Isaac Nogues Agrees To Two-Year Deal With Valencia

Free agent guard Isaac Nogues has reached an agreement on a two-year deal with Valencia Basket in his home country of Spain, the club announced in a press release.

Nogues, 21, spent the 2024/25 season in the NBA G League with the Rip City Remix, Portland’s affiliate. He made a total of 40 appearances for the Trail Blazers’ NBAGL team, averaging 5.2 rebounds, 3.9 assists and 2.1 steals in 21.1 minutes per game, before going undrafted in June.

While his offensive contributions were limited, the 6’5″ guard (who has a 6’10” wingspan) was named to the NBAGL’s All-Defensive team and finished third in Defensive Player of the Year voting.

We typically wouldn’t dedicate a full story to an undrafted player without any NBA experience signing with a EuroLeague team, but Nogues’ agreement is notable because reporting in June indicated that he had agreed to sign an Exhibit 10 contract with the NBA’s Kings and would be competing for a two-way deal in Sacramento this fall.

That signing never became official, and it seems it won’t happen now that Nogues has found a more appealing offer overseas. He’ll have a clearer path to playing time with Valencia and will be located just a few hours down the coast from Badalona, where he was born and where he began his professional basketball career.

Celtics Sign Amari Williams To Two-Way Contract

The Celtics have signed second-round pick Amari Williams to a two-way contract, according to the NBA’s official transaction log (hat tip to Michael Scotto of HoopsHype).

Williams, who spent his first four college seasons at Drexel, transferred to Kentucky in 2024 for his super-senior year. In 36 games (all starts) last season, the 6’11” forward/center filled up the box score with averages of 10.9 points, 8.5 rebounds, 3.2 assists, and 1.2 blocks in just 22.8 minutes per game.

The Celtics traded down from No. 32 on draft night in June and used their newly acquired 46th overall pick to select Williams. At the time, then-ESPN draft expert Jonathan Givony reported that the big man would be signing a two-way contract with Boston, but it took a while for the deal to actually come to fruition.

The Celtics carried over Miles Norris from last season on his two-year, two-way contract, signed 57th overall pick Max Shulga to a two-way deal in July, and acquired two-way player RJ Luis in a trade with Utah earlier this month. The club subsequently waived Norris in order to open up a two-way slot for Williams.

Williams will earn a salary of $636,435 if he spends the full season on his two-way contract and will be eligible to appear in up to 50 NBA regular season games. He’ll likely be transferred back and forth between the NBA and the G League many times over the course of his rookie year.

With Williams now under contract, the Celtics are carrying 18 players on their offseason roster, including their three two-ways. Twelve of the other 15 players have guaranteed standard contracts, while Jordan Walsh and Neemias Queta are on partially guaranteed deals and Hayden Gray has an Exhibit 10 contract.

The top 50 players from this year’s draft have now signed NBA contracts for 2025/26 or are committed to playing in a non-NBA league, as our tracker shows.

Cash Sent, Received In NBA Trades For 2025/26

During each NBA league year, teams face limits on the amount of cash they can send out and receive in trades. Once they reach those limits, they’re no longer permitted to include cash in a deal until the following league year.

For the 2025/26 NBA season, the limit is $7,964,000.

The limits on sending and receiving cash are separate and aren’t dependent on one another, so if a team sends out $7,964,000 in one trade, then receives $7,964,000 in another, they aren’t back to square one — they’ve reached both limits for the season and can’t make another deal that includes cash.

Adding cash to a deal can serve multiple purposes. It can be a sweetener to encourage a team to make a deal in the first place – like when a club acquires a second-round pick in exchange for cash, or sends out an unwanted contract along with cash – or it can be a necessity to meet CBA requirements.

Teams operating above the second tax apron are prohibited from sending out cash in a trade. For the time being, that restriction applies to one teams: Cleveland. The Cavaliers could only send out cash if they dip below the second apron.

We’ll use the space below to track each team’s cash sent and received in trades for the 2025/26 season, updating the info as necessary leading up to the 2026 trade deadline and for the first part of the 2026 offseason next June. These totals will reset once the ’26/27 league year begins on July 1.


Atlanta Hawks

  • Cash available to send: $3,464,000
  • Cash available to receive: $7,768,700
    • Received $85,300 from Rockets.
    • Received $110,000 from Nets.

Boston Celtics

  • Cash available to send: $4,464,000
  • Cash available to receive: $6,754,000
    • Received $1,100,000 from Nets.
    • Received $110,000 from Nets.

Brooklyn Nets

  • Cash available to send: $6,644,000
  • Cash available to receive: $4,464,000

Charlotte Hornets

  • Cash available to send: $7,854,000
    • Sent $110,000 to Magic.
  • Cash available to receive: $4,464,000
    • Received $3,500,000 from Celtics.

Chicago Bulls

  • Cash available to send: $7,964,000
  • Cash available to receive: $7,464,000
    • Received $500,000 from Knicks.

Cleveland Cavaliers

  • Cash available to send: $7,964,000
  • Cash available to receive: $7,854,000
    • Received $110,000 from Jazz.

Note: The Cavaliers are ineligible to send out cash as long as they’re operating over the second apron.

Dallas Mavericks

  • Cash available to send: $7,964,000
  • Cash available to receive: $7,964,000

Denver Nuggets

  • Cash available to send: $7,964,000
  • Cash available to receive: $7,964,000

Detroit Pistons

  • Cash available to send: $6,864,000
  • Cash available to receive: $7,964,000

Golden State Warriors

  • Cash available to send: $7,964,000
  • Cash available to receive: $7,964,000

Houston Rockets

  • Cash available to send: $7,878,700
  • Cash available to receive: $7,964,000

Indiana Pacers

  • Cash available to send: $5,464,000
    • Sent $2,500,000 to Spurs.
  • Cash available to receive: $7,964,000

Los Angeles Clippers

  • Cash available to send: $1,964,000
    • Sent $2,500,000 to Jazz.
    • Sent $3,500,000 to Nets.
  • Cash available to receive: $7,964,000

Los Angeles Lakers

  • Cash available to send: $4,714,000
  • Cash available to receive: $7,964,000

Memphis Grizzlies

  • Cash available to send: $7,964,000
  • Cash available to receive: $7,964,000

Miami Heat

  • Cash available to send: $7,964,000
  • Cash available to receive: $7,964,000

Milwaukee Bucks

  • Cash available to send: $7,964,000
  • Cash available to receive: $3,464,000
    • Received $4,500,000 from Suns.

Minnesota Timberwolves

  • Cash available to send: $7,964,000
  • Cash available to receive: $2,114,000
    • Received $3,250,000 from Lakers.
    • Received $1,500,000 from Hawks.
    • Received $1,100,000 from Pistons.

New Orleans Pelicans

  • Cash available to send: $7,964,000
  • Cash available to receive: $7,575,000
    • Received $389,000 from Knicks.

New York Knicks

  • Cash available to send: $7,075,000
  • Cash available to receive: $7,964,000

Oklahoma City Thunder

  • Cash available to send: $7,214,000
    • Sent $750,000 to Jazz.
  • Cash available to receive: $7,964,000

Orlando Magic

  • Cash available to send: $7,964,000
  • Cash available to receive: $7,854,000
    • Received $110,000 from Magic.

Philadelphia 76ers

  • Cash available to send: $7,964,000
  • Cash available to receive: $7,964,000

Phoenix Suns

  • Cash available to send: $3,464,000
    • Sent $4,500,000 to Bucks.
  • Cash available to receive: $7,964,000

Portland Trail Blazers

  • Cash available to send: $7,964,000
  • Cash available to receive: $7,964,000

Sacramento Kings

  • Cash available to send: $7,964,000
  • Cash available to receive: $7,964,000

San Antonio Spurs

  • Cash available to send: $7,964,000
  • Cash available to receive: $5,464,000
    • Received $2,500,000 from Pacers.

Toronto Raptors

  • Cash available to send: $7,964,000
  • Cash available to receive: $7,964,000

Utah Jazz

  • Cash available to send: $7,854,000
  • Cash available to receive: $843,000

Washington Wizards

  • Cash available to send: $7,964,000
  • Cash available to receive: $7,964,000

Data from Eric Pincus of Sports Business Classroom was used in the creation of this post.

Sixers Unsure About Joel Embiid’s Status For Start Of Training Camp

With training camp about six weeks away, the Sixers aren’t certain if Joel Embiid will be ready to participate. Head coach Nick Nurse discussed the health status of his star center and the team’s misfortunes from last season in an interview with Brian T. Smith of TalkSport.

Speaking Tuesday at the NBA’s Basketball Without Borders Europe camp in Manchester, England, Nurse said he’s “not sure” if Embiid will be cleared to participate when camp begins next month. However, he added an encouraging spin by saying “all the news is positive” so far.

“I know he’s working very, very hard and I think things look good,” Nurse said. “Whether he’s ready for training camp or not, I think there’s maybe a lot more decisions than that to make before we get there. But our main thing is that he’s healthy to play and play to his nearest capabilities, because he’s awesome, no doubt about that.”

Embiid hasn’t come close to playing a full season since winning MVP honors in 2023. He was limited to 39 games in 2023/24 before having meniscus surgery on his left knee and appeared in just 19 games last season before being shut down in February due to lingering concerns about the knee. He underwent arthroscopic surgery in April.

Nurse’s comments represent the first health update on Embiid since president of basketball operations Daryl Morey said following the draft that he was on track for recovery “right around” the start of camp. Regardless of the condition of his knee by then, the Sixers will be cautious with Embiid and try to gradually prepare him for the season opener.

“When he’s on the floor and any night he’s out there, we’ve got a chance to win, which is amazing,” Nurse said. “We just want to make sure and get him healthy and let him play for a longer period of time.”

Philadelphia plummeted without Embiid available, winning just 24 games after being viewed as a potential title contender when the season began. In addition to Embiid’s injury woes, the team got just 41 games out of Paul George and 52 from Tyrese Maxey. Injuries affected the Sixers throughout their roster, and they spent the last few weeks of the season using a makeshift lineup as losses piled up.

Nurse called it “a really unfortunate season,” but there’s renewed optimism related to better health for the team’s star players and the addition of VJ Edgecombe with the third pick in this year’s draft.

“It was almost four, five, six guys every night,” Nurse said of last season’s injuries. “We just never could get any continuity. We used an incredible 40 different players last year. So let’s put that in the rear-view mirror a little bit. Listen, those guys get healthy. They’re great players, and we get some better health this year. We’ll be right back in the mix and that’s what we’re looking to do.”

NBA Teams Average 14.4 Back-To-Backs In 2025/26

Five NBA teams will play a league-high 16 back-to-back sets during the 2025/26 regular season, while six clubs will have just 13 instances of back-to-back games on their schedules. The remaining 19 teams will play either 14 or 15 back-to-backs.

[RELATED: 2025/26 NBA Schedules By Team]

Those totals – along with an overall average of 14.4 back-to-backs per team – are about what we’ve come to expect in recent years.

Prior to the COVID-shortened seasons of 2019/20 and ’20/21, the NBA’s regular season consisted of 177 days, and the league had made a concerted effort to reduce instances of back-to-backs. When the league announced its initial schedule in ’19/20, its press release boasted that teams were averaging a record-low 12.4 back-to-backs that season, marking the fifth straight year in which that number had reached an all-time low.

However, since 2021/22, NBA regular seasons have spanned just 174 days, making it a little more difficult for schedule-makers to avoid back-to-back sets. The average number of back-to-backs per team is still well below where it once was (teams averaged 19.3 in 2024/25), but it’s no longer at a record low.

Here are the back-to-backs by team in 2025/26:

  1. Charlotte Hornets: 16
    Denver Nuggets: 16
    Philadelphia 76ers: 16
    Phoenix Suns: 16
    Washington Wizards: 16
  2. Golden State Warriors: 15
    Los Angeles Clippers: 15
    Miami Heat: 15
    New Orleans Pelicans: 15
    Portland Trail Blazers: 15
    Toronto Raptors: 15
    Utah Jazz: 15
  3. Brooklyn Nets: 14
    Cleveland Cavaliers: 14
    Dallas Mavericks: 14
    Detroit Pistons: 14
    Houston Rockets: 14
    Los Angeles Lakers: 14
    Memphis Grizzlies: 14
    Milwaukee Bucks: 14
    New York Knicks: 14
    Orlando Magic: 14
    Sacramento Kings: 14
    San Antonio Spurs: 14
  4. Atlanta Hawks: 13
    Boston Celtics: 13
    Chicago Bulls: 13
    Indiana Pacers: 13
    Minnesota Timberwolves: 13
    Oklahoma City Thunder: 13

Warriors, Lakers, Knicks, Thunder Get Most Nationally Televised Games For 2025/26

Having gone from two national broadcasting partners (ABC/ESPN and TNT) to three (ABC/ESPN, NBC, and Amazon Prime) ahead of the 2025/26 season, the NBA’s schedule will feature a significant increase in nationally televised games.

When the league unveiled its full regular season schedule on Thursday, it announced 237 nationally televised regular season matchups, along with the seven knockout round NBA Cup games whose participants aren’t yet known, for a total of 244 contests.

As Colin Salao of Front Office Sports writes in a subscriber story, the total number of nationally televised games is up by more than 40% from last season, when the league’s partners nationally broadcasted a total of 172 games.

Salao also points out that beginning in the middle of the season, when the NFL schedule starts winding down, the NBA will have national games every day of the week: Peacock on Monday; NBC/Peacock on Tuesday; ESPN on Wednesday; Amazon on Thursday; Amazon and ESPN on Friday; Amazon and ABC on Saturday; and ABC, NBC, and Peacock on Sunday.

Every team will be featured at least twice on the national TV broadcast schedule, with the Warriors, Lakers, Knicks, and defending champion Thunder leading the way with 34 appearances apiece.

Here’s the full breakdown of nationally televised games by team:

  1. Golden State Warriors: 34
  2. Los Angeles Lakers: 34
  3. New York Knicks: 34
  4. Oklahoma City Thunder: 34
  5. Houston Rockets: 28
  6. Minnesota Timberwolves: 28
  7. Denver Nuggets: 26
  8. Boston Celtics: 25
  9. Cleveland Cavaliers: 24
  10. Dallas Mavericks: 23
  11. San Antonio Spurs: 22
  12. Los Angeles Clippers: 21
  13. Milwaukee Bucks: 18
  14. Detroit Pistons: 16
  15. Orlando Magic: 14
  16. Philadelphia 76ers: 14
  17. Atlanta Hawks: 13
  18. Memphis Grizzlies: 10
  19. Indiana Pacers: 9
  20. Phoenix Suns: 9
  21. Sacramento Kings: 9
  22. Portland Trail Blazers: 8
  23. Miami Heat: 5
  24. Charlotte Hornets: 3
  25. Chicago Bulls: 3
  26. Brooklyn Nets: 2
  27. New Orleans Pelicans: 2
  28. Toronto Raptors: 2
  29. Utah Jazz: 2
  30. Washington Wizards: 2

Since nationally televised matchups are subject to change, there’s no guarantee that every team will ultimately end up being featured multiple times on the national stage.

As Salao points out, all 30 clubs showed up at least once on the national broadcast schedule initially announced for 2024/25, but the Wizards didn’t get any nationally televised games after having their lone contest replaced by a showdown between Cleveland and Oklahoma City.

Additionally, not every team this season will have a game aired on a traditional, non-streaming network — the only games featuring the Raptors or Wizards will air on either Peacock or Amazon Prime.

Celtics’ Payton Pritchard To Start In 2025/26?

Celtics guard Payton Pritchard won the NBA’s Sixth Man of the Year award in 2024/25 after averaging 14.3 points, 3.8 rebounds and 3.5 assists on .472/.407/.845 shooting in 80 games last season (28.4 MPG). Last week, he discussed his confidence in the team’s ability to remain competitive and his excitement for a larger role in 2025/26.

After trading Jrue Holiday to Portland, Boston intends to promote Pritchard to the starting lineup for the upcoming season, Grant Afseth reports for FastbreakJournal.com.

That means Anfernee Simons — whom the Celtics acquired for Holiday and have reportedly been trying to trade — will essentially slide into Pritchard’s old role as a spark-plug scorer off the bench, assuming he’s still on the roster when the season tips off in October.

As Afseth notes, Pritchard only started three games last season, but he put up big numbers in those contests, averaging 21.7 PPG, 5.0 RPG and 7.3 APG in 35.1 MPG.

According to Afseth, Boston believes the former 26th overall pick has “earned the starting job through years of steady development.” Pritchard is entering his sixth season with the Celtics.

While Simons is a more proven offensive player than Pritchard, he’s also a lesser defender. And given Simons’ tenuous spot on the roster — he’s on an expiring $27.7MM contract, whereas Pritchard is in the second season of a four-year, $30MM rookie scale extension — it makes sense from both a team-building and continuity perspective to give Pritchard the starting nod.

International Notes: Harrison, Lauvergne, Silva, Toscano-Anderson

Seven-year NBA veteran Shaquille Harrison has signed a one-year contract extension with ASVEL Basket, the French team announced in a press release.

Known for his defense, Harrison appeared in 183 regular season contests with seven different NBA teams, last suiting up for Memphis on a 10-day deal during the 2023/24 campaign. The 31-year-old guard played in 63 total games with ASVEL last season, averaging 5.5 points, 2.0 rebounds, 1.9 assists and 1.1 steals in 17.0 minutes per contest.

ASVEL competes in France’s top domestic league — the LNB Élite — as well as the EuroLeague. The club went 23-7 during the LNB Élite regular season, losing in the semifinals of the playoffs, but just 13-21 in EuroLeague action.

Here are a few more international notes:

  • Harrison was one of several former NBA players on ASVEL Basket’s roster in ’24/25. Another was center Joffrey Lauvergne, who has spent the past three seasons with the team in his native France. Although he’s coming off a productive season, ASVEL recently announced that Lauvergne will not return in ’25/26 (link to press release). The 33-year-old was a second-round pick back in 2013 and spent four seasons in the NBA, last playing for San Antonio in ’17/18.
  • Chris Silva has signed a one-year deal with Greece’s AEK BC, per the team. The African big man is a four-year NBA veteran who spent last season in Israel with Bnei Herzliya. Former Nets second-rounder RaiQuan Gray will also return to AEK in ’25/26, Eurohoops notes.
  • Italian team Pallacanestro Trieste has reportedly reached an agreement with free agent wing Juan Toscano-Anderson, according to Kevin Martorano of Sportando, who cites a report from Il Piccolo. Toscano-Anderson, 32, won a title with Golden State in 2022 and last played in the NBA for Sacramento in ’23/24. He spent all of last season in the NBA G League with the Mexico City Capitanes.

Heat Notes: K. Jones, Herro, Johnson, Rotation, Schedule

Free agent center Kai Jones is working out for the Heat this week and Miami could use depth in the middle. However, Ira Winderman of The South Florida Sun Sentinel is skeptical the former first-round pick will make the Heat’s roster — assuming he’s offered a contract, which would likely be non-guaranteed.

As Winderman explains, due to their luxury tax situation (they’re currently slightly over the tax line), the Heat are “far more likely” to add a big man on a two-way contract than carry a 15th player on a standard deal to open the season, and Jones no longer has two-way eligibility. It’s also not unusual for free agents to work out for the Heat in the summer, but many of those auditions occur privately, Winderman writes.

Jones has reportedly drawn serious interest from the Italian team Virtus Bologna, which could offer him guaranteed money and a more significant role than Miami, so it’s unclear if a non-guaranteed training camp contract would appeal to the 24-year-old.

Here’s more on the Heat:

  • Between October 1 and the start of the regular season, Tyler Herro will be eligible for a contract extension that could pay him up to $149.7MM over three years. De’Aaron Fox (four years, maximum salary) and Mikal Bridges (four years, $150MM) recently signed veteran extensions and a scout who spoke to Winderman believes that, in a vacuum, Herro is the best of the three players. While locking in a core duo of Bam Adebayo and Herro with no assurances of short- or long-term team success could be costly for the Heat, particularly given Herro’s defensive limitations, waiting until next offseason could also be risky for both sides. Winderman points out that Herro would be eligible for an even more lucrative deal at that point and suggests Herro and the Heat might need to compromise to reach an agreement this fall.
  • Haywood Highsmith‘s knee injury may open rotation minutes for second-year forward Keshad Johnson, at least during the preseason, Winderman adds in the same story. Johnson rarely played for the Heat as a rookie in 2024/25, having spent most of the season in the G League. It’s unclear if Highsmith will be available for the start of the regular season after undergoing surgery to repair a torn right meniscus.
  • In a separate mailbag, Winderman states that head coach Erik Spoelstra is unlikely to make major lineup decisions based on how players perform during the Heat’s six-game preseason slate. That’s not to say training camp won’t be important — Winderman just thinks practices will likely be weighed more heavily than the exhibition games.
  • Anthony Chiang of The Miami Herald shares his takeaways from the Heat’s schedule, which was released this afternoon along with every other team. Miami will only be featured in five nationally televised games in ’25/26 — only seven teams have fewer national TV games, Chiang notes.

Pistons Sign Javonte Green To One-Year Deal

August 14: Green has signed his one-year contract with the Pistons, according to the official transactions log at NBA.com.


August 11: The Pistons are set to sign free agent swingman Javonte Green, according to Shams Charania of ESPN, who reports (via Twitter) that the two sides are finalizing an agreement on a one-year deal.

Green, 32, began his professional career overseas after going undrafted out of Radford in 2015, but eventually earned a look in the NBA and has since established himself as a rotation player for a handful of teams. Since 2019, he has made 263 regular season appearances for the Celtics, Bulls, Pelicans, and Cavaliers, averaging 5.3 points and 3.1 rebounds in 16.8 minutes per game.

Known primarily for his defensive ability and versatility, Green played in New Orleans and Cleveland in 2024/25. He made 18 starts and 50 total appearances for the injury-plagued Pelicans before being bought out in order to sign with the East-leading Cavs. In total, he averaged 5.1 PPG and 3.2 RPG in 18.5 MPG across 68 outings for the two teams, with a shooting line of .429/.326/.724.

Charania’s report doesn’t include any additional details on Green’s deal with Detroit beyond the fact that it will be a one-year contract, so it’s unclear whether or not it will be guaranteed. It’s a safe bet it will be worth the minimum salary.

The Pistons are currently only carrying 13 players on standard contracts, so even if Green’s deal isn’t fully guaranteed from day one, he should have a clear path to earning a spot on the 15-man regular season roster this fall.