• Loading stock data...
Saturday, April 19, 2025

Why Agents Aren’t Fans of the New NBA Draft Format

  • Adam Silver got union sign-off earlier this year to move the second round to Thursday.
  • Agents told ‘FOS’ that the new structure of the second round gives teams more leverage. 
Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports

BROOKLYN — When commissioner Adam Silver announced the new, two-night format for the NBA draft in January, he knew it wouldn’t be met with a 100% approval rating.

The initial suggestion for the new format came from the team side. Front offices, who have seen second-rounders like Nikola Jokić, Jalen Brunson, and Khris Middleton blossom into stars in recent years, wanted more time to make second-round picks. 

Under the new format, teams will have four minutes instead of two to pick in the second round, which necessitated punting that round to a second day. 

“For us, it was pretty straightforward. Of course we needed the Players Association agreement to do that, and it wasn’t universally popular,” Silver said in February. “There was some people who felt maybe we should just get it all done in one night.”

Chief among those people: player agents.

At Wednesday night’s draft, several agents told Front Office Sports they were unhappy with the new format. They spoke on the condition of anonymity to candidly criticize the league.

The agents felt the new format advantaged front offices in several ways. The daylong break between rounds, as opposed to the old hourlong sprint through the second round, gives teams a better sense of what other teams are up to, increasing their leverage with players who could be picked in the second round or go undrafted. In the old format, agents said teams struggled to process all the moving parts at once, giving agents more power to steer players around the league.

Agents seem to think it’s now easier for teams to have a feel on a players’ situation than before. The second round is something of a Wild West: Teams can offer players whatever contracts they like, all the way down to the $559,000 two-way deals, which rookies on two-ways receive whether they’re drafted. Agents said that the ability to weigh teams’ offers to players is more challenging for them when the teams themselves are more informed about what situations other teams are in.

Previously, agents said, they could pit teams against one another late in the draft, playing up possibly theoretical interest to steer their client to a preferred destination—or out of the draft entirely, given the lack of player agency once they’re picked in the second round.

“[Teams] get a lot of leverage now,” one agent said. 

The break between rounds has also introduced another dynamic more familiar in other sports: whether to accept a green room invite if you’re a fringe first-round pick. NBA agents previously hadn’t had those conversations with players, but now they need to advise clients on the pros and cons of taking an invite. The upside is shaking Silver’s hand to celebrate a dream come true; the downside is going undrafted and having to return Thursday for the second round.

 “It’s a weird dynamic, especially with the people management part,” another agent said. 

Before the draft was cleaved in two, there were very few players making the NFL-style choice to stay home and avoid embarrassment. It was something of an NBA tradition to see a second-rounder attend the draft on his own and emerge from the stands to shake deputy commissioner Mark Tatum’s hand. 

The second round will take place at an ESPN studio in lower Manhattan, eliminating the stands-to-podium walk, at least for now. This year, the NBA invited 25 players to the green room, which is almost double the NFL’s number for April’s draft, despite the new setup. On Wednesday, multiple green room invites, including Duke’s Kyle Filipowski, went unselected over the three-hour event. It’s unclear whether they’ll cross the East River to the South Street Seaport on Thursday.

While agents are adjusting to the new reality, front offices appear satisfied with the new format for the reasons they wanted it in the first place. Multiple team executives told FOS the additional time for planning, discussing trades, and even just the mental reset from one of the more stressful days on the job have all been welcome. 

“For me, [operating] over a spread of two days is just better all around,” one Western Conference scout texted FOS

One scout punted on the question, saying it was too early to gauge the format and pointed out that it’s only halfway over. 

“We won’t know until tomorrow if this was all easier,” an Eastern Conference scout told FOS

There was one universal upside to the new format. At 11:15 p.m. Eastern, Silver announced the Celtics had selected Creighton’s Baylor Scheierman with the 30th pick. And just like that, the first round was over, at least an hour earlier than the draft had historically ended. Weary media members, agents, and executives welcomed the slightly earlier bedtime, and Thursday night’s roughly 120-minute affair will take place over happy hour. It starts at 4 p.m. local time.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Dec 9, 2024; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson (11) watches as center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) celebrates after making a three point basket to clinch a win against the Toronto Raptors near the end of the fourth quarter at Scotiabank Arena

Same Owner, New Knicks: New York’s Remarkable Rebound

The franchise’s renaissance didn’t happen overnight.
Kendrick Lamar

Drake Lawsuit Says Kendrick Lamar Defamed Him At Super Bowl

Drake says taking out the word “pedophile” didn’t erase the defamation.
exclusive

Shannon Sharpe Eyes $100M+ Podcast Deal As Volume Contract Expires

Sharpe’s podcasts have exploded in popularity over the last several years.
Masters

Why The Masters Quietly Cracked Down on Ticket Resellers

Insiders expect big changes are coming to ticketing at Augusta National.

Featured Today

exclusive

Inside Nico Iamaleava’s Ugly Breakup With Tennessee

Iamaleava’s representatives claim to FOS he didn’t push for more NIL money.
Jul 29, 2024; Villeneuve-d'Ascq, France; France center Dominique Malonga (14) and guard Marine Johannes (23) celebrate after defeating Canada during the Paris 2024 Olympic Summer Games at Stade Pierre-Mauroy
April 13, 2025

‘Has to Change’: The WNBA’s International Player Problem

As more global stars arrive, the “prioritization” rule is causing tension.
Yamine Lamal Barcelona
April 12, 2025

Lamine Yamal: The Pressure and Price of Barcelona’s Young Prodigy

Lamine Yamal is a teenage superstar. Can Barcelona afford him?
The pin flag on the second green flaps in the wind during the second round of the Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club.
April 7, 2025

Inside The Masters: Traditions, Restrictions, and Gnomes

How the most exclusive major employs its own strict rules and operations.
UFL

UFL and Players Union Agree to New CBA, Pending Board Approval

Players say the new deal gives them wins on wages and healthcare.
April 18, 2025

Golf’s Other Majors Won’t Follow Masters Lead in Banning Phones

Phone intrusions at past majors have led to strong reactions from golfers.
April 18, 2025

NHL Breaks Attendance Record for Third Straight Season

More than 23 million hockey fans attended games this season.
Sponsored

Game On: Portfolio Players Stories, Brought to You by E*TRADE from Morgan Stanley

This week, Two-time Super Bowl Champion and CBS NFL analyst Logan Ryan joins us to talk the business of sports on our third installment of Portfolio Players.
April 17, 2025

UFL Dealing With Challenges Three Weeks Into Second Season

The spring football league is in its second season.
Jan 8, 2025; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Cleveland Cavaliers guard Darius Garland (10) drives to the basket against Oklahoma City Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (2) during the second half at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse.
April 17, 2025

Thunder, Cavs Are NBA Title Contenders on a Budget—for Now

The NBA playoffs tip off this weekend.
Kim Ng
April 17, 2025

Kim Ng Is Trying to Crack Pro Softball’s Toughest Problem

Ng’s new task is translating the popularity of college softball to pros.
April 17, 2025

WNBPA Matches NBA’s 3-Point Contest Prize. Will Caitlin Clark Join?

The 2025 WNBA All-Star weekend will be in Indianapolis.