Central Notes: Love, Allen, Stuckey, Bucks

The reports are pouring in fast and furious on the negotiations between the Cavaliers and Timberwolves for Kevin Love. While conflicting rumors persist, Ken Berger of CBS Sports simplifies it for us in his latest piece. Quite basically, LeBron James wants Love in Cleveland and Minnesota wants Andrew Wiggins for Love. And LeBron usually gets what he wants. Beyond that, Berger points out that these negotiations are a sign of things to come with regard to the leverage James holds within the Cleveland organization.

Grantland’s Zach Lowe weighs in on the talks as well (via Twitter), suggesting that the Wolves should immediately pull the trigger if Wiggins is on the table. However, as Chris Mannix of Sports Illustrated tweets, the “general feeling” at summer league was that Minnesota would require more than just Wiggins in a deal for their coveted superstar.

Here are some additional notes from the Central division on Thursday night:

  • Mike Miller said in an ESPN Radio appearance that he’s selling Ray Allen on becoming the latest former Heat player to join the Cavaliers, but Allen is still considering retirement and has spoken with multiple teams this month, sources tell Brian Windhorst of ESPN.com.
  • The Pacers stayed in touch with Rodney Stuckey all month, the guard told Candace Buckner of the Indianapolis Star today, seemingly countering a report that made it seem as though the team shied away from him after contacting him early in free agency. Stuckey agreed Wednesday to a one-year deal with Indiana for the minimum.
  • Bucks co-owner Wesley Edens revealed the franchise’s minority share owners on Thursday, a list that did not include Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers, writes Charles F. Gardner of the Journal Sentinel. Edens didn’t rule out potential for Rodgers’ involvement in the franchise, however. The list contains six local names, corresponding with a May report that the ownership duo of Edens and Marc Lasry hoped to add five to ten investors.
  • Jesse Biancarte of Basketball Insiders examines what the loss of Lance Stephenson will mean for the Pacers next season, opining that Indiana has the pieces to maintain their dominance on defense but will struggle to replace the Cincinnati product on the other end of the floor.

And-Ones: Boozer, Blair, Williams, Mavs

With the Bulls using their amnesty provision on Carlos Boozer on Tuesday, only seven NBA players remain amnesty-eligible as noted in our 2014 Amnesty Primer. But the five teams that haven’t used the provision will have to wait until next summer, as Wednesday marked the deadline for this offseason.

Boozer was snatched up by the Lakers earlier today for a manageable price of $3.25MM, though as ESPN’s Marc Stein reports (via Twitter), the Duke product had strong interest in the Rockets had he gone unclaimed and cleared waivers. Meanwhile, Eric Pincus of the L.A. Times speculates that Boozer’s presence might signal a more complimentary role for rookie Julius Randle unless the playoff-hungry Lakers consider June’s No. 7 pick a small forward (Twitter links are here).

Here’s more from around the league on Thursday night:

Chuck Myron contributed to this post.

Mavs Re-Sign Devin Harris

JULY 17TH, 6:35pm: The deal is official, the Mavericks announced via a team release.

JULY 5TH, 8:50pm: Dwain Price of The Fort Worth Star-Telegram (Twitter link) is reporting that Harris’ deal is the same as the 3-year, $12MM that Patty Mills received from the Spurs.

2:16pm: A source tells Jody Genessy of the Deseret News (on Twitter) that the deal is actually four years in length and worth $16MM.

1:42pm: Harris’ deal will be worth roughly $9MM over three seasons, hears Tim McMahon of ESPNDallas.com (Twitter link).

1:15pm: The Mavericks and Devin Harris are finalizing a three-year deal, reports Marc Stein of ESPN.com (via Twitter). Re-signing Harris became the team’s top priority after they traded Jose Calderon to the Knicks, Stein mentions.

Harris joined the Mavs on a one-year, minimum salary pact last season and performed well for Dallas coming off the bench. He averaged 7.9 points and 4.5 assists in 20.5 minutes per contest. Although those numbers are a far cry from the figures he was able to put up in his All-Star 2008/09 campaign, he proved himself as a still-capable contributor.

Stein doesn’t mention how much the contract will be worth, but it’s likely more than the minimum Harris agreed to last season. Of course, no deal can become official until July 10, when the league-wide moratorium on signings and trades expires.

Suns, Eric Bledsoe Far Apart In Talks

5:42pm: The Suns’ current offer to Bledsoe is four years, $48MM, tweets Broussard, who adds that the point guard is insistent on a max offer of five years, $80MM.

10:40am: The Suns are offering Eric Bledsoe much less than the maximum salary he’s likely seeking as the team and agent Rich Paul aren’t moving anywhere close to agreement on a new contract for the restricted free agent, reports Chris Broussard of ESPN.com. Phoenix’s insistence that it will match any offers for Bledsoe has effectively deterred would-be suitors, as Broussard details. The Suns have so far refused to discuss sign-and-trade scenarios, but rival teams nonetheless continue to believe the Suns would trade him, given Phoenix’s acquisition of Isaiah Thomas and decision to draft Tyler Ennis. Both are point guards, like Bledsoe.

The Bucks had reportedly been pursuing Bledsoe earlier this month, and while it seems they discussed an offer sheet with him, it isn’t clear whether they’re still in the mix nearly two weeks later. Broussard makes mention of the Bucks in his story, and he also points to the Rockets and Kings as teams in need of a point guard, but it appears as though there’s no sign of legitimate interest from either Houston or Sacramento.

The Jazz had reportedly been preparing to make an offer to Bledsoe, but they’ve largely exhausted their cap flexibility on new deals for Gordon Hayward and Trevor Booker. Some around the league apparently believed Rich Paul’s meetings with teams interested in LeBron James were geared more toward selling those clubs on Bledsoe. The Cavs, Mavs, Lakers and Bulls were among the teams that reportedly met with Paul.

It’s not uncommon for negotiations to become drawn out between marquee restricted free agents and their incumbent teams. The Timberwolves and Nikola Pekovic didn’t reach agreement until August 14th last year. Bledsoe is the top restricted free agent on the Hoops Rumors Free Agent Power Rankings.

Paul Pierce Signs With Wizards

JULY 17TH: The deal is official, the team announced.

“We are very happy to welcome Paul to our organization and add his championship experience and history of clutch play to our team,” Wizards GM Ernie Grunfeld said. “He will be a good fit alongside our young, dynamic backcourt while his presence and leadership will make a difference for us both on and off the court.”

NBA: Playoffs-Brooklyn Nets at Miami HeatJULY 12TH: Paul Pierce has agreed to sign a two-year contract worth roughly $11MM with the Wizards, in a move first reported by Marc Stein of ESPN.com. The second year is a player option, reports Sam Amick of USA Today (via Twitter). Washington will use the full midlevel exception to sign Pierce, per a tweet from Zach Lowe of Grantland. If the star receives the maximum allowable 4.5% raise in the second year, he would be paid $5,305,000 in 2014/15 and $5,543,725 in 2015/16, for a total of $10,848,725 that comes in just below the approximate values being reported.

The Wizards are adding Pierce after losing Trevor Ariza, who signed with the Rockets after turning in a career year as Washington’s starting small forward. Pierce hops from the Nets to Washington after a single season in Brooklyn where he performed well, if not up to his career standards. The 36-year-old is a proven winner with the championship experience and demeanor the young Wizards are hoping to cultivate as they look to improve upon last year’s playoff run. Pierce’s teams haven’t missed the playoffs since the 2006/07 Celtics bottomed out before adding Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen to complement “The Truth.”

League sources tell Tim Bontemps of The New York Post that the Nets passed on a chance to re-sign Pierce to avoid further luxury tax penalties (Twitter link). The Excel Sports Management client was looking for $9MM-$10MM per season as a free agent, and made over $15MM last season, so this contract appears to be a great value for Washington. The deal might look even better as the market for small forwards tightens further once Chandler Parsons‘ offer sheet with Dallas is matched or declined by the Rockets. Other teams had shown interest in acquiring Pierce, with the Clippers being the most confident in their ability to draw coach Doc Rivers‘ former player away from Brooklyn.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

Omer Asik’s Twisted Path To The Pelicans

The day before the draft, the Rockets and Pelicans agreed to a trade that would send Omer Asik and cash to New Orleans for a protected first-round pick. The trade couldn’t be finalized until after the July moratorium, like so many predraft deals. But what made this deal puzzling was that it couldn’t, in the form in which it had been reported, have become official after the moratorium, either. It wasn’t until after two other trades happened, an extra team became involved, and five other players were wrapped into the swap that Asik would finally become a member of the Pelicans.

NBA: Houston Rockets at Orlando MagicThe original deal would have required the Pelicans, who are without a trade exception, to absorb Asik into cap room they couldn’t clear. At the time of the original Asik agreement, the Pelicans stood at $54,088,513 in guaranteed salary for 2014/15. That meant that even if the team renounced all of its cap holds and waived all of its non-guaranteed contracts, it would have salaries totaling $8,976,487 less than the $63.065MM cap. That would seemingly be enough to take on Asik’s $8,374,646 cap hit, but the $54,088,513 in guaranteed salaries for the Pelicans were only committed to seven players. That meant the league would place five roster charges, each of them equal to the $507,336 rookie minimum salary, onto the team’s cap figure, so in essence, the team would have 12 slots accounted for. That meant the greatest amount of room the Pelicans could open beneath the cap would be $6,439,807, which wouldn’t be enough for Asik. That number was further reduced to $6,339,807 when the team kept Jeff Withey past July 5th, the date upon which his contract became partially guaranteed for $100K.

That left the team reportedly looking for ways to unload either Eric Gordon, Austin Rivers or Alexis Ajinca to create more room. Moving just one of Rivers or Ajinca wouldn’t have been quite enough to get the job done, but just about every Pelicans player short of Anthony Davis has found himself in trade rumors over the past few months, even as GM Dell Demps has expressed an eagerness to keep the core of his team together. There were plenty of directions in which Demps could go, but all of them involved the cooperation of at least one other team, which is never a given.

Still, there was a path for Demps to pursue that involved taking on more salary, rather than ridding his team of it. The Pelicans swung a deal with the Cavs last week to acquire Alonzo Gee‘s non-guaranteed contract and two days later, they made another trade with the Hornets to obtain the non-guaranteed contract of Scotty Hopson. Both were trades in which the other teams gave up no salary in return, maneuvers that required the Pelicans to dip under the cap. New Orleans had renounced its rights to Al-Farouq Aminu, Jason Smith and James Southerland the same day that it traded for Gee, erasing the cap holds for that trio of free agents, and allowing the team to go beneath the cap. The Pelicans renounced their rights to Brian Roberts the same day that the Hornets agreed to a deal with him, which was also the same day they traded with Charlotte to obtain Hopson.

The role the Hornets played can’t be understated. Charlotte had an agreement with the Cavs to acquire Gee that Cleveland had to break so it could send Gee to New Orleans. Cleveland instead sent Hopson to the Hornets, who later conveyed Hopson to the Pelicans. Charlotte ended up with two chunks of cash for its trouble. Whether the Hornets were privy to the plans the Pelicans had all along may never be known, but it’s worth wondering whether the Pelicans agreed to stop pursuing a deal with Roberts, letting him go to the Hornets, in exchange for Charlotte’s cooperation. That’s just my speculation, of course.

In any case, the Pelicans had acquired Gee and Hopson, and they could package them with Melvin Ely, whom New Orleans signed to a non-guaranteed deal late last season just for this very sort of purpose. They’d have enough salary to fit the salary-matching requirements necessary to acquire Asik in a trade that would put New Orleans back over the cap. The Pelicans and Rockets could move forward with a trade that saw Asik going to the Pelicans and Hopson, Gee and Ely on their way to Houston, which would probably waive all three and pocket the savings.

Houston nonetheless added another layer onto the trade. The Rockets had designs on adding a third superstar to their team, which provided the motivation for trading Asik as well as Jeremy Lin in salary-clearing moves. The Rockets had already agreed to deal both Asik, to the Pelicans, and Lin, to the Lakers, when Chris Bosh, the team’s last best hope for a major free agent signing, committed to the Heat. The Rockets turned to Trevor Ariza as a fallback. Yet for Houston to pay Ariza the $8MM+ salary they’d agreed upon, the Rockets would have to dip under the cap and renounce the valuable $8,374,646 trade exception they could create from the Lin trade, not to mention the $5.305MM mid-level and $2.077MM biannual exceptions. Unless, that is, they could work out a sign-and-trade with the Wizards.

The Wizards stood to gain from a sign-and-trade, since they could create a $8,579,089 trade exception equal to the first-year salary in Ariza’s new contract. They also had leverage to ask for more than the standard protected second-round pick or draft-and-stash player in return, given Houston’s motivation to stay above the cap. It’s not clear whether the Wizards insisted that they receive a non-guaranteed salary in return, but the Rockets possessed no non-guaranteed contract quite as large as Ely’s, which is worth $1,316,809. The larger the non-guaranteed salary, the more valuable a cap asset it becomes. The Wizards wouldn’t have been able to accept the even larger non-guaranteed contracts of Hopson or Gee in the three-team trade that Washington, Houston and New Orleans wound up putting together, since neither is technically a minimum-salary contract, like Ely’s is. Minimum salary contracts aren’t counted as incoming salary in trades for salary-matching purposes, so that made the Wizards’ acquisition of Ely in return for Ariza possible.

So, the Hornets, Pelicans and Wizards worked out a mutually beneficial three-teamer. The Wizards wound up with Ely and the ability to create a lucrative trade exception. The Rockets secured Ariza, Gee, Hopson and a protected 2015 first-round choice from New Orleans, along with the ability to keep their Lin trade exception as well as their mid-level and biannual exceptions. The Pelicans finally reeled in Asik, along with $1.5MM in cash. Omri Casspi, included in the deal to make the salary-matching work, has a chance to hit free agency with New Orleans likely to waive him, and it’s conceivable he winds up with more than the non-guaranteed minimum salary he’d been ticketed for.

The volume of trade rumors around the NBA rarely matches the number of swaps that actually take place, in no small part because of the difficulty involved with getting teams with competing agendas to come to agreements. Demps and his staff convinced the Cavs, Hornets, Rockets and Wizards, all in the span of three weeks, to acquiesce, all while keeping sight of a plan that was most beneficial to his team. The core of the Pelicans remains intact, with Asik added on top of it. We’ll find out if such a mix amounts to playoff contention in the ever-challenging Western Conference next year, but New Orleans has already accomplished one of its many goals toward that end.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

Greivis Vasquez Re-Signs With Raptors

JULY 17TH: Vasquez has officially signed his new deal, the team announced in a press release.

“Greivis’ passion for the Raptors and Toronto is wonderful,” GM Masai Ujiri said in the team’s statement. “He is a versatile player who provides us with energy and depth.”

NBA: Toronto Raptors at Cleveland CavaliersJULY 9TH: Greivis Vasquez has agreed to a deal with the Raptors, a league source tells Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports (Twitter links). The point guard will sign the two-year, $13MM contract with Toronto once the league moratorium has passed. The deal includes no options, tweets Sam Amick of USA Today.

The move will end Vasquez’s restricted free agency following Toronto’s choice to extend a qualifying offer over a week ago. Vasquez was being sought after by the Bucks, but was reportedly close to re-signing with the Raptors before Milwaukee’s efforts could gain steam. Ryan Wolstat of The Toronto Suns speculates that the agreement could have been delayed by a failed attempt on the part of the 27-year-old’s agent, Arn Tellem, to gain a third year on the contract (on Twitter).

Vasquez will return to back up Kyle Lowry, whom Toronto reached a four-year agreement with already. An average salary of $6.5MM is high for a second string guard, but the length of the contract gives the team flexibility and a reliable insurance option should the oft-injured Lowry run into any health trouble. Vasquez excelled as a backup last season, posting a career-high per-36-minute scoring average while maintaining a solid 6.2 assists-per-36-minute rate.

Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.

Raptors Sign James Johnson

JULY 17TH: The deal is official, the team announced via press release.

JULY 10TH: 10:10am: The deal is fully guaranteed, according to Shams Charania of RealGM (Twitter link).

8:40am: The Raptors and James Johnson have reached agreement on a two-year deal, reports Doug Smith of the Toronto Star. The value of the contract will be $5MM, according to Smith, though Ryan Wolstat of the Toronto Sun believes it might be for slightly more (Twitter link). The Raptors are using part of their mid-level exception on the Mark Bartelstein client, Wolstat adds in the same tweet.

Johnson revived his NBA career after signing with the Grizzlies in December, proving a useful reserve as he averaged 7.4 points in 18.4 minutes per game. The five-year NBA veteran previously spent parts of two seasons with the Raptors, though that was during the regime of former GM Bryan Colangelo. The 27-year-old spurns the Rockets, who were reportedly set to meet with him earlier this month, as well as the Jazz, who also had interest, as Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports reports. The Grizzlies had apparently been split on whether to bring him back.

The move largely brings a close to Toronto’s major free agent expenditures, as Smith writes, after previous agreements with Kyle Lowry, Patrick Patterson and Greivis Vasquez. The Raptors wouldn’t mind trying to find a trade partner willing to take on Chuck Hayes or Landry Fields if they could net younger versions of those players in return, but the club probably won’t make any trades until the leaguewide free agency rush passes, Smith writes. The move also likely squeezes out Dwight Buycks, who’s on a non-guaranteed contract, and probably ends any chance that the Raptors would sign Andray Blatche or Ed Davis, according to Smith.

And-Ones: Draft, Jackson, J.R. Smith, Blair

The league office proposed a new lottery system for as soon as next season that would more evenly distribute the odds that non-playoff teams would have of ending up with the No. 1 overall pick, Grantland’s Zach Lowe reports. The proposal to the competition committee, which would cut the worst team’s chance from 25% to 11%, was the dominant subject of talk about lottery reform at league meetings this week, but it’s nonetheless one of many the NBA has considered, Lowe cautions. There’s more draft-related fodder among the latest from around the league:

  • Chad Ford of ESPN.com unveiled his top 100 top prospects list and mock draft for 2015 in a pair of subscription-only pieces. His top three players are Jahlil Okafor, Emmanuel Mudiay, and Karl Towns, Jr. Mudiay’s recent decision to withdraw from college basketball and play overseas shouldn’t much affect his draft stock, according to Ford.
  • Phil Jackson doubts that Jerry Buss, as has been reported, made the final decision to pass Jackson over to hire Mike D’Antoni as Lakers coach in 2012, as the Zen Master writes in an update to his latest book with Hugh Delehanty, as excerpted in the New York Daily News. Jackson also says that he spoke to the Nets, Raptors and Suns about jobs in the wake of Lakers’ choice.
  • J.R. Smith appeared on ESPN’s First Take Thursday, telling the hosts that he wouldn’t blame the Knicks if they traded him (transcription via Ian Begley of ESPNNewYork.com). No. Absolutely not,” Smith said. “The way I was playing, I was playing like a person who didn’t want to be there. Not looking as focused as a person should be in that situation that we were, in the trenches. I wouldn’t blame them at all.” 
  • DeJuan Blair went into Washington’s $2,016,000 trade exception left over from when the team traded Eric Maynor at the deadline, tweets Eric Pincus of Basketball Insiders. Previous reports had indicated that the Wizards would absorb Blair into their new $8,579,089 trade exception created through Trevor Ariza‘s sign-and-trade to Houston, but it appears the team will instead preserve that exception. Just how much of the Maynor exception Blair will take up remains to be seen, since the precise amount of Blair first-year salary has yet to be reported.

Cray Allred contributed to this post.

Rockets, Kostas Papanikolaou Halt Talks

WEDNESDAY, 8:21am: Discussion between the sides ended and Papanikolaou has decided to remain overseas, in spite of having fielded a call from Rockets coach Kevin McHale, who tried to convince the forward to take Houston’s offer, reports Sport24 (translation via Sportando’s Emiliano Carchia). The value of Papanikolaou’s buyout will come to down roughly the equivalent of $947K next year, perhaps making it easier for him to come stateside at that point.

TUESDAY, 5:03pm: Papanikolaou rejected a two-year, $4MM offer, but the sides continue to talk, reports Emiliano Carchia of Sportando.

2:43pm: The Rockets will meet with Papanikolaou’s agent to discuss their ideas for his role on the team, after which the forward will make his decision, according to Sportando’s Emiliano Carchia, who hears the sides are likely to agree to a deal (Twitter links).

12:11pm: Papanikolaou’s buyout is $1.5MM, so the Rockets would cover $600K, and the rest would be up to him to pay, Sport24 reports (translation via Sportando’s Orazio Cauchi).

11:04am: The sides are discussing a deal worth $4.5MM total, Pick tweets.

10:16am: The Rockets are in advanced talks with Papanikolaou, as Grantland’s Zach Lowe hears (Twitter link).

9:04am: Rockets draft-and-stash prospect Kostas Papanikolaou is leaning toward coming to the NBA this year, David Pick of Eurobasket.com reports (on Twitter). Pick indicates that he’d do so on a two-year deal, though it’s unclear if that’s something either the team or Papanikolaou is discussing. The Greek forward spent this past season playing in Spain with FC Barcelona Regal.

The Rockets acquired the rights to Papanikolaou, the 48th overall pick in the 2012 draft, in the trade a year ago that sent Thomas Robinson to the Blazers. Papanikolaou reportedly had strong interest in playing in the NBA this past season, with the Bucks among the NBA clubs eyeing him in case the Rockets were inclined to trade his rights, but he ultimately signed a four-year deal with Barcelona. It’s unclear how much his buyout would cost, but a report in February cast it as likely that the 23-year-old would end up in Houston one way or another for 2014/15.

Variously listed at 6’7″ and 6’8″, the combo forward averaged just 6.8 points and 3.8 rebounds in 24.2 minutes this past season in Spain. He failed to duplicate a fantasic shooting season in 2012/13, when he made a dazzling 46.2% of his three-point attempts for Olympiacos in Greece. This past season, he made only 34.0% of his treys.