Date | League | Transaction |
---|---|---|
2011 NBA Draft | NBA | Drafted 29th overall by San Antonio. |
9th December, 2011 | NBA | Signed four year, $5,161,601 rookie scale contract with San Antonio. Included team options for 2013/14 and 2014/15. |
2nd January, 2012 | D-League | Assigned by San Antonio to Austin Toros of the D-League. |
12th January, 2012 | D-League | Recalled by San Antonio from Austin Toros of the D-League. |
3rd March, 2012 | D-League | Assigned by San Antonio to Austin Toros of the D-League. |
9th March, 2012 | D-League | Recalled by San Antonio from Austin Toros of the D-League. |
20th March, 2012 | D-League | Assigned by San Antonio to Austin Toros of the D-League. |
25th April, 2012 | D-League | Recalled by San Antonio from Austin Toros of the D-League. |
26th October, 2012 | NBA | San Antonio exercised 2013/14 team option. |
15th November, 2012 | D-League | Assigned by San Antonio to Austin Toros of the D-League. |
21st November, 2012 | D-League | Recalled by San Antonio from Austin Toros of the D-League. |
1st December, 2012 | D-League | Assigned by San Antonio to Austin Toros of the D-League. |
5th December, 2012 | D-League | Recalled by San Antonio from Austin Toros of the D-League. |
17th December, 2012 | D-League | Assigned by San Antonio to Austin Toros of the D-League |
14th January, 2013 | D-League | Recalled by San Antonio from Austin Toros of the D-League. |
22nd January, 2013 | D-League | Assigned by San Antonio to Austin Toros of the D-League. |
23rd January, 2013 | D-League | Recalled by San Antonio from Austin Toros of the D-League. |
24th January, 2013 | D-League | Assigned by San Antonio to Austin Toros of the D-League. |
28th February, 2013 | D-League | Recalled by San Antonio from Austin Toros of the D-League. |
28th October, 2013 | NBA | San Antonio exercised 2014/15 team option |
9th July, 2015 | NBA | Signed a four year, $29,890,000 contract with Toronto. Included player option for 2018/19. |
14th July, 2017 | NBA | Traded by Toronto to Indiana in exchange for the draft rights to Emir Preldzic (#57, 2009). |
2nd May, 2018 | NBA | Exercised 2018/19 player option. |
2010 - 2011 | Texas (NCAA) |
June 2011 - June 2015 | San Antonio Spurs (NBA) |
July 2015 - July 2017 | Toronto Raptors (NBA) |
July 2017 - present | Indiana Pacers (NBA) |
June 29, 2017
Cory Joseph
PG, 6’3, 193lbs, 25 years old, 6 years of experience
Joseph improved slightly on all his numbers from last season, small but measurable improvements across the board that speak to the solid job he did filling in for an injured Lowry. Without any one clear-cut strength, Joseph made for a good back-up option by virtue of his all-around game, headiness and discipline. Driving to the basket, finishing well for his size, shooting a good two-point pull-up, occasionally catching and shooting from three, aggressively trying to keep tabs defensively with those both bigger and faster than him, and working the offence without thriving in it, Joseph has become a plenty solid back-up point guard, further buoyed here by being Canadian.
Player Plan: Two years and a combined $14,575,000 remaining, with a player option for the final year. Despite his very solid play and Canadianness, it might be worth dealing him if Lowry re-signs, partly because the money might be needed elsewhere and partly because, if he opts out, he’s likely walking, thus a decent asset walks with him.
March 22, 2017
[...] DeMarre Carroll and Jonas Valanciunas are not drawing much defensive respect outside of the paint, while Patrick Patterson is not making enough shots this season to capitalise. Although somewhat effective, backup point guard Cory Joseph is not the scoring counterpart of DeRozan in the same way Lowry is, while Delon Wright and Fred VanVleet are not NBA calibre primary playmakers at this time. And while Serge Ibaka has become one of the better stretch bigs in the game, he is not creating looks with or without the ball so much as just taking what crops up. DeRozan is at his best as the first or second scoring option in a two-option line-up, but without Lowry, Toronto has thus far only had one.[...]
October 10, 2013
Cory Joseph, San Antonio Spurs
As the penultimate pick in 2011, Joseph is certainly cheap enough at only $2,023,261 in his fourth season. However, his own team has twice placed players ahead of him with Nando de Colo and Patrick Mills, and thus Joseph fits no obvious role with the Spurs.
Working in his favor are strong performances in the D-League last season and in the FIBA America tournament this summer. Joseph has talent and has demonstrated that at levels close to the NBA one. However, given that the Spurs have plenty of competition for the only role Joseph can fit, it seems unnecessary to guarantee him NBA salary if they can't guarantee him NBA minutes.
June 25, 2011
Pick 29: San Antonio, seeking to replace George Hill, make a selection reminiscent of the one that got them Hill in the first place. In a fairly shocking pick, they select Cory Joseph out of Texas, a man who was a legitimate threat to go undrafted tonight. Joseph is not a talentless player by any stretch, and having completed only one year at Texas before declaring, he has plenty of time left to prosper. But he's also not really any better than Curtis Jerrells.
Joseph's decision to declare was pretty shocking, given that he wasn't certain to get picked at all, let alone in the first round. And yet now he's gone in the first round to a team within the same state. Perhaps he had a hunch.
June 22, 2011
Cory Joseph - Joseph shouldn't really be here. He is this season's you-probably-shouldn't-have-declared point guard, and it's not as if he's riding the crest of momentum off the back of a deep tournament run, for Texas once again faded late. That said, he is not this year's Tommy Mason-Griffin or Courtney Fortson, for he is at least a good player. Joseph is a smooth, versatile and talented corer, if unspectacular and undersized. Juan Dixon turned a similar skillset into some NBA years. But Juan Dixon had a hell of a lot more legacy in his favour.