The post Pacers Waive Cam Payne, Make Other Moves To Get Roster Regular Season Ready appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Indiana Pacers’ Cameron Payne dribbles during the first half of an NBA preseason basketball game against the Oklahoma City Thunder, Saturday, Oct. 11, 2025, in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings) Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. INDIANAPOLIS – The Indiana Pacers made many transactions on Saturday to get their roster ready for the 2025-26 regular season. Entering the day, the team had 21 players under contract – they have to get that number down to 18 (15 standard contracts and three two-way agreements) before the start of the season. Technically, rosters aren’t finalized until Monday. But players have to clear waivers to not count against the salary cap starting that day, and the waiver process takes 48 hours. So almost every team across the association made several moves on Saturday, and Indiana was included. Who did the Pacers waive and why? Following the Pacers cap sheet is instructive as it displays the front office was likely deciding between three players on non-guaranteed contracts: James Wiseman ($1 million guaranteed), Tony Bradley, and Cam Payne. In the end, the most noteworthy player the team parted ways with was Payne. Payne was signed by the blue and gold just over a week ago after the team lost T.J. McConnell and Delon Wright to injury in the same preseason game. They needed point guard depth for their preseason action and training camp, and that became even more true when two-way player Quenton Jackson went down in the team’s second tune-up game. Payne ended up playing in three preseason games for Indiana. He averaged 6.7 points and 2.3 assists per game but shot a dismal 28.6% from the field. His performances did him no favors while the team was deciding who to keep into the regular season. This decision was also about positions. Bradley… The post Pacers Waive Cam Payne, Make Other Moves To Get Roster Regular Season Ready appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Indiana Pacers’ Cameron Payne dribbles during the first half of an NBA preseason basketball game against the Oklahoma City Thunder, Saturday, Oct. 11, 2025, in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings) Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. INDIANAPOLIS – The Indiana Pacers made many transactions on Saturday to get their roster ready for the 2025-26 regular season. Entering the day, the team had 21 players under contract – they have to get that number down to 18 (15 standard contracts and three two-way agreements) before the start of the season. Technically, rosters aren’t finalized until Monday. But players have to clear waivers to not count against the salary cap starting that day, and the waiver process takes 48 hours. So almost every team across the association made several moves on Saturday, and Indiana was included. Who did the Pacers waive and why? Following the Pacers cap sheet is instructive as it displays the front office was likely deciding between three players on non-guaranteed contracts: James Wiseman ($1 million guaranteed), Tony Bradley, and Cam Payne. In the end, the most noteworthy player the team parted ways with was Payne. Payne was signed by the blue and gold just over a week ago after the team lost T.J. McConnell and Delon Wright to injury in the same preseason game. They needed point guard depth for their preseason action and training camp, and that became even more true when two-way player Quenton Jackson went down in the team’s second tune-up game. Payne ended up playing in three preseason games for Indiana. He averaged 6.7 points and 2.3 assists per game but shot a dismal 28.6% from the field. His performances did him no favors while the team was deciding who to keep into the regular season. This decision was also about positions. Bradley…

Pacers Waive Cam Payne, Make Other Moves To Get Roster Regular Season Ready

2025/10/19 05:14

Indiana Pacers’ Cameron Payne dribbles during the first half of an NBA preseason basketball game against the Oklahoma City Thunder, Saturday, Oct. 11, 2025, in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)

Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

INDIANAPOLIS – The Indiana Pacers made many transactions on Saturday to get their roster ready for the 2025-26 regular season. Entering the day, the team had 21 players under contract – they have to get that number down to 18 (15 standard contracts and three two-way agreements) before the start of the season.

Technically, rosters aren’t finalized until Monday. But players have to clear waivers to not count against the salary cap starting that day, and the waiver process takes 48 hours. So almost every team across the association made several moves on Saturday, and Indiana was included.

Who did the Pacers waive and why?

Following the Pacers cap sheet is instructive as it displays the front office was likely deciding between three players on non-guaranteed contracts: James Wiseman ($1 million guaranteed), Tony Bradley, and Cam Payne. In the end, the most noteworthy player the team parted ways with was Payne.

Payne was signed by the blue and gold just over a week ago after the team lost T.J. McConnell and Delon Wright to injury in the same preseason game. They needed point guard depth for their preseason action and training camp, and that became even more true when two-way player Quenton Jackson went down in the team’s second tune-up game.

Payne ended up playing in three preseason games for Indiana. He averaged 6.7 points and 2.3 assists per game but shot a dismal 28.6% from the field. His performances did him no favors while the team was deciding who to keep into the regular season.

This decision was also about positions. Bradley and Wiseman are both centers, but two of Indiana’s top bigs (Wiseman and Isaiah Jackson) are recovering from Achilles tears suffered in the 2024-25 season. Having more depth at that position does make sense, and Bradley provided consistent play during the team’s recent exhibitions. Wiseman has some guaranteed money in his contract.

Health at center was obviously a factor, but after multiple point guards went down with various injuries, Payne had a chance to matter for the Pacers. But in the team’s final preseason outing, they tinkered with a lineup that contained no nominal point guards and saw some success. Plus, Q. Jackson is healing, and RayJ Dennis can provide depth at the one position if needed.

“Health is obviously a big issue right now, so we’ve got to hope mother nature is kind to us,” Pacers head coach Rick Carlisle said when asked about roster decisions during the week. “We’ve got to have plans if we don’t have all of our guys in the first game or however long it is.”

Entering the season, Bradley and Wiseman will likely stick around for the Pacers, though their contracts are still not completely guaranteed. Their performance will be worth monitoring until all contracts become fully guaranteed in the NBA in early January.

The Pacers still needed to make two more waivers on top of Payne, but the final two cuts were more instructive. Indiana had two players on their training camp roster – Gabe McGlothan and Jalen Slawson – who each signed Exhibit 10 deals that were agreed to with the intention of the player ending up with the Pacers G League affiliate, the Noblesville Boom. In the press release announcing the signing of McGlothan, the Pacers noted he was signing an, “Exhibit 10 contract with the Noblesville Boom.”

Cleveland Cavaliers guard Kyle Guy (7) in action as the Indiana Pacers played the Cleveland Cavaliers in an NBA preseason basketball game in Indianapolis, Friday, Oct. 15, 2021. (AP Photo/AJ Mast)

Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Slawson and McGlothan both were waived on Saturday around noon. They each played in all four preseason games for the Pacers this year but had no real shot to make the team’s final roster. Given how banged up the team was throughout training camp, they were valuable bodies to have leading up to the regular season.

What did the Pacers do with their Exhibit 10 deals?

Throughout the summer, Indiana made several other moves involving Exhibit 10 contracts. In late September, both Steven Ashworth and R.J. Felton signed that type of contract with the franchise. They were waived one day later. Since both players are rookies, by being under an Exhibit 10 agreement with an NBA club for a training camp day, their G League rights went to the Boom.

Ditto for Samson Johnson, who played for Indiana’s summer league team alongside Ashworth and Felton. He was signed to an Exhibit 10 deal and waived four days later, and his rights are now with Noblesville. That’s a natural cycle for Exhibit 10 agreements – players on those types of contracts can receive a bonus of up to $85.3k if they report to the G League affiliate of the team they signed with for 60 days.

Technically, an Exhibit 10 deal is a one-year, non-guaranteed minimum-salary NBA contract that can be converted to a two-way contract. But they are almost always used for bonuses and G League rights. The Pacers’ many Exhibit 10 signees had little chance of actually making Indiana’s final 18-player roster.

That goes for players they added on Saturday, too. After moving on from Slawson and McGlothan, the Pacers signed Kyle Guy and Ray Spalding to Exhibit 10 deals, and they were waived later in the day. In Guy’s case, his rights now go to Noblesville. Spalding’s are already there – the Boom acquired his rights in a trade on October 2. Earlier in the offseason, they made the required deals to acquire the rights to Slawson and McGlothan.

After waiving McGlothan and Slawson, then waiving Guy and Spalding, the Pacers roster was down to 19. With Payne cut too, the roster is at 18 with 15 players on standard deals and three on two-way agreements. That means Indiana’s roster is regular season ready – though it is still possible for them to still make moves in the coming days if they see opportunity elsewhere once other franchises waive players.

As things stand, the Pacers are about six million dollars shy of the luxury tax, though they could get farther away during the season if they move on from players on contracts that aren’t fully guaranteed. They open the regular season on Thursday at home against the Oklahoma City Thunder in an NBA Finals rematch.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/tonyeast/2025/10/18/pacers-waive-cam-payne-make-other-moves-to-get-roster-regular-season-ready/

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.
Share Insights

You May Also Like

‘Code Is Law’ documentary nails the drama of DeFi hacks — despite what it leaves out

‘Code Is Law’ documentary nails the drama of DeFi hacks — despite what it leaves out

Ekin Genç is DL News’ Editor-in-Chief. Opinions expressed are his own.The world was transfixed last week when thieves in construction vests at the Louvre managed to vanish with jewels worth more than $100 million. Yet when hundreds of millions vanish from decentralised finance, nobody outside crypto hears about it; you won’t see headlines of DeFi heists in mainstream media. (The Louvre heist is hefty, of course, but it still wouldn’t make it to the top 25 in crypto.)That dissonance is the starting point of Code Is Law, a new documentary about DeFi exploits:“It’s incredible, you turn on the news and see a $450 theft from a local 7-Eleven, and on the same day someone steals $25 million from a protocol and you’ll never hear about it,” pseudonymous blockchain security specialist Ogle says during the opening credits.Streaming on Amazon Prime Video, Code Is Law is probably the first serious documentary to take the woes of decentralised finance — not centralised crypto exchanges or charismatic crypto fraudsters — as its subject.“It’s done an incredible job of representing people involved as humans rather than fringe lunatics, and I’m proud I was involved in it,” Indexed Finance co-founder Laurence Day told DL News, “even if I now know more about how the sausage is made when it comes to films than I ever cared to!”Given it’s a documentary about a community that’s pretty much exclusively online, you might expect it to be un-cinematic, a story more suited to the podcast format. It does, of course, consist mostly of people explaining things, sitting in front of laptops, typing, skimming code, and wading through Discord logs. Yet the filmmakers have still managed to make the watch genuinely gripping — not just for crypto nerds, but for anyone interested in cybercrime.But those deeply involved in crypto will notice at least two major omissions — for good reasons, as one of the directors tells me.The DAO hack without the hackerYou’ll be familiar with DAOs as the digital co-ops behind DeFi protocols and other crypto projects. But back at Ethereum’s start, there was basically one DAO, and it was literally called The DAO. It functioned like a giant onchain venture fund.The documentary opens with the hack of that project in 2016. Griff Green, Christoph Jentzsch, and Lefteris Karapetsas narrate those sleepless days as they tried to keep the first Ethereum experiment from falling apart in real time. Their recollections give the film its pulse. Code is Law is one of the first accounts in which the people who held Ethereum together tell their story at such length, and for that reason alone, the documentary is a significant contribution to crypto industry’s collective memory.The DAO hack was a big deal for Ethereum because the saga led to a “hard fork” — a blockchain split — to refund depositors who lost their money in the hack. Those who disagreed with the hard-fork kept mining the original chain, which became Ethereum Classic. The other, newer version is what we call Ethereum today. But that monumental event, a consequence of the DAO hack, gets only the briefest mention in Code is Law — and in the closing credits, at that. “In a film with such a wide scope, we had to make difficult choices about what to include,” James Craig, one of the directors, told DL News. Louis Giles is the other director.Another glaring omission is the journalist Laura Shin’s 2022 investigation identifying Austrian programmer Toby Hoenisch as The DAO hacker. (Hoenisch denies the allegations.)“In the case of Hoenisch, the decision was primarily thematic: our film focuses on individuals who actively defended their actions by invoking the idea that ‘code is law.’,” Craig said. “Since Hoenisch has never admitted to the hack — let alone offered a justification based on that idea — including him would have felt tangential to the story we were telling.”For anyone hoping for closure on the DAO hack story, that omission might feel like a letdown. Yet the documentary succeeds where it matters most: capturing the chaos and urgency of those first days of The DAO hack, from the people who were directly involved with it.Andean Medjedovic, the poster boy of ‘code is law’The hacker who gets the most airtime in the documentary is Andean Medjedovic, a Canadian teenager who ended up being a kind of live experiment in whether “code is law” holds up in a court of law. His name is tied to two major DeFi exploits, that of Indexed Finance in 2021 and of KyberSwap in 2023. According to an indictment by prosecutors in the Eastern District of New York, he stole about $49 million and $16 million, respectively.“It’s both cathartic to see it out after all this time, and a reminder of an incredibly rough time in a bunch of our lives, so I’m pretty conflicted,” Day told DL News.As the documentary reminds us, Medjedovic, a maths prodigy, was identified by the Indexed Finance team through a seemingly absurd digital breadcrumb. In a careless moment of vanity, he edited — under a user name associated with him — a Wikipedia page for a Canadian TV show he’d once appeared on and added himself to the list of show’s notable alumni as a “notable mathematician.” That tiny edit was enough to connect the dots between his real identity and the heist. But that wasn’t enough to bring him to justice, as Medjedovic still remains at large. In March 2024, Medjedovic told DL News he was self-exiled on an island somewhere and claimed to have turned a white-hat hacker — someone who hacks lawfully.Medjedovic declined to speak in the documentary, Craig told DL News.Didn’t Avi Eisenberg prove ‘code is law’?Another hacker that gets plenty of screen time is Avi Eisenberg, the Mango Markets exploiter.In October 2022, Eisenberg manipulated Mango Markets, the Solana-based decentralised exchange, by artificially inflating the price of his own collateral token, then borrowing against it to drain roughly $110 million in assets. He was convicted in April 2024.Unlike most hackers who vanish, he went fully public at the time, tweeting that his actions were “a highly profitable trading strategy” conducted entirely within the protocol’s rules (hence “code is law”).Although initially he negotiated with the Mango DAO, returning part of the funds in exchange for a promise that he wouldn’t face legal consequences, that didn’t stop US federal agencies from later charging him with market manipulation and fraud. If you don’t know what later happened, you could be forgiven for thinking as the credits roll that Eisenberg lost the “code is law” defence. “We’re beginning to see the end of the ‘code is law’ defence,” Paul Dylan-Ennis, the author of ​​the book “Absolute Essentials of Ethereum”, says in the documentary.“Filming concluded during the build-up to Eisenberg’s trial, and at the time, the overwhelming expectation among those we spoke to was that he would be found guilty,” Craig said.“The crew had originally intended to end the film with a message saying that Eisenberg’s case had tested the ‘“code is law’” defence in court, and it flopped.”And yet this May a judge said prosecutors didn’t prove Eisenberg defrauded Mango Markets in 2022.Although some in the industry cheered that “code is law” appeared to prevail in court, things were more nuanced than that — as they typically are.While the defence did lean on the idea that Eisenberg’s trades were executed within the logic of the protocol’s code, the judge didn’t conclude that this alone justified acquittal.Instead, the judge’s decision to overturn the most serious conviction — on wire fraud — rested on narrower legal grounds specific to that statute.“While a jury did initially find Eisenberg guilty, as we were preparing to release the film it became clear the judge was seriously considering overturning some of the convictions… which ultimately happened,” Craig said.“The precedent it sets for future cases isn’t clear, but it reinforces the central theme of the film: that we’re in uncharted legal territory where traditional systems are struggling to keep up.”
Share
2025/10/29 07:11