Knicks Rumors

And-Ones: White, Kerr, Green

Metta World Peace insisted that he had offers from NBA teams before he signed with China’s Sichuan Blue Whales, as he said today in an appearance on the Dan Patrick Show (video link). World Peace, who turns 35 this month, added that he plans to return to the NBA, perhaps later this season when the Chinese schedule is over, but he said that he’d “rather play in Angola” than sign this season with the Knicks or Lakers, his two most recent teams.

Here’s more from around the league:

  • The one-month deal that D.J. White signed with Laboral Kutxa Vitoria of the ACB is set to expire this weekend, and the forward is looking to catch on with an NBA team, David Pick of Eurobasket reports (Twitter link). The Sixers are the only team currently rumored to be in the market for another big man, though with the way injuries are piling up this season, that could change in a flash. White’s last taste of NBA action came last season when he appeared in two games for the Hornets.
  • Rookie head coach Steve Kerr has made a number of risky decisions involving his starting lineups, but they have all worked out thus far, Sam Amick of USA Today writes. The Warriors head man is revitalized by his return to competition, notes Amick. Kerr weighed in, saying, “I’m alive. I love feeling this way. I love the competition. I love being part of the group. I love trying to build something together. The intensity — you can’t even come close to matching. On TV, you’re talking about what somebody else is doing. Now we’re talking about what we’re doing. So we’re in the fight, and that’s what makes it fun.”
  • ESPN basketball analyst Jeff Van Gundy has nothing but praise for Warriors forward Draymond Green, Monte Poole of CSNBayArea.com writes. Van Gundy suggested that Green, who is set to become a restricted free agent next summer, would command an annual salary between $10MM-$12MM, Poole notes. For his part, Green was quick to dispel any discussion of his next contract, saying, “But it’s four games into the season. If I start worrying about $10 (million) or $12MM right now, I’m going to get $2 (million).”
Chuck Myron contributed to this post.

Eastern Notes: Antetokounmpo, Allen, Nets

Knicks second-rounder Thanasis Antetokounmpo remains a work in progress as a basketball player, but the team is extremely high on his potential, Adam Zagoria of SNY.tv writes. As for when Antetokounmpo will be ready to dazzle the fans at Madison Square Garden, assistant GM Allan Houston said, “I don’t think you can put a time frame on a guy like that because you have to just take it as a daily process. I think because he’ll be with us this year [in the D-League], it’s the right approach for him personally. So he won’t get frustrated or impatient if it didn’t happen right away.”

Here’s more from the east:

  • Houston also added that the team sees Antetokounmpo’s eventual NBA position as a shooting guard, notes Zagoria. “When we saw him in the draft process we saw his just relentless energy,” Houston said. “I think his size [helps] because he’ll be able to guard multiple positions, especially in this league, and I think hopefully if he develops into an NBA player we want to see him be able to be comfortable on the perimeter with guard skills. He shot the ball better toward the end of the year in the D League so we think he can improve there as well. But I think it’s just his impact on the game is high. He finds a way to leave an imprint and I think in this system if he can continue to grow and we develop him into playing in different places on the floor and not be limited to just the wing or maybe a forward position, I think we’re going to keep him equipped and ready to make that jump.”
  • Free agent guard Ray Allen is visiting Chicago, but his agent Jim Tanner insists the trip has nothing to do with a possible Bulls signing, Shams Charania of RealGM reports (Twitter link). Chicago does happen to have an open roster spot, and would be a desirable destination for Allen, as the team is expected to contend for a title this season.
  • The Nets were reportedly up for sale last month, but majority owner Mikhail Prokhorov had told commissioner Adam Silver recently that he intends to maintain his controlling interest in the franchise, Mitch Abramson of The New York Daily News tweets.

Offseason In Review: New York Knicks

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

  • None

Draft Picks

Camp Invitees

  • Langston Galloway
  • D.J. Mbenga
  • Orlando Sanchez
  • Jordan Vandenberg

Departing Players

Rookie Contract Option Decisions

The Knicks entered this past offseason in a difficult position, with the team in the luxury tax, their star player a free agent, no first round draft pick, and not much in the way of tradeable assets. This was hardly an ideal spot for new team president Phil Jackson to enter his first summer as Knicks president, but nothing in the NBA is ever easy.

The team’s first order of business was re-signing Carmelo Anthony, and despite stiff NBA: Charlotte Hornets at New York Knickscompetition from the Bulls, Lakers, Mavs, and Rockets, the team retained the star forward with a five-year, $124.065MM pact. Anthony did give the franchise a small discount, amounting to $5,071,124 over the life of the deal, with the intent that the team would use the extra cap space to try and surround him with more talented players. While every free dollar of cap room helps, the discount could be seen as more of a symbolic gesture on Anthony’s part to show that he cares more about winning than the amount in his paycheck.

Having inked his deal prior to the NBA signing its new $24 billion TV contract, I’m curious if ‘Melo would have still given the team a discount if he signed after the announcement. Perhaps he might have signed a contract similar to the one LeBron James did with the Cavs instead, though Anthony has gone on the record saying he wouldn’t have wanted a shorter deal. That would have allowed Anthony to see what changes Jackson would make to the team, giving the star forward an opportunity for an “out” if things did not improve. It also would have afforded Anthony the opportunity to really cash in when the new CBA takes effect, though a $124MM contract won’t leave ‘Melo clipping coupons anytime soon.

It is nonetheless possible that in four year’s time, Anthony’s deal will be looked at as a bargain, especially if the salary cap increases as drastically as is rumored, and even more so if the next CBA does away with max contract restrictions altogether. But for now, it can be argued that the Knicks handcuffed themselves to a max deal with a 30-year-old scorer who has only once made it past the second round of the playoffs, and whose best seasons are behind him.

The Knicks were in an extremely difficult position regarding Anthony’s free agency. Team owner James Dolan isn’t paying Jackson a record $12MM a season to allow the franchise to hit bottom and rebuild from the rubble, something that Anthony’s departure would have ensured. It would have also been a bitter pill for the team and its fans to swallow if Anthony was allowed to leave for nothing in return, especially since the franchise gutted itself back in 2011 to acquire him.

The other primary risk with allowing Anthony to depart would have been the hit the team would have taken in trying to recruit free agent talent the next two summers. With the trend of players forming superstar tandems or trios, it’s likely the Knicks would have relived the summer of 2010, when LeBron spurned them and they instead had to settle for signing Amar’e Stoudemire, a contract the franchise will be all too pleased to get off of its books this coming summer. Anthony’s presence should make Jackson’s free agent pitches more effective, though he’s not necessarily someone other players are clamoring to play with, either. His reputation as a “ball-stopper” is not unearned, though it can also be argued that Anthony hasn’t had enough talent around him at any point in his career for him not to have had to take the volume of shots (19.7 per game) that he has in his career.

Jackson’s second biggest move of the summer was the trade with the Mavericks that sent Tyson Chandler and Raymond Felton to Dallas in exchange for Jose Calderon, Shane Larkin, Samuel Dalembert, Wayne Ellington, and two second-rounders. This deal was a big win for the Knicks, despite New York giving up arguably the most talented player in Chandler. The 32-year-old big man had grown increasingly frustrated in New York and his production took a dip last season as a result. While his 9.7 rebounds per game were quite respectable, the 8.7 points per game he averaged represented Chandler’s lowest scoring output since the 2009/10 season he spent in Charlotte. Chandler also wasn’t the defensive stopper that he had made his reputation as being. Nagging injuries and the Knicks’ porous perimeter defense that often left Chandler exposed certainly contributed, but the fire that defined his first stint in Dallas was noticeably absent, and he was rumored to be a negative influence in the locker room as well as to have had issues with now-former Knicks coach Mike Woodson.

There was seemingly little, if any, chance of Chandler re-signing with the Knicks next summer when his contract was up, so dealing him away for something of value was a wise move. But even more importantly, the trade rid New York of Raymond Felton and his player option of $3,950,313 for the 2015/16 campaign. Shedding Felton’s potential 2015/16 salary was a bonus, but removing him from the on-court equation was the true benefit, since Felton was one of the worst starting point guards in the league statistically.

The players the Knicks picked up in the trade are certainly intriguing. Point guard Jose Calderon is a huge potential upgrade over Felton, and his outside shooting and competent ball distribution should be assets in the triangle offense, though he has yet to make his regular season debut courtesy of an injured right calf. But one negative involved with acquiring Calderon is that he’s signed for two more seasons and is scheduled to make $7,402,812 in 2015/16 and $7,708,427 in 2016/17. While those dollar figures aren’t excessive for a veteran with career averages of 10.2 PPG and 6.8 assists per game, his salary cap hit won’t necessarily help the Knicks nab max free agents. The other issue is that if the Knicks intend to try to sign Rajon Rondo next summer as has been rumored, Calderon’s contract could pose a problem for Jackson and the front office unless they are able to find a taker for it via trade.

Samuel Dalembert is a stopgap at the pivot, and not in Chandler’s class as a defender. So far this season he’s averaging 2.0 PPG and 4.8 RPG, but he’s only logging 16.4 minutes per game in the Knicks rotation.  The one surprising aspect of his game that has surfaced in New York is his ability as a passer in the triangle offense, where he’s far surpassing his career 0.5 APG, logging 1.8 APG thus far.

The potential steal of the trade with the Mavs was young point guard Shane Larkin, a first-rounder in the 2013 draft who didn’t see much playing time during his rookie season. Larkin has an extremely high upside, and he has been the team’s starter early in the season thanks to an injury to Calderon. But the Knicks may have made an error in declining to pick up his $1.675MM team option for next season since the CBA bars the team from re-signing him for more than he would have made on his option. If Larkin continues to impress on the court, he’ll likely command a higher salary than that option would have paid him. This could end up being another potential Jeremy Lin scenario, where the player has a breakout season and then another team swoops in and offers more than New York will be able to match.

Outside of the personnel Jackson acquired from the Mavs, he was also able to snag two second-rounders in the draft, valuable commodities for teams that are over the luxury tax line. While neither player is expected to make an immediate impact, it’s not unreasonable to think that Jackson maximized the value of those picks by selecting Cleanthony Early and Thanasis Antetokounmpo. Both players have high upsides, and Early, who was projected by DraftExpress as a late first round pick, was a steal with the 34th pick. Antetokounmpo won’t be terrorizing arena announcers in the NBA just yet, as he declined overseas offers to join the Knicks’ D-League team in Westchester.

Another contract decision that could come back to bite Jackson is the team declining to sign Iman Shumpert to a contract extension. Shumpert hasn’t lit up the stat sheets since entering the league back in 2010, averaging 7.8 PPG, 3.5 RPG, and 2.1 APG, but his true value is as a perimeter defender, a skill that is at a premium in the league with the shift in emphasis to guard play. Shumpert was the subject of numerous trade rumors last season, which would seem to indicate that the Knicks will have competition for the 24-year-old’s services next summer, should they wish to re-sign him. I look to Avery Bradley‘s four-year, $32MM deal with the Celtics as a good indicator of the sort of numbers Shumpert’s agent, Happy Walters, will be seeking for his client, as both players’ skill sets are remarkably similar.

Jackson made a number of other minor moves that were more placeholders than franchise changers, with one exception: signing Jason Smith with the team’s taxpayer mid-level exception of $3.27MM. While the Knicks have a glut of power forwards on the roster, Smith, if he can stay healthy, has the type of skills that can thrive in the triangle offense, as his 10.4 PPG average over 20.2 minutes per game this season indicates.

New York also made some drastic changes on the bench, firing Mike Woodson and hiring Derek Fisher to implement the triangle offense. Woodson wore out his welcome in New York, and with the locker room seemingly lost to him, a change was best for all parties involved. Fisher was Jackson’s second choice, but Steve Kerr, Jackson’s main target, chose to ink a deal with the Warriors instead.

While I like the hire of Fisher, I’m not convinced yet about the triangle offense. Yes, it’s worked for a slew of championship teams over the years, but the system doesn’t fit the team’s personnel very well, especially Anthony, who thrives in iso sets. Early returns haven’t been stellar, with the team averaging only 89.8 PPG thus far and looking extremely out of synch. It’s a work in progress, and I’ll hold my final verdict until next season when Jackson will have cap room to play with and can sign players who fit the system, rather than this year when he’s trying to put a round peg in a square hole.

The Knicks’ only real avenue for improvement this season is flipping one of their expiring contracts (Stoudamire, Shumpert, Andrea Bargnani) and/or one of their younger players like Tim Hardaway Jr., for established NBA talent. One name that is being tossed around in speculation as a possibility is Lakers great Kobe Bryant. Bryant would have to waive his no-trade clause for any deal to be a possibility, but his pedigree in the triangle and previous relationship with Jackson, though rocky at times, are why people advance this theory. Bryant’s acquisition would place him alongside ‘Melo, an interesting pairing. Both players have averaged nearly 20 shots per game for their careers, so seeing how the two would co-exist would make for interesting theater. But the Knicks would also be adding Bryant’s $25MM salary for 2015/16, which isn’t an ideal situation for a franchise looking to make a splash in free agency next summer.

One report indicated the Knicks were talking about swapping mercurial guard J.R. Smith for the Pacers’ Chris Copeland. Though a follow-up report threw cold water on the possibility of such a trade happening, and Indiana would have to add more to the deal to make it legal, it’s one that New York should jump on if given the opportunity. Smith has expressed his disdain for the triangle, has had numerous issues on and off the court, and the team has a glut of two guards, so ridding itself of the headache, as well as Smith’s $6,399,750 player option for next season, for Copeland’s lower-maintenance personality and expiring contract would be wise.

This looks to be a rebuilding year in New York, with the team fortunately owning its first-round pick in next year’s draft for a change. But unless the Knicks can score in free agency next summer, which is not a given based on past history, they may find themselves stuck in a position similar to where the Hawks have been the last few seasons — good enough to make the playoffs in the Eastern Conference, but not talented enough to make it past the first or second round. That’s not a result the owner or fans will be thrilled with, and Anthony isn’t getting any younger.

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

Q&A With Former Bulls Guard Craig Hodges

Last week, Phil Jackson hired old friend Craig Hodges to serve as an assistant coach for the Knicks’ D-League affiliate in Westchester.  A two-time champion as a player under the Zen Master, Hodges later reunited with Jackson as an assistant coach for the Lakers and added two more rings to his collection.  During his playing days, the guard led the league in three-point shooting percentage twice over the course of his ten-year career and established himself as one of the most consistent long-range threats of his time.

When the Bulls visited the White House after winning the 1992 NBA Championship, Hodges handed President George H.W. Bush a letter outlining his dissatisfaction with the administration’s treatment of disadvantaged black Americans.  That summer, he was waived by the Bulls and, surprisingly, was not picked up by another team, prompting him to later file a lawsuit against the NBA alleging that he was blackballed from the game.  He was unsuccessful in court but the experience hasn’t hardened Hodges and he is still very much an activist for the downtrodden.

When he’s not busy with the Westchester Knicks this season, Hodges will be working on his forthcoming book, which he expects to be released in January.  The NBA champion and the newest member of the Knicks D-League operation was kind enough to take some time and chat with Hoops Rumors on Tuesday.

Zach Links: How did the opportunity to join the Westchester Knicks coaching staff come about?  It was reported that you were initially among the head coaching candidates.

Craig Hodges: It actually was one of those things where it was a basic interview and they didn’t really tell me which job was available. Initially they talked to me in May and asked if I would be interested in working with the D-League team.  I got a call again in August to actually come and interview we’ve been going back and forth since then.   NBA: Utah Jazz at Chicago Bulls

ZL: How often do you and Phil Jackson talk?

CH: Well, with him, even when you don’t talk to him you know you’re still cool with him and I have a cool relationship with him.  He’s a great manager of people and his management style is that he understands what you do well, and if he sees something that you need help with, he’ll help you or find a person to help you. I’ve never felt uncomfortable around him, and I’ve been blessed to be one of the first players to win a championship [with him], and I was a coach on his staff when he won his last one, so hopefully we can make something happen here.

ZL: I know you just joined the staff, but do you have a sense of how closely the Westchester Knicks will work with the main organization?

CH: We’re going to function as their minor league team and we’re going to operate the way that they operate so that they can gauge the pulse of our players.  It’s a great situation and I’m looking forward to it.  We’ll also have an emphasis on getting guys accustomed to the triangle and ready to play in that system.

ZL: The D-League is very youth-centric, but what do you think of it as a tool for veterans to find their way back into the NBA?

CH: I think it’s good for both young guys and vets.  I don’t know how many vets look at it as an opportunity, but they should.  One drawback would be the money, but I think the opportunities that come from it would be worthwhile for guys trying to get back into the NBA and get their games back to that level. I think we have a great thing going in Westchester and, hopefully, guys will see it as a destination location.

ZL: In 1992, you brought a lawsuit against the league when you felt that you were blackballed from playing for expressing your beliefs.  Do you feel like in 2014 a player can take up a cause without repercussions, or do you think that could still be problematic career-wise?

CH: You’re always going to be sacrificing something if you speak out, but I think it’s important for people to do so when it comes to issues that are near and dear to their hearts.  If someone [takes a stand], they need to know that they’ve done critical studies on what they want to speak about.  I was the baby of the movement and my mission then [was], and it continues to be, ‘How can I help people who are less fortunate than me and help them move upward?’  Many people saw that as a militant stand to take, but I look at it as a cultural imperative.  Mentors in my life have always told me that you’re only as strong as the weakest of your people, and when I look at the condition of my people, especially in Chicago where the young people are killing each other and getting killed at a horrible rate, you just have to say something.  We have the opportunity as a nation to take the lead role in getting people to realize how important it is to teach young people.

ZL: Could you tell me a bit about your upcoming book?

CH: It’s not a book to bash anybody, but it’s a book to clear the air as far as the stuff that happened in my career and also what I see going on.  God blesses me and he blesses you with teachings, but not everyone is taught the same way and not everyone is passionate about the same things.  I think God has blessed us with a garden where we can have a lot of good people do a lot of good things and we can change the face of the Earth by doing so.  

ZL: Now that you’re actively working for the NBA again, will you be pulling any punches in the book when it comes to how your career ended, or are you putting it all out there? 

CH: I think it’ll be somewhat cathartic when I put it all on paper.  I’m just putting the facts out there and letting people study things for what they are, it’s not up to me to make judgement calls.  Everyone has their own reasoning and logic. … For me, I just want to make sure that I put it out there as a written history for my sons and my grandbabies, but I also want it out there for the overall legacy of it, man.  I think that it’s important that I took the stand that I did.  My mantra has been to help others ever since I was 8 years old.  My mom was a civil rights organizer who marched with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and those ideals have been on my heart.  They haven’t diminished.

ZL: Do you have a publisher yet?

CH: We’re still shopping it and we have a few meetings over the next few weeks with publishers.  It’s been a cool experience and I’m looking forward to getting the book out there. It’s something I should have done a long time ago.  Having Daniel [Hazan, of Hazan Sports Management] to help me has been great.  I never had an agent for off-the-court matters [before], and looking back on my life, I wish I had an agent for that type of stuff. It would have made things a lot easier.

ZL: Do you have your eye on becoming a head coach in the NBA?

CH: [laughs] Not at all!  That’s the thing, I love what I do as an assistant coach.  The purity of the game is what I love.  I get to help make guys better and do as much as possible with their talent.  That’s what I like doing, so I haven’t thought about moving up the ladder.  I think in general if you do a good job, then opportunities open up, and then you can assess and go from there.  I’ve been trying to live more in the spiritual realm. I’m not looking forward or behind. 

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

Eastern Notes: LeBron, Noel, Knicks

If LeBron James was indeed trying to send a message to his teammates during the Cavs‘ 101-82 loss to the Blazers last night, it’s a risky move that may backfire, Nate Scott of USA Today opines. James had one of the worst games of his career and immediately passed the ball anytime it came to him during the second half of the game. “I’m just trying to do other things,” James said. “I’m trying to instill what it takes to win. My mission is not a one-game thing. We have to do multiple things in order to win. We have to share the ball. We’ve got to play defense. We’ve got to sacrifice in order to ultimately win. Obviously, when you’re going through the process, it’s not the best part of it. But I’m looking at the end of the tunnel.” Scott believes it might be too early in the season for James to try and light a fire under the rest of the team, and it could end up causing issues in the locker room.

Here’s more from the east:

  • James realizes that many of his new teammates in Cleveland haven’t had experience with winning in the NBA, writes Sean Deveney of The Sporting News. “There has been a lot of losing basketball around here for a few years,” James said. “A lot of guys who are going to help us win ultimately haven’t played a lot of meaningful basketball games in our league. When we get to that point where every possession matters, no possessions off, we have to share the ball, move the ball and be a team and be unselfish, we’ll be a better team.
  • Knicks second round draftee Thanasis Antetokounmpo said it was a call from team president Phil Jackson during the summer that sealed his decision to play in the NBA D-League rather than overseas, Ian Begley of ESPNNewYork.com tweets.
  • Nerlens Noel is the early leader for Rookie of the Year honors, Michael Kaskey-Blomain of Philly.com writes. The Sixers‘ big man is attempting to duplicate Blake Griffin‘s feat of winning the award after sitting out his first year due to injury, notes the Philly.com scribe. In four games Noel is averaging 8.0 PPG, 6.5 RPG, and 2.0 BPG.

Knicks, Pacers Talk J.R. Smith, Copeland Trade?

TUESDAY, 7:55am: A source who spoke with WTHR.com and former Indianapolis Star columnist Bob Kravitz denied that the talks have taken place (Twitter link).

MONDAY, 8:08am: The Knicks and Pacers have had discussions recently about a swap of J.R. Smith and Chris Copeland, reports Marc Berman of the New York Post. Still, Knicks team president Phil Jackson isn’t planning on making any trades between now and December 15th, the date that most players who signed this offseason become eligible to be traded, Berman hears. A Smith-Copeland trade could nonetheless take place immediately, since both remained with their teams over the offseason, but a one-for-one exchange of the pair wouldn’t satisfy the league’s salary-matching requirements. Such a swap would also put the Pacers over the luxury tax line, so Indiana would no doubt insist on sending out more salary in any such deal.

Smith has frequently found his way into trade talk since his profound regression last season after winning the 2013 Sixth Man of the Year award. A report in July indicated the Knicks were open to trading Smith, along with fellow guards Iman Shumpert and Shane Larkin, not long after Smith said he wouldn’t blame the Knicks if they traded him on the heels of his subpar performance in 2013/14. Moving the enigmatic 29-year-old would further Jackson’s goal of clearing salary cap flexibility for the coming summer, since Smith has a nearly $6.4MM player option for 2015/16 while Copeland is on an expiring contract. Smith makes more than $5.982MM this season while Copeland earns $3.135MM.

The 30-year-old Copeland made his mark with the Knicks in 2012/13, earning a spot on the regular season roster as a training camp invitee and nailing 42.1% of his three-point attempts in 15.4 minutes per game that season. He moved to Indiana in free agency the following summer, but the Pacers buried him on their bench, as he made just 41 regular season appearances and notched only 6.5 MPG last season. Copeland is averaging 30.3 MPG on Indiana’s depleted roster so far this year. Smith would ostensibly give the Pacers more scoring punch, though he’s only averaging 11.7 points per 36 minutes during the opening week of 2014/15, compared to Copeland’s 19.0.

Knicks Notes: Shumpert, Free Agency, ‘Melo

Earlier tonight we took a look at the latest out of the Nets organization, so it only makes sense to round up what’s happening with the other team in New York. We’ll examine some notes on the 2-1 Knicks below:

  • As expected, the Knicks and Iman Shumpert failed to reach an agreement on a rookie scale extension before the October 31st deadline passed, but the fourth-year guard is focused on helping New York win in the present rather than looking toward free agency next summer, as Ian Begley of ESPNNewYork.com transcribes. “I can’t think about [free agency]. We make the playoffs and I do what I’m supposed to do, things will happen,” said Shumpert. “I’m worried about winning games. Like I’ve said, that was the worst year of my life last year and I don’t ever want to feel that again.
  • After a tough 2013/14 campaign of his own, Carmelo Anthony has sympathy for Kobe Bryant‘s situation as stud player surrounded by a lackluster supporting cast, writes Fred Kerber of the New York Post. “It’s tough. Nobody wants to go through situations like that,” Anthony said. “I know Kobe. He’s going to do what he has to do to compete and win basketball games. Is it going to be hard? Yeah, it’s going to be hard. But in his eyes, I don’t think anything is impossible.
  • ‘Melo had positive remarks for the directions that the Knicks organization is heading, notes Scott Cacciola of the New York Times. Although the All-Star forward wouldn’t specifically identify any personnel changes he was particularly fond of, he has a sense that this season will end better than last year’s disastrous campaign. “From Day 1 last year, the energy was just not right,” Anthony said, “We looked at that, and the organization looked at that, and made some great changes in that direction… I’m not talking about no players, man. I’m just talking about as a whole.

Eastern Notes: Rondo, Harris, Larkin, Butler

Whether they decide to keep him or trade him, the Celtics are convinced that Rajon Rondo is back to normal, reports Jenny Dial Creech of The Houston Chronicle.  Rondo, who had 4 points, 10 rebounds and 8 assists Saturday in a loss to the Rockets, played in just 30 games last season because of an ACL injury. “He kind of looks like what I’d seen on film before I got here,” said Celtics coach Brad Stevens. “I don’t think he ever looked like that at any time last year, because he was coming back. And that’s just the way it goes with that injury. But he is back to full speed.” Rondo is in the final season of a five-year, $55MM contract and will be an unrestricted free agent this summer. Here’s more from around the Eastern Conference:

  • Tobias Harris faces a new challenge as he plays this season without certainty of his future status, writes Josh Robbins of the Orlando Sentinel. The Magic and Harris did not reach an extension agreement by the October 31st deadline. “It’s business,” Harris said. “It’s a little disappointing. But at the same time, I’ll just approach it the same way.”
  • Shane Larkin understands the “business deal” that led the Knicks not to pick up his third-year option, but he told Ohm Youngmisuk of ESPNNewYork.com he wants to show the team he can be part of its future. “Obviously they want to build a championship team here,” Larkin said, “and they need as much money as they can next summer to be able to bring in the big free agents that they’re looking at.” Larkin will become an unrestricted free agent this summer and can re-sign with New York, but only for up to $1,675,320, the amount of the option that was declined, The Knicks, who also decided not to offer an extension to Iman Shumpert, are expected to chase maximum-salary players next summer when the hefty contracts of Amar’e Stoudemire and Andrea Bargnani expire.
  • The BullsJimmy Butler is headed toward restricted free agency, but he explained to Nick Friedell of ESPNChicago.com that doesn’t mean he’s headed out of Chicago. Friedell adds that Butler and his agent, Happy Walters, were asking for a deal similar to the $12MM a year that the Hornets gave to Kemba Walker last week. Bulls GM Gar Forman said the uncertainty looming over the salary cap with the league’s new TV deal affected the decision not to give Butler a long-term deal.

Arthur Hill contributed to this post.

Eastern Notes: Thompson, Iverson, Knicks

Uncertainty over the future of the salary cap prevented Tristan Thompson from signing an extension with the Cavaliers, writes Terry Pluto of The Plain-Dealer. With a new TV contract taking effect during the summer of 2016, there are estimates that the cap could soar by 25%, dissuading players and teams from committing to long-term deals. Pluto notes that Thompson, represented by Rich Paul, who is also the agent for LeBron James, should have extra value because of the scarcity of quality big men. There’s more on the Cavs amid our look around the Eastern Conference:

  • Cavaliers coach David Blatt may be new to the NBA, but that didn’t stop him from tearing into his team following its opening-night loss to the Knicks, as Zach Harper of CBSSports,com details. “He got on us from the time we started our meeting to the time we left,” said Cavs star LeBron James“And it’s great. For a team like us, we need that.”  James said the first-year coach definitely got the players’ attention with his tirade.
  • The Celtics have to be encouraged by the play of former second-round pick Colton Iverson in the Euroleague, writes A. Sherrod Blakely of Celtics Insider. The 7-footer had 17 points and six rebounds and hit the game-winning basket for Kutxa Vitoria in a recent victory over Galatasaray Liv Hospital. “That’s my style of play,” Iverson said during his stint with the Celtics’ summer league team. “I’m always gonna be someone who is a pest to play against. I take pride in the way I play physical, and [being] a menace.” The Celtics acquired Iverson’s draft rights on draft night in 2013.
  • Ian O’Connor of ESPNNewYork.com blames a lack of talent, not the Knicks‘ new triangle offense, for the opening night blowout loss to the Bulls. O’Connor writes that even though the Knicks will be clearing a massive amount of cap room this summer, players such as LaMarcus Aldridge and Marc Gasol are unlikely to leave their current teams. O’Connor speculates that the Knicks could chase Rajon Rondo next summer, or endure another losing season and go after Kevin Durant in 2016.

Knicks To Decline Option On Shane Larkin

The Knicks have decided to pass on their 2015/16 rookie scale team option with Shane Larkin, tweets Marc Berman of the New York Post. Berman suggests this was New York’s plan all along, though previous reports had indicated that New York was picking up the option before the team had an apparent change of heart. Larkin’s option was worth more than $1.675MM for that season, as our Rookie Scale Team Option Tracker shows. The Knicks picked up a nearly $1.305MM team option for 2015/16 on Tim Hardaway Jr. and waived trade acquisition Arnett Moultrie, who also had a pending rookie scale team option.

Declining Larkin’s option will set the point guard up for unrestricted free agency next summer, a year after the Knicks acquired him from the Mavs in the Tyson Chandler trade. The 18th overall pick in the 2013 draft played sparingly as a rookie, averaging 10.2 minutes per game across 48 appearances, though he’s started the first two games of the year for the Knicks, who are without Jose Calderon because of injury.

The primary motivation for turning down the option appears to be New York’s desire to preserve cap flexibility for next summer. That also appears to be behind the apparent unlikelihood that the team will reach an extension with Iman Shumpert before tonight’s deadline to do so. The Knicks have about $32.7MM tied up for 2015/16, plenty of room beneath a projected $66.5MM salary cap.