Tim Hardaway Jr. joining Heat on $6.5 million contract as team beefs up around Giannis
- US News
- World News
- Page Six
- Sports
- Post Sports+
- Sports Betting
- Business
- Opinion
- Entertainment
- Shopping
- Lifestyle
- Health
- Real Estate
- Alexa
- Media
- Tech
- Science
- Astrology
- Video
- Photos
- Pod Force One
- NY POSTcast
Switch between CA and NY editions here.
Edition- Sports
- Sports Plus
- Sports Betting
- Columnists
- NFL
- MLB
- NBA
- World Cup
- NHL
- NCAAB
- WNBA
- NWSL
- PWHL
- NCAAF
- Sports Entertainment
- Golf
- Tennis
- Wrestling
- MMA
- Soccer
- Olympics
- NBA
- New York Knicks
- Brooklyn Nets
- Scores
- Stats
- Standings
- Teams
- Players
- Odds
- Injuries
- Transactions
- Drafts
Recommended
Skip to main content NBATim Hardaway Jr. joining Heat on $6.5 million contract as team beefs up around Giannis
By Spencer Brod Published June 30, 2026, 7:30 p.m. ETSee more of our coverage in your search results.
Add The New York Post on GoogleThe Heat aren’t slowing down this offseason.
Just eight days after trading for superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo, the Heat have agreed to a one-year, $6.5 million deal with Tim Hardaway Jr., ESPN’s Shams Charania reported Tuesday.
NBA insiders Marc Stein and Jake Fischer previously reported Hardaway was among the players to receive “priority” interest from the Heat this offseason.
The 34-year-old guard spent last season with the Nuggets, but has bounced around the league between the Knicks, Hawks, Mavericks and Pistons.

After spending three years at Michigan and scoring 13 points per game or more in each, the Knicks took a chance on Hardaway in the 2013 NBA Draft.
Hardaway’s first stint in New York was a mixed bag, as he displayed brilliance from beyond the arc but struggled to be consistent. He averaged nearly 11 points per game over his first two seasons with the Knicks.
Explore More
LeBron James is not retiring, but he is leaving the Lakers — and he’ll have to take a pay cut
Ben Simmons teases NBA comeback after sitting out season: ‘Needed to get away’
Heat give Andrew Wiggins $64 million contract in Giannis trade fallout
He then joined the Hawks for two years before returning to the Knicks for a second stint from 2017-19, where he saw increased minutes despite poor efficiency.
In the Knicks’ woeful 17-65 season in 2018-19, Hardaway averaged a career-high 19.1 points per game despite shooting just 38.8 percent from the field.

Hardaway then spent the next five years with the Mavericks and Luka Doncic from 2019-24, and he averaged between 14 and 17 points per game each season while becoming a solid 3-point shooter.
Following one season with the Pistons, Hardaway averaged 13.5 points per game with the Nuggets last season, though he started just six games.
Hardaway brings much-needed shooting to a forward-heavy team with Antetokounmpo, Bam Adebayo, Bobby Portis and Andrew Wiggins.
After losing to the Hornets in the play-in round, the Heat continue to make moves this offseason in hopes of competing with the Eastern Conference’s best.
Filed under Read Next Drama brewing in Golden State as Draymond Green blasts War...Unlock full access to Post sports columnists and newsletters
-
Joel Sherman
How the Mets can transform their outlook going into MLB’s minefield offseason
-
Madeline Kenney
Underwhelming Liberty superteam missing a championship-caliber element
-
Mark Cannizzaro
USMNT vet is so much more than the World Cup team’s elder statesman
Sports Podcasts
The best insights from the ultimate insiders- Up in the Blue Seats - Rangers Listen on Apple Podcasts Spotify
- The Show with Joel Sherman and Jon Heyman Listen on Apple Podcasts Spotify
- The Dodgers Post Listen on Apple Podcasts Spotify
- Blue Rush: NY Giants Football Podcast Listen on Apple Podcasts Spotify
- Gang’s All Here: A NY Jets Football Podcast Listen on Apple Podcasts Spotify
- NY Got Game: Basketball Listen on Apple Podcasts Spotify
- Pinstripe Post - Yankees Listen on Apple Podcasts Spotify
- Against the Cage - Combat Sports Listen on Apple Podcasts Spotify
- Straight Outta Flushing - Mets Listen on Apple Podcasts Spotify
Scoreboard
More Stories
Page Six
‘The Devil Wears Prada 2’ is now streaming — Here’s how to watch at home
Decider
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Louis C.K.: Ridiculous’ On Netflix, The Comedian Slowly, Crudely, Comes To Grip With The Inevitability Of Mortality
NYPost
Mystery of explosive diarrhea parasite outbreak in the US — as experts try to figure out what’s causing it
© 2026 NYP Holdings, Inc. All Rights Reserved Terms of Use Subscription Terms Privacy Notice SitemapYour California Privacy Rights
Serena Williams Didn’t Win in Wimbledon Return. But She Didn’t Lose Either
Serena Williams Didn’t Win in Wimbledon Return. But She Didn’t Lose Either
The 44-year-old fell to 20-year-old Maya Joint in a respectable showing after nearly four years away from major competition. Jon Wertheim|
For all its hidebound traditions, Wimbledon decided to do something different this year. The tournament turned back the clock on Tuesday at the All England Club. There on Centre Court (in, symbolically, diminishing evening light), was the familiar sight of Serena Williams, ankles taped, clad in Nike, brandishing a Wilson racket, crowding the baseline, serving in excess of 120 mph, fixing her eyes on targets and rocking her arms as she prepared to return serve.
The nostalgia and throwback only went so far. Serena played more than respectably—surely one of the world’s all-time best players north of 40 years old. She served well, moved respectively, and, at times, did a convincing Serena impersonation. But in the end, the mighty Serena Williams lost to Maya Joint, a game 20-year-old from Australia, 6–3, 6–7, 6–3. And with that, considerable amounts of air left this tournament.
Ever since she announced her comeback, Serena has been the talk of Wimbledon, the biggest source of star wattage and the reason ESPN’s ratings may be higher for this first-round match than for the finals 10 days from now. This is a familiar story of a generational athlete returning, braided with themes of motherhood, self-agency and even the power of GLP-1s.
But, viewed objectively, this match was more about the opponent than the headliner. A former star at Texas, Joint turned pro as a teenager and cracked the top 30 in the WTA rankings. This year, at 20, she’s struggled mightily, having lost 12 of the past 13 matches she’s played. But tonight, in the strangest and most pressure-stuffed match of her career, she was the player who imposed herself, who protected her second serve, won the majority of the long rallies and handled the occasion with poise to burn.
Four years ago at Wimbledon, Serena lost to France’s Harmony Tan, moving sluggishly, making scads of errors and playing at a level unworthy of a GOAT. On Tuesday, she would have beaten that player handily. Against a player half her age, she hung in rallies, clubbed seven aces and showed flashes of brilliance. She also suffered from the lack of match play, made a series of questionable decisions, played too many balls to the middle of the court and missed too many second-serve returns. “Respectable” was a word scribbled in my notes more than once. Not dazzling. Not embarrassing. Respectable.
Where does Serena go from here? The first answer is the Wimbledon doubles draw, where she will pair with her sister, Venus, their combined age being 90. The bigger question: Was this a fun detour and experiment, a chance for a player to test herself and play in front of her kids when they could appreciate Mom’s aura? Or will this fail to slake her thirst for competition, and she’ll start training for the U.S. hard-court season?
Speculating about anything Serena-related is a fool’s errand. Always has been. But if she continues this comeback, she’ll need more match play, a bit more movement and better returning.
This we can say with certitude: Serena didn’t lose on Tuesday. Not in the big picture. But she didn’t win either. Her career singles record coming in was 858–156. It is now 858–157.
Meanwhile, the doubles team of time and biology remains, of course, unbeaten.
More Tennis from Sports Illustrated
Published 9 minutes ago | Modified 9 minutes ago
JON WERTHEIMJon Wertheim is a senior writer for Sports Illustrated and has been part of the full-time SI writing staff since 1997, largely focusing on the tennis beat, sports business and social issues, and enterprise journalism. In addition to his work at SI, he is a correspondent for “60 Minutes” and a commentator for The Tennis Channel. He has authored 11 books and has been honored with two Emmys, numerous writing and investigative journalism awards, and the Eugene Scott Award from the International Tennis Hall of Fame. Wertheim is a longtime member of the New York Bar Association (retired), the International Tennis Writers Association and the Writers Guild of America. He has a bachelor’s in history from Yale University and received a law degree from the University of Pennsylvania. He resides in New York City and Paris with his wife, who is a divorce mediator and adjunct law professor. They have two children.
Home/Tennis
What a Jaylen Brown Trade Would Cost the Jazz–– And Why They'd Regret It
What a Jaylen Brown Trade Would Cost the Jazz–– And Why They'd Regret It
Could the Utah Jazz get involved in the Jaylen Brown trade sweepstakes?Jared Koch|
In this story:
Utah JazzThe Jaylen Brown trade sweepstakes are heating up, as the Boston Celtics appear to be listening to offers for their five-time All-Star after failing in their efforts to acquire Giannis Antetokounmpo earlier this offseason.
Brown could be an intriguing fit for several teams, considering he's fresh off a career-best season in Boston in the wake of Jayson Tatum's Achilles recovery, and would be an instantly impactful player for wherever he ends up if he is dealt away from Boston after nine seasons.
"In some cases, the Celtics have asked for at least four first-round picks for Jaylen Brown." @ShamsCharania on a potential Jaylen Brown trade 👀 pic.twitter.com/seGNQWJBBX
— Get Up (@GetUpESPN) June 26, 2026
One team that's been subtly connected to Brown, simply because of the Boston connections within the front office and coaching staff, has been the Utah Jazz––who have former Celtics execs Danny and Austin Ainge running their basketball operations, and might be a dark horse in the race to push for a deal surrounding the All-NBA talent.
But what would a trade look like for the Jazz if they were in the market to try and land Brown? And even if they were, would pulling the trigger on a deal make sense from their perspective?
Let's break it all down:
What a Jazz Trade for Jaylen Brown Would Look Like
The Athletic's Sam Vecenie recently laid out a half-dozen trade ideas for Brown that could make sense with the recent reports that the 2024 Finals MVP is being shopped by the Celtics.
One of the suitors mentioned in those trade frameworks was none other than the Jazz, who Vecenie sees as an ideal partner for the Celtics to deal with for a package centering around Lauri Markkanen:
This seems like a fair ask from the Celtics if they were to inquire with the Jazz about a deal. They get a returning centerpiece that matches Brown's salary in Markkanen, a young bench scorer in Sensabaugh, and a couple of draft picks that sweeten the pot.
On the other side of the equation, the Jazz could land a top-15 player in the league in return, a true number one option to lean on for their offense who's still got several years left in his prime, and give their defensive side of the ball a lift with the impact Brown provides on that end as well.
The logic makes some sense for both sides. So maybe the deal shouldn't be totally counted out as a possibility. However, that doesn't mean the Jazz should rush to make a deal like this happen.
In fact, Utah might be better off steering clear of pushing their chips in for a move like this, rather than trying to make a splashy acquisition for the Celtics star.
Why the Jazz Should Hold Off on a Jaylen Brown Deal
While a superstar acquisition like Brown is sure to draw some initial intrigue, especially for a team like the Jazz who have the assets to make it happen, Utah is in no rush to make a swap like this happen.
In reality, the Jazz are in year one of facilitating a competitive, playoff-level roster this year. They've spent time building up their chemistry around the roster, have a great combination of veteran and young talent, and have future flexibility in terms of draft capital to bolster things even further down the road.
2026-27 Utah Jazz:
— StatMuse (@statmuse) June 24, 2026
— Darryn Peterson
— Jaren Jackson Jr
— Lauri Markkanen
— Walker Kessler
— Ace Bailey
— Keyonte George
— Isaiah Collier
— Kyle Filipowski
Playoff team? pic.twitter.com/Y5aO11V11C
Nothing about the Jazz's situation screams, "we have to go get Jaylen Brown." They're actually in a polar opposite position. While they're in a solid spot to win next season, their timeline allows them to remain patient, see how this current core shakes out next year, and then potentially re-evaluate for further moves next offseason.
Lauri Markkanen is also a huge part of the equation for the Jazz as well. Brown might be the better player in a vacuum, but Markkanen has remained outwardly committed Utah since they first started their rebuilding process.

Markkanen's is locked in with Utah for his future until 2029 thanks to the $238 million deal he signed in 2024, is still at the prime of his career, coming off a strong 2025-26 campaign, and has the playstyle and versatility to be an ideal fit in several different variations of this Jazz lineup and roster both now and moving forward.
Unless the deal was one that the Jazz simply couldn't refuse, there's no real incentive for the Jazz to pivot off of Markkanen now. A deal for Brown may provoke some thought in a Utah front office with history in Boston, though still doesn't seem like enough for them to pull the trigger.
All of that being said, Jazz fans probably don't have to worry about a Brown deal being on the way anytime soon this offseason. And in any case that it does come to form, it might not take long for Utah to regret pushing their chips in so soon.
Published 1 minute ago
JARED KOCHJared Koch is the deputy editor of Utah Jazz On SI. He's covered the NBA and NFL for the past two years, contributing to Denver Broncos On SI, Indianapolis Colts On SI, and Sacramento Kings On SI. He has covered multiple NBA and NFL events on site, and his works have also appeared on Bleacher Report, MSN, and Yahoo.
Follow jjaredkochHome/News
