Larry Sanders

Eastern Links: Knicks, Sanders, Cavs, Heat

As we look forward to Derrick Rose and the Bulls hosting the Knicks in Chicago tonight, let’s round up a few Eastern Conference notes….

Chuck Myron contributed to this post.

Eastern Notes: Sanders, C’s, Heat, Knicks

Back in August, prior to signing a long-term extension with the Bucks, Larry Sanders changed agents, moving from Andy Miller and ASM Sports to Dan Fegan and Relativity Sports. While the switch seemed fairly innocuous at the time, ASM has filed suit against Relativity, claiming that the agency stole Sanders away with “flights on private planes, expensive dinners, invites to pre-ESPY awards parties, acting classes and trips to Disneyland for his family.”

According to Dareh Gregorian of the New York Daily News, ASM Sports is seeking the commission on Sanders’ new $44MM contract with the Bucks, claiming that “even in the hypercompetitive world of sports agents there are rules and boundaries that must be followed.” Sanders’ earnings shouldn’t be affected by the suit, but it’s a peek at what goes on behind the scenes at sports agencies when a big-name player is about to cash in.

As Sanders and the Bucks prepare for tomorrow’s opener in New York, let’s round up a few more items from around the Eastern Conference….

  • Celtics GM Danny Ainge continues to discuss a possible extension with Avery Bradley‘s camp, but won’t extend Jordan Crawford, tweets Chris Forsberg of ESPNBoston.com. Ainge emphasized today that Bradley remains a big part of Boston’s future, according to A. Sherrod Blakely of CSNNE.com (via Twitter).
  • In his latest piece for Grantland, Zach Lowe explores the Heat‘s roster-building options going forward, concluding that, as creative as Pat Riley is, it will be tricky for the team to make significant upgrades around LeBron James in the next couple years.
  • Chris Smith believes he earned his spot on the Knicks with his play, but some rival agents believe he came as a package deal with older brother J.R. Smith, says Ian Begley of ESPNNewYork.com.
  • Responding to criticism from Charles Barkley, Carmelo Anthony said today that he thinks players would love to come play with him in New York, and that he has a “big rolodex” for when the time comes to recruit (Twitter links via Peter Botte of the New York Daily News).
  • According to Gigi Datome‘s agent (Twitter link via Emiliano Carchia of Sportando), the Pistons didn’t offer the most money to his client this offseason, but they did offer the best opportunity for the Italian sharpshooter.
  • While news of his trade to the Wizards initially caught him off guard, Marcin Gortat is excited to join a team with playoff aspirations, as he tells Michael Lee of the Washington Post.

Central Notes: Cavs, Rose, Sanders

According to Cavs coach Mike Brown, he’d like to keep everyone on the training camp roster. But as Jodie Valade writes in the Cleveland Plain Dealer, cuts are coming and can’t be delayed much longer. The Cavs currently have 20 players and need to get down to the league maximum of 15 before the start of the regular season.

The delay is tied to injuries and the Cavs’ D-League affiliate Canton Charge. Neither Andrew Bynum (knee) or Tyler Zeller (appendectomy) have a set return date, and Jarrett Jack and Carrick Felix are also out. Also, the last three training camp cuts go directly to the Cavs’ Canton team if they haven’t previously played in the D-League, as long as they clear waivers and agree to sign D-League contracts. So, the Cavs are trying to be smart and keep those players around to develop.

Valade  notes that forward Henry Sims and guard Matthew Dellavedova are expected to make it through the final cut, though.

Here are some more notes from around the Central division tonight:

  • Valade and Mary Schmitt Boyer opine, in a tweet, that Alonzo Gee should be the Cavs‘ starting small forward after outplaying Earl Clark all preseason.
  • After scoring 32 points in 32 minutes against the Pacers on Friday night, Bulls players  tell Joe Cowley of the Chicago Sun-Times that Derrick Rose is better than ever.
  • Bulls Swingman Jimmy Butler said, “I think [Rose is] all the way back and more.”
  • Gravelly-voiced coach Tom Thibodeau is amping up the intensity at Bulls‘ practices writes K.C. Johnson at the Chicago Tribune (subscription only) despite an undefeated record in preseason play so far.
  • Thibodeau tells Cowley  Bulls rookies Tony Snell and Erik Murphy have “a long way to go,” to crack the rotation.
  • Larry Sanders tells the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel’s Charles F. Gardner that he has “spent a lot of quiet time, meditation, listening to classical music or gospel music…” as well as speaking with God in a effort to calm his emotions. Sanders led the NBA with 5 ejections while helming the defensive paint for the Bucks last season.

Central Links: Jennings, Rose, Datome

Pistons guard Brandon Jennings offered a response via the media to former teammate Larry Sanders, who recently said “he has to pass to them first” after being told about how Jennings was excited to play with Greg Monroe and Andre Drummond in Detroit: “(Milwaukee) gave him $11 million, so he must be doing something right…Me and (Monta Ellis) had to take those shots. For us to even get to the (eighth) spot in the playoffs, we had to take those shots. It is what it is” (David Mayo of MLive.com). Here's more out of the Central Division tonight: 

  • According to K.C. Johnson of the Chicago Tribune, Bulls superstar Derrick Rose is more pre-occupied about his conditioning in the pre-season opener against the Pacers rather than his surgically repaired knee: "You can run and condition yourself as much as possible, but it's nothing like getting out there and playing a game…I hope it's building my wind for it. In the future, I shouldn't have anything to worry about." 
  • In another piece from Mayo, Gigi Datome opens up about attending his first NBA training camp with the Pistons and some of his experiences so far: "The best players in the world are here, so everybody's more quick, more fast, more physical, and for sure also skilled…I'm going to get better, for sure, (and) have to get used to this as quick as possible."
  • Caron Butler already appears to be relishing his leadership role on the Bucks and is enjoying his homecoming thus far in Wisconsin (NBA.com via the Associated Press).
  • Jeffery Taylor hopes to continue the success he had over the summer with the Bobcats this season, writes Tom Sorensen of the Charlotte Observer. Aside from a strong performance for Charlotte's summer league team in Las Vegas, the 6'7 swingman also emerged as Sweden's best player in the FIBA Eurobasket Tournament.
  •  In another Bobcats-related article, Rick Bonnell (also of the Charlotte Observer) takes a closer look at how forward Josh McRoberts has found his niche with the team. 

Read more

Contract Details: Sanders, Pekovic, Harris, Bost

Mark Deeks of ShamSports.com is back with another round of salary details for several of the new contracts signed in recent weeks. Here's a round-up:

  • Larry Sanders' new four-year contract extension with the Bucks will pay him an even $11MM in each season. Those figures will increase slightly if Sanders reaches contract incentives currently considered unlikely.
  • The Timberwolves' five-year deal with Nikola Pekovic will pay the big center $12.1MM in each of the next four seasons, before dipping to $11.6MM in year five. His potential incentives are also listed as unlikely, meaning they don't count against the cap for now.
  • Elias Harris' deal with the Lakers is a two-year, minimum-salary pact. It's guaranteed for $100K in year one, and fully non-guaranteed in year two.
  • The Cavaliers inked Matthew Dellavedova to a two-year contract that looks virtually identical to Harris' — his minimum salary is partially guaranteed for $100K in 2013/14.
  • Like Harris and Dellavedova, Dee Bost also signed a two-year minimum contract, but his deal with the Trail Blazers is only guaranteed for $25K this season.

Eastern Notes: Sanders, Bulls, Contract Years

Let's round up a few Wednesday items out of the Eastern Conference….

  • According to Gery Woelfel of the Racine Journal Times (via Twitter), there were some Bucks officials who wanted to cut Larry Sanders a year ago, making his lucrative new four-year extension with the club even more remarkable.
  • The Heat will head into 2013/14 as the favorites to come out of the East for a fourth straight year, but Lang Greene of HoopsWorld warns that sleeping on the Bulls, despite their fairly quiet offseason, would be a mistake.
  • Ira Winderman's latest mailbag at the South Florida Sun Sentinel includes questions on the Heat's inactivity and on whether Mikhail Prokhorov's willingness to go deep into the luxury tax will have an effect on the league's other owners.
  • In an Insider-only piece for ESPN.com, David Thorpe poses "burning questions" facing the five Atlantic Division teams.
  • Danny Granger (Pacers), Kyle Lowry (Raptors), and Paul Pierce (Nets) are a few of the players in contract years who Alex Kennedy of HoopsWorld believes are worth watching.

Examining New Deals For Pekovic, Sanders

While most of the summer's most lucrative new contracts were signed last month, a pair of big men have cashed in within the last week. Nikola Pekovic reached an agreement with the Timberwolves on a five-year, $60MM deal, which includes up to $8MM in potential incentives. And just yesterday, Larry Sanders and the Bucks finalized a four-year, $44MM extension, which could include another $4MM in incentives.

Comparing Pekovic's and Sanders' deals is a little tricky — the Timberwolves center wasn't coming off a rookie-scale contract, is already 27 years old, and was available on the open market (albeit as a restricted free agent). Sanders, on the other hand, remained under Bucks control for another year, is just 24, and received a rookie-scale extension.

Still, both players fall into a group of big men that has received four- or five-year contract in recent years, after playing three or four NBA seasons. Here's a look at how Pekovic and Sanders stack up against a few other players who have inked similar deals, along with their career stats at the time they signed their respective contracts (sorted by overall dollar amount):

Bigs

There are a few caveats worth mentioning here: All these players were signed three years into their NBA careers except JaVale McGee, who had four years of experience when he re-upped with the Nuggets. Additionally, only Sanders, Taj Gibson, Serge Ibaka, and Al Horford signed rookie-scale extensions. Pekovic, McGee, and DeAndre Jordan were re-signed as restricted free agents.

Taking these factors into account, our first instinct may be to assume that the Bucks overpaid for Sanders, who ranks noticeably behind most of the players on this list when it comes to experience, playing time, and scoring. Some of his career numbers compare favorably to Gibson's, Jordan's, and McGee's, but Gibson is being paid nearly $3MM per year less than Sanders, and overpaying for Jordan and McGee was more defensible, since their deals came in free agency, rather than a year earlier.

Of course, the Bucks aren't paying for Sanders' career stats; they're paying for his potential, which he began to realize during the 2012/13 season. Sanders' '12/13 averages (9.8 PPG, 9.5 RPG, 2.8 BPG, 18.7 PER) are easily better across the board than the numbers Gibson and Jordan put up in the season prior to their new contracts. McGee's pre-free-agency season was perhaps a little more productive than Sanders', but it's worth mentioning again that McGee was in his fourth season, not his third.

If we assume that Sanders will take another step forward in year four of his NBA career, and also consider how difficult it is for the Bucks to attract marquee free agents, that four-year, $44MM looks like a solid value for the team. It's about in line with the market rate, and it was probably a necessary investment for a club that saw multiple impact players (Brandon Jennings, Monta Ellis) choose to leave Milwaukee this offseason.

As for Pekovic, when I asked last week whether the Wolves got a good value, Hoops Rumors readers were nearly split between viewing the deal as an overpay or just about right. Horford provides the easiest point of comparison, since the two contracts are virtually identical, and their career numbers are nearly identical as well, with Pekovic perhaps being a little more efficient in less overall playing time.

Unlike the other players on this list though, Pekovic didn't sign his first NBA deal out of college, but rather spent multiple years overseas before joining the T-Wolves. As such, he's actually a few months older than Horford, despite the fact that the Hawks big man inked his extension nearly three years ago, while Pekovic is just seeing his first huge payday now. When Atlanta locked up Horford at age 24, the club was banking on continued development, whereas there's a good chance that with Pekovic, at age 27, what you see is what you get.

In the short-term, the Wolves should be just fine if Pekovic produces at the same rate he did in 2012/13, when he averaged 16.3 PPG, 8.8 RPG, and a 20.2 PER. After all, those stats look pretty similar to what Horford did this past season while playing a few extra minutes per game (17.4 PPG, 10.2 RPG, 19.8 PER), and Horford's contract is generally considered an excellent value for the Hawks.

In the longer-term, Pekovic's contract may prove to be an overpay, but he'll only be 32 when it expires, so his production shouldn't fall off a cliff. Considering Pekovic had the chance to talk to any of the NBA's other 29 teams, and the Wolves were still able to lock him up at a rate of $12MM annually, I don't mind the investment, even if it may end up being for one year too long.

Pekovic and Sanders may never become top-20 players in the NBA, but they're talented enough that they should be worth eight-digit salaries. For Minnesota and Milwaukee, which aren't exactly prime free agent destinations, landing a scoring center like Pekovic or a rim-protecting power forward like Sanders isn't easy. I think both teams managed to lock their players up to fair deals, but even if they overpaid by a few million dollars, it will likely be worth it, considering the lack of alternatives available.

Bucks Sign Larry Sanders To Extension

The Bucks have officially signed Larry Sanders to a long-term contract extension, the team announced today in a press release. Sanders himself broke the news this afternoon on Instagram, writing, "It's official. Can't believe I've been granted this opportunity to represent Milwaukee for the next five years and hopefully the rest of my career." The caption accompanied a photo of Sanders signing his new deal.

ESPN.com's Marc Stein first reported earlier this month that Sanders and the Bucks were nearing an extension agreement. Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports chimed in last Friday with a similar report, adding that the deal figured to be for four years and $44MM, with a few incentives that could boost the overall value to about $48MM for the Dan Fegan client. Prior to that report, Chuck Myron of Hoops Rumors had predicted that Sanders would be in line for an annual salary in the neighborhood of $11-12MM.

Sanders, 24, didn't appear to be a real extension candidate heading into the 2012/13 season, but enjoyed a breakout year and established himself as a core piece in the Bucks' frontcourt. After averaging 4.0 PPG, 3.0 RPG, and a 12.0 PER in limited minutes during his first two years in the NBA, Sanders increased those averages to 9.8 PPG, 9.5 RPG, and an 18.7 PER this past season.

Because his extension won't take effect until the 2014/15 season, the new deal will keep Sanders under contract through 2018, assuming it's a four-year pact as initially reported. It will also make him Milwaukee's highest-paid player starting next season, exceeding O.J. Mayo's $8MM salary.

By finalizing his agreement with the Bucks, Sanders becomes the second of 18 eligible players to extend his rookie-scale contract this offseason. John Wall and the Wizards agreed on a five-year max extension earlier this summer.

Bucks, Larry Sanders Near Deal On Extension

The Bucks and Larry Sanders are nearing agreement on a four-year, $44MM contract extension, according to Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo Sports.  The deal will include bonuses that could push the value of the contract to the $48 million range, according to sources.

Sanders, 24, enjoyed a breakout season in Milwaukee last year, averaging 9.8 PPG, 9.5 RPG, and 2.8 blocks per contest.  Even though the Bucks were swept by the Heat in the opening round of the playoffs, Sanders showed that he could produce in the postseason with 10.8 PPG and 8.3 RPG.

The Bucks have had a very busy offseason which has seem them add free agents O.J. Mayo, Carlos Delfino, and Zaza Pachulia while parting ways with a number of players including Monta Ellis and J.J. Redick.  Milwaukee also replaced interim coach Jim Boylan with former Hawks head man Larry Drew.

Recently, our own Chuck Myron examined Sanders as an extension candidate and concluded that he would wind up with a contract that would give him between $11MM and $12MM annually.  That's pretty much what the big man has in this deal as his base AAV is $11MM with incentives that could bump him to $12MM.  Sanders is a client of Relativity Sports' Dan Fegan, according to the Hoops Rumors Agency Database.

Kyler On Magic, Turkoglu, Bucks, Ellis, Sanders

As we noted yesterday, the Magic lost an asset this weekend, when the team let the $17.8MM trade exception created by last August's Dwight Howard deal expire unused. As Steve Kyler of HoopsWorld explains in his latest piece, Orlando explored a few possible uses for the exception. Ultimately though, it didn't make a whole lot of sense to take on additional salary when the club is already paying substantial amounts to players no longer on the roster. Here's more from Kyler:

  • The Magic are still talking to Hedo Turkoglu about a buyout, but there's a belief that he may have some value at the trade deadline as a big expiring contract. As such, he may remain on the roster beyond opening night, says Kyler.
  • Orlando remains undecided on what to do with second-round pick Romero Osby, who the team has said could earn a spot on the roster. If the Magic extend a training camp invitation to Osby, they'd have to either sign or waive him.
  • According to Kyler, the Bucks offered Monta Ellis a four-year, $46MM contract in free agency last month. If those numbers are accurate, they signal how uninterested Ellis was in remaining in Milwaukee, since he eventually settled for a three-year deal from the Mavericks worth about $20MM less.
  • The Bucks continue to discuss an extension with Larry Sanders, and Kyler says it sounds like Sanders could get the sort of deal Ellis didn't — something that could be worth up to $46-50MM for four years, depending on incentives.