Jazz Waive David Jones
JANUARY 1: Jones has officially been waived, according to a team press release.
DECEMBER 31: The Jazz will open a two-way spot for Elijah Harkless by waiving David Jones, sources tell Michael Scotto of HoopsHype (Twitter link). Scotto reported earlier today that Harkless will be signed out of the G League.
Jones, a 23-year-old small forward, inked a two-way deal with Philadelphia in July after going undrafted out of Memphis. He played for the Sixers’ Summer League teams in both Salt Lake City and Las Vegas, but was waived in late September.
Jones signed with Utah on November 22, but he hasn’t appeared in any NBA games. He spent time with both the Salt Lake City Stars and Mexico City Capitanes in the G League, where he is averaging 15.8 points, 6.1 rebounds, 3.1 assists and 1.2 steals per game.
He will likely remain in the G League as he awaits another NBA opportunity.
Jones was a first-team All-AAC selection last season at Memphis, where he averaged 21.8 points, 7.6 rebounds and 2.2 steals in 32 games. He spent two years at DePaul and one at St. John’s before joining the Tigers.
Nets Notes: Thomas, Clowney, Leadership, Williams
After starting the season with a 9-10 record, the Nets lost for the 10th time in their last 13 games on Sunday in Orlando, but there was a silver lining. As Brian Lewis of The New York Post writes, leading scorer Cam Thomas was active for the first time since November 25 and said after racking up 25 points, six assists, and six rebounds in just 25 minutes of action that he “felt great” in his return.
“Obviously a little sore, you know playing, come back and playing high intensity like that,” said Thomas, who was coming off a hamstring strain. “So I am a little sore right now, but at the end of day, I feel good. Felt great, playing out there. Just got to do the other things for game rhythm, conditioning and fatigue. Just getting all that back to where I was, but until I get back to that, I’ll feel good. Be ready. Be CT again.”
Thomas, who started each of his first 17 games of the season, came off the bench on Sunday and was on a minutes restriction — his 25 minutes were a season-low, excepting the game in which he got injured. He’ll likely face some form of minutes limit for a few more games while he works his way back to 100%.
“Some of the shots I was missing (Sunday), I don’t normally miss those,” he told reporters, including Lewis. “I think some of that is just, you know, obviously fatigue and legs, and just getting back to playing these kind of minutes with the defense, you know, keying in on it, almost, I just got to get back in the flow, in the flow of things.”
Here’s more on the Nets:
- Noah Clowney will rely on the lessons he learned from Dorian Finney-Smith now that his former teammate has been traded to the Lakers, Lewis states in a separate story. Clowney, who’s proving himself worthy of increased minutes by averaging 13.0 points and 5.2 rebounds over the last six games, said Finney-Smith taught him to keep each game in perspective. “I got a lot of different types of advice,” Clowney said. “Just keeping a level head through it all, knowing what a long-term goal is, things like that. It’s 82 games, you know? You can’t stress over all things like that.”
- Trading away Finney-Smith and Dennis Schröder in the past two weeks has left a lack of veteran leadership in Brooklyn, notes Bridget Reilly of The New York Post. That was evident Sunday as the Nets couldn’t hold onto a 17-point fourth quarter lead against the Magic. “Today we just needed one more grown-up to bring the guys together and calm everybody down and execute on the defensive end and win the game,” coach Jordi Fernandez said. “And it didn’t happen. So I put that on all the guys on our team that are over 23 years old, that those are our grown-ups. And if you cannot do that, then it’s just going to be tough.”
- Nets wing Ziaire Williams, who has missed the team’s past 11 games due to a left knee sprain, was a full participant in Tuesday’s practice and hopes to play in one half of Brooklyn’s back-to-back set vs. Toronto on Wednesday and Milwaukee on Thursday, tweets Lewis.
- Sources tell Lucas Kaplan of NetsDaily that the Nets are highly motivated to use their projected $70MM in cap space this summer “if the right opportunity” comes along. Kaplan cautions against being too aggressive about spending at this stage of the rebuild and recommends tanking for another season before moving forward in the summer of 2026.
Luke Adams contributed to this post.
Scotto’s Latest: C. Johnson, Nuggets, Bulls, Ingram, Pelicans, Poeltl
The “growing belief” around the NBA that it will take more than one first-round pick to pry forward Cameron Johnson away from the Nets due to his strong play this season and the team-friendly descending/flat structure of his contract, reports Michael Scotto of HoopsHype. Johnson has base salaries of $22.5MM this season, $20.5MM in 2025/26, and $22.5MM in ’26/27.
However, Johnson’s deal also includes significant unlikely incentives of $4.5MM this season, $4.1MM next season, and $4.5MM in ’26/27. Those incentives count against the apron, complicating matters for a potential suitor right up against a hard cap, such as the Warriors.
Golden State and Brooklyn discussed Johnson before agreeing to their Dennis Schröder trade, but those conversations were always considered exploratory and Jonathan Kuminga‘s name wasn’t part of them, says Scotto. Among Pacific playoff hopefuls, the Kings may be a more serious suitor for Johnson, having long expressed interest in him, Scotto notes.
Here are a few more interesting tidbits from Scotto:
- There’s “growing pessimism” that the Nuggets and Bulls will make a deal centered around Zach LaVine and Michael Porter Jr., league sources tell HoopsHype. As Scotto explains, Chicago doesn’t want to take on Zeke Nnaji‘s four-year contract and doesn’t want to have to give up assets to get a third team to take it. However, Denver may have to include Nnaji for salary-matching purposes and might not have the draft capital necessary to incentivize a third team to acquire him.
- Confirming a previous report that the Jazz and Pelicans briefly discussed Brandon Ingram before he made it clear he didn’t want to sign long-term in Utah, Scotto says the two teams “kicked around” the idea of a package that would’ve included John Collins and draft compensation before talks fizzled out.
- Scotto also confirms that the Pelicans will look to duck out of luxury tax territory by moving a player or two prior to February 6. Assuming New Orleans is able to open up a roster spot and has enough room below the tax line, the team would like to promote two-way player Brandon Boston to its standard roster, Scotto adds.
- Although Toronto hasn’t made starting center Jakob Poeltl via trade, teams around the NBA are monitoring the situation in case that stance changes before February 6, Scotto writes. The Raptors believe Poeltl, who is under contract through at least 2026, fits with their young core, according to Scotto, who suggests an inflection point could come this summer, when the big man becomes extension-eligible again.
- In case you missed it, we rounded up a few more of Scotto’s latest rumors in a separate story focused on Pacific teams.
Pacific Rumors: Finney-Smith, Lakers, Kings, Fox, Clippers
After acquiring him from Brooklyn, the Lakers would like to hang onto three-and-D forward Dorian Finney-Smith long-term, says Michael Scotto of HoopsHype. However, Scotto hears that the early expectation is that Finney-Smith will decline his $15.4MM player option for the 2025/26 season in order to test free agency.
While it’s unclear if Finney-Smith could exceed that $15.4MM figure in terms of average annual salary on a new contract, he could certainly secure a larger overall guarantee with a new multiyear deal.
According to Scotto, besides the Lakers, other teams that had interest in Finney-Smith before the Nets traded him to Los Angeles included the Grizzlies, Mavericks, Nuggets, Warriors, Kings, and Pacers. That doesn’t necessarily mean all of those clubs will be in the mix if and when Finney-Smith reaches free agency, but they could be some of the potential suitors to watch.
Here are a few more items of interest from around the Pacific:
- The next item on the Lakers‘ wish list is a backup center, according to Scotto, who says Wizards center Jonas Valanciunas is still very much a potential target for Los Angeles. As they peruse the market for a big man, the Lakers are expected to dangle Gabe Vincent and their remaining second-round draft capital, sources tell Scotto. The team still controls its own 2025 second-round pick, as well as the Clippers’ 2025 second-rounder.
- Teams around the NBA are keeping an eye on the Kings to see if they’ll end up making a panic trade in the hopes of turning their season around, Scotto writes, reporting that Nets forward Cameron Johnson has been a consistent target for Sacramento. The biggest question among rival executives, Scotto says, is whether the Kings would entertain the idea of a De’Aaron Fox trade. There’s a sense from some around the league that Fox would have to request a trade for Sacramento to seriously consider moving him, Scotto adds.
- League sources tell HoopsHype that Clippers two-way player Jordan Miller is a strong candidate for a promotion to the 15-man roster if the team can open up a spot for him. In that scenario, San Diego Clippers standouts Tosan Evbuomwan or RayJ Dennis would be among the contenders for the newly opened two-way slot, Scotto writes.
NBA Suspends Amen Thompson Two Games, Terry Rozier One Game
Rockets swingman Amen Thompson has been suspended for two games, while Heat guard Terry Rozier has received a one-game suspension, the NBA announced today in a press release (Twitter link).
Thompson and Rozier are being suspended for the roles they played in the on-court altercation that occurred during the final minute of the Heat/Rockets game in Houston on Sunday. In addition to the suspensions, the league announced that Rockets guard Jalen Green has been fined $35K and Heat guard Tyler Herro has been fined $25K for their involvement in the fracas.
Rockets head coach Ime Udoka has received a $50K fine for verbal abuse of a referee and not leaving the court in a timely manner after being ejected.
Additionally, Rockets point guard Fred VanVleet has been fined $35K for making “reckless” contact with official Marc Davis. That incident occurred moments before the altercation that led to the other penalties.
With Miami up by five points and about to inbound the ball with 35.7 seconds left in Sunday’s game, Herro and Thompson began exchanging words and bumping one another (Twitter video link). Thompson grabbed Herro by the jersey and threw him to the floor, which led to Rozier tackling Thompson as Green went after Rozier and several other players and coaches converged on the melee.
Once the dust settled, those four players, along with Udoka and Rockets assistant coach Ben Sullivan, were ejected. Sullivan is the only one of those ejected who wasn’t fined or suspended today.
Tensions were already running high leading up to the melee, as VanVleet was tossed from the game after arguing that a timeout should have been awarded to Houston before Davis called the team for a five-second violation on its inbound play (Twitter video link).
VanVleet made contact with Davis during the argument, which the veteran official deemed to be intentional, resulting in the guard’s ejection. Udoka was also sniping back and forth with Davis at that time and was eventually ejected for “unsportsmanlike comments,” per the crew chief.
The suspension will keep Thompson out of action for Wednesday’s game vs. Dallas and Friday’s contest vs. Boston. It will also cost him $127,586, which is 2/145ths of his $9,249,960 full-season salary, notes ESPN’s Bobby Marks (Twitter link).
Rozier, who will have to sit out Wednesday’s game vs. New Orleans, will forfeit $143,242, which is 1/174th of his $24,924,126 salary.
Pelicans Rumors: Williamson, Ingram, Potential Trades
Veteran agent Bill Duffy, who is representing Zion Williamson after the Pelicans forward parted with CAA earlier in the season, doesn’t intend to push New Orleans to move his client before this season’s trade deadline, sources tell Tim MacMahon and Bobby Marks of ESPN.
The focus for both the Pelicans and Williamson’s camp, according to MacMahon and Marks, is to get the 24-year-old back on the court in the coming weeks for the first time since a hamstring strain sidelined him on November 6. The former No. 1 overall pick went through some non-contact work on Monday, tweets William Guillory of The Athletic, and the team announced last week that he’s expected to begin practicing in full very soon.
“Let’s ramp him up and create value for him,” a source said, “whether that’s with the Pelicans or another team.”
Within their deep dive into Williamson’s situation, MacMahon and Marks consider whether a trade would be a viable option for the Pelicans, exploring what the forward’s value on the market would be and what teams might be interested. According to ESPN’s duo, executives trying to come up with a logical landing spot for the former Blue Devil suggested he might make sense for a veteran team seeking another star, like the Warriors, or a retooling club looking to move off big contract of its own, like the Bulls with Zach LaVine.
A rebuilding team looking to roll the dice on a player with star potential at a discounted price could also be a fit, some of ESPN’s sources suggested. One Eastern executive who spoke to ESPN called Williamson’s trade value “the hardest question to answer in the NBA” at the moment.
“It’s really hard to see anybody paying a ton for him right now, but there are a very limited number of players in the league when healthy who are at or near the franchise-player tier,” that exec said. “The only way you win at the highest level is to have a guy who can do the type of things he can do if he’s healthy.
“I would probably do something stupid to get him if it were me making decisions.”
Here’s more on Williamson and the Pelicans:
- Williamson’s 2025/26 salary of $39.4MM will likely become at least 20% guaranteed, since he’s on track to meet the weight benchmarks in his contract, sources tell MacMahon and Marks. However, he has missed too many games to reach the 61-game threshold, which means no more than 80% of his total salary for next season will be guaranteed entering the summer. Assuming he passes his required weigh-ins, Williamson can increase his partial guarantee to 60% by playing in at least 41 games or 80% by playing in at least 51.
- Despite the structure of his contract, which will remain non-guaranteed beyond ’25/26, the Pelicans don’t consider waiving Williamson in the offseason in order to generate cap flexibility to be a feasible path to improving their roster, per MacMahon and Marks, given that the team still wouldn’t have maximum-salary cap room and New Orleans has never been a free agent destination anyway.
- Finding a trade for forward Brandon Ingram remains the top priority for the Pelicans’ front office in the short term, sources tell ESPN. Ingram is on an expiring deal and will be an unrestricted free agent in 2025 if he’s not extended before then.
- William Guillory of The Athletic fields several hypothetical trade ideas from Pelicans fans, evaluating each suggestion and considering whether the Pelicans or their proposed trade partner is more likely to pass on each offer.
Jimmy Butler Rejoins Heat, Addresses Trade Rumors
After missing two games due to an illness and three due to return-to-competition reconditioning, Heat forward Jimmy Butler rejoined the team on Tuesday, participating in practice and telling reporters that he’ll play in Wednesday’s game vs. New Orleans.
As Barry Jackson of The Miami Herald relays, Butler also spoke to the media about last week’s ESPN report suggesting that he prefers to be traded out of Miami. Heat president Pat Riley announced a day after that report that the club wouldn’t be trading its star forward.
“Does it matter?” Butler said today when asked if he prefers a trade. “I honestly do not care about getting traded, where I’m supposed to go, who’s saying what…. All of that is out of my control anyway.”
Reporters in Miami posed a series of questions related to Butler’s future, including whether he’d be content if he’s not traded this season, whether it’s in his and the Heat’s best interests to have an amicable divorce in the summer of 2025, and whether he wants to be in Miami. In each case, he began his answer by saying, “I don’t know.”
The 35-year-old also said he’s “happy” and “in a good space,” adding that he’ll defer to Riley on roster decisions.
“Right now, I’m here and I’m to make the most of it,” Butler said. “I am going to compete and I’m going to win. It’s a lot of talk, a lot of noise, which I’m cool with. It doesn’t bother me at all. I love that. I thrive at it. It keeps you all wondering, the world wondering. It’s good to be talked about. Even better to be wanted.”
Asked if he and/or his agent have talked to Riley, Butler offered no comment, simply replying, “Next.”
While Butler’s remarks suggest he doesn’t intend to take the scorched-earth route he did six years ago in Minnesota to force a trade, he also passed on the opportunity to put the issue to bed, offering vague responses and not outright denying that he prefers a trade. Despite Riley’s statement last Thursday about not trading Butler, this still looks like a situation worth keeping an eye on as the February 6 trade deadline nears.
In addition to addressing the trade rumors, Butler also spoke about his five-game absence, explaining that he was “pretty messed up” as a result of a bad stomach illness, but that he’s feeling better now and looking forward to getting back on the court. It’s possible Miami will be down a player or two as a result of Sunday’s altercation vs. the Rockets – the NBA has yet to announce suspensions and/or fines – so Butler’s return should be a welcome one.
Suns’ Royce O’Neale Out For At Least 10 Days
Suns forward Royce O’Neale, who sprained his left ankle during Saturday’s game in Golden State, will be reevaluated in 10 days, the team announced today in a press release (Twitter link via Duane Rankin of The Arizona Republic).
The injury occurred during the final minute of the second quarter, with O’Neale defending Dennis Schröder as the Warriors guard drove to the basket. O’Neale blocked Schröder’s shot, but landed awkwardly after doing so, turning his left ankle and falling to the floor (video link).
O’Neale has primarily been part of Phoenix’s second unit this season, but he has been one of the team’s most effective rotation players, averaging 10.5 points, 5.6 rebounds, and 2.4 assists per game while making 44.1% of his 5.7 three-point attempts per night. He’s also one of the Suns’ most versatile defenders and ranks third on the roster with 817 total minutes played this season, so the club will miss him during his absence.
The Suns, who have fallen to 15-16 on the season, have been banged up lately, but should get some reinforcements as early as Tuesday, with guards Devin Booker and Grayson Allen seemingly on the verge of returning to action.
While Booker and Allen could play some of the minutes that would have been O’Neale’s, the forward’s absence will likely also result in increased roles for defense-first players like Ryan Dunn and Josh Okogie. Dunn has started the past three games, while Okogie was the first player off the bench in the second half of Saturday’s contest and logged a season-high 31 minutes.
Hoops Rumors Front Office Subscriber Chat Transcript: 12/31/2024
Hoops Rumors’ Arthur Hill held a live chat today exclusively for Trade Rumors Front Office subscribers. Topics included what the Nuggets might get in return for Michael Porter Jr., whether the trade market will be as lively as in past seasons, the Lakers' next move after acquiring Dorian Finney-Smith, De'Aaron Fox's future in Sacramento and more!
Pacific Notes: Christie, Finney-Smith, Podziemski, Warriors
Kings interim head coach Doug Christie picked up his first win on Monday, as Sacramento took advantage of a Dallas team missing its top two scorers and snapped a six-game losing streak, registering its first home win since December 8. Christie has been an assistant coach in Sacramento since 2021, so his players were happy to see him get his first official victory as a head coach, writes Eric He of The Associated Press.
“We’ve spent three summers now with him,” Sabonis said. “He works his butt off and just to see him installing what he believes in the guys, and the guys reacting that quickly to it is awesome.”
As Jason Anderson of The Sacramento Bee details, Christie got emotional ahead of the game when asked by CBS Sacramento’s Jake Gadon what he wanted to say to Kings fans as the team attempts to turn its season around.
“I love you, first, because this is an incredible fan base, but I would say more than anything, know that we are here to put a product out on the floor that makes you proud,” Christie responded. “… I think everyone understands who I am and what I’m trying to do, so I don’t need to reiterate that, but first and foremost, there’s steps to that process, and the first step is that when they walk in the doors and they leave the doors, they know that team played their f—ing a– off.”
Given that multiple reports in the wake of Mike Brown‘s dismissal indicated that Kings players had grown weary of the coach’s public criticism of the team, one post-game remark Christie made while discussing the team’s need to perform better in “clutch” situations was especially noteworthy.
“When it comes to that point, what are you willing to do?” Christie said, according to He. “I know what I’m willing to do for you, and I’m going to support them in any way I can. Because it’ll always be my fault. It’ll never be their fault. They go do their job. I’m here to take the bullets.”
Here’s more from around the Pacific:
- Lakers newcomers Dorian Finney-Smith and Shake Milton have been given the go-ahead to debut for their new team on Tuesday vs. Cleveland, according to Shams Charania of ESPN (Twitter link), who reports that the physicals for the four players involved in this week’s Lakers/Cavaliers swap are complete. As Jovan Buha of The Athletic relays, Finney-Smith said on Tuesday that he knew the odds were “high” that he’d be traded the season and added that he’s excited to play for the “big bros” in Los Angeles after being the “little brother” to the Knicks in Brooklyn.
- The MRI on Brandin Podziemski‘s abdominal strain came back clean, according to Warriors head coach Steve Kerr. Kerr told reporters – including Tim Bontemps of ESPN (Twitter link) – that the guard is considered day-to-day after getting injured on Saturday and sitting out Monday’s game.
- With their loss to Cleveland on Monday, the Warriors have now dropped 13 of 17 games and are back to .500 after starting the season 12-3. Star guard Stephen Curry referred to the team as “very average” at the moment, Anthony Slater of The Athletic writes, noting that several of Golden State’s offensive weapons – including Buddy Hield and Dennis Schröder – are going through shooting slumps at the same time. During the Warriors’ 12-3 start, they had the NBA’s sixth-best offensive rating (115.7); in their past 17 games, that number has plummeted to 106.1, ahead of only Charlotte and Washington.
