Month: November 2024

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Atlantic

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Southeast

Southwest

Northwest

Pacific

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Southwest Notes: Andersen, Calderon, Gay

The Rockets might have preferred not stopping for halftime last night against the Thunder. Houston put up 73 points in the first half but followed with only 19 after the break, setting an NBA record for the largest point differential between halves. The strong initial performance was not enough to outweigh the later thud, as Oklahoma City prevailed, 104-92. Here’s more from the Southwest Division:

  • Former Rockets and Pelicans center David Andersen says agent Leon Rose told him that NBA teams would be interested in him if an injury created a need, but the former second-round pick thinks it’s more likely he winds up signing in Europe next month. Roy Ward of The Age has the details.
  • Many of Jose Calderon‘s numbers aren’t any better than the ones Darren Collison put up last year, but part of the reason the Mavs prioritized an upgrade at point guard this past summer was to fix their crunch-time woes, notes Tim McMahon of ESPNDallas.com. Dallas is better in the clutch this year, and there’s no reason to believe the team is rethinking its decision to bring in Calderon, McMahon writes.
  • With the approaching one-year anniversary of the GrizzliesRudy Gay trade, Gay is grateful for his time in Memphis, where he learned plenty about NBA life that he’s putting into practice now with the Kings, as he tells Jason Jones of The Sacramento Bee.

How Warriors/C’s/Heat Trade Works Financially

The primary reason the Warriors dealt two first-round picks and three bloated contracts to the Jazz this summer was to clear enough room to absorb Andre Iguodala, who came from the Nuggets in that same three-way deal with Utah. Yet if it weren’t for a vestige of that trade, the Warriors wouldn’t have been able to pull off yesterday’s three-teamer with the Celtics and Heat.

Golden State had four trade exceptions at its disposal entering Wednesday. Two of them were for less than $1MM, so they were of no help in acquiring Jordan Crawford and MarShon Brooks. That left them with a choice of either the sizable $11.046MM exception created when the Warriors sent Richard Jefferson to the Jazz, and the other a $4MM exception for Brandon Rush, who also went to Utah. According to Eric Pincus of Basketball Insiders, the Warriors chose to use the larger Jefferson exception (Twitter link). That makes sense, since the Warriors are more likely to find a deal that would allow them to use most or all of the $4MM Rush exception than to use the $11.046MM Jefferson exception to somehow fit an eight-figure salary onto their payroll without giving up commensurate salary.

The combined incoming salary of $3,372,499 that Golden State acquired in Wednesday’s trade is greater than 150% plus $100K of the outgoing salary of Toney Douglas, who’s making just $1.6MM this year. Ordinarily, the Warriors would have to send out another player to make the deal work, but the Jefferson exception allows them to absorb the $1,210,080 salary of Brooks by itself. That means the Warriors can treat the exchange of Douglas for Crawford as its own transaction, and Crawford’s $2,162,419 pay is less than $150% of the money Douglas makes, so it satisfies the salary-matching requirements.

The Warriors could also make the trade work if they used the Jefferson exception for Crawford and made it a one-for-one swap of Douglas-for-Brooks. That option would create a new trade exception, but it would nonetheless allow for less flexibility. The Douglas-for-Brooks swap would create a tiny exception worth $389,920, which is equal to the difference between the Douglas and Brooks salaries. That amount of money would only be enough to take on a prorated salary. Crawford’s salary would meanwhile eat up a larger portion of the Jefferson exception. Putting Brooks, who makes less than Crawford does, into the Jefferson exception leaves it at $9,835,920. That’s much more useful than creating a new exception for less than $400K, and it allows for greater flexibility than if the Jefferson exception had been reduced to $8,883,581, as would have happened if the Warriors had employed it to absorb Crawford’s salary.

There are still a couple of new exceptions that Wednesday’s trade creates for each of the other teams in the deal. Boston couldn’t absorb Joel Anthony‘s $3.8MM salary for Brooks, since it’s more than 150% plus $100K of what Brooks is making, but Crawford’s salary would fit within those bounds. That allows the Celtics to treat their unloading of Brooks as its own transaction. So, the Celtics have a $1,210,080 exception, equal to the amount of Brooks’ salary, that they can use anytime until the one-year anniversary of Wednesday’s trade.

The Heat gave up one player and received another, so the calculus is simpler for them. They receive a trade exception worth $2.2MM, the difference between the salaries for Anthony and Douglas. Like the Celtics, Miami will have up to one year to use its exception.

Executives from all three teams have said since the trade that they continue to look to make changes. That means the exceptions left over for the Warriors, and the ones that the Celtics and Heat created, could soon play a role, with the trade deadline looming next month.

ShamSports was used in the creation of this post.

Odds & Ends: Nets, Aldridge, Heat, Bogut

Nets owner Mikhail Prokhorov believes in the importance of positive thinking.  “I still think we have a chance to be a championship if, of course, stars align,” Prokhorov said before the Nets beat the Hawks, 127-110, at O2 Arena in London today. “I think we like sport because it is really unpredictable. So it’s unpredictable, but possible.”  Tim Bontemps of the New York Post has more from the Nets’ charismatic owner’s chat with reporters today.  Here’s tonight’s look around the league..

  • The Blazers are having fun playing together and Chris Haynes of CSNNW.com (on Twitter) hears LaMarcus Aldridge, Nicolas Batum, and Damian Lillard have discussed their plans to play together long-term.  Recently, Aldridge expressed openness to signing an extension with Portland.
  • Sam Amick of USA Today (video link) breaks down the three-way deal between the WarriorsHeat, and Celtics and what it means for all parties involved.
  • His health history is iffy, but Andrew Bogut has been the Warriors‘ iron man this year, writes Carl Steward of the Mercury News.  The big man inked a three-year, $42MM extension with Golden State back in October.

Eastern Notes: Knicks, Smith, Deng, C’s

Can the Knicks make the playoffs?  Chris Broussard of ESPN.com checked in with four Eastern Conference scouts to find out what they think of New York’s chances going forward.  Two scouts say the Knicks can get home court advantage in the postseason, one scout sees them getting in the lower half but not getting far, and the other scout says their recent success is a product of the Eastern Conference’s weakness.  More out of the East..

  • Mike Woodson said if J.R. Smith isn’t with the program, he should get used to sitting at the end of the Knicks‘ bench, writes Al Iannazzone of Newsday. “Put it this way, he’s going to have to be with it if he’s going to want to be a part of it,” Woodson said. “As a coach, it’s my job to make sure that that happens.’‘  It sounds like the Knicks would like to move the outspoken guard, but that could prove to be difficult.
  • Bob Finnan of The News-Herald says that the newly-acquired Luol Deng is filling the bill at small forward for the Cavs.
  • Caron Butler is happy to be playing for his hometown Bucks, but he wants more playing time, writes Charles F. Gardner of the Journal-Sentinel.  “The information I received before coming here is that ‘You’re going to play a lot,‘” said Butler, who thought being traded from Phoenix to Milwaukee would signal more playing time. “And I want to play. I want to be out there to help the situation.
  • Going from least valuable to most valuable, Kevin Pelton of ESPN.com (Insider sub. req’d) looks at the Celtics‘ trade assets.  No surprise here, but the worst trade asset the C’s have is the cumbersome contract of Gerald Wallace.

Hawks, Others Interested In Ivan Johnson

Over the summer, Ivan Johnson waited and waited to find an NBA deal to his liking.  When he couldn’t get anything more than the veteran’s minimum, he opened things up to international offers and wound up signing in China.  With the end of the CBA season in sight, however, several teams, including the Hawks, are showing interest in welcoming him back to the states, according to Chris Vivlamore of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution (via Twitter).

In two NBA seasons with Atlanta, Johnson averaged 6.5 PPG and 3.9 RPG to go along with a 15.1 PER in 125 contests.  The former Hawk drew interest from the Knicks over the summer and reportedly had preliminary talks with at least six NBA teams in total.  It would stand to reason that several of those clubs will circle back around for him once he is available.

At the age of 29, the Oregon product is well-traveled at this point, having spent time with teams in South Korea and Puerto Rico, as well as playing in China in 2011 before coming to the NBA.

Southeast Notes: Heat, Trade Exception, Oden

After parting with Israeli’s Maccabi Ashdod, Xavier Silas is returning to the States in hopes of signing with an NBA team, a league source told Shams Charania of RealGM.  Silas, who went to training camp with the Wizards in October, was an undrafted rookie out of Northern Illinois leading into the lockout and has done quite a bit of traveling for a 25-year-old.  Silas apparently went AWOL without notifying his Israeli team, according to David Pick of Eurobasket.com (via Twitter).  While a stop in the D-League is possible, it’s not planned at the moment, his agent tells Gino Pilato of D-League Digest.  Here’s more out of the Southeast Division..

  • Eric Pincus of the Los Angeles Times (on Twitter) estimates that the Heat will wind up with a $2.2MM trade exception following the three-team deal involving the Warriors and Celtics.  The swap saw Jordan Crawford and MarShon Brooks head to the W’s, Toney Douglas come to Miami, and Joel Anthony, a Heat first-round pick, and 2016 second-round pick go to the Boston.
  • Good news for Heat fans: Greg Oden says his knees feel fine after seeing a handful of minutes on the NBA hardwood for the first time in more than four years, writes Michael Wallace of ESPN.com.  Miami inked the former No. 1 overall pick to a one-year deal over the summer.
  • Former Heat training camp invitee Derrick Byars has reached agreement on a deal with Krasny Oktyabr of the European League, a source told Charania.  Byars averaged 5.0 points and 5.5 rebounds in two regular season games with San Antonio in 2012.  The 6-foot-7 forward was a second round pick of the Trail Blazers in 2007.

Odds & Ends: Stern, Lottery, Seattle

In what is expected to be his final press conference as commissioner, David Stern defended the NBA’s draft lottery and dismissed speculation that teams may tank games to earn a better chance at a top pick.  However, he conceded that the system may need some adjustments, writes Mark Woods of ESPNNewYork.com.  “We made it a bit more slanted to the worst teams, and I think it’s maybe time to look at the lottery and maybe tinker a little more,” he said. “But we’ll see what Commissioner [Adam] Silver wants to do on that.”  More from around the Association..

  • Silver also confirmed that he would be naming a new deputy commissioner within weeks, Woods writes.
  • “Under the right circumstances,” Silver said that he would love to see an NBA team back in Seattle, tweets Marc J. Spears of Yahoo Sports.
  • The NBA expects more foreign investors to buy into teams, writes Keith Weir of Reuters.  Wealthy groups in China, the Middle East and Latin America have all been mentioned as potential investors in NBA franchises.  “We encourage that movement of capital and we think it is inevitable,” Stern said, reflecting on the example set by Mikhail Prokhorov‘s purchase of Nets in 2010.  “In addition we also have an operating structure with a salary cap that very much blunts the impact of pure dollars or pounds or rubles,” he added.

Lakers Sign Manny Harris To 10-Day Deal

4:42pm: The team has officially announced the deal, via Twitter.

11:29am: The Lakers will sign combo guard Manny Harris to a 10-day contract, according to Dave McMenamin of ESPNLosAngeles.com. He’ll join them in Boston, where the team is set to play Friday night, McMenamin adds.

Harris had drawn interest from the Hawks as well as the Lakers, as Sam Amico of Fox Sports Ohio reported earlier this week, and USA Today’s Sam Amick revealed that Harris interviewed with the Thunder earlier this month. The 24-year-old was playing for the Lakers’ D-League affiliate, which acquired his D-League rights in December. He’s coming off back-to-back D-League Performer of the Week awards, and has averaged 43 points over his last three games, McMenamin notes via Twitter. He’s notched 30.6 points and 6.5 rebounds in 38.0 minutes per game overall for the L.A. D-Fenders this season.

The 6’5″ Harris wasn’t nearly as productive in two seasons with the Cavaliers, the only NBA team he’s played for. He put up 6.2 PPG in 17.4 MPG in his time with Cleveland. The Lakers have an open roster spot, so they don’t need to waive anybody to make room.

Atlantic Rumors: Nets, Celtics, J.R. Smith

Mikhail Prokhorov, in London for today’s Nets-Hawks game, said that he was never close to making changes when the Nets were playing their worst this season, and the owner also expressed confidence in GM Billy King and coach Jason Kidd. Prokhorov added that he has no intention of selling the team anytime soon. Newsday’s Roderick Boone and Stefan Bondy of the New York Daily News round up his comments via Twitter, and there’s more from Nets ownership suite among the day’s news from the Atlantic Division:

  • Gerald Wallace is upset with his role on the Celtics, and also feels the Nets “disrespected” him by trading him to a rebuilding club, observes Mark Murphy of the Boston Herald“This season is a slap in the face, having to change my game and fine-tune it,” Wallace said. “First of all, it has to come mentally. You accept your situation, but there’s two sides to your brain. One side is fighting the other side because of the predicament you’re in. You feel you can still perform at the level you always have, but at the same time, you’re doubting yourself.”
  • One of Prokhorov’s advisers seems to have overtaken the role of another, with Sergei Kushchenko now exerting more influence on the Nets than Dmitry Razumov has, as Tim Bontemps of the New York Post explains.
  • There was no chance the Celtics were going to keep soon-to-be restricted free agent Jordan Crawford beyond the season, writes Herald scribe Steve Bulpett, who sees Wednesday’s trade of Crawford and MarShon Brooks as a move made with only the future in mind.
  • An Eastern Conference personnel man tells Mitch Lawrence of the New York Daily News that if Knicks GM Steve Mills finds a taker for J.R. Smith, “he’ll be pulling a fast one” on whatever team ends up with the swingman.
  • Ian O’Connor of ESPNNewYork.com wonders if Mike Woodson‘s public support for Smith has to do with their mutual ties to the Creative Artists Agency. The Knicks would be better off waiving Smith this summer and using the stretch provision to spread out his remaining cap hits, O’Connor believes.