CLEVELAND, Ohio — The Cavs did more than clear a roster spot at the trade deadline. They cleared a runway.
By trading Lonzo Ball and opening the 15th roster slot, the Cavs created the necessary space to convert Nae’Qwan Tomlin from a two‑way contract to a standard NBA deal.
It is a reward for trust earned, minutes survived and an improbable path that never bent toward convenience.
“With these moves, we’ll be able to convert Nae’Qwan, which is an incredible story,” Cavs president of basketball operations Koby Altman said during his post-trade deadline press conference on Thursday. “... where he came from and just the rare feat that he’s accomplished. When he does get converted, I would love for all you guys to congratulate him. It’s just remarkable. Not only is he getting converted, but he’s playing real minutes and he’s helping us. So he’s been a revelation. “
The timing of the conversion matters almost as much as the conversion itself.
The mechanics behind the moment
Tomlin has four NBA games remaining on his two‑way eligibility clock. The Cavs are expected to use all of them before officially converting him, a decision driven by luxury tax math.
Cleveland currently sits around $3.862 million above the NBA’s second apron. The moment Tomlin is converted to a standard deal, that number could rise by roughly $700,000. His contract will be a prorated minimum, the only mechanism available to the Cavs as a second‑apron team without access to signing exceptions, including the mid‑level.
Once the conversion happens, the Cavs have a couple of structural options:
A deal that runs through the end of the 2025‑26 campaign, with a renegotiation opportunity in the offseason.
A two‑year minimum contract, the maximum length allowed under current restrictions.
The two‑year route offers subtle but meaningful advantages. Tomlin’s cap hit this season would still land around $700,000, but next season’s salary would be roughly $2.1 million, calculated as a 5% raise off this year’s minimum. With minimum salaries projected to rise alongside the cap, a comparable deal next year could approach $2.4 million. Locking Tomlin in now could save Cleveland approximately $300,000 next season.
But the Cavs did not engineer this flexibility simply to win a spreadsheet exercise. They did it because Tomlin forced the issue.
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Why his minutes stopped feeling experimental
Across 45 career games, he is averaging 6.7 points and 3.3 rebounds in 16.6 minutes. Those numbers do not explain why his role has felt stable, intentional and increasingly trusted.
The 6‑foot‑10 wing has become one of Cleveland’s most versatile perimeter defenders, a necessity after parting with De’Andre Hunter ahead of the deadline and with Max Strus’ timeline toward his season debut still uncertain following offseason foot surgery.
And it never seems to matter who he’s guarding. They all get the same treatment.
On Jan. 30 against the Lakers, Tomlin picked up Luka Dončić before halfcourt. Twice he poked the ball free. The second time ended with a breakaway two-handed tomahawk slam that detonated Rocket Arena. The pestering continued against one of the league’s best players to the point that Dončić looked eager to give the ball up just to escape the harassment.
Tomlin plays fearlessly yet calculates every move in an effort to stay on the court.
He sprints the floor. He attacks gaps. He defends relentlessly for 94 feet. His cuts are violent, his dunks vicious. He disrupts simply by being present, by turning length and energy into discomfort.
His minutes have not felt like emergency coverage or developmental indulgence. They have come against real lineups, in real moments, when Cleveland needed juice.
Tomlin hunts impact. His energy is his calling card. He defends because deflections turn into opportunities. He cuts because no one needs to call a play for him to score. The athleticism is obvious. The effort layered on top of it is what separates him.
Cavs head coach Kenny Atkinson has already referenced scenarios where Tomlin could be deployed in playoff matchups, even with inevitable rotation tightening. Because Cleveland may not need Tomlin for 30 minutes. But it may need him badly for one stretch or just 10 minutes. He’s earned that trust.
A path that never came prepackaged
Tomlin’s place in the NBA makes more sense once you understand how rarely the game ever met him halfway.
He grew up in Harlem, New York, in an era where exposure pipelines were already well established. High school circuits fed AAU brands. AAU brands fed recruiting rankings. Recruiting rankings fed NIL value.
Tomlin touched none of it.
His game was shaped on pavement, not polished hardwood. Rucker Park, not prep showcases.
He attended Urban Assembly High School in New York City, but never played. Poor grades kept him off the team during his lone attempt as a senior.
A brief prep school stop at Strength N Motion International, run by Naismith Basketball Hall of Famer George Gervin, finally opened a door. Monroe Community College in Rochester, New York, offered the first real opportunity. After one season, Tomlin outgrew the level.
Chipola Junior College in Marianna, Florida, became the turning point. From 2020 to 2022, Tomlin helped lead Chipola to a 53‑11 record, finding structure, accountability, and belief. It put him on Kansas State’s radar, the same program that developed Dean Wade, another Cleveland pipeline success story.
The opportunity dissolved quickly. A disorderly conduct arrest led to Tomlin’s dismissal from Kansas State, despite being granted diversion in the case. Another restart. Another search for footing.
Memphis, under Penny Hardaway, became his final collegiate stop.
He went undrafted in 2024.
The Cavs brought him onto their Summer League roster. The Charge gave him a role. A 10‑day contract followed. Then a two‑way deal. Now, a standard NBA contract.
Nothing arrived early. Nothing stayed easy.
Nowhere near the finish line
Tomlin’s game is still evolving. His processing speed is catching up to his physical tools. His feel is growing. Those developments matter as much as any vertical pop or chase‑down block.
His NBA place has been molded by adversity. His legacy, however brief or extended, will be defined by how he responds under playoff lights, on a team that reshaped itself to give him this chance.
Sometimes, the player fighting hardest just to stay is the one who reminds everyone else what staying actually takes.
For the Cavaliers, converting Tomlin is a necessary transaction. For Tomlin, it is confirmation that the grind was not invisible.