Why is Jonathan Isaac still wearing an Orlando Magic uniform? It’s a cool little fact. Isaac was born in the Bronx, New York, on October 3, 1997. He turned 28 last fall. That’s what the NBA calls “prime time”—the time when skill and experience are most valuable, when contracts get bigger and roles become clear. But 28 looks different for Isaac than it does for most players his age. It seems more earned.
He joined the league as the sixth overall pick in 2017. He was 19 years old, 6 feet 10 inches tall, and had defensive instincts that made scouts use words like “special.” It was enough to play one season at Florida State. The Magic didn’t think twice. For a while, the prediction seemed reasonable, maybe even too low.
Isaac’s third season, from 2019 to 2020, gave us the best look at what he could become. He had almost 12 points, 6.8 rebounds, and 2.3 blocks per game, and he looked like a player on the verge of something big. Then, in August 2020, his left knee gave out in Orlando during the NBA Bubble. A torn ACL and meniscus is the kind of injury that changes careers for players, even if they don’t want to admit it.

After that, they watched for years. He missed seasons, came back slowly, and had to have surgery on his right hamstring again in 2022. Two and a half years after that August night, Isaac finally played in the NBA again in January 2023. It was clear that the league had changed in obvious ways. The Magic had put together a new team with younger players. There was no need to say out loud that Isaac’s role had shrunk.
It takes a certain amount of patience to get back on track after that. It’s not just our bodies. When players miss that much time, it’s harder for them to figure out where they fit again than it is to fix their knee. Isaac quietly got it done. He played in 58 games in 2023–24 and made 51% of his shots from the floor. Not a line of stars. But proof of idea.
By 2024, the Magic had faith in him enough to give him a five-year, $84 million extension. Things changed again right before the 2026–27 season. He was let go at the end of June 2026, but four days later, he signed a new deal worth $3.52 million for one year. This is the kind of transaction where the amount of money doesn’t really say what it means. He is still wanted by someone. He still wants to be there.
By any measure, the 2025–26 season was not very good. 52 games, 10 minutes every night, and 2.6 points each. Those numbers don’t show who the hero is. That being said, they do talk about a 28-year-old who has spent more time in rehab than on highlight reels, but he keeps coming back anyway.
Isaac is in a unique position for his age and background. That’s not the same thing as a reclamation project. He’s also not a story to teach a lesson. What’s more, he’s a player who came in with a lot of promise, had that promise broken in the worst way possible, and has spent the last five years figuring out what’s left. Still something there, though it’s tougher to measure now.
It’s still not clear if this one-year contract will lead to something more or if it will be the end of the story. It’s clear that Jonathan Isaac, who is 28 years old, has already played basketball more times than most players twice his age. It’s important, even if the box score doesn’t show it.
