How 2011 Lotto Picks Followed Up On Rookie Deals
New deals handed out this summer to 2011 lottery picks ranged in value all the way from the minimum salary to the maximum. Rookie scale contracts signed in 2011 ran to term in June, so many of the lottery picks from that year will start this season on new deals. Some, including 2011 No. 1 overall pick Kyrie Irving, locked in their second NBA deals early, agreeing to extensions last year. Others, like Jimmer Fredette, saw the team options on their rookie scale extensions go unexercised, meaning they hit free agency before the rest of the 2011 lottery class. That wasn’t a lucrative proposition for Fredette, who’s followed up his rookie scale contract with back-to-back minimum-salary deals.
Jonas Valanciunas remained overseas for a year after the Raptors drafted him, so his rookie scale contract still has a year left on it. However, he already has new terms in place, having signed a four-year, $64MM extension just last week. Tristan Thompson is the only 2011 lottery pick who’s currently a free agent, with everything from his nearly $6,778MM qualifying offer to the max seemingly in play.
Here’s a look at how each 2011 lottery pick has followed up on his rookie scale contract:
- Kyrie Irving — signed five-year max extension with Cavaliers in 2014.
- Derrick Williams — signed two-year, $8.998MM deal with Knicks in July.
- Enes Kanter — signed four-year max offer sheet with Blazers in July; Thunder matched.
- Tristan Thompson — remains an restricted free agent.
- Jonas Valanciunas — signed four-year, $64MM extension with Raptors last week.
- Jan Vesely — signed with Turkey’s Fenerbahce Ulker in 2014.
- Bismack Biyombo — signed two-year deal worth nearly $5.755MM with Raptors last month.
- Brandon Knight — signed five-year, $70MM deal with Suns last month.
- Kemba Walker — signed four-year, $48MM extension with Hornets in 2014.
- Jimmer Fredette — signed one-year, minimum-salary deal with Pelicans in 2014; signed one-year, minimum-salary deal with Spurs in July.
- Klay Thompson — signed four-year, $68.979MM extension with Warriors in 2014.
- Alec Burks — signed four-year, $42MM extension with Jazz in 2014.
- Markieff Morris — signed four year, $32MM extension with Suns in 2015.
- Marcus Morris — signed four-year, $20MM extension with Suns in 2014; traded to Pistons last month.
The Basketball Insiders salary pages were used in the creation of this post.
Which of the new contracts for 2011 lottery picks surprised you the most? Leave a comment to tell us.
2017 NBA Free Agents
Hoops Rumors’ up-to-date list of 2017 free agents is below. These are players who are eligible for restricted or unrestricted free agency after the 2016/17 season. The player’s 2017 age is in parentheses. Players who didn’t finish the 2016/17 season on an NBA roster aren’t listed here, with the exception of a few notable names.
Free agents are separated by type, starting with unrestricted and restricted. Players with team or player options for the 2017/18 season are listed, unless they’re still on their rookie scale contracts. Players whose 2017/18 contracts aren’t fully guaranteed are also noted below.
Our list of 2017 free agents sorted by team can be found here. As options are exercised or declined, salaries become guaranteed, or players are signed, our free agent lists will be updated.
You’ll be able to access this list anytime under the “Hoops Rumors Features” menu on the right sidebar of our desktop site, or on the “Features” page in our mobile menu. If you have any corrections or omissions, please contact us.
Updated 5-14-18 (4:06pm CT)
Unrestricted Free Agents
Point Guards
- Bobby Brown (33)
- Isaiah Canaan (26)
- Semaj Christon (25)
- Toney Douglas (31)
- Larry Drew II (27)
- Jordan Farmar (31)
- Josh Gray (24)
- Walt Lemon Jr. (25)
- Kendall Marshall (26)
- Naz Mitrou-Long (24)
- Ronnie Price (34)
- Tim Quarterman (23)
- Xavier Rathan-Mayes (23)
- Marquis Teague (24)
- Greivis Vasquez (30)
- C.J. Watson (33)
- Briante Weber (25)
- Deron Williams (33)
Shooting Guards
- Tony Allen (35)
- Monta Ellis (32)
- Carrick Felix (27)
- Randy Foye (34)
- Michael Gbinije (25)
- Archie Goodwin (23)
- Gerald Henderson (30)
- Scotty Hopson (28)
- Dahntay Jones (37)
- Sheldon Mac (25)
- Trey McKinney-Jones (27)
- Elijah Millsap (30)
- Anthony Morrow (32)
- Brandon Rush (32)
- Xavier Silas (29)
- Rodney Stuckey (31)
- Marcus Thornton (24)
- Rashad Vaughn (21)
- James Young (22)
Small Forwards
- Alan Anderson (35)
- Mike Dunleavy (37)
- Jarell Eddie (26)
- Jeremy Evans (30)
- Alonzo Gee (30)
- Mike Miller (37)
- Steve Novak (34)
- Quincy Pondexter (29)
Power Forwards
- Anthony Bennett (24)
- Omri Casspi (29)
- Tyler Cavanaugh (23)
- Kris Humphries (32)
- Brice Johnson (23)
- Josh McRoberts (30)
- Maurice Ndour (25)
- Johnny O’Bryant (24)
- Willie Reed (27)
- Josh Smith (32)
- Mirza Teletovic (32)
- Jarrod Uthoff (24)
- Jameel Warney (23)
- Damien Wilkins (37)
- Derrick Williams (26)
- Kyle Wiltjer (24)
- Brandan Wright (30)
Centers
- Chris Andersen (39)
- Festus Ezeli (28)
- A.J. Hammons (25)
- Spencer Hawes (29)
- Roy Hibbert (31)
- Jordan Hill (30)
- Daniel Ochefu (24)
- Larry Sanders (29)
- Diamond Stone (21)
- Anderson Varejao (35)
- Jeff Withey (27)
- Stephen Zimmerman (21)
Restricted Free Agents
No restricted free agents remaining. Click here to see where this year’s RFAs signed.
Player Options
No decisions remaining. Click here for Hoops Rumors’ 2017/18 player option decision tracker.
Team Options
No decisions remaining. Click here for Hoops Rumors’ 2017/18 team option decision tracker.
Non-Guaranteed Contracts
Our list of players on non-guaranteed contracts for 2017/18 has been moved. Click here for that list of players, who aren’t free agents, but don’t yet have fully guaranteed salaries for the coming season.
The Basketball Insiders salary pages were used in the creation of this post.
How August Stretch Provision Use Helped Teams
A key offseason date is approaching, as Monday is the final day that teams can waive players using the stretch provision to reduce the costs of their obligations for the coming season. The stretch provision is still useful after the end of August, but salaries for 2015/16 would remain the same for any player waived and stretched beginning Tuesday.
Last year, teams used the stretch provision on four players at the end of August, and their individual cases highlight many of the details involved with this salary cap tool. We’ll look at all four of them here:
- Clippers waive Carlos Delfino — One of two players the Clippers acquired from the Bucks as part of the deal that sent Jared Dudley to Milwaukee, Delfino had a salary of a guaranteed $3.25MM for 2014/15 and a non-guaranteed salary of the same amount for 2015/16. Using the stretch provision on August 31st last year allowed the Clippers to spread the guaranteed money over five years, not just three, as would have been the case if 2014/15 were the final season on the contract, illustrating the advantage of using the stretch provision on a contract that features a non-guaranteed year. Thus, the $3.25MM was cut into equal fifths of $650K.
- Clippers waive Miroslav Raduljica — The center was the other player the Clippers picked up in the Dudley trade, and he, like Delfino, had a non-guaranteed 2015/16 after a fully guaranteed 2014/15. Thus, the Clippers spread his $1.5MM in guaranteed money over five seasons in equal $300K parts. Those annual payments are even cheaper, at $252,042, thanks to set-off rights that triggered when Raduljica collected money from his deal with Shandong of China and pair of 10-day contracts with the Timberwolves. The Clips had just $649,228 under their hard cap before they waived Delfino and Raduljica, so the stretch provision gave them $3.8MM in extra breathing room that helped them maneuver throughout the season. Stretching Dudley’s contract wasn’t an option, since he signed his deal under the old collective bargaining agreement.
- Grizzlies waive Jamaal Franklin — Memphis let go of Franklin, whose minimum salary of $816,482 for 2014/15 was the only guaranteed money remaining on the final two years of his deal. Thus, the Grizzlies reduced his pay to a tiny $163,297 for each of the following five seasons. The release allowed Memphis to open a regular season roster spot and gain a small measure of flexibility under the tax line. The Grizzlies finished roughly $2MM shy of the tax.
- Kings waive Wayne Ellington — The Kings only had about $100K in room beneath the tax threshold when they released Ellington, who was due $2,771,340. They’d traded for him earlier in the summer of 2014 in a deal that sent out Travis Outlaw, who signed his contract under the old collective bargaining agreement and was thus ineligible for the stretch provision. Ellington’s contract was stretch-eligible, and Sacramento took advantage of that. It was an expiring deal, so the Kings could spread Ellington’s salary over three seasons to reduce the yearly payment to $923,780. Ellington later signed to play with the Lakers for the five-year veteran’s minimum salary of $1,063,384. That helped defray Sacramento’s obligation via set-off rights. The Kings thus got to withhold $123,451, reducing their annual payout to Ellington to $882,630.
The Basketball Insiders salary pages were used in the creation of this post.
Is there a player under contract that you believe should be waived using the stretch provision between now and Monday’s deadline? Leave a comment to tell us.
Pacific Notes: Kobe, Buss, Casspi, Suns
Lakers Executive VP of basketball operations Jim Buss believes Kobe Bryant is worth his league-high $25MM salary this season after all he’s done for the franchise and said that while the team is operating on the premise that Bryant will retire at season’s end, he’d welcome him back with open arms if he’s willing to accept a role that fits his age and ability. Buss made his comments as part of an interview with Eric Pincus of the Los Angeles Times, adding that he “feels like we’ve righted the ship” with coach Byron Scott and a new cast of key players, even if the team didn’t sign a star free agent this summer.
“It’s just that it takes time to build a core that guys want to play with,” Buss said to Pincus. “I understand a superstar doesn’t want to come in and say, ‘Oh, we still have two or three years of rebuilding.’ I think with Jordan Clarkson, [D’Angelo] Russell, [Julius] Randle, even [Roy] Hibbert … we’re getting a core of seven or eight players.”
See more on the Lakers amid the latest from around the Pacific Division:
- Buss, also a part-owner of the team, has no regrets about pledging in April 2014 to resign from his basketball operations position if he couldn’t restore the Lakers to contention in three or four years, as he said to Pincus for the same piece. Buss’ sister Jeanie, the primary owner of the franchise, has said she’ll hold him to that pledge if the Lakers aren’t back in the Western Conference Finals by the spring of 2017. Still, the top goal for this season, Jim Buss said to Pincus, is identifying core players for the future, and not necessarily making the playoffs.
- Omri Casspi cited DeMarcus Cousins, calling him the best center in the league in an interview with James Herbert of CBSSports.com, among the reasons why he decided to re-sign with the Kings this summer.
- The Suns officially named Chris Jent the head coach of their one-to-one D-League affiliate, the franchise announced Thursday. Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo! Sports reported earlier this month that the sides were finalizing a deal. Jent had been Michael Malone‘s lead assistant with the Kings.
Hoops Rumors Community Shootaround 8/27/15
Wednesday brought with it an entertaining Twitter debate (hat tip to Ira Winderman of The Sun Sentinel) between Heat center Hassan Whiteside and Warriors forward Draymond Green, who had a back-and-forth exchange regarding the merits of small ball versus traditional big men holding down the pivot. It should go without saying that Whiteside was in the pro-big man corner, while Green, whose Warriors captured the NBA crown this past season using a smaller lineup, was firmly in the opposing camp.
The last four NBA titles have been won by teams willing, and in the case of Golden State, preferring, to utilize smaller, faster, non-traditional lineups to get the job done, so that helps Green’s point. It would appear in today’s NBA that outside shooting and positional versatility, and perhaps ambiguity, are more valuable than size and strength. Having grown up with the privilege of watching the likes of Patrick Ewing, Hakeem Olajuwon, David Robinson, Alonzo Mourning, and Shaquille O’Neal play in their primes certainly makes it difficult at times for me to embrace the league’s new style of play. The basketball purist in me still bristles at 6’8″ power forwards playing center, or seeing 7-footers who are more adept at launching three-pointers than they are at scoring with their backs to the hoop. But on the flip side of the coin, I can certainly appreciate the skill and athleticism that today’s taller players possess.
This segues into the topic of the day: Is the traditional NBA big man a thing of the past, or is small ball just a passing fad?
Do you think that the league has completely moved on from the concept of back-to-the-basket big men, or will the next revolutionary concept be a return to the post-up game? Is this shift more a result of a lack of talent at the position, or is the ever-increasing athleticism of players rendering the traditional ideas we had regarding positions obsolete? Do you miss the older style of play and watching two 7-footers wrestling for post position, or are you a fan of the quicker tempo and reliance on the deep ball of today’s frontcourt players?
Take to the comments section below to share your thoughts and opinions, or to just wax nostalgic about your favorite big man you watched while you were growing up. We look forward to what you have to say.
Pacific Notes: Jordan, D-League, Suns
Clippers owner Steve Ballmer stressed that the team’s sale pitch to DeAndre Jordan which included an endorsement deal with Lexus for $200K a year, and subsequently garnered the organization a $250K fine from the league, played no part in the center’s decision to spurn Dallas and return to Los Angeles, Alex Kennedy of Basketball Insiders writes. “Today, the NBA announced it has fined the team for violating NBA rules in our presentation to DeAndre Jordan on July 2nd,” Ballmer relayed in an internal team memo (hat tip to Dan Woike of the Orange County Register). “The League’s investigation concluded that the presentation of a potential third-party opportunity had no impact on DeAndre’s decision to re-sign, and having been a part of the process, I can attest to this fact. As we, and the basketball world, observed DJ ultimately chose to stay with the Clippers because he felt it was his best opportunity to win a championship, and because of his desire to remain part of the Clippers family.”
Here’s more out of the Pacific Division:
- The L.A. D-Fenders, the Lakers‘ D-League affiliate, filled out head coach Casey Owens‘ staff with Paul Woolpert, Brian Walsh, Jermaine Byrd, and Will Scott, who were all named as assistants, tweets Mark Medina of The Los Angeles Daily News.
- The one-year, minimum salary training camp deals that Henry Sims, Deonte Burton, and Cory Jefferson inked with the Suns include no guaranteed salary, Eric Pincus of Basketball Insiders notes (via Twitter).
- Lakers 2015 first-rounder D’Angelo Russell believes that he and 2014 second round pick Jordan Clarkson can be an effective tandem playing together in the backcourt, as he told ESPN 710’s Mychal Thompson and Mike Trudell during a radio appearance. “I feel like we’re dangerous for our team,” Russell said of he and Clarkson. “We both rebound. We both can push the break, and we both can run the wing. So if he gets it and I’m running the wing, he can set up the offense or make the right decisions and vice versa with me. I feel like it’s dangerous, and we can play together easily. I think it will just take some time.“
Poll: 2003 NBA Draft Take Two (Pick No. 5)
Drafting players is far from an exact science, and many a GM has been second-guessed for his draft night decisions. I’m willing to bet that every team executive has at least one pick that he would like a mulligan for. While life, and the NBA, doesn’t allow for such opportunities, we at Hoops Rumors decided it would be fun to give our readers a second take at picking players, complete with the benefit of hindsight.
We are in the process of taking you on a journey back to June of 2003, and revisiting a draft that saw the likes of LeBron James, Carmelo Anthony, Dwyane Wade, and Chris Bosh available to potentially change the fortunes of a few struggling franchises. Wade was the first of that group to win an NBA championship, though James and Bosh would later join him in Miami and go on to win multiple titles together years later, while Melo is still seeking his first trip to the NBA Finals. Detroit, which owned the No. 2 overall pick that season, chose to go with Darko Milicic, who didn’t work out so well for the Pistons. Not all picks pan out, but that one is especially painful given the talent that the Pistons passed over to select the big man, who owns career averages of 6.0 points and 4.2 rebounds, and has been out of the NBA since making a single appearance for the Celtics back in 2012/13.
We continue our revisionist history with the Heat, who used the No. 5 overall pick in 2003 to select Wade, but was nabbed by the Pistons at No. 2 overall in our draft. Readers, you are now on the clock! Cast your vote for Miami’s pick and check back Friday night for the results, as well as to cast your vote for who the Clippers will select with the No. 6 overall pick. But don’t limit yourself to a simple button click. Take to the comments section below and share your thoughts on the No. 5 overall pick and why you voted the way that you did.
Previous Picks
- Cavaliers: LeBron James
- Pistons: Dwyane Wade
- Nuggets: Carmelo Anthony
- Raptors: Chris Bosh
If you’re a Trade Rumors app user, click here.
Eastern Notes: Kidd-Gilchrist, Beasley, Thompson
Steve Clifford believes the reasons were numerous for the Hornets to sign Michael Kidd-Gilchrist to his four-year, $52MM extension, but chief among them is Charlotte’s performance with him in the lineup as opposed to without, the coach said Wednesday, according to Steve Reed of The Associated Press. The Hornets went 62-55 when he played and 14-33 when he didn’t the last two season, Reed notes. “As much as anybody that we have had in the two years I’ve been here, he’s been the guy that we can’t play well without for any long period of time,” Clifford said.
Here’s more from the Eastern Conference:
- Several executives around the league can envision Toronto native Tristan Thompson signing with the Raptors next summer if he signs his qualifying offer with the Cavaliers this year, reports Michael Scotto of SheridanHoops. Agent Rich Paul has said Thompson won’t re-sign with Cleveland in 2016 if he takes the qualifying offer. One Eastern Conference GM said he’d thought Thompson would end up in Toronto this summer. Thompson is friends with Raptors signee Cory Joseph, who’s also from Toronto, Scotto notes.
- One Eastern Conference GM who spoke with Scotto estimated Thompson’s worth at $15MM a year, regardless of the expected spike in the salary cap over the next few years. That would put him beneath the max-level salaries he’s believed to be seeking in negotiations with the Cavs.
- In a response to a reader question, Ira Winderman of The Sun Sentinel opines that one reason the Heat haven’t re-signed Michael Beasley is that the team is looking to keep its 15th roster slot open for a developmental player who can be shuttled between the main club and the D-League. Miami currently has 12 fully guaranteed pacts on its roster
Chuck Myron contributed to this post.
Clippers Show Interest In Chris Singleton
The Clippers have spoken with former Wizards first-rounder Chris Singleton‘s representatives, though no deal is in place, a source tells Broderick Turner of the Los Angeles Times (Twitter link). Singleton and Ryan Hollins share agent Todd Ramasar, and the sides also reportedly discussed the free agent center. The Pacers had Singleton in training camp last fall, but he hasn’t signed a contract since they let him go prior to opening night.
Singleton played in China early last season, putting up 22.5 points and 12.8 rebounds in 38.1 minutes per game over 17 appearances with Jiangsu Nangang. He later signed with the D-League and the Thunder’s affiliate picked up his rights. The 18th overall pick from 2011 saw a more limited role on offense for the D-League Oklahoma City Blue than he had in China, averaging 9.2 PPG and 6.1 RPG in 24.9 MPG across another 17 contests. Singleton, who turns 26 in November, spent three years in the NBA and topped out at the 4.6 PPG he posted as a rookie.
The Clippers have 14 fully guaranteed deals, and they’re reportedly bringing in Yanick Moreira on a camp deal. Reports within the last 24 hours have linked the team to Singleton, Hollins and Glen Davis.
Do you think Singleton has what it takes to carve out a niche in the NBA? Leave a comment to tell us.
Wizards, Kings, Clippers Interested In Ryan Hollins
2:55pm: The Wizards and Kings have also had conversations with the Hollins camp, Turner clarifies, citing a source (Twitter link).
2:41pm: The Clippers and representatives for Hollins spoke today, though a deal isn’t happening, Turner tweets. Presumably, Turner means that a deal isn’t happening at the moment, rather than that a deal won’t happen at all.
10:36am: The Kings and Clippers maintain interest in signing nine-year veteran Ryan Hollins, and the Wizards are also eyeing him, a source told Marc J. Spears of Yahoo! Sports (Twitter link). Spears reported Sacramento’s interest in re-signing the Todd Ramasar client in early July, around the time Broderick Turner of the Los Angeles Times heard that the Clippers had conversations about reuniting with Hollins, who previously spent two seasons with the team.
The Clips didn’t make an offer at that point, Turner said then, and it’s unclear if any team has put a deal on the table for Hollins yet. He’s also reportedly received interest from the Mavericks and Pelicans along the way, though neither team has been connected to him for more than a month.
Hollins, who turns 31 in October, would appear to have an easier path to a regular season roster spot with the Kings or Clippers than he would with the Wizards, barring trade activity. Sacramento and L.A. have 14 full guarantees apiece while Washington has 15 and apparently isn’t offering partially guaranteed money to its camp invitees. Still, he faces competition, as the Kings were reportedly eyeing Hedo Turkoglu late last month while reports continue to show the Clippers have interest in re-signing Glen Davis.
The Kings signed him to a one-year, minimum-salary contract in 2014, and that would seem to be the sort of deal he’d command this time around, too. He averaged 3.0 points and 2.2 rebounds in 9.6 minutes per game this past season.
Where do you think Hollins ends up? Leave a comment to tell us.
