Raptors Notes: Ingram, Cap, Roster Decisions

New Raptors trade acquisition Brandon Ingram remains “at least a month” away from making his debut for Toronto, Michael Grange of Sportsnet.ca. As the Raptors prepare to incorporate their new star forward, Blake Murphy of Sportsnet.ca unpacks five critical areas that will help determine Ingram’s fit with his new club.

Murphy speculates as to how Ingram and fellow All-Star Raptors forward Scottie Barnes will mesh in pick-and-roll actions, what Ingram’s shot profile will look like, how Ingram’s play-making will impact Toronto, and more.

In the view of Eric Koreen of The Athletic, figuring out how best to integrate Ingram into his offense will be a defining factor of head coach Darko Rajakovic‘s tenure in Toronto.

“I think there’s going to be a lot of work that we need to put in,” Rajakovic told Koreen on Saturday. “(Ingram) is very open. He’s very willing to accept what this team is doing. And he already started using his voice with the team and talking in the film sessions. He’s opening up, which is great. I really respect that.”

Ingram has only been healthy for 18 games this season. When available, he’s putting up big numbers. The 27-year-old is averaging 22.2 points, 5.6 rebounds, and 5.2 assists per night, with a shooting line of .465/.374/.850.

“All of us, we want the same thing,” Rajakovic said. “We want to win. And winning demands certain things. I think he will embrace that without any problem — ball movement and body moment. I think he’s a very, very unselfish player. I think that he’s a player that can see the court really well. And I think that’s going to be the driving force for us when we get him on the court.”

There’s more out of Toronto:

  • In a separate Sportsnet.ca story, Murphy takes a look at the Raptors’ salary cap setup heading into the future in the wake of Ingram’s extension and recently promoted forward Jamison Battle’s three-year standard deal. Because Ingram opted to waive his trade bonus and Toronto offloaded some other salaries, the team was able to accommodate Battle without going into tax territory.
  • Ingram inked a three-year, $120MM contract extension upon being dealt to the Raptors. As Koreen observes in another story, the significant cap hits on that deal going forward could compel Toronto’s front office to make some difficult choices about its other personnel. Koreen notes that the Raptors will now owe an estimated $175.4MM in guaranteed money to just 10 players next year — four shy of the required minimum. That figure doesn’t account for the team’s projected lottery pick.
  • In case you missed it, Ingram’s contract extension will be paid out in an ascending structure, with 5% annual raises.

Pelicans’ Herb Jones Has Shoulder Surgery, Out For Season

Pelicans forward Herbert Jones has had successful surgery to repair a torn right rotator cuff, per a press release from the team.

As had been anticipated earlier this week by Pelicans vice president of basketball operations David Griffin, Jones will indeed be sidelined for the rest of the season while he recuperates. He hasn’t suited up in a game since January 8.

Jones, a versatile 6’8″ combo forward, made an All-Defensive Team last season for his efforts on that end of the floor. At the time, he was a rising talent on a 49-win New Orleans club that seemed primed to make a leap this season.

Instead, the Pelicans have been felled by horrible injury luck and find themselves dead last in the Western Conference entering play on Wednesday — the team traded away Brandon Ingram at least week’s trade deadline in exchange for draft equity.

Jones has played sparingly this year for the 12-41 Pelicans. Across just 20 healthy games in 2024/25, the 26-year-old averaged 10.3 points, 3.9 rebounds, 3.3 assists, 1.9 steals and 0.5 blocks per contest.

Deandre Ayton To Miss At Least Four Weeks With Calf Strain

Trail Blazers starting center Deandre Ayton injured his left calf during a blowout loss to the Nuggets on Monday.

Further imaging has indicated that Ayton is dealing with a strained left calf, according to the Blazers, who announced in a press release that the seven-footer will miss at least the next four weeks. At that point, he is set to be reassessed.

The Arizona alum had been a critical component of the Trail Blazers’ midseason turnaround. Without him available, Portland will likely lean even more on impressive rookie lottery pick Donovan Clingan.

In 40 games overall this season, Ayton is averaging 14.4 points, 10.2 rebounds, 1.6 assists, 1.0 blocks and 0.8 steals.

During a recent 12-2 Trail Blazers stretch, the former No. 1 overall pick saw those numbers improve to 17.9 points, 12.0 rebounds, 2.3 assists, 1.0 blocks and 0.9 steals per game. He was also shooting 57.4% from the field during that run.

At 23-31, without Ayton for a month and now on a three-game losing streak, the 13th-seeded Blazers’ postseason hopes seem to be fading fast.

Ayton is currently Portland’s priciest player, earning $34MM this season. He has one year left on his four-season maximum-salary deal, worth $35.5MM in 2025/26.

Ayton’s recent play could go a long way towards rehabilitating his trade value across the league, though he has struggled with injuries throughout his career, having appeared in 58 or fewer games three times in the last five seasons prior to 2024/25.

Hawks’ Larry Nance Jr., Vit Krejci Out Multiple Weeks

Hawks forward Larry Nance Jr. and guard Vit Krejci both had to leave a 112-106 win over Orlando on Monday with injuries and will face extended absences.

According to the Hawks (Twitter link), Krejci departed Monday’s game with a lower back contusion. After he underwent imaging, he was diagnosed with a non-displaced lumbar fracture and is set to be reassessed in three-to-four weeks.

Nance, meanwhile, exited the contest with a right knee injury. He has sustained a non-displaced fracture of his right medial femoral condyle, and is set to be on the shelf for at least six weeks, at which point he will be reevaluated.

Nance was acquired as part of a blockbuster offseason deal with New Orleans for guard Dejounte Murray. Across his 24 healthy games this season, the 6’8″ forward/center is averaging 8.5 points, 4.3 rebounds, 1.6 assists, 0.8 steals and 0.5 blocks in just 19.3 minutes per night.

Krejci, 24, is in his third season with Atlanta. This year, he’s averaging a career-high 6.9 points per game on an efficient .447/.384/.667 shooting line. The 6’8″ pro is also chipping in 2.7 APG, 2.7 RPG, 0.7 SPG and 0.5 BPG for the Hawks.

This is a big blow to the depth of the new-look Hawks, who have retooled their personnel through an active trade deadline stretch.

Without Nance or star forward Jalen Johnson, Atlanta head coach Quin Snyder will likely need to lean more on rookie forward Zaccharie Risacher and newly added stretch four Georges Niang.

Sans Krejci or Kobe Bufkin, Snyder will presumably give more touches to other backcourt contributors like Dyson Daniels, Garrison Mathews, and fresh trade acquisition Caris LeVert.

Raptors Sign Brandon Ingram To Three-Year Extension

February 12: The Raptors have officially announced Ingram’s extension in a press release.

“Improving every day is the ethos of our team, and we believe the long-term addition of Brandon improves us greatly,” general manager Bobby Webster said in a statement. “We’ve spoken about his elite scoring and play-making; we’re looking forward to seeing that mesh with the talents we already have on our roster – and we’re thrilled that Brandon wants to be a Raptor as much as we want him here in Toronto.”


February 11: The Raptors and newly acquired forward Brandon Ingram have reached an agreement on a three-year contract extension, according to Shams Charania and Bobby Marks of ESPN (Twitter link), who hear from Ingram’s agents at Klutch Sports that the deal will be worth $120MM and will feature a player option for the 2027/28 season.

Ingram was traded from the Pelicans to the Raptors last week in a deal that sent Bruce Brown, Kelly Olynyk, and two draft picks (one first-rounder and one second-rounder) to New Orleans.

Ingram had spent the previous five-and-a-half seasons with the Pelicans after having been a centerpiece of the team’s return in 2019’s Anthony Davis blockbuster with the Lakers. From 2019-25, Ingram averaged 23.0 points, 5.2 rebounds, and 4.3 assists per game in 305 total outings for New Orleans, with a .472/.372/.847 shooting line and a 2020 All-Star berth.

The Pelicans and Ingram were unable to come to terms last offseason – or during the first half of this season – on a new contract that would extend the 27-year-old’s $36MM expiring deal, which led to the decision to trade him.

The Raptors were clearly more comfortable with the idea of investing in Ingram — general manager Bobby Webster said after last week’s trade that the front office wouldn’t have made the trade if there wasn’t “a comfort level with (the contract) he was looking for.”

Recently traded players face certain limitations on the extensions they’re permitted to sign, but Ingram’s new contract will fall within those limits (which include a 20% first-year raise, subsequent annual raises of 5%, and four total years, including the current season).

The deal will also come in well below Ingram’s maximum. Based on current cap projections, he would’ve been eligible to receive up to about $150MM over the next three years (or $269.1MM over five) if he had waited until free agency to sign a new contract with the Raptors. His maximum three-year extension right now would’ve been worth $136.1MM.

The exact impact of Ingram’s extension on Toronto’s cap situation for 2025/26 and beyond won’t be known until we see the official numbers, but it figures to push the team up over $175MM in guaranteed money for 10 players for next season. That will be well over the projected cap ($154.6MM), but will put the team in position to stay below the projected tax line ($187.9MM).

Ingram, who is still recovering from an ankle injury and whose Raptors debut is likely still a little ways off, is now part of a core in Toronto that also includes Scottie Barnes, Immanuel Quickley, Gradey Dick, and RJ Barrett.

Community Shootaround: Kevin Durant’s Future

Despite an up-and-down season in Phoenix, there had been no indication up until a couple weeks ago that Kevin Durant wasn’t perfectly happy with the Suns or that he was in any danger of seeing his time with the team come to an end.

That changed in the days leading up to last Thursday’s trade deadline, when rumors began percolating about Durant’s possible availability. While the former MVP ultimately stayed put, reporting from ESPN indicated that the Suns and Warriors began discussing Durant about 10 days prior to the deadline without looping in the forward’s camp on those talks.

By the time the deadline came and went, more than half the league had reportedly inquired on Durant, who was said to be “blindsided” by suddenly being at the center of trade rumors — he confirmed as much on Monday.

The Suns’ openness to listening to inquiries on Durant, combined with his apparent unease about those trade talks, has led to speculation that the two sides could be headed toward a divorce during the 2025 offseason as the 36-year-old enters the final year of his current contract.

Asked on Tuesday after he surpassed the 30,000-point mark whether he hopes to spend the rest of his career in Phoenix, Durant didn’t exactly shut down that speculation.

“I’m gonna focus on (playing) Houston tomorrow, man,” Durant said. “We ain’t gonna go there right now.”

Making a TV appearance on Get Up on Wednesday (YouTube link), ESPN’s Brian Windhorst reiterated that he’s not expecting the relationship between Durant and the Suns to extend beyond this season.

“He’s probably going to get traded this summer,” Windhorst said. “He knows it. The Suns know it. The rest of the league knows it. They’re going to enjoy him while they have him. It’s not really controversial, in all honesty. They’re under .500, they’ve got a $230MM payroll, then add over $100MM on tax on that.

“He’s played almost 1,500 minutes this year and he’s plus-two on the court in those 1,500 minutes. So you have an extremely expensive team that is not winning and the player that is their most expensive player is playing great but not impacting them on a positive level. You do not need a high-level analyst to tell you that they probably need to trade him, which is why they were exploring the trade market for him.

“While I would never make an ironclad prediction, I would expect this summer for Durant and the Suns to work together to find a new home. He has one year left on his contract, which would give him some control as to where that would be.”

The Warriors were the team pursuing Durant most aggressively last week, but they eventually pivoted to Jimmy Butler and immediately signed their newest star forward to an extension. Technically, there would be nothing stopping them from getting back in the mix for Durant this offseason – the Suns did have a ton of interest in Butler – but the former Warriors star was reportedly entirely uninterested in a reunion with his old team, which was a factor in Golden State’s decision to back off.

This summer, there should be plenty of other teams around the NBA who are in a better position to make trade offers for Durant and who are more likely to appeal to the league’s eighth all-time leading scorer.

We want to know what you think. Will these next few months be Durant’s last in Phoenix? Will the Suns trade him this offseason? If so, which teams do you expect to be in the mix and which club would be the best fit for the star forward?

Head to the comment section below to weigh in with your thoughts!

Eastern Notes: Embiid, George, Nurkic, Sims

Following up on reporting over the weekend that suggested Joel Embiid might require another surgery to address a nagging left knee injury, ESPN’s Brian Windhorst said during a TV appearance on Get Up (YouTube link) that there’s not necessarily a consensus among the experts the Sixers center has consulted about the best way to put that knee issue behind him.

“I know that people would like this to be a cut-and-dry issue — you either need knee surgery or you don’t,” Windhorst said. “That’s not necessarily clear here. He has seen a number of specialists. There isn’t a clear path on how to resolve this issue.

“He’s still playing, obviously. They’ve got him playing. If they thought he needed knee surgery, trust me, the Sixers would have dealt with it. He’s playing right now, and he signed this $193MM contract extension. He’s under contract now for five years for $300MM. They have to get this right. And right now, they have no option. They have to figure this out.”

As Windhorst notes, Embiid is now locked up through at least the 2027/28 season, with a player option for ’28/29 worth a projected $69MM. Given that huge financial commitment the Sixers made to the former MVP, they have to do all they can to get him back to full health, since it makes little sense to try to trade him while value is at a low.

“He’s not tradable right now. That contract makes his value… it’s not realistic,” Windhorst said. “And just on Friday, Daryl Morey, their team president, coming out of the trade deadline still reaffirms, ‘We think he’s a top-five player. We don’t regret signing Paul George.’

“The future going forward is around Joel Embiid, so he’s doubled, tripled, quadrupled down on it, and he really has to because that contract makes it impossible. They have to figure out a way to get him right. Trust me, they’re trying. They are seeking all kinds of alternatives trying to make it happen.”

Here’s more from around the Eastern Conference:

  • Speaking of George, the Sixers forward admitted after Tuesday’s loss to Toronto that adjusting to playing alongside Embiid this season has “definitely been challenging,” per Keith Pompey of The Philadelphia Inquirer. “But I’m here to learn and figure it out,” George said. “He’s an unbelievable talent. He makes the game easy with just his presence, his attention that he draws. But it’s been a challenge.” Sixers lineups that feature both George and Embiid have a -4.2 net rating so far this season.
  • Jusuf Nurkic will be available on Wednesday to make his Hornets debut vs. Orlando, according to NBA insider Chris Haynes, who reports (via Twitter) that the veteran center will be on a minutes restriction. Nurkic, traded from Phoenix to Charlotte last week, hasn’t played since January 7. With Mark Williams back on the roster following the voided trade with the Lakers, Nurkic likely won’t have as significant a role, but Williams won’t be active on Wednesday, having been listed on the injury report as “not with team.”
  • Speaking about the trade-deadline addition of Jericho Sims, Bucks general manager Jon Horst referred to the center as a “fourth big,” but expressed enthusiasm about Sims’ athleticism, offensive rebounding, and ability to make an impact in transition, per Eric Nehm of The Athletic. “It may or may not be an every night role, but it’s kind of based on matchups, it’s based on need,” Horst said of Sims’ role. “If guys get injured or guys are out, he’s a guy that can step in, and you feel confident with him playing.”

Knicks’ Robinson: I Want To Be 100% Upon Return

When Knicks center Mitchell Robinson underwent a procedure on his left ankle last May, it was described as minor and there was an initial expectation that he’d be ready for the start of the 2024/25 season. His recovery has lasted several months longer than anticipated, but Robinson told reporters on Tuesday that he didn’t experience any setbacks during the process, according to Stefan Bondy of The New York Post.

“I’ve just been taking my time. I want to make sure it’s 100 percent, I ain’t trying to keep having these sit-outs and setbacks and stuff like that,” Robinson said. “This time, I’m just going to play it smart. Usually, I’d be young and dumb to go out there and try to get back as fast as I can. I can’t do that no more.”

Robinson went on to explain that he’s increasingly aware of the need to care of his body and is more cognizant of the importance of things like nutrition and icing after games.

“That’s part of learning and growing,” he said. “I’m just going to focus to make sure this doesn’t happen again.”

Robinson still hasn’t taken part in a full 5-on-5 practice, but has been cleared for contact and is inching closer toward his season debut. Shams Charania of ESPN recently reported that the 26-year-old could return by March 1.

For his part, Robinson is eager to resume suiting up, telling reporters on Tuesday that he thinks he was playing some of the best basketball of his career last season before going down with his initial ankle injury. In his first 21 appearances before getting hurt in December 2023, the big man averaged 6.2 points, 10.3 rebounds, 1.5 steals, and 1.3 blocks per game as New York’s starting center. He made it back last March before re-injuring the ankle in May.

With Robinson’s health still a question mark leading up to last Thursday’s trade deadline, there was some speculation that the Knicks might make him available in search of a more reliable depth option up front, but it didn’t sound as if the team ever engaged in any serious discussions about moving him. He said on Tuesday that he wasn’t fazed by the rumors, according to Bondy

“You know how people are,” Robinson said. “They keep telling me [about the rumors] and it is what it is. It’s a business. I’m not going to cry about it.”

While Karl-Anthony Towns is now the Knicks’ starting center, there should be a spot in the rotation for a healthy Robinson, who could play 20 or so minutes off the bench and spend some time on the court alongside Towns, Bondy suggests. The seventh-year veteran had a message on Tuesday for anyone who may doubt his ability to give the team positive minutes down the stretch.

“Let them sleep,” he said. “I’ll wake they ass up … I’m just going to continue to do what I do best. Offensive rebounding. Block shots. Defend. Stuff like that. I can’t wait to see how it goes. I’ll see.”

Fischer’s Latest: Raptors, Hunter, Pelicans, Ingram, Boucher

As the Raptors sought out a scorer and play-maker to complement Scottie Barnes, they considered several options besides Brandon Ingram ahead of last Thursday’s trade deadline before making a deal with New Orleans, reports Jake Fischer of The Stein Line (Substack link).

Toronto had real interest in forward De’Andre Hunter, according to Fischer, who says the Raptors have had talks with the Hawks about Hunter dating back to 2023, when Atlanta was looking at Pascal Siakam.

Sources tell Fischer that the Cavaliers – who ultimately acquired Hunter – viewed the Raptors as the top threat to outbid them at the deadline and were also aware that the Pelicans were talking about Atlanta about a deal that would have sent Ingram to Atlanta and Hunter and Clint Capela to New Orleans.

As the trade deadline neared, however, it became clear that the Hawks were less inclined than the Raptors to sign Ingram to a contract extension after acquiring him, which made Toronto a better bet to pay the price the Pelicans were seeking. According to Fischer, while Ingram’s injury history reduced his appeal to some potential suitors, general manager Bobby Webster told reporters that the Raptors believe they have the “best medical staff in the league” and can help the star forward stay healthier going forward.

Here’s more from Fischer:

  • League sources tell Fischer that Ingram previously passed on a four-year, $160MM extension offer from the Pelicans. That would have matched the annual average value of $40MM that he got on his new three-year, $120MM deal with the Raptors, though it’s unclear whether New Orleans’ offer was fully guaranteed and when exactly it was presented to Ingram, who had been extension-eligible since last July.
  • Fischer hears that the Raptors‘ coaching staff has encouraged the team’s young players not to stress over game-night results this season, having prioritized player development and growth over wins and losses. However, Toronto’s trade for Ingram is another sign that the club doesn’t want to drag out its rebuild. “They want to compete starting next year,” one source with knowledge of the Raptors’ thinking tells Fischer.
  • Raptors big man Chris Boucher drew trade interest from multiple teams and would presumably be a popular target on the buyout market this month, but Fischer suggests there has been no discussion to this point about a potential buyout for Boucher.

Rockets’ Jabari Smith On Track To Return After All-Star Break

Rockets forward Jabari Smith Jr. is targeting a February 21 return from the hand injury that has sidelined him since early January, reports NBA Chris Haynes (Twitter video link).

Assuming Smith hits that target date, he would be back in action for Houston’s first game after the All-Star break, at home vs. the Timberwolves. However, agent Wallace Prather provided a more conservative timeline for his client’s return, telling Haynes, “We are targeting the end of the month.”

Smith has missed Houston’s past 20 games after fracturing his left hand during the team’s shootaround on January 3 ahead of a matchup with Boston. Prior to that injury, he had played a major part in the Rockets’ early-season success, starting the first 33 games of the season for a team that got off to a 22-11 start.

Smith has averaged 11.9 points, 6.5 rebounds, and 1.0 block in 30.9 minutes per game when healthy, with a shooting line of .435/.354/.867. Since he went down, the club has gone just 11-9, having just snapped a six-game losing streak on Sunday against Toronto.

Amen Thompson has taken over Smith’s spot in the starting lineup since Jan. 5 and has thrived in that new role, putting up 17.1 points, 9.7 rebounds, 5.1 assists, 2.1 steals, and 1.5 blocks per game in his past 18 games as a starter.

It will be interesting to see which player is the odd man out of that starting five when Smith returns. The former No. 3 overall pick hasn’t come off the bench in any of his first 188 NBA outings.