Month: November 2024

Southwest Notes: Granger, Grizzlies, Spurs

The Southwest Division, where four out of five teams could make the playoffs, is abuzz today. The Rockets and Spurs are jostling at the top of the Western standings, and have both been linked to Danny Granger, who could be the biggest buyout prize this year. The Mavs are also rumored to be in on Granger, and they’re bumping shoulders at the bottom of playoff contention with the Grizzlies, who claimed Beno Udrih off waivers today. Here’s some more from what should remain one of the more interesting divisions this year:

  • Ramona Shelburne of ESPN Los Angeles seconded earlier reports that the Spurs, Rockets, and Mavs all have a shot at Granger (Twitter link).
  • Grizzlies coach Dave Joerger told reporters before tonight’s game, including Ronald Tillery of The Commercial Appeal, that he won’t address newly acquired Udrih until tomorrow (Twitter link).
  • The Grizzlies are a game and a half out of the playoffs this season after former coach Lionel Hollins took them to the Western Conference Finals last year, but CEO Jason Levien has no regrets about hiring new coach Dave Joerger. Levien made his comments in an appearance on Sports 56 WHBQ radio in Memphis, as Ronald Tillery of The Commercial Appeal notes (Twitter link). “I feel better about the decision today than I did in June or July,” Levien said. “He’s been terrific.”
  • The Grizzlies have assigned Jamaal Franklin D-League, the team announced. The 41st pick in the draft this past June hasn’t started in any of his three appearances with the Fort Wayne Mad Ants, an affiliate Memphis shares with five other NBA teams.
  • Spurs coach Gregg Popovich tells Jeff McDonald of San Antonio Express-News that the team hasn’t yet been active in the buyout market, but is ready when the opportunity arrives: “Like everyone else we’re looking at all the names. If we see there’s a body there we think can help us we’ll try to do it, but we haven’t done anything to this point.” The Spurs are reportedly one of the front-runners for Danny Granger’s services once the short-timer Sixers guard clears waivers.
  • Metta World Peace is one player in the buyout market the Spurs are not interested in, according to Jeff McDonald of San Antonio Express-News (Twitter link). The former Ron Artest was reportedly interested in San Antonio as a landing spot, but the interest apparently isn’t mutual.

Chuck Myron contributed to this post.

Mavs Expected To Join Granger Pursuit

The Mavs are expected to have conversations with Danny Granger about joining them once he clears waivers, a league source tells Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports. Dallas is joining a long list of teams that are reportedly interested in the former All-Star with a career average of 17.6 PPG. The Clippers, Rockets, Bulls, Heat and Spurs are also in on the Granger sweepstakes, with the Clippers and Spurs believed to be the favorites.

The Mavs would presumably have more room for Granger behind Monta Ellis at the shooting guard slot than his traditional small forward role, as Shawn Marion, Vince Carter, and Jae Crowder are all productive wings taking up minutes there. The Mavs have played well of late, climbing up into the Western Conference 7th seed slot for the playoffs at 12 games over .500. However, they are still just 2.5 games ahead of the Grizzlies, who are currently on the outside looking in for the playoffs with the 9th best record in the West. In the fiercely competitive West, no team is safe as we head into the stretch run.

Dallas sits at roughly $4.47MM under the luxury tax line, which could give them an edge against other teams near or already over the tax line, as the actual cost of adding Granger will be steeper than his salary for those teams. The Mavs are nonetheless limited to offering the minimum salary.

Grizzlies Want To Keep Zach Randolph Long-Term

Zach Randolph said in November that he’d like to retire with the Grizzlies, though he’s undecided on his nearly $17MM player option for next season. Whatever he chooses to do, it appears the Grizzlies would like to keep him around for 2014/15 and beyond, given the comments of Grizzlies CEO Jason Levien on Sports 56 WHBQ radio in Memphis (transcription via Ronald Tillery of The Commercial Appeal, on Twitter).

“We’re hopeful we’ll have Zach for a very long time to come,” Levien said. “We have to figure out what’s the right way to do that for the organization.”

Randolph has notched 17.3 points per game this year, his highest scoring average since pouring in 20.1 PPG in 2010/11. The Grizzlies rewarded the power forward with a four-year, $66MM extension near the end of that season, and while Randolph, who turns 33 in July, probably won’t merit a package quite that lucrative again, he’d still be a sought-after free agent if he hits the market this summer.

The team adamantly denied trade rumors surrounding Randolph in December, but the Raymond Brothers client nonetheless expressed annoyance over a perceived lack of loyalty from the club, pointing to the success the Spurs, Lakers and Heat have had standing by their players. Trade rumors continued to persist until last week’s deadline, but Randolph said last month that he wants to continue playing alongside Marc Gasol, who’s under contract through next season. In the same interview, Randolph reiterated that he’s undecided about his player option for next year, in spite of sources who told Ken Berger of CBSSports.com in December that they expect Randolph to opt out.

Celtics, Rodrigue Beaubois In Talks About Deal

WEDNESDAY, 2:44pm: The Celtics and Beaubois are discussing a possible 10-day contract, tweets Marc Stein of ESPN.com.

TUESDAY, 11:15pm: Rodrigue Beaubois was brought in by the Celtics for a private workout on Tuesday and is said to have had a “strong showing,” reports Chris Haynes of CSNNW.com. Boston currently has one open roster spot, and Haynes adds that a decision to sign him or not is expected soon. Beaubois became a free agent in the offseason after the Mavericks chose not to offer him a new contract.

The 6’2 guard underwent hand surgery in March of last year to repair a fractured metacarpal in his left hand and has reportedly recovered. It’s worth noting that not only was it the third time he had the operation, but Haynes writes that it was the sole reason why the French point guard was unable to land on an NBA roster last summer.

Originally selected 25th overall by the Thunder in 2009, Beaubois was traded to Dallas and spent four seasons with the Mavs; he owns career averages of 7.1 PPG, 2.1 APG, and nearly 44% shooting overall in 15.9 MPG.

Kings Sign Orlando Johnson To 10-Day Pact

WEDNESDAY, 1:47pm: The team has officially announced the deal.

TUESDAY, 9:26pm: The Kings will sign guard Orlando Johnson to a 10-day contract tomorrow, according to Sean Cunningham of News10 Sacramento (Twitter link passed along from Jason Jones of the Sacramento Bee). The 24-year-old Monterey native last played for the Pacers, averaging 2.4 PPG and 9.0 MPG in 38 games this season.

Coincidentally, Johnson had been selected by the Kings during the second round of the 2012 draft but was quickly sent to the Pacers for cash considerations on a draft day deal. Indiana waived the 6’5 guard last week in order to make their trade for Evan Turner work.

Odds & Ends: Monroe, Humphries, Williams

Five teams, most of them in the Eastern Conference, are planning to pursue Greg Monroe when he becomes a restricted free agent this summer, a source tells Bleacher Report’s Jared Zwerling. The source predicts Monroe will sign early in July, which often isn’t the case with restricted free agents. There’s more from Zwerling amid our latest look around the league:

  • The Celtics have interest in signing-and-trading Kris Humphries this summer, Zwerling writes in the same piece. Danny Ainge is reportedly high on the 10th-year veteran who’s expressed a desire to stay in Boston, so it seems there’s no guarantee Humphries will go elsewhere this summer, even as the C’s appear to be preparing for that possibility.
  • Marvin Williams is comfortable in Utah and wants to remain with the Jazz, observes Steve Kyler of Basketball Insiders, who figures that was one of the reasons the team reportedly turned down at least one offer for a late first-round pick in exchange for Williams.
  • Pelicans GM Dell Demps expressed confidence in his core earlier this week, but Bradford Doolittle of ESPN.com, in an Insider-only piece, urges Demps to shake up the team in the offseason.
  • Justin Barrasso of WEEI.com examines the transition Brad Stevens is making from college to the NBA game, noting that most college coaches who’ve entered the pros have done so with franchises far less stable than the Celtics are.

Wizards Sign Drew Gooden To 10-Day Contract

WEDNESDAY, 10:38am: The Wizards have officially announced the signing, via press release.

TUESDAY, 6:59pm: Drew Gooden has agreed to sign a 10-day contract with the Wizards, according to Michael Lee of the Washington Post. Yesterday, ESPN’s Marc Stein reported the likelihood that the Wizards would look to bring the 6’10 forward on board, and Yahoo’s Marc J. Spears said that Gooden would be in Washington D.C. today to ink a deal.

With big man Nene sidelined for the next four-to-six weeks in addition to nagging injury issues affecting Kevin Seraphin and Trevor Booker, it’s not surprising that Washington – currently at fifth place in the Eastern Conference and a game and a half out of fourth – would look to add some frontcourt help.

Gooden last played during the 2012/13 season for the Bucks, but only appeared in 16 games and was eventually amnestied in July of 2013. In 2011/12, he appeared in 56 games with 46 starts for Milwaukee, averaging 13.7 PPG, 6.5 RPG, and shot 43.7% from the field in 26.2 MPG.

Buyout Market Guidelines

Player movement in the NBA certainly doesn’t cease following the passage of the trade deadline. This year’s robust buyout market is testament to that, with names like Danny Granger, Glen Davis, Metta World Peace, Jimmer Fredette and Ben Gordon either having already reached buyout agreements or having engaged in talks with their teams about doing so. All of it leads up to yet another deadline.

No player waived after March 1st is eligible to play for another team in the postseason. That means anyone who wants off his team must find a way to make it happen no later than Saturday. Such players can remain free agents right up until the playoffs, but as long as they’re on waivers no later than Saturday, they’re postseason-eligible. Playoff-bound teams have made late-season signings in the past, as the Spurs did with Tracy McGrady last year, though most of the notable names generally land on new teams soon after they become free agents.

When a player and a team reach a buyout agreement, it’s the player, not the team, who gives up money. It’s common for reports to suggest that Team X bought out Player Y, but such wording is inaccurate. Commonly, players agree to relinquish a portion or the entirety of whatever the team still owes them. Often, the player is a veteran on a non-contender who wants a shot at a title, like Granger and Caron Butler. Sometimes, the buyout candidate is simply dissatisfied with his playing time, like Fredette, who’s nearing release from his rookie scale contract. It’s a calculated risk, since there’s no guarantee a player can find a new team and recoup the money he’s giving up, but most of the time agents won’t push for a buyout unless they’re certain another NBA offer is forthcoming.

Teams get to deduct the amount of the buyout from their books, and removing a player who doesn’t want to be around can help locker room dynamics. Still, teams are often reluctant to give a player up, particularly when it’s someone who’s still productive, as is the case with Granger. The Sixers have reportedly held interest in seeking a sign-and-trade that would allow them to collect assets for Granger this summer, when he’d become a free agent if he plays out the rest of his contract. Philadelphia can’t sign-and-trade Granger if there’s a buyout, so that’s probably slowed negotiations. Teams and players may also haggle over the amount of the buyout, further delaying an agreement.

Another point of negotiation may be over set-off rights, which allow teams to recoup a portion of the money they owe a player when he signs his next contract. Teams can withhold the amount of the new deal a player signs minus the one-year veteran’s minimum, divided by two. So, if a team owes a player $4MM and he signs a new deal for $2MM, the set-off amount is $2MM minus $788,872, or $1,211,128, divided by two, which comes to $605,564. The team would then subtract that amount from $4MM and owe the player $3,394,436.

In this scenario, the player collects $5,394,436, which is still more than he would have received if he hadn’t found a new deal. The amount the team could collect via set-off would be higher if the player signed a new contract for $3MM, and the player would also earn more in that case. So, there’s still financial advantage for the player to seek as lucrative a deal as possible. There have been reports suggesting that a club with extra money to spend on free agents has no financial advantage when it comes to signing buyout players, on the premise that set-off rights would force those guys to forfeit whatever they get in a new deal, but that’s not accurate. A larger new contract means the old team indeed collects more, but the player collects more, too.

Of course, if a player agrees to forgo all of the money he’s owed as part of the buyout, set-off isn’t a factor, and teams can give up their set-off rights as part of the buyout agreement.

Players can re-sign with teams that they’ve just bought their way off, but it’s highly unlikely that anyone would elect to do so. It used to be fairly common for players to be traded at the deadline, buy out their contracts with their new teams, and re-sign with their original teams, but the current collective bargaining agreement curbed that practice. Once a team trades a player, it can’t re-sign him or claim him off waivers for one year or until his contract was due to expire, whichever is earlier. So, even if a team trades a player on an expiring contract, it can’t re-sign him until July.

All players who agree to a buyout must go through waivers first, and usually the buyout agreement hinges on the player clearing waivers. Should a team put in a waiver claim, that typically means the buyout is null and void, and the new team is on the hook for the player’s entire guaranteed salary. There’s no rule against a player negotiating a buyout with a team that claims him off waivers, but that would be an unusual practice, and waiver claims are rare to begin with.

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

Sixers, Granger Nearing Buyout

10:12am: There isn’t quite as much interest in Granger as other reports have suggested, according to Sam Amico of Fox Sports Ohio, who hears from one GM who says that he has no interest at all and that Granger is “done” (Twitter link). Still, I’d be surprised if Granger doesn’t receive multiple attractive offers once a buyout is done.

WEDNESDAY, 7:59am: The buyout should be done today, TNT’s David Aldridge hears, identifying the Clippers, Bulls, Heat, Rockets and Spurs as teams in the hunt for the 30-year-old (Twitter link).

10:55pm: It’s also being said that Granger is weighing all of his options right now, including staying with Philadelphia for the remainder of the season, according to Ramona Shelburne and Marc Stein of ESPN. However, if Granger should complete a buyout soon enough, Stein tweets that the Spurs and Clippers will be in a two-team race for his services.

TUESDAY, 4:35pm: Granger appears to be limiting his interest to realistic title contenders, rather than mere playoff teams, tweets TNT’s David Aldridge.

MONDAY, 6:30pm: Coach Brett Brown told reporters, including Dei Lynam of CSNPhilly.com (on Twitter), that the club might have an announcement regarding Granger in the next 24 hours.  There’s no nameplate on Granger’s locker and he won’t be in action for tonight’s game against the Bucks.

SATURDAY, 12:06pm: League sources tell Charania that Granger would likely choose between the Heat, Clippers, Bulls, Spurs, and Mavs as a free agent should the buyout happen (Twitter link).

11:55am: In initial discussions regarding a buyout for recently acquired Danny Granger, the Sixers have been cooperative with the shooting guard, a league source tells RealGM.com’s Shams Charania (via Twitter).

Despite reports that Granger was unhappy with being traded and immediately wanted a buyout, it appears there is no animosity between him and the Sixers organization. Earlier in the day, Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports reported that Granger was undergoing a team physical, but adds that the physical does not mean that the former All-Star isn’t interested in a buyout (Twitter links).

Granger was traded to the Sixers from the Pacers at the trade deadline after spending the first eight-plus years of his career in Indiana. A knee injury has limited Granger’s athleticism and impact over the last two seasons, when he has been moved to the bench and averaged under 23 minutes and 10 points per game for the first time since his rookie season.

Pacific Notes: Suns, Smith, Gasol, Kings

The Suns have what it takes to attract top-level free agents, as team president of basketball operations Lon Babby tells Bob Young of The Arizona Republic.

“I don’t think we ever lost our status as a destination, because of the history of the franchise, the weather, the medical and training staff,” Babby said. “Those are constants that make it an attractive place. I wouldn’t deny that we have enhanced our position. I think we were always above average. Now I think we’re in the upper echelon because there’s an excitement and a spirit about the atmosphere and the culture here that is palpable.”

Young thinks Kevin Love should be the team’s next free agent target, though that would require waiting until the summer of 2015. In the meantime, here’s more on the Suns and their Pacific Division rivals:

  • Ish Smith is poised to spend an entire season with a single NBA team for the first time in his four-year career, and he’s been an important contributor for the Suns, as fellow Republic scribe Paul Coro examines. Smith’s deal is non-guaranteed for next season.
  • Mike Bresnahan of the Los Angeles Times interprets Pau Gasol‘s postgame comments Tuesday as veiled criticism of Mike D’Antoni, but Gasol didn’t hide his thoughts about whether all the expiring contracts the Lakers have are creating a negative atmosphere. “Probably. That’s part of it,” Gasol said. “But that’s why you have to be disciplined and implement discipline. That’s how you kind of make that better or make that not a factor. I don’t think there’s a lot of discipline right now.”
  • It’s as if Kings executives think that they should keep making moves until they get it right, opines Ailene Voisin of The Sacramento Bee, who examines the team’s decision to let go of Jimmer Fredette and audition others on 10-day contracts. Sacramento is set to sign Orlando Johnson and reportedly worked out Royce White.