Is Lakers guard D’Angelo Russell an underrated free agent?

Lakers guard D’Angelo Russell free agency preview and why he’s underrated amid a career year from HoopsHype’s NBA Insider Michael Scotto.

Los Angeles Lakers guard D’Angelo Russell is playing the best basketball of his career in his prime, and it couldn’t have come at a better time.

This season, Russell has shot more efficiently than his All-Star campaign in Brooklyn, shooting 42.3 percent from 3-point range, which ranks third among players ranked in the NBA’s Top 25 in made threes per game.

Since Russell’s son, Riley, was born on September 24, 2022, Russell has averaged 18.0 points on 46.6 percent shooting from the field and 40.9 percent from 3-point range, 6.3 assists, and 3.0 rebounds with a plus-215 rating in 137 games.

According to Russell, the birth of his son helped him know his purpose in every game.

“Everything I do, I’d see his face,” Russell told HoopsHype. “It’s either this or that. What are you going to do? It makes my decision easy when it comes to anything. It does have a change and effect on you. It puts you in this state of mind that it’s mine or I’ll die for it. It’s been good.”

Lachlan Cunningham/Getty Images

Russell has an upcoming decision on his $18.69 million player option for the 2024-25 season and is considered one of the top free agents on the market should he decline to exercise his player option and become an unrestricted free agent.

“It’s definitely pressure,” Russell told HoopsHype when asked what it’s like playing in a potential contract season. “It’s something that can eat a lot of people up in the league. A lot of people can be too high at times and too low at times, which causes an emotional roller coaster through the ups and downs of the season. For me, I wanted to control that. I wanted to stay sane and stay even-keeled through the ups and the downs.”

While thriving under the pressure of a contract season, Russell could be of interest to several teams looking for point guard help during free agency this summer.

What’s next for Klay Thompson and Warriors in free agency? “He’s a Warrior for life no matter what”

Previewing 2024 NBA free agency for Klay Thompson and Golden State Warriors, with reporting from HoopsHype Senior NBA Insider Michael Scotto.

With Stephen Curry, Draymond Green, and coach Steve Kerr signed through the 2025-26 season, will Klay Thompson be the next Warriors cornerstone piece to get a new deal in free agency this summer?

Thompson, a five-time All-Star before suffering a torn ACL and Achilles that caused him to miss two and a half seasons, is among the top free agents available this summer.

With that in mind, HoopsHype asked eight NBA executives for their free agent projections for Thompson. Three executives believed Thompson would get $18-20 million annually, and the other five predicted he’d get $20-25 million annually. Four executives believed Golden State would ideally try to align Thompson with his fellow “Splash Brother,” Curry, on a two-year deal. Green, meanwhile, has a player option for the 2026-27 season.

Ranking NBA teams by their valuations

Check out Sportico’s NBA team valuations for the 2023-24 season.

The sports world continues to see money flooding into it. That is particularly the case with the NBA, which has seen team valuations skyrocket over recent years.

The most valuable franchise in the NBA right now, according to Sportico, is the Golden State Warriors. Meanwhile, the Los Angeles Lakers are merely just third on the list, behind the New York Knicks, who rank second.

Below, check out Sportico’s NBA team valuations for the 2023-24 season:

Nets Rumors: Coach Candidates, Sean Marks’ Future, Mikal Bridges, Nic Claxton NBA Free Agency, Ben Simmons, Cam Thomas

Reporting on potential Brooklyn Nets coaching candidates, the future of GM Sean Marks, Nic Claxton’s free agency, and what’s next for Mikal Bridges, Ben Simmons, and Cam Thomas with New York Post writer Brian Lewis and HoopsHype’s Michael Scotto on the latest episode of The HoopsHype Podcast.

HoopsHype’s Michael Scotto and New York Post Brooklyn Nets beat writer Brian Lewis report on potential Brooklyn Nets coaching candidates, the future of GM Sean Marks, Nic Claxton’s free agency, and what’s next for Mikal Bridges, Ben Simmons, and Cam Thomas on the latest episode of The HoopsHype Podcast.

For more interviews with players, coaches, and media members, be sure to like and subscribe to the HoopsHype podcast on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and anywhere else you listen to podcasts. Listen to the podcast above or check out some snippets of the conversation in a transcribed version below.

At 39 years old, LeBron James is still the market-maker

The history-making longevity of L.A. Lakers superstar LeBron James has been one of the storylines of the 2023-24 NBA campaign. In his 21st year, James is still in the vicinity of his peak years as a player, averaging 24.8 points, 7.8 assists and 7.2 …

The history-making longevity of L.A. Lakers superstar LeBron James has been one of the storylines of the 2023-24 NBA campaign. In his 21st year, James is still in the vicinity of his peak years as a player, averaging 24.8 points, 7.8 assists and 7.2 rebounds per game, while the only other players to have played that long (Vince Carter, Robert Parish, Dirk Nowitzki, Kevin Garnett and Kevin Willis) were shadows of their former selves by the same stage.

On the court, James is still having an impact unlike anyone else before him. And it turns out that this may be the case off the court, too.

Last week, ESPN reported that at the trade deadline, the Golden State Warriors threw a Hail Mary attempt and reached out to the ownership of James’s team, the Los Angeles Lakers, about possibly trading for him. And while it clearly did not work – the Lakers, simply, had no reason to engage in any such discussion – the existence of the report speaks to the continued importance of LeBron in the transaction market.

Paying historically high levels of salary for what still might not be a playoff team, the Warriors sought some sort of rejuvenation. The Chris Paul trade in the offseason had not kept the title window open as intended, and, with the trio of Stephen Curry/Klay Thompson/Draymond Green in the final quarter of their careers, they needed to go big if they were going to make a deal at all.

A move for James, though, would have been bigger even than most optimists would have envisaged. The fact that they felt it was a phone call they were both willing and able to make speaks to a perception, real or not, that James might have been available.

NBA buyout season: The most successful pickups of the century

HoopsHype ranks the best buyout player signings in this century of NBA history.

Following every trade deadline, many veterans are bought out and subsequently join teams with championship aspirations. The buyout market can be important for teams in need of another piece to make a run in the playoffs.

Although the new Collective Bargaining Agreement poses challenges for luxury tax teams, expect several veterans to secure buyouts and sign with contenders soon.

Let’s review the most impactful buyout signings of this century.

2024 NBA buyout season: Who are the candidates?

If your team was not willing or able to complete a deal in time for trade deadline, the good news is that the trade deadline is not a roster deadline. Waivings, signings and waiver claims can be made up to and including the last day of the regular …

If your team was not willing or able to complete a deal in time for trade deadline, the good news is that the trade deadline is not a roster deadline. Waivings, signings and waiver claims can be made up to and including the last day of the regular season, and some of the players who have been traded as financial filler in deals – or who were not dealt when they were expected to be – might now be bought out of their incumbent contracts and hitting the free agency market in the springtime. Indeed, some already have been.

This is an annual cycle, and in the past, it has made for some significant moves. A particularly strong recent example was the case of Markieff Morris, who posted 19 points in Game 3 of the 2020 NBA Finals having been bought out by the Detroit Pistons only a few weeks prior, with others such as Boris Diaw (San Antonio, 2012), Peja Stojakovic (Dallas Mavericks, 2011) and the combination of Ersan Ilyasova and Marco Belinelli (Philadelphia 76ers, 2018) also being impactful players in their short stays.

Developments in the Collective Bargaining Agreement have tempered the potential impact slightly. Galvanized by the absurdity of the Boston Celtics trading Gary Payton in 2005 only to re-sign him a week later, the 2005 CBA saw a rule implemented which ensured that a player could not return to the team that traded him for a period of 30 days; however, after the Cleveland Cavaliers salary-dumped Zydrunas Ilgauskas in 2010 only to immediately re-sign him after that period, the 2011 CBA modified the rule to make it so that a cannot reacquire a player it traded away during the same season.

In the latest CBA, prohibitions go even further. Teams that are above the first tax apron cannot sign players whose previous salary was more than the amount of the Non-Taxpayer MLE or $12,405,000, which puts the kybosh on many of the moves that fans of the Boston Celtics, Denver Nuggets, Golden State Warriors, L.A. Clippers, Miami Heat, Milwaukee Bucks and Phoenix Suns may be hoping for. The rich can only get slightly richer, and the player’s current salaries are important now in a way they were not before.

Nevertheless, there are always available players, and always interested teams. Here are some of the players expected to be in the buyout market over the coming weeks.

NBA Depth Charts: The 2023-24 rotations

Who plays, who might, and who’s out tonight? Those are the questions millions of fans (and some coaches) ask every day before the games begin. To help them, we have our Depth Charts updated to the minute, with the latest moves involving every one of …

Who plays, who might, and who’s out tonight? Those are the questions millions of fans (and some coaches) ask every day before the games begin. To help them, we have our Depth Charts updated to the minute, with the latest moves involving every one of the NBA rosters.

Key: • Out / • Two-way contract

NBA salaries: All the 2023-24 contracts team-by-team

Ranging from league superstars to two-way players, here are the full salaries for 2023-24 in just one page. (You can come back often as this will be constantly updated). Key: • Player Option / • Team Option / • Partially guaranteed / • …

Ranging from league superstars to two-way players, here are the full salaries for 2023-24 in just one page. (You can come back often as this will be constantly updated).

Key: • Player Option / Team Option / • Partially guaranteed / • Non-guaranteed / • Two-way contract / • Expiring contact / • Cap Hold