Skip to main content
Come Fan with UsFriday, June 26, 2026

Washington Wizards: Rumors, Free Agents, Cap Space And More

The Washington Wizards insist they will retain Rashard Lewis, which likely means that not a whole lot will be happening in the Wizards’ front office in the next few weeks.

The Washington Wizards are right in the middle of rebuilding around John Wall and ... uh, well John Wall! Washington picked up Jan Vesely and Chris Singleton in the June draft and has plenty of cap space to not play with. Prudence has a name, and its name is the Washington Wizards. (It's a nice change from the remarkably imprudent Gilbert Arenas-for-$110-million Wizards.)

CAP SPACE

Here’s a look at the Wizards’ salary cap levels over the past six seasons.

Wizards_medium

After unloading Caron Butler, Brendan Haywood and Antawn Jamison, Washington met Lady Luck and picked up the No. 1 pick in 2010, Wall. Arenas was next to be unloaded (for Rashard Lewis, a similarly bad contract but a more pleasant personality, apparently). That's where the Wizards are now: really young, fairly sparse in terms of owed salary beyond Shard.

Heading into free agency, the Wizards have a cap figure of $40 million with the leaguewide team salary cap set at $58 million and the luxury tax line at $70 million. The salary floor is $49 million, so the Wizards will have to add someone(s), whether in free agency or via trade.

FREE AGENTS

The Wizards’ free agents are:

Young is the single Wizards free agent expected to return; while the guard has drawn some interest outside D.C., Washington can match any signed offer sheet. This could get the Wizards most of the way to the payroll floor. Howard and Evans are veterans likely seeking a role on a team closer to the playoffs; the other restricted free agents or back-of-the-rotation guys. Yi’s Bird rights could be an asset if the forward returns to the NBA in the future.

RUMORS

The team has insisted it won't waive Lewis under the amnesty clause, even given that his salary would continue to count toward the payroll floor. With that, there's not a whole lot more to look at unless the team looks to bring in a substitute for Andray Blatche, the perennial underachiever. The Wizards could be in play for young bigs despite the presence of Blatche, JaVale McGee, Kevin Seraphin and Trevor Booker. But there aren't many promising young bigs available in free agency, and teams typically avoid trading them.

For more on the Wizards, visit SB Nation’s Bullets Forever.

See More:

More in NBA

NBA
The LaMelo Ball trade makes absolutely no sense for the HornetsThe LaMelo Ball trade makes absolutely no sense for the Hornets
NBA

The Hornets sold low on LaMelo.

By Ricky O'Donnell
NBA
6 Jaylen Brown trade ideas for Celtics star with rumors swirling6 Jaylen Brown trade ideas for Celtics star with rumors swirling
NBA

Here are six Jaylen Brown fake trades that make sense for both sides.

By Ricky O'Donnell
NBA
NBA Draft grades for all 30 teams’ full 2026 classNBA Draft grades for all 30 teams’ full 2026 class
NBA

Let’s grade every team’s full 2026 NBA draft class.

By Ricky O'Donnell
NBA
LaMelo Ball trade grades for Wolves, Hornets after shocking blockbuster dealLaMelo Ball trade grades for Wolves, Hornets after shocking blockbuster deal
NBA

Let’s trade the LaMelo Ball stunner for the Wolves and Hornets.

By James Dator
NBA
The biggest lessons from the Giannis Antetokounmpo trade sagaThe biggest lessons from the Giannis Antetokounmpo trade saga
NBA

The Bucks waited too long to trade Giannis, and other lessons from the NBA’s latest blockbuster.

By Oliver Fox
NBA
NBA Draft results: Pick-by-pick tracker for all 60 selections in 2026 classNBA Draft results: Pick-by-pick tracker for all 60 selections in 2026 class
NBA

Keeping track of every pick in the 2026 NBA Draft.

By Ricky O'Donnell