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Free Agent Stock Watch: J.R. Smith

The summer of 2015 provided one of the craziest starts to NBA free agency in recent memory. The projected salary cap rise for a year from now encouraged franchises to spend big on free agents and teams responded by doling out over $2 billion in contracts. J.R. Smith and his agent, Leon Rose, surely anticipated this and expected to draw from the free agency money tree. Thus far, that plan has not borne fruit.

Jan 23, 2015; Cleveland, OH, USA; Cleveland Cavaliers guard J.R.  Smith (5) reacts after hitting a three-point shot against the Charlotte Hornets during the first quarter at Quicken Loans Arena. Mandatory Credit: Ken Blaze-USA TODAY Sports

Courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

The Cavs would like to have him back, but apparently only on a modest one year deal. The team cautioned Smith against declining his $6.4MM option. While Cleveland has the ability to offer him a deal as lucrative as the one he turned down because it owns his Bird rights, the tax implications behind making such an offer would be pernicious from a financial standpoint. Assuming the Cavs sign Tristan Thompson to the mammoth contract he is holding out for, the team would be well into the luxury tax, meaning every dollar they shell out to Smith would cost them $3.75 or more in tax penalties.

The former Sixth Man of the Year is has reportedly been angling for a three-year contract. The Cavs simply cannot accommodate his request unless owner Dan Gilbert is willing to foot a massive tax bill over the next few years. Cleveland doesn’t have any significant money coming off the books in the next couple of seasons and it will have to account for a monstrous new contract for center Timofey Mozgov. Mozgov’s arrival turned a below-average defense into a stable unit, and he played a integral role in the team’s slaughtering of Eastern Conference foes en route to the NBA Finals. Gilbert may be willing to pay a large bill a year from now to retain a difference maker in Mozgov, but he’s most likely not going to do that for Smith.

Cleveland will reportedly let the market dictate what kind of contract it offers Smith, in an example of a team properly forecasting the NBA economy. The Cavs recognize that New York had to attach Iman Shumpert to the deal that sent Smith to Cleveland in order to move him, and if any team thought Smith was worth the price of his previous contract, it would have just taken him off Phil Jackson‘s hands for nothing.

The Jazz, Trail Blazers and Sixers are the only teams that are hoarding enough cap space to entertain a salary comparable to the option that Smith turned down. Philadelphia had ill-matched interest in Smith, but that interest has faded, according to Hoops Rumors contributor Sam Amico of AmicoHoops.net. Smith wants to be somewhere he can make a difference and he is just not a fit for any of the teams that are left with cap space.

Charlotte has the ability to offer the 29-year-old the full value of the mid-level exception, worth $5.464MM, as the team’s Salary Cap Page shows. The free agent market has dried up considerably and few remaining players outside of Smith can reasonably anticipate receiving a contract for nearly that amount. Let’s assume Smith is willing to concede on the value of his annual salary in favor of a longer deal that has more guaranteed money. The Hornets present an alluring situation for the shooting guard.

The team made a few gleaming upgrades this offseason with an eye on improving its overall shooting. New addition Nicolas Batum could slide into the starting two spot next to Michael Kidd-Gilchrist at the three to solidify the team’s starting five. The team added Jeremy Lin, in a team-friendly deal, to presumably run the second unit. After the top six players, the roster gets murky. The big man rotation looks to be adequate, especially if Frank Kaminsky’s game can translate immediately as expected, but the chatter about playing Kidd-Gilchrist at the four could further extend an already thin wing rotation.

The Hornets picked up Jeremy Lamb as a follow-up to the Lance Stephenson trade. Lamb showed flashes of becoming a serviceable rotation piece last season, but his inconsistency led him to see the bench more often than not for a Thunder team that was derailed with injuries. P.J. Hairston could be a contributor, but after a less-than-stellar rookie season in which he shot 30.1% from behind the arc, the prospect of increasing his role doesn’t bode well for a team looking to make the playoffs.

Smith can be a reliable and somewhat efficient offensive weapon. After being traded to Cleveland, his slash line improved from .402/.356/.692 in New York to .425/.390/.818. He was simply taking better shots. He went from being a second option on offense for the Knicks to arguably the fifth option (LeBron James is option one and two), and he mostly played within his lane. Kemba Walker, Al Jefferson and Batum would all rank ahead of him on offensive totem pole should he sign with Charlotte, which would give him a poor man’s version of what he had on the court with the Cavs. Signing with the Hornets would aid Smith in centralizing his focus on basketball as well.

I think [Cleveland] is the best situation for me, ’cause there’s nothing but basketball. There’s nothing you expect but basketball. There’s nothing, there’s no going out, there’s no late nights. There’s video games, basketball and basketball. So it’s a great thing, ’cause I go back to where I came from,” Smith said after being traded last season.

Nobody is mistaking the city of Charlotte for New York, Los Angeles or Miami in terms of its nightlife scene, so relocating to the Queen City may give the 29-year-old a similar environment to the one in which he thrived in Cleveland.

This is purely speculative, as the Hornets have not been linked to Smith in free agency, but adding the shooting guard makes sense for the team from an on-court perspective. Smith’s off-court antics, coupled with the franchise’s recent disaster signing of Stephenson, as Chuck Myron of Hoops Rumors discussed in his weekly chat, may impede a potential pairing. Charlotte clearly intends to compete for a playoff spot this season, but the team has noticeable flaws on its roster. The expected rise in the salary cap over the next few seasons, along with the team’s ability to use the stretch provision, should mitigate the risk of offering Smith a two-year deal worth the mid-level exception, and the Hornets should take the opportunity to add talent at such a minimal cost.

What kind of deal do you think Smith will end up signing? Leave a comment to let us know.

Eastern Rumors: James, Wells, Pistons

LeBron James will attend the USA Basketball minicamp meeting next week but will not attend the workouts, the team’s executive director Jerry Colangelo told Marc J. Spears of Yahoo Sports. Colangelo is uncertain of whether James wants to pursue another Olympic gold medal, Joe Vardon of Northeast Ohio Media Group reports. “One thing I need to find out: is he desirous, is he committed,” Colangelo told Vardon. “I don’t know that right now, and I need to find out at some point. An indicator will come next week when we see who shows up.” Kyrie Irving and Kevin Love are expected to attend, though neither Cavs star will participate in the workouts or a scheduled scrimmage because they are still on the mend from their playoff injuries, Colangelo added to Vardon.
In other news around the Eastern Conference:
  • Dez Wells has been extended a training camp invite by the Wizards but he’s likely to turn it down, J. Michael of CSNWashington.com reports. The rookie guard from the University of Maryland was on Washington’s summer league roster but dislocated his right thumb prior to the Las Vegas summer league and did not play. Wells has five other training camp offers and feels his prospects with the Wizards are dim because they already have 15 players with guaranteed contracts, the story adds.
  • Adonis Thomas is guaranteed $60K of his $845,059 contract with the Pistons, Eric Pincus of Basketball Insiders tweets. The 6’7” shooting guard will be battling second-round pick Darrun Hilliard, among others, for a roster spot in training camp.

Players Set To See The Largest Raises In 2015/16

Jimmy Butler probably would have jumped at a salary of nearly $14.4MM in the fall, when he was reportedly prepared to settle for salaries between $12.5MM and $13MM in extension talks with the Bulls. Instead, that $14.4MM figure represents merely the amount of the raise he’s getting. He’ll make $16,407,500, the maximum salary for a player of his experience, in 2015/16 after having earned only $2,008,748 last season. No one in the NBA is slated to see a more significant raise this year.

Butler personifies two traits shared by most of the 10 players slated to see raises of $10MM or more this coming season. He re-signed with his team, and he was coming off a rookie scale contract. Khris Middleton, Draymond Green and DeMarre Carroll are the only players on the list below who aren’t coming off rookie scale deals, and Green and Middleton made the minimum last season. Carroll and Greg Monroe are the only ones to change teams, even though free agents can receive the same starting salaries wherever they sign.

An eleventh player seems poised to join this group eventually. Tristan Thompson, who made $5,138,430 last season on the final year of his rookie deal, is the most prominent free agent still available, and he’s eligible for that same $16,407,500 max.

  1. Jimmy Butler, Bulls — $14,398,752 ($2,008,748 to $16,407,500)
  2. Khris Middleton, Bucks — $13,784,757 ($915,243 to $14,700,000)
  3. Tobias Harris, Magic — $13,619,406 ($2,380,594 to $16,000,000)
  4. Kawhi Leonard, Spurs — $13,513,441 ($2,894,059 to $16,407,500)
  5. Draymond Green, Warriors — $13,345,627 ($915,243 to $14,260,870)
  6. Klay Thompson, Warriors — $12,425,120 ($3,075,880 to $15,501,000)
  7. Reggie Jackson, Pistons — $11,708,675 ($2,204,369 to $13,913,044)
  8. DeMarre Carroll, Raptors — $11,157,545 ($2,442,455 to $13,600,000)
  9. Greg Monroe, Bucks — $10,927,565 ($5,479,935 to $16,407,500)
  10. Enes Kanter, Thunder — $10,712,826 ($5,694,674 to $16,407,500)

The Basketball Insiders salary pages were used in the creation of this post.

Which of these raises was the most-deserved? Least-deserved? Leave a comment to let us know.

Players Who’ve Survived Salary Guarantee Dates

Contract guarantee dates are often the reason why players end up on waivers. Eric Moreland, Brendan Haywood and Ricky Ledo have all met the end of their time with their respective teams in the past two days, largely because those teams didn’t want to guarantee their salaries, or at least a portion of them. More figure to join that trio soon, with Saturday the key day for a handful, as the schedule of contract guarantee dates shows.

Players and teams are free to negotiate dates on which a salary may become fully or partially guaranteed should the player remain under contract. If a player has non-guaranteed salary and no date is specified in the contract, his salary would become guaranteed if he hasn’t cleared waivers by January 10th. Thus, January 7th is the de facto leaguewide guarantee date, since players waived that day would clear waivers January 9th.

The Nuggets and Wilson Chandler got a head start on all that this offseason, as Chandler’s $2MM partial guarantee had already become a full guarantee of nearly $7.172MM by early May. The sides later upped his salary to more than $10.449MM in a renegotiation. The rest of the players to have had their full salaries guaranteed have seen those dates come and pass over the last month. They’re listed below, with their respective salary figures rounded to the nearest $1K. Note that this doesn’t include players who’ve earned partial guarantees, since they still have a ways to go:

  • Jamal Crawford (Clippers), $5,675MM (had been partially guaranteed for $1.5MM)
  • Chris Kaman (Trail Blazers), $5.016MM (had been partially guaranteed for $1MM)
  • Trevor Booker (Jazz) $4.775MM (had been partially guaranteed for $250K)
  • Matt Barnes (Grizzlies) $3.543MM (had been partially guaranteed for $1MM)
  • Randy Foye (Nuggets) $3.135MM
  • Anthony Tolliver (Pistons), $3MM (had been partially guaranteed for $400K)
  • Beno Udrih (Grizzlies) $2.17MM (had been partially guaranteed for $923K)
  • Jon Leuer (Suns), $1.035MM
  • Isaiah Canaan (Sixers), minimum (had been partially guaranteed for $758K)
  • Ray McCallum (Spurs), minimum (had been partially guaranteed for $200K)
  • E’Twaun Moore (Bulls), minimum
  • Robert Sacre (Lakers), minimum
  • Russ Smith (Grizzlies) minimum (had been partially guaranteed for $150K)

Note: The Lakers have decided to keep Jordan Clarkson through his guarantee date on Saturday.

The Basketball Insiders salary pages were used in the creation of this post.

Texas Notes: Spurs, Mavs, Matthews

Malik Rose swears he’s happy in retirement, but he saw the offseason moves the Spurs made, he wished that he could make a comeback, Lorne Chan of Spurs.com writes.

I still feel like I can get out there and play, but I know I can’t,” Rose said. “I see guys out there that I played with still going strong, and I live through them. Especially Tim [Duncan].

Rose was elated to see LaMarcus Aldridge land in San Antonio, but he wasn’t surprised, calling the current team “talented guys with the right mindset.”  Here’s more from the Lone Star state..

  • Wesley Matthews is determined to prove that the Mavericks made the right decision when they signed him to a five-year, $70MM deal and silence the critics who say that he won’t be the same after his Achilles injury. “Maybe this [injury] happened to continue my push, continue my drive,” Matthews told Jason Quick of The Oregonian. “Maybe I was getting too content. Maybe I was resting on everything that I had done. I felt myself getting to the point of being entitled.” Matthews reportedly turned down a four year, $64MM offer from the Kings and had interest from other clubs this summer before landing in Dallas.  Last year he averaged 15.9 points, 3.7 rebounds, and 2.3 assists in an injury-shortened season.
  • In an interview with Grantland.com’s Zach Lowe, Mavericks owner Mark Cuban stuck up for Rajon Rondo, who disappointed in his time in Dallas.  Cuban also explained that the front office was split on whether or not to trade for the guard and ultimately “it came down to a coin flip” that resulted in them pulling the trigger.
  • The Spurs are nurturing their D-League affiliate, the Austin Spurs, as Dan McCarney of the San Antonio Express-News writes.  In recent years, the Spurs have used the D-League as a way to help their end-of-the-bench players improve.  In fact, Cory Joseph actually asked the club to go to Austin in 2012/13.  “I could be sitting on the bench in San Antonio,” Joseph reasoned at the time, “or I could be getting better. I needed to play. I was learning and trying to simulate the stuff they wanted me to do [with the Spurs] in Austin. The coaching staff there did a great job of helping me.”

Pacific Notes: Cousins, Davis, Suns, Clippers

Kings executive Vlade Divac insists the team has no plans to trade DeMarcus Cousins, according to Ailene Voisin of The Sacramento Bee. Divac, who is preparing for his first draft since being named vice president of basketball and franchise operations in March, said the team is looking for players who will complement Cousins’ skills. “That is not happening,” Divac said about the possibility of moving Cousins, “but I would love to do something, a smaller move, before the draft. We have a lot of changes to make. The league is much more up-tempo now, and we need more three-point shooting. If we don’t get that in the draft, we’ll be active in free agency and see about making trades later in the offseason.” Sacramento holds the sixth pick in Thursday’s draft.

There’s more from the Pacific Division as we count down toward draft day:

  • Ed Davis hopes to land a richer and longer contract with the Lakers by opting out of his current deal, but Mark Medina of The Los Angeles Daily News isn’t sure if that will work. The 26-year-old Davis, who has a $1.1MM option for next season, posted a career high in scoring, rebounding and several other categories this year. An unidentified source told Medina that Davis wants a two- or three-year contract worth $7MM to $8MM annually or a one-year deal in the $9MM to $10MM range. Whether the Lakers will make that kind of offer depends on what the team can acquire through the draft and free agency.
  • After a non-playoff season, any Suns player can be traded or replaced through the draft, according to Paul Coro of The Arizona Republic. “We always need guys that will push our guys or even challenge them for a spot,” said Suns coach Jeff Hornacek. “… Where we’re picking at 13, you’re going to get a good, solid guy that can push our guys and maybe in a year or two take over their spots.” Coro writes that the 12 picks ahead of Phoenix are unpredictable, but he expects the Suns to use their pick to add size.
  • The Clippers will hold a workout today for Ryan Boatright, D.J. Newbill, Chris Walker, Royce O’Neale and Damontre Harris, tweets Michael Scotto of SheridanHoops.

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Western Draft Notes: Towns, Grant, Jazz

Karl-Anthony Towns will interview with the Wolves and the Lakers, but won’t work out for any teams, Adam Zagoria of SNY.tv reports. The big man would relish the opportunity to play in Minnesota. “It would be a blessing and an honor to even have a chance to play for Minnesota and be able to have the chance to play for a great organization and learn from a great mentor like Kevin Garnett, Towns said.

Here’s more on the upcoming draft:

  • Jerian Grant, whom I profiled earlier today, will work out for the Raptors, Heat, Hornets, Nuggets and Wizards according to Paul Coro of the Arizona Republic. Grant previously worked out for the Pacers, SunsThunder and Rockets.
  • The Suns are looking for play-makers off their bench and Grant may be a good candidate for the No. 13 pick, Coro opines in the same piece.  “We’re looking at the guys who could possibly be backup point guards,” coach Jeff Hornacek said. “The more guys we can get on this team, whether it’s point guard, off-guard, three-man, center, forward, whatever it is — that bring intelligence to the game can only help us.” 
  • The Jazz own the No. 12 selection in the draft and Kincade Upstill of the Deseret News wonders if the team should trade its pick. Upstill examines some hypothetical trades involving the team’s first-rounder, including an intriguing swap with the Clippers that involves sending J.J. Redick to the Jazz for Trey Burke and the No. 12 pick.

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Teams With The Most 2015 Draft Picks

Don’t cry for the Sixers because they didn’t wind up with either of the two extra lottery picks that could have come their way. GM Sam Hinkie isn’t morose about it, in part because the team will receive those first-rounders from the Lakers and Heat eventually, and because Philadelphia has a league-high six total picks this year anyway. That’s the case even though the Sixers traded away their own second-round pick. Only the Celtics, with four, even come close. If there’s a team that deserves sympathy, it’s the Clippers. They’re the only franchise without a pick this year, and thanks in large measure to their max deals for Blake Griffin and Chris Paul, they’re without many other means to improve this offseason.

Five of Philly’s six picks come in the second round, including two of the last three picks, a result of Hinkie’s prioritization of second-rounders in trades. A second-round pick isn’t as likely to become a productive player as a first-round pick is, but the Sixers have five times as many chances to find an exception to the rule than they would if they had stood pat.

While 19 of this year’s 60 picks changed hands, including 14 in the second round, precisely half the teams in the league possess two picks, the same number as if there hadn’t been any trades. Some of those teams did trade at least one of their selections, but in those cases, they pulled off other deals to even the ledger.

Here’s a breakdown of each team’s picks, categorized by the total amount of selections they have. To check out the order by selection, click here:

Six picks

  • Sixers (3, 35, 37, 47, 58, 60)

Four picks

  • Celtics (16, 28, 33, 45)

Three picks

  • Hawks (15, 50, 59)
  • Jazz (12, 42, 54)
  • Lakers (2, 27, 34)
  • Timberwolves (1, 31, 36)

Two picks

  • Bucks (17, 46)
  • Cavaliers (24, 53)
  • Heat (10, 40)
  • Hornets (9, 39)
  • Magic (5, 51)
  • Mavericks (21, 52)
  • Nets (29, 41)
  • Nuggets (7, 57)
  • Pacers (11, 43)
  • Pistons (8, 38)
  • Rockets (18, 32)
  • Spurs (26, 55)
  • Suns (13, 44)
  • Thunder (14, 48)
  • Wizards (19, 49)

One pick

  • Bulls (22)
  • Grizzlies (25)
  • Kings (6)
  • Knicks (4)
  • Pelicans (56)
  • Raptors (20)
  • Trail Blazers (23)
  • Warriors (30)

No picks

  • Clippers