The NBA’s new economic order is squeezing the middle, and Markieff Morris says the league is feeling it in real time.
During an appearance on The Big Podcast with Shaq, the former NBA forward pointed to the way massive contracts at the top are reshaping rosters and thinning out the rest of the payroll.
“I wish they could disperse it out a little bit better than what that is,” Morris said. “‘Cause you’re gonna see teams where OKC you going to have three players making 50, 50, 50… I mean, it’s more players on the team that’s giving stuff to help to win.
You going to see that, and you going to see the big drop off of 8, 7, 3. So in that aspect, I think it should be more mixed.”
The Oklahoma City Thunder fit the example Morris was talking about. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Jalen Williams, and Chet Holmgren are on max contracts, while the rest of the roster has to be built around rookie deals and cheaper contracts. The Thunder also have players in that middle range in Alex Caruso, Isaiah Hartenstein, and Lu Dort, though there is talk that Dort may need to be traded if the team is going to avoid becoming a second apron team.
That apron pressure is already changing how Oklahoma City operates. The Thunder have moved on from Aaron Wiggins and Isaiah Joe for second-round picks because keeping them around became too expensive in this new setup.
The current Collective Bargaining Agreement, which took effect in 2023, has drawn plenty of criticism from the National Basketball Players Association for exactly that reason. Teams are being pushed to make decisions based less on basketball and more on the punishment attached to spending too much for too long.
Once a team crosses into second apron territory, the penalties stack up fast: frozen draft picks, no salary aggregation in trades, no midlevel exception, and more. The Cleveland Cavaliers were the only second-apron team last season, and the Thunder are the only one projected for next season. Around the league, teams are steering clear of that line.
Adam Lefkoe noted on the show that the top-end stars will still get paid no matter what. Morris didn’t argue that point.
The biggest names already locked in their money under the previous CBA, and that hasn’t changed here. Golden State Warriors star Stephen Curry is set to be the highest-paid player in 2026-27 at $62.6 million.
Lefkoe said he was disappointed to see the middle class fading out, and Morris agreed that it is basically disappearing.
That frustration has also shown up elsewhere. On Friday, Milwaukee Bucks forward Kyle Kuzma blasted the current CBA on X, saying it was sold as parity but that the aprons are starting to act like a hard cap.
“Teams are no longer making pure basketball decisions,” Kuzma wrote. “They’re making fear-based apron decisions. That means good players get squeezed, homegrown cores get broken up, fan-favorite teams lose their identity, and the overall product loses some of the nostalgia and continuity that made people fall in love with the NBA in the first place.”
Kuzma sees the next CBA as a make-or-break moment for the players and believes the owners and league continue to outmaneuver them. For now, though, the current deal runs through the end of the 2029-30 season, which means this is the system teams and players are stuck with for a while.
In Other News...
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Thomas Sorber, meanwhile, has quietly put himself in the conversation for a roster spot if he gets to camp fully healthy. The draft slotting says Mara should have the edge, but Sorbers prior experience and practice time could make this a real competition for the fourth big-man job, and Oklahoma City has reason to watch closely as both players try to carve out a place. [Read more 🡒]
Thunder Just Made A Lu Dort Call That Says Plenty
The Thunders decision to pick up Lu Dorts club option for the 2026-27 season says plenty about where this roster stands right now. Oklahoma City clearly values the kind of player Dort has become for them, but the move also reflects a practical reality: he looks like the best answer for the teams final roster spot when the alternatives are thin and the market does not offer much help.
For a club trying to balance talent, flexibility and the realities of the cap, this is a meaningful choice. Keeping Dort points to a willingness to live in second-apron territory for the time being, even if that posture could change later. If the Thunder ever decide to move him, it would likely say more about a shift in their cap approach than about Dort himself. [Read more 🡒]
Thunder Suddenly Face One Big Question About Their Title Chances
The Thunder spent the offseason making a few subtle but meaningful tweaks around the edges, dealing Isaiah Joe and Aaron Wiggins for second-round picks and bringing in first-round prospects Aday Mara and Bennett Stirtz. Even with those moves, the bigger picture in Oklahoma City still points to continuity, with Isaiah Hartenstein and Luguentz Dort back in place as the club tries to stay firmly in the Western Conference contender mix.
What makes the conversation more interesting is how the rest of the West is shifting around them. San Antonio and the reigning champion New York Knicks are being cast as the primary threats in the title race, which means Oklahoma City cannot just rely on internal growth to keep pace. The Thunder still profile as one of the teams with the best path to another championship, but the margin for error is getting thinner. [Read more 🡒]
