Offseason In Review: Washington Wizards

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

Extensions

Trades

Draft Picks

  • Otto Porter (Round 1, 3rd overall). Signed via rookie exception.
  • Glen Rice Jr. (Round 2, 35th overall). Signed via minimum salary exception for two years, $1.31MM. Second year is partially guaranteed for $400K.

Camp Invitees

Departing Players

Rookie Contract Option Decisions

The pressure’s on in Washington. GM Ernie Grunfeld, like coach Randy Wittman, is entering the final season of his contract, and owner Ted Leonsis says he expects the Wizards to be a “playoff-caliber team” this year. That’s not quite a playoffs-or-else declaration, but it’s about as close as it gets. It would be surprising to see either Grunfeld or Wittman still on the job if the Wizards miss the postseason, and that’s evident in the trade the team pulled off just before the regular season began.

The news that Emeka Okafor‘s neck injury threatens to keep him out all season broke shortly after the Wizards traded him to the Suns. The Wizards had no doubt known already that Okafor could miss significant time, so Grunfeld pulled the trigger on a deal he’d been working on for a few weeks. The acquisition of Marcin Gortat, a replacement at center for Okafor, came at the cost of a first-round pick, a precious commodity these days made even more so by the likelihood that the pick will go to Phoenix this coming year, meaning the Wizards will miss out on a heralded draft class. The selection is top-12 protected for 2014, meaning there’s a disaster scenario in which the Wizards miss out on the playoffs and lose their 2014 first-rounder. The trade had a negligible financial impact, and Gortat’s on an expiring contract, so there’s a chance that come July, the Wizards will have nothing to show for having done the deal. That’s why it served to tighten the screws on a postseason mandate.

Still, not all of Grunfeld’s offseason moves were made solely with the present in mind. The Wizards committed a five-year maximum-salary extension to John Wall, banking on the notion that a brilliant second half of the season in 2012/13 is a harbinger of the point guard’s future performance. The five-year deal makes Wall the team’s designated player, essentially meaning Grunfeld and company are confident they won’t draft a superior talent either of the next two years. That’s probably a safe assumption, but it was nonetheless a risky move to give max money to a player who hasn’t definitively proven he’s worth it. That’s doubly so since the Wizards could have waited until Wall hit restricted free agency next summer to either do the same deal or match another team’s offer sheet that would have locked Wall up for only four seasons.

Wall was the first player eligible for a rookie-scale extension this summer to sign one, and the Wizards wasted no time getting their other major deals done, reaching agreements with Eric Maynor and Martell Webster on the first and second days of free agency, respectively. The Wizards re-signed Webster to a four-year deal for the full value of the non-taxpayer’s mid-level exception. It’s another potential overpay, especially considering Webster’s not in the starting lineup, but the sixth overall pick from 2005 is still just 26 years old, so he should still be producing at his current rate when his contract expires in 2017.

Maynor lost out to Reggie Jackson for the backup job in Oklahoma City, but he recouped some of his value when he helped shore up Portland’s bench after a midseason trade. Using the biannual exception on him somewhat limits the team’s flexibility for next summer, since, as the name suggests, the biannual can only be used every other year, but few teams make use of it as frequently as that. Like Webster, Maynor is a bench player and doesn’t figure to see too much time at the point behind Wall, but perhaps Maynor will see significant minutes in small backcourts alongside Wall.

The Wizards were fortunate in the lottery this past May, moving up to the third spot, though that luck was tempered by the weakness of the draft field. Grunfeld went with the hometown choice in Georgetown’s Otto Porter, a small forward with polish but limited potential. The team’s high-profile draft failures of the past, and former No. 6 overall pick Jan Vesely in particular, might have made Grunfeld hesitate to go with a bolder choice. Porter’s selection and the speed with which the team came to a long-term agreement with Webster is an odd juxtaposition, since they primarily play the same position. The team’s desire to make a playoff run this season also likely factored into their decision to draft Porter, since the 20-year-old was supposed to be able to contribute immediately. Of course, an injury prior to training camp caused him to miss all of preseason and the start of the regular season, so there’s been no immediate return on the team’s investment.

It’s possible that minimum-salary addition Al Harrington makes a greater impact than Porter does this season. Harrington missed most of last season with a staph infection, but he’s only a year and a half removed from playing a key role on a Nuggets team that made some noise in the postseason. He’s a stretch power forward who duplicates some of the same skills that Martell Webster has, but he offers Wittman a chance to field an intriguing lineup of Harrington, Webster and Bradley Beal, all of whom offer the outside shooting that Wall and the team’s centers don’t.

The Wizards might have hoped they could pencil Vesely in at power forward this year, but they instead began the season by declining his 2014/15 team option. The Wizards also did the same for former 18th overall pick Chris Singleton, further underscoring the need for Porter to at least hit the relatively low ceiling most draft analysts predicted for his career.

Wittman is already drawing mention as perhaps the coach most likely to meet an end to his tenure at midseason, and while Grunfeld seems like a safer bet to at least finish the season, these are nervous times in the capital city. The Wizards are married to Wall and Webster for years to come, and Nene‘s contract doesn’t run out until 2016, but next summer represents a chance for Leonsis to green-light major changes to the roster. If the Wizards on the court look different this time next year, expect the Wizards in the executive suite to have new faces, too.

Luke Adams contributed to this post.

Poll: Will Suns Trade Goran Dragic?

The Suns have made a number of major trades since the end of the 2012/13 season, but arguably none were bigger than the three-way deal that sent Eric Bledsoe to Phoenix. In Bledsoe, the Suns acquired a player capable of being a starting NBA point guard, and one with star upside.

While the trade itself was a coup for the Suns, skeptics immediately questioned how Bledsoe would fit with incumbent point guard Goran Dragic, the club’s most productive player last season. Team executives insisted the two players could coexist in Phoenix’s backcourt, but there were rumblings that Dragic, an acquisition of the old regime, could be shipped out by new GM Ryan McDonough.

McDonough denied that he was interested in moving Dragic, and things got a little more interesting when the Suns failed to work out an extension with Bledsoe last week. That means the former Clipper will be a restricted free agent next summer, and will likely be in line for a much larger salary than the $7.5MM being earned annually by Dragic. I wouldn’t expect Phoenix to let Bledsoe walk, but it sounds like a sign-and-trade isn’t out of the question, if the price tag gets too high.

Keeping both Bledsoe and Dragic long-term doesn’t make much sense for the Suns, since each player represents a valuable asset that could be turned into a productive piece at another position. Still, that doesn’t mean that the club won’t ride out the 2013/14 season with both players still in tow.

What do you think? Will Dragic be the next veteran player moved by the Suns, or will he stay put through this season’s trade deadline?

Will the Suns trade Goran Dragic by the deadline?

  • Yes 64% (422)
  • No 36% (238)

Total votes: 660

Western Notes: Suns, Aldridge, Thunder, Kings

No team except perhaps the Sixers was viewed as more likely to tank the 2013/14 season than the Suns, who shipped out Luis Scola over the summer and traded Marcin Gortat just days before the regular season began. But team president Lon Babby takes issue with the idea that Phoenix is intentionally trying to lose games, as he tells Sean Deveney of the Sporting News.

“There is a key difference between acknowledging that you’re rebuilding, which we are, and some notion that you’re not trying to succeed,” Babby said. “Anybody in this business, because you’re competitive, and you have a competitive nature, it is not going to do anything but give your heart and soul to try to win every night.”

It may be an question of semantics, but Babby’s comments, along with the strong starts to the season for the Sixers and Suns, are a reminder that while a front office may put a team in position to lose games, the players on the court are certainly trying to win.

Here’s more from around the West:

  • Rival team executives will continue to monitor LaMarcus Aldridge‘s situation in Portland, but the Blazers forward tells Sam Amick of USA Today that he has no desire to be moved. Asked about his current attitude, Aldridge replied: “It’s not ‘If there’s a better deal, then get me out of [Portland] or take that.’ It’s ‘We’re here. Let’s win, and let’s try to have the best season that we can.'” Amick adds that there’s a league-wide belief that GM Neil Olshey wouldn’t even consider an offer for Aldridge unless it included at least an All-Star player, among other things.
  • Responding to comments made by ESPN’s Bill Simmons, Oklahoman contributor Jon Hamm rebuts the idea that the Thunder need to become a taxpaying team to win the title.
  • On the heels of a 19-point outing from Ben McLemore, Kings coach Michael Malone tells Jason Jones of the Sacramento Bee that the rookie guard is “a big part of our future.”

Odds & Ends: Bynum, Deng, Nets, D-League

Andrew Bynum had the best game of his first week with the Cavaliers last night, scoring 10 points and blocking three shots in 18 minutes. While he’s starting to move better, he told reporters that he doesn’t think his explosiveness will come back, according to Sam Amico of FOX Sports Ohio. Bynum added that he’s having “little sharp” pains in his knees here and there. The big man’s status is worth watching over the next two months, since the Cavs will have to guarantee him another $6MM if he’s on the roster beyond January 7th.

Here are a few more odds and ends from around the NBA:

  • ESPN.com’s Marc Stein has weighed in with eight bold predictions relating to the NBA season. Among them: This will be Luol Deng‘s last season with the Bulls, Gordon Hayward will get a max offer sheet next summer, Jerry Sloan will replace Tyrone Corbin as the Jazz head coach, and veterans like Lamar Odom, Stephen Jackson, Baron Davis, and Jason Collins will return to the NBA.
    In his latest column for Grantland, Zach Lowe takes an extended and informative look at restricted free agency. Lowe concludes that the current CBA provides little downside for teams who prefer to pass on extensions for fourth-year players in favor of letting them hit the open market.
  • The Nets are working to turn their D-League affiliate, the Springfield Armor, into a contending team, while also developing players and coaches, as NetsDaily details.
  • Speaking of the D-League, Mark Porcaro of Secret Rival has training camp rosters for each of the league’s 17 clubs, based on what’s been reported and announced so far. Porcaro is also keeping tabs on where last months’ NBA camp invitees are landing.

Offseason In Review: Charlotte Bobcats

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

Trades

  • None

Draft Picks

  • Cody Zeller (Round 1, 4th overall). Signed via rookie exception.

Camp Invitees

Departing Players

Rookie Contract Option Decisions

If you want to make an argument against the benefits of tanking in the NBA, pointing to the Charlotte Bobcats would be a good place to start. Despite finishing in the bottom three of the NBA standings four times since 2004/05, the Bobcats haven’t had much luck in the draft lottery or the draft itself.

After winning 18 games in ’04/05, Charlotte landed the fifth pick and drafted Raymond Felton immediately after two other point guards (Deron Williams, Chris Paul) had come off the board. In 2006, the Bobcats nabbed the third pick and selected Adam Morrison, one spot after LaMarcus Aldridge was drafted. Charlotte set an NBA-record for futility in the lockout-shortened 2011/12 season, but missed out on consensus first overall pick Anthony Davis and settled for Michael Kidd-Gilchrist at No. 2. Most recently, the 21-win Bobcats used the fourth pick in the 2013 draft on Cody Zeller.

This brief trip through the team’s recent history illustrates in large part why the Bobcats’ rebuilding process has been long and laborious. The team has been neither lucky nor particularly shrewd when it comes to the draft, having narrowly missed out on several franchise-altering players, and passing on others. It has left the team in a tough spot — there’s plenty of young talent on the roster, including players like Kemba Walker, Bismack Biyombo, Kidd-Gilchrist, Zeller, and others. But none of those guys are likely to develop into stars, meaning the club will face some tough decisions on exactly how much to pay to keep those players when their rookie contracts end.

On the plus side, while the Bobcats haven’t been entirely successful in the draft, the club is at least reducing the number of bad contracts clogging its cap. DeSagana Diop‘s deal finally came off the books this summer, while Tyrus Thomas‘ was forcibly removed (via amnesty). The team still has one year left on Ben Gordon, who will earn $13MM+, but that was the price Charlotte paid to obtain a Pistons first-round pick that could ultimately become very valuable.

The absence of those overpriced contracts and the abundance of rookie deals on the Bobcats’ cap meant that the team had room to make a splash this summer. It’s unclear if there was a deal out there for Charlotte similar to the one Utah made with Golden State, which landed the Jazz a pair of first-round picks along with a pair of bad contracts (Richard Jefferson, Andris Biedrins). But if there was, it’s not hard to figure out why the Bobcats didn’t choose that path. For a team that has spent the last several years getting unlucky in the draft lottery and waiting for overpriced players to come off the books, the idea of doubling down by taking on more toxic contracts and acquiring more draft picks probably looked less appealing than pursuing free agents.

The Bobcats’ pursuit of free agents led them to Al Jefferson, who immediately becomes the biggest offensive threat the team has ever had in the low post. The price for Jefferson – $13.5MM annually for three years – was a little high, but I imagine it had to be to lure him to Charlotte. The Bobcats were also able to make a couple other solid buys in free agency, bringing back Gerald Henderson and Josh McRoberts for fair prices. In the draft, the Bobcats passed on Nerlens Noel‘s upside in favor of Zeller’s ability to contribute right away, another decision that reflected the club’s desire to improve in the short-term.

Still, while the acquisition of Jefferson and continued improvement from Charlotte’s young players should add up to more wins in 2013/14, this still doesn’t look like a playoff team, which likely means a spot in the NBA’s no-man’s land — somewhere between a postseason berth and a top-five pick. Depending on how the Bobcats, Pistons, and Blazers perform this season, Charlotte could have as many as three first-round picks in 2014, which is good news, considering how strong the draft is expected to be. But the addition of Jefferson means the club is probably just good enough not to be involved in the Andrew Wiggins sweepstakes, which could leave the Bobcats where they’ve been for the last several years: Narrowly missing out on the opportunity to draft an impact player.

It’s hard to blame the Bobcats for not deliberately tanking the season, especially after owner Michael Jordan publicly suggested it’s not a strategy he believes in. But after a couple seasons among the NBA’s bottom-dwellers, the timing of the decision to improve now is unfortunate. There are several prospects projected to be difference-makers in the 2014 draft, meaning that even a team with the fourth or fifth pick could land a star. In other words, if there was ever a time to have a bad season, this is that time.

On a move-by-move basis, you could make the case that the Bobcats had a strong offseason. Jefferson is probably a bit overpaid, and Zeller was a surprising pick at No. 4 overall, but the Bobcats added and retained more talent than they lost, and will be better this season than they were a year ago. Although the club’s summer approach may not be in its best long-term interests, the strategy wasn’t surprising, considering how the last several years have played out in Charlotte.

Michael Redd, Dan Gadzuric To Retire From NBA

TUESDAY, 11:43am: Redd will officially announce his retirement from the NBA on Wednesday in Milwaukee, when the Bucks host the Cavaliers, according to a release from the team.

MONDAY, 4:40pm: Former Bucks Michael Redd and Dan Gadzuric are done playing in the NBA, according to Gery Woelfel of the Racine Journal Times (Twitter links).

While Redd hasn’t announced his retirement, Woelfel hears his NBA career is over.  The 34-year-old shooting guard, who was out of the league last season, turned down a camp invite last month, which would indicate that he is ready to transition into a post-basketball life.  Redd spent the bulk of his career in Milwaukee, where he averaged 20.0 PPG and 4.0 RPG while shooting 38.3% from downtown over the course of eleven seasons.  His final NBA season was spent in Phoenix where he put up a less impressive 8.2 PPG in 15.1 minutes per contest.

Gadzuric, 35, spent his first eight years in Milwaukee where he put up 4.9 PPG and 4.5 RPG.  The big man, who has been out of the NBA since his two game stint with the Knicks in 2011/12, is thinking about playing in Puerto Rico, according to Woelfel.

Redd was taken with the 43rd overall pick in the 2000 draft and wound up being one of the top talents to come out of a class that was ripe with disappointments.  The Ohio State product was the only player out of that draft to make an All-Star team and an All-NBA team over the course of his career.

Atlantic Notes: Sixers, C’s, Raptors, Knicks

Let’s round up a few Tuesday morning items from around the Atlantic Division, where the Sixers still sit atop the standings despite last night’s loss to the Warriors….

Contract Details: Sixers, Price, Stone, Christmas

Mark Deeks of ShamSports.com has updated his salary database to account for every NBA team’s opening night roster, and in the process has provided several contract details that had previously been unreported. Let’s round up Deeks’ new info, which has now been incorporated into our list of non-guaranteed salaries and our schedule of guarantee dates….

  • Daniel Orton and Brandon Davies were late additions to the Sixers‘ roster, but they received the same kind of deals that many of the team’s other offseason signees did: Non-guaranteed four-year pacts. Hollis Thompson, meanwhile, landed a $35K guarantee for this season on his four-year contract.
  • When Chuck Myron of Hoops Rumors listed the camp cuts who had been owed guaranteed money, he noted that the guarantees for Vander Blue, Khalif Wyatt, and Richard Howell were still unknown. Deeks fills in those amounts, reporting that the Sixers paid Blue $55K and Wyatt $35K. Howell received $50K from the Trail Blazers.
  • Unlike most players on non-guaranteed contracts, A.J. Price won’t have to wait until the new year for his salary to become fully guaranteed. He’ll get his full minimum salary as long as he’s not waived by the Timberwolves on or before December 8th.
  • Julyan Stone‘s two-year contract with the Raptors was initially guaranteed for $50K, but that amount was bumped up to $100K when he earned a spot on the regular season roster.
  • Dionte Christmas (Suns) and Henry Sims (Cavaliers) both received partial guarantees worth $50K.
  • The Hawksagreement with Cartier Martin is just for one year, for a fully non-guaranteed minimum salary.

Odds & Ends: Perkins, Gay, Walton

With the season barely underway, should teams getting off to a slow start be concerned?  HoopsWorld ran down the league’s winless club and assessed their own level of concern.  The writing staff isn’t too worried about the Jazz as they’re anxiously awaiting the return of highly touted point guard Trey Burke.  The level of concern for the 0-2 Nuggets is at medium since they’re not at full strength at this stage.  Meanwhile, it could be time to worry in D.C. as the Wizards are 0-3 and can’t blame a John Wall injury for their slow start.  Here’s tonight’s look around the league as the Celtics failed to get in the win column..

  • Kendrick Perkins took to Twitter tonight to clear the air on his tweet from earlier today where he said it was “time for a change“.  “Let me clear something up. I wasn’t talking about leaving OKC. I was talking to some of my family members. I love playing here,” tweeted the Thunder big man.
  • Rudy Gay is working to recapture his budding stardom with the Raptors, writes Shams Charania of RealGM.  Meanwhile, the forward refutes any notion that the Grizzlies were a better and more savvy team without him on the court.
  • The Los Angeles D-Fenders, the D-League affiliate for the Lakers, announced that Luke Walton will join the team as a player development coach.  Walton says that he still hopes to continue his playing career and his arrangement with the D-Fenders will allow him to work out with the team and stay in shape.
  • Bucks rookie Giannis Antetokounmpo readily admits that he has outpaced his own expectations for his basketball career, writes Sean Deveney of Sporting News.  “Let me tell you the truth: No. I did not think I would be in the NBA, it was just a dream. How could I think this would happen? And happen now? But I am here now. So I am happy,” said the rookie.

Hoops Links: Mekel, Jack, Sixers, Koufos, Nets

On this date in 1960, Philadelphia Warriors center Wilt Chamberlain set an NBA record for the most free throw attempts in a game with none made when he missed all ten of his tries against Detroit.  Chamberlain’s dubious record would last more than 40 years before another dominant center, Shaquille O’Neal, broke it by missing all eleven free throw attempts against Seattle on December 8, 2000.

Here at Hoops Links, we know the importance of converting at the charity stripe.  Got a great basketball blog post that you want featured in next week’s edition?  Email it to me at HoopsLinks@gmail.com.  Here’s this week’s look around the basketball blogosphere..

If you have a suggestion for this feature, Zach can be reached here.