It's becoming harder than ever to keep a job in the NBA. We continually see role players make the decision to sign with team's overseas, and several never end up making their way back to the NBA.
Spencer Dinwiddie has found his next stop overseas. The veteran guard has officially signed with Bayern Munich, the German club announced. The deal does not include an NBA out clause, meaning Dinwiddie is locked in for the season.
The all-time list of NBA All-Stars is obviously long, and notably distinguished. However, there are some players — for various reasons — who the casual, or even most-dedicated, NBA fans can't recall having earned All-Star nods.
Spencer Dinwiddie’s market beyond the NBA has been heating up over the past few days. Lately, he’s been getting linked to several clubs, some based in Turkey, Greece, and Germany.
Two recently waived point guards are drawing overseas interest. According to Marc Stein of The Stein Line, both Spencer Dinwiddie and Jared Butler have suitors in Europe following their preseason releases.
Spencer Dinwiddie’s days in the NBA might be numbered. After he was cut by the Charlotte Hornets, the veteran guard has been gaining “strong interest” from the EuroLeague.
The Charlotte Hornets inked veteran guard Spencer Dinwiddie to a one-year, $3.6 million contract in the summer, but they will be entering the 2025-26 NBA season without him on the roster.
The Charlotte Hornets officially announced their roster for the start of the 2025-26 season, and there was one surprising entry. That surprising entry is the inclusion of Pat Connaughton over Spencer Dinwiddie, who was waived last week.
The 2025 preseason is starting to wrap up around the NBA, so teams will start to crunch down on their rosters, waiving people to get down to the roster limits.
Spencer Dinwiddie may have been stung by the Charlotte Hornets, but the New York Knicks might be a good spot to pick up the pieces. As NBA squads start to prune their preseason rosters, one of the more surprising entries to the cut list was Dinwiddie, a lasting NBA veteran who was released by a veteran's minimum contract from the Hornets.
With the regular season under a week away, the Charlotte Hornets waived veteran guard Spencer Dinwiddie to finalize their roster heading into the new campaign.
The Houston Rockets will not be able to pursue veteran guard Spencer Dinwiddie following his release from the Charlotte Hornets, due to hard-cap restrictions triggered earlier this offseason.
Less than 24 hours after Malcolm Brogdon’s announcement, Spencer Dinwiddie was waived by the Hornets and is looking for a new team. He could have a fit on the Knicks.
The Hornets have officially waived veteran point guard Spencer Dinwiddie, the team announced in a press release. The move comes just three months after Dinwiddie signed a one-year, fully guaranteed deal with Charlotte.
The Charlotte Hornets just shook up NBA headlines with just under a week to go until the regular season kicks off with their decision to release 11-year veteran guard Spencer Dinwiddie.
The Charlotte Hornets just shook up NBA headlines with just under a week to go until the regular season kicks off with their decision to release 11-year veteran guard Spencer Dinwiddie.
The Charlotte Hornets waived guard Spencer Dinwiddie on Thursday, just three months after signing him to a one-year contract. The Hornets didn't release details, but ESPN reported the Hornets needed to release a guaranteed salary ahead of the season opener next week.
Coming into the 2025 offseason, one thing was extremely clear about the Charlotte Hornets: the team needed veterans. Last season, they had two in Taj Gibson and Seth Curry.
LaMelo Ball has played less than 50 games in all of his last three seasons in the NBA. With this, the Charlotte Hornets have seen a rotation of backup guards come in and receive starts.
In a move that’s raising eyebrows across the league and sparking buzz in Buzz City, the Charlotte Hornets have signed veteran guard Spencer Dinwiddie to a one-year deal, per ESPN’s Shams Charania.
The Los Angeles Lakers are searching for ways to improve a roster that lost in the first round of the playoffs this year, and they may have an interest in bringing back a notable veteran.