Chris Johnson (LSU)

Odds & Ends: Grizzlies, Redick, Magic

Ric Bucher of CSN Bay Area (Sulia link) hears that the trade rumor involving Rudy Gay to the Suns in exchange for Jared Dudley and Michael Beasley was leaked in order to facilitate more offers from around the league. In terms of the Grizzlies dealing Gay for luxury-tax purposes, Bucher notes that the Wizards and Warriors only have trade pieces that would relieve Memphis of the super luxury tax in two years, but not after this season. You can find more of tonight's miscellaneous notes from the Association here:

  • David Baumann of Bright House Sports Network tweets that the Celtics covet J.J. Redick as a possible trade target before February's trade deadline. 
  • Josh Robbins of the Orlando Sentinel provides a primer of what the Magic front office has to think about heading into next month's deadline. He thinks that GM Rob Hennigan might want to deal for more young players and draft picks while shedding salary, adding that Redick, Glen Davis, Arron Afflalo, Jameer Nelson, and Josh McRoberts are among the team's most tradeable assets. Lastly, Robbins thinks that Orlando is unlikely to part with Nikola Vucevic and that the team has almost no interest in dealing for Rudy Gay
  • Noting that Chris Johnson had been a member of Timberwolves' training camp before the season, Ray Richardson of the Pioneer Press says that his familiarity with the team provided an advantage during the team's search for help at center. 
  • The recent struggles of Nuggets swingman Andre Iguodala prompted him to admit after today's practice that he's "probably behind the curve" and has had trouble finding his comfort level this season (Benjamin Hochman of The Denver Post reports).  
  • HoopsWorld's Alex Kennedy (Sulia link) anticipates a quiet trade deadline for the NBA considering a busy offseason that saw 31 deals involving 96 players. 
  • Alex Raskin of HoopsWorld looks at Jeff Teague, one of four players who are guaranteed to remain in Atlanta beyond this season, as a viable long-term investment for the Hawks

Wolves Sign Chris Johnson

5:11pm: Ray Richardson of the Pioneer Press reports that Johnson was signed to his 10-day contract before the team's shootaround this morning. He also mentions that with the NBA's permission to exceed the 15-man roster limit due to their injury situation, Minnesota's official roster number is now at 16. 

10:10am: The Timberwolves are set to sign Chris Johnson to a 10-day contract, according to Darren Wolfson of 1500 ESPN (on Twitter).  The move means that Minnesota will be passing on Jerome Jordan, who they were also considering.

Johnson, 27, signed with the T'Wolves over the summer on a non-guaranteed deal but did not make their roster.  The center hooked on with the D-League's Santa Cruz Warriors in December and put up 10.9 PPG and 6.1 RPG in roughly 26 minutes per contest.  

Minnesota gained the ability to sign another player to a 10-day contract when they were awarded an injury exception yesterday.  The T'Wolves also signed Mickael Gelabale to a 10-day deal this week.

Wolves Waive Johnson, Harris

2:48pm: The Wolves have confirmed the cuts via Twitter.

11:26am: The Timberwolves are expected to waive center Chris Johnson and small forward Mike Harris, according to Jerry Zgoda of the Star Tribune.  Minnesota must shed two players by the Saturday deadline in order to get down to the 15-man maximum.

Johnson, who stands at 6'11", was released by the Trail Blazers last season when trade deadline acquisitions forced the club to trim down the roster.  The 27-year-old then hooked on with the Hornets but played in just seven games before suffering a concussion.  Harris, 29, last appeared in the Association in 2010/11 in a stint with the Rockets.

T-Wolves Sign Six To Finalize Camp Roster

The Timberwolves formally announced today that they have signed six players to fill out their roster for training camp. Besides Will Conroy and Seth Tarver, whose signings had been previously reported, Minnesota has also added Jermaine Taylor, Mike Harris, Chris Johnson, and Phil Jones, according to the team (Twitter link).

Of the four additions that we're hearing about for the first time, Taylor, Harris, and Johnson all have previous NBA experience, though only Johnson logged NBA minutes in 2011/12. Taylor, the 32nd overall pick in 2009 appeared in 65 games for the Rockets and Kings, while the undrafted Harris played for the Rockets and Wizards in parts of three seasons. Jones, meanwhile, played his college ball for the Charlotte 49ers, where his senior year was cut short in 2011 after he was ruled academically ineligible for the second half.

Conroy has a small guarantee on his contract, which should give him a slight advantage over the other five players for the T-Wolves' 15th and final roster spot. However, I expect the team would be happy to eat the $100K owed to Conroy if one of the other non-guaranteed players excels in training camp and preseason action.

With Minnesota's roster now at 20 players, it appears the T-Wolves are officially out of the running for Sean Williams, Hassan Whiteside, and various other big men that have been linked to the team in recent weeks.

Hornets Sign Darryl Watkins, Waive Chris Johnson

The Hornets have signed Darryl Watkins to a 10-day contract and waived Chris Johnson, according to Jim Eichenhofer of Hornets.com (via Twitter). John Reid of the New Orleans Times-Picayune reported earlier today that the injury-ravaged Hornets were expected to replace Johnson with another big man.

Watkins, 27, only played nine regular-season games in his NBA career, way back in the 2007/08 season with the Kings. He has received training-camp invites from a few teams, including the Hornets in 2010. In recent seasons, Watkins has played in the D-League and in various leagues overseas. With less than 10 days remaining in the regular season, The Syracuse product will be eligible for the rest of the Hornets' games, with Chris Kaman and Emeka Okafor out of the lineup with injuries.

Johnson was released by the Trail Blazers along with Greg Oden at the trade deadline to make room for Portland's incoming players. The Hornets claimed Johnson off waivers, but the big man appeared in just seven games for New Orleans before suffering a concussion on April 1st. He hasn't played since.

As Hoops Rumors' 10-day contract tracker shows, Watkins is the sixth player to receive at least one 10-day contract from the Hornets this season.

Southwest Rumors: Hornets, Allen, Mayo, Kidd

Let's check in on a few Wednesday updates out of the Southwest Division….

Southwest Notes: Johnson, Gordon, Hornets, Ford

Jarrett Jack gave the Hornets 18 points and ten dimes this afternoon but it wasn't enough as they fell to the Lakers 88-85.  Here's more out of the Southwest division..

  • The last 15 games of the season will determine whether the Hornets re-sign center Chris Johnson in the offseason, team officials tell John Reid of The Times-Picayune.  Coach Monty Williams said he's still trying to figure out what the 6'11", 210-pound journeyman from LSU can do.
  • The Hornets expect shooting guard Eric Gordon to return from right-knee surgery Wednesday against the Nuggets, writes Reid.  Earlier this week, Luke Adams pegged Gordon as the prize of the restricted free agent market in his look at this summer's available shooting guards.
  • Mike Wells of the Indianapolis Star checks in with former Spurs guard T.J. Ford, who's now a volunteer assistant with the Austin Toros after bringing his playing career to an end earlier this season. "I'm healthy, that's the whole purpose of me retiring," he said. "There really wasn't much else I could prove with my circumstances. I became more a role player coming off the bench. I'd rather now move on to the next phase in my life."

Chuck Myron contributed to this post.

How Teams Can Claim Players Off Waivers

For most of the week, as players have been waived or bought out, we've heard that only teams with cap space can claim those guys off waivers. As last night's J.J. Hickson claim exhibited, this isn't entirely true. According to Storytellers Contracts, the Trail Blazers' player salaries for 2011/12 already sat at $66MM+, with cap holds taking their total hit up to $68MM+. This is well over the salary cap ($58.04MM), so how was Portland able to claim Hickson?

In his CBA FAQ, Larry Coon outlines four ways in which teams are able to claim players off waivers:

  • The team is far enough under the salary cap to fit the player's entire salary.
  • The team has a disabled player exception for at least the player's salary.
  • The team has a traded player exception for at least the player's salary.
  • The player's contract is for one or two seasons and he is paid the minimum salary.

At this point in the season, very few clubs have the space to fit a waived player's salary under the cap. While teams like the Cavaliers and Raptors are thought to be under the cap, both clubs would have to renounce their cap holds in order to place a claim on any player earning more than the minimum. Only the Pacers and the Kings currently have enough room to absorb any significant salary under the cap. Because waiver claims mean a team inherits that player's contract (paying the remainder), most players clear waivers without any issue. Boris Diaw, for instance, should have no problem passing through waivers, since no team will want to take on his full $9MM cap figure for this season.

Inexpensive players are more likely to be claimed, however, and over-the-cap teams claiming players on minimum salaries isn't uncommon. The Hornets did that earlier this week, when they claimed Chris Johnson off waivers from the Blazers. While New Orleans is over the cap, Johnson was on a minimum-salary, two-year deal, so the Hornets were able to place a claim.

Hickson, however, isn't a minimum-salary player. In the fourth year of his rookie scale contract, his 2011/12 cap figure is about $2.35MM. With no cap space and no disabled player exception available, Portland could only have used a traded player exception to absorb Hickson's salary. Fortunately, as I noted after last week's trade deadline, the Blazers created a trade exception when they dealt Marcus Camby to Houston, and Hickson's salary fits nicely into that $2.68MM exception.

The Warriors had hoped to sign Hickson after he cleared waivers — following Portland's winning claim, Marcus Thompson II of the Bay Area News Group explained that Golden State didn't have the cap space to absorb Hickson's salary, and therefore missed out. But if the Warriors broke down the Andrew Bogut as we assume they did, the team should have received a trade exception of its own, worth $3.29MM. If they wanted Hickson badly enough, the Warriors could have used that exception to grab him.

Hornets Claim Chris Johnson Off Waivers

The Hornets have claimed Chris Johnson off waivers from the Trail Blazers, the team announced today in a press release. Portland waived Johnson along with Greg Oden last week to make room for the players they acquired in separate trades with the Rockets and Nets.

New Orleans is over the salary cap, but was able to claim Johnson because he's on a minimum-salary contract. The Hornets will take on the big man's $762,195 cap figure, taking it off the Blazers' books. Because the Hornets had a pair of open roster spots, following the expiration of Jeff Foote's 10-day contract, they won't have to make a corresponding move to clear room for Johnson.

Johnson, 26, signed 10-day contracts with the Blazers and Celtics last season before agreeing to a contract for the rest of last season and this season with Portland. In 20 games for the Blazers this year, the former LSU Tiger averaged 1.6 points and 0.9 rebounds in just 4.7 minutes per contest.

Odds & Ends: Nene, Celtics, Camby, Kaman, Rubio

A few odds and ends from around the league for Friday afternoon: