Nikola Vucevic is back in Orlando, and the Magic wasted little time making the move official once free agency opened on June 30 at 6 p.m. ET. The veteran center agreed to a one-year, $3.9 million deal, giving the team a familiar face to help shape what comes next.
The signing came during a busy stretch for Orlando. The front office also re-signed Jevon Carter to a one-year deal and brought back Jonathan Isaac after waiving him on June 27.
On the other side of the ledger, Moe Wagner departed for a two-year, $19 million deal with the Brooklyn Nets. With a first-apron payroll limiting flexibility, the Magic still managed to make meaningful moves instead of sitting out the market.
Vucevic, 35, returns after a 2025-26 season in which he averaged 15.1 points, 8.4 rebounds and 3.3 assists while shooting 36.9 percent from three-point range. He remains one of the league’s most productive bigs, ranking second among active NBA players in career double-doubles, behind only LeBron James.
The fit in Orlando is about more than numbers. Vucevic said he has not spent much time thinking about how this chapter might end, but he does see the possibility of finishing his career in a place that already means a great deal to him.
"I haven't really thought about it much. Hopefully, you know, if things work out well, and you know the team plays well, I play well, and you know, I can stay in Orlando for a few years, that'd be great... if I can stay there and we can have some good success together, that obviously that'd be a great way for me to end it, but it's not something that's too much on my mind yet...
I think I can still play at a high level, you know. I think it'll be a different role for me, you know, adjusting from going to starter and playing major minutes to probably playing less minutes and coming off the bench, and that's something that I went through in Boston."
That role shift matters here. Orlando is bringing him in with the expectation that he can anchor the bench and provide a steady veteran presence for a young roster that has already logged meaningful postseason minutes, even if those runs ended in first-round exits.
Vucevic made clear that he sees the bigger picture, too. For him, this return is tied to the team’s ceiling and the chance to finally push past that opening round barrier.
"It would mean a lot. It is also one of the reasons I came back.
I think this team has a chance to take the next step and go deep in the playoffs... I like our chances.
I think we have a lot of good players on this team. I think they've built a lot of good experience past couple seasons, even though you know it was first round exits, but still they played a lot of meaningful games...
I've never gotten a chance to go past first round with the Magic, and if we're able to do that together, it'd be amazing."
His decision also came down to comfort, family and a clear basketball fit. Orlando checked every box for him, and he said the choice became straightforward once the opportunity surfaced.
"Be at that stage where I am in my career was something it was important for me that it's, you know, a team that has a chance to win, and then also a place that would be good for my family, and so, you know, when the opportunity for Orlando came up, I didn't think about it too much. Obviously, everybody knows my ties to Orlando... the team is good, have a chance to win, and then for my family, you know, we live there... when I put it all on paper, it was pretty easy decision for me to come back, and I'm happy I get the chance to go back to the franchise where I spend the most years."
In Other News...
Magic Just Ran Into A Problem Every Contender Eventually Faces
Brad Stevens explanation for why Boston moved on from Jaylen Brown was a reminder that even good teams eventually have to make hard choices about how much money can be tied up in a few stars. For Orlando, thats not a distant lesson. The Magic have built their future around Paolo Banchero and Franz Wagner, and with a new coach in Sean Sweeney taking over, the organization is clearly betting that development, health and internal growth will matter more than any quick fix.
The problem is that the cap sheet can close in fast once a team starts paying for its core. Orlando already has a heavy amount of its payroll committed at the top, which leaves little room to maneuver if the roster needs another boost. That is why the next few seasons, and especially 2027, will be judged less by flashy additions than by whether Banchero and Wagner keep ascending and stay on the floor. [Read more 🡒]
Magic Quietly Backed Themselves Into A Tough Free Agency Corner
Orlando has spent the early stretch of the offseason preserving the shape of its roster more than reshaping it, leaving Paolo Banchero, Franz Wagner, Desmond Bane and Jalen Suggs in place while making only minimal cap movement after the free agency moratorium. The result is a team that still looks very much like itself, but also one that has very little room to maneuver and only one roster spot left to fill.
The bigger issue is what comes next if the Magic want to add anything meaningful. They are already close to the salary cap limits and near the second apron, so even a modest veteran-minimum signing would push them right up against another hard line. With little appetite to move core pieces and no obvious splash left to make, Orlando is leaning on health and internal growth to carry the burden of improvement. [Read more 🡒]
