
Cam Thomas entered free agency with momentum following his most productive NBA campaign to date, but according to Bleacher Report’s Jake Fischer, the 23-year-old guard has yet to draw meaningful interest around the league.
“Cam Thomas—no—does not really have a market, to my understanding,” Fischer said, suggesting that the Brooklyn Nets may face little competition in retaining the high-scoring wing.
The Nets extended a $5.99 million qualifying offer to Thomas, officially making him a restricted free agent. Brooklyn now holds the right to match any offer sheet he may receive from another team.
Thomas averaged a career-high 24.0 points and 3.8 assists across 25 games during the 2024–25 season, starting 23 of those contests. He shot 43.8% from the field and hit 34.9% of his three-point attempts on high volume.
His scoring surge came in a year when the Nets struggled to a 26–56 finish, placing 12th in the Eastern Conference. Despite the team’s performance, Thomas was one of the few consistent offensive contributors.
Drafted 27th overall in 2021, the LSU product has spent all four seasons with Brooklyn. Over 215 career games, he has averaged 15.1 points in just over 23 minutes per outing.
In 2024–25, Thomas also set personal bests in free throw percentage (.881), assists per game (3.8), and three-pointers made per game (2.7). His ability to score off the dribble and shoot from deep remains his biggest asset.
However, questions about his playmaking ceiling, defense, and role on a winning team may be tempering outside interest. With few teams armed with cap space and many targeting other positions, Thomas’ market appears limited for now.
If no outside offers materialize, Brooklyn could re-sign him on the one-year qualifying offer or negotiate a longer-term deal. The Nets may also explore sign-and-trade options if interest resurfaces later in the offseason.















