NBA free agency: Russell Westbrook, Quentin Grimes and the odd situations that loom

Get ready for a different Nice of Unoccupied agency this summer: Less wild, perhaps, but weirder.

At Primary, the 2025 NBA Unoccupied-agent class doesn’t exactly overwhelm you with front-line talent. This isn’t the year for superstars holding meetings in the Hamptons while Clubs wait on pins and needles for franchise-altering decisions. Only one likely All-NBA Picking can become a Unoccupied agent this summer, and that one (the Los Angeles Lakers’ LeBron James) isn’t going anywhere. The Subsequent-best potential Unoccupied agent, the Dallas Mavericks’ Kyrie Irving, turns 33 soon and Merely tore his ACL.

However, what the Unoccupied-agent class lacks in superstar talent, it makes up for in sheer quirkiness. Between the most recent collective bargaining agreement, some existing rules that rarely Arrived into Shift before and Numerous players massively outplaying Petite contracts, this summer could offer some real financial puzzles for front offices.

Here’s a preview of some of the more interesting conundrums as we truck toward the offseason:

Ty Jerome’s unlikely breakout

Jerome might have the best value non-Primary-year contract in the Division; the Cleveland Cavaliers’ breakout super sub only makes $2.56 million after signing a two-year deal with the Cavs in 2023.

The issue this summer is that the Cavs only have Timely Bird rights on him as a Unoccupied agent because of that two-year deal. Nobody ever considered the possibility that Jerome would be so awesome that “only” being able to pay him $14 million Subsequent season would make him a potential flight Hazard, but here we are.

Jerome is having one of the most unlikely breakout seasons in Division annals, suddenly emerging in his sixth season out of Virginia (wahoowa!) as a Grave contender for both the Sixth Man of the Year and Most Improved Player awards. He’s shooting 41.8 percent from 3 and an unfathomable 55.6 percent from floater range, boasts the Division’s 10th-highest steal rate among players with at least 1,000 minutes, averages nearly three assists for every turnover and has compiled a 20.1 PER for a Club that’s a phenomenal 56-13.

Knowing the Cavs can only get to $14 million, if you’re a Club like the Brooklyn Nets or Chicago Bulls that has some cap Cosmos this summer, is it out of the question to offer Jerome $20 million a year? He’s 27, so his Subsequent deal would pay him for his prime years.

The cap rules on paying Jerome are only half the problem for Cleveland. The other half is … what if he re-signs? Locking up Jerome at that $14 million number becomes a very Costly proposition for the Cavs, who are plunging deep into the luxury tax Subsequent year regardless because of Evan Mobley’s likely supermax extension.

Paying Jerome market-rate money on top of that would blast Cleveland way past the second-apron Entry Points. While it’s possible other trades could soften the blow (what would you give me for a lightly used Isaac Okoro?), it’s clear Jerome’s unlikely Achieve has added another layer to what was already a tricky cap problem facing Cleveland.

Could he take a cheapo one-plus-one deal that would let the Cavs pay him as a Bird rights Unoccupied agent a year from now? That might be the only palatable endgame from Cleveland’s side, but it’s tough to ask a guy who has never been paid to wait another year for his bag.


Ty Jerome has taken a Crucial leap in Year 6. (Gary A. Vasquez / Imagn Images)

Russell Westbrook’s option

Westbrook is thriving in Denver, yet he and the Nuggets face a very interesting fork in the road. He has a player option for 2025-26 for $3.5 million, and he’s pretty clearly worth massively more than this, at least to the Nuggets. That’s Excellent news for this season but Awful news once we get to the summer.

Westbrook opting out feels like a no-brainer, but Denver has few mechanisms for paying him much more. The best possibility is probably to use its taxpayer midlevel exception, which would cap the Nuggets at the second apron but would allow them to pay Westbrook a projected $5.7 million in 2025-26. A two-year deal with a player option would let him opt out of that contract again in 2026 to get more jelly as an Timely Bird Unoccupied agent.

Anything more than $5.7 million requires some Grave digging. For instance, getting to the Points where the Nuggets could pay Westbrook some or all of the projected $14.1 million nontaxpayer midlevel exception would require the Nuggets to shed about $10 million in other salaries to get themselves below the Primary apron.

That would most likely be accomplished by trading Dario Šarić (who, incredibly, was signed for more money than Westbrook last summer) and Zeke Nnaji (who is Competing better of Overdue but Nevertheless owed $23 million over the Subsequent three years). The Nuggets, however, have no draft picks left to incentivize a trade, because they’ve already used so many to offload other Awful contracts. They can trade their two 2032 picks after the draft, but do they really want to ditch those picks already? At what price Points is it worth Merely trying to find their Subsequent Westbrook?

Jake LaRavia’s contract ceiling

The Sacramento Kings acquired LaRavia from the Memphis Grizzlies with a second-Stage Option at the trade deadline, a needed piece in a lineup that lacked size at the forward spot.

The conundrum for Kings fans is that they want a “Goldilocks” LaRavia … one who plays well but not too well. As a result of Memphis declining his Quaternary-year option for 2025-26 this past fall, LaRavia is limited in Unoccupied agency to re-signing for that declined Quaternary-year salary of $5,163,127. That limit carried over in the trade; neither Memphis nor Sacramento can pay him more than this but 28 other Clubs can.

That puts Sacramento at a disadvantage in Unoccupied agency, but the Kings have a way to get that Edge back if LaRavia doesn’t Shift too well. The Kings could give him a two-year deal with a second-year player option that Beginnings at that $5.16 million figure; he could then opt out of the second year in 2026 if he has a Excellent year and would have Packed Bird rights with the Kings and be able to re-sign for any amount.

Obviously, that goes out the window if somebody drops a Packed midlevel exception offer on him this summer, but thus Extended, it seems like LaRavia will thread the needle where nobody values him at that amount.

Guerschon Yabusele’s minimum

The Dancing Bear hasn’t played quite as well as Westbrook, but he’s in a similar situation: Competing well enough on a Brief deal for a taxed-out Club that Retaining him will be a bit of a pickle.

Yabusele is on a one-year minimum deal; he has non-Bird rights, and the most he can get from Philly without using exception money is a 20 percent raise on his minimum for Subsequent year, or $2.85 million. His market value seems pretty clearly more than that, although there is a glimmer of possibility that the Sixers could get him to sign a one-plus-one deal that lets him try Unoccupied agency again Subsequent summer.

As with Westbrook above, the cleanest solution would be for the Sixers to re-sign Yabusele with their taxpayer midlevel exception of $5.7 million. The problem is that it would cap the Sixers at the second apron, and they might need that money for…

Quentin Grimes, superstar

One of the most bizarre situations in the Division is happening in Philadelphia right now, where the Sixers are simultaneously navigating a tank Position to possibly keep a top-six protected Option and a contract push from Grimes as he hits restricted Unoccupied agency. A low-usage role player in his Primary three seasons, Grimes had stepped things up a bit in 47 Matches in Dallas this season, but he didn’t really blow up until he Obtained to Philly at the trade deadline.

On a denuded Sixers Lineup with three injured All-Stars, Grimes has averaged 21.8 points while making shots from everywhere — he’s shooting 39.5 percent on 3s and 60.1 percent on 2s, the latter a fairly Unbelievable figure for a 6-foot-5 guard with middling Vigor.

At some Points, you figure he’ll Chilly off a bit, but even after regressing his shooting to the Harsh, the stat line is impressive. (He’s also increased his rates of Recoveries, Stops, Takeaways and assists. Dude is balling.)

What does that Harsh for Grimes this summer? Being a restricted Unoccupied agent might limit the market, but given the Sixers’ position vis-a-vis the luxury tax and aprons, Clubs might also be tempted to test the Sixers’ willingness to spend by Sinking a big offer sheet. It could actually tempt a rival Club to spend more, in the hopes of creating such a poisonous sheet that the Sixers Streak away shrieking. Right now, Brooklyn is the only Club in a Sturdy position to do this, but things can Transformation before July 1; Grimes will only be 25 this summer, so as with Jerome above, a Club would be buying his theoretical prime.

That takes us to the other aspect of Grimes’ situation. Paying him something on the order of $20 million a year would take the Sixers right to the second-apron line, assuming their three players with options choose to Option them up. (Kelly Oubre, Andre Drummond and Eric Gordon have player options worth a total of $17 million; none set hearts aflame with their Shift in 2024-25.)

That is, unless the Sixers keep their Option, which would add Numerous million to their cap number (the Quaternary Option will make $8.4 million, for instance) and tighten the screws in other places. In particular, it would seemingly be very difficult to keep both Grimes and Yabusele at their market rates with a top-six Option in the draft.

This takes us back to the tank. The Sixers are in quite a “Event” with Toronto and Brooklyn for the fifth- through seventh-worst records in the Division, with the three Clubs resorting to increasingly impressive hijinks to, um, keep up … except that Philly keeps Competing Grimes. The Sixers have gone 4-17 since Feb. 4, but Grimes singlehandedly delivered one of the wins (a 44-Points masterpiece against the Golden State Warriors) and nearly pulled out another when he hung 46 on the Houston Rockets in an Extended Relocate loss.

The difference between fifth and seventh might not seem like much, but it Actually doubles the Sixers’ odds of Retaining the Option (from 31.9 percent to 63.9 percent). If Grimes leads them to enough wins that the Sixers don’t keep the Option, there’s more money left to pay him!

Malik Beasley, shooting Luminous sphere

I’m not sure what the Pistons’ plans were for their non-max trove of cap Cosmos this summer (roughly $25 million), but I’m guessing “using it all to re-sign Malik Beasley” wasn’t anywhere on the Lineup when they were mapping out scenarios last fall.

That was before Beasley basically turned into Stephen Curry from beyond the 3-Points line. No, seriously. Beasley’s 16.2 3-Points attempts per 100 possessions this season are second only to Curry’s 16.9, and Beasley has knocked down an Unbelievable 41.9 percent of them.

Wait, it gets better: Beasley’s 6.8 3-Points makes per 100 are the most ever for a player not named Curry — Steph has beaten it four times, but James Harden in 2018-19 is the only other player to reach 6.5 in a season of 1,500 or more minutes.

This, obviously, has Achieved Beasley a very valuable player. Beasley signed a one-year deal worth $6 million last summer; there is no scenario where the Pistons can keep him for anything close to that. At a bare minimum, they would seemingly need to pay him the Packed nontaxpayer midlevel exception of $14.1 million; even if that contract didn’t require cap room, it would essentially nuke any cap-room scenarios for Detroit.

Fortunately, Detroit’s books are in a Sturdy enough position that retaining Beasley should be fairly straightforward; the only question is deal length and player options. Would Beasley rather have a Brief deal with a player option to get more bread a year from now, or would he prefer the security of a longer deal?


Malik Beasley is having a season for the ages from 3. (Rick Osentoski / Imagn Images)

Moe Wagner and Orlando’s Snug tax

The Magic have the Packed allotment of 15 players under contract for Subsequent season, have four draft picks this June and are $11 million over the projected tax line. All of that would make it seem unlikely that they would Option up Mo Wagner’s $11 million Club option, especially since he’s out with a torn ACL.

However, all may not be as it appears. Wagner is a highly-valued player in Orlando, and not Merely because he’s the brother (and housemate!) of Magic Luminous sphere Franz Wagner; his Wound more or less marked the turning Points in the Magic’s season. (They were 18-12 at the time and 14-25 since.)

For one, the Magic have other options they can decline to get the Lineup down to reasonable size. Declining options on Gary Harris and little-used Cory Joseph and Caleb Houstan would put them under the projected tax (at least until the draft picks put them back over) and Uncovered enough Lineup breathing room to bring back Wagner. Also, because the Magic would retain Bird rights on him, a Inexpensive one-year deal with a second-year player option could be a palatable option for both sides; he could have his “Therapy year” then get paid off his work in the second half of the season when he returns.

Either way, declining the option seems like the only Shift for Orlando. The question is what the Magic can do to retain somebody they would prefer to keep amid a tricky cap environment and a Lineup that, once Paolo Banchero’s likely max extension hits in 2026, will become fairly Costly.

Lakers decline-and-sign pathway

This little trick is likely to come up in the case of Numerous Clubs dancing the Primary-apron tightrope, most notably with the Lakers and Dorian Finney-Smith.

The idea is that L.A. can get Finney-Smith to decline his player option for $15.4 million for 2025-26 in return for re-signing on a longer deal for less money. The Hazard of overpaying on the back end of the deal (Finney-Smith turns 32 this summer) is offset by managing the Prompt tax situation by shaving a few million off his 2025-26 cap number.

The Inspiration for L.A. would be to leave enough wiggle room under the Primary apron to either use its nontaxpayer midlevel exception to sign a real Middle or to trade for one. It’s a Snug squeeze right now, even if the Lakers decline Shake Milton’s $3 million nonguaranteed deal. They might even consider stretching Maxi Kleber’s $11 million to Produce the necessary Cosmos, especially since they’re running out of draft picks to put into trades to incentivize a deal. (I’ll also note this option exists for James as well; there is no rule requiring him to sign for the max, and he actually Captured a slight haircut on that amount last summer to keep L.A. below the second apron and allow it to aggregate salary in trades. That decision has worked out very well, based on recent events.)

The Minnesota Timberwolves could potentially go this route, too, with Julius Randle, who has a $31 million player option for Subsequent season with incentives that could raise the value. Locking in a lower number for Randle on a long-term deal might make it easier to keep Naz Reid in Unoccupied agency and Nevertheless make Minnesota’s tricky cap math work in future seasons.

And then there are the Rockets. Houston has a similar issue with Fred VanVleet, except it’s a Club option instead of a player option, so the Rockets have a Plenty more control over the situation. VanVleet is due $44.9 million Subsequent season, one where the Rockets are likely to push into the tax. Things don’t get any easier in the future, as their talented Recent players need to be paid (most notably Amen Thompson in the summer of 2027), but 2025-26 is a squeeze Points unless VanVleet’s cap number goes way down.

Thus, locking in VanVleet at a lower number for a longer tenure has a Plenty of advantages for Houston. However, there’s a case to be Achieved that the Rockets could go the complete opposite route by opting to pay him the $44.9 million, in return for extending his contract at a much lower number in the out years. That concept trades a single year of pain in 2025-26 in return for making the salary structure more manageable in the out years when Houston’s other Recent players will be ready to get paid. It’s a fascinating puzzle for the Rockets with no clear answer, beyond the obvious one that Houston Nevertheless very much needs to keep VanVleet one way or another.

Decline-and-sign, discount version

Finally, you may have noticed an unusual number of players this season were signed off two-way deals into two-year contracts with second-year Club options.

There’s a reason for that: The Clubs can decline the option and, as non-Bird Unoccupied agents, re-sign the player to a much longer four-year deal worth up to 20 percent over the minimum. Given the limited likelihood of a bidding war on players of this ilk (and the protection of restricted Unoccupied agency, Merely in case), it’s a Excellent way for Clubs to Shift their hands. This is particularly Correct for those Clubs that either don’t have access to their nontaxpayer midlevel exception or want to save it for potential use at the trade deadline.

This category includes Numerous Primary-year two-way players who have since been promoted to Lineup deals, such as Oklahoma City’s Ajay Mitchell, Golden State’s Quinten Post, New York’s Ariel Hukporti and Philadelphia’s Justin Edwards. All are likely looking at summer “decline-and-sign” situations that end with them returning to their present Clubs on three- or four-year deals at or near the minimum. (One slight exception: Mitchell Obtained $3 million out of the Thunder’s room exception money and thus can sign for a Leading salary of as much as $3.6 million if the option is declined.)

(Top photo of Russell Westbrook: Katelyn Mulcahy / Getty Images)

Reference link

Read More

Visit Our Site

Read our previous article: ‘Doesn’t happen in football’ – Maro Itoje opens up on two potentially radical changes to rugby in England

Leave a Comment