Eastern Links: Cavs, Nets, Bobcats, Wallace
A 3-7 record is not what the Cavaliers had in mind for a season in which they’re facing owner Dan Gilbert’s mandate to make the playoffs, and the frustration is boiling up to the surface. Cavs players had a heated exchange during a players-only meeting Wednesday, according to Brian Windhorst of ESPN.com, and Dion Waiters was one of those involved, as Sam Amico of Fox Sports Ohio tweets. It remains to be seen whether the discord will result in a roster move, but Cleveland will probably be a team to watch when the trade deadline approaches. Here’s more on a few teams the Cavs are trying to overcome in the East:
- The Nets have recalled Tornike Shengelia from the D-League, the team announced. Deron Williams, Brook Lopez and Paul Pierce are all out for tonight’s game with the Clippers, so Brooklyn is likely making the move to shore up its depth.
- The Bobcats are hiring Matt Carroll for an apparent non-playing gig, tweets Rick Bonnell of the Charlotte Observer. The Pennsylvania native had an informal coaching role with the Sixers in training camp, and now he’ll join the team with which he spent most of his 10 seasons as a player.
- Bonnell also checks in with one of Carroll’s former Bobcats teammates in Gerald Wallace, who’s no longer the player he once was, even though his contract with the Celtics pays him as though he were. Wallace played a key mentorship role for Gerald Henderson, who re-signed with the ‘Cats this summer on a three-year, $18MM deal.
Offseason In Review: Portland Trail Blazers
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
- Dorell Wright: Two years, $6.14MM. Signed via cap space.
- Mo Williams: Two years, $5.42MM. Signed via room exception. Second year is player option.
- Earl Watson: One year, $1.4MM. Signed via minimum salary exception.
Trades
- Acquired the No. 31 pick in the 2013 from the Cavaliers in exchange for a 2015 second-round pick and a 2016 second-round pick.
- Acquired cash from the Thunder in exchange for the No. 40 pick in 2013.
- Acquired Thomas Robinson from the Rockets in exchange for the rights to Kostas Papanikolaou, the rights to Marko Todorovic, the Timberwolves’ 2015 second-round pick, and a 2017 second-round pick.
- Acquired Robin Lopez and Terrel Harris from the Pelicans in exchange for the rights to Jeff Withey (to Pelicans), the Knicks’ 2016 second-round pick (31-37 protected, to Kings), and the rights to swap 2018 second-round picks (to Kings). Harris was subsequently waived.
Draft Picks
- C.J. McCollum (Round 1, 10th overall). Signed via rookie exception.
- Allen Crabbe (Round 2, 31st overall). Signed via cap space for three years, $2.63MM. Third year is non-guaranteed.
- Jeff Withey (Round 2, 39th overall). Rights traded to Pelicans.
- Marko Todorovic (Round 2, 45th overall). Rights traded to Rockets.
Camp Invitees
- Dee Bost
- Richard Howell
- E.J. Singler
Departing Players
Rookie Contract Option Decisions
- Meyers Leonard (3rd year, $2.32MM): Exercised
- Damian Lillard (3rd year, $3.34MM): Exercised
- Thomas Robinson (3rd year, $3.68MM): Exercised
The summer of 2012 was about the arrival of star rookie Damian Lillard for the Blazers, while the headlines of 2013’s offseason were more about whether another star would stay. LaMarcus Aldridge gave conflicting statements to reporters about whether he asked GM Neil Olshey for a trade. The power forward entered the summer frustrated with the team after it finished its fourth straight season with a record worse than the one that preceded it. There were no shortage of potential suitors for Aldridge, who’s made the last two Western Conference All-Star teams, but Olshey wasn’t about to move him. Aldridge wants to play on a competitive team, but his remarks as camp began this fall indicated that he’s optimistic the Blazers can fit the bill after seeing the moves Olshey made in the offseason.
The Blazers again pounced on a team willing to give up a chance to strike gold with a young talent. Olshey had acquired the pick that turned into Lillard from the Nets at the 2012 trade deadline, and this summer he landed the player drafted immediately before Lillard, taking on Thomas Robinson from the Rockets in Houston’s rush to clear cap room for Dwight Howard. The price was a relative bargain for a player with such promise, with the draft rights to a pair of overseas players and two future second-round picks going to the Rockets in the swap. Robinson had a trying and tumultuous rookie campaign, having been traded from the Kings to Houston at the deadline, but it’s premature to assume he can’t produce. Robinson’s rate of 4.5 rebounds in 15.1 minutes per game last season is an auspicious indicator, and if he develops, he may even be a capable replacement should Aldridge force a trade or bolt in free agency.
Robinson’s acquisition was part of Olshey’s retooling of last year’s subpar bench. The Blazers gave up 1.8 more points per 100 possessions than they scored with Lillard, Aldridge, Wesley Matthews, Nicolas Batum and J.J. Hickson on the floor, per NBA.com. Portland surrendered 4.2 more points per 100 possessions overall, demonstrating that the reserves lagged far behind most other second units.
The Blazers used their lottery pick to help with backcourt depth, drafting combo guard C.J. McCollum, who’d drawn comparisons to Lillard. They brought in another player capable of playing both backcourt spots in veteran Mo Williams, who’s come in handy with McCollum out with a broken foot to begin the season. Olshey snagged Williams for about half of what I figured the Mark Bartelstein client would make when I examined his free agent stock in April. Williams had spent six of the previous seven seasons as a starter, and the 30-year-old even made an All-Star team as LeBron James‘ sidekick in Cleveland, so he’ll be the most significant weapon Portland brings off its revamped bench.
That’s in spite of having spent slightly more money to pry forward Dorell Wright from a handful of other free agent suitors. He led the NBA in both three-pointers attempted and made in 2010/11. A year later the Warriors felt they needed an upgrade at small forward, where he’d been the starter, so they traded him to the Sixers, who put him in a more fitting role as a bench piece. His 37.3% rate of success from behind the arc the past four seasons will help the Blazers, who finished 20th in the NBA in three-point accuracy in 2012/13.
Still, it wasn’t all about the bench for Portland this summer, as Olshey acquired a new starting center with a trade for Robin Lopez. The Blazers didn’t send anything other than second-rounders out in the deal, so the move amounted to an absorption of Lopez’s $5.9MM salary. Olshey used the largest chunk of the team’s roughly $15.5MM in cap flexibility to bring in a traditional 7’0″ center while allowing undersized J.J. Hickson to leave in free agency. Lopez isn’t nearly the rebounder that Hickson is, despite the three-inch height difference, but he’s better at rim protection, as Lopez blocked nearly three times as many shots per minute as Hickson did last season.
The offseason also entailed a purge of three former first-round picks whom Olshey inherited when he took the job. Nolan Smith, Elliot Williams and Luke Babbitt seemed destined to head elsewhere when Olshey declined to pick up their 2013/14 options in the fall of 2012, and while they managed to remain on Portland’s roster throughout last season, the team elected not to re-sign them. The league essentially validated Olshey’s decision not to wait any longer for them to develop, as none of the three made an NBA opening-night roster this season.
The Blazers are off to a hot start, and all appears well in Portland. Aldridge seems as upbeat as he’s been in at least four years, as Chris Haynes of CSNNW.com tweets, and while the 28-year-old remains non-committal about his long-term future, there aren’t any alarm bells ringing. Aldridge is under contract for this year and next, and short of the unlikely prospect that he’ll consider an extension, it’s not yet time for the team and the Arn Tellem client to negotiate. Olshey has a window of this season and next to show that the team is headed in the right direction, and it looks like he’s well on his way to doing so. The real test will be in how the Blazers can craft not just a playoff team, but a squad capable of competing for a championship. Aldridge probably won’t be satisfied with losing in the first or second rounds of the playoffs, and neither should Olshey.
Luke Adams contributed to this post.
California Rumors: Kobe, Pierce, KG, Warriors
It might be awhile before Lamar Odom is back on the court, though it sounds like he’s moving toward a reunion with the Clippers. A much bigger L.A. star is also making progress toward playing again, as we detail here:
- Kobe Bryant returned to practice today with the Lakers, reports Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports, though there’s still no timetable for when he’ll make it into a game for the first time since tearing his left Achilles tendon in April.
- Paul Pierce and Kevin Garnett remain in regular contact with Clippers coach Doc Rivers, but at one point this summer the ex-Celtics figured they’d both be following their coach to L.A., as Pierce and Garnett tell Marc J. Spears of Yahoo! Sports. Garnett and Pierce also expressed doubt that they would have been pleased to play in Boston without Rivers around.
- Warriors owners Joe Lacob and Peter Guber have made strides in turning the franchise into a team that didn’t have to make a sales pitch to convince Andre Iguodala to come aboard this summer, as Rusty Simmons of the San Francisco Chronicle examines. Lacob and Guber may face their stiffest test yet as they seek to build an arena in San Francisco.
- We covered more Lakers rumors earlier this morning in our roundup from the Pacific Division.
Odds & Ends: Heat, Smith, Akognon, Selby
In today’s mailbag, a reader asks Ira Winderman of the Sun Sentinel if Rockets big man Omer Asik might be a fit for the Heat. A suggested swap of Udonis Haslem and Joel Anthony for Asik wouldn’t work because Haslem can’t stretch the floor like Houston wants out of their power forward and even though Anthony could be a competent backup for Dwight Howard, the Rockets can do a lot better overall. More Saturday afternoon links from around the Association..
- Knicks coach Mike Woodson made his dissatisfaction with J.R. Smith over his latest Twitter trouble known to everyone, writes Ian Begley of ESPNNewYork.com. “Eventually, no team is going to want to deal with you,” said the coach.
- Chinese team Qingdao waived Josh Selby to make room for yesterday’s signing of Josh Akognon, according to Emiliano Carchia of Sportando. The former NBA and D-League player lasted just two games in China. Selby came to the Cavs as a part of the three-for-one deal last year that sent Marreese Speights to Cleveland.
- Akognon will make significantly more money with Qingdao than if he had signed with one of the several NBA teams that showed recent interest, writes Shams Charania of RealGM. With Qingdao, Akognon’s season will be complete and have him available to NBA teams by early February. Three NBA teams had been interested in him and would be more inclined to sign him near the trade deadline, a source said.
- The value of Pacers forward Danny Granger next summer hinges largely on what he does this season, but he has yet to get back on the court. Pacers coach Frank Vogel doesn’t sound sure of when the 30-year-old might return. “We know he’s going to be out for a while with his calf,” Vogel said, according to Michael Pointer of the Indianapolis Star. “We want to get him back as soon as possible, but we’re not going to rush it. There’s no need to rush it.”
- David West never seriously considered leaving the Pacers even though many felt that he could have gotten a larger payday than the three-year, $36MM deal he signed with Indiana, writes Moke Hamilton of HoopsWorld.
- In this week’s maibag, a reader proposes to Sam Smith of NBA.com that the Bulls use Luol Deng to pry Eric Gordon from the Pelicans. While New Orleans would like to move one of their ball-handling guards for a small forward, Chicago can’t afford to take on the risk of taking on the Indiana product given his sizable contract and attitude problems.
- Wolves forward Corey Brewer had nothing but positive things to say about Denver after facing his former Nuggets teammates, writes Jerry Zgoda of the Star Tribune. Brewer signed a three-year, $14.1MM deal with Minnesota this summer.
Texas Notes: Rockets, Howard, Mavs, Asik
Here’s a quick look at the Mavs and Rockets..
- The new-look Rockets and Dwight Howard are still searching for their identity together, writes Howard Beck of Bleacher Report. Even though Houston isn’t dominating, they’re still fairly pleased with the early returns. The Rockets are 6-4 heading into tonight’s game against Denver.
- Mavericks owner Mark Cuban believes Eduardo Najera, second season coach of the D-League Texas Legends, will make an excellent NBA coach. “I think being in the D-League has given him great experience and he recognizes a lot of the elements of what it takes to be successful,’‘ Cuban said. “He’s open-minded, he’s bright, he knows the game, he relates well to players, so he’s definitely got a chance to be a great NBA coach. “I know that’s in his DNA and that’s what he wants.’‘
- Omer Asik wants to be traded from the Rockets, but with a $5.5MM salary, Houston doesn’t have to move the center until they want to, tweets Steve Kyler of HoopsWorld.
Pacific Notes: Lakers, Shumpert, Gasol, Suns
Let’s head out West for a look at the Pacific Division..
- Steve Kyler of HoopsWorld (via Twitter) would be surprised if the Lakers didn’t have interest in Knicks guard Iman Shumpert. Unfortunately for L.A., they don’t have the kind of young impact big that New York is looking for.
- In his new book, Lakers forward Pau Gasol discusses the trade that brought him to Los Angeles and the trade rumors that have swirled around him ever since, writes Eric Pincus of the Los Angeles Times. “The last two season have been challenging and difficult. The constant trade rumors, injuries and coaching changes — from Phil Jackson to Mike Brown, from Mike to Bernie Bickerstaff and from Bernie to Mike D’Antoni — have been a lot to take in.“
- The new-look Suns are the top fast break team in the league and they have no intentions of taking their foot off of the gas, writes Paul Coro of the Arizona Republic.
Atlantic Notes: Nets, Shumpert, Kidd, Smith
The Nets can’t take anything for granted given the way they’ve been playing so far this year, so they must be happy to have gotten a 100-98 overtime win over the Suns last night. Joe Johnson had a rough evening overall, shooting just 6-of-19 from the floor, but he hit the big shots when they counted. The two-guard’s floater towards the end of regulation sent the game into OT and his teardrop at the final buzzer gave the Nets the W. Here’s more out of the Atlantic..
- The heated exchange between Iman Shumpert and Knicks coach Mike Woodson during Thursday night’s loss to Houston adds another layer of intrigue to the trade rumors swirling around the guard, writes Marc Berman of the New York Post. After the loss to Houston, Shumpert said there’s “nothing I can do about it’’ regarding trade talk and said he’s trying to “limit the distractions.’’
- On ESPN’s TrueHoop TV, David Thorpe blasted Nets head coach Jason Kidd, calling him the worst coach in the NBA. “He gets an F. He gets a 0. My wife could coach a team to a 29th ranking for that team. She doesn’t know much about basketball,” Thorpe said.
- Guard J.R. Smith, who will become even more crucial for the Knicks if Shumpert is moved for a forward, was hit with a $25K fine for his threat towards Brandon Jennings via Twitter, writes Berman. As Berman notes, this is far from Smith’s first incident to catch the attention of the league office. The guard inked a new three-year, ~$18MM deal with New York this past summer.
Odds & Ends: Jennings, Rondo, Shumpert
Pistons point guard Brandon Jennings admits basketball wasn’t his primary focus during the first four years of his career, but the free agent process this summer jolted him out of complacency, as he tells Marc J. Spears of Yahoo! Sports.
“I just wanted a new start,” Jennings said. “Seeing a bunch of my teammates leave, Monta (Ellis), J.J. (Redick), Mike Dunleavy, everybody, the coaching staff I’d been around for four years, everything was different. I felt like they were going in a different direction and I felt like I had do the same.”
Jennings considered signing his one-year qualifying offer from the Bucks to get to unrestricted free agency in 2014, but Milwaukee’s hiring of an unfamiliar coach in Larry Drew dissuaded him from that idea, Jennings says. Still, at least one beat writer doesn’t see him as Detroit’s point guard of the future, as we detail in our league-wide roundup:
- MLive’s David Mayo answers reader questions and expresses confidence that the Celtics will continue to make Rajon Rondo available, and that Pistons president of basketball ops Joe Dumars will keep trying to trade for the All-Star point guard.
- Iman Shumpert didn’t answer a question Thursday about whether he wants to stay in New York, as Ian Begley of ESPNNewYork.com notes. Marc Berman of the New York Post suggests some possible landing spots for the Knicks swingman.
- Wherever Shumpert lands, it probably won’t be in Minnesota, since the Wolves aren’t in on any of the trade talks involving him, tweets Darren Wolfson of ESPN 1500 Twin Cities.
- Andre Iguodala started thinking about joining the Warriors even as he and his Nuggets teammates were facing Golden State in the playoffs last season, HoopsWorld’s Alex Kennedy writes. Iguodala fits the needs of the W’s even more than Dwight Howard would have, posits Marcus Thompson II of the Bay Area News Group.
- Nets GM Billy King is optimistic about his team and coach Jason Kidd in spite of Brooklyn’s slow start, as he reveals in a Q&A with USA Today’s Sam Amick.
Clippers Nearing Deal With Lamar Odom?
10:38pm: A source tells Stein that a deal doesn’t appear imminent, but that he’d be surprised if it doesn’t happen at some point. Odom has put in a month of encouraging workouts, speeding up his original plan to sign in the second half of the season (Twitter links).
9:36pm: Free agent Lamar Odom met for almost two hours with Doc Rivers and Clippers front office officials today after practice, leaving Clippers players with the impression that the team will sign him soon, reports Marc J. Spears of Yahoo! Sports (Twitter links). The players were “shocked” to see him, and the 34-year-old looks like he’s in shape, Spears also tweets.
A report just yesterday indicated the Clippers, as well as the Lakers, maintain interest in the troubled power forward. ESPN’s Marc Stein and Ramona Shelburne wrote then that neither team had made recent contract with Odom other than to check on his well-being, but that appears to have changed after today’s Clippers meeting. The ESPN report indicated that Odom would have to prove he’s healthy both mentally and physically before either team would sign him, and that he was eyeing a comeback in the second half of the season. That timetable may have been accelerated.
The Clippers have an open roster spot and have reportedly been considering multiple options for filling it. They’re about $2.4MM shy of their hard cap for the season, but Odom isn’t likely to merit more than a minimum-salary deal.
A source tells Spears that Odom’s presence at the Clippers facility today was indeed shocking, but added that it was “good surprise” (Twitter link). It appears Odom, who faced personal and legal troubles this summer, including a DUI charge and rumors of drug use, could be back on the right path. He returned to Los Angeles last season after a tumultuous year in Dallas in which the Mavericks told him to stay away from the team for the last several weeks of 2011/12. Odom has played 12 of his 14 seasons for one L.A. team or the other, and though the Knicks, from his native New York, reportedly had interest over the summer, Odom seems committed to staying in the City of Angels.
Offseason In Review: Denver Nuggets
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
- J.J. Hickson: Three years, $16.15MM. Signed via mid-level exception.
- Timofey Mozgov: Three years, $14MM. Signed via Bird rights. Third year is team option.
- Nate Robinson: Two years, $4.12MM. Signed via bi-annual exception. Second year is player option.
Trades
- Acquired the No. 46 pick in 2013 from the Jazz in exchange for the No. 27 pick in 2013 and cash.
- Acquired Darrell Arthur and the No. 55 pick in 2013 from the Grizzlies in exchange for Kosta Koufos.
- Acquired Randy Foye from the Jazz and a 2018 second-round pick from the Warriors in exchange for Andre Iguodala (signed-and-traded to Warriors) and a 2018 second-round pick (to Jazz). Foye was signed-and-traded for three years, $9.14MM.
Draft Picks
- Erick Green (Round 2, 46th overall). Playing overseas.
- Joffrey Lauvergne (Round 2, 55th overall). Playing overseas.
Camp Invitees
- Reginald Becton
- Kyle Fogg
- Damion James
Departing Players
Rookie Contract Option Decisions
- Kenneth Faried (4th year, $2.25MM): Exercised
- Evan Fournier (3rd year, $1.48MM): Exercised
- Jordan Hamilton (4th year, $2.11MM): Declined
All was right in Denver after the first game of the playoffs last season. The Nuggets were coming off a regular season in which they’d won 57 times, the most since their ABA days, and they’d added another win in the opener of their first-round series against the underdog Warriors. In a few weeks, George Karl would be named Coach of the Year and GM Masai Ujiri would clutch the Executive of the Year trophy. Yet by the time the league announced those awards, Denver’s fortune had turned. The Nuggets only managed one more win in that series, and they suddenly had to deal with their ninth first-round elimination in 10 years.
More tough breaks followed. Ujiri departed for the Raptors, and Pete D’Alessandro, Ujiri’s top aide in Denver, became the new Kings GM. Other Nuggets executives fled as well, but the changes weren’t limited to the front office. The team parted ways with Karl, who had guided the team to three of its four best regular seasons since the merger but was responsible for seven of the first-round flame-outs. The shocking decision was tempered only by a wild offseason of coaching changes in which Lionel Hollins and Vinny Del Negro, who’d both won 56 regular season games in 2012/13, also lost their jobs. Still, Nuggets president Josh Kroenke reeled in capable replacements before the draft, hiring well-regarded Pelicans exec Tim Connelly as the new GM and Brian Shaw, a fast-rising assistant on the Pacers bench, as the new coach.
There was upheaval galore in Denver, but perhaps the most significant figure to leave was Andre Iguodala, who rejected Connelly’s four-year, $52MM offer and even more money from the Kings to sign with Golden State on a four-year, $48MM pact. The Nuggets, Jazz and Warriors turned it into a three-way sign-and-trade that facilitated Denver’s acquisition of Randy Foye, but the arrangement had more to do with Golden State and Utah than it did with the Nuggets. Foye can provide some of the outside shooting that Denver sorely lacked in 2012/13, and while Iguodala hardly looked like the Gold Medal winner he is last season, Foye doesn’t figure to come close to Iggy’s impact. It’s somewhat surprising that Connelly didn’t add a fifth year to Iguodala’s offer, a sweetener no other team could match. Still, the nine-year vet was clearly willing to take less to play with a team that has more star power and, as this spring’s results suggested, a better chance to advance deep into the playoffs. The loss to Golden State clearly continues to cast a shadow on the Nuggets.
Connelly affected plenty of other changes, swinging a draft-night trade with the Grizzlies that sent Kosta Koufos to Memphis in return for Darrell Arthur. The intentions of the deal were clear. Nuggets brass wanted to give JaVale McGee more playing time after he came off the bench behind Koufos while Karl was coach. There’d otherwise be little motivation for the Nuggets to give up a starter for Arthur, who hadn’t started as many as 10 games in a season since his rookie year in 2008/09. That’s especially true since Koufos is cheaper and has a partially guaranteed 2014/15 season, while Arthur has a player option for next year. The desire to maximize their four-year, $44MM investment in McGee surely fuels their interest in seeing him play, and with McGee out indefinitely with a stress fracture in his leg, Denver may have overplayed its hand with a trade it could regret.
The deal put the onus on Connelly to re-sign restricted free agent center Timofey Mozgov to provide depth. Ujiri had made it clear long before he skipped town that Mozgov was a priority, rebuffing trade interest in the Russian seven-footer last season. The deal seems like a fair market price for an intriguing 7’1″ center, even though he rarely played last season. He’ll be a couple weeks shy of his 30th birthday when the contract is up, but early returns, with Mozgov averaging career highs of 10.3 points and 4.6 boards per game, suggest the team’s decision on Mozgov was more sound than what its done with its other centers.
Denver made its most significant expenditure of the offseason on another player capable of manning the five spot. J.J. Hickson is more of a power forward, but he’s played plenty of center, including his role as the starting pivot for the Blazers last season. Portland GM Neil Olshey said publicly that he wanted an upgrade at the position this summer, irking Hickson, who’d resurrected his career while with the Blazers. He went from signing a one-year, $4MM deal in 2012/13 to a three-year pact with the Nuggets that will pay him more than four times last year’s contract. Hickson averaged 10.4 rebounds last season playing out of position, so his new deal is priced reasonably, though it was odd to see the Nuggets, with Kenneth Faried and Arthur at power forward and McGee and Mozgov at center, spend to acquire another big man. That’s led to rumors that Connelly could trade Faried this season.
The Nuggets didn’t just focus on the frontcourt this summer, acquiring Foye and Nate Robinson to play shooting guard. Robinson is a dangerous scorer, as he proved with a 34-point performance in the first round of the playoffs for the Bulls last season, but he’s also an inconsistent one, as witnessed by a zero-point, 0-for-12 effort during the second round. The 5’9″ Robinson nonetheless outperformed expectations that he would run afoul of defensive guru Tom Thibodeau, proving he was capable enough on defense to at least garner playing time. He’s inexpensive on a deal that pays him a little more than $2MM a year, but that slight raise on the minimum salary cost Denver its biannual exception, a tool it won’t be able to use next summer.
Denver is off to a slow start in 2013/14, which isn’t a major surprise given all of its movement. Once the Nuggets find their rhythm, they still probably won’t approach last season’s win total, especially with the absence of Iguodala and the injured Danilo Gallinari, as well as the potential for yet more significant changes to the roster. Connelly clearly isn’t of the belief that last year’s playoff loss was a fluke, so the Nuggets are a work in progress at this point. It’s hard to see exactly what Connelly’s vision for the franchise is, but Kroenke and company are probably more willing to tolerate regression this year than they were another banner regular season that led to a playoff defeat. Connelly will have time.
Luke Adams contributed to this post.
