Atlantic Notes: ‘Melo, DeRozan, Ross, MCW

Carmelo Anthony will likely be a free agent next summer, and Justin Terranova of the New York Post reveals that Grant Hill thinks the Knicks’ unimpressive season might dissuade Melo from re-signing in the Big Apple:

“I think it could. He’s getting older and you want to be in a situation where you are going to win. And he came to New York, he got in the playoffs and now it’s almost like they are regressing. To go through a potential season with no playoff opportunity, it could play a role.”

Here’s more out of the Atlantic Division:

Lakers Notes: Gasol, Deadline, Tax

Despite a surprising 13-13 start to the season, the Lakers find themselves limping into their last game before the All-Star break, having lost eight of their last 10 contests. With a tough matchup against the Thunder tonight, the Lakers are surely looking forward to a week long vacation. Let’s round up the latest notes out of Lakerland..

  • Pau Gasol still feels the Lakers want him, even amid the specter of a potential trade to the Suns. Mike Bresnahan of The Los Angeles Times has the details.
  • Unlike years past, this season’s trade deadline might feature a major move by the Lakers, opines Dave McMenamin of ESPNLosAngeles.com. McMenamin observes that this is the first time in quite awhile that Los Angeles has been this far out of playoff contention, and he suggests their strategy at the deadline might change as a result.
  • In the same piece, McMenamin notes the repeater tax set to be instated this summer could push the Lakers to make one or more trades that would land them underneath luxury tax threshold. Along with Gasol, McMenamin sees Steve Blake, Chris Kaman, and Jordan Hill as players that could be moved to help the team shed salary.
  • Earlier today, we passed along news and notes on both Los Angeles teams.

Chuck Myron contributed to this post.

Odds & Ends: Suns, Bobcats, Pietrus

Executives from around the league say the Bobcats and Suns are the teams to watch with the trade deadline a week from today, tweets Marc Stein of ESPN.com. Both teams are buyers looking to improve their postseason chances, and Charlotte in particular has been involved in numerous trade rumors of late. Here’s more from around the Association:

  • A recent conversation with Nicolas Batum sold Mickael Pietrus on the idea of joining the Blazers, but Portland, with a full 15-man roster, declined the free agent swingman’s pitch to join the team, according to Chris Haynes of CSNNW.com.
  • Mike Vaccaro of the New York Post figures Mike Woodson has coached the Knicks for the last time at Madison Square Garden, since New York follows up Wednesday’s home loss to the Kings with a tough road trip after the All-Star break.
  • Dan Gadzuric has signed with Petrochimi of Iran, Sportando’s Enea Trapani reports. The 36-year-old is continuing his career overseas after retiring from the NBA this past fall.
  • Hawks first-round draftee Lucas Nogueira is headed back to Spain to rejoin Estudiantes next week, observes fellow Sportando scribe Emiliano Carchia. The 16th overall pick this past June has been in the care of Hawks doctors, who’ve treated the severe tendinitis that’s sidelined him since December.
  • The Rockets have sent Robert Covington to the D-League, reports Jonathan Feigen of the Houston Chronicle (Twitter link). The assignment will allow the rookie to take part in the D-League All-Star Game this weekend.

Trade Candidate: Brandon Bass

Brandon Bass became a hot commodity on the NBA trade market this week, when reports indicated the Suns, Bobcats, Warriors and Thunder are among several teams interested in trading for the Celtics power forward. While a follow-up indicated that Golden State is unlikely to be in the mix, it seems there’s no shortage of clubs seeking the 28-year-old with a reasonably priced contract that runs through next season. Bass is the Celtic garnering the most trade talk around the league as the deadline nears, according to Sean Deveney of The Sporting News, who initially reported the leaguewide interest. Celtics president of basketball ops Danny Ainge is usually active at the deadline, so it seems there’s a strong chance Bass will be playing for another team soon.

Bass makes $6.45MM this season and $6.9MM in 2014/15 as part of a three year deal he inked in 2012 to remain in Boston. The former second-round pick made his reputation as a physical presence off the bench for the Mavericks, and he blossomed into a part-time starter after signing with the Magic following their run to the 2009 Finals. He’s started more often than not since coming to the Celtics in exchange for Glen Davis soon after the lockout, but this season is the first since 2006/07 that he’s spent on a team seemingly destined for the lottery.

He makes sense as a role player on a contending team that needs to shore up its power forward position, and that’s apparently what the Rockets envisioned him doing for them when he was involved in Omer Asik rumors. The development of Terrence Jones would seem to have dissuaded Houston from revisiting the idea of trading for Bass. The 6’9″ Jones has a slightly larger frame than the 6’8″ Bass, and while neither he nor Jones has the three-point range the Rockets usually covet, Jones has been much more efficient. Jones has an 18.1 PER this season compared to the 15.1 mark Bass is posting. Jones is also cheaper, and while Bass could provide the Rockets with an intriguing bench option, the Rockets probably have no call for a reserve power forward who lacks an outside shot and makes nearly $13.5MM between this year and next.

Bass has been a defensive minus, as his teams have allowed more points per possession with him on the floor than when he’s been on the bench four of the past five seasons, per NBA.com. Some of that might be a function of playing when defensive stalwarts Kevin Garnett and Dwight Howard are sitting, but that’s not a factor this year. The Celtics give up 104.4 points per 100 possessions with him in the game compared to 101.6 points per 100 possessions when he’s not on the court. Boston also has a net rating of minus 7.8 when he’s in there, and only the Sixers and Bucks have worse net ratings as a team this year.

His rebounding is a weakness, too, particularly for any team that envisions him as a center. He hasn’t averaged as many as eight rebounds per 36 minutes in any of the past five seasons. Still, Bass earns his minutes. His PER of 14.9 since becoming a rotation-level player seven years ago is as close at it comes to 15.0, the mark of an average player. He’d be an upgrade over most bench guys in the league, and his contract, while pricey for that job description, is not entirely unreasonable.

The Suns view him as an alternative to Pau Gasol, but he probably wouldn’t be their first option if they can’t work out a deal with the Lakers, particularly given that GM Ryan McDonough is on the lookout for stars. The Bobcats have been particularly active in trade rumors this month, having been linked to Evan Turner and Greg Monroe, among others, and while Bass would be an improvement over starting power forward Josh McRoberts, Charlotte probably has other priorities.

The Thunder’s interest is curious, since they already have an off-the-bench banger in Nick Collison. The 33-year-old Collison is seeing fewer minutes this season than in any year since he was a rookie, and perhaps Oklahoma City is looking for an upgrade to Bass, a better scorer. Collison only makes about $2.6MM this season, so the Thunder would have to add more salary to the deal to entice the Celtics to take him on and to avoid going into the tax. Both Oklahoma City and Boston are in close proximity to the tax line, so if the teams hooked up on a deal, the salaries would have to align nearly perfectly.

There are clearly plenty of teams interested in Bass, but I’d be surprised if the Celtics can wrangle too much in return. Deveney suggested that a first-round pick could be in play, but I’m highly skeptical that Ainge will be able to command that. The Celtics are probably best served targeting a deal that provides salary relief and perhaps an undervalued young player they can develop.

L.A. Notes: Nash, Vujacic, Williams

Steve Nash tells Grantland’s Bill Simmons he’s considered the possibility that the Lakers will waive him this summer and use the stretch provision to spread out his cap hit for next season. If that happened, Nash, who wants to continue living in Los Angeles, would probably either retire or play for the Clippers if they have interest, Simmons writes. There’s more on Nash amid our look at a pair of Los Angeles teams in distinctly different places with the deadline a week away:

  • The Clippers were pleased with Sasha Vujacic while he was with them on a 10-day contract that expired last night, but they’ll wait until after the All-Star break to determine whether they’ll sign him to another one, according to Ramona Shelburne of ESPNLosAngeles.com (Twitter links).
  • Shawne Williams describes the reality check that his D-League stint this season represented, and he’s grateful to be back with the Lakers, as he tells Shahan Ahmed of NBCLosAngeles.com. The Lakers will probably hold off on deciding whether to give him a second 10-day deal until after the deadline, Ahmed writes.
  • Nash might have saved the Lakers plenty of money if he had walked away from the game earlier this season, but he’s still worth rooting for, Shelburne argues.

How Long-Tenured Execs Deal At Deadline

History is often the best teacher, and executives who have significant track records with their teams provide a clue about how they’ll act as this year’s trade deadline approaches. Some executives are well-known for swinging deadline deals, Rockets GM Daryl Morey chief among them, while others, notably Pacers president Larry Bird, seem loathe to dip into the fray.

I’ve examined the moves of each primary basketball executive who’s been with his team through at least three deadlines. That excludes long-tenured execs who’ve remained with their clubs for several years but are no longer running day-to-day affairs, like Kevin O’Connor of the Jazz and John Paxson of the Bulls. I’ve also held off from judging executives in Charlotte and Memphis, where it’s not entirely clear who’s making decisions.

I’ve given the term “deadline trade” a broad definition as any that takes place during February, when the deadline has fallen every year except 2012. That’s when the lockout-shortened schedule pushed it into March. For 2012, I’ve included March deals only. The executives are in order from busiest to least busy at the deadline.

  • Daryl Morey, Rockets (Six deadlines, 10 trades): No one swings deals at the deadline quite like Morey, who’s never failed to make at least one trade this time of year. Still, none of them have involved superstars, aside from a prematurely aging Tracy McGrady, whom the Rockets gave up in the three-team deal that brought Kevin Martin to Houston in 2010.
  • Sam Presti, Thunder (Six deadlines, eight trades): Presti made his controversial acquisition of Kendrick Perkins for Jeff Green at the 2011 deadline. A subtle 2009 swap with the Bulls that sent away the draft pick that became Taj Gibson in exchange for Thabo Sefolosha continues to affect both franchises.
  • Danny Ainge, Celtics (10 deadlines, 11 trades): Most of these trades weren’t headliners, as Ainge usually saves his most earth-shattering moves for the summer. The most noteworthy of the bunch is the Kendrick PerkinsJeff Green trade from 2011.
  • John Hammond, Bucks (Five deadlines, five trades): Hammond acquired the pick that became Larry Sanders from the Bulls without giving up much at the 2010 deadline. He’s made fairly noteworthy trades at the deadline the past two seasons, but the Bucks have little other than Ekpe Udoh to show for deals that sent out Andrew Bogut and Tobias Harris.
  • Billy King, Nets (Three deadlines, three trades): Last year was the first in King’s relatively brief tenure that he didn’t make a significant deal that sacrificed the future for the present. He gave up a package that included Derrick Favors and the pick that became Enes Kanter for Deron Williams in 2011, and acquired Gerald Wallace in 2012 in a much-maligned deal for the pick that became Damian Lillard.
  • Gar Forman, Bulls (Four deadlines, three trades): Forman fleeced the Bobcats in 2010 when he acquired a first-round pick that could become a late lottery selection this year, but the same day, he gave up picks that became Larry Sanders and Isaiah Thomas for little in return.
  • Ernie Grunfeld, Wizards (10 deadlines, six trades): Grunfeld sat out the first six deadlines of his tenure in Washington, but that changed in 2010, when he pulled off three trades, and he’s made a move at each deadline since. The Wizards netted little in exchange for their purge of Caron Butler and Antawn Jamison in 2010, and the only part of the team’s current rotation who came via any of Grunfeld’s deadline moves is Nene, who arrived in 2012.
  • R.C. Buford, Spurs (11 deadlines, five trades): The Spurs have been quiet at the deadline under Buford, as you might expect with a team that’s kept its core of Tim DuncanTony Parker and Manu Ginobili together for so long. The most significant deadline move might have been Buford’s first, in which he gave up a first-round draft pick that eventually became David Lee for Nazr Mohammed, the starting center on San Antonio’s 2005 title team.
  • Donnie Nelson, Mavericks (11 deadlines, five trades): Owner Mark Cuban clearly exerts influence, but Nelson has handled at least the day-to-day operations for the Mavs for more than a decade. Nelson showed his creative side when he included a retired Keith Van Horn in a move that brought Jason Kidd from the Nets in 2008. The procedure was later outlawed, but Kidd helped Dallas win the 2011 title, which probably absolves the loss of the first-round pick that became Ryan Anderson.
  • Pat Riley, Heat (Five deadlines, two trades): Riley has undoubtedly had a strong influence on Miami’s personnel ever since coming to the team as coach in 1995/96, but for our purposes we’ll count Riley’s moves since the 2008/09 season, when Riley left coaching for good and former GM Randy Pfund stepped down. His only deadline move of note was the acquisition of Jermaine O’Neal from Toronto in 2009, a deal in which he acquired the first-round pick that became Jonas Valanciunas. Riley later sent that pick back to Toronto in the Chris Bosh sign-and-trade.
  • Joe Dumars, Pistons (13 deadlines, five trades): Trading Greg Monroe or Josh Smith would go against character for Dumars, who’s made just one significant deadline swap. That move to acquire Rasheed Wallace in 2004 set up the team’s title run.
  • Mitch Kupchak, Lakers (13 deadlines, five trades): Kupchak has largely avoided deadline deals, and the Pau Gasol acquisition in 2008 barely qualifies, since it came on February 1st, nearly three weeks before deadline day. His only other deadline move of note was in 2012, when he traded for Ramon Sessions, but Sessions turned out not to be the answer at point guard and was forced out when Kupchak recruited Steve Nash the next summer.
  • Dell Demps, Pelicans (Three deadlines, one trade): Demps’ only deadline move was a controversial one, since the swap of Marcus Thornton and cash for Carl Landry added money to the payroll of a financially troubled franchise that was owned by the league at the time.
  • Larry Bird, Pacers (Nine deadlines, one trade): When Bird sent cash and a second-round pick to the Raptors for Leandro Barbosa in 2012, it was the first deadline deal he ever made. He took last year off, but unless the Barbosa deal was the start of a trend, don’t expect Indiana to get involved in any trades this year.

Central Rumors: Bulls, Pistons, Cavs

The All-Star break doesn’t officially begin until the end of tonight’s pair of games, but the Bucks are already mathematically eliminated from contention for the Central Division title. Milwaukee’s 13 and a half games out of the playoffs with 30 games to go, so it shouldn’t be too much longer before the team has nothing left to play for this season, which suggests changes are on the way with the deadline just one week off. Here’s the latest from the Central:

  • Bulls executive VP of basketball ops John Paxson says the team is unlikely to make a move at the deadline, as Joe Cowley of the Chicago Sun-Times observes.
  • Bob Wojnowski of The Detroit News figures the Pistons will continue to try to make the playoffs rather than sell off assets at the deadline, and he argues it’s the right course. If the Pistons fall back into the lottery and wind up with a top eight pick this year, there’s the chance the pick they owe the Bobcats could wind up being the No. 2 overall selection in 2015, as Wojnowski points out.
  • New Cavs GM David Griffin‘s relaxed approach in dealing with players differs from predecessor Chris Grant‘s “tough love,” as Sam Amico of Fox Sports Ohio examines.

Thunder, Other NBA Teams Eye Rudy Fernandez

The Thunder are one of multiple NBA teams with interest in four-year veteran Rudy Fernandez, reports Jorge Sierra of HoopsHype. The 28-year-old shooting guard is under contract with Real Madrid of Spain through 2014/15, and is set to make slightly more than $4MM next season. That means he’d probably be looking for an NBA deal worth around $5MM per year to make it worthwhile for him to terminate his Spanish contract early, according to Sierra.

The Thunder have their full mid-level exception available, but using all of it on Fernandez would put them into the tax. Since most teams are similarly without enough financial flexibility, the possibility of Fernandez returning stateside will likely be stronger in the summer than it is now.

It’s unclear whether Fernandez’s deal includes an NBA escape clause, so any NBA team interested in signing him may have to engineer a buyout. He’s averaging 13.0 points, 3.6 rebounds and 3.2 assists for Real Madrid, which has won 37 of its last 38 games.

Fernandez spent time with Real Madrid during the 2011 lockout, and he rejoined the club after the 2011/12 season, his last in the NBA. He’s put up 9.1 points, 2.4 rebounds and 2.2 assists per game over his NBA career, with his best numbers coming as a rookie with the Blazers in 2008/09.

Odds & Ends: Cavs, Jackson, Gordon, Ennis

The Cavs have won four straight since firing former GM Chris Grant. One of interim GM David Griffin‘s priorities was to improve the rumored chaos in the Cleveland locker room according to Sam Amico of FOX Sports Ohio (via Twitter). Amico says that Griffin told both Kyrie Irving and Dion Waiters they would not be traded, and urged the team to have fun and avoid stress (Twitter link), which could explain some of the team’s sudden positivity. Here are the rest of the notes from around the league:

  • Mark Jackson took some critical comments made earlier by Warriors owner Joe Lacob in stride, per Tim Kawakami of Bay Area News Group. Jackson said he “understands” why the owner is disappointed with the team’s performance, adding, with a laugh: “I stopped reading [Lacob’s comments]. I was getting depressed.”
  • Steve Kyler of Basketball Insiders said he wouldn’t be surprised if Ben Gordon wound up on the Suns before the upcoming trade deadline, in response to a tweeted question he received (Twitter link). This would fall in line with the Suns’ reported preference of landing a perimeter player.
  • Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim doesn’t think consensus top-10 draft prospect Tyler Ennis will enter the draft this summer, per Seth Davis of SI.com. “I think he knows and his father knows that he’s a really good college player. He has to become a better shooter and get stronger to go to the next level,” said Boeheim. “He’d go in the first round, but look at the number of first-round picks who are already out of the league in the last two years. It’s a huge number.” (hat tip to Adam Zagoria of SNY.tv)
  • Representatives from the Bulls attended a Eurobasket game to get a look at Nolan Smith, per David Pick of Eurobasket.com. The 25-year-old point guard spent two years with the Blazers, and was expected to join the Celtics for training camp this summer before heading overseas. Smith has averaged 9.9 minutes per game in his NBA career, and declined in nearly every statistical category last year.
  • Free agent Brian Cook is attempting to make an NBA return, according to a source for Shams Charania of RealGM.com (via Twitter). The 33-year-old has nine years of NBA experience, but he hasn’t played in the NBA since splitting time with the Clippers and Wizards in the 2011/12 season.

Raja Bell Announces NBA Retirement

After 12 NBA seasons and 774 combined regular-season and playoff games, Raja Bell has decided to officially retire from the league. Bell told Talkin Hoopz of his retirement in an exclusive interview.

At 37, Bell hasn’t played a game since the 2011/12 season with the Jazz. He had a falling out with coach Tyrone Corbin after that season, and the team eventually waived him after a lengthy standoff in the 2012/13 season. Bell had talked and worked out for NBA teams up through last offseason, but never landed another contract. While he was still looking for late season work last year, he says he’s past the point, physically, of answering the call.

“Earlier this year I shut it down. I’m 37, I have three boys, I do miss it, but physically it wasn’t realistic for me to keep training and keep putting my body through what I’ve been putting it through for the last 20 years,” Bell told Talkin Hoopz. “I’m enjoying retirement, and trying to find out what the next chapter is going to hold for me.”

Bell built a reputation as a great defender over a career that started as an undrafted free agent with the Sixers in 2000/01. Bell scored just shy of 7,000 points in his career for an average of 9.9 PPG, and was a career .406 shooter from three point range. His best years came with the Suns from 2005-2008, where he was named to the NBA All-Defensive First and Second Teams in consecutive years, while playing a major part in perennial playoff runs in Phoenix. Bell also spent time with the Mavericks, Bobcats, and Warriors.

According to Basketball-Reference, Bell earned approximately $36.6MM over the course of his NBA career.