A significant gap persists between the Utah Jazz and restricted free agent center Walker Kessler despite the franchise placing an offer worth approximately $140 million over five years on the table, a figure that would represent the largest contract ever awarded to a center who had not yet earned All-Star recognition.
The offer signals how highly Utah values the 7-foot-2 big man, but the distance between the two sides suggests Kessler may be seeking considerably more than what the franchise has been willing to commit. As a restricted free agent, Kessler is free to sign an offer sheet with another team, at which point the Jazz retain the right to match it and keep him on their roster.
What Kessler brings to the table
The case for a substantial investment in Kessler is straightforward. When healthy, he has been one of the most impactful defensive players in the league. In the 2024-25 season he ranked second in blocked shots and fifth in rebounding while posting strong efficiency numbers on the offensive end. His season last year was limited to just five games before a shoulder injury required surgery, which adds an element of medical uncertainty to an already complicated negotiation.
His combination of size, shot-blocking ability, rim protection, and rebounding at his position makes him the kind of player that contenders covet and rebuilding teams rarely can afford to develop and then lose in the same window. For Utah, letting him walk would represent a significant setback to whatever direction the franchise is building toward.
A second contract standoff with Keyonte George
The Kessler situation is not the only complicated negotiation the Jazz are managing. The franchise is also navigating discussions around a rookie contract extension with guard Keyonte George, and sources have expressed doubt that those talks will produce an agreement either.
George’s trajectory has been striking. After two difficult early seasons, he broke out in 2025-26 with averages of 23.6 points and 6.1 assists per game while posting dramatically improved efficiency numbers. The Jazz view him as a core piece of their future and have expressed optimism about his continued growth, but the front office is not yet willing to pay him at the upper range of what rookie extensions can reach. Their preference is to see him sustain that breakout performance across another full season before committing to the corresponding contract.
As with Kessler, Utah is comfortable allowing George to reach restricted free agency if no extension is finalized, preserving the ability to match any outside offer while maintaining financial flexibility in the short term.
Draft uncertainty adds another layer
The Jazz hold the second overall pick in next week’s NBA draft, but the picture at the top of the board has grown more complicated. The player many observers expect to go first overall is limiting his pre-draft visits exclusively to the team holding the top pick, which is not Utah. The second prospect most prominently connected to the Jazz has visited both franchises, leaving the outcome genuinely uncertain heading into draft night.
The combination of a stalled Kessler negotiation, unresolved extension talks with George, and draft-day uncertainty about who will be available at the second pick gives Utah a summer defined by consequential decisions made without clear resolution on any of the major fronts.
How the Jazz navigate the coming weeks will shape the franchise’s trajectory for years and may determine whether the current roster core stays together long enough to see the rebuild through.

