Indiana
Quenton Jackson Gets Indiana Pacers Final Two-Way Deal Before Deadline
Washington Wizards guard Quenton Jackson (29) in action during the second half of an NBA basketball … [+]
On Monday, the Indiana Pacers announced that they had signed guard Quenton Jackson to a two-way contract. The 25-year old guard is in his second season in the NBA.
Jackson, who attended Texas A&M and spent three years in the NCAA ranks, had time with the Washington Wizards on a two-way contract last season. He averaged 6.2 points and 1.7 assists per game for the Wizards, and he appeared in nine games.
To be eligible for a two-way contract, a player must have fewer than four years of NBA experience. Because Jackson only has one year of service under his belt, he was eligible for the agreement. Two-way deals are contracts that can be transferred between the NBA and the G League throughout the season, so Jackson will spend time with both the Pacers and their G League affiliate team, the Indiana Mad Ants.
The timing of this deal is related to a deadline. March 4 was the final day that teams were permitted to sign players to a two-way contract, and the Pacers had one such deal available to offer after promoting the contract of young wing Kendall Brown, who was previously on a two-way agreement. Now, the Pacers have a full roster — 15 players are on a standard contract with the team, and three others have two-way deals.
Players on two-way contracts receive half of the rookie minimum for their salary. For a full season, that number would be about $560,000, but Jackson’s deal is prorated to the day he signed his contract.
With Jackson officially signing on March 4, his salary will be roughly $135,000 with the Pacers this season. Players on two-way deals are allowed to appear in 50 games during a full NBA season, and that number is prorated as well. Jackson can be active for 12 of the Pacers final 20 games.
The blue and gold have been all about flexibility and options this season. They kept roster spots open when they needed to and didn’t use their exceptions until late in the campaign. That made it easier to grab Brown on a more favorable deal, and they were able to use the open two-way slot to add Jackson.
“Some of it is trying to keep flexibility with our roster. We wanted to have the ability to maybe look at some other players with our last roster spot,” Pacers general manager Chad Buchanan said of his team’s moves and waivers just after the trade deadline.
LAS VEGAS, NEVADA – JULY 08: Quenton Jackson #29 of Washington Wizards takes a shot over Andrew … [+]
Jackson spent his first day in the Indiana organization practicing with the Mad Ants. “I’m just high-spirited, goofy,” Jackson said, per the team. He thinks his energy will fit in anywhere, including with his new squad.
This season, Jackson has been with the Chicago Bulls organization. He played with the NBA club for preseason action, where he appeared in three games, but he was waived prior to the start of the NBA campaign. He landed with the Windy City Bulls in the NBA G League.
In 38 outings for Windy City, Jackson averaged 16 points and 5.8 assists per game. As a bigger, scoring guard, he can slot in as an off-ball starter for the Mad Ants once he is up to speed. The Pacers’ G League affiliate team will have a quality guard rotation with Isaiah Wong, Elfrid Payton, and Jackson all getting playing time.
Jackson reached 19 points in his most recent NBA outing, and he averaged 11.3 points per game in his final four appearances for Washington. He has proven to be a good scorer at the pro level — he will hope to grow in other ways with the Pacers.
Wong and Oscar Tshiebwe occupy Indiana’s other two two-way deals. The Mad Ants next play on Thursday, so perhaps Jackson makes his debut in the organization on that date. The Pacers, meanwhile, will have to decide when to use his 12 available games in the NBA — if they use them at all.
Indiana
Body of teen recovered from Lake Michigan after search near Indiana beach
The body of a 13-year-old boy was recovered from Lake Michigan during a multiple-day search near a beach in Michigan City, Indiana.
Officials did not provide further details.
A search has been underway since Monday night after witnesses reported seeing a child wearing red shorts enter the water.
Michigan City police said officers responded to a possible drowning just before 5:40 p.m. on Monday near Washington Park Beach.
Police said the child disappeared underwater just south of the lighthouse and did not resurface.
A search was initiated with dive efforts, a fishing boat, drone technology, and a medical helicopter deployed.
The Michigan City Fire Department said three divers suffered minor injuries during the search and are being treated at Franciscan Health. Fire officials said divers encountered “challenging water conditions” before the search was suspended.
Officials have not identified the body recovered.
Indiana
What Teams Could Be Good NBA Draft Trade Partners For Indiana Pacers?
PARIS, FRANCE – JANUARY 25: Blake Wesley #14 of the San Antonio Spurs drives to the basket between RayJ Dennis #10 and Johnny Furphy #12 of the Indiana Pacers during the fourth quarter at The Accor Arena on January 25, 2025 in Paris, France. (Photo by Dean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty Images)
Getty Images
INDIANAPOLIS – With the NBA Draft approaching tonight, the Indiana Pacers are on the outside looking in. On Tuesday, the first round will take place as 30 rookies join the NBA.
The Pacers aren’t currently involved. They don’t have a selection among the first 30. In fact, they don’t have one at all. Their top pick is owned by the Los Angeles Clippers and their second rounder is in the hands of the Memphis Grizzlies. Indiana and Portland are the only two franchises without a selection in this week’s proceedings.
Even without a pick in either round, the Pacers did their homework ahead of the draft. Dozens of prospects came into their practice facility to work out in front of front office members, scouts, coaches, and more. That on-court prep matters for Indiana’s decision makers, and the face-to-face meetings with prospects are sometimes more valuable at this stage of the process.
And just because the Pacers don’t own a 2026 draft pick right now doesn’t mean they won’t make one by the end of Wednesday night. They have plenty of future picks to trade and have frequently made moves early in the second round. Indiana has been active with picks in the 31-38 range during the 2020s.
There are good reasons to do so again, though as contenders acquiring young talent is not a necessity for the Pacers. If they do decide to trade for a 2026 NBA Draft selection, who might be a good trade partner for the blue and gold?
In 2024, the Pacers and San Antonio Spurs agreed to a trade involving second round picks. That deal put Johnny Furphy in Indianapolis. In 2025, Indiana and San Antonio linked up again – this time, the Spurs swapped the 38th pick for a future second-round selection.
These teams have a history of draft-related transactions. And they could be good fits for one another again. While the Spurs have several roster spots to fill this summer and have the wiggle room to bring in a few rookies, they are contenders. They need to add proven veterans in free agency. Yet as of this writing, they own four picks in the 2026 NBA Draft.
Those four are 20th, 35th, 42nd, and 44th overall. Could the Pacers grab one of those picks and send San Antonio a future asset that may be more helpful down the line? The Grizzlies appear to be entering a rebuild and would thus value draft selections. But Memphis has 14 players under contract – a full roster – before making a single pick in the coming draft.
There are a few players the Grizzlies could easily part with. But their roster crunch makes them a trade candidate this week, especially as they hold picks No. 3, 16, and 32. That early-second round pick seems like a particularly good fit for the Pacers if these teams agree to a trade.
The Nets find themselves in a similar position to the Grizzlies. Entering the offseason, they could have as many as 13 players under contract after agreeing to acquire Julius Randle from the Minnesota Timberwolves on Monday. They also possess multiple picks in the coming draft.
Brooklyn is slated to select sixth, 28th, and 43rd. Could 28 or 43 be in play for Indiana if the Nets need to keep their roster spots open in anticipation of other moves?
The Cavaliers and Pacers made a trade involving draft picks earlier this decade when Caris LeVert went to Cleveland and Ricky Rubio to Indiana. Multiple second-round picks and a first-round selection were exchanged in the deal. This week, the Cavaliers could be a trade candidate with their only draft pick. Cleveland holds pick 29 overall, which comes with a starting salary just under $3 million (pending rookie scale usage). But right now, the Cavs are over the salary cap’s second apron.
That means adding more contracts would make it harder for the team to be flexible or add other talent in the offseason. Cleveland makes sense as a team that would move their late first-round pick for multiple future assets, or even move back into the second round. Indiana could be a good trade partner if that is the case.
CLEVELAND, OHIO – APRIL 13: Andrew Nembhard #2 of the Indiana Pacers guards Craig Porter Jr. #9 of the Cleveland Cavaliers during the first quarter at Rocket Arena on April 13, 2025 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Jason Miller/Getty Images)
Getty Images The Thunder, like the Cavaliers, project to be an expensive team in 2026-27. So much so that they already agreed to a trade that will send forward Aaron Wiggins to the Atlanta Hawks in exchange for second-round draft capital.
While the money is the headliner for the Thunder, they fit the same boxes as every team listed so far. Like the Spurs, they are contenders and perhaps more interested in upgrades than young talent. Like the Cavaliers, they have a pricey roster. And like the Grizzlies and Nets, they have several draft picks and a more filled roster. Oklahoma City owns picks 12, 17, and 37 entering the draft. Pick 37, in particular, feels like one that could be moved.
Atlanta has been mentioned in multiple reports as a team looking for upgrades in the offseason. They were the only team able to beat the champion New York Knicks more than once in the most recent NBA playoffs, so improving their roster is a natural next step.
The Hawks own the eighth overall pick, which would be challenging for the Pacers to obtain. But the Hawks, who have 12 players under contract, also own picks 23 and 57. Is there a world in which Atlanta’s later selections become available in bigger deals? They don’t have the perfect asset for the Pacers to chase like some other teams but seem like a team to watch in general during the two-night draft.
The Clippers and Pacers already made a trade involving a 2026 draft pick. Could they do so again?
Los Angeles has 13 players under contract and owns picks five, 36, and 52. They could easily use all three selections and spend a two-way contract on their 52nd pick. But the Clippers have shaken up their team quite a bit in the last few months and are a team worth watching this week. New York just won a title. Keeping their core together seems like a prudent move. And maybe the Knicks do exactly that – they’ve already reportedly agreed to terms with Mohamed Diawara and have agreed to change a contract detail for Jose Alvarado.
But like a few teams on this list, the Knicks are expensive. They are approaching the second apron, and crossing that team spending threshold has been a topic of discussion surrounding the franchise since their championship parade.
“There’s certain things in the NBA that you’d have to be suicidal to do. One of them is the second apron,” Knicks owner James Dolan said in a recent radio interview.
New York holds the 24th, 31st, and 55th overall picks. Could the Pacers move into the late first or early second round via a trade with New York?
Count the Nuggets, who possess picks 26 and 49, in the expensive teams group. They are approaching the second apron and have many roster spots to fill out to complete their team. As Denver looks to contend around Nikola Jokic, would they be willing to move their pick late in the first-round to make their salary cap sheet make better sense? If so, the Pacers could be a good trade partner.
While the Bulls don’t have a filled roster or financial crunch, they have other noteworthy factors to keep an eye on.
One is that the team switched its front office leader, bringing in Bryson Graham as their new Executive Vice President of Basketball Operations. His draft strategy isn’t clear as a team’s top dog.
The Bulls also join the Spurs as the only two teams with four picks in the 2026 NBA Draft. That volume makes a move more likely, though Chicago doesn’t have a strong need to deal a pick.
The Pacers have multiple attractive future second-round picks they could move in trades, and they have some recent draftees in Jarace Walker, Ben Sheppard, and Kam Jones that are still developing but could be moved. In their draft pick and salary cap reality, a trade seems possible, and the above teams would all be natural candidates for a variety of reasons.Could the Spurs and Pacers make another deal?
Memphis Grizzlies
Brooklyn Nets
Another Pacers trade with the Cleveland Cavaliers?
Oklahoma City Thunder
Atlanta Hawks
A Los Angeles Clippers and Indiana Pacers draft trade again?
New York Knicks
Denver Nuggets
Chicago Bulls
Indiana
Madam Walker Legacy Fest brings back Indiana Avenue’s Black history
Women of 250 honors women past, present and future, including C.J. Walker
This video spotlights the initiative and includes a look at Madam C.J. Walker’s enduring influence while encouraging viewers to nominate women who have made a difference today.
As dozens of people and music filled Indiana Avenue, Sampson Levingston gestured to the scene around him as evidence of a return to the area’s history as a hub of Black life and music.
“This is what Indiana Avenue is supposed to be. Black people having a good time on a Saturday in the summer,” Levingston said. “That’s our history. That’s our story.”
The fifth annual Legacy Fest, organized by the Madam Walker Legacy Center, honored that story on June 19 and 20. A block party with food trucks, vendors selling one-of-a-kind jeweled hats and patchwork denim, jewelry, and live musical performances capped off the Juneteenth weekend. The day before, Grammy-winning producer Teddy Riley performed in the Walker Theatre.
The block circles the Walker Building, a triangular African Art Deco theater topped with a red sign easily spotted in Indianapolis’ skyline. The 1927 building is the last building still operating in its original state on a street once filled with Black-owned businesses but now dominated by fences and parking lots.
After being forced by a former downtown Indianapolis theater to pay a “Black tax,” Walker promised to build a theater without discrimination. The building was home to Walker Manufacturing Company and a 1500-seat theater, the only theater without race-based discrimination in the city at the time. The theater still regularly puts on shows and holds the Madam Walker Legacy Center non-profit responsible for and supported by the Legacy Fest.
“There’s a lot of BS going on in the world and the country. You can get sad about it and pout,” Levingston said. “Madam Walker addressed the issue.”
Levingston runs Walk & Talk, historic walking tours allowing participants to literally step into Indianapolis’ Black history. On June 20 he led a group away from the music and crowd of Legacy fest and around the block, stopping at historic centers of the community such as Lockefield Gardens and the former Second Christian Church. On the tour, Levingston spoke about the impact of redlining and zoning restrictions on reducing the neighborhood’s density and businesses. In the Green Book, a travel guide listing businesses safe for Black Americans, most Indianapolis stores listed are on Indiana Avenue. Now the block is mostly residential. A closed convivence store is vacant and the Second Christian Church is a single-family home.
“Imagine if they won’t let people borrow for decades and decades how much wealth that drips out of a community,” Levingston said. “That’s why when you walk around you just see parking lots.”
Julia A. Royston, a Legacy Fest block party vendor, has been publishing books for 18 years. Many of the books she publishes are centered on increasing representation and putting out voices other than traditional publishing houses.
“No matter what season of the world we’re in, there’s still an opportunity for us to tell our story our way,” Royston said.
Lucy Tobier is the politics reporting intern for the Indianapolis Star. She can be reached at lucy.tobier@indystar.com or on X at @TobierLucy
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