In the weeks leading up to free agency, the Hornets were said to be looking to add multiple centers to their roster and were linked to top free agents like Richaun Holmes and Nerlens Noel in addition to intriguing trade candidates like Myles Turner.
The Hornets ultimately took a quieter approach to addressing the center position, accommodating a salary-dump deal for Mason Plumlee and selecting Kai Jones with the 19th pick in the draft. As Steve Reed of The Associated Press writes, president of basketball operations Mitch Kupchak‘ comments to reporters on Tuesday suggested that Plumlee will probably be the starter in 2021/22 but isn’t necessarily a long-term solution.
“Our thought process was to get somebody that’s a veteran under a reasonable contract and also give these young guys a chance to grow a little bit, and maybe a year from now they’re going to be the guys that maybe we should’ve pursued this year in free agency,” Kupchak said.
As Reed notes, besides Jones, the Hornets also have young bigs like Vernon Carey and Nick Richards on the roster, so the team will be focused on developing all of them this season. In the interim, Charlotte was happy to play it safe by acquiring Plumlee rather than trying to make a big splash in free agency.
“Going into free agency, there are 30 teams and there were a couple of centers available, but you don’t know where you rank,” Kupchak said. “You don’t know what the marketplace is going to be like once free agency begins, so there’s a lot of uncertainty going in. … We felt we got somebody (Plumlee) with two years remaining who’s a proven veteran on a good financial contract.”
Here’s more from around the Southeast:
- New Hornets forward Kelly Oubre said the team’s “youth” and “energy” drew him to Charlotte, as Rod Boone of SI.com relays. “We played against them last year on three different occasions and the way they played — the young guys, the athletic ability, the speed they play with, the way they share the basketball and shoot the basketball and then how they defend — it was fun,” Oubre said. “I’m telling you, even playing against them, it was fun to watch them play against other teams, scouting against them.”
- Newly-signed Wizards guard Spencer Dinwiddie tells Fred Katz of The Athletic that it was excruciating waiting to see whether Washington’s sign-and-trade deal for him – which turned into a five-team trade – would ultimately come together. “They were terrible,” Dinwiddie said of the 48 hours he spent waiting. “They were terrible, because you gotta remember, this wasn’t just, ‘Oh, I’m going to the Wizards and we’re just figuring out the dollars. Is it 58 (million)? Is it 59? Is it 60?’ That wasn’t it. You had to get all these parties to agree, and if any of the parties say no, then the whole trade falls through. … I wasn’t just even relying on Brooklyn and the Wizards to negotiate. I was relying on five, six teams.”
- Undrafted rookie guard A.J. Lawson has left the Heat‘s Summer League team to join the Hawks‘ SL roster, tweets Anthony Chiang of The Miami Herald. A report on draft night suggested that Lawson was expected to attend training camp with the Heat, but that no longer seems likely.
Ya I figured someone might take 1 or 2 guys off that Heat summer league team. Atlanta is a curious fit for Lawson though, but I guess it makes sense in terms of likely more playing time on their summer league roster, where there are multiple similar guys on the Heat’s summer league roster, so better chance to get noticed by someone else…definitely makes the tough decision I was talking about previously slightly easier for the Heat though. My guess is the 5 guys that get invited to training camp will be Marcus Garrett, Dejon Jerreau, Tyson Carter, DJ Stewart, and 1 of Javonte Smart or RJ Nembhard. Thought those last 2 spots would be 1 of those guys, and then 1 of Stewart or Lawson. I could be wrong though. Definitely think Garrett is guaranteed 1 of the 2 way spots regardless
I am a bit curious why Charlotte didnt simply keep Zeller. He doesnt need the ball in his hands the way Plumlee does. Maybe the idea of taking on Plumlee and getting the asset was what put that over as the better option for them? I really like Charlotte’s roster a lot, and I thought they would have made a good run if they didnt lose half their team to injuries at the end of last season
Carey Jr and Kai are solid young bigs. I wish Knicks would of kept Kai in a way. But I get where we are. I see Carey Jr as an old school 4. He’s more a post guy and rebounder. Seems teams are moving away from that. Which I don’t get since it only helps outside shooting. Imo Hornets had best draft. They got really good young talent. They are deeper and are ready to challenge for a playoff spot. The East is getting g deeper. Not top heavy like it used to be. Bucks and Nets are still teams to beat. But now first rd gms are going to be tougher.
I think Knicks should of signed Oubre instead of Fournier. I hope Fournier works out
Benedict Arnold