Month: September 2024

Odds & Ends: D’Antoni, Durant, Jackson

The Lakers aren't expected to be contending for an NBA title this season after losing Dwight Howard to the Rockets in free agency. Many Lakers fans blame coach Mike D'Antoni for playing an important role in driving him out of town. Plus, the phantasm of former coach Phil Jackson still hovers above the Staples Center court where he's won five rings during his former time on the bench.

As D'Antoni told the Los Angeles Times' Mike Bresnahan, it probably will continue to be that way through the foreseeable future.

"I think anybody that comes in here the next 10, 15 years, it's going to be that way," D'Antoni remarked. "I don't think there is any doubt that he was so good and so large and he's still sitting out thereHad that bothered me, I shouldn't have taken the job because you know it's going to be there. I wasn't stupid enough to think that, 'Oh, they won't remember him.' Sure they will. It doesn't really affect what we do day-to-day and how we approach the game."

After getting swept in the the first round of the playoffs by the Spurs this past season, the 62-year-old D'Antoni still has two guaranteed years left on his contract with the Lakers. With Kobe Bryant's torn Achilles tendon and the aging Steve Nash and Pau Gasol representing the backbone of this year's Lakers team, things might not get much better as D'Antoni prepares for the 2013/14 season.

Here's what else is happening around the Association on a quiet Saturday evening, including an update on Jackson's coaching future. 

  • The Zen Master told Mark Jones of the Williston Herald that he doesn't plan on coaching because "I am still recovering from multiple surgeries."
  • In 2005, strength trainer Alan Stein walked up to a 15-year-old Kevin Durant and told him, "Look, man, you have all the tools to be one of the best players in the world, but the only way you can do that is to get stronger," Stein recalled to the Oklahoman's Anthony Slater. “I can help you. Give me a shot.”
  • Four-year former Florida Gator Kenny Boynton went undrafted in the 2013 NBA Draft, but he did catch on with the Lakers' Summer League squad before failing to land a contract. Sportando's Emiliano Charchia reports, via Twitter, that Boynton's deal with Barack Netanya of Israel's BSL is now official.
  • On that European note, via a re-tweet from Ridiculous Upside's Keith Schlosser, SecretRival.blogspot.com has compiled a list of former NBA players, picks and recent NCAA players who are in the top 10 European leagues. 

Poll: Which Western Team Finishes Higher?

After the new five-year $60MM contract Nikola Pekovic agreed to earlier this week, the Timberwolves have their three core players, Kevin Love, Ricky Rubio and Pek, healthy and ready to compete for a Western Conference playoff spot this season. Sam Tongue of Blazers Edge, compared the 'Wolves with another team in a similar spot out West, the Trail Blazers. 

During their podcast on Friday, Matt Moore and Zach Harper of CBS Sports (by way of the Dallas Morning News) discussed two more teams that are on the Western Conference playoff periphery coming into the new season: the Pelicans and Mavericks.

With most NBA observers confidently predicting playoff spots (barring a significant injury) for the Rockets, Thunder, Spurs, Grizzlies, Clippers and Warriors  out West, that leaves 2 slots open for the rest of the Western Conference's remaining 9 teams.

The Nuggets, Timberwolves, Mavericks, Trail Blazers, Lakers and Pelicans, all either made moves this offseason to improve, or in the case of the Nuggets and Lakers, lost enough personnel to be considered a fringe contender with the rest of these teams despite making the postseason last year. 

So which of these teams on the cusp of the Western Conference playoffs, finishes higher during the 2013/14 season? 

Eastern Notes: Celtics, Drummond, Sixers

The new regime in Boston, led by former Butler coach Brad Stevens, is looking to fill out the rest of the staff positions during the down days before NBA training camps open at the beginning of October. ESPN NBA Insider Jeff Goodman tweets that they're looking to bring former Celtics swingman James Posey back into the Celtics fold as an assistant.

Chris Forsberg of ESPNBoston.com adds that the Celtics have benefited from bringing in former players who can provide more hands-on instruction to their young roster. The C's had brought in former Lakers guard Tyronn Lue in that role in previous seasons to act as a practice body while providing additional tutelage.

Here's what else is happening around the Eastern Conference:

  • In an open letter Ethan Sherwood-Strauss wrote for ESPN.com on Friday, he asked Andre Drummond about attempting to shoot free throws underhanded in an effort to improve his historically abysmal 37 percent average from the line during his rookie season. 
  • CBS Sports' Matt Moore reports that Drummond declined the offer on Twitter and Moore looks at some other big men that may have wanted to adopt the underhand free throw form popularized by Hall of Fame guard, Rick Barry
  • Keith Pompey of the Philadelphia Inquirer writes that Sixers fans need to calm down. The team isn't leaving Philadelphia despite concern stemming from the purchase of the New Jersey Devils and the Prudential Center by Sixers owner Joshua Harris
  • During the NBA's Rookie Transition Program in Tarrytown, New York two weeks ago, the New York Times' Joe Brescia spoke with Anthony Bennett about recovering from the torn labrum in his shoulder, and how he'll mesh with the Cavaliers' other power forward Tristan Thompson, and star point guard Kyrie Irving
  • Bobcats assistant Bob Beyer was charged with resisting arrest outside a bar in Saratoga Springs on Thursday. 

Howard-Cooper On Hansen’s Anti-Arena Donation

Seattle venture capital investor, Chris Hansen, who headed the group looking to purchase the Kings and move them to Seattle, was caught donating $100K to the Anti-Kings-Arena group, STOP, which had previously been linked to former Kings owners the Maloofs.  Hansen was contrite after the connection surfaced, offering an apology to the people of Sacramento for his underhanded effort to ruin their new arena deal and help facilitate a move to his hometown.

But Scott Howard-Cooper of NBA.com opines that Hansen's back-handed donation hurts Seattle more than it might have hurt Sacramento.  Howard-Cooper argues that Hansen owes an apology to the people of Seattle more so than the one he gave Sacramento on Friday.

Seattle still remains a city without a basketball team after Clay Bennett moved the Seattle Supersonics to Oklahoma City in the summer of 2008 ostensibly after the city voted against publicly funding a new stadium. Hansen's actions have drawn the ire of the NBA, and Howard-Cooper says it has created another obstacle in the path of professional basketball's return to rainy Seattle. 

Howard-Cooper adds, via Twitter, that Hansen's public scolding is a nice cherry on top for Sacramento since the league approved the sale of the team to a Sacramento-group led by Vivek Ranadive. He wonders why Hansen donated the money when he had to be aware it would eventually be made public (Twitter). But he also cautions, with a tweet, that this sort of corporate sabotage happens all the time when this much money is at stake; it just usually goes unreported.    

Cavs Notes: Brown, Bynum, Thompson, Oden

During her weekly mailbag, the Cleveland Plain Dealer's Mary Schmitt Boyer theorizes that the vitriol about Andrew Bynum in Philadelphia was stronger than Ohio's reaction  to the repeatedly injured Greg Oden because Oden led the Buckeyes to the 2007 NCAA National Championship game, and Philadelphia lost their gamble on Bynum last season. 

Boyer also predicts the Cavs' starting lineup if the whole roster–specifically Anderson Varejao and Bynum–are healthy. The hypothesis: Bynum, Tristan Thompson, Earl Clark, Dion Waiters and Kyrie Irving. Noticeably absent is Varejao, who could attract interest from other teams if Bynum appears healthy and productive before the the February trade deadline. 

Here's what else is happening with the Cavs, on a lazy NBA Saturday in August:

  • The underlying reason the Cavs brought back head coach Mike Brown was for his defensive acumen. The Plain-Dealer's Terry Pluto writes that Brown is assigning players specific positions in an effort to avoid confusion with a player's role in his new defensive schemes. 
  • One example of strictly following positional assignments is Waiters. He can play either guard position, but Brown says he'll primarily assign him the defensive responsibilities of a shooting guard, with Kyrie Irving defending the helmsman at point. 
  • Pluto also adds that Tristan Thompson's switch from shooting with his left to right hand wasn't a big surprise for the Cavs. He'd been shooting free throws with his right hand last season at practice, and even attempted some right-handed jump shots towards the end of the year because the rotation looked better. 
  • Thompson shoots the ball with either hand near the basket, but throws a ball right-handed and eats with his left hand. The Cavs just want him to improve on his career 58.6 percent mark from the charity stripe.

Evan Turner On His Future With The Sixers

Former No. 2 overall pick Evan Turner is among those eligible for a rookie-scale extension this summer, but he understands that in GM Sam Hinkie's rebuilding project, the Sixers could trade him before he has a chance to re-up with the team. "All I can worry about is being better," Turner said to Tom Moore of PhillyBurbs.com

Hinkie made a splash right after accepting the Sixers' GM position when he sent All-Star Jrue Holiday to the Pelicans on draft night in exchange for the pick that turned into Nerlens Noel and a 2014 top-3 protected first round selection. But now the Sixers are supposedly in tank mode in preparation for that exciting 2014 NBA Draft, and Hinkie may have positioned them for two lottery selections, depending on how they finish this season.

It stands to reason that Turner could be cast out before he's given a rookie-scale extension, so the former Ohio State University Buckeye has a cloudy future in Philadelphia. Despite those trade rumors, which have surrounded Turner during Philadelphia's first rebuilding steps this offseason, he's looking forward to working in new coach Brett Brown's uptempo offense. 

Here's what Turner told Moore during their Q & A.

On keeping perspective with the rebuild:

 "I just don’t want to let these type of situations deter the fun I have with the game. Everything that’s been going on this summer has been about chess moves and money and all that. At the end of the day, it’s about playing basketball."

On his discussions with recently hired head coach Brett Brown around tanking:

“I told him, ‘Everybody wants to be in tank mode and thinks we’re going to lose. I intend on trying to win as much as possible because losing’s too easy,’ ” Turner declared. “He said, ‘Well, they got the wrong coach if we’re going to go out and lose on purpose. We want to compete and get better.’ ”

On increased effectiveness now that former coach Doug Collins is gone:

“I think each year I’ve been taking jumps,” he proclaimed. “I don’t want to sit here and say if I’m successful it’s because of Doug [leaving]. I want to think it’s maturing and growing.”

On new coach Brett Brown's uptempo offense:

(Brown) said he wants to get us in the best fitness shape of our life,” revealed Turner before saying he enjoys that Brown had a winning track record in San Antonio. “He feels like my skills will flourish in that situation.

Chuck Myron contributed to this post.

Western Notes: Pekovic, Wolves, Jackson, Lakers

The difference between unrestricted free agency and restricted free agency can be seen in the divergent plights of the Lakers and Timberwolves this summer. The purple and gold had no say-so when Dwight Howard jumped to the Rockets, while negotiations between the Wolves and Nikola Pekovic dragged on for months, with other suitors seemingly scared off by Minnesota's ability to match offers. Still, the Wolves and Lakers both figure to be among the teams fighting for one of the final playoff spots in the Western Conference, and they're among the teams we focus on in today's look at the West:

  • Pekovic is unlikely to meet many of the $8MM worth of incentives in his deal with the Wolves, reports Darren Wolfson of 1500 ESPN Twin Cities (Twitter link). That means that starting next season, those incentives won't count against the cap. As Jerry Zgoda of the Star Tribune surmised earlier, games played is one of the incentives, and Wolfson says Pek will earn a bonus if he appears in at least 70 games a year.
  • Pekovic isn't the only Wolves player with durability issues, and president of basketball ops Flip Saunders plans changes to the way the team handles the treatment and prevention of injuries, as Zach Harper of CBSSports.com examines.
  • Lakers co-owner Jeanie Buss said last week that Phil Jackson, her fiancee, still yearns to coach, but Jackson seemed to disagree Friday in comments he made to his hometown newspaper. "I have no intention of coaching," he told Mark Jones of the Williston Herald"I am still recovering from multiple surgeries." 
  • Keith Schlosser of Ridiculous Upside examines the Lakers' unusual promotion of Nick Mazzella from public relations coordinator to GM of the team's D-League affiliate.
  • The strength of someone's relationships is key to doing business in the NBA, and Chris Hansen's funding of an anti-Kings-arena effort shows he doesn't understand not to burn his bridges, SB Nation's Tom Ziller writes.
  • The Lakers got a D from HoopsWorld's Moke Hamilton, who graded each Western Conference team's offseason, while the Wolves and Kings both wound up with a B+.

Extension Candidate: Paul George

It's not often that a player somewhat unexpectedly joins the ranks of the superstars, but that might just have happened with Paul George this past season. The former 10th overall pick from Fresno State stepped into Indiana's spotlight with Danny Granger injured, and transformed from a 12.1 points-per-game scorer who played slightly less than 30 minutes a night into an All-Star, a third-team All-NBA selection, and a second-team All-Defensive player. He backed it up when he took the team a round farther in the playoffs than it had been with Granger as the No. 1 option the year before, challenging LeBron James nose-to-nose in seven stirring games.

The question that remains is just how George's emergence changes Pacers president Larry Bird's long-range plans for the team. Bird sat out this past season, turning the club over to venerable executive Donnie Walsh, but Larry Legend has returned to a small-market team with an unusual wealth of talent. Bird and GM Kevin Pritchard kept a key piece of that talent around with a new three-year deal for David West, and made necessary upgrades to the bench with the signings of Chris Copeland and C.J. Watson and the trade for Luis Scola. Either Granger or Lance Stephenson will join that second unit next season, further strengthening what had been the team's major weakness in 2012/13. 

All of the team's major moves this summer look like winners, but it's the last big decision of the offseason that could have the greatest long-term impact on the franchise. Comparative value would dictate a five-year, maximum salary extension for George after the Wizards handed out such a deal to John Wall last month. Even though George has only played at his current level for one season, he seems at least as deserving of a max deal as Wall, who showed his brilliance only in stretches during an injury-shortened 2012/13 campaign. The idea that Wall could win the MVP this season, triggering a higher maximum salary via the Derrick Rose Rule, is generally dismissed as unattainable. Yet nearly 40% of Hoops Rumors readers voted in June to indicate their belief that George will someday win the MVP award. 

Wall's extension was done by the end of July, after Wizards owner Ted Leonsis made it clear early in the process that Wall was a priority. Blake Griffin's max extension last summer came together just as the negotiating period began. James Harden signed his max extension with the Rockets two days after they acquired him from the Thunder. The Pacers have left George hanging to some degree, forcing him to bat down speculation that he'll sign with his hometown Lakers in free agency. It's clear that George wants to remain with the Pacers, and Bird would obviously like to see him in Indiana long-term, saying last month on radio that the team is prepared to make Paul a "major offer." A "major offer" doesn't necessarily add up to the max, and George indicated in June that he thought of himself as a max player, so perhaps there is a financial gulf between the Pacers and Aaron Mintz, George's agent.

I predicted back in June that George would wind up with a four-year, $50MM extension, and that was based on the notion that the Pacers would hesitate to do the max. That would add up to about $10MM less than the max over the course of the deal, and roughly $25MM less than a five-year max extension would entail. The savings could allow the Pacers a chance to re-sign Granger, who'll be a free agent next summer, without going into the tax. Of course, Mintz and George could reject such an offer and wait until George becomes a restricted free agent in 2014, when he'd be free to sign an offer sheet with another team. It seems reasonable to expect that some team would float a max offer George's way in that scenario, barring a major regression this coming season, leaving the Pacers to either match and reduce their flexibility with other players, or watch their young superstar walk away.

It could be that Bird is content to go all in on this year, let Granger go after this season, and sign a cheaper replacement in the summer of 2014 to accommodate a max deal for George. In that scenario, it would behoove George to get a deal done this summer, giving him the opportunity to make another All-NBA team — or win the MVP — and trigger the Rose rule, which would afford him a more lucrative contract than the Pacers or anyone could give him next year. Bird and the Pacers, then, would be the ones preferring to wait past the extension deadline so they can avoid the possibility of getting stuck with a more expensive max deal for George. 

The idea that George could hit the open market next year, even as a restricted free agent, merely adds to the intrigue already surrounding the summer of 2014. Bird was never short on confidence as a player, so I'm sure he'd be willing to let George hit free agency and take his chances on re-signing him to a team-friendly deal. Similarly, I'm sure Mintz would relish the opportunity to hock a young superstar to the highest bidder. Ultimately, the decision may come down to George, a 23-year-old with a short track record of success. He could be willing to compromise and take less money as a hedge against a decline in performance. He may be ready to get into a staredown with Bird and put pressure on the Pacers to equal the deal that the Wizards gave Wall. George's financial future, and that of the team he wants to stay with for years to come, is at stake.

Heat Rumors: Roster, Oden, D-League, Jones

Greg Oden's discount contract is the latest example of a player willing to make a financial sacrifice to join the Heat, writes Ira Winderman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel. LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh set the tone with their deals in 2010, and Oden, Ray Allen and Chris Andersen followed this summer. The loss of a little extra cash or flexibility for Oden, Allen and Andersen means much greater gain for the Heat, who have the luxury tax to worry about. Winderman has more on the champs, as we detail:

  • Some agents are hearing that the Heat plan to carry only the minimum 13 players this season. That could spell trouble for Jarvis Varnado, whose deal is non-guaranteed for this season, and Eric Griffin, a training camp invitee, since Miami already has 13 guaranteed contracts. 
  • Winderman suggests that the Heat are already thinking of retaining the D-League rights of a few camp cuts — teams are able to do so with three players they let go before the regular season, sparing those guys from the D-League draft. So, perhaps the Heat will make sure Varnado and Griffin wind up with their affiliate in Sioux Falls.
  • The revelation this week that Oden's deal doesn't include a second season means the Heat only have to pay him the two-year veterans minimum, instead of the five-year veterans minimum, with the league compensating Oden for the difference. That's a $143,131 difference for Miami, an amount that will be magnified when it's subtracted from the team's tax bill at the end of the season.
  • Even if James Jones doesn't wind up running for union president, a candidacy that LeBron would reportedly get behind, he'll remain secretary-treasurer for another three years, since his term isn't expiring, Winderman points out. 
  • Just how steep a paycut Wade and Bosh are willing to take in their next deals, if they're willing to take paycuts at all, will be a central question for the Heat going forward, as Winderman opines in his latest mailbag column.

Designated Players

While the term "designated player" may evoke thoughts of baseball's designated hitter rule, there really aren't any similarities. In the NBA, a designated player isn't chosen game by game. Instead, when a team makes someone its designated player, the move can have broad, long-lasting consequences.

A designated player is a former first-round draft pick who receives a five-year extension to his rookie-scale contract. Teams are allowed to sign players to rookie-scale extensions of up to four years as often as they want, but they can only sign one player to a five-year rookie scale extension for as long as that extension is in effect. So, the Wizards, who signed John Wall to a five-year extension in July, can't sign anyone else to a rookie-scale extension of more than four years until the summer of 2019, when Wall's deal expires. The five-year deal makes Wall the team's designated player. That means the Wizards will be limited when they negotiate with Bradley Beal or any other player on the team's roster who can become eligible for a rookie-scale extension before Wall's deal is up.

There are ways the Wizards could get around this, of course. They could trade or release Wall, since he'd cease to be the Wizards' designated player if he's no longer on their roster. That's unlikely to happen. A much more plausible scenario involves the Wizards simply letting Beal hit restricted free agency in 2016, and signing him to a five-year deal then.

Wall signed for the max, and the designated player rule requires that contracts be for the max in at least the first season. The salaries can decrease by as much as 7.5% of the first-year salary each season, providing some measure of flexibility in the total value of the deal. The Bucks and Larry Sanders are closing in on a four-year, $44MM extension, a below-max deal overall. If they wanted to add a fifth year to the arrangement, front load the deal and bring the total value to $58,230,313, they could do so, triggering the designated player rule for Sanders. When I examined the prospects for a Sanders extension, I figured his agent would ask for a fifth year, particularly since the Bucks don't have any former first-round picks on their roster who figure to warrant such a long-term deal when they become extension-eligible. It looks like Sanders won't get that fifth year, perhaps because the Bucks want to retain flexibility in case they find other worthy talent in the next two drafts.

Teams that have designated players do have the option of trading for another team's designated player. So, the Wizards, in theory, could trade for Blake Griffin, the designated player of the Clippers, at some point during the life of their respective extensions. The Wizards couldn't, however, trade for both Griffin and another designated player, such as James Harden. The notion that Washington or any club could put together such a superteam is a little far-fetched, but the stipulation that no team may trade for more than one designated player is in place nonetheless.

The designated player rule doesn't apply to veteran extensions, and it doesn't apply to second-round picks or undrafted players. So, if the Rockets want to sign Chandler Parsons to a five-year extension when he becomes eligible next summer, they can do so without making him their designated player, since Parsons was a second-round pick. Nikola Pekovic's new five-year deal with the Wolves doesn't make him the team's designated player for two reasons: he signed it once his original contract expired, so it's not an extension, and that original contract was for only three seasons, which made him ineligible for an extension anyway.

Not every team has to have a designated player, and few teams do, in part because the designated player rule came into being only recently, when the new collective bargaining agreement went into effect in 2011. Here's the complete of designated players:

*— Kevin Durant also signed a five-year extension, but he did so before the new CBA took effect, so he was exempt from the designated player rule, allowing the Thunder to sign Westbrook to his five-year deal. 

Note: This is a Hoops Rumors Glossary entry. Our glossary posts will explain specific rules relating to trades, free agency, or other aspects of the NBA's Collective Bargaining Agreement. 

Larry Coon's Salary Cap FAQ was used in the creation of this post.