OKC Thunder news: David Nwaba, Trey Burke, Marquese Chriss waived

The Thunder have set their roster.

The Oklahoma City Thunder announced on Monday that they had waived guard Trey Burke and forwards Marquese Chriss and David Nwaba. All three players were acquired in the eight-player trade with the Houston Rockets in late September.

None of the players dealt are with either team.

The Thunder needed to make room to fit guard Isaiah Joe on their roster, and the release of the three players gives them plenty of that. Nwaba was the only player from the trade that played for the Thunder in the preseason.

With the three moves, the Thunder 17-man roster is set.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Josh Giddey, Lu Dort, Ousmane Dieng, Jalen Williams, Aleksej Pokusevski, Kenrich Williams, Tre Mann, Jeremiah Robinson-Earl, Darius Bazley, Aaron Wiggins, Jaylin Williams, Mike Muscala, Isaiah Joe, Chet Holmgren and two-way players Lindy Waters III and Eugene Omoruyi.

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Rockets trade four players to OKC for package led by Derrick Favors, future second-round draft pick

The Rockets are trading four veteran players to Oklahoma City in a deal bringing Derrick Favors, a future second-round draft pick, and more to Houston. Here’s our analysis of the move.

In a trade between rebuilding rivals in the Western Conference, Oklahoma City is trading Derrick Favors, Ty Jerome, Moe Harkless, Theo Maledon, and a 2025 second-round pick via Atlanta to the Houston Rockets for David Nwaba, Sterling Brown, Trey Burke and Marquese Chriss, as first reported by Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN.

All of the players involved have expiring contracts (see Rockets books, Thunder books), so it shouldn’t materially impact either team’s long-term salary cap planning. Oklahoma City is also sending $6.3 million in cash considerations to compensate for the substantial gap in salaries, per Jackson Gatlin of Locked on Rockets.

The Rockets had acquired Brown, Burke, and Chriss for salary matching purposes as part of the trade sending Christian Wood to Dallas in June, but none were in Houston’s future plans.

Keeping those players into the 2022-23 regular season, which begins in under three weeks, would have been difficult because the NBA’s offseason roster limit of 20 players shrinks to 15 standard contracts and two two-way deals. Thus, Rockets general manager Rafael Stone was searching to make something of those assets before the roster deadline would force many (if not all) of those players to be released.

Of the four players acquired from the Thunder, only Favors — a veteran who could figure into Houston’s backup center mix — would seem to have a plausible path to rotation minutes this season. While Houston is likely to evaluate all or most in the upcoming preseason, the roster deadline is likely to force a handful of releases.

Beyond any value from Favors, now 31 years old, as a player, the primary trade benefits would appear to be his salary and the future second-round draft pick via Atlanta. At $10.2 million, Favors could potentially help the Rockets match salary in trades closer to the 2022-23 trade deadline next February, yet he only occupies one roster spot. To reach that figure prior to this trade, the Rockets would have had to commit multiple roster spots due to the smaller annual salaries.

Moreover, because the Rockets are taking in more money than they are sending out and reducing Oklahoma City’s potential luxury tax figure, the Thunder are compensating Houston with a future second-round draft pick and cash. In effect, the Rockets are buying a future pick by absorbing a contract from a team looking to shed payroll, similar to the 2024 second-round pick they got from Brooklyn last preseason in a deal involving Sekou Doumbouya, who was subsequently waived by the Rockets.

According to Kelly Iko of The Athletic, Houston’s newly acquired 2025 second-round pick via Atlanta is protected for picks 31-40. If that doesn’t convey, the Rockets would then receive the second-best 2026 second rounder between Dallas, Oklahoma City, and Philly (all are currently owned by the Thunder).

Scroll on for recent statistics of players involved in the trade, along with further analysis and reaction to the move.

Report: Thunder send Derrick Favors to Rockets in an 8-player deal

The Oklahoma City Thunder will send Derrick Favors to the Houston Rockets in a large deal that includes eight players.

The Oklahoma City Thunder are done wheeling and dealing as they continue with training camp on their way to preparing for the 2022-23 season.

The Thunder, who are rebuilding, made a large deal Thursday night in terms of players but a minor one in terms of impact. They are sending Derrick Favors, Theo Maledon, Moe Harkless, Ty Jerome and a 2025 second-round pick to the Houston Rockets for Trey Burke, David Nwaba, Marquese Chriss and Sterling Brown.

All in all, it’s more of a deal for salary cap relief. The Thunder gain two trade exceptions, and they drop roughly $10 million below the luxury tax. OKC also gains some intriguing players to continue their rebuild.

Favors was a respected veteran who was a nice presence for the youngsters. He averaged 5.3 points and 4.7 rebounds in 39 games in the 2021-22 season as he now heads to Houston where he could be moved again.

The Thunder had recently acquired Harkless in a trade earlier in the week while Jerome and Maledon will be looking for fresh starts with the Rockets.

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Trade aggregation date arrives for Rockets and players acquired in Christian Wood deal

As of this week, the Rockets can aggregate the salaries of Boban Marjanovic, Trey Burke, Sterling Brown and Marquese Chriss (acquired for Christian Wood) in potential trades.

Of the four players acquired from Dallas in the Christian Wood trade, which became official on June 24, only veteran center Boban Marjanovic reportedly has a potential future with the Houston Rockets. Yet, none of the other three (Trey Burke, Sterling Brown or Marquese Chriss) has been released in the nearly two months since.

There’s a good reason for that. With the NBA allowing each team expanded rosters of up to 20 players in the offseason and in training camp, there’s not much incentive for Rockets general manager Rafael Stone to rush into a release, since each of those players — Marjanovic at $3.5 million, Burke at $3.4 million, Brown at $3 million and Chriss at $2.2 million — has a salary that could be used to make the potential trade matching math work on hypothetical deals elsewhere.

By comparison, if Stone released those players, any new signings to those spots would not be able to be dealt until midway through the 2022-23 season. So, there’s minimal harm — and potentially a lot of upside — to delaying official transactions as long as possible. After all, it’s not as if the Rockets need any new signings to fill out their NBA roster, since they are already well stocked with options for the 15 standard contracts and two two-way deals allotted for the season.

A key date arrives this week. Once two months pass from the original transaction, each of those players (Burke, Brown, Chriss and Marjanovic) can be traded in combination with others. Before that, each player is eligible to be dealt individually, but not in a package. Given how small each salary is by itself, the aggregation route is far more realistic, in terms of potentially being of use to the Rockets.

This week the 60-day mark since the June 24 transaction will pass. At that time, trade options open for Stone and the Rockets.

It doesn’t guarantee anything will materialize. If it doesn’t, expect the Rockets to release at least three of those four players prior to training camp and use those roster spots for players whose G League rights Houston would like to retain for the club’s Rio Grande Valley affiliate. But the fact that none of those releases has happened suggests the Rockets at least want the option for something larger in the weeks leading up to 2022-23 training camp.

The transaction window will open shortly.

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Podcast: August 2022 Rockets financial update with David Weiner

NBA salary cap guru David Weiner (@BimaThug) joins our latest podcast with a Houston Rockets financial update covering the remainder of the 2022 offseason and 2023 free agency.

David Weiner, NBA salary cap guru for ClutchFans, joins Friday’s episode of “The Lager Line” podcast with a Houston Rockets financial update covering the remainder of the 2022 offseason and 2023 free agency.

Topics discussed between Weiner and our Ben DuBose include trade aggregation options in late August involving players acquired from Dallas for Christian Wood; what Houston’s 2023 salary flexibility could bring; rotation battles to watch at 2022-23 training camp; and much more.

The podcast also dives into the stalled NBA trade market based on uncertainty involving Kevin Durant in Brooklyn and Donovan Mitchell in Utah. Once those situations are resolved, it’s possible more deals could open up around the league for teams like the Rockets.

Friday’s full episode can be listened to below. Each episode of the show is also made available via flagship radio station SportsTalk 790 in Houston, as well as to all major podcast distributors under “The Lager Line.”

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Meet the newest Rockets: Sterling Brown, Boban Marjanovic, Trey Burke, and Marquese Chriss

It’s not yet clear who will stick around, but for now, here’s a look at the four players headed from Dallas to Houston as part of the trade involving Christian Wood and a first-round draft pick.

The primary motivations for Wednesday’s trade sending Christian Wood from the Rockets to the Mavericks involved his contract situation, an apparent logjam for frontcourt minutes, and Dallas sending Houston the No. 26 overall pick in the first round of the 2022 NBA draft.

But for salary reasons, the Rockets did receive four players as well. And because it’s the offseason, which is when the NBA allows teams to have up to 20 players on each roster (up from 15 standard contracts during the regular season), Houston has time to decide its next move(s).

Clearly, no one in the group of Sterling Brown, Boban Marjanovic, Trey Burke, and Marquese Chriss is a foundational piece. Yet, each has had a spot in an NBA rotation before. In the case of Chriss (2018-19) and Brown (2020-21), each has played a previous season in Houston, as well.

Like Wood, none of those players has a contract beyond 2022-23. Thus, Houston’s foreseeable salary cap situation — above the cap this 2022 offseason, and potentially well below it in 2023 — is unchanged.

Time will tell as to whether each player is rerouted in a future offseason trade, waived, or kept as part of the 2022-23 roster in Houston. For now, here’s a look at what each player could have to offer.

Everything we know about Marquese Chriss confronting Bismack Biyombo in the tunnel after Game 5 ejections

This escalated!

Oh boy. We got ourselves an old fashioned tunnel confrontation in the NBA playoffs.

Game 5 of the Phoenix Suns’ Western Semifinals against the Dallas Mavericks was nearly over when the Mavs’ Marquese Chriss fouled Bismack Biyombo hard while the Phoenix big man was trying to throw down a last-second dunk in a blowout.

Maybe there was some “unwritten rules” thing Chriss objected to, but it was unnecessary that late. And both players got in each other’s faces, resulting in ejections.

But Chriss jogged into the tunnel where the Suns’ locker room was. And, well, let’s go from there about everything we know:

Explaining the NBA’s hardship exception and the free agents who signed as replacement players

Explaining what hardship exceptions and replacement players mean as COVID-19 protocols hit the NBA.

As the omicron variant of COVID-19 continues to spread, the NBA has required a large share of “replacement players” to fill in for the players who are in health and safety protocols. And so far, more than 100 players have reportedly entered the league’s health and safety protocols so far this month, per ESPN’s Baxter Holmes.

But how exactly do the “replacement players” work?

Essentially, the NBA’s hardship exception allows teams to exceed the 15-man roster limit if more than three players on the roster are each going to miss extended time due to illness or injury. Typically, teams weren’t allowed to apply for the hardship exception before Jan. 5.

But starting last season, the league changed the policy to allow earlier exceptions. And as of earlier this week, effective Dec. 19 until Jan. 19, the NBA is allowing teams to sign one replacement player for each player on their roster who tests positive for COVID-19.

While there are some big names (e.g. Isaiah Thomas, Lance Stephenson, CJ Miles) who have signed as replacement players, there are lots of promising young NBA hopefuls who are hoping to use this opportunity as a chance to stick around the league.

Not all of the players below were signed through hardship exceptions and some transactions (e.g. DeMarcus Cousins and Wesley Matthews to the Milwaukee Bucks) may have happened anyway during a normal season.

But below, based on the NBA’s transaction log and reporting from the league’s top insiders, you can find a live tracker of all the players who have signed new deals with NBA teams over the course of the past month.

Report: Dallas Mavericks signing former Warriors big Marquese Chriss

Former Golden State Warriors big Marquese Chriss is reportedly signing with the Dallas Mavericks.

A former member of the Golden State Warriors has found a new home.

According to Chris Haynes of Yahoo! Sports, former Warriors big Marquese Chriss is signing with the Dallas Mavericks.

The Mavs will add Chriss and Theo Pinson as replacement players for Reggie Bullock and Josh Green with the league’s new COVID-19 hardship exception, per Tim MacMahon of ESPN.

Via @espn_macmahon on Twitter:

If players on a roster test positive for COVID-19, teams will be required to sign a player with the new 10-day hardship exception.

During his 61 game stint with the Warriors, Chriss quickly became a fan favorite in the Bay Area. 

The former No. 8 overall pick from the 2016 NBA draft averaged a career-best 9.2 points on 53.9% shooting from the field with 6.2 rebounds and 1.9 assists in 20 minutes per game. Unfortunately, his time with the Warriors came to an end after Chriss broke his leg at the start of the 2020-21 season.

Prior to joining Golden State, Chriss bounced around the league with stops in Phoenix, Houston and Cleveland. Chriss spent the 2021 training camp with the Portland Trail Blazers.

With five seasons under his belt in the NBA, Chriss is still only 24-years-old. The Washington Huskies product will join fellow former Warrior Willie Cauley-Stein with the Mavericks.

This post originally appeared on Warriors Wire! Follow us on Facebook! 

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Report: Former Warrior Marquese Chriss agrees to non-guaranteed deal with Portland Trail Blazers

After spending 61 games with the Warriors, Marquese Chriss has reportedly agreed to a non-guaranteed contract with the Trail Blazers.

After bouncing around the NBA through his first four seasons in the association, the emergence of Marquese Chriss was a highlight of the Golden State Warriors 2019-20 campaign.

While the team struggles to produce wins due to injuries to Steph Curry and Klay Thompson, Chriss quickly developed into a key piece of Golden State’s new-look rotation.

Following an invite to Golden State’s 2019 training camp, the former lottery pick quickly developed into one of the better stories of Golden State’s 2019-20 season. The Washington Huskies product turned a two-way contract into a two-year deal with the Warriors.

Chriss registered 21 starts for the Warriors in 2019-20, averaging 9.3 points on 54.5% shooting from the field with 6.2 rebounds and 1.9 assists per game. Heading into the 2020-21 season, Chriss was expected to play a role in Golden State’s frontcourt alongside Kevon Looney and rookie James Wiseman.

However, a broken leg ended his 2020-21 run after two games. At the 2021 trade deadline, the Warriors traded Chriss to the San Antonio Spurs.

Before the 2021-22 season, Chriss is reportedly headed back to the Pacific Northwest. According to Shams Charania of The Athletic, the former Warriors big man has agreed to a non-guaranteed deal with the Portland Trail Blazers.

Via @ShamsCharania on Twitter:

Chriss will compete with players like Cody Zeller, Jusuf Nurkic, Larry Nance Jr. and Robert Covington for a spot in Portland’s frontcourt.

Since being drafted by the Phoenix Suns with the No. 8 overall pick in the 2016 NBA draft, the 24-year-old has averaged eight points on 45.5% shooting from the floor with 4.9 rebounds and 1.1 assists per contest.

 This post originally appeared on Warriors Wire! Follow us on Facebook! 

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