Rockets Notes: Terry, Depth, Bosh

With the Rockets only one game from playoff elimination, 16-year veteran Jason Terry is aware he doesn’t have many championship opportunities remaining in his career, Brian T. Smith of The Houston Chronicle writes.

I don’t want it to end, obviously not knowing how many more opportunities I’ll get at going deep in the playoffs and making a run at a championship,” Terry said. “I’m going to leave everything I have out there on the floor. And I’m going to do it again, because I’ve still got plenty left.

Terry will become an unrestricted free agent at season’s end. Here’s more from his current team in Houston:

  • Fran Blinebury of NBA.com doesn’t believe Houston can win a title with the roster that is currently constructed. Blinebury cites James Harden‘s lack of supporting cast outside Dwight Howard, who has been inconsistent himself, as reason for the pessimism. The Rockets have roughly $54.4MM in guaranteed salary on the books for the 2015/16 season, as our Salary Commitment page shows. That figure doesn’t account for the cap holds of Josh Smith and Patrick Beverley. Re-signing one or both of these players will likely eat away at any available cap space, so if GM Daryl Morey is going to make significant upgrades, he is going to have to be crafty. Morey leads one of the most active front offices in the league, so a lack of available cap space shouldn’t preclude the team from making a substantial acquisition.
  • Chris Bosh was nearly a member of the Rockets and Kevin Ding of Bleacher Report wonders what could have been had the team landed the All-Star forward. Ding also notes that while having Jeremy Lin and Omer Asik on the team would help Houston during this playoff run, dealing them away in order to secure the salary cap space to sign Bosh was worth the risk.

Eddie Scarito contributed to this post.

Draft Notes: Payne, Sixers, Magic

In today’s chat, a reader asked Chad Ford of ESPN.com if he feels that Myles Turner getting out ahead of the story on his running style will alleviate the fears of GMs picking in the lottery.  Ford feels that it’s a good start and notes that the reports from Turner’s camp are encouraging.  If he can correct his running style, Ford could see him going as high as No. 5 or No. 6 in the draft.  Here’s a look at the latest draft news..

  • After Emmanuel Mudiay and D’Angelo Russell, ESPN’s Fran Fraschilla said that he views Murray State’s Cameron Payne, Notre Dame’s Jerian Grant, and Utah’s Delon Wright as the top point guards in the draft, Paul Coro of The Arizona Republic writes.  Fraschilla was particularly high on Payne, who he feels “has a chance to be a tremendous NBA player.”  The Murray State star spoke with Hoops Rumors last week about his skill set and NBA goals.
  • The Sixers will interview Eastern Washington guard Tyler Harvey on Thursday, according to Keith Pompey of the Philadelphia Inquirer (on Twitter).  Pompey sees Harvey as a possible steal in the second round. The sophomore is currently ranked No. 35 overall by ESPN.com’s Chad Ford and No. 75 by Jonathan Givony of DraftExpress.
  • One of the Magic‘s interviews Wednesday at the combine was with Anthony Brown of Stanford, Josh Robbins of the Orlando Sentinel tweets.  DraftExpress.com ranks Brown as the No. 41 overall prospect and ESPN.com (Insider subscription required) places him 61st.

Celtics Eyeing Aldridge, Matthews

Celtics GM Danny Ainge has made it clear that he will explore every avenue to improve his team this summer and it sounds like he has at least one very bold idea in mind.  The Celtics will be “open to putting together some type of package deal” for Blazers free agents LaMarcus Aldridge and Wesley Matthews, according to A. Sherrod Blakely on CSNNE’s Celtics Talk TV (h/t Jay King of MassLive.com).

Many believed that Aldridge would wind up staying put in Portland, but speculation grew over the course of the season that he might look elsewhere.  In particular, a pair of Texas teams – the Spurs and Mavericks – have been heavily connected to the big man.  One has to imagine that playing in Boston would hold appeal for most players, but the C’s would also have to convince Aldridge that they’d be ready to compete for a championship in the immediate future.  As Blakely notes, Aldridge is looking for a team that can give him a great chance of going deep in the playoffs.

When asked to handicap the odds of Aldridge donning green and white next season, Blakely handicapped the odds at 35-40%.  That figure may sound optimistic, but Aldridge and Matthews are friendly and the guard’s inclusion could help convince the former No. 2 overall pick to join the C’s.

Matthews, meanwhile, could be a solid fit for the Celtics, independent of Aldridge.  If his Achilles checks out, the Celtics might feel that the 28-year-old could provide them with the shooting that they need.

Draft Combine Latest: Upshaw, Russell, Booker

Former University of Washington center Robert Upshaw registered perhaps the most impressive numbers as the NBA measured prospects today at the predraft combine in Chicago. He checked in a 7 feet tall and had the greatest standing reach (9’5″), wingspan (7’5.5″), hand length and hand width, notes Gary Washburn of the Boston Globe (Twitter links). Washington dismissed Upshaw in January for a violation of team rules, but his size will surely make teams think twice. The 21-year-old is the No. 30 prospect with both Chad Ford of ESPN.com and Jonathan Givony of DraftExpress. Here’s more from the combine:

  • D’Angelo Russell is interviewing with the Lakers and Pacers today and the Sixers on Thursday, reports Keith Pompey of the Philadelphia Inquirer (Twitter links). The combo guard told Pompey he prefers to play the point and would love to play for the Sixers.
  • Stanley Johnson, whom the Sixers are hesitant to peg as either a shooting guard or small forward, already interviewed with Philadelphia today, Pompey tweets.
  • Shooting guard Devin Booker and center Myles Turner are also speaking with the Pacers today, tweets Candace Buckner of the Indianapolis Star. Check out our full profile on Booker here and our profile on Turner here.
  • Sam Dekker‘s athleticism stood out as he went through ball-handling and shooting drills Tuesday, as Ford observes in an Insider-only piece. His shooting was solid but not overwhelming, according to Ford, who sees the small forward from Wisconsin going between the 10th and 15th picks.
  • GMs who spoke with Ford on Tuesday have shooting guard R.J. Hunter ranked as high as No. 12 and as low as No. 21, as Ford writes in the same piece. The NCAA tournament hero is No. 21 in Ford’s ranking.
  • Brazilian prospect George Lucas registered a 7-foot wingspan today, the longest ever recorded for a point guard in the DraftExpress database, as DraftExpress contributor Derek Bodner points out (Twitter link). Lucas, who also goes by George de Paula, is slated to be one of the participants in five-on-five drills this week, as shown on the full list of five-on-five participants that Ford shared via Twitter.

2014/15 D-League Usage Report: Sixers

The relationship between the NBA and the D-League continues to grow, and 17 NBA franchises currently have one-to-one D-League affiliates amongst the 18 D-League teams. The remaining 13 NBA teams shared the Fort Wayne Mad Ants this season. We at Hoops Rumors will be recapping each team’s use of the D-League this season, looking at assignments and recalls as well as the players signed out of the D-League. We’ll continue onward with a look back at how the Sixers utilized the D-League during the 2014/15 campaign…

D-League Team: Delaware 87ers

Affiliation Type: One-to-one

D-League Team Record: 20-30

Number of NBA Players Assigned To D-League: 1

Total D-League Assignments: 1

Player Stats While On Assignment:

  • JaKarr Sampson: 1 assignment, 2 games, 15.0 PPG, 4.5 RPG, 1.5 APG. .367/.250/.667.

D-League Signings

  1. Larry Drew II (Sioux Falls SkyForce-Heat affiliate): Signed 1st 10-day deal on January 16th. Inked 2nd 10-day pact on January 26th.
  2. Tim Frazier (Maine Red Claws-Celtics affiliate): Inked 1st 10-day contract on February 5th. Signed 2nd 10-day agreement on February 20th.
  3. Malcolm Lee (Grand Rapids Drive-Pistons affiliate): Signed multiyear deal on December 5th. Lee was waived by Philadelphia on December 11th.
  4. Ronald Roberts (Delaware 87ers-Sixers affiliate)*: Signed for remainder of season on December 12th. Was waived by the Sixers on December 15th.

*Roberts was later dealt by the 87ers to the Santa Cruz Warriors, Golden State’s affiliate.

Assignment/Recall Log

Nets Set To Pass On Qualifying Offer For Jordan

The Nets aren’t expected to make a qualifying offer to Jerome Jordan, according to Devin Kharpertian of the Brooklyn Game (Twitter link; hat tip to NetsDaily). Failing to tender what would be a one-year offer of slightly more than $1.147MM would mean the Nets wouldn’t have the right to match competing offers for the reserve center when he enters free agency in July. Still, that wouldn’t preclude the Nets from re-signing him, notes Robert Windrem of NetsDaily (Twitter link), and coach Lionel Hollins likes the two-year veteran, according to Mike Mazzeo of ESPNNewYork.com (on Twitter).

Jordan was a success story from training camp, having signed a one-year non-guaranteed deal that featured a partial guarantee of $100K only if he remained under contract through October 25th. He stuck for the whole season, earning his entire minimum salary of more than $816K as he averaged 3.1 points and 2.4 rebounds in 8.7 minutes per game across 44 appearances in the regular season. It was the Jamaican native’s first official NBA action since 2011/12, when he was with the Knicks, as he’d played in the D-League and overseas in the interim.

Extending the qualifying offer would leave the Nets vulnerable to having Jordan lock in a fully guaranteed salary at $200K more than the minimum for next season, a commitment that would be even more troublesome if the Nets end up having to pay repeat-offender tax penalties next year. Brooklyn can decline to make the qualifying offer and circle back later in the summer when the front office will ostensibly have a clearer picture of whether or not it’ll be in line to pay the tax, and the Nets can still retain Jordan’s Non-Bird rights in this scenario.

Pelicans Rumors: Calipari, Cole, Williams

A potential Pelicans coaching candidate appears close to coming off the market, as John Calipari is nearing a deal on extension that would tack an extra season worth $8MM onto his deal with the University of Kentucky, reports Mike DeCourcy of The Sporting News. The amended contract would run through 2021/22, according tp DeCourcy. Calipari received a similar extension last year, though that didn’t stop NBA rumors. In any case, here’s more on the latest NBA team with a coaching vacancy:

  • The Cavs sought to trade for Norris Cole when he was on the Heat prior to the deadline before the Pelicans were instead able to wrangle the point guard from Miami, as Jason Lloyd of the Akron Beacon Journal writes within his Final Thoughts column. Dave McMenamin of ESPN.com spotted the Ohio native in Cleveland’s for last night’s Game 5 between the Cavs and the Bulls (Twitter link). Cole, a restricted free agent, is a client of Klutch Sports, the same Cleveland-based agency that represents LeBron James and Tristan Thompson.
  • Monty Williams thought Tuesday’s meeting with Pelicans management would include discussion about a contract extension, league sources told John Reid of The Times-Picayune. Instead, it was in the meeting that the Pelicans told Williams they were firing him, and executive vice president of basketball operations Mickey Loomis admits the coach was surprised by the termination, Reid writes. Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports reported Tuesday that the expectation was that the Pels would use the meeting to tell the coach that they would at least pick up his option for 2016/17.
  • Williams regarded Loomis as his immediate supervisor rather than consulting with GM Dell Demps, and the coach last week admitted that he and Demps hadn’t always seen eye-to-eye about the roster, Reid writes in the same piece. Demps, who wasn’t in the meeting in which Williams learned of his firing, denied that there was a disconnect between him and the coach.
  • Anthony Davis was close with Williams, as USA Today’s Sam Amick notes, but the star was cognizant that Williams probably wouldn’t be his coach for his entire career, and Ira Winderman of the Sun Sentinel posits that the Pelicans made the change in part to try and entice Davis to stay. Williams sits atop the market for rookie scale extensions, as I examined earlier today, and if New Orleans doesn’t sign him to one this offseason, he’d hit restricted free agency in 2016.

Early Termination Options

Early termination options were a factor in 2014, when LeBron James, Carmelo Anthony, Chris Bosh and Dwyane Wade all exercised the early termination options in their contracts to hit free agency. In 2015, this sort of option is largely a vestige of rules from previous collective bargaining agreements. Thaddeus Young and Jared Dudley are the only players with early termination options for 2015/16, and only Deron Williams and Carmelo Anthony have contracts that include this type of option for any subsequent season.

Early termination options, or ETOs, are opportunities for players to free themselves from their contracts before they run to term, as the name suggests. They’re essentially player options, but with a few tweaks. They were originally designed to give players a second chance to escape from their deals, since player options can only cover one season. That’s why James, Bosh and Wade all had early termination options for 2014/15 and player options for 2015/16 as part of the contracts that they opted out of in 2014. All three signed under the previous collective bargaining agreement, just like Dudley and Young. The existing collective bargaining agreement prevents deals from running longer than five seasons, and since early termination options may only be included in five-year pacts, a contract can no longer contain both an ETO and a player option.

That ETOs are only allowed in five-year deals also means that most of the players who will hold ETOs from now on will be marquee names, since few others sign deals that cover five seasons. Going forward, ETOs will be exclusively for free agents who re-sign with their teams via Bird rights, since there’s no other way to obtain a five-year contract in the current collective bargaining agreement. That was the case with Anthony when he re-signed with the Knicks in 2014 and with Williams in 2012, when he was the most sought-after free agent on the market before re-upping with the Nets. Both signed their contracts under the current collective bargaining agreement rules.

Perhaps one of the most notorious ETOs belonged to Dwight Howard. Now, he doesn’t have an ETO in his contract with the Rockets, and he couldn’t have received one anyway, since he signed it under the existing collective bargaining agreement and changed teams as he did so. His previous contract contained one, but when the 2012 trade deadline came and rumors swirled about his future with the Magic, he formally agreed not to exercise it, thus giving up the chance to hit free agency that summer. It was an odd move, in part because players with ETOs don’t have to tell the league or their teams that they’re not going to use them. They can simply keep silent on the matter through the option deadline, which is June 29th unless the team and player negotiated an earlier date, and remain under contract. Players with ETOs only have to give notice by the option deadline if they’re using them to opt out. The opposite is true with player options; those who have player options and want to remain under contract have to say so by the option deadline. Otherwise, they become free agents.

ETOs allow teams and players slightly more room for negotiation than standard player options do, since the salary in a player option year can’t be any lower than in the previous season. There’s no such rule with an ETO, so players can have their contracts front loaded, with an ETO season at a reduced salary around as insurance against an injury or decline in play. If the player is still performing at a high level after four seasons, he can exercise the early termination option to hit free agency and seek another lucrative contract. Teams may also benefit from this rule, similarly using the cheaper fifth season as protection against a drop-off in the player’s production. Still, no existing contract with an ETO is structured this way.

A player who signs a deal with a trade kicker stands to benefit if the contract also includes an early termination option. A trade kicker is a bonus that a player receives when he’s traded, and it’s usually equal to a percentage of the money remaining on the deal. Standard player option seasons don’t count toward trade kickers, but seasons covered by ETOs do.

Another difference between player options and ETOs rarely comes into play. If a player opts out using a standard player option, he can still sign an extension before hitting free agency. That’s not the case with ETOs. However, most players make formal decisions on these options not long before becoming free agents, leaving little time to negotiate extensions. Veteran extensions usually aren’t beneficial to players under the current collective bargaining agreement anyway, so there’s little incentive to choose a player option over an ETO just to gain more flexibility in signing an extension.

ETOs probably won’t disappear completely from the NBA landscape, as the deals Williams and Anthony signed proved that there are still circumstances in which they’re desirable in the NBA’s current landscape. Yet unless rules change during the next labor negotiations, don’t expect to see too many of these options.

Here’s a look at the only early termination options in existence as of May 2015:

Thaddeus Young, Nets — $10,221,739 for 2015/16
Jared Dudley, Bucks — $4.25MM for 2015/16
Deron Williams, Nets — $22,331,135 for 2016/17
Carmelo Anthony, Knicks — $27,928,140 for 2018/19

Note: This is a Hoops Rumors Glossary entry. Our glossary posts will explain specific rules relating to trades, free agency, or other aspects of the NBA’s Collective Bargaining Agreement. Larry Coon’s Salary Cap FAQ and the Basketball Insiders Salary Pages were used in the creation of this post. 

An earlier version of this post appeared on March 11, 2014.

Draft Notes: Larsen, Turner, Russell

Hoops Rumors extends its condolences to those close to European standout Rasmus Larsen, who was found dead at his home, as Emiliano Carchia of Sportando tweets. The 20-year-old from Denmark was an early entrant for the 2014 NBA draft before withdrawing, though he didn’t apply for this year’s draft as he’d struggled with injury. The cause of the death has yet to be identified, agent Doug Neustadt told Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports (Twitter link). He was a mobile big man and versatile scorer reminiscent of Cody Zeller, according to Jonathan Givony of DraftExpress (Twitter link). Here’s more draft-related news:

  • Myles Turner‘s unusual running style has been cause for concern, but tests through the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York showed his gait is correctable with a series of daily exercises, as Matt Kamalsky of DraftExpress examines. The results of the tests, arranged by agent Andy Miller in concert with Turner’s father and trainer Ken Roberson, have been sent to NBA teams, Kamalsky notes. Turner is the 11th-ranked prospect on DraftExpress, and Eddie Scarito of Hoops Rumors wrote about the way the center from Texas runs in his prospect profile of the draft hopeful whom Eddie lists 10th in the Hoops Rumors Draft Prospect Power Rankings.
  • The Timberwolves will interview D’Angelo Russell at the Chicago predraft combine this week, reports Darren Wolfson of 1500 ESPN Twin Cities (Twitter link). Russell is a candidate for Minnesota’s lottery selection, which will fall between No. 1 and No. 4, as the lottery odds show. Jonathan Givony of DraftExpress and Chad Ford of ESPN.com both rank him as the fourth-best prospect.
  • Ira Winderman of the Sun Sentinel delivers his mock draft, which has the Heat taking Kelly Oubre at No. 10, given team president Pat Riley‘s affection for players with upside. Miami would lose its pick if it falls out of the top 10 in the lottery, though there’s only about a 9% chance of that happening.

Early Look At The Rookie Scale Extension Market

Last year’s rookie scale extension market yielded some $450MM in deals, but with the salary cap set to zoom for 2016/17, when this year’s rookie scale extensions would kick in, uncertainty clouds the market. The deadline for these extensions isn’t until October 31st, but negotiations can start on July 1st, just as free agency opens. Here are the extension-eligible players split into three tiers, with players likely to make the max at the top, those unlikely to receive extensions at the bottom, and the most interesting cases in between.

Max

Debatable

  • Harrison Barnes, Warriors — David Lee‘s contract will be up just as an extension for Barnes would kick in for 2016/17, but the Warriors already have about $54MM on the books for that season, not counting any new deal they give Draymond Green this summer. There’s a strong chance an extension for Barnes would bring the Warriors right up to the cap for that season, making them one of the few teams without flexibility. Prediction: No extension
  • Bradley Beal, Wizards — Washington has reportedly been planning an extension for Beal since before the season, when league executives were apparently confident that he could command the max. Injuries and stalled development have thrown that into question, but a four-year deal with terms similar to John Wall‘s would make sense. Prediction: Four years, $65MM.
  • Evan Fournier, Magic — He missed the second half of the season with injury and cooled after a hot start, but he showed promise in the early part of the season that he never did with Denver. A smaller extension in the range of the four years and $41MM Alec Burks received from the Jazz would probably be the model here, but there’s still only a small sample size to go off of. Prediction: No extension.
  • John Henson, Bucks — Henson has been in and out of the lineup for Milwaukee, though at 6’11”, he carries some intrigue. Still, if the Bucks didn’t extend Brandon Knight last year, it’d be tough to see them doing so with Henson. Prediction: No extension
  • Terrence Jones, Rockets — Houston has Jones, Donatas Motiejunas and soon-to-be free agent Josh Smith all occupying the power forward spot. Motiejunas is up for a rookie scale extension, too, but with the team’s desire to remain a player in the free agent market, it’s tough to see the Rockets making a commitment to either extension-eligible four man, particularly if they re-sign Smith. Prediction: No extension
  • Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, Hornets — Kidd-Gilchrist’s is one of the most intriguing cases, especially considering he was a No. 2 overall pick. He improved this year, but he doesn’t appear capable of becoming a threat from deep anytime soon, and that’s a problem at small forward. Still, his defense helps anchor the Hornets, and he’s a strong rebounder for his position, too. Prediction: Four years, $52MM 
  • Meyers Leonard, Trail Blazers — Leonard broke out to a degree in the playoffs, finally delivering on some of the promise that made him a lottery pick. Still, there’s so much uncertainty in Portland this summer, so it’s tough to see the team making a long-term commitment to Leonard just yet. Prediction: No extension
  • Donatas Motiejunas, Rockets — He’s largely in the same spot as Terrence Jones, with a logjam at his position. Prediction: No extension
  • Miles Plumlee, Bucks — He was a starter for the 2013/14 Suns, who came agonizingly close to a playoff berth, but he wasn’t a factor for the Bucks after the deadline trade that brought him to Milwaukee. Prediction: No extension
  • Terrence Ross, Raptors — The former eighth overall pick has talent, but he plateaued this year, which seemed to contribute to the stall in Toronto’s climb up the Eastern Conference. Prediction: No extension
  • Jared Sullinger, Celtics — Sullinger has said he’s willing to consent to the weight clause that president of basketball operations Danny Ainge wants, but what Ainge wants even more is a star. It’ll be tough for the C’s to commit long-term to anyone until they know what their team will look like in the long run. Prediction: No extension
  • Jonas Valanciunas, Raptors — GM Masai Ujiri made it clear he believes in the big man, and though he hasn’t quite lived up to having been a No. 5 pick and often didn’t finish games this season, the potential is still there. Prediction: Four years, $48MM
  • Dion Waiters, Thunder — Waiters struggled with his outside shot and wasn’t the difference-maker the Thunder hoped when they traded for him in January. No one knows what Oklahoma City will look like in a year when an extension for Waiters would kick in as Kevin Durant‘s future looms over the franchise. Prediction: No extension
  • Tony Wroten, Sixers — Philadelphia has shown a reluctance to commit money to free agents, so it would seem somewhat antithetical for the team to do so at this point to anyone else, particularly a player who might not be a starter in the long run. Prediction: No extension
  • Tyler Zeller, Celtics — The former Cavalier started much of the season, but as with Sullinger, uncertainty about Boston’s future makes it risky for the Celtics to tie up money in anyone who doesn’t project to become a star. Prediction: No extension

Extension longshots