
2026. 7. 1. · 00:18
NBA Daily Digest: Ja to Portland, free agency opens, Warriors keep Porziņģis
No NBA games were scheduled for June 30, so today’s digest focuses on Portland acquiring Ja Morant, Golden State keeping Kristaps Porziņģis, Utah retaining Jusuf Nurkić, and the free-agency and Summer League dates now in view.
The NBA had no games on the June 30 board, so the day’s meaningful movement came from roster decisions. Portland made the loudest move by landing Memphis Grizzlies point guard Ja Morant, while several playoff teams used the hours before free-agency negotiations to stabilize role players and frontcourt pieces.
Scoreboard and postseason status
| Item | Status | Source |
|---|---|---|
| June 30 NBA games | No games scheduled | ESPN scoreboard |
| NBA.com games page | No games scheduled | NBA.com games page |
| Last completed NBA Finals result | New York Knicks beat San Antonio Spurs 4-1; Game 5 finished Knicks 94, Spurs 90 | ESPN Finals scoreboard item |
That leaves the league in the short offseason gap between the Finals, the Draft and the start of the free-agency negotiation window. NBA.com’s calendar lists June 30 at 6 p.m. ET as the time teams may begin negotiating with outside free agents, which is July 1 at 6:00 a.m. in the display timezone for this channel. 1 Contracts may be signed beginning July 6 at 12:01 p.m. ET, or July 7 at 12:01 a.m. in the display timezone. 1
Lead move: Portland takes the Ja Morant swing
The Trail Blazers acquired Memphis Grizzlies point guard Ja Morant in exchange for forwards Jerami Grant and Kris Murray. 2 NBA.com’s trade tracker lists the same return: Portland receives Morant; Memphis receives Grant and Murray. 3
For Portland, this is a high-variance backcourt bet. Morant averaged 19.5 points and 8.1 assists in 20 games last season, while his broader career résumé still includes a Rookie of the Year award, two All-Star selections and a career scoring average of 22.4 points. 2 The roster fit is less clean than the talent upgrade: NBA.com notes that Morant joins a current guard group that also includes Jrue Holiday, Damian Lillard and Scoot Henderson. 2
For Memphis, the move closes another chapter of the 56-win core from 2021-22. NBA.com notes that Dillon Brooks, Desmond Bane, Jaren Jackson Jr. and now Morant have all moved on from that group. 2
Retention board: Warriors, Jazz, Spurs, Pistons and Thunder
| Team | Move | Why it matters | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Golden State Warriors | Center Kristaps Porziņģis agreed to return on a two-year, $40 million deal, with the second year reported as a player option. | Keeps a 7-foot-2 floor-spacing big next to Golden State’s perimeter core. | NBA.com |
| Utah Jazz | Center Jusuf Nurkić intends to return on a two-year, $22 million deal. | Utah keeps a veteran center who averaged 10.9 points, 10.2 rebounds, 4.8 assists and 1.3 steals before nasal surgery ended his season. | NBA.com |
| San Antonio Spurs | Forward Harrison Barnes intends to re-sign for one year and $8 million. | The Spurs retain a veteran wing after a Finals run; Barnes averaged 9.9 points in 26 minutes last season. | NBA.com |
| Detroit Pistons | Swingman Kevin Huerter plans to sign a three-year, $27 million deal. | Detroit keeps a career 11.4-point scorer and shooting piece after acquiring him at last year’s deadline. | NBA.com |
| Oklahoma City Thunder | The Thunder exercised their team option on wing Luguentz Dort. | Oklahoma City keeps an All-Defensive First Team-caliber defender in its championship core. | NBA.com |

The common thread is timing. These are not all star-level moves, but they remove uncertainty before the market fully opens. Golden State keeps Porziņģis’ spacing. Utah keeps Nurkić’s passing and rebounding. San Antonio keeps Barnes’ wing depth after reaching the Finals. Detroit keeps Huerter’s shooting. Oklahoma City keeps Dort’s point-of-attack defense.
Injury and availability watch
There are no active NBA games today, so there is no same-day availability report to track. The injury context that matters for this digest is tied to roster decisions:
| Player | Team / position | Current roster note | Injury context | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jusuf Nurkić | Utah Jazz center | Reported two-year return to Utah | Nasal surgery ended his 2025-26 season after 41 games. | NBA.com |
| Zach LaVine | Sacramento Kings guard | Previously reported to be picking up his $49 million player option | His 2025-26 season ended before the All-Star break after surgery on a tendon injury in his right hand. | ESPN |
| Fred VanVleet | Houston Rockets guard | Previously reported to be exercising his $25 million player option | He missed the entire 2025-26 season after a torn right ACL during an unofficial team minicamp. | ESPN |
The market context is simple: teams are pricing returning players with health history into short, controlled commitments. Nurkić gets two years below the top of the center market; Barnes gets one year; LaVine and VanVleet stay on existing option decisions rather than testing a fresh open-market bidding process.
What’s next on the calendar
| Date in display timezone | Event | Notes | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| July 1, 6:00 a.m. | Free-agency negotiations open | Teams may begin negotiating with all other upcoming free agents. | NBA key dates |
| July 4-7 | California Classic Summer League | Warriors host July 3, 5-6 ET; Kings host July 4-6 ET. | NBA California Classic schedule |
| July 5, 7-8 | Salt Lake City Summer League | Jazz, Hawks, Grizzlies and Thunder are listed for the Salt Lake City event. | NBA key dates |
| July 7, 12:01 a.m. | Free-agent signings may begin | Agreements can become contracts after the moratorium. | NBA key dates |
| July 9-19 | NBA Summer League in Las Vegas | All 30 teams are scheduled for the Las Vegas event. | NBA Summer League schedule |
The next digest should have a cleaner transaction split: reports will keep coming in after negotiations open, but signings cannot become official until the July 7 signing window in the display timezone.

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