Pacers Roster Squeeze Just Forced A Move Fans Saw Coming

The Indiana Pacers shake up their roster by swapping out Micah Potter for seasoned forward Larry Nance Jr., enhancing both on-court potential and financial strategy.

The Pacers made room for Larry Nance Jr. by moving on from Micah Potter, and the roster shuffle also nudged Indiana a little farther from the first apron.

ESPN’s Shams Charania first reported Wednesday afternoon that Indiana had agreed to terms with the 11-year veteran. Because the Pacers are hard-capped at the first apron, they needed to clear salary to make the signing work. Potter’s $2.8 million non-guaranteed contract was waived, a league source confirmed, and the move was made official in the early evening of July 8.

Nance will make $3.88 million on his one-year deal next season, but Indiana will only count $2.45 million against its books. That’s because of the NBA’s veterans minimum exception, which allows teams to pay the salary equivalent of a two-year veteran. The end result: the Pacers save $400,000 and create a little more breathing room below the first apron.

Tony East of Forbes and Circle City Spin reported that Kelly Oubre Jr.’s contract would be just above $8.0 million this upcoming season. With Nance’s $2.45 million hit included, Indiana is now $2.24 million away from the first apron, which is about $600,000 more space than had originally been reported.

The Pacers are still carrying 14 players under contract for next season, something they have not typically done in past years. Indiana has usually entered the regular season with 15 players, and that could still be the plan. Third-year wing Johnny Furphy remains out while rehabbing the torn ACL he suffered at the start of February in Toronto, Canada.

The extra room created by swapping Potter for Nance also gives Indiana some flexibility on the minimum market. The Pacers could sign a player with zero or one year of experience to a veteran minimum deal and remain under the first apron, but a player with three years of experience would cost too much for the space they have available.

There’s also a possible path involving the two-way logjam. Indiana currently has Taelon Peter, Jalen Slawson, Braden Smith, and Ethan Thompson in those spots, and it would make sense for the Pacers to promote Peter to a standard non-guaranteed contract. His salary would be $2.16 million this season, which would free up the two-way spots for the other three.

According to Spotrac’s Free Agency List, Slawson and Thompson have two years of NBA service, which would make them ineligible for that type of move. Some listings, though, show Thompson with only one year of service.

The Nance addition also leaves Indiana about $5.8 million over the luxury tax line. If the Pacers want to get below the tax by the NBA Trade Deadline, they could move Jarace Walker’s expiring $8.4 million contract and stay under.

For a franchise that has not paid the tax in over twenty seasons, that possibility matters. Indiana’s books are also set up to be very close to the tax in the 2027-28 season, so the Pacers may choose not to pay it this year in order to avoid the repeater tax penalty.

In Other News...

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The Pacers have already added one more piece to the offseason puzzle with an agreement on a two-year deal for Kelly Oubre Jr., even if the move has not been officially announced yet. It is the kind of addition that keeps Indiana in the middle of the East conversation, and it also helps explain why the fan base is suddenly looking at the rest of the market with a little more curiosity.

DeMar DeRozans name has surfaced as a possible next swing after his contract buyout with Sacramento, where he just finished a season averaging 18.4 points per game. The fit is easy to see for a team trying to stay balanced and competitive, but for now the buzz is more about the idea than the likelihood, which is why this one has become more of a debate than a prediction. [Read more 🡒]

Pacers Officially Sign Kelly Oubre Jr. To Bolster Wing Depth

The Pacers officially added Kelly Oubre Jr. on July 8, giving the roster another proven wing after a summer that thinned that part of the rotation. Indiana did not disclose the contract terms, per team policy, but reporting has pegged the deal at two years and about $16.5 million, fully guaranteed, which signals a meaningful commitment to a player who should help absorb some of the minutes on the perimeter.

Oubre arrives with a clear lane to matter right away, especially with the team looking for wing depth after the Bennedict Mathurin trade, the decision not to re-sign Kobe Brown and Johnny Furphys ACL injury. Last season, he gave Philadelphia steady production and enough two-way activity to fit a bench role, and the Pacers are expected to use him as a sixth-man type behind their starting wings. [Read more 🡒]