Cason Wallace may be headed toward a very different payday than the one plenty of people have been expecting.
ESPN’s Tim MacMahon raised that possibility on a recent edition of The Hoop Collective Podcast, saying the Thunder guard could wind up without a rookie extension this summer and instead land in restricted free agency.
“Cason Wallace will get paid [but] I don't know that it's going to be on an extension. That might play out in restricted free agency, we'll see,” MacMahon said.
That lines up with the way Wallace has talked about his own future. He’s made it clear he loves and respects the Thunder, but he also wants what’s best for his growth and his game. If that next step comes, it could set him up for a bigger deal down the road in free agency next year if he does not sign an extension now.
The catch is obvious: staying in Oklahoma City without a new deal could keep him in the shadow of the Thunder’s established All-NBA talent, which may limit what he can command on the open market.
Wallace could still be eligible for a max contract in next summer’s restricted free agency, but MacMahon doesn’t see that as the likely outcome.
“I don't think [Wallace's free agency deal] will be max, but he'll get paid,” MacMahon said.
For the Thunder, that would be a welcome development. A deal that comes in below the max only strengthens their chances of keeping him around, and Wallace is exactly the kind of player they’d want to retain: a 22-year-old two-way piece who has already shown he can help during championship runs.
For Wallace, though, the math may not be as friendly. He has spent his first three seasons in Oklahoma City mostly in a reserve, role-player capacity, and that usage could keep his value from reaching the top of the market.
With Lu Dort opting in to the final year of his contract, the expectation is that Wallace will remain in that kind of role during a contract year.
If he reaches the 2027 free agency market, he should still draw plenty of interest. Even so, it’s difficult to imagine many teams rushing to pay max money for a player who has been used in such a limited way for much of his pro career.
That would be a win for the Thunder’s wallet. It may not be such a clean result for Wallace’s.
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The real intrigue is in the middle of the roster, where health and performance will sort out who gets trusted once the games start mattering. A few players are already on the bubble or fighting to carve out a role, and the frontcourt picture is especially unsettled as Oklahoma City weighs size, availability and fit for those last minutes. Daigneault has options, which is usually a good problem, but it also means the competition for rotation spots is about to get very real. [Read more 🡒]
