Quenton Jackson To Sign Three-Year Contract With Indiana Pacers
Quenton Jackson earned a three-year NBA contract with the Pacers through consistent performance, shooting 48.9% overall and 40.5% from three this season, sources said.
- On Feb 27, 2026, the Indiana Pacers converted Quenton Jackson's two-way pact to a three-year standard NBA contract, ESPN's Shams Charania and league sources reported.
- Performance data shows Jackson earned an expanded role through consistent scoring, shooting, and energy that fit the team, according to Pacers general manager Chad Buchanan.
- According to The Indianapolis Star's Dustin Dopirak, it is a minimum-salary deal with a projected $550k–$600k cap hit if signed this weekend, using the Mid-Level Exception.
- Indiana's roster now shows a full 15th standard slot, opening a two-way contract slot after Tony Bradley's expired 10-day contract, preserving flexibility for future moves.
- With the March 4 deadline looming, Jackson's rise from undrafted status and years on G League, Exhibit 10 and two-way pacts culminated in this standard NBA opportunity.
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Pacers Sign Guard Quenton Jackson to 3-Year Contract
Source: Michael Hickey / Getty INDIANAPOLIS — The Indiana Pacers announced Friday they are signing guard Quenton Jackson to a three-year deal. Jackson has been on a two-way deal for these past three seasons. He averaged 9.2 points, 48.9% shooting from the field, and 40.5% from 3 in 30 games on the team. The Pacers take on the Memphis Grizzlies this Sunday afternoon at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in downtown Indianapolis. The game tips off at 5 p.m., a…
Quenton Jackson signs 3-year deal with Pacers; what we know
Quenton Jackson's Pacers Teammates React To 3-Year Contract
This weekend, the Indiana Pacers will face just one team, traveling to Tennessee to take on the Memphis Grizzlies. After losing five straight games, the last two by a combined 45 points, it’ll be an opportunity for them to re-calibrate. Even teams that aren’t concerned about their win-loss record need to feel the triumph of victory every now and then. It boosts the morale in the locker room and, frankly, keeps players from pulling their hair out…
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