Month: November 2024

No Camp Deal For Nets, Michael Jenkins

SEPTEMBER 25TH, 4:01pm: The Nets released their training camp roster today, and Jenkins’ name isn’t on it, so presumably he won’t be with the team.

JULY 21ST, 1:21pm: Shooting guard Michael Jenkins has accepted a training camp invitation from the Nets, agent Daniel Moldovan of Entersport tweets (hat tip to Sportando’s Enea Trapani). The deal is likely the standard non-guaranteed one-year deal for the minimum salary that most camp invitees receive.

The 6’4″ shooting guard had his first taste of NBA experience this month with Brooklyn’s summer league team, having pursued his career overseas since going undrafted out of Winthrop in 2008. He averaged 6.8 points in 15.7 minutes per game across five summer league contests for the Nets, and this past season he averaged 10.3 PPG and 25.9 MPG with 39.9% three-point shooting for Pallacanestro Cantu of Italy.

It appears for now that he’ll stand a puncher’s chance of making the opening-night roster for Brooklyn, which has 12 players under contract, including free agent signee Alan Anderson. Bojan Bogdanovic seems destined to become the 13th, leaving Jenkins to compete with Markel Brown, Xavier Thames and Cory Jefferson, Brooklyn’s trio of second-round picks from last month.

Mike Budenholzer On GM Duties, Roster, East

Mike Budenholzer probably didn’t bank on adding responsibility over Atlanta’s basketball operations to his coaching duties after just one season as an NBA head coach, but the controversy surrounding the team has left him with a dual capacity. He’s serving as an interim GM while Danny Ferry is on an indefinite leave of absence, but in his comments today to Chris Vivlamore of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Budenholzer suggested the most difficult part has been seeing Ferry, whom he calls a friend, suffer under the harsh light of scrutiny. The coach/executive called Ferry’s racially derogatory statements about Luol Deng “out of character,” and dished on his new job and more in his conversation with Vivlamore. The entire interview is worth a read, but we’ll pull out three highlights here:

On how he’ll handle two jobs at once:

We have an incredible group here with our management and our basketball operations, scouts, assistant coaches and medical staff. I think it’s what we feel is the best solution in a tough time. I’m excited to continue to fight for our guy, protect our guys and protect what we have been building and continue to move us forward. We have done everything collaboratively since I arrived. So in a lot of ways as much as possible we are going to continue to work and continue to do business. In a tough time, this is the best solution.”

On the battle for roster spots in camp:

I think there is still competition. Guys come to camp and they come to make the team. I think we are in a situation where salary-wise and cap-wise we have some flexibility. I think we want to leave ourselves open to competition, most importantly, in putting together the best team we can. I think fortunately for us there is still opportunity for us, there is still flexibility in all ways, shapes and forms.”

On the team’s place in the Eastern Conference hierarchy:

It’s strange. I don’t really pay that close attention to the rest of the East or the entire NBA. We are in such that building mode and that beginning phase mode that I’m really focused on our guys. I genuinely mean that. I think there are fans out there that know more about the East than I do. Hopefully I know more about the Hawks than they do. I know LeBron is in Cleveland now and Chicago has made some good additions, mostly Derrick Rose coming back healthy. I think you can go down the list of how the teams have improved. To whatever degree, I am aware of all that. I’m significantly more focused on what we are doing and hope that we can have that daily approach and be worried about ourselves. We’ll find our spot in that mix of teams.”

Jazz Sign Dahntay Jones

THURSDAY, 2:33pm: The deal is official, the team announced.

TUESDAY, 8:29am: The contract is for the minimum salary and covers just one year, according to Eric Pincus of Basketball Insiders (on Twitter).

MONDAY, 9:02pm: Jones has signed with the team, according to the RealGM transactions log. This presumably means he’s passed his physical and that the team has yet to make a formal announcement.

4:51pm: It’s a non-guaranteed deal, according to Tony Jones of The Salt Lake Tribune. Dahntay Jones is taking his physical for the team today, the Tribune scribe adds, clarifying that the pact is not yet official. (Twitter links).

1:07pm: The Jazz have a deal with 10-year NBA veteran swingman Dahntay Jones, according to Jones’ representatives at Priority Sports (Twitter link). The tweet indicates that Jones has signed a contract with the club, but the Jazz have yet to make an official announcement. In any case, several NBA teams had reportedly been in pursuit of the 33-year-old this summer, and the Jazz had the flexibility necessary to give him more than the minimum if that’s what it took. The terms are nonetheless unclear.

The Knicks and Sixers were to have worked out Jones this summer, and the Clippers reportedly met with him. Observers from roughly half the league were apparently in attendance for a workout that the Mark Bartelstein client staged in Las Vegas. He spent this past season out of the NBA, the first time he went without a deal in the Association since he went 20th overall in the 2003 draft.

The Jazz had been carrying 13 fully guaranteed deals, while Dee Bost, Jack Cooley, Kevin Murphy and Toure’ Murry all have partially guaranteed arrangements. Just how much guaranteed money Jones has in his deal will likely dictate his chances of making the opening-night roster.

Grizzlies Officially Sign Beasley, Five Others

The Grizzlies formally announced the signings of Michael Beasley, Patrick Christopher, Earl Clark, Luke Hancock, Kalin Lucas and Hassan Whiteside via press release. The moves had been expected for all six, since each was reported to have come to terms on a deal with the team.

All six are on non-guaranteed contracts. The Grizzlies have the capacity to give more than the rookie minimum to Chrisopher, Hancock and Lucas, but it’s likely they’ve received minimum-salary arrangements just like the veteran additions for camp.

Beasley probably has the inside track for joining the team’s 14 players on fully guaranteed pacts for opening night, though Clark plays the same positions and looms as a threat should Beasley falter.

Kings Waive Alonzo Gee

The Kings have waived swingman Alonzo Gee, the team announced. The move is no shock, since he was due a non-guaranteed $3MM for the coming season, and he came to the team in the Jason Terry trade that appeared to be primarily about clearing space beneath the tax threshold from Sacramento’s perspective.

Gee has been a member of four NBA teams this offseason, largely shadowing the path of Scotty Hopson, who passed through the hands of five clubs. The Cavs, who originally signed him to his three-year deal in 2012, traded him to the Pelicans, who flipped him to Houston in the Omer Asik trade. The 6’6″ Gee started all 82 games for the Cavs in 2012/13, but he made just 24 starts last season, and his efficiency declined when he did see the floor. His 8.6 PER this past year was his first single-digit mark in that category in his five NBA seasons.

Sacramento has deals with 18 players in the wake of Gee’s release, which leaves room for the team to sign two more for training camp. The team had been less than $1MM shy of tax territory after striking a deal with Omri Casspi earlier in the offseason, but a series of moves has left the Kings with only about $71MM in guaranteed salaries, well short of the $76.829MM tax threshold.

Pistons Sign Brian Cook For Camp

The Pistons have signed nine-year NBA veteran big man NBA Brian Cook, the team announced via press release. The release also officially announces the signings of Hasheem Thabeet, Lorenzo Brown and Josh Bostic, who’d reportedly reached deals earlier with the team. The Pistons have the capacity to give Cook more than the minimum, but it’s unlikely that Detroit has done so. It’s unclear if there’s any guaranteed money involved, though the Pistons already have fully guaranteed deals with 16 players.

Cook hasn’t played in a regular season game since splitting the 2011/12 season between the Clippers and Wizards, but he did appear with the Pistons summer league team this past July, averaging 9.3 points and 5.0 rebounds in 21.3 minutes per game. He went to training camp with the Wizards in the fall of 2012 and the Jazz last autumn, but he failed to make the opening-night roster both times. The 6’9″ 33-year-old is a career backup in the NBA, never having averaged more than 18.9 MPG in the regular season.

Today’s moves bring the Pistons to 20 players, the preseason maximum. Cook, Thabeet, Brown and Bostic have little shot of making the regular season roster, but coach/executive Stan Van Gundy can retain the D-League rights to some of them for the team’s new one-to-one affiliate in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Suns Plan Long-Term Deal For Goran Dragic

One member of Phoenix’s dynamic backcourt has committed to remain for the foreseeable future, with Eric Bledsoe having re-signed for five years and $70MM, and Suns GM Ryan McDonough wants to make sure that’s the case for Goran Dragic, too. McDonough expressed a desire to do what it takes to keep the Slovenian guard, who has said he plans to decline his $7.5MM player option for 2015/16 and hit free agency next summer, as Paul Coro of the Arizona Republic reports.

“We don’t have many long-term commitments,” McDonough said. “We have every intention of keeping Goran in a Suns uniform as long as possible. We know he loves Phoenix. There’s plenty of money for Goran next year or when it comes up. We fully anticipate taking care of him.”

The Suns only have about $31MM tied up for 2015/16, not counting Dragic’s player option, more than $7MM in rookie scale team options for Alex Len, Miles Plumlee and Archie Goodwin, and potential extensions for Markieff Morris and Marcus Morris. That should still leave plenty of room for a lucrative new deal with Dragic, though Phoenix has his Bird rights, as thus the power to exceed the cap to re-sign him, if the Suns deem it necessary.

Dragic caught the eye of many teams around the league last season as he won the NBA’s Most Improved Player award in a year in which he scored 20.3 points per game after never having averaged as many as 15 PPG. The Pacers appeared to have interest in trading for him early this summer, and the Rockets have reportedly been considering a push to sign him in free agency next summer. The Lakers were apparently among the teams likely to make a play for both Bledsoe and Dragic in the hopes that the Suns would be unable to re-sign the two of them if they were to hit unrestricted agency at the same time in 2015, but Bledsoe’s long-term deal undermines any such plans. The Suns are nearing a deal with Zoran Dragic, Goran’s younger brother, and that would presumably give Phoenix another edge in keeping the older Dragic around.

Nets, Lawrence Frank Reach Buyout Deal

The Nets and former assistant coach Lawrence Frank have reached a deal on a buyout that will allow the sides to part ways after a contentious one-year stint, reports Chris Mannix of SI.com (Twitter link). Frank appears headed to the Clippers, as the team is expected to name him one of its assistant coaches in the coming days, according to Dan Woike of the Orange County Register (on Twitter). Brooklyn reassigned Frank in December into a role in which he filed daily reports for the club, in spite of a contract that had called for him to make more than $1MM a year for six seasons as an assistant coach under coaching neophyte Jason Kidd.

The buyout is no surprise, since Frank had reportedly hired “high-powered” attorney David Cornwell to try to negotiate a way out of his deal shortly after his reassignment late last year. It’s unclear whether that sort of legal counsel was ultimately involved in the buyout, but this summer’s departure of Kidd, with whom Frank apparently clashed, didn’t seem to repair the relationship between Frank and the team. Nets GM Billy King said in April that it was his decision, and not Kidd’s, to strip Frank of his coaching duties.

The Clippers have been eyeing Frank for a while, as A. Sherrod Blakely of CSNNE.com reported earlier this summer that they were considering him for their staff, and Arash Markazi of ESPNLosAngeles.com wrote earlier this month that Frank was expected to join the team. Clippers head coach/executive Doc Rivers had reportedly sought Frank as an assistant coach in the summer of 2013, too. Frank served as an assistant under Rivers for the 2010/11 season on the Celtics bench.

The 44-year-old Frank’s greatest success in coaching came in his first stint with the Nets, when he guided the team to the playoffs four straight years as head coach. He also served as a head for the Pistons, and is 279-335 in parts of nine seasons as an NBA head man.

Nets Sign Willie Reed For Camp

THURSDAY, 8:47am: The deal is official, the team announced via press release.

TUESDAY, 6:17pm: It’s a one-year, non-guaranteed pact, reports Zach Links of Hoops Rumors (Twitter link).

MONDAY, 12:03pm: The Nets will make Willie Reed their final addition for training camp, tweets Stefan Bondy of the New York Daily News. It’ll almost certainly be a minimum salary arrangement, since the Nets can’t give him any more, though it’s conceivable that the deal might cover multiple seasons and include a nominal guarantee. The client of Bell Management International had been a free agent since the Kings cut him loose in June.

Reed, a 6’9″ power forward, has twice signed during the regular season with NBA teams, but he’s never made an appearance in an official NBA game. The Grizzlies signed him just before the end of the 2012/13 season, and the Kings did the same as this past season came to a close. Both contracts included non-guaranteed salary for the following year, but Memphis waived him in training camp last fall, while the Kings released him just before this summer’s leaguewide free agency rush. Reed put up 9.2 points and 5.6 rebounds in 20.0 minutes per game for the Pacers in summer league play this year, while he averaged 14.7 PPG and 9.9 RPG in 31.1 MPG in the D-League this past season.

The 24-year-old will seemingly compete against fellow big men Jerome Jordan and Cory Jefferson for a spot on the Nets opening-night roster, with Brooklyn already carrying 13 fully guaranteed deals. Jefferson’s contract is partially guaranteed for $75K while Jordan has a non-guaranteed arrangement. Point guard Jorge Gutierrez‘s non-guaranteed deal becomes guaranteed for $25K if he makes it past Friday with the club, and while it appeared during the summer that shooting guard Michael Jenkins would camp with Brooklyn, it’s starting to sound as if the Nets won’t be signing him after all, if Reed is truly the final addition. Brooklyn was also set to bring Hamady Ndiaye to camp, but he failed his physical and the Nets voided his contract.

And-Ones: Pietrus, Parker, Bjelica

After a one-year break, free agent Mickael Pietrus is healthy and ready to return to the NBA, Chris Haynes of the Northeast Ohio Media Group writes. One league executive told Haynes that Pietrus has looked good in workouts and can help an NBA team immediately. The executive added, “You can tell right away that he can still be a productive player. His movements are crisp and the athleticism is there. It’s all about finding the right fit for him but he definitely belongs in the NBA.” Pietrus has already worked out for the Kings, and has more showcases lined up in the future.

Here’s more from around the league:

  • Serbian player Nemanja Bjelica has signed with Wasserman Media Group, Liz Mullen of Sports-Business Journal reports (Twitter link). The Timberwolves hold the NBA rights to the 2010 second-rounder.
  • Free agent guard Charlie Westbrook has signed with Hyeres-Toulon Var Basket in France, Shams Charania of RealGM reports (Twitter link). Westbrook went undrafted back in 2012 and was in training camp with the Heat last year before spending the rest of the season in the D-League.
  • Bucks rookie Jabari Parker said he was more comfortable playing power forward when asked which position suited him best, Charles F. Gardner of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel writes. In an interview with Nancy Lieberman of Sirius XM NBA Radio, Parker said, “As of right now I’m more comfortable with the 4 position. That’s where I played previously, before getting drafted, at Duke. I played a lot of 4. Even in high school. I know this is a different level. But in coach’s style of play, it’s more a stretch 4. That’s where I like to play my game, even though I like to post up a little. Just being on the perimeter, setting screens and popping, that’s what we’ve been doing so far. That’s what coach Kidd has been anticipating me playing that role.”
    Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/2014/09/24/6733686/abdur-rahim-no-longer-with-kings.html#storylink=cpy