Sports
Nuggets trade Reggie Jackson, 3 second-round picks to Charlotte Hornets, source says
The Nuggets traded backup point guard Reggie Jackson and three future second-round draft picks to the Charlotte Hornets for cash considerations Thursday in a maneuver that provides Denver salary cap relief before NBA free agency, a league source told The Denver Post.
Denver sent out its 2025, 2029 and 2030 second-round picks in the trade.
Earlier this week, Jackson picked up a $5.25 million player option to return for the 2024-25 season. The Nuggets originally signed him in February 2023 after Jackson reached a contract buyout with Charlotte, where he had just been traded from the Clippers. The Nuggets then re-signed Jackson on a two-year deal last summer.
After trading three other second-rounders to Phoenix on Wednesday in order to move up in the first round of the 2024 draft for DaRon Holmes II, Denver’s only remaining future draft pick available to trade is a 2031 first-round pick.
Jackson, 34, played in every regular-season and playoff game in 2023-24, averaging 10.2 points and 3.8 assists. He shot 43.1% from the field and 35.9% from three, efficiencies that plummeted after an exceptional first two months of the season when Jamal Murray was injured. Before his struggles and ultimately limited playoff minutes, Jackson’s finest moment in a Nuggets uniform came last November, when he and DeAndre Jordan led a short-handed squad to an unlikely win at the Clippers. Jackson registered 35 points and 13 assists in the win while Nikola Jokic and Murray were both out.
The Palmer High School alum won his first career NBA championship as a reserve for his hometown team in 2023. He has been in the league for 13 years, appearing in games for four teams.
Factoring in the trade of Jackson, the addition of Holmes with the 22nd pick, Kentavious Caldwell-Pope’s opt-out and the likely one-year minimum contract incoming for Vlatko Cancar, the Nuggets will have 12 roster spots filled at a payroll of around $172 million.
That’s narrowly above the luxury tax line for 2024-25, placing Denver below the first tax apron and about $18 million below the second apron with free agency looming. The trade of Jackson in particular will provide some flexibility for Denver’s attempt at re-signing Caldwell-Pope, but perhaps more notably, it also supplies more cap space to sign other players if the Nuggets lose KCP.
Clemson, Creighton stars sign two-way contracts
The Nuggets also signed Creighton’s Trey Alexander and Clemson’s PJ Hall to two-way contracts Thursday, a source told The Post. They have one two-way spot remaining.
Hall was a projected second-round pick who went un-drafted after averaging 18.3 points and 6.4 rebounds per game last season. The 6-8 power forward led Clemson to the Elite Eight in the 2024 NCAA Tournament and will now reunite with former college teammate Hunter Tyson, whom the Nuggets drafted last year. Hall was No. 45 on The Athletic’s draft board.
Alexander led Creighton to the Elite Eight the previous year, with a stop at Ball Arena along the way. In his third and final season of college ball, the 6-4 guard averaged 17.6 points, 5.7 rebounds and 4.7 assists per game. He was No. 44 on The Athletic’s board.