Wolves Rumors: Saunders, Ownership, Pekovic
In addition to taking over as the Timberwolves' president of basketball ops, Flip Saunders will invest about $8MM into the team, reports Darren Wolfson of 1500 ESPN Twin Cities. We heard earlier today that owner Glen Taylor is no longer interested in selling the franchise, but instead figures to try to buy out minority owners' stakes, or find local buyers for those shares. Wolfson has a few more T-Wolves updates in his latest piece, so let's dive in and check them out….
- When he was fielding calls about possibly selling the franchise, Taylor was approached by Chris Hansen's Seattle group, former Grizzlies owner Michael Heisley, St. Louis businessman Dr. Richard Chaifetz, and a group headed by former coach Mike Dunleavy Sr. However, none of those potential suitors had interest in keeping the team in Minnesota long-term, says Wolfson.
- Rick Adelman appears very likely to return as the Wolves' head coach in 2013/14, but if Saunders hires a new coach down the road, Michigan State's Tom Izzo and Rockets assistant J.B. Bickerstaff figure to be among the candidates, sources inform Wolfson.
- Nikola Pekovic's camp isn't upset with David Kahn's dismissal, but it will be Taylor who ultimately makes the final call on how high the Wolves are willing to go on a new deal for the restricted free agent.
- Wolfson also questions the validity of a number of the comments Kahn made after being let go, suggesting there may be some revisionist history at work.
- According to Jerry Zgoda of the Star Tribune (Twitter link), Taylor had a list of eight candidates to call about replacing Kahn, including Phil Jackson, but ultimately hired Saunders before even getting to his list.
Eastern Notes: Heat, Robinson, Bobcats, Pistons
The Nets' win in Chicago last night ensured that we'll get at least one Game Seven in the first round of this year's playoffs, but if we're lucky, we could do a lot better than that. With four Game Sixes on tap for tonight, including two more Eastern Conference series, there's a chance this year's first round could break the NBA record for most Game Sevens in a single playoff round. According to ESPN.com's Marc Stein (via Twitter), there has never been more than three in a round. As we look forward to tonight's packed slate, let's check out some notes from around the East….
- In his latest mailbag, Ira Winderman of the South Florida Sun Sentinel notes that Patrick Beverley is in a good spot in Houston and that the Heat won a title without him, a win-win situation for both sides. However, Winderman adds that a defensive third-string point guard like Beverley could have come in handy for Miami, and "it's not as if there wasn't roster space to try to make it work." The Heat signed Beverley to a guaranteed two-year deal in 2010, but cut him shortly thereafter.
- Nate Robinson figures to land more than a veteran's minimum contract in free agency this summer, but don't bank on him receiving a huge raise, writes Tom Ziller of SBNation.com.
- With at least five candidates already in the mix for the Bobcats' head coaching opening, Rick Bonnell of the Charlotte Observer anticipates a search as wide-ranging as last year's. Charlotte's hunt for a coach last May involved so many names that I dedicated a post at the time to keeping them all straight.
- Vince Goodwill of the Detroit News breaks down nine potential candidates for the Pistons' head coaching opening, in slideshow form. GM Joe Dumars and owner Tom Gores will be advised by Phil Jackson in the Pistons' search, as the team announced yesterday.
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Timberwolves Hire Flip Saunders As President
FRIDAY, 11:12am: The Wolves made it official today, introducing Saunders to the media at a press conference. Jerry Zgoda of the Star Tribune tweeted a number of highlights from Saunders and Taylor, so we'll round those up here:
- Saunders' contract with the Wolves is for five years with additional options beyond that. The commitment is a "big one," according to Taylor.
- Taylor is now interested in buying out limited partners' shares of the franchise rather than considering selling his own majority stake in the team.
- As of now, Saunders expects head coach Rick Adelman to be back on Minnesota's bench next season.
- Saunders was noncommital when asked if his own coaching career is over.
THURSDAY, 7:16pm: Former Timberwolves and Pistons head coach Flip Saunders has officially signed a multi-year deal to become president of basketball operations for the Timberwolves, according to a tweet from ESPN.com's Brian Windhorst. Saunders will also have an ownership stake in the team.
Minnesota's owner, Glen Taylor, has also opted not to sell the team, and has taken it off the market. Earlier today it was announced that the Timberwolves would decline the option on former general manager David Khan.
David Kahn Talks Wolves, Flynn, Darko, Love
In the wake of David Kahn's dismissal as the Timberwolves' head of basketball operations, Jerry Zgoda of the Star Tribune sat down with Kahn for an extensive interview about his time running the team. The entire piece is very much worth your time, particularly if you're a fan of the T-Wolves, as Kahn goes into detail on the club's decision not to give Kevin Love a five-year deal, the hirings of Kurt Rambis and Rick Adelman, how missing Kenneth Faried inspired a scouting overhaul, and plenty more. Here are a few of the more notable quotes from Kahn in the four-part feature:
On how well positioned he has left the Wolves:
"Highly well positioned. I think it’s a team that’s a force to be reckoned with the next seven to 10 years. Very few teams, when you think about it, have the star power contained in Ricky [Rubio] and Kevin. [Nikola] Pekovic is becoming a significant player at his position in the league. You have [Andrei] Kirilenko, [Alexey] Shved, [J.J.] Barea, [Chase] Budinger, there’s a lot and I’m leaving people out. There’s just a lot of talent on the roster and it’s mostly young talent, mid-20s and under. I think the team is very well positioned to make a serious run these next several years. The organization is better positioned than it was and the facilities are better. We made major strides and upgrades in almost every area of the franchise because frankly, when I arrived here, this was a very distressed situation."
On the decision to draft Jonny Flynn sixth overall in 2009:
"I’m hired on May 22nd, 2009. There are four GMs or assistant GMs who have been scouting the entire year and one of their complaints to me was that despite all their scouting work in the past, in the end nobody would listen to them and my predecessor would take who he wanted to take…. We needed a point guard on the team, we knew Ricky couldn’t come…. And so the scouts had Flynn as the No. 1 point guard. And I had just emerged from several meetings where all they were saying to me was nobody ever listens to us and I like Jonny too, so please don’t mistake that. I could see a lot of the appeal and so to that extent, that’s the reason that pick was made."
On signing Darko Milicic to a four-year, $20MM contract:
"Kurt Rambis and Dave Wohl both were big proponents of making the trade. And once we obtained Darko, I could see what they were talking about. Darko has enormous skills. Both Kurt and Bill Laimbeer played the big-man position in the league and they felt if it ever worked out for him psychologically, he could be one of the top three or four centers in the league. And again the risk point was quite low when we made the trade and even the contract we gave him that many people talked about was really no more than what a backup center gets in our league this days, about $4MM a year. We didn’t pay him as a starting center even though we had him ticketed as our starting center. So I think there were some reasons to do it and I recognize those reasons even today."
On rumors that Kahn was willing to trade Love for Anthony Randolph in 2010:
"Not true. I never have ever wanted to trade Kevin, ever. And there was no way as I sat in the chair that I would have recommended to the owner that we do so. That’s a fact."
On whether the cap relief gained by trading Al Jefferson made the deal worthwhile:
"Absolutely. First of all, there’s no way Kevin would have had a breakout if Al had still been here. Too many people focus all the time on the offensive end of the court and not enough on the defensive end. The issue isn’t can Al and Kevin co-exist offensively. The issue is the strain it puts on a team defensively because we’re short and we don’t change ends very well and it already was becoming a huge issue for our team. And so the trick was to have the kind of financial flexibility for that season and beyond. Al’s number was going to suck up a lot of room and would make a lot of moves almost to make. We needed that kind of relief to let Kevin breathe on the court and to let the roster breathe financially so we could make some other changes. Having not to take back salaries that added up to him was critically important because usually when you do that you’re just perpetuating the same kind of bottleneck. We needed to eliminate the bottleneck."
On whether Kahn wants to stay in the league:
"I don’t know yet. When all the speculation the last couple weeks started to incur, I had a call from inside basketball and from outside basketball. So I don’t know yet. I’ll stay here and attend to some affairs for now. There’s a lot to do."
Phil Jackson Remains Open To NBA Opportunities
The Pistons announced yesterday that Phil Jackson has agreed to serve in an advisory capacity to help the team find its next head coach. Despite the agreement, Jackson won't assume a formal role in the Pistons' front office, and remains open to other opportunities. According to ESPN.com's Marc Stein and Ramona Shelburne, Jackson's role as an advisor for the Pistons "does not foreclose any options."
Stein and Shelburne report that Jackson won't be paid for his assistance to the Pistons, and that the agreement represents an "act of friendship" between Jacksons and team owner Tom Gores. Presumably, Jackson's stint as a club consultant will come to an end once the team completes a coaching search that has led them to interview Nate McMillan and Lindsey Hunter so far.
The Raptors have been mentioned as an aggressive suitor for Jackson, though Toronto is far from the only one. Ken Berger of CBSSports.com reported earlier this week that a number of teams have reached out to Jackson via "back channels" to discuss a potential front office role with him, and that other clubs may still try to recruit the Zen Master as a head coach.
Jackson told the San Francisco Chronicle last week that he'd spoken to "three or four teams" about a front office position. Perhaps he has already ruled out a couple of those opportunities, but it's possible more have arisen since then.
Jarrett Jack Shut Down In-Season Extension Talks
With their win last night, the Warriors became the first lower seed to advance to the second round of this year's postseason. Point guard Jarrett Jack, who has played a significant role in Golden State's success, will be a free agent when the team's season ends, but according to Marcus Thompson of the Bay Area News Group, the team was interested in locking him up long-term earlier this season.
Thompson reports that the Warriors approached Jack about a potential contract extension back in January, but that the 29-year-old shut down discussions. Jack preferred to focus on the season and wanted to experience free agency this summer, according to Thompson.
As I noted prior to the season, Jack was one of three Warriors veterans eligible for a contract extension this year, since it had been more than three years since he signed his four-year deal. Had Jack and the Warriors tried to work something out, the club would have been able to offer him a contract starting at 7.5% of this year's $5.4MM salary, for up to three new years. The maximum extension Jack could have signed would have added three years and $18.63MM to his existing deal, though it's unclear whether Golden State would have made that sort of commitment.
Now that he's heading for free agency, Jack appears to be at or near the top of the second tier of unrestricted point guards, along with players like Jose Calderon and Mo Williams, so there should be no shortage of interest.
Poll: Who Should Coach The Sixers?
Earlier tonight we linked to a report from the Philadelphia Inquirer regarding four possible coaching candidates that the Sixers are interested in interviewing for their open head coaching position. Who do you think is the best fit?
Who Should Coach The Sixers?
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Brian Shaw 56% (369)
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Jeff Hornacek 15% (100)
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Mike Malone 12% (78)
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Other 9% (58)
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Michael Curry 8% (52)
Total votes: 657
Odds & Ends: Pierce, Jackson, Fortson
The NBA has announced that Warriors head coach Mark Jackson has been fined $25K by for influencing officials with recent postgame comments, reports Benjamin Hochman of the Denver Post.
Here are a few more notes from around the league.
- D-League guard Courtney Fortson will not be playing in the D-League next year, according to RidiculousUpside.com's Keith Schlosser. His options for next season, as he told the site, are the NBA, Europe, or China.
- Nola.com's Jimmy Smith takes a look at Pelicans forward Lance Thomas, who has a team option on his contract next season for less than $1MM. Smith focuses on what Thomas needs to do to make him worth keeping on the roster.
- Celtics general manager Danny Ainge says dealing with Paul Pierce's contract this offseason will be difficult. Ainge and the C's have an option to buy out Pierce for $5MM, which would save the team more than $10MM, according to CSNNE.com's A. Sherrod Blakely.
- Philadelphia Inquirer reporter John Mitchell reports that the Sixers will look to interview Jeff Hornacek, Michael Curry, Mike Malone and Brian Shaw for their open head coaching position.
Coaching Notes: Gentry, Walker, Van Gundy
A few coaching rumors from around the NBA and D-League.
- Rick Bonnell of the Charlotte Observer tweeted confirmation that former Suns head coach Alvin Gentry will be interviewing with the Bobcats for their open head coaching position. The Bobcats recently fired Mike Dunlap after one season on the job, while the Suns let go of Gentry earlier in the year.
- According to a tweet from Yahoo! Sports reporter Adrian Wojnarowski, the head coach of the Idaho Stampede (the Trail Blazers D-League affiliate), Barry Rohrssen, will be leaving the team and returning to the University of Pittsburgh's coaching staff.
- JournalTimes.com reporter Gery Woelfel tweets that a source close to Stan Van Gundy says it's unlikely the free agent head coach takes the Bucks open job.
- Knicks assistant coach Darrell Walker will interview for the Pistons open head coaching position, according to a tweet from SI.com's Chris Mannix.
- The Pistons have also hired Phil Jackson in an advisory role to select their next head coach, reports NBA.com's Keith Langlois.
