Odds & Ends: Price, Bennett, Warriors
The Knicks and Celtics were among the losing teams on a five-game Tuesday in the NBA, and while those clubs fall farther beneath .500, it sounds like they’re thinking about helping each other out via trade, as Bleacher Report’s Jared Zwerling detailed tonight. Zwerling has a ton of news from New York and Boston, as well as a couple other NBA teams, in the piece we linked to earlier tonight, and there are still more noteworthy items as a busier-than-usual November continues:
- A.J. Price tells Michael Lee of the Washington Post that the Wizards never made contact with him while he was a free agent this offseason (Twitter link). The point guard had been confident he’d return to the Wizards, according to Lee, but Price signed with the Timberwolves instead.
- Jim Ingraham of The News-Herald worries that the Cavs‘ selection of Anthony Bennett first overall is on its way to becoming a “colossal, franchise-rattling whiff” and believes Cleveland should send Bennett on a D-League assignment.
- Cavs coach Mike Brown remains confident that Bennett will hit his stride in time, observes fellow News-Herald scribe Bob Finnan.
- The Warriors assigned Nemanja Nedovic, Ognjen Kuzmic and the newly signed Dewayne Dedmon to their D-League affiliate today, the team announced.
Zwerling On Amar’e, Wallace, Humphries
Jared Zwerling of Bleacher Report recaps many of the rumors we’ve heard about the Knicks and Celtics in recent days, and adds plenty more in his latest piece. Let’s dive in.
- Zwerling presents a somewhat different version of an earlier trade rumor, which suggested that the Celtics would take on Amar’e Stoudemire if the Knicks would take back Gerald Wallace and Courtney Lee. Zwerling reports that the teams had talks about such a swap over the summer, and that Iman Shumpert was also part of the package. In the latest version of the proposal, Kris Humphries replaces Lee, while Shumpert is not involved.
- The Celtics like the idea of Avery Bradley as their shooting guard going forward, and envision the soon-to-be restricted free agent as a $6MM-a-year player. Bradley’s development is why Shumpert is no longer a part of their talks with the Knicks. The Celtics don’t plan to be competitive in 2014/15, fueling their willingness to take on Stoudemire.
- The Celtics are “desperate” to trade Wallace, Zwerling hears.
- The Knicks continue to have interest in Humphries after having eyed him in the summer. They would have signed him if the Celtics had bought him out, but Boston wasn’t sure how rookie Vitor Faverani would perform and wanted to keep Humphries as insurance. Humphries maintains his interest in the Knicks as well, and he’s also keen on the Rockets as an option.
- Miles Plumlee of the Suns is another young center the Knicks might like, but not if it means parting with Shumpert, Zwerling writes.
- Zwerling points to a clause in Kenyon Martin‘s contract with the Knicks, revealed earlier this month by Mark Deeks of ShamSports, that nullifies his guarantee if he misses 15 games because of arthritis, repair to his patellar tendon, or progressive loss of articular cartilage.
- The Knicks‘ medical staff has OK’d Stoudemire for up to 20 minutes per game, about twice as many as he’s seeing.
- The Knicks are concerned about a lack of vocal leadership that can serve as a check on Carmelo Anthony‘s power among his teammates.
Poll: Should Celtics Trade Rajon Rondo?
A summer story line resurfaced this weekend with a report that the Knicks had attempted to trade for Rajon Rondo. The injured point guard is the final remaining link to the Celtics’ last championship team, and when Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett and Doc Rivers all exited this summer, rumors surfaced that Rondo could be next. Celtics GM Danny Ainge denies having conversations with the Knicks and insists that he hasn’t fielded calls about Rondo from any NBA team. Whether or not that’s true, it seems scuttlebutt about the four-time All-Star will persist.
Rondo is under contract for close to $12MM this season and about $12.9MM in 2014/15. It’s one of the most team-friendly deals in the league for a player of his caliber, but it only has two seasons left, and will likely have expired by the time the Celtics are ready to compete again. Still, Rondo’s the team’s best player, and he’s never played for another franchise. One opposing GM believes the Celtics would seek a major star in return for Rondo if they were to deal him away, so perhaps Ainge feels confident enough about the prospect of re-signing him in 2015 to pass up all but the most generous of trade offers.
What do you think Ainge’s strategy should be? Should he cash out the team’s best asset now while he’s under team control on a bargain contract? Or should he make Rondo the centerpiece of his rebuilding effort even though the point guard can bolt in two years? Let us know with a vote, and elaborate on your opinion in the comments.
Should the Celtics trade Rajon Rondo?
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Yes 55% (624)
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No 45% (502)
Total votes: 1,126
Offseason In Review: Phoenix Suns
Hoops Rumors is in the process of looking back at each team’s offseason, from the end of the playoffs in June right up until opening night. Trades, free agent signings, draft picks, contract extensions, option decisions, camp invitees, and more will be covered, as we examine the moves each franchise made over the last several months.
Signings
- Dionte Christmas: Two years, $1.31MM. Signed via cap space. First year is partially guaranteed for $50K. Second year is non-guaranteed.
Trades
- Acquired Malcolm Lee and the No. 29 pick in 2013 from the Warriors in exchange for the No. 30 pick in 2013.
- Acquired Eric Bledsoe and Caron Butler from the Clippers in exchange for Jared Dudley (to Clippers) and a 2014 second-round pick (less favorable of Raptors’ and Sixers’ picks; to Bucks).
- Acquired Gerald Green, Miles Plumlee, and a 2014 first-round pick (top-14 protected) from the Pacers in exchange for Luis Scola.
- Acquired Viacheslav Kravtsov and Ish Smith from the Bucks in exchange for Caron Butler.
- Acquired Emeka Okafor and a 2014 first-round pick (top-12 protected) from the Wizards in exchange for Marcin Gortat, Shannon Brown, Kendall Marshall, and Malcolm Lee.
Draft Picks
- Alex Len (Round 1, 5th overall). Signed via rookie exception.
- Archie Goodwin (Round 1, 29th overall). Signed via rookie exception.
- Alex Oriakhi (Round 2, 57th overall). Playing overseas.
Camp Invitees
- James Nunnally
Departing Players
- Michael Beasley
- Shannon Brown
- Jared Dudley
- Diante Garrett
- Marcin Gortat
- Hamed Haddadi
- Wesley Johnson
- Kendall Marshall
- Luis Scola
Rookie Contract Option Decisions
- Marcus Morris (4th year, $2.94MM): Exercised
- Markieff Morris (4th year, $2.99MM): Exercised
- Miles Plumlee (3rd year, $1.17MM): Exercised
Just call him Trader Ryan. New Suns GM Ryan McDonough aggressively used the trade market to set the club’s sights on the future, somehow managing to turn spare parts from a roster that finished with just 25 wins last season into two potential 2014 first-round picks and an intriguing young point guard. That’s on top of protected first-rounders for 2014 and 2015 coming their way from previous trades and Phoenix’s own picks. The Suns could have as many as six first-round picks in the next two drafts, including four for the ballyhooed 2014 class. All of it represents a tantalizing opportunity for the franchise to return to title contention within a few years, but the most significant change McDonough has brought about so far is a sharp focus on the future at the cost of wins in the near-term. The relative safety of the first-year honeymoon for a new executive no doubt plays a role in his willingness for the team to take its lumps this season. Still, predecessor Lance Blanks never seemed to fully embrace rebuilding as he tried to squeeze as much as he could out of an aging Steve Nash before last season’s effort to remain competitive without the two-time MVP fell flat.
“Future” is the keyword for the team, even as the Suns reconnected with a part of their past in hiring Jazz assistant Jeff Hornacek as head coach, replacing interim boss Lindsey Hunter. Hornacek had the misfortune of seeing his six-year playing tenure with the Suns end with a trade to the Sixers for Charles Barkley just before the franchise’s most successful season, but two decades later, he’s probably much more content with Phoenix’s trades this time around. The talent that exited wasn’t likely to help Hornacek win much this year, and with the promise of better days ahead and a front office that seems content to sacrifice the present, there’s not much pressure on the first-year coach for now.
The opposite is true for the team’s new point guard. The team and Eric Bledsoe failed to reach an agreement on a rookie scale contract extension before the October 31st deadline, setting him up for restricted free agency next summer. Bledsoe has never been a full-time starter in the NBA, and that surely weighed heavily on the team as it decided to pass on the extension. Bledsoe must prove that he’s capable of sustaining impressive per-minute numbers, which included leading all NBA guards in blocks per minute last season, per Basketball-Reference. He also finished fifth among guards in steals per minute in 2012/13, and while both rates are down to start this season, his offensive efficiency is way up, as he’s averaging more than 20 points and nearly seven assists with a 23.9 PER. It’s something of a double-edged sword for the Suns, who may rue the chance to lock Bledsoe up at a discount if he proves capable of producing at both ends, but Phoenix nonetheless has the ability to match any other team’s offer and plenty of cap space next summer. Waiting on a new contract for the 23-year-old seems a worthwhile gamble, and the price of Jared Dudley and a second-round draft pick that the team paid to acquire him from the Clippers seems a pittance.
McDonough and the Suns made the cost of bringing Bledsoe aboard seem even lower once they shipped Caron Butler’s $8MM contract off in another trade to a Bucks team that, like the Suns in 2012, is intent on rebuilding and remaining competitive at the same time. Neither Viacheslav Kravtsov nor Ish Smith may be of much benefit to the Suns, but the more than $5.5MM difference between their combined salaries and what Butler is making gave the Suns a savings that makes up for the majority of the rest of Michael Beasley’s contract. Thus, the Suns saw fit to part with one of their mistakes from 2012’s ill-fated attempt to compete and a player who once more ran afoul of the law this past summer. They waived Beasley, convincing him to give up $2MM of his guaranteed $9MM, and used the stretch provision to spread the remaining $7MM over four seasons. Beasley will remain a slight hit on the team’s books through 2016/17, but perhaps most importantly, the Suns excised a player they felt had failed to live up to their “standards of personal and professional conduct.”
Luis Scola engendered no such rebukes as he left Phoenix, and the Suns turned the player they claimed off amnesty waivers in 2012 into new starting center Miles Plumlee, a once-again useful wing player in Gerald Green, and one of its store of 2014 first-round picks. The selection the Suns picked up in this trade with Indiana might be the least valuable first-rounder in the team’s stable, since Scola figures to help the Pacers pile up wins this year, so Plumlee might be the gem of the deal for Phoenix. He’s one year removed from having been the 26th overall pick in 2012, and after the first nine starts of his career, he’s sixth in the league in blocks per game and 15th in rebounds per contest this season. The excitement over his ability greased the skids for the latest of McDonough’s swaps, as he sent Marcin Gortat, last year’s starting center, to Washington for yet another 2014 first-round pick and the injured Emeka Okafor.
Trading a serviceable starting center for a draft pick and a player on an expiring deal who might not be healthy enough to play at all this season would have been anathema under Blanks. Yet it’s a quintessential McDonough move that frees up playing time for a promising young player, doesn’t involve a significant financial commitment, and allows for the distinct possibility that the Suns may have multiple lottery picks among their haul of 2014 first-rounders. If the Wizards miss the playoffs but only narrowly so, the Suns could wind up with that lottery pick in addition to their own, which seems destined to be a lottery selection despite Phoenix’s on-court success early this season. There’s even a chance the Suns could have three lottery picks, though their pick from a previous trade with the Timberwolves would have to fall precisely at No. 14 for that to happen.
There’s so much talk of the draft picks coming Phoenix’s way that it’s easy to forget that the Suns already have the No. 5 selection from this past June’s draft. Injury has limited Alex Len to just 21 minutes so far in his NBA career, but he drew mention as a possible No. 1 overall pick before left ankle surgery knocked him out of predraft workouts. The former Maryland Terrapin is a raw talent, but a year ago he was putting up 23 points and 12 rebounds in a game against reputed defensive whiz Nerlens Noel, an even stronger candidate for the No. 1 overall spot in spite of his own injury. The Suns could face a dilemma if Plumlee sustains his performance and Len comes back to fulfill his potential, but having two promising young centers is a much more desirable problem than having none, and McDonough has already proven a willing and creative orchestrator of trades.
So much of what McDonough has done has seemingly been aimed at undoing what Blanks did last year. The use of the 13th overall pick in 2012 on Kendall Marshall was another of the ex-GM’s moves that went bust, and McDonough offloaded the point guard in the Gortat trade while using one of his other swaps to find a more successful young point guard in Bledsoe to replace him. The contrast between McDonough and Blanks shows up even in the methods they used to make their transactions. McDonough only signed one player who remains on the roster, in contrast to his five trades. Blanks wasn’t averse to a swap, making a pair in the summer of 2012, but he signed seven free agents for the team’s 2012/13 opening-night roster. Goran Dragic is the only one of those seven who remains, and executives from other teams suspect he’ll be the next player McDonough trades away. Trades are fun, but they’re not nearly as enjoyable for Suns fans as playoff victories are. McDonough has set the team up for the opportunity to once more have a winning team in a few years, but he’ll have to prove as skilled at the draft as he is at trades for that on-court success to come about.
Luke Adams contributed to this post.
Leandro Barbosa To Play In Brazil
Leandro Barbosa will sign with a team in his native Brazil, but the contract will allow him to move to an NBA team if he can find one that’s interested, tweets Fábio Alexio of the Brazlian website Lancenet.com.br (hat tip to Brian Mahoney of The Associated Press). The 30-year-old Barbosa will play for Pinheiros after spending last season with the Celtics and Wizards.
Barbosa tore his left ACL shortly before the trade deadline last season, prompting the Celtics to throw him into the Jordan Crawford trade with the Wizards for salary matching purposes. Barbosa never played while on the Wizards roster, and a report in May indicated he was rehabbing at Boston’s facilities, several weeks before his contract was officially up. Still, the Celtics didn’t wind up signing him this summer, though Barbosa’s brother Artur Barbosa, who doubles as his agent, said the Mavs offered the combo guard a contract. The agent also said the Bulls and Rockets had shown interest.
The longtime Sun was an October addition for Boston in 2012, but he wound up playing a fairly significant role as backup point guard, averaging 5.2 points and 1.4 assists in 12.5 minutes per game. The “Brazilian Blur” might have lost a step, but his outside shooting remains a threat, as his three-point accuracy last season came close to his 39.1% career mark.
Steve Nash Seriously Considering Retirement?
5:06pm: A source close to Nash who’s familiar with the point guard’s thinking tells Medina that the retirement chatter is “premature.”
3:39pm: Mike D’Antoni told reporters, including Mark Medina of the Los Angeles Daily News (Twitter link), that Nash hasn’t mulled retirement.
10:08am: Only a week and a half ago, Steve Nash expressed his intent to play out the remaining two years on his contract, in spite of a number of nagging injuries. However, according to longtime NBA writer Peter Vecsey (Twitter link), those health problems, including nerve root irritation, may be forcing Nash to reconsider. Vecsey hears that the veteran point guard is “seriously considering calling it a career.”
Given Nash’s recent comments about attempting to play this season and next, I’d be surprised if his retirement was imminent. He’s expected to be re-evaluated later this month, and for now, the Lakers are waiting on his return rather than exploring alternatives at point guard. Still, if the timetable for Nash’s return gets extended, or he suffers a setback, both he and the team will have to seriously weigh all their options.
As Vecsey’s tweet suggests, if Nash were to retire, he’d still get paid and the Lakers would receive cap relief next season. Nash is owed about $9.7MM for 2014/15, so if he’s cut anytime between now and August 31st, 2014, that amount can be stretched over three years. The Lakers’ cap hit in that scenario would be about $3.23MM annually from ’14/15 through ’16/17.
It’s also possible that the Lakers could receive even more cap relief if NBA doctors were to rule Nash medically unable to play for the next two years. Eric Pincus of the Los Angeles Times explained that potential scenario last week, noting that medical retirements are rare in the NBA.
Odds & Ends: Odom, Clippers, Kidd, Warrick
While there have been conflicting reports on how close the Clippers and Lamar Odom are to reuniting, it sounds like Clippers players are expecting the two sides to get something done. Asked by Sam Amick of USA Today whether he foresees Odom joining the Clips, Jared Dudley replied, “Oh, 100%.”
While Odom continues to work his way back into playing shape and the Clippers prepare for tomorrow night’s game in Minnesota, let’s check out a few odds and ends from around the Association….
- The Nets are still trying to get healthy and to get all their offseason additions working together, but one offseason addition – coach Jason Kidd – hasn’t been impressive so far, a veteran scout tells Howard Beck of Bleacher Report. “He doesn’t do anything,” said the scout. “John Welch does all the offense. Lawrence [Frank] does all the defense…. I don’t know what Kidd does. I don’t think you can grade him and say he’s bad. You can give him an incomplete.”
- In free agency, players typically like to secure longer-term deals, but that’s not beneficial when later seasons are non-guaranteed, writes Mark Deeks at The Score. As Deeks observes, a player like Omri Casspi could be stuck in no-man’s land next summer, since the Rockets will have until August to decide whether or not to guarantee the second year of his contract.
- Deeks also reports (via Twitter) that free agent forward Hakim Warrick is in China, working out for the Sichuan Blue Whales. If the audition goes well, Warrick is expected to replace former Rutgers big man Herve Lamizana, according to Deeks.
- Emiliano Carchia of Sportando passes along an Italian report suggesting that Justin Holiday, Jrue Holiday‘s brother, has turned down an offer from Italy’s VL Pesaro. Holiday was in camp with the Jazz after spending last season with the Sixers, and still appears to be searching for an NBA deal.
Offseason In Review: Oklahoma City Thunder
Hoops Rumors is in the process of looking back at each team’s offseason, from the end of the playoffs in June right up until opening night. Trades, free agent signings, draft picks, contract extensions, option decisions, camp invitees, and more will be covered, as we examine the moves each franchise made over the last several months.
Signings
- Derek Fisher: One year, $1.4MM. Signed via minimum salary exception.
- Ryan Gomes: One year, $1.19MM. Signed via minimum salary exception. Partially guaranteed for $75K.
Trades
- Acquired the No. 26 pick in 2013 from the Warriors in exchange for the No. 29 pick in 2013 and $1MM in cash.
- Acquired the No. 40 pick in 2013 from the Trail Blazers in exchange for cash.
- Acquired the rights to Szymon Szewczyk from the Bucks in exchange for Kevin Martin (signed-and-traded to Timberwolves) and cash (to Timberwolves).
Draft Picks
- Steven Adams (Round 1, 12th overall). Signed via rookie exception.
- Andre Roberson (Round 1, 26th overall). Signed via rookie exception. Earning 80% of rookie scale amount in rookie season, and 120% thereafter.
- Alex Abrines (Round 2, 32nd overall). Playing overseas.
- Grant Jerrett (Round 2, 40th overall). Playing in D-League.
Camp Invitees
- Diante Garrett
- Rodney McGruder
Departing Players
- Ronnie Brewer
- DeAndre Liggins
- Kevin Martin
Rookie Contract Option Decisions
- Reggie Jackson (4th year, $2.20MM): Exercised
- Perry Jones III (3rd year, $1.13MM): Exercised
- Jeremy Lamb (3rd year, $2.20MM): Exercised
There was a perception that the Thunder took a step back last season after reaching the NBA Finals in 2012. That idea is a little unfair — Oklahoma City still racked up 60 wins, good for the top seed in the West, and would have been favored against Memphis in round two with a healthy Russell Westbrook. Losing James Harden prior to opening night a year ago may have meant taking a step back in terms of overall talent on the roster, but the Thunder are still a loaded team, with two elite players in Westbrook and Kevin Durant.
The belief that the Thunder had fallen behind other Western Conference contenders only gained traction this offseason, based on the club’s relative inactivity. And while it’s true that OKC’s presence on the free agent and trade market was virtually nonexistent, that’s not necessarily the worst thing for a team coming off back-to-back seasons with a .700+ winning percentage. Like the Bulls, the Thunder could look forward to having a star point guard return to their lineup. And unlike many title contenders, OKC tweaked the edges of its roster by continuing to add talent through the draft.
When the Thunder traded Harden last October, the club had two major goals: Maintaining financial flexibility and adding young, controllable talent. Even without a new, expensive contract for Harden, the team’s cap flexibility was limited this summer. There was already so much money committed to salaries for 2013/14 that OKC couldn’t make a serious run at a shooter like Dorell Wright — the free agent wing reportedly received his choice of one- or two-year offers from the Thunder before opting for the Trail Blazers instead. OKC eventually settled for Ryan Gomes on a non-guaranteed contract.
While the Thunder’s proximity to the tax limited its options in free agency, the draft picks and young players acquired in that Harden deal represented the team’s best chance to upgrade the roster. In addition to using its own late-first round pick (traded up from No. 29 to 26) to select Andre Roberson, Oklahoma City used one of the first-rounders obtained from Houston to select big man Steven Adams, who has looked better than expected in the early going.
In addition to Roberson and Adams, 2012 draftees Jeremy Lamb and Perry Jones III appear poised to take on bigger roles after spending good chunks of last season in the D-League. While the duo’s frequent D-League assignments had some observers eager to write them off as busts, it looked to me like their time with the Tulsa 66ers was always part of OKC’s developmental plan. With Kevin Martin playing significant minutes in 2012/13, it made more sense for Lamb to get more frequent minutes and a more prominent role under the Thunder’s hand-picked coaches in Tulsa rather than sitting on the bench in Oklahoma City.
Of course, even with youngsters like Lamb, Adams, and Reggie Jackson expected to become a major part of the Thunder’s rotation, the team was reluctant to part with its veteran insurance. OKC’s apparent infatuation with Derek Fisher resulted in another guaranteed one-year deal worth the minimum salary. It’s not a major investment, and Fisher certainly isn’t the de facto coach that Juwan Howard has been in Miami in recent years. But presumably the Thunder would prefer to rely on the veteran point guard more for leadership than for crucial minutes in the spring.
Similarly, the Thunder continued to hang on to Kendrick Perkins, despite the team’s cap restrictions and Perkins’ dwindling usefulness. Amnestying Perkins would have allowed OKC to make a bigger offer to a mid-level-type shooter like Wright without worry of tax penalties. However, the cost-conscious Thunder seem reluctant to pay Perkins to play elsewhere, particularly if there’s a chance he could come back to haunt them for another Western team in the postseason. Personally, I’m unconvinced that Perkins still has the ability to make OKC seriously regret losing him, but perhaps ownership wasn’t comfortable with waiving him via amnesty.
The summer of 2013 probably isn’t one Thunder fans will be wistfully recalling years down the road. OKC didn’t land a huge free agent like the Clippers (Chris Paul) and Rockets (Dwight Howard), or pull off a big sign-and-trade like the Warriors (Andre Iguodala) and Timberwolves (Martin). The team didn’t even use the mid-level exception to add useful veterans like the Spurs (Marco Belinelli, Jeff Ayres). But by keeping their core intact and continuing to add complementary young pieces around their stars, the Thunder are ensuring they’re still very much a part of the championship conversation, and should remain a part of it for the next few years.
Southwest Notes: Asik, Mekel, Randolph
As the Rockets look to pull a half-game closer to the Spurs in the Southwest standings tonight, let’s round up a few of the latest notes out of the division….
- Speaking to reporters today, including Jonathan Feigen of the Houston Chronicle, Omer Asik indicated that he has just been “frustrated” about his role recently, but is looking forward to returning to the court and helping the Rockets win.
- It’s only a matter of time until the Rockets find a taker for Asik, according to Grantland’s Zach Lowe, who says a deal will likely happen after December 15th. Lowe also addresses a pair of hypothetical deals for Asik, involving the Pelicans and Hawks. In Lowe’s view, a trade centered around Asik and Paul Millsap would work so well for Houston that, if it were to happen, rival Western teams would hold it against Hawks GM Danny Ferry “forever.”
- Steve Kyler of HoopsWorld discusses a pair of Southwest teams in today’s NBA AM column, examining Mavericks offseason addition Gal Mekel and the Rockets‘ situation with Asik. According to Kyler, Houston is believed to be seeking either an impact frontcourt player or a combination of a frontcourt player and unprotected draft picks for Asik.
- In a recent piece for the Los Angeles Times, Paresh Dave outlined the details of the deferred payments on Zach Randolph‘s last two contracts. While it doesn’t affect a team’s cap, up to 25% of a player’s salary can be deferred. In the case of Randolph’s current deal with the Grizzlies, $9.9MM of his $66MM (15%) is deferred compensation.
NBA Execs Discuss 2014 Draft, Top Prospects
Following last week’s Champions Classic in Chicago, I asked Hoops Rumors readers which player would be selected first overall in the 2014 draft. While Kansas’ Andrew Wiggins received more than half the votes, the outcome wasn’t as one-sided as it may have been six months ago, with Jabari Parker (Duke), and Julius Randle (Kentucky) earning plenty of votes as well.
ESPN.com’s Chad Ford recently posed the same question to 39 NBA executives, and the breakdown of responses was similar to our poll — nearly half of those 39 execs picked Wiggins, but Parker and Randle got plenty of attention as well, and Dante Exum loomed as a dark horse. Here’s what some of the executives who spoke to Ford had to say about the top draft prospects for 2014:
A veteran NBA exec on Wiggins:
“I think he can be a player that plays a lot like Paul George does. He’s so smooth that at times it almost looks like he’s coasting. But when you watch closer, you just see the game comes so easy to him…. I’m not sure how we could pass on him if we had the No. 1 pick. The other guys might be more ready right now, but in three years, I think he’s the best player in this class.”
A general manager on Randle:
“I think he’s the surest thing in the draft. There’s nothing he can’t do and there just aren’t that many bigs in the NBA with that set of skills. He’s going to be a 10-time All-Star and will make a major impact on your team in Year One. Wiggins might have a little more upside and [Parker] is so attractive as well, but if you take someone else, you’re really risking your job.”
A different GM on Parker:
“I absolutely love him. I love guys who just know how to play. Very few players at Jabari’s age are so sophisticated about the game. You see how he’s reading the floor and how he’s thinking the game and you can’t help but get excited. I remember when some guys were wringing their hands about Kevin Durant. Does he play defense? Is he an elite athlete? I just saw a killer out there who would do anything to win. I see that in Jabari. Some will worship Wiggins’ athleticism. Some will pray to the altar of ‘big’ with Randle. But Parker’s my guy and I don’t see that changing.”
Another GM on Exum:
“Maybe I’m young and foolish, but I think Exum ends up being the guy everyone wishes they took in a few years. All of them are going to be great, but when you watch Exum, you see the ability to be a generational talent. My owner might kill me, but I think you take Exum, regardless of what the other guys do this year. Exum’s already proved it to me.”
