Celtics Rumors

Atlantic Notes: Rondo, McDaniels, Fisher

With tip off for the Celtics and Knicks only a few minutes away, let’s take a look at some of the news and notes coming out of the Atlantic division:

  • Rajon Rondo would like to stay in Boston, according to close friend and former teammate Kendrick Perkins, who spoke to a number of Celtics reporters, including Gary Washburn of the Boston Globe, before Wednesday night’s Thunder-Celtics game (via Twitter). Rondo will be an unrestricted free agent this summer and we recently heard the Lakers might pursue him.
  • The impressive play of Sixers’ second round pick K.J. McDaniels has many in Philly wondering how long it will be before the rookie cracks the starting lineup, writes Keith Pompey of the Philadelphia Inquirer. While starting for the downtrodden Sixers is hardly remarkable — even for a rookie — McDaniels’ success is noteworthy because the Clemson product opted to gamble on himself with a one-year deal earlier this fall rather than sign the team’s four-year offer.
  • Knicks head coach Derek Fisher said he would currently be suiting up for his 19th season had the opportunity to hop right into coaching not come up this offseason, according to Chris Herring of the Wall Street Journal (via Twitter). Fisher, of course, spent the past two-plus seasons in the Oklahoma City backcourt rotation.

Eastern Notes: Waiters, Frye, Thomas, Powell

Dion Waiters may have been moved out of the starting lineup, but Cavaliers coach David Blatt tells Alex Kennedy of  Basketball Insiders that the third-year guard should think of himself as a “second starter.” “I just don’t like the term ‘bench player’ because I don’t think that’s what he is,” Blatt said. “He’s a player who plays important minutes in the game when we need them. To me, whether he begins the game [as a starter] or not is less significant. It’s about the minutes he plays and what he does in those minutes.” Still on his rookie contract, Waiters is under the Cavaliers’ control through the 2016/17 season.

Also in the Eastern Conference:

  • The Magic know what Channing Frye can do for them, but his new teammates don’t always know where he is, reports Josh Robbins of The Orlando Sentinel. “When I’m watching film, he’s open more times than he’s receiving the basketball,” lamented Magic coach Jacque  Vaughn. “That’s just guys not knowing where he’s going to be yet, not knowing how the defense is going to play him.” The growing pains are to be expected for the Magic, who brought in eight new players during the offseason. Frye, a big man with three-point range, came to Orlando as a free agent, signing for $32MM over four years.
  • Malcolm Thomas, who was waived Monday by the Sixers, has opted to undergo knee surgery, according to Dei Lynam of CSNPhilly.com. Thomas, who was playing about 14 minutes per game, suffered a left knee effusion and will be out of action for four to five weeks.
  • The CelticsDwight Powell has no complaints about his short stint in the D-League, writes A. Sherrod Blakely of CSNNE.com. Powell, who was recalled by the Celtics Monday, scored 29 points in a Maine Red Claws scrimmage. “It’s very important for me or any player really, to work on your skills,” Powell said. “I’m glad I was able to get down there.”  Powell came to Boston this summer as part of a three-team deal with the Nets and Cavaliers. He has yet to appear in a regular-season game for the Celtics.

Atlantic Notes: Raptors, Pressey, Knicks

The Raptors are tied for the league’s best record at 6-1, and any trepidation about whether Kyle Lowry merely lucked into his four-year, $48MM deal thanks to an aberration of a season last year is dissolving with each passing game. His 17.9 points per contest this season is precisely the same number he put up in 2013/14, when he set a new career high. While we wait to see just how well Lowry and the Raptors will continue to play, here’s more from Toronto and other Atlantic Division locales:

  • Greivis Vasquez and James Johnson haven’t been Raptors teammates for long, but the point guard is already sold on the value of the forward the team signed this past summer, note Ryan Wolstat of the Toronto Sun notes and Josh Lewenberg of TSN Sports (Twitter links). “He’s a little spicy, a little crazy, but I love playing with a guy like him because I know he’s got my back,” Vasquez said.
  • The decision the Celtics made to keep Phil Pressey past the date his minimum salary became guaranteed this summer is paying off with Marcus Smart injured, as Marc D’Amico of Celtics.com examines.
  • Phil Jackson has made his share of changes in his eight months as Knicks president, but none of them appear to have made a difference in the team’s effectiveness, opines Marc Berman of the New York Post.

Eastern Notes: Brooks, Dellavedova, Powell

Bulls guard Aaron Brooks credits coach Tom Thibodeau with rebuilding the confidence that once made him the NBA’s Most Improved Player, according to Nick Friedell of ESPNChicago.com. Thibodeau quickly became a fan of the 6’0″ guard after he signed a one year deal with the Bulls in the offseason for $915,243. “I came in here lacking confidence,” Brooks admitted. “Even when I doubted myself, he was there to tell me, ‘You know what? I’ve watched you play, you’ve done well’ and just to keep working hard. It’s been a breath of fresh air for me.” Brooks earned the Most Improved Player award with the Rockets during the 2009/10 season, but has since bounced around the league, playing for the Suns, Kings, Rockets again and Nuggets before signing with Chicago.

Here’s more from the east:

  • Matthew Dellavedova has been diagnosed with an MCL sprain in his right knee and is expected to miss four to six weeks of action, the Cavs announced in a press release.  The backup point guard is averaging 2.7 points and 2.3 assists in three appearances.
  • Celtics forward Dwight Powell has been assigned to the Maine Red Claws of the NBA D-League, the team has announced. The rookie has yet to make a regular season appearance after averaging 1.7 points and 1.2 rebounds in 9.0 minutes per game in six preseason appearances.
  • The Pacers are doing their best to remain positive despite a spate of injuries affecting their top seven players, according to Candace Buckner of The Indianapolis Star. “It’s almost comical,” point guard Donald Sloan said. “Just how it’s happening. It seems game by game, it’s something. Same story.” The latest victim is center Roy Hibbert, who is day-to-day after leaving Saturday’s loss to the Wizards with a bruised left knee. The spiral for the 1-6 Pacers, who were the East’s top seed last season, began when Paul George suffered a broken leg in August during an exhibition game with the USA Men’s National Team.

Arthur Hill contributed to this post.

Celtics Notes: Rondo, Smart, Pressey

Celtics guard Rajon Rondo underwent a procedure to have a screw removed from his left hand Saturday, but coach Brad Stevens tells A. Sherrod Blakely of CSNNE.com he isn’t worried about his point guard. “It went well. It happened (Saturday) morning and from everything I’ve gathered it’s just a matter of letting the stitching heal and he’s back at practice Tuesday,” Stevens said. “So it’s a three-day thing.” Rondo, who is in the final year of his contract and has been the target of trade speculation, said he injured the hand September 25th in a bathroom fall. He was originally projected to be out of action for a month, but returned in time for the Celtics’ opener and currently leads the NBA in assists with 11.2 per game.

More from around the Celtics:

  • Rondo’s absence from Saturday’s game in Chicago, along with an injury to rookie guard Marcus Smart, created a playing opportunity for Evan Turner, Blakely reports. The 6’7″ guard received a two-year, $6.7MM contract to come to Boston in the offseason. He was the second pick in the 2010 Draft, but was considered a disappointment with the Sixers and only played sparingly after being traded to the Pacers last season. Turner would prefer to start, but will accept whatever role the Celtics will give him. “I’ve been blessed with enough gifts to have an opportunity to figure that out,” Turner said. “It’s just easier to get into a flow as a starter, when it comes to certain situations. But I don’t worry about that. It’ll work itself out.”
  • Despite the up-and-down start to his NBA career, Turner still has plenty of supporters around the league, writes Mark Murphy of The Boston Herald. Among them is Aaron McKie, who coached Turner as an assistant with Doug Collins‘ staff in Philadelphia. McKie said patience is needed with the young guard and Turner’s status as the second overall draft pick brought unrealistic expectations. “He doesn’t have the personality for the No. 2 pick,” McKie said. “That’s the Catch 22 of it. It’s a hard balance for anyone. “Part of the problem is that our pop culture has crossed over into sports. We want our guys now to be Madison Avenue people as much as basketball people, and I don’t think that’s really Evan. But that’s my guy. I’ve been with him since he got into the league.”
  • The injuries have also opened the door for little-used Phil PresseyMurphy notes. The second-year guard took the court for the first time this season Friday, contributing four fourth-quarter assists in a win over the Pacers. The Celtics showed faith in Pressey this summer by guaranteeing his $816,482 salary. “I’m staying ready expecting to get in, and if I don’t get in I’m counting down the minutes until the next game,” Pressey said. “It’s just my mindset. I love this game and I’m going to give it my all. Coach tells me to stay ready before every game. My mindset is 40 minutes, so when my name is called my mindset is there.”

Eastern Notes: Napier, Dellavedova, Sixers

The Sixers are keeping their eyes open for another big man to sign, Tom Moore of Calkins Media reports (Twitter link), though, according to Moore, no move is imminent. Philadelphia currently has 15 players on its roster so someone would need to be waived or dealt before another big could be added. The top bigs available currently are Dante Cunningham, Rashard Lewis, Ivan Johnson, Jeff Adrien, and Bernard James. With the Sixers in full-on rebuild mode, they may look to the D-League for a player with upside rather than a veteran, though that is just my speculation.

Here’s more from around the league:

  • The trade for Shabazz Napier on draft night has worked out very well for the Heat so far, Ira Winderman of The Sun Sentinel writes. While Napier is only averaging 5.0 PPG and 3.0 APG, he’s been the point guard on the floor for Miami during crunch time, which is a strong indicator of his standing on the team, notes Winderman. “The thing about that is that whatever opportunity I get, I’m going to try my best, and I expect a lot from myself no matter what,” Napier said. “And I’m fortunate enough that Coach puts me in the fourth quarter. So I’m going to do whatever I can possible do.
  • Heat coach Erik Spoelstra isn’t thrilled with the new experimental rules that are to be tested in the D-League, Winderman writes in a separate piece. Spoelstra isn’t a fan of all the play stoppages the league currently has, and said, “I don’t think any of that stuff matters until we figure out what’s going on with replays. Replays are what’s extending the games 20, 30 minutes each game.” One of the new rules being tested are coaches challenges which would serve to increase the amount of time officials spend looking at replays during games.
  • The Bucks have fired Skip Robinson, longtime VP of player development, Gerry Woelfel of The Racine Journal Times reports (Twitter link). The reason for Robinson being dismissed is unknown at this time, Woelfel adds.
  • Cavs guard Matthew Dellavedova has been diagnosed with a grade two MCL sprain and is expected to miss up to six weeks, Chris Haynes of The Northeast Ohio Media Group reports. In three games Dellavedova is averaging 2.7 points, 1 rebound and 2.3 assists. Cleveland recently waived A.J. Price and signed Will Cherry, who will most likely see increased minutes with Dellavedova out for an extended period.
  • Former Celtic Leon Powe has been observing Boston’s practices and meetings with an eye on a potential move to a front office position in the future, Scott Souza of the MetroWest Daily News reports (Twitter link).

Western Notes: Green, Bryant, Rondo

Draymond Green‘s representation switch to the Wasserman Media Group could help the Warriors re-sign the forward, who is set to become a restricted free agent next summer, Diamond Leung of the Bay Area News Group writes. GM Bob Myers is a former player agent who worked with and was mentored by Arn Tellem, the head of Wasserman, notes Leung. In an interview with 95.7 The Game, Myers said, “So if Arn says, ‘Hey, I got this much money (from another offer),’ he’s not going to lie to me, so there’s value in that. And here’s the other thing I do know. If it’s a tie, we’ll win. Not only just because he’s restricted, but Arn, we’ve known other a long time, so he’s not going to hurt us. If he can help, that’s great.”

Here’s more from way out west:

  • With the Lakers season seemingly over before it began, talk has turned to the possibility of Kobe Bryant potentially waiving his no-trade clause and being dealt. Chris Mannix of SI.com believes this would be the smart move from a basketball standpoint for both the team and Bryant, but Los Angeles has plenty of business and economic reasons to hold onto their star. Mannix cites the franchise’s high ticket prices and fanbase that isn’t keen on rooting for a team without a marquee attraction as the main reasons the Lakers would keep Bryant.
  • Despite the Lakers‘ potential interest in signing Rajon Rondo, the point guard will likely realize that the Celtics’ outlook seems rosier, Ben Rohrbach of WEEI 93.7 writes. Boston’s roster has more talent the Los Angeles’, and the Lakers are more likely to deal Bryant than to acquire Rondo, Rohrbach opines.
  • Not every player who signs to play in Los Angeles and ends up in Salt Lake City would appreciate the move, but Joe Ingles is content after the Jazz claimed him off waivers from the Clippers and paired him with Dante Exum, his teammate from the Australian national squad. Jody Genessy of the Deseret News has the details. “I don’t regret anything about what happened or what I did or anything,” Ingles said. “I did all I can to make the team and wasn’t what they [the Clippers] wanted or good enough or whatever it was, so it worked out perfectly. I’m very happy here (with Utah). It’s been great.”

Chuck Myron contributed to this post.

Lakers Likely To Pursue Rajon Rondo

Several executives from teams around the league believe the Lakers will make a hard push to sign Rajon Rondo next summer, the execs tell Chris Mannix of SI.com. The Celtics All-Star is set to hit free agency after the season, and he’s also perhaps the league’s most notorious trade candidate, though Mannix doesn’t suggest the Lakers are eyeing him for a swap.

The Lakers have a clear need for a long-term solution at point guard, where Jeremy Lin has inherited the starting job on his expiring contract after nerve trouble knocked Steve Nash out for the season. Reports linked them to Eric Bledsoe before he re-signed with the Suns on a long-term deal. The team has about $35.1MM in commitments for 2015/16 against a salary cap the league projects to come in around $66-68MM, leaving the Lakers with the flexibility required to sign Rondo to the maximum-salary contract he’ll almost certainly seek.

Still, Rondo has spoken fondly of Boston over the past several months even amid consistent trade rumors and the team’s inability to kick-start a return to the Eastern Conference elite. The 28-year-old is nonetheless coming to an end of a team-friendly five-year, $55MM extension, so this coming summer could present the final opportunity the BDA Sports Management client will have to command first-rate attention on the free agent market.

And-Ones: Rondo, Thunder, Scott

Nine players signed rookie scale extensions before last week’s deadline, but the Magic’s four-year, $48MM arrangement with Nikola Vucevic stands out among them as the best deal from the perspective of the team, according to a plurality of Hoops Rumors readers. Not surprisingly, the Jazz’s four-year, $42MM extension with Alec Burks picked up the least amount of votes in that poll, with Ricky Rubio‘s four-year, $55MM pact with the Timberwolves finishing next to last. Time will tell on each of those extensions, especially since they don’t kick in until 2015/16, just a year before the league’s $24 billion TV deal takes hold. Here’s more from around the NBA:

  • Rajon Rondo made a quick return from left hand surgery to join the Celtics for the start of the regular season and he’s leading the league with 11.7 assists per game, but Boston isn’t budging and appears in no hurry to trade the star point guard, as Chris Mannix of SI.com hears (video link; hat tip to Ben Rohrbach of WEEI.com).
  • An independent physician’s opinion that Anthony Morrow will return sooner than expected from injury is holding up league approval of a 16th roster spot for the injury-depleted Thunder, reports Darnell Mayberry of The Oklahoman. Still, Oklahoma City is expected to qualify for that provision after tonight’s game, Mayberry writes.
  • Mike Scott‘s versatility helped him come away with a new three-year, $10MM deal from the Hawks in free agency during the summer, and he’s paying dividends in the early going, as Chris Vivlamore of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution examines.

Offseason In Review: Boston Celtics

Hoops Rumors is in the process of looking back at each team’s offseason, from the end of the playoffs in June right up until opening night. Trades, free agent signings, draft picks, contract extensions, option decisions, camp invitees, and more will be covered, as we examine the moves each franchise made over the last several months.

Signings

Extensions

  • None

Trades

Waiver Claims

Draft Picks

  • Marcus Smart (Round 1, 6th overall). Signed via rookie exception to rookie scale contract.
  • James Young (Round 1, 17th overall). Signed via rookie exception to rookie scale contract.

Camp Invitees

  • Tim Frazier
  • Rodney McGruder
  • Christian Watford

Departing Players

Rookie Contract Option Decisions

It was supposed to be the summer of Love in Boston. Alas, Kevin Love‘s early summer visit to the city turned out to be just that — a visit. The Celtics didn’t possess the sort of trade assets the Timberwolves were demanding for their All-Star power forward, and try as president of basketball operations Danny Ainge might, he never acquired them. The return of LeBron James to the Cavs stoked Love’s interest in playing in Cleveland, and once that happened, no team was able to match Cleveland’s package that included consecutive No. 1 overall picks. That left Ainge holding on to the perennial All-Star he already had and again enduring several more months of on-again, off-again Rajon Rondo trade rumors.

NBA: Boston Celtics at Cleveland CavaliersIn a twist of fate, the C’s helped the Cavs clear the cap room necessary to sign James, and in turn trade for Love, when they participated in a three-team trade with Cleveland and the Nets. Boston gave up only a second-round pick that’s so heavily protected it will almost certainly never end up having to surrender it to receive a what’s likely a late first-round pick in 2016 plus Tyler Zeller and Marcus Thornton. It’s debatable whether Zeller, the 17th overall pick from the 2012 draft, or the future pick is the most intriguing asset out of this swap for Boston. In some sense it could be Thornton, a double-figure scorer in four of his five NBA seasons, but his $8.575MM salary this season casts him merely as the booby prize of the deal for now. The C’s might be able to use his Bird rights to re-sign him and turn him into a bargain next summer, but for the time being the presence of his salary stands as an obstacle.

The acquisition of Thornton along with Boston’s decision to re-sign Avery Bradley wiped out whatever cap flexibility the Celtics might have had. The C’s entered the summer with only about $44.7MM in guaranteed salary, not counting their pair of first-round picks. A touch of creativity would have given them enough money to throw a max offer at a restricted free agent like Gordon Hayward, who played for coach Brad Stevens when both were at Butler. Of course, the Jazz proved they were going to match any offer for Hayward when they matched the max deal that the Hornets gave him. Still, in this summer’s wild restricted free agency market, in which Eric Bledsoe and Greg Monroe idled without contracts for months, that flexibility might have come in handy for the C’s.

Ainge instead decided to retain his own restricted free agent. Bradley was never in line for max money, but an improved shooting season and continued stellar defense helped him earn annual salaries of $8MM a year. The Celtics showed little hesitancy in committing to Bradley on the second day of free agency just months after the sides had failed to come to terms on an extension, suggesting that the former 19th overall pick made a significant impression last season. It was nonetheless an impression that didn’t stop the Celtics from drafting Marcus Smart sixth overall a few days before they reached a deal with Bradley, and the Smart pick prompted Ainge to once more deny rumors that Rondo would be the odd man out in what had become a crowded backcourt.

It nonetheless seems that the notion of a Rondo trade, or at least the concern that he’ll leave via free agency next summer, helped fuel Ainge’s choice to draft one guard and commit $32MM over four years to another. Smart’s rookie scale contract will see to it that Boston isn’t committing an overwhelming sum to its backcourt, but given the star potential of the former Oklahoma State standout, it could quickly become difficult for Stevens to distribute minutes. Perhaps Ainge is taking a cue from former understudy and current Suns GM Ryan McDonough, who’s doubled down on a strategy of stockpiling point guards that worked to surprising success last season, but time will tell if either experiment pays dividends in the playoffs.

James Young, whom the Celtics took at pick No. 17 this year, can also play guard, but he can swing to the small forward, too, and he’s less of an immediate threat for playing time. Jeff Green, who fits the Bradley mold as an above average player on a salary that’s above average as well, holds down the starting job at the small forward, where Gerald Wallace figures to see minutes if the Celtics have any hope of flipping his decidedly player-friendly contract.

The C’s entered the offseason hoping to use the nearly $5.3MM non-guaranteed salary of Keith Bogans as bait in a trade that would have significant consequences, but Ainge instead used it on the eve of training camp to acquire four players and two future second-round picks. Dwight Powell, the only one of the four players who remains on Boston’s roster, holds some intrigue after having been the 45th overall pick in this year’s draft, and the future second-round picks are not without value, either. But the trade exception equivalent to Bogans’ salary is the most intriguing asset from this transaction as far as Boston is concerned, and it essentially gives Ainge another year to turn Bogans into a player who can help the team. The C’s acquired Bogans in the Pierce/Kevin Garnett trade, so coming away with a contributor of some value would serve as a meaningful bridge from the last Celtics championship to the next one.

The Bogans trade did allow the C’s to accomplish one goal they’d set out to do since July, as before the exchange they’d been carrying too many players to consummate their free agent deal with Evan Turner. The stock of the former No. 2 overall pick isn’t what it used to be, as evidenced by a deal that represents a sharp pay cut even from his rookie scale contract, but he’s a versatile swingman who, at age 26, gives Stevens a chance to unlock the potential that’s yet to fully develop. He’s also another candidate for minutes in the backcourt in what shapes up as a season-long complication for the coach.

Turner’s contract, which fits within the taxpayer’s mid-level exception rather than the full mid-level, also speaks to Boston’s salary crunch, one the team alleviated only slightly in sending Joel Anthony‘s larger salary to Detroit in a one-for-one deal for Will Bynum. Boston is only about $2MM clear of the tax line, and that will present a challenge not just as the Celtics scour for midseason pickups, but also as Ainge tries to construct trades involving Rondo and/or others. This clearly isn’t the sort of team that Wyc Grousbeck and his fellow owners would deem worth paying the tax for, barring the unlikely event that Ainge can strike gold with with a swap.

Such “fireworks” simply failed to launch this summer, to borrow a term from Grousbeck and Ainge, and the reality is setting in that the moves that brought Garnett and Ray Allen to Boston in 2007 are exceptions rather than the rule in the NBA. The Celtics are stuck in no-man’s land, too strong to have a decent chance at the top pick, and too weak to make the playoffs. They possess one key to unlocking the door that leads out of that territory in the form of Rondo, the sort of legitimate star whom successful teams almost always have. Whether the C’s can get where they’re going with him and a team of good-but-not-great players is the key decision that Ainge must make in the months ahead, and it will probably determine whether Rondo remains in Boston for much longer.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images. The Basketball Insiders salary pages were used in the creation of this post.