Warriors Just Lost Out On A Veteran Wing They Needed

In a bold move to shake up their roster, the Clippers have secured Rui Hachimura for $28 million, leaving other top contenders in the dust.

Rui Hachimura is staying in Los Angeles, just not in the uniform plenty of people expected.

The veteran forward has agreed to a two-year, $28 million deal with the LA Clippers, according to ESPN’s Shams Charania. Hachimura and his agent Darren Matsubara of THE•TEAM had already been working toward a deal with the Clippers early in free agency, but the path they hoped for never materialized. The sides were waiting for the Lakers to finish their offseason business so they could pursue a sign-and-trade, but, as Charania reported, the Lakers did not cooperate on one.

That ends Hachimura’s run with the Lakers after three seasons, a stretch in which he repeatedly delivered in the playoffs and looked like a player many expected to keep around. Instead, he’ll cross town and join a Clippers team that is trying to get younger after being one of the oldest teams in the league last season.

Hachimura was one of the more attractive role players on the market, and the bidding reflected that. The Minnesota Timberwolves, Golden State Warriors, San Antonio Spurs, and Brooklyn Nets all made offers, but he never wanted to leave Los Angeles. According to NBA reporter Evan Sidery, Hachimura was only open to re-signing with the Lakers or going to the Clippers.

For the Lakers, the move adds to a rough free-agency stretch. With Hachimura gone, the team has now lost seven players from last season’s roster in free agency. Lake Show Life’s Svyatoslav Rovenchuk noted that LeBron James, Marcus Smart, Luke Kennard, Hachimura, Jaxson Hayes, Maxi Kleber, and Nick Smith Jr. all hit free agency, and all of them have either already departed or are expected to be gone.

The Clippers, meanwhile, get a proven playoff performer who can help right away. Hachimura brings a strong mid-range game and a dependable outside shot, and now he gets a chance to make the Lakers feel the loss every time he steps on the floor against them.

In Other News...

Spurs Missed On A Dream Target For One Frustrating Reason

The Spurs spent part of the offseason chasing a forward they believed could have fit neatly into their frontcourt plans, with Rui Hachimura drawing interest from San Antonio and several other teams before the market settled. Golden State, Minnesota and Brooklyn were also in the mix, a reminder that Hachimura had plenty of options as he weighed his next move.

San Antonio ultimately had to pivot after missing out, and the answer came in the form of veteran forward Tobias Harris, a steadier addition who helps address the same area of need. The Spurs would have liked to land Hachimura and keep building around a younger, more versatile look, but the search for frontcourt help did not end with one swing. [Read more 🡒]

Spurs Send Tarris Reed Jr. A Tough Message Right Away

Tarris Reed Jr. already has a clear early-career assignment in San Antonio, and it has little to do with putting up points. The Spurs took Reed alongside Jayden Quaintance in the 2026 NBA Draft, bringing in the former UConn and Michigan big man with the expectation that his value will come from defense, rebounding and a physical presence around the basket.

In Summer League, coach Corliss Williamson made the message plain: Reeds lane is the gritty stuff, not a featured offensive role. For a Spurs roster that already has plenty of scoring to go around, the rookie will need to earn his way by doing the dirty work and showing he can hold up in the details, with a chance to push into the regular rotation if those traits translate once the games start to count. [Read more 🡒]

Spurs Suddenly Face A Lineup Decision That Could Disrupt Their Chemistry

The Spurs are staring at one of those early offseason choices that can quietly shape everything else, and it centers on the starting power forward spot. Tobias Harris brings the kind of veteran rsum that usually makes a coach think twice, while Julian Champagnie has already shown he can fit cleanly alongside the rest of San Antonios core.

Champagnies case is rooted in how well the Spurs looked with him in the first unit, where the group around De'Aaron Fox, Stephon Castle, Devin Vassell and Victor Wembanyama clicked at a high level. Harris still has value, especially as a scorer who could change the tone of a second unit, but the bigger question for San Antonio is whether it keeps the chemistry it found or makes room for experience at the expense of continuity. [Read more 🡒]