Month: November 2024

Rudy Fernandez Out For Season

Rudy Fernandez will undergo surgery on his lower back and will likely miss the remainder of the season, according to the Nuggets. Fernandez has missed time this year with a lower back strain, and had the injury flare up on Monday, prompting further evaluation.

The Nuggets should still be well-stocked at the wing despite losing Fernandez, as Aaron J. Lopez of Nuggets.com points out via Twitter. However, it could be another blow for the Spanish Olympic team, depending on Fernandez's recovery time, tweets Marc J. Spears of Yahoo! Sports.

Fernandez averaged 8.6 PPG on 44% shooting in 31 games for the Nuggets this season, after the team acquired him from Dallas in December. The 26-year-old is in the final year of his contract, so if the Nuggets don't expect him back this season and require a roster spot to add another player, he's a candidate to be cut. Fernandez will be an unrestricted free agent this summer.

Celtics Expected To Sign Hollins, Waive Wilcox

2:54pm: The Celtics will sign Hollins after he clears waivers and passes a physical, tweets USA Today’s Jeff Zillgitt. If Hollins still needs to pass through waivers, the signing is far from official, as we learned with J.J. Hickson. But it appears Boston will land Hollins later today.

1:43pm: The Celtics are working on a contract for the recently waived Ryan Hollins, and are expected to cut Chris Wilcox if they land Hollins, reports A. Sherrod Blakely of CSNNE.com (via Twitter).

Hollins, 27, parted ways with the Cavaliers earlier this week in a move Jason Lloyd of the Akron Beacon Journal characterized as a mutual decision. The Celtics, in need of a big man after losing Jermaine O’Neal for the season and missing out on Ronny Turiaf, were reported to be the frontrunners to land Hollins. Blakely adds that the Celtics may continue to search for a big man even if they sign Hollins (Twitter link).

Wilcox is sidelined for the rest of the season due to a heart issue which required surgery. Cutting him would open up a roster spot for the Celtics, though his $3MM cap figure for this year would remain on the team’s books. Wilcox is an unrestricted free agent at season’s end.

Mavericks Waive Sean Williams

The Mavericks have requested waivers on Sean Williams, according to a team release. The move reduces the team's roster to 14 players.

Williams, 25, signed with the Mavs prior to the season on a two-year contract worth the minimum salary. While Dallas will be on the hook for the rest of his salary for this season, the second year of the deal was nonguaranteed.

Williams was up and down between the Mavericks and the team's D-League affiliate in Austin this season. The former 17th overall pick averaged 3.6 PPG and 1.6 RPG in eight contests for the Mavs, and 14.7 PPG, 8.5 RPG, and 2.5 BPG in 24 games for the D-League's Texas Legends.

With an empty roster spot, the Mavs could be eyeing a replacement for Williams. They reportedly had interest in Ryan Hollins, though it appears Hollins will sign with the Celtics.

Warriors Sign Mickell Gladness

The Warriors have officially signed Mickell Gladness to a 10-day contract, according to a team release. The Warriors reportedly had been set to sign J.J. Hickson, but the forward was unexpectedly claimed by Portland before he could clear waivers.

Gladness, 25, signed a pair of 10-day contracts with the Heat this season, appearing in eight games for Miami. Over the last three seasons, he has played mostly in the D-League, averaging 4.6 PPG and 3.8 RPG in 81 career D-League contests.

Scott Schroeder of RidiculousUpside.com first reported that the Warriors would sign Gladness.

Draft Deadlines Facing NCAA Underclassmen

Jonathan Givony of DraftExpress has written a piece breaking down the various deadlines NCAA underclassmen will face as they decide whether or not to declare for this year's NBA draft. Givony's extremely informative article begins with a list of the relevant dates, as follows:

April 3rd: NBA Undergraduate Advisory Committee Application Deadline
April 6th: NBA Undergraduate Advisory Committee Response Deadline
April 10th: NCAA Early Entry "Withdrawal” Deadline
April 29th: NBA Draft Early Entry Eligibility Deadline (10:59 pm CT)
May 3rd or 4th: NBA Draft Early Entry Candidates Released
May 30th: NBA Draft Lottery
June 6-8th: NBA Combine/Pre-Draft Camp (Chicago)
June 18th: NBA Draft Early Entry Withdrawal Deadline (4:00 pm CT)
June 28th: 2012 NBA Draft

As Givony explains, the major change this season involves that NCAA "withdrawal" deadline. In past seasons, NCAA underclassmen wishing to test the waters and get a sense of their draft stock didn't need to finalize their decision until May, allowing them to work out for NBA teams before perhaps deciding to return to school. However, this year, the NCAA has moved up its withdrawal deadline nearly a month. Now, if a player enters his name into the draft pool, he loses his future collegiate eligibility if he doesn't remove himself from consideration by April 10th — well before the NBA's deadline.

Givony argues that it doesn't make sense for a player to declare for the draft prior to the 10th unless he's 100% sure he'll stay in. If a player waits on the decision, he'd have the option to declare his intent by the NBA's April 29th deadline, without putting his NCAA eligibility at risk. Givony writes that there doesn't seem to be much benefit to declaring early; even if the April 29th deadline still doesn't allow players a chance to work out for NBA teams, it allows them a little extra time to privately explore their options.

The NBA's Undergraduate Advisory Committee allows players to get feedback on their draft stock from a committe of NBA executives that includes GMs, assistant GMs, and VP's of player personnel. Players don't have to declare their intent to enter the draft to receive that information. But as Givony points out, this feedback comes on April 6th, well before even the most plugged-in scouts and execs have an idea of how the June 28th draft will play out. Even the Committee itself admits this: "The Committee's evaluation is, of course, only an educated assessment and is not binding in any way or a commitment of guarantee that a player will or will not be drafted in a certain slot or at all."

The upshot of the NCAA's new rule, Givony says, is that players considering entering this year's draft will be forced to make career-altering decisions without necessarily having a sufficient amount of information. Given the uncertainty surrounding such an early decision, we may see more underclassmen than usual elect to stay in school and retain their collegiate eligibility for another year.

Celtics Rumors: Allen, Garnett, Pierce, Rondo

With the Celtics' Big Three of Ray Allen, Paul Pierce, and Kevin Garnett potentially playing their last season together in Boston, Marc J. Spears of Yahoo! Sports talked to the Celtics stars about the trade deadline, the offseason, and their history. Spears also shares a few interesting trade and free agent tidbits along the way. Here are the highlights:

  • The Heat are expected to make a strong push to sign Allen this summer, a source tells Spears. Miami will almost certainly be a taxpaying team next season, so the club would only have a mini mid level exception to offer the sharpshooter.
  • Allen on the possibility of returning to the Celtics in free agency: "First of all, the team has to be willing to have me back. Then you have to look around to see what’s acceptable and who is capable of having me on the team and then you go from there. It’s hard to really say."
  • Coach Doc Rivers wouldn't be surprised to see Allen or Garnett, who are on expiring contracts, back in Boston next year: "I think people assume they won’t be back next year. I don’t know why there is that assumption. [Garnett and Allen] are free agents, but you can sign your own free agents last time I checked…. I don’t know if we will sign them both. We may sign one. But they’ve been great for us. Our [free agents] are probably the best ones and we will have the most money."
  • Rivers added that he thinks Garnett's first choice would be to return to Boston.
  • According to Spears, the Celtics were seeking first-round picks in exchange for Allen or Garnett at the trade deadline. Their asking price for Pierce was "a young star," and they were also only willing to move Rajon Rondo for an elite player.

Southwest Notes: Arenas, Camby, Smith, Mills

Here's the latest out of the Southwest, the only division in the NBA that would send four teams to the playoffs if the season ended today:

How Teams Can Claim Players Off Waivers

For most of the week, as players have been waived or bought out, we've heard that only teams with cap space can claim those guys off waivers. As last night's J.J. Hickson claim exhibited, this isn't entirely true. According to Storytellers Contracts, the Trail Blazers' player salaries for 2011/12 already sat at $66MM+, with cap holds taking their total hit up to $68MM+. This is well over the salary cap ($58.04MM), so how was Portland able to claim Hickson?

In his CBA FAQ, Larry Coon outlines four ways in which teams are able to claim players off waivers:

  • The team is far enough under the salary cap to fit the player's entire salary.
  • The team has a disabled player exception for at least the player's salary.
  • The team has a traded player exception for at least the player's salary.
  • The player's contract is for one or two seasons and he is paid the minimum salary.

At this point in the season, very few clubs have the space to fit a waived player's salary under the cap. While teams like the Cavaliers and Raptors are thought to be under the cap, both clubs would have to renounce their cap holds in order to place a claim on any player earning more than the minimum. Only the Pacers and the Kings currently have enough room to absorb any significant salary under the cap. Because waiver claims mean a team inherits that player's contract (paying the remainder), most players clear waivers without any issue. Boris Diaw, for instance, should have no problem passing through waivers, since no team will want to take on his full $9MM cap figure for this season.

Inexpensive players are more likely to be claimed, however, and over-the-cap teams claiming players on minimum salaries isn't uncommon. The Hornets did that earlier this week, when they claimed Chris Johnson off waivers from the Blazers. While New Orleans is over the cap, Johnson was on a minimum-salary, two-year deal, so the Hornets were able to place a claim.

Hickson, however, isn't a minimum-salary player. In the fourth year of his rookie scale contract, his 2011/12 cap figure is about $2.35MM. With no cap space and no disabled player exception available, Portland could only have used a traded player exception to absorb Hickson's salary. Fortunately, as I noted after last week's trade deadline, the Blazers created a trade exception when they dealt Marcus Camby to Houston, and Hickson's salary fits nicely into that $2.68MM exception.

The Warriors had hoped to sign Hickson after he cleared waivers — following Portland's winning claim, Marcus Thompson II of the Bay Area News Group explained that Golden State didn't have the cap space to absorb Hickson's salary, and therefore missed out. But if the Warriors broke down the Andrew Bogut as we assume they did, the team should have received a trade exception of its own, worth $3.29MM. If they wanted Hickson badly enough, the Warriors could have used that exception to grab him.

Celtics Frontrunners To Sign Hollins

The Boston Herald is reporting that the Celtics are considered by league sources to be the frontrunners to land free agent center Ryan Hollins when he clears waivers.

Hollins was waived on Tuesday by the Cavaliers, and the Celtics have been rumored to be interested, especially in light of the news that Jermaine O'Neal will miss the remainder of the season.

Hollins, 27, averaged 3.7 PPG and 2.3 RPG in 24 games with the Cavaliers this season. He is in the final year of a three-year deal worth $7MM, and is making $2.4MM this season. He will be an unrestricted free agent this summer.

Reactions To The Ronny Turiaf Signing

On Wednesday, the Miami Heat signed center Ronny Turiaf for the remainder of the 2011/12 season. Here's a roundup of reactions to the signing from around the media:

  • Fox Sports Florida's Chris Tomasson thinks Turiaf could help the Heat, who needed frontcourt depth.
  • ESPN.com's Tom Haberstroh points out how low-risk the signing was, and believes Turiaf is an offensive upgrade over Joel Anthony.