Larry Nance Jr. is heading to a division rival, agreeing Wednesday to a one-year, $4 million deal with the Indiana Pacers, according to Shams Charania.
Indiana is bringing in Nance as a reserve big, the kind of veteran who can give a team useful minutes and steady the bench. For a Pacers group trying to climb back into the Eastern Conference mix, that’s the role he’s expected to fill.
For Cleveland, the return never matched the promise. The Cavaliers signed Nance last offseason with the idea that his ability to handle spots from the three through small-ball five would give them inexpensive, flexible front-court depth. On a second-apron roster, that kind of value looked like a clean win.
It just didn’t play out that way.
Nance appeared in only 35 games for the Cavaliers, with injuries and DNPs keeping him from ever settling into a consistent rhythm. Health has been part of the story for him over the past few seasons, and this was not the kind of run either side likely imagined when he came back to Cleveland. The hope was that he’d be a real regular-season piece and maybe even the third big in the playoffs if things broke right.
Even without much impact on the floor, Nance still mattered around the team. His presence in the locker room and in the community stood out, especially as Cleveland cycled through plenty of roster changes around the trade deadline.
There’s still a sense that Nance will eventually retire as a Cavalier. But his last real contract there ending in disappointment is a tough finish. Now the Pacers will try to get him healthy and back to being the kind of productive bench big he can be.
In Other News...
Larry Nance Jrs Cleveland Return Ended With A Brutal Twist
Larry Nance Jr.s latest move closes the book on a Cleveland homecoming that never quite found its footing. The Akron native and veteran forward had returned to the Cavaliers with plenty of familiarity and goodwill, but his time back in Northeast Ohio was limited, with his role shrinking over the course of a season that never gave him much room to matter.
Now he is moving on again, taking a one-year deal elsewhere and adding another stop to a career that has already wound through several franchises. For Cleveland, it is another reminder that the roster churn around the edges has been constant this offseason, and for Nance, it leaves one more familiar chapter behind without the kind of ending either side probably hoped for. [Read more 🡒]
Lakers Just Closed The Book On A Former Cavs Lottery Pick
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For Cleveland fans, the note tucked inside the paperwork was a reminder of how far one former lottery pick has traveled since his days with the Cavaliers. He last surfaced with Los Angeles in 2020 and was part of that bubble title run, and now his Lakers chapter has been closed in the most administrative way possible, with the timing of the move underscoring just how thoroughly the franchise is resetting its books. [Read more 🡒]
Cavs May Already Have Their Answer To A Costly Dean Wade Loss
Dean Wades offseason departure leaves a real gap for Cleveland, because his value was never about volume scoring so much as the little things that keep a lineup balanced. He gave the Cavaliers a rare mix of defensive versatility and enough shooting to keep the floor open, the kind of skill set that can quietly hold a rotation together when the matchups get tricky.
Jaylon Tyson is already the name to watch as the Cavs look for a way to absorb that loss, and the appeal is obvious. In limited run, he has flashed enough offensive feel and defensive activity to suggest there is something there, but the next step is straightforward: he needs more minutes to turn those hints into something dependable. [Read more 🡒]
