Month: November 2024

Hamed Haddadi Worked Out For Pelicans

Since being released by the Suns two months ago, reports have linked Hamed Haddadi almost exclusively to the Knicks, but it seems as if New York isn't the only club with some interest. According to Jared Zwerling of ESPNNewYork.com (via Twitter), Haddadi recently had a workout with the Pelicans.

As our list of 2013/14 roster counts shows, the Pelicans have 15 players under contract, but only 13 of those deals are fully guaranteed. As such, there'd still be room for Haddadi to earn a spot on the team if he were to sign with New Orleans. The Pelicans traded their 2012/13 starting center, Robin Lopez, earlier in the offseason, but still have a few players capable of playing the position, including Jason Smith, Greg Stiemsma, and Jeff Withey.

Haddadi finished last season strong after coming over from the Raptors at the trade deadline, averaging 4.1 PPG and 5.1 RPG in 17 contests (13.8 MPG) for the Suns. The 28-year-old big man had a partially-guaranteed deal with the Suns for 2013/14, but the team opted to cut him loose for $200K this summer rather than pay his full $1.4MM salary.

Poll: What Will Jamison Average As A Clipper?

As we detailed yesterday, Antawn Jamison decided to switch locker rooms at the Staples Center, going from the Lakers to the Clippers on a one-year deal for the veteran's minimum.  Jamison is now 37 and saw his numbers drop drastically across the board last year as a part-time player for the Lakers.  He averaged only 21.4 minutes-per-game in 2012/13, the lowest number of his career, but also shot 46.4 percent from the field, which was his highest shooting percentage since his 2008/09 campaign in Washington.

Our Chuck Myron compiled a list of reactions to the signing of Jamison and the consensus seems to be that, in light of the mystery that is Lamar Odom, Doc Rivers and the Clippers were able to land a consumate professional that will help do the little things it takes to win a championship.  This was presumably the same reason the Lakers signed Jamison last year.  The question is, were Jamison's career low averages (9.4 points-per-game) a reflection of a terrible situation with the Lakers or more simply a result of an aging player's diminishing skills?  In short, what will his scoring average be this season with the Clippers?

Western Notes: Wright, Goodwin, Jensen

Let's round up a few links from around the Western Conference on Tuesday night:

  • Despite already inking a two-year year deal with the Mavericks last month, Brandan Wright has vowed to return to the court in the upcoming season as a drastically improved player, writes Earl K. Sneed of Mavs.com.  Wright averaged career highs in points, rebounds, blocks and minutes last season and shot nearly 60 percent from the field.  At only 25, the Mavs are hoping he has finally tapped into the potential that made him a top-10 selection in 2007.
  • It's been two months since he was selected with the 29th pick in the draft, but Suns rookie Archie Goodwin says his existence as a player in the NBA has yet to sink in, writes Matt Petersen of Suns.com.  Goodwin, 19, was the youngest American player to declare for the draft and second youngest overall behind Greece's Giannis Antetokounmpo.  He was drafted by Oklahoma City and then traded twice before ending up in Phoenix, where he signed on in July.
  • Despite his long list of Utah ties, Alex Jensen was added to the Jazz coaching staff on merit alone according to general manager Dennis Lindsey, writes Bill Oram of the Salt Lake Tribune. Jensen, the reigning D-League Coach of the Year, was hired last month by Utah as a player development assistant.  Before coaching in the D-League, Jensen spent four years on Rick Majerus' staff at Saint Louis University.  He played for Majerus at Utah and grew up in the beehive state.

Odds & Ends: Hawks, Bradley, Bobcats, Stern

Here are some odds and ends from around the NBA on Tuesday night:

  • The Hawks' offseason represents a step forward for the organization, writes Zach Harper of CBS Sports in his detailed offseason review of Atlanta.  Harper condemns the former regime's running-in-place approach, and says the Hawks had a solid draft and made the right decision to replace Josh Smith with the much cheaper Paul Millsap.  While he expects Atlanta to again end up in that familiar middle-of-the-playoff-pack area, Harper writes that the flexibility and roster construction created by Danny Ferry should give it a different feel.
  • Avery Bradley has focused on getting bigger and stronger this offseason in an attempt to stay healthy, writes Chris Forsberg of ESPN Boston.  Bradley says that, due to injuries and the lockout, this offseason has easily been the most productive of his career as a professional.  He will certainly have an opportunity to shine on the new-look Celtics' roster. 
  • While success and roster continuity are typically linked in the NBA, the Bobcats are this year's exception, writes John Schuhmann of NBA.com.  Charlotte will bring back 11 players that accounted for over 85 percent of the team's total minutes played last year, which is the third highest percentage in the NBA this offseason,  The Bobcats have only added Cody Zeller, Anthony Tolliver and Al Jefferson at this point.  It is not surprising that first, second and fourth teams on that list are the Heat, Thunder and Spurs, respectively.
  • In an Insider-only piece, David Thorpe of ESPN points out the burning questions facing each of the teams in the Southeast division this season, adding that the division is stocked with youth and talent as well as, of course, the two-time defending champs.
  • With Adam Silver set to take over the commissioner's office in February, Jabari Davis of HoopsWorld provides a retrospective look at David Stern's 30 year reign as the NBA's front man.   

Vogel On East, Offseason, Granger, Hibbert

Pacers head coach Frank Vogel was a guest on ESPN Radio in Indianapolis today and Scott Agness of Pacers.com transcribed much of the interview for us.  Vogel hits on a number of topics, but specifically discussed the offseason developments at the top of the Eastern Conference, including those within his own team.  Here are a few key points from Vogel:

  • Vogel mentioned the Bulls and Nets as the two teams that have taken big steps forward this offseason; Chicago with the return of Derrick Rose and Brooklyn with their bevy of additions.  Vogel lauded the bench additions of Jason Terry and Andrei Kirilenko in Brooklyn, and said he expects good things from Jason Kidd as an NBA coach.
  • The Pacers' addition of Luis Scola will really help the team's bench, Vogel said, adding that Scola is one of smartest and most creative players in the league.  Vogel said that Solomon Hill, drafted 23rd by Indiana in June, is "ready to contribute right away" and also mentioned C.J. Watson and Chris Copeland as useful additions to his squad. 
  • Of course, the piece most likely to elevate the Pacers to the next level is the return of Danny Granger, who missed all but five games last season with knee issues.  On Granger, Vogel said, "It’s really exciting. Danny is on schedule, looks really good, he’s making progress each week and we’re hoping that we're going to be having a full-strength Danny Granger this year to add to this team that made a lot of noise last year."
  • Roy Hibbert has concentrated on bulking up this summer, according to Vogel.  Hibbert, who established himself as an elite physical presence in last season's playoffs, is adding bulk mainly in hopes of improving on the offensive end, Vogel said.

Cavs, Spurs To Audition Josh Childress

The Cavaliers and Spurs are the latest teams to schedule workouts for Josh Childress, agent Chris Emens tells Jorge Sierra of HoopsHype.com (Twitter link). Despite the confirmation of the workout, Childress is one of 40 or more players that Cleveland will audition next month as training camp approaches, tweets Mary Schmitt Boyer of the Plain Dealer, so the team may not be especially interested.

Childress has already worked out for the Pelicans and been linked to the Knicks this offseason.  He also reportedly turned down a lucrative offer from Greek powerhouse Olympiacos earlier this summer, instead opting to try to latch on with an NBA team.  Childress, 30, spent two seasons overseas with Olympiacos but has yet to re-establish himself in the NBA since returning in 2010 with the Suns.  It sounds like Childress has a handful of suitors, but as Schmitt Boyer cautions, it is tough to evaluate if he can land an NBA job until we figure out where he will spend training camp.

The Impact Of Playing Experience On Coaching

There are many ways we can categorize the experience that coaches bring to their jobs: retreads and first-time hires, college guys and NBA lifers, former assistants and those who skipped that step. Perhaps the most important of distinctions is the one that either allows them to tell their players they've been there and done that or not.

In an offseason when we've seen record-high turnover in the coaching ranks, seven of the 13 new hires are without NBA playing experience. That's an unusually high ratio in a league where most coaches were at least bit players in the Association at some point in their lives. In the last five years, teams hired 34 coaches who had played in the NBA, but only half as many who didn't. The records of those 51 total hires suggest a reason why there were more non-players hired this year. Those without playing experience compiled a .495 winning percentage, superior to the .449 winning percentage the ex-players managed. It's also worth noting that neither group of coaches hired within the past five seasons reached .500, but that's a phenomenon that's probably worth its own post.

Here's a list of this offseason's hires, broken down by ex-players and non-players:

Ex-Players

  • Jason Kidd, Nets
  • Brian Shaw, Nuggets
  • Maurice Cheeks, Pistons
  • Doc Rivers, Clippers
  • Larry Drew, Bucks
  • Jeff Hornacek, Suns

Non-Players

  • Mike Budenholzer, Hawks
  • Brad Stevens, Celtics
  • Steve Clifford, Bobcats
  • Mike Brown, Cavaliers
  • Dave Joerger, Grizzlies
  • Brett Brown, Sixers
  • Michael Malone, Kings

The chart that follows shows each of the coaching hires since the 2008 offseason, with the exception of coaches who kept their jobs for 10 games or fewer — in other words, placeholder interim choices who kept the seat warm after a coach was fired midseason. Note that some coaches are listed multiple times, like Vinny Del Negro, since they held more than one job over the past five years.

Coaches

Of course, this doesn't definitively prove coaches without playing experience are better. It merely provides a small window into the issue, and helps explain some of the hires that were made this summer. After a Finals in which both coaches never played in the NBA, we'll see if the trend toward more such coaches continues in years to come.

New York Notes: Dolan, Prokhorov, Free Agents

The Knicks didn't exactly break the bank in free agency this summer, as J.R. Smith's new $17.947MM contract represents more than half of the team's approximately $32MM in free agent spending. Still, that total is enough to qualify as the most money that any Atlantic Division club dished out, as Luke Adams of Hoops Rumors examined today. The crosstown Nets spent only about $12.6MM on free agents, but they absorbed plenty of salary in the blockbuster Kevin Garnett/Paul Pierce trade. Here's more on the Big Apple's teams:

Extension Candidate: Gordon Hayward

Over the weekend, I examined the chances that the Jazz and Derrick Favors would reach agreement on an extension. Teammate Gordon Hayward is eligible for one, too, and he may be just as valuable a part of Utah's future. He's certainly played a more prominent role in the team's recent past, showing steady progress and averaging 29.8 minutes per game the past two seasons. He, unlike Favors, has been a full-time starter for the team, but Hayward spent most of last season as a reserve, rejoining the starting lineup for the final month of the season. It seems certain that he'll start for this season's stripped-down Jazz team, but Utah's front office has to determine whether he's likely to continue to do so when there's more talent on the roster.

Hayward was the team's third leading scorer last season, at 14.1 points per game. He's the only one of the team's top-five scorers to return, and without much offensive talent coming in, he has as strong a chance as anyone to lead the Jazz in scoring this year. The former Butler University star's calling card is long-range shooting, and last season he demonstrated for the first time an ability to hit from just about every spot behind the three-point arc, as his Basketball-Reference heat map shows. He made 41.5% of his three-pointers last season, and even though he played slightly fewer minutes than in 2011/12, he upped the number of threes he took per game to 3.4 from 2.4.

He made nearly as many shots at the rim this past season as the year before, so the fact that his overall shooting percentage declined for the second year in a row is simply a reflection of Hayward's willingness to eschew mid-range jumpers. That's a choice that Jazz coach Tyrone Corbin and his staff probably encouraged Hayward to make, as the NBA increasingly values three-pointers and attempts from point-blank range over all other shots.

Hayward is evolving into the modern ideal of an offensive threat, and he's also a markedly better defender than when he came into the league. The Jazz gave up a whopping 110.8 points per 100 possessions with Hayward on the court during his rookie season, a rate worse than the league's worst defensive team that season. That number went down to 104.6 in 2011/12 and 104.0 in 2012/13. It's still a rate that would rank among the bottom half of teams, but Hayward wasn't exactly surrounded by top-flight defenders last season, and more minutes for Favors along with the departure of the sieve-like Al Jefferson figures to help mask any of Hayward's shortcomings. 

The Jazz possess two of the top 10 picks in the 2010 draft in Hayward and Favors, but unlike the offensively challenged Favors, the No. 3 overall selection, Hayward is more of a two-way player. That doesn't mean the team doesn't see him as more valuable. There's always been a premium on big men in the NBA, and quality wing players like Hayward are usually in much greater supply. However, the league is experiencing an ebb in shooting guard talent these days, and while the 6'8" Hayward is much better suited as a small forward, he's played enough at the two that I suspect he'd draw interest from a few teams with holes at the two-guard position if he hits restricted free agency next summer. He'd probably be the best option under the age of 30 at that position. The Jazz would have the right to match, of course, but an inflated offer from another team would drive up Hayward's price.

Hayward scored 17.4 points per 36 minutes last season, a number virtually identical to the 17.2 points per 36 minutes that DeMar DeRozan put up in 2011/12, right before he and the Raptors agreed to a four-year, $38MM extension. Hayward was probably a better player overall in his third season than DeRozan was in his third year, as witnessed by Hayward's 16.8 PER, much preferable to DeRozan's 12.8 PER. Few saw DeRozan's extension coming, and though he showed improvement last season, his inclusion in trade rumors this summer suggests Toronto's new regime thinks their predecessors overpaid him. That means such a deal could be just right for a superior player like Hayward.

Agent Mark Bartelstein reps Hayward, and he also helped Taj Gibson get his extension from the Bulls last fall. Bartelstein is the agent for Nick Young, who didn't get a rookie-scale extension, signed his qualifying offer, and is now making the minimum salary. Bartelstein client David Lee didn't get a rookie-scale extension either, but he signed a one-year deal in restricted free agency and cashed in with a six-year, $80MM contract the next summer. So, Bartelstein understands all of the possibilities at play. I imagine he envisions a deal slightly larger than the one DeRozan got — perhaps four years, $40MM.

Doing that kind of deal, along with the $42MM to $44MM four-year extension I figure Favors will get, would tie up about $38MM or $38.5MM worth of Utah's cap space for next summer, leaving plenty of room for a maximum-salary free agent. The Jazz so far have only about $4MM in salary committed for 2015/16, when an extension or new contract for Enes Kanter would kick in, so locking up Favors and Hayward with extensions this fall wouldn't hamstring the team long-term. Paying a little bit more for them as restricted free agents next summer probably wouldn't hurt the Jazz either, but I don't think executive VP of basketball ops Kevin O'Connor and GM Dennis Lindsey want to pay any more than they have to.

Hayward has shown enough promise for the team to expect that he'll continue to blossom, particularly in the expanded role he'll see this year. The Jazz reportedly are comfortable with letting him play out the season and coming to the negotiating table next summer with another year of evidence on Hayward's game, but they've already begun talks with him and Favors, and ultimately I think they'll see the wisdom of an extension for both. In Hayward's case, that four year, $40MM extension, perhaps with some incentives built into that total, would probably get it done.

Free Agent Spending By Division

A year ago, when we looked at 2012 free agent spending by division, the Atlantic blew away the field, in large part due to the Nets' incredible spending spree. The total amount of money Brooklyn committed to free agents ($243MM+) was greater than every other division except the Southwest ($262MM+).

That script was flipped this year, as the Atlantic Division has been the league's smallest-spending division, with no team spending more than the Knicks' $32MM, including the Sixers, who have yet to sign a single free agent. The turnaround isn't surprising — last summer, the Nets had a virtually empty roster, with plenty of top free agents to re-sign, such as Deron Williams and Brook Lopez. This offseason, with all those players already locked up, the Nets didn't have much flexibility to continue adding big free agent contracts.

Using our free agent tracker, we've put together a list of total money committed to free agents this offseason, by division. These figures won't necessarily be 100% accurate — we're still sorting out a few details of the latest signings, which include summer contracts, and good portions of this money could be non-guaranteed. For example, we consider the Cavs' commitment to Andrew Bynum to be $24.79MM, but only $6MM of that amount is guaranteed. Keeping those caveats in mind, here's the breakdown of 2013 free agent spending by division so far:

  1. Southwest: $327.536MM. Most: Rockets ($105.882MM). Least: Grizzlies ($24.302MM).
  2. Central: $270.964MM. Most: Pistons ($94.082MM). Least: Bulls ($8.825MM).
  3. Pacific: $256.009MM. Most: Clippers ($154.26MM). Least: Suns ($0MM).
  4. Southeast: $194.254MM. Most: Hawks ($86.45MM). Least: Heat ($4.952MM).
  5. Northwest: $183.722MM. Most: Timberwolves ($119.912MM). Least: Thunder ($2.586MM).
  6. Atlantic: $83.277MM. Most: Knicks ($32.002MM). Least: Sixers ($0MM).

After ranking second among spending by division last summer, the Southwest was at it again this year, topping the list of highest-spending divisions. While the Rockets' big commitment to Dwight Howard was the key signing this time around, the Pelicans played a large role in the division's standing in both 2012 and 2013; New Orleans spent big on Eric Gordon and Ryan Anderson a year ago, and inked Tyreke Evans to a $44MM pact last month.

The Clippers and Rockets, with their max contracts for Chris Paul and Howard respectively, rank among the year's highest spenders, with their totals representing a significant chunk of their respective divisions' totals. But the second-highest spender, nestled in between L.A. and Houston, may surprise you: That'd be the Timberwolves, who committed $60MM to Nikola Pekovic and inked Kevin Martin, Chase Budinger, and Corey Brewer to lucrative multiyear deals as well.

Also notable: The Sixers and Suns, the league's two teams who haven't committed a dollar to a free agent this summer, are among the smallest-spending clubs, but so are the Heat, Thunder, and Bulls, all expected to be title contenders in 2013/14. Spending big in free agency doesn't necessarily translate to on-court success, particularly when a strong core is already in place.

Still, it may be worth noting that the two smallest-spending divisions from a year ago (the Northwest and Southeast) only sent two teams to the 2013 postseason, while the other four divisions sent three teams each. We'll see if that's a pattern that continues this season, or merely a coincidence.

The Hoops Rumors Free Agent Tracker was used in the creation of this post.