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Jazz Face Oct. 31 Deadline on Rookie Scale Team Options
Chris Nicoll-Imagn Images

The Utah Jazz have circled one date on the fall calendar, Oct. 31.

By the end of October, the Jazz rookie scale contracts face an important deadline when the front office must decide on options for Taylor Hendricks, Keyonte George, Brice Sensabaugh, Cody Williams, and Isaiah Collier. It’s the kind of paperwork that rarely makes waves around the league, but in Salt Lake City, it serves as a subtle but telling marker of where the rebuild stands.

Rookie Options, Explained in Practice

When a player is drafted in the first round, the league’s contract system guarantees the first two seasons. Years three and four are at the discretion of the team, with decisions due a full year in advance. For Utah, that means weighing whether each young prospect is worth another season on the books in 2026-27.

Most clubs end up exercising the options; the salaries are modest compared with the wider cap sheet. Declining one usually shows the team doesn’t trust the player’s long-term fit. But the front office also doesn’t automatically keep everyone, especially for a roster with overlapping positions and a coaching staff trying to build a rotation.

Utah Jazz’s Rookie Scale Contracts

Hendricks was taken ninth overall in 2023 and still carries the profile of a future defensive anchor. His rookie season had ups and downs, but his ability to switch on the perimeter and protect the rim makes him a strong bet. At just under $7.8 million, his option feels safe.

George wasted little time showing he can create his own shot and carry possessions when needed, giving Utah a burst of offense the roster often lacked. The percentage has to improve, but the Jazz seem comfortable living with the bumps because of his attacking mindset. His $6.5 million option is a near certainty.

Sensabaugh is a tougher call. Offensively, he can fill it up in a hurry, but carving out minutes has been a challenge given his defensive limitations. The Jazz have to decide whether his scoring upside outweighs the question marks. Given the low cost, there’s still an incentive to stay patient.

Williams entered the league this summer with a reputation for length and versatility. He’s still raw, but wings with his physical tools are rare. Expect Utah to keep him around while he develops.

Collier, another rookie, offers a different look, a guard with vision and strength who can run pick-and-roll. Like Williams, his option is more about projecting forward than judging past production. With his contract at the rookie minimum scale, there’s little downside in giving him time.

Why These Rookie Contracts Matter for the Jazz Rebuild

If the Jazz pick up every option, they’ll carry a young, inexpensive core into 2026. That approach matches what Ainge and Zanik have done since the Mitchell-Gobert breakup: stockpile talent, protect cap space, and see who develops. A declined option, though, would draw plenty of attention. It usually means either a roster shuffle is coming or that the front office no longer sees a clear role for that player.

Utah isn’t the only team sorting this out. Washington actually leads the league with seven players up for decisions. But the Jazz’s five ties them near the top, underscoring how young the roster remains. For a franchise in no rush to contend, these are the kinds of internal choices that add up.

The Bigger Picture

The Western Conference isn’t forgiving. Utah knows it’s not ready to compete with Denver or Oklahoma City right now. That makes these developmental bets even more valuable. Hendricks represents length and defense, George a potential scoring guard, Sensabaugh a microwave shooter, Williams a versatile wing, and Collier a playmaking guard.

Individually, none are sure things. Collectively, they give the Jazz options, and in this stage of a rebuild, options matter as much as results.

Looking Ahead

Once Halloween passes, the decisions will be locked in. It may not register with fans immediately, but the impact will stretch into the offseason and beyond. For a franchise built on patience and timing, these October calls could quietly steer where the Jazz head next.

This article first appeared on The Lead and was syndicated with permission.

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