aldama, F, Grizzlies (RFA)
Aldama flies somewhat under the radar in Memphis, where he plays a complementary role to stars like Ja Morant and Jaren Jackson Jr., but he quietly had a career year in his fourth NBA season, averaging 12.5 points, 6.4 rebounds, and 2.9 assists in 25.5 minutes per contest. His 48.3% mark on shots from the floor and 36.8% percentage on three-point tries were both career bests too. A solid, versatile frontcourt defender, Aldama will be a priority for the Grizzlies this offseason and has a pretty good case to match or exceed the four-year, $58MM contract Obi Toppin signed with Indiana a year ago.

13. Brook Lopez, C, Bucks
If Lopez were 10 years younger, he might be up in the top five of this list alongside Turner, his fellow rim-protecting, floor-spreading center. At age 37, he’ll still draw plenty of interest on the open market, but he’ll have a hard time getting more than a couple guaranteed years. I’ll be interested to see whether Lopez prioritizes one last big payday or if he’s open to accepting a substantial pay cut to take on a role with a team that may be closer than Milwaukee to contending for a title in 2026. He nearly left the Bucks for the Rockets in 2023 — maybe this will be the year he finally changes teams.

14. Bobby Portis, F/C, Bucks (player option)
A reliable part of the Bucks’ frontcourt for the last five seasons, Portis earned Sixth Man of the Year votes in three of those years — he started too many games to qualify in one of the other two seasons, then only suited up a total of 49 times last season due to a 25-game suspension that cost him much of the second half. His consistency is an asset, and it’s one Portis believes he should be rewarded for. He recently spoke about a desire to be “compensated fairly” after accepting what he views as team-friendly contracts in recent years. Given that context, it seems relatively safe to assume he’ll decline his $13.4MM player option in search of a more sizable commitment, either from Milwaukee or another team.
Update: Portis reportedly intends to sign a three-year, $44MM contract with the Bucks.

15. Caris LeVert, G/F, Hawks
With three ball-dominant guards (Donovan Mitchell, Darius Garland, and Ty Jerome) on the roster in Cleveland, LeVert wasn’t an ideal fit for a team that needed more of a three-and-D wing in his spot. The Cavaliers ultimately ended up sending him out in a trade to get exactly that sort of player (De’Andre Hunter). But LeVert thrived leading the second unit in Atlanta following his change of scenery, looking more like the player who frequently averaged between 17 and 20 points per game earlier in his career. The Hawks reportedly want to bring him back in that role and have plenty of cap flexibility to do so.

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Thunder Win First Championship Since Move; SGA Named Finals MVP

The Thunder claimed their first NBA championship since the franchise moved to Oklahoma City, as they defeated the depleted Pacers, 103-91, in Game 7 on Sunday.

Seattle, which won the championship in 1979, relocated to Oklahoma City in 2008. The Pacers, who have never won an NBA title, played the last three quarters without Tyrese Haliburton, who suffered an Achilles injury in the first quarter.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, this season’s Most Valuable Player, also earned Finals MVP honors, the league announced (via Twitter). It’s the 16th time a player has won both in the same year, though it hasn’t happened since LeBron James pulled it off during the 2012/13 season.

The Thunder should be major contenders for years to come with their young core, featuring Gilgeous-Alexander, Jalen Williams and Chet Holmgren. The top priorities for the Thunder this offseason center around extensions.

Gilgeous-Alexander has met the performance criteria for a super-max contract and will become eligible to sign that extension next month. The 2024 MVP runner-up still has two years left on his current deal and can’t exceed six years in total, so the maximum value of his extension would be a projected $293.4MM over four years, beginning in 2027/28.

Williams and Holmgren are eligible for rookie scale extensions until the beginning of next seasons and both could receive the max – five years and a projected $246MM. The maximum value of those extensions could increase to a projected $296MM if All-NBA, MVP or Defensive Player of the Year honors are negotiated into the contracts.

The Pacers’ offseason outlook could change dramatically due to Haliburton’s injury. Myles Turner, their starting center, is headed to unrestricted free agency and while the Pacers reportedly want to re-sign him, they could have plenty of competition. Bennedict Mathurin is eligible for a rookie scale extension.

Several other key players, including Haliburton and Pascal Siakam, are signed through at least the 2027/28 season. Could they look to shed salary in light of Haliburton’s injury?

With the NBA Finals decided, the 2025 NBA offseason is officially underway. For the second straight year, teams will be permitted to negotiate contracts with their own free agents one day after the Finals. Players who won’t be free agents this offseason but who will become eligible to sign contract extensions on July 6 will also be permitted to begin negotiations with their current teams on Monday.

Thus, it wouldn’t be surprising if some agreements are reported this week. Free agent contracts still can’t be officially finalized until after the July moratorium lifts on July 6.

The draft will be held on Wednesday and Thursday, with free agency beginning on June 30 at 6 p.m. Eastern time.

Tyrese Haliburton Exits Game 7 With Achilles Injury

8:21 pm: ESPN’s Lisa Salters spoke to Haliburton’s father prior to the end of the first half and he confirmed that his son suffered an Achilles injury (Twitter video link).

The team will likely be conducting more tests to confirm the diagnosis, but if it’s an Achilles tear for Haliburton, it could cost him the entire 2025/26 season.


7:50 pm: Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton has exited Game 7 of the NBA Finals in the first quarter after sustaining a right lower leg injury (Twitter video link via ESPN). He won’t return to the game, according to the team.

With just over five minutes left in the first quarter on Sunday, Haliburton caught a pass outside the three-point line and made a move to drive toward the Thunder’s basket. However, his right leg gave way as he pushed off and he fell to the court, where he shouted in frustration and banged his fist against the floor. He was unable to put any weight on the leg as he was helped off the court.

Haliburton had been playing through a right calf strain that he suffered in Game 5 of the series. The injury likely would have sidelined him for multiple weeks had it occurred during the regular season, but he was determined to play through it and was able to finish out Game 5 and compete in Game 6 without any setbacks.

Playing through a calf strain generally increases the risk of suffering a major Achilles injury (ie. a tear) — that happened to Kevin Durant when he attempted to return early from a strained calf in the 2019 NBA Finals.

We don’t know that Haliburton injured his Achilles tonight and we’ll obviously be hoping for a best-case scenario, but video of the play and the guard’s reaction suggest the injury is a significant one, affecting that lower part of his right leg.

An All-NBA third-teamer during the regular season, Haliburton has made several huge game-winning shots for the Pacers during the playoffs, leading the way for the upstart club as it pulled off multiple upsets in the Eastern Conference bracket and pushed the 68-win Thunder to a Game 7 in Oklahoma City. If Indiana is going to win its first NBA championship on Sunday, the team will have to do it without its starting point guard.

Rockets Trading For Suns’ Kevin Durant

The Rockets are acquiring Kevin Durant from the Suns in exchange for Jalen Green, Dillon Brooks, the 10th pick in the 2025 draft, and five second-rounders, reports Shams Charania of ESPN.

The Heat were the other finalist for Durant, sources tell Charania.

According to John Gambadoro of Arizona Sports 98.7 (Twitter link), who reported this morning that Phoenix was “very close” to trading Durant, the second-round selections the Suns will receive are the 59th pick in this year’s draft, two picks in 2026, Boston’s selection in 2030, and Houston’s pick in 2032.

As ESPN’s Bobby Marks tweets, the blockbuster trade cannot be formally completed until July 6 due to the poison pill provision affecting Green’s rookie scale extension.

Durant, who turns 37 years old in September, has been on the trade block for months after Phoenix nearly sent him to Golden State prior to the February deadline, a move that reportedly fell apart after the former NBA MVP didn’t want to return to the Warriors, especially during the season. Four months later, he’ll be heading to Houston, one of three teams said to be on his wish list, along with San Antonio and Miami.

Although Durant will be entering his 19th NBA season this fall, he continues to perform at an All-NBA level. In 62 games for the Suns this past season, he averaged 26.6 points, 6.0 rebounds, 4.2 assists, and 1.2 blocks in 36.5 minutes per game, with an impressive shooting line of .527/.430/.839.

In Durant, Houston now has a star capable of creating his own shot and generating half-court offense, which was an issue for the team during its first-round playoff loss to Golden State this spring. While Green was Houston’s leading scorer during the regular season, he struggled in his first appearance on the postseason stage — he poured in 38 points in Game 2 but failed to score more than 12 points in any of the series’ other six games.

Still, Green is just 23 years old, so he has the potential to continue improving and expanding his game after averaging 20.1 points per contest on .422/.342/.799 shooting in his first four NBA seasons.

According to Marc Stein of The Stein Line (Twitter link), although Jabari Smith Jr. was among the young Rockets players the Suns were reportedly interested in, Houston was insistent on only doing a Durant trade if Green was the only member of its young core it gave up.

Phoenix now has a crowded shooting guard depth chart, with Green joining Devin Booker and Bradley Beal on the roster, but Gambadoro tweets that there are no plans to flip Green to another team and that he’ll play alongside Booker in the Suns’ backcourt. There has been an expectation that Beal won’t return to the club next season, though his contract (which includes a no-trade clause) will make him difficult to move.

Besides Green, the Suns are also adding a solid defensive wing in Brooks and a lottery pick in this week’s draft, which will put them in position to add another promising young prospect to their core.

Durant will be on an expiring $54.7MM contract, so the Rockets will likely make an effort to extend his deal beyond 2025/26. As Marks tweets, the star forward will be eligible for a two-year extension worth roughly $122MM as of July 6. If he were to wait six months, his maximum extension would be worth a little more, though the difference would be minimal (approximately $2MM).

Green’s three-year, $105.3MM rookie scale extension will go into effect this July. That deal includes a third-year player option and a 10% trade kicker, though that bonus will likely have to be eliminated or amended in order to make this trade work, Marks notes.

Brooks, who is on a descending contract, is owed about $41.1MM in base salary over the next two seasons, with an additional $2MM in incentives ($1MM per year) for making the first round of the playoffs.

Because Houston achieved that feat this season and Phoenix didn’t, that bonus will change from “likely to be earned” to “unlikely” as a result of the trade, reducing Brooks’ 2025/26 cap hit by $1MM. That will be a key to making the trade legal for the Suns, who can’t take back more salary than they send out as long as they continue to operate over the second tax apron, Marks adds (via Twitter).

According to Barry Jackson of The Miami Herald (Twitter links), the Heat improved their offer for Durant in recent days and received consideration from the Suns, but their offer ultimately couldn’t compete with Houston’s. Jackson suggests Miami was unwilling to include multiple first-round picks and young players in its package, while Anthony Chiang of The Miami Herald (Twitter link) hears that the Heat’s unwillingness to include center Kel’el Ware was among the sticking points that led to Phoenix going in a different direction.

The Timberwolves were also involved in the Durant sweepstakes, but with no assurances from Durant that he actually wanted to be in Minnesota, they seemingly didn’t get all that close to making a deal, tweets Jon Krawczynski of The Athletic.

The Spurs, Raptors, and Clippers were among the other teams who were said to have interest in Durant before the Suns reached an agreement with the Rockets.


Luke Adams contributed to this story.

Nuggets’ Dario Saric Picks Up Player Option

Nuggets reserve big man Dario Saric has picked up his $5.4MM player option for the 2025/26 season, sources inform Marc Stein of The Stein Line (Twitter link).

Saric was inked to a two-year, $10.6MM deal last summer via Denver’s taxpayer mid-level exception. He was a relative disappointment, and quickly fell out of the team’s rotation.

The 31-year-old played just 16 regular season contests, averaging 3.5 PPG, 3.1 RPG, and 1.4 APG in 13.1 MPG. He was out of David Adelman‘s playoff lineups entirely. Instead, power forward Aaron Gordon was often used as a small-ball center to back up three-time MVP starting five Nikola Jokic in the postseason.

Saric’s deadline to make a decision on the contract was June 29. Denver’s new-look front office, led by interim general manager Ben Tenzer, presumably isn’t surprised that he opted to lock in the security of the deal, since he would’ve been unlikely to earn more than the veteran’s minimum in free agency this summer.

For his career, the 6’10” big man boasts averages of 10.4 PPG and 5.3 RPG, and is a 36% three-point shooter on 3.6 triple tries a night. He could have some intriguing upside to another team, if Denver can find a destination to reroute his salary this offseason, but he’ll have negative value on the trade market.