NBA free agency opens with Spurs, Rockets, Hawks, Magic and Mavs among those making early moves

NBA free agency opens with Spurs, Rockets, Hawks, Magic and Mavs among those making early moves
The San Antonio Spurs lured center Luke Kornet away from Boston with a four-year, $41 million deal. Kornet was part of Boston’s 2024 NBA title team and has shot 68 percent from the field in 205 games, mostly off the bench, over the last three regular seasons. (AP)
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Updated 01 July 2025

NBA free agency opens with Spurs, Rockets, Hawks, Magic and Mavs among those making early moves

NBA free agency opens with Spurs, Rockets, Hawks, Magic and Mavs among those making early moves
  • The Rockets added veteran forward Dorian Finney-Smith on a four-year, $53 million deal shortly after free agency opened
  • The NBA announced Monday that it has set the salary cap for the coming season at $154.647 million, the maximum allowed 10 percent increase over the level for this past season

NBA NEW YORK: Victor Wembanyama has another big man to help him out in San Antonio. The Houston Rockets continued their offseason overhaul. And Orlando and Atlanta made moves with eyes on contending this coming season as the NBA’s free agency period got underway Monday.

The Spurs lured center Luke Kornet away from Boston with a four-year, $41 million deal, a person with knowledge of the agreement told The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the team cannot announce the deal until the league’s signing moratorium for most contracts is lifted on Sunday.

Kornet was part of Boston’s 2024 NBA title team and has shot 68 percent from the field in 205 games, mostly off the bench, over the last three regular seasons. He figures to add frontcourt depth to the Spurs, who are hoping to have Wembanyama — the 2023-24 NBA Rookie of the Year and an All-Star this past season — back and ready to go after he was diagnosed with deep vein thrombosis in a shoulder back in February.

The Rockets, meanwhile, added veteran forward Dorian Finney-Smith on a four-year, $53 million deal shortly after free agency opened. ESPN first reported the deal, and a person with knowledge of the agreement confirmed the terms to AP.

Houston becomes Finney-Smith’s fourth team after stints with Dallas, Brooklyn and the Los Angeles Lakers. He’ll be added to a Rockets club that earlier this summer landed Kevin Durant in a blockbuster trade with Phoenix, though that deal cannot receive formal approval from the NBA until next week.

Finney-Smith averaged 8.7 points and was a 41 percent shooter from 3-point range this past season.

ESPN also reported that the Rockets’ run on free agents continued with the addition of center Clint Capela, who spent the first six years of his career in Houston before playing for the last five seasons in Atlanta. Capela agreed to a three-year deal with the Rockets, ESPN said.

Dallas, which needed some point guard help especially because the newly re-signed Kyrie Irving — rehabbing from an ACL tear — may not be ready to play until about midseason, agreed with D’Angelo Russell on a two-year contract worth nearly $13 million.

Russell would be part of the backcourt depth on a club with an imposing front line that, if healthy, would include No. 1 overall pick Cooper Flagg, 10-time All-Star Anthony Davis and promising young center Dereck Lively II.

Hawks, Magic eyeing moves in East

Atlanta added Nickeil Alexander-Walker from Minnesota on what will be a four-year, $62 million deal following a completion of a sign-and-trade with the Timberwolves. Minnesota will get a draft pick, cash considerations and will create a trade exception once the deal is finalized, a person with knowledge of the move told AP.

The Magic, meanwhile, added Tyus Jones on a one-year deal. He joins an Orlando roster that already landed Desmond Bane from Memphis in a trade, and the Magic — who played long stretches last season without Paolo Banchero, Franz Wagner and Jalen Suggs because of injuries — should be a legit East contender this season if healthy.

It was a big night for the Jones family: Tyus Jones’ brother, Tre Jones, agreed Monday on a three-year deal to return to the Chicago Bulls.

Free agency ‘officially’ starts

The free agency period officially opened at 6 p.m. Eastern time on Monday, but in actuality, was rolling long before that.

LeBron James has already opted in to a $52.6 million deal with the Los Angeles Lakers for this coming season, the Rockets traded for Durant — not a free agency move, obviously — and the Los Angeles Clippers saw James Harden decline his option in return for a new deal and a raise. There was even a surprise addition to free agency, with Portland announcing it has bought out the contract of former No. 1 pick Deandre Ayton, allowing him to sign with any team he chooses.

And on Monday, even before the shopping window officially started, more deals: Nicolas Batum will come back to the Clippers, his agency said, on a two-year deal, while Joe Ingles agreed to return to the Minnesota Timberwolves. Deals like those could get done before the official start time because teams are allowed to negotiate with their own free agents once the NBA Finals are finished.

Other deals

In other deals confirmed by AP on Monday night:

— The Los Angeles Clippers added Brook Lopez — most recently of Milwaukee — on a two-year deal worth about $18 million.

— Veteran guard Bruce Brown returned to the Denver Nuggets, a team he helped win the 2023 NBA title.

— Center Kevon Looney agreed to a two-year deal with New Orleans, after he spent his first 10 seasons with Golden State.

— Guard Caris LeVert will sign a two-year deal worth nearly $15 million annually with the Detroit Pistons, a team that won 14 games in 2023-24 and then won 44 games to earn the No. 6 seed in the Eastern Conference this past season.

— Luka Garza joined Boston, after the Celtics lost Kornet, on a two-year, $5.5 million deal, agent Mark Bartelstein said.

Salary cap set

The NBA announced Monday that it has set the salary cap for the coming season at $154.647 million, the maximum allowed 10 percent increase over the level for this past season.

The tax level for the 2025-26 season is $187.895 million, the league said.

What’s already happened

— Julius Randle returns to the Timberwolves with a potential $100 million deal.

— Bobby Portis stays with the Bucks, keeping the popular sixth man in Milwaukee.

— Duncan Robinson terminates his contract with the Heat, though he may return.

What’s next

In very specific situations, teams can announce signings when completed. But in most situations, and this even applies to some draft-related trades (such as the one involving Durant going to Houston), teams won’t be able to announce those until at least July 6.


UK police say Maccabi Tel Aviv fans banned from Aston Villa match over hooliganism, not threats

UK police say Maccabi Tel Aviv fans banned from Aston Villa match over hooliganism, not threats
Updated 44 sec ago

UK police say Maccabi Tel Aviv fans banned from Aston Villa match over hooliganism, not threats

UK police say Maccabi Tel Aviv fans banned from Aston Villa match over hooliganism, not threats
  • West Midlands Police cite ‘significant levels of hooliganism’ among small section of supporters as reason for decision
  • Ruling based on community safety following assessment of risk posed by traveling fans, police chief says

LONDON: West Midlands Police have said their decision to ban Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters from attending the club’s Europa League fixture against Aston Villa on Thursday was based on intelligence suggesting “significant levels of hooliganism” among a section of the Israeli club’s fan base, rather than concerns about threats to Israeli fans.

Chief Superintendent Tom Joyce told Sky News that the move, which drew criticism from UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer and several MPs, was taken solely on safety grounds following an assessment of risks surrounding the match.

The decision to exclude Israeli fans was criticized by government figures, with some describing it as antisemitic and suggesting it effectively turned parts of Birmingham into a “no-go zone” for Israelis. The Home Affairs Committee subsequently requested an explanation from police regarding the decision-making process.

“We are simply trying to make decisions based on community safety, driven by the intelligence that was available to us and our assessment of the risk that was coming from admitting traveling fans,” Joyce said.

He added: “I’m aware there’s a lot of commentary around the threat to the (Maccabi) fans being the reason for the decision. To be clear, that was not the primary driver. That was a consideration. We have intelligence and information that says there is a section of Maccabi fans — not all, but a section — who engage in quite significant levels of hooliganism.”

Joyce said previous incidents involving Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters, including unrest before a match against Ajax in Amsterdam last year, informed the force’s risk assessment ahead of the Europa League fixture in Birmingham.

“What is probably quite unique in these circumstances is that, whereas often hooligans will clash with other hooligans, we’ve had examples where a section of Maccabi fans were targeting people not involved in football matches,” he said.

“It is exclusively a decision we made on the basis of the behavior of a subsection of Maccabi fans, but all the reaction that could occur obviously formed part of that as well.”

The Amsterdam fixture referenced by Joyce saw violence both before and during the game, leading to five convictions over antisemitic attacks on Israeli supporters. Dutch authorities also recorded instances of anti-Arab chanting by Maccabi fans.

Maccabi Tel Aviv’s CEO, Jack Angelides, said earlier this week that there had been “blatant falsehoods” spread about the Amsterdam incident and expressed frustration over what he described as a lack of transparency from West Midlands Police.

Responding to those remarks, Joyce said: “We are absolutely not saying that in Amsterdam the only fans causing trouble were the Maccabi fans. But what we were very clearly told is that they played a part in causing trouble, particularly a day before the match. That absolutely resulted in the following day there being attacks on Maccabi fans.”

He added: “So it wasn’t all one way, but escalating violence as a consequence is what we were trying to prevent here in Birmingham.”