The Indiana Pacers have managed to stay out of the financial trap that has already caught up with other contenders.
Right now, Tyrese Haliburton and Pascal Siakam account for just under 60% of the cap, but Indiana does not have to deal with either of their extensions until 2028-29. That gives the Pacers breathing room that teams like the Cleveland Cavaliers and Boston Celtics no longer enjoy.
Cleveland recently locked up Donovan Mitchell on a four-year, $273 million extension that will pay him $75.5 million in the final season. Boston, meanwhile, moved on from Jaylen Brown in part because of the size of his cap hit. Stevens pointed to the same issue when explaining the logic behind that decision, noting that Jayson Tatum and Brown combined to take up 70% of the cap.
That kind of payroll squeeze makes life difficult under the current CBA, especially when two players are eating such a massive chunk of the roster budget. It leaves less room to build, less room to adjust, and less room to absorb the penalties that come with crossing into the second apron.
The Cavaliers are already in that danger zone. They also have Evan Mobley on a max contract, and he is expected to get another one after this deal runs out. With Cleveland already well above the second apron, the consequences are only going to get heavier over the next few years.
Boston has been working its way back toward normal after operating as a second-apron team when it won the 2024 title. Stevens clearly did not see a setup with two players taking 70% of the cap as a sustainable path, especially with the roster he had in place.
Indiana, at least for now, is in a much cleaner spot. Haliburton and Siakam still take up a big piece of the cap, but neither is staring down an extension right away. And neither is on a deal as expensive as Brown’s or Mitchell’s new contract.
Haliburton is almost certain to land another max deal. Siakam’s next one is less certain. By the time that first season arrives, he will be 34, and he may not be worth max money at that stage.
For the Pacers, that’s the key advantage: they have built themselves into a team that can chase a title without immediately running into the same cap headaches that have complicated things for Boston and Cleveland.
In Other News...
Pacers Suddenly Face A Real DeMar DeRozan Dilemma
DeMar DeRozans sudden availability after Sacramento waived him on July 6 has created a fresh layer of offseason intrigue for teams looking for a proven scorer on a short-term deal, and Indiana is right there in the conversation. The Pacers have been linked to the idea of bringing in the veteran wing on a minimum salary, which would give them another established creator without a long-term commitment, while also opening the door to a reunion with Pascal Siakam.
The fit, though, is not as simple as the name value suggests. Indiana does not have cap space at the moment, so it would need to clear room to make a move work, and adding DeRozan would likely force a tough roster decision elsewhere. For a team trying to balance present-day competitiveness with its younger pieces, the question is whether a player of DeRozans profile is worth the squeeze if it means reshaping the back end of the roster to get him in the building. [Read more 🡒]
Pacers Talent Is Turning Heads On The International Stage
Ivica Zubac has been a steady presence for Croatia, and his latest outing in a win over Israel only added to that reputation. The former Pacers center was efficient around the rim, controlled the glass and helped set the tone in a game Croatia handled well, while Andrew Nembhard continued to show the kind of poise Canada has come to expect from him in its victory over Jamaica.
There was more Pacers-adjacent production elsewhere on the international stage, too, with Ethan Thompson giving Puerto Rico a lift in its win over the Bahamas. For Indiana fans, it is another reminder that several familiar names are getting meaningful reps in high-leverage settings, and the broader question is how much of that momentum carries back once the international window closes. [Read more 🡒]
