We're nowhere near Christmas, but the Brooklyn Nets have treated this summer as the season of giving. Brooklyn's incoming rookie class—consisting of Egor Demin, Nolan Traore, Drake Powell, Ben Saraf and Danny Wolf—surprised a Brooklyn Basketball clinic at Sunset Park back in July.
Watch this space… Mid-afternoon on Friday, the Brooklyn Nets waived Tosan Evbuomwan, the 6’8” British-born Princeton forward who’d been on a two-way contract, his slot being one of three available.
Around this time last year, there was an abundance of talk about the Brooklyn Nets trading Mikal Bridges for “a bunch of middle schoolers.” Dariq Whitehead, Drew Timme, and Tyson Etienne recently spent some time bettering the Brooklyn community, and just maybe scouting for those picks in the process.
The Brooklyn Nets still have a two-way contract to give out. As the countdown towards the 2025-26 NBA season rolls on, the Nets need to fill at least one vital roster spot.
Which former NBA players watch today's game and think to themselves, Man, I would have been awesome in today's game? Probably all of them. But how many of them are right?
As the Nets move deeper into their rebuild, they've built a roster full of young talent, but they also have some scrappy veterans who bring a level of grit that the younger players could learn from.
Tyson Etienne has already secured his spot on the Brooklyn Nets' 2025-26 roster after receiving a two-way contract following his seven appearances last season.
Tosan Evbuomwan and Tyson Etienne hold down two of three two-way roster spots for the Brooklyn Nets, but who will join them? The Nets could go a number of directions.
The Brooklyn Nets continued a busy offseason on Thursday, re-signing Tyson Etienne to a two-way contract. Etienne, a 6-foot-2 guard who attended high school in Englewood, New Jersey, joins forward Tosan Evbuomwan as the team’s players on two-way contracts.
On Wednesday, the Brooklyn Nets filled one of their two-way spots by re-signing Wichita State product Tyson Etienne. Etienne made seven appearances for Brooklyn toward the end of the 2024-25 campaign, averaging 7.9 points in 21.6 minutes of action.
The Brooklyn Nets made multiple roster moves on Tuesday, signing Tyson Etienne to a two-way contract and waiving Kendall Brown. Those maneuvers came on the final day NBA teams were allowed to sign players to two-way contracts.
The Brooklyn Nets are making a move to bolster their backcourt, signing guard Tyson Etienne to a two-way contract, according to HoopsHype’s Michael Scotto.
The Brooklyn Nets are making a move to bolster their backcourt, signing guard Tyson Etienne to a two-way contract, according to HoopsHype’s Michael Scotto.
The Brooklyn Nets have waived guard Tyson Etienne one day after signing him, the team announced, via the RealGM transactions log. Etienne is 6-foot-2 and is now likely headed for the Long Island Nets of the G League.
Like other NBA clubs, the Nets are restocking their G League roster starting with Tyson Etienne. It’s that time of the off-season when NBA teams begin signing — then waiving — players, part of a dance aimed at filling out their G League rosters.
Just 28 days out from their preseason opener against the LA Clippers, the Brooklyn Nets continue to make moves in hopes of a better future. Per Evan Barnes of Newsday Sports, the franchise has added former Wichita State star Tyson Etienne.
Tyson Etienne is coming off a year where he appeared in 21 regular season games (12 starts) for the College Park Skyhawks (G League affiliate of the Atlanta Hawks).