Festus Ezeli

Pacific Notes: Russell, Barnes, Ezeli, World Peace

Lakers coach Byron Scott didn’t think Emmanuel Mudiay was a true point guard as the draft approached, and the coach questioned his decision-making, but Mudiay dismisses it as just “another human’s opinion,” writes Mark Medina of the Los Angeles Daily News. Mudiay delivered 10 assists, albeit with six turnovers, in Denver’s win Tuesday over the Lakers, leading him to retort, “Thank you Byron Scott for saying I’m not a point guard,” tweets Christopher Dempsey of The Denver Post. Mudiay played down the stretch of the close game while D’Angelo Russell, whom the Lakers took with the No. 2 overall pick instead of Mudiay, sat on the bench. That left Russell searching for answers, observes Mike Bresnahan of the Los Angeles Times (Twitter link).

“I have no idea,” Russell said about how he can convince Scott he’s worthy of crunch-time minutes. “It’s just something I’ve got to deal with.”

Scott insists Russell will have his opportunities, though Russell wasn’t in the mood to compare himself to Mudiay, calling him “just another player,” as Bill Oram of the Orange County Register relays (Twitter links). See more on the Lakers amid the latest from the Pacific Division:

  • The Warriors failed to reach extensions with Harrison Barnes and Festus Ezeli before Monday’s deadline, but Barnes and Ezeli are fond of their surroundings and GM Bob Myers remains committed to finding a way to keep them, as Marc J. Spears of Yahoo Sports details. “We worked hard to get both [deals] done, but we weren’t able to,” Myers said to Spears. “We made a good effort. They looked hard at what we proposed. Ultimately, they decided to see what the market was in July, which is fine. We will work just as hard then to try to work something out.”
  • Metta World Peace, who’s on a non-guaranteed deal, has yet to appear in any games for the Lakers so far, but he’s OK with that, he tells Bresnahan“It’s about looking at your surroundings, what you’re presented with, how you’re going to take that and become successful,” World Peace said. “How can I help the organization? How can I help myself? How can I help the guys? I’m just locked in. I’m focused on improving and winning. The minute you focus on something else, it’s a problem.”
  • Caron Butler has averaged 12 minutes per game in three appearances for the Kings so far, but like World Peace on the Lakers, Butler’s offseason signing was in large measure for his experience and locker room presence, as Jason Jones of The Sacramento Bee examines.

Western Extension Notes: Waiters, Ezeli, Leonard

Thunder GM Sam Presti cited the rising salary cap and “the potential for further changes to the cap system itself as a whole prior to the summer” as reasons why he, Dion Waiters and Waiters’ representatives agreed to table contract talks until July, notes Royce Young of ESPN.com. Still, mutual interest exists, Presti insists.

“Dion has made it clear that he feels he has found a basketball home in Oklahoma City and is committed to being a part of the culture that exists, and the team sees him as someone who has his best basketball in front of him and has the potential to be a contributor for years to come with more time to develop in our program,” Presti said in the statement he issued to media.

The deal that Waiters, a Landmark Sports Agency client, passed up from the Thunder was team-friendly, and his camp hopes the projected surge in the salary cap bears an improved market for him, according to Steve Kyler of Basketball Insiders. See more on the aftermath of Monday’s extension deadline around the Western Conference:

  • The Warriors and Festus Ezeli were close to a deal on an extension, but his agent talked him out of signing what some called a team-friendly deal, sources tell Kyler for the same piece. Ezeli is a client of agent Bill Duffy.
  • Meyers Leonard declined a “considerable” offer from the Trail Blazers when he and the team failed to reach an agreement before Monday’s extension deadline, a source tells Jason Quick of CSNNW.com. Still, Leonard, who said he’s betting on himself, would prefer to re-sign with the team in restricted free agency next summer, as Casey Holdahl of Blazers.com relays. “I like Portland a lot, I love this team, I love the city,” Leonard said in part. “So hopefully after this year we’ll get something done, because I truly believe that we have a good core group of guys. I came in with Damian [Lillard], CJ [McCollum] is just a year behind us, all the other guys that [president of basketball operations] Neil [Olshey] has brought in. I feel like we’re just going to keep going up, and that’s a good thing.”
  • Five of the seven players who signed rookie scale extensions this year were in the Eastern Conference, but the two most lucrative deals of the bunch went to Western Conference representatives, as our extensions recap shows.

Western Notes: Ezeli, Miller, Lillard, Diawara

Festus Ezeli‘s favorable perception of the Warriors hasn’t changed in the wake of the end of extension talks between agent Bill Duffy and the team, as Diamond Leung of the Bay Area News Group relays. The center is headed into restricted free agency in July with the extension window officially set to close at 11pm Central tonight.

“Obviously [Duffy] didn’t come up to an agreement with the team, but that doesn’t take away from the fact that I want to be here for the rest of my career, and I love these guys,” Ezeli said. “I love the team. We discussed it a little bit with my family, and [Duffy] kind of told us what he thought was best moving forward, and we went with that.”

See more from the Western Conference:

  • Part of the reason the Timberwolves wanted to sign Andre Miller is because Flip Saunders wanted to shore up the team’s troubles with simply inbounding the ball at the end of games, as TNT’s David Aldridge notes within his Morning Tip column for NBA.com. Of course, Miller’s leadership was key, too, and Saunders told Miller ahead of time that the team would be signing fellow veteran Tayshaun Prince, as Miller said to Aldridge for a piece that further shows the respect the Wolves have for the late coach/executive.
  • Damian Lillard‘s play has been surprisingly underwhelming so far this season, but it’s chiefly a product of his willingness to experiment with his game so that he can tailor it to the needs of the Blazersoverhauled roster, as Jason Quick of CSNNW.com examines. “It’s easy for me to go out there and get 35 and have seven assists and the game not be played as well,’’ Lillard said. “But if we are going to play the game the right way and if our team is going to grow and keep getting better, then I have to make sure we are doing things the right way.’’
  • Four-year NBA veteran and Grizzlies camp cut Yakhouba Diawara has signed with CSP Limoges of France, the team announced (translation via Sportando’s Emiliano Carchia). Freelance journalist Guido Guida first reported the news (Twitter link).

Warriors, Festus Ezeli Break Off Extension Talks

NOVEMBER 2ND, 1:46pm: Ezeli won’t be signing an extension, the team says, according to Ethan Sherwood Strauss of ESPN.com (Twitter link).

2:33pm: Myers told reporters today that negotiations with Ezeli continue, notes Diamond Leung of the Bay Area News Group, which runs directly counter to the idea that they haven’t engaged in talks.

OCTOBER 27TH, 1:17pm: The Warriors and Festus Ezeli haven’t had extension talks and he is expected to hit restricted free agency next summer, a source told Marc J. Spears of Yahoo Sports (Twitter link). As with Harrison Barnes, who is also unlikely to sign an extension, the deadline to do so is November 2nd.

Ezeli, who turned 26 last week, was a somewhat surprising extension candidate when GM Bob Myers expressed interest in doing a deal, given the limited playing time he’s seen over the past three seasons, though Tim Kawakami of the Bay Area News Group speculated that the center might end up with a deal worth $9-11MM annually. The former 30th overall pick expressed strong sentiment toward staying with Golden State as camps began a month ago. Warriors co-owner Joe Lacob told Kawakami recently that it would be OK with him if Ezeli and Barnes hit restricted free agency next summer, though Lacob indicated a preference that the team reach extensions with both.

The 6’11” Ezeli returned last season after missing all of 2013/14 with injury, though he still managed only 11.0 minutes per game in 46 appearances. He started 41 games for Golden State as a rookie but still saw just 14.4 minutes per game that season. I looked in depth over the summer at the extension prospects for the Bill Duffy client, concluding that a back-loaded deal with salaries between $8MM and $10MM made the most sense. He’ll have a chance to gauge his value around the league this coming July, though the Warriors can match all competing bids if they tender a qualifying offer of about $3.013MM.

Golden State has a history of signing key players to extensions, having done so with Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and Andrew Bogut. Ezeli has yet to perform to their level, however.

Extension Rumors: Sunday

It seems unlikely that Wizards shooting guard Bradley Beal and Warriors center Festus Ezeli will receive rookie-scale contract extensions and thus will be restricted free agents come July, barring an unexpected late turnaround in negotiations, Marc Stein of ESPN.com reports.

The news regarding Beal does not come as a surprise because though the Wizards fully intend to sign him to a maximum-salary contract, they prefer to do so next summer. Stein adds that the Wizards have been consistent with their message that they see Beal as a future and long-term star for the franchise. Reports have conflicted about how much negotiating has occurred between Ezeli and the Warriors, but an extension never seemed imminent.

The window for former first-round picks to sign contract extensions during the fourth and final year of their rookie contracts is Monday.

Here is more news on extensions:

  • Players known to still be in negotiations entering the deadline include Raptors shooting guard/small forward Terrence Ross, Trail Blazers center Meyers Leonard and Thunder shooting guard Dion Waiters, according to Stein. Regarding Ross, it’s likely to go down to the wire and the Raptors would be open to giving him an extension, if the price is to their liking, Josh Lewenberg of TSN.ca. reports. “I mean it would be an honor to get an extension,” Ross told Lewenberg. “If that doesn’t happen then we’ll take it from there.”
  • Extensions at this point are looking unlikely for Sixers shooting guard Tony Wroten and Celtics big men Tyler Zeller and Jared Sullinger, according to Stein.

Pacific Notes: Crawford, Barnes, Ezeli, Hibbert

It took a sell job from Clippers coach/executive Doc Rivers, but Jamal Crawford is on board with continuing to be a part of a crowded rotation, as Dan Woike of the Orange County Register details. Rivers and Crawford spoke about their issues over the summer and again before camp, and while Crawford took to social media this summer to drop vague hints that he was dissatisfied, the two-time Sixth Man of the Year now says it can “easily work” for him in L.A. Rivers said in September he was unlikely to trade Crawford, swatting down rumors. See more from the Pacific Division:

  • Warriors co-owner Joe Lacob would like to see the team sign Harrison Barnes and Festus Ezeli to extensions before the November 2nd deadline, but he’d still be OK with them ending up in restricted free agency next summer, as Lacob said in a podcast with Tim Kawakami of the Bay Area News Group. Lacob also made it seem as though it’s unlikely that Steve Kerr will coach the team in the opener as he continues to nurse his ailing back.
  • Roy Hibbert is fostering team chemistry in a way that no one did on the Lakers last year, Jordan Clarkson tells Bill Oram of the Orange County Register. The big man doesn’t see it as all that important but thinks that if he can help others perform, it will reflect well on him in the future. Hibbert is poised to hit free agency this coming summer. “When the team wins,” Hibbert said, “everybody wins. So helping them is going to help me on the court in the long run and then that will help whatever contract stuff. So you have to be selfless.”
  • Omri Casspi is struggling in the preseason, but coach George Karl isn’t worried about the player in whom the Kings invested $5.8MM on a new two-year deal this summer, observes Jason Jones of The Sacramento Bee“I think the way he played at the end of last year, he’s earned the right to be given some freedom and opportunity to figure out what happens this year,” Karl said.

Pacific Notes: Ezeli, Butler, Crawford

Warriors center Festus Ezeli, who is eligible to sign a rookie scale extension prior to the deadline this fall, wants to remain with Golden State long-term, Diamond Leung of The Bay Area News Group writes. I don’t want to leave,” Ezeli said. “I love this team. I love my teammates. The fans here are unbelievable. I’m inspired to come in every day and see even our best player, Stephen Curry, just working really hard. So this whole team and being here, the chemistry that we have, you can’t buy this anywhere. You can’t get it anywhere else.” Hoops Rumors’ Chuck Myron took an in-depth look at Ezeli’s extension candidacy earlier this month, which can be viewed here.

Here’s more out of the Pacific Division:

  • Metta World Peace‘s one-year, minimum salary deal with the Lakers doesn’t include any injury protection or guaranteed salary, Eric Pincus of Basketball Insiders tweets.
  • Kings swingman Caron Butler, who signed with the team this offseason, says he is looking forward to the challenge in Sacramento, and noted that he was offered more money from other teams, Deuce Mason of Sports 1140 relays (on Twitter).
  • With the Clippers‘ offseason additions adding depth to the team’s rotation, swingman Jamal Crawford‘s minutes are likely to suffer, a sacrifice that he is willing to make for the good of the team, Robert Morales of InsideSoCal.com relays. “€œI think it will be a lot of sacrifice, obviously, to sacrifice minutes, whatever it may be,”€ Crawford said. “Your common goal has to be winning.“€ The Clippers were reportedly exploring trades involving the two-time Sixth Man of the Year shortly before the draft, with other reports this summer indicating that the Heat, Cavs and Knicks have held interest, but Doc Rivers recently said that the team was unlikely to deal Crawford.
  • Rivers noted that the Clippers now possess the most talent that they have had since he’s been a part of the organization, Ben Bolch of The Los Angeles Times tweets.

Extension Candidate: Festus Ezeli

NBA: Golden State Warriors at Minnesota Timberwolves

Courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

Usually, players who sign rookie scale extensions have averaged more than five points per game at least once in their first three NBA seasons. That’s not the case for Festus Ezeli, but the Warriors apparently want to buck the trend. It’s possible that it’s a simple case of buying low, since Ezeli clearly hasn’t shown the bona fides usually required for a team to make a long-term commitment but will ostensibly have a chance to do so this season. The repeated signals from Warriors GM Bob Myers that the team is willing to do an extension are also perhaps yet another manifestation of a drastically rising salary cap, since teams will have an unprecedented capacity to spend. Golden State just won its first championship in 40 years, and beyond the positive vibes from that accomplishment is the wisdom in using the cap boom to keep a title-winning team together.

Golden State appears ready to test that wisdom to its extreme. Of course, that depends on just how much the Warriors would be on board with giving the former 30th overall pick. If, say, they want to do an unusually cheap rookie scale extension and sign him for around the value of the mid-level, the shock factor wouldn’t be nearly as profound. Indeed, the Warriors would extend his contract for the right price, as Steve Kyler of Basketball Insiders wrote this week, though Tim Kawakami of the Bay Area News Group later speculated that market price for Ezeli would be $9-11MM a year.

Ezeli’s chronic failure to corral passes from teammates has helped deflate his offensive numbers, but he’s improved his hands, as Monte Poole of CSNBayArea.com noted. Indeed, he got off nearly twice as many shots per 36 minutes this past season as he did in 2012/13, his rookie year. He also converted them at a much higher rate, lifting his field goal percentage from 43.8% to 54.7%. He upped his PER from a dismal 9.3 to an above-average 16.2, showing increased efficiency, and he posted impressive averages of 11.1 rebounds and 3.0 blocks per 36 minutes last season.

All of that is encouraging, but the sample size is small. Ezeli played only 504 total minutes last season, an average of 11.0 per game across his 46 appearances. Part of that had to do with the depth of the title-winning Warriors, who had Andrew Bogut and Marreese Speights, with David Lee and even Draymond Green capable of playing small ball center at times. Lee is the only one no longer on the roster, and Bogut, the starter, is signed through 2016/17. Still, the former No. 1 overall pick turns 31 this November and has a history of injuries, so chances are he’ll fade away long before Green, Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and Harrison Barnes do. Golden State will eventually need a center who can complement its young core.

Bogut has appeared in more regular season games during the three years of Ezeli’s career than Ezeli has. The 6’11” 25-year-old from Nigeria had surgery in June 2013 to reinforce the MCL and PCL in his right knee after he sprained the knee in the playoffs that spring. He missed all of the 2013/14 season, and a sprained left ankle kept him on the inactive list for more than a month this past season. The ankle injury was poorly timed, since he’d just come off a string of seven consecutive starts in place of Bogut. Ezeli didn’t make any more starts last season, but he did eventually return to the rotation, and he appeared in every playoff game but one.

Starting isn’t altogether unfamiliar for Ezeli, who was on the floor for the tip of 41 regular season games and three playoff games as a rookie. That was the year Golden State made its first postseason appearance with its current group. Bogut’s defense has proven key to the team’s success the past few years. Ezeli is also plus defender, according to Basketball-Reference’s Defensive Box Plus Minus, though that’s not surprising for a center. He’s the 40th-best center in ESPN’s Real Plus Minus, fairly impressive for someone who saw only 11.0 minutes a night, finishing right behind vaunted defensive talent Gorgui Dieng in that metric. The Warriors were about as efficient defensively with Ezeli on the floor as they were without him this past season, as NBA.com shows. However, they scored a whopping 6.5 points more per 100 possessions when Ezeli sat, a number that reflects the drop-off from Golden State’s starters to its bench but nonetheless speaks to Ezeli’s offensive shortcomings.

An extension with salaries in the eight-figure range would signal that the Warriors believe in Ezeli as the successor to Bogut in the role of starting center. Convince him to sign for somewhat less, and he’ll shape up as a well-compensated reserve. Kosta Koufos paced the free agent the market for backup centers this summer with a deal from the Kings that will give him an average of a little more than $8MM each season. Ed Davis and Aron Baynes, two reserve centers with upside, each wound up with about $6.5MM in average annual value.

The escalation in the cap plays a role, but it would be surprising to see the Warriors pay more than what their Northern California neighbors shelled out to Koufos if they project Ezeli as a backup for the long haul. Perhaps a four-year deal that starts at Koufos-level money of around $8MM a year and goes up to a salary of around $10MM for the last couple of seasons makes the most sense. He would be paid like a premier backup at the beginning of the extension and like a fifth starter at the end of it, and if the Warriors are reasonably optimistic about his potential, that’s probably how they view him.

Do you think Ezeli deserves an extension, and if so, how much should he get? Leave a comment to tell us.

Extension Candidate: Festus Ezeli

NBA: Golden State Warriors at Minnesota Timberwolves

Courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

Usually, players who sign rookie scale extensions have averaged more than five points per game at least once in their first three NBA seasons. That’s not the case for Festus Ezeli, but the Warriors apparently want to buck the trend. It’s possible that it’s a simple case of buying low, since Ezeli clearly hasn’t shown the bona fides usually required for a team to make a long-term commitment but will ostensibly have a chance to do so this season. The repeated signals from Warriors GM Bob Myers that the team is willing to do an extension are also perhaps yet another manifestation of a drastically rising salary cap, since teams will have an unprecedented capacity to spend. Golden State just won its first championship in 40 years, and beyond the positive vibes from that accomplishment is the wisdom in using the cap boom to keep a title-winning team together.

Golden State appears ready to test that wisdom to its extreme. Of course, that depends on just how much the Warriors would be on board with giving the former 30th overall pick. If, say, they want to do an unusually cheap rookie scale extension and sign him for around the value of the mid-level, the shock factor wouldn’t be nearly as profound. Indeed, the Warriors would extend his contract for the right price, as Steve Kyler of Basketball Insiders wrote this week, though Tim Kawakami of the Bay Area News Group later speculated that market price for Ezeli would be $9-11MM a year.

Ezeli’s chronic failure to corral passes from teammates has helped deflate his offensive numbers, but he’s improved his hands, as Monte Poole of CSNBayArea.com noted. Indeed, he got off nearly twice as many shots per 36 minutes this past season as he did in 2012/13, his rookie year. He also converted them at a much higher rate, lifting his field goal percentage from 43.8% to 54.7%. He upped his PER from a dismal 9.3 to an above-average 16.2, showing increased efficiency, and he posted impressive averages of 11.1 rebounds and 3.0 blocks per 36 minutes last season.

All of that is encouraging, but the sample size is small. Ezeli played only 504 total minutes last season, an average of 11.0 per game across his 46 appearances. Part of that had to do with the depth of the title-winning Warriors, who had Andrew Bogut and Marreese Speights, with David Lee and even Draymond Green capable of playing small ball center at times. Lee is the only one no longer on the roster, and Bogut, the starter, is signed through 2016/17. Still, the former No. 1 overall pick turns 31 this November and has a history of injuries, so chances are he’ll fade away long before Green, Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and Harrison Barnes do. Golden State will eventually need a center who can complement its young core.

Bogut has appeared in more regular season games during the three years of Ezeli’s career than Ezeli has. The 6’11” 25-year-old from Nigeria had surgery in June 2013 to reinforce the MCL and PCL in his right knee after he sprained the knee in the playoffs that spring. He missed all of the 2013/14 season, and a sprained left ankle kept him on the inactive list for more than a month this past season. The ankle injury was poorly timed, since he’d just come off a string of seven consecutive starts in place of Bogut. Ezeli didn’t make any more starts last season, but he did eventually return to the rotation, and he appeared in every playoff game but one.

Starting isn’t altogether unfamiliar for Ezeli, who was on the floor for the tip of 41 regular season games and three playoff games as a rookie. That was the year Golden State made its first postseason appearance with its current group. Bogut’s defense has proven key to the team’s success the past few years. Ezeli is also plus defender, according to Basketball-Reference’s Defensive Box Plus Minus, though that’s not surprising for a center. He’s the 40th-best center in ESPN’s Real Plus Minus, fairly impressive for someone who saw only 11.0 minutes a night, finishing right behind vaunted defensive talent Gorgui Dieng in that metric. The Warriors were about as efficient defensively with Ezeli on the floor as they were without him this past season, as NBA.com shows. However, they scored a whopping 6.5 points more per 100 possessions when Ezeli sat, a number that reflects the drop-off from Golden State’s starters to its bench but nonetheless speaks to Ezeli’s offensive shortcomings.

An extension with salaries in the eight-figure range would signal that the Warriors believe in Ezeli as the successor to Bogut in the role of starting center. Convince him to sign for somewhat less, and he’ll shape up as a well-compensated reserve. Kosta Koufos paced the free agent the market for backup centers this summer with a deal from the Kings that will give him an average of a little more than $8MM each season. Ed Davis and Aron Baynes, two reserve centers with upside, each wound up with about $6.5MM in average annual value.

The escalation in the cap plays a role, but it would be surprising to see the Warriors pay more than what their Northern California neighbors shelled out to Koufos if they project Ezeli as a backup for the long haul. Perhaps a four-year deal that starts at Koufos-level money of around $8MM a year and goes up to a salary of around $10MM for the last couple of seasons makes the most sense. He would be paid like a premier backup at the beginning of the extension and like a fifth starter at the end of it, and if the Warriors are reasonably optimistic about his potential, that’s probably how they view him.

Do you think Ezeli deserves an extension, and if so, how much should he get? Leave a comment to tell us.

Warriors To Consider Extension For Festus Ezeli

AUGUST 28TH, 1:59pm: Myers furthered his earlier comments, making it clear in an appearance on KNBR radio that the Warriors want extensions with both Ezeli and Barnes and plan to keep them a long time, as Diamond Leung of the Bay Area News Group transcribes (Twitter links).

“We’re focused and motivated,” Myers said. “Hopefully we can get something done.”

AUGUST 14TH, 1:08pm: Warriors GM Bob Myers recently said that he’d address the matter of a rookie scale extension for Festus Ezeli before the deadline this fall, and he expressed that he’d like a long-term partnership with Ezeli and Harrison Barnes, who’s also eligible for a rookie scale extension, reports Monte Poole of CSNBayArea.com. The Warriors and Barnes have mutual interest in an extension, as Marcus Thompson of the Bay Area News Group reported in June and as I examined in depth last week.

“We love them and we’re going to try to keep them as long as we can,” Myers said of Barnes and Ezeli. “Thankfully, like with Draymond [Green], they would be restricted free agents [next summer]. But hopefully we can figure something out like we have with a lot of our players. They’re a key part of what we do. Without them, we don’t win a championship.”

That would fit with the narrative that the Warriors have expressed about Ezeli in the past, as members of the organization, from co-owner Joe Lacob to coach Steve Kerr and his staff, have consistently spoken of their faith in Ezeli’s future, Poole notes. Ezeli told Poole that he’d leave the matter up to agent Bill Duffy. The deadline for an extension this year is November 2nd, since the traditional October 31st rookie scale extension deadline falls on a Saturday, as Larry Coon’s Salary Cap FAQ indicates.

Ezeli’s much-pilloried ability to catch passes from teammates has improved, as Poole details, and the three-year veteran was more productive on offense this past season, averaging 4.4 points in 11.0 minutes per game compared to 2.4 PPG in 14.4 MPG when he was a rookie. He missed all of his second season with a right knee injury.

Poole cites speculation that Ezeli might end up with $10MM salaries on an extension, though that seems too high, even with the surging salary cap at play, for a backup who was on the fringe of the team’s rotation last season. Golden State already has nearly $75MM committed for 2016/17 against a projected $89MM salary cap, and even though the tax line is projected all the way up at $108MM, the Warriors have reason to remain financially flexible with leaguewide target Kevin Durant set to hit free agency next summer.

What do you think a reasonable extension for Ezeli would look like? Leave a comment to weigh in.