Month: May 2024

Atlantic Notes: Prokhorov, Sixers, Friisdahl

Nets owner Mikhail Prokhorov is close to acquiring majority control of the Nassau Coliseum, sources have informed Mike Mazzeo of ESPN.com (Twitter link). The plan is for Brooklyn’s future D-League team to eventually be situated at the refurbished arena, Mazzeo notes. The Nets hope their future D-League team begins play in time for the 2016/17 campaign, but for now they are one of the 11 NBA teams without an affiliate to call their own this season.

Here’s more from the Atlantic Division:

  • It’s difficult to know for sure, given GM Sam Hinkie‘s unpredictability, but the pairing of No. 3 overall pick Jahlil Okafor with Nerlens Noel appears to give the Sixers a glimpse at what their team will look like in the future, writes Sean Deveney of The Sporting News.
  • Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment, the Raptors‘ parent company, went in a different direction with their hire of Michael Friisdahl as the new president and CEO, Michael Grange of Sportsnet.ca writes. “Quite frankly they [MLSE] looked at it in totality and said what we need is an overall executive to lead the whole organization,” said Friisdahl. “And then we’re going to rely on the very strong leadership in each of the sports organizations and have them focus on that. You will not see me heavily involved in any kind of sports decisions, which is fairly obvious from my background.
  • Knicks coach Derek Fisher, speaking about the draft day trade of Tim Hardaway Jr. to the Hawks in return for the draft rights to Jerian Grant, said that Grant has more skills as a guard than Hardaway, which is why the deal was made, Adam Zagoria of SNY.tv tweets.
  • Point guard Scottie Wilbekin, who was waived by the Sixers on Monday, has signed a two-year, $780K deal with the Turkish club Darussafaka, international journalist David Pick reports (Twitter links). The contract does include an NBA out clause, Pick adds.

Chuck Myron contributed to this post.

Bulls Exercise Options On McDermott, Snell

The Bulls have exercised their third-year team option on small forward Doug McDermott and fourth-year team option on swingman Tony Snell, the team announced. Both options are for the 2016/17 campaign, when McDermott is set to earn $2,483,040 and Snell is due $2,368,327. These moves now give Chicago approximately $64.75MM in guaranteed salary committed for next season.

McDermott, 23, appeared in 36 contests last season during a disappointing rookie campaign when he averaged 3.0 points and 1.2 rebounds on 40.2% shooting. His defensive shortcomings no doubt played a part in limiting his minutes to 8.9 per game under former coach Tom Thibodeau, though McDermott failed to impress on the offensive end of the court when he was able to crack Chicago’s rotation. The former No. 11 overall pick has certainly looked more comfortable in Fred Hoiberg‘s system, though the sample size remains small.

The 23-year-old Snell is known primarily for his defensive abilities, as well as his high-energy style of play. Snell appeared in 72 games during the 2014/15 season, including 22 starts, and he notched averages of 6.0 points, 2.9 rebounds, and 0.9 assists in 19.6 minutes per contest. His career numbers are 5.3 PPG, 2.0 RPG, and 0.9 RPG to accompany a slash line of .408/.349/.780.

Timeline: Injuries Force Pelicans Roster Shuffle

No team has made more moves since training camps began this season than the Pelicans, who’ve endured a seemingly unending stream of injuries. They began with Quincy Pondexter still recovering from offseason knee surgery, and he’s yet to play this season. It only worsened from that point, and executive VP of basketball operations Mickey Loomis and GM Dell Demps have been shuffling the roster ever since. Here’s a timeline of the past five weeks leading up to today, when the Pelicans made yet another move, their 17th transaction in October.

  • September 24th — Pelicans coach Alvin Gentry announces that Jrue Holiday will be under a minutes restriction until January as he continues to recover from a stress reaction injury in his lower right leg that cost him 42 games last season, as John Reid of The Times Picayune details. That means no more than 15 minutes in regular season games and no back-to-backs, Gentry says.
  • September 29th — The Pelicans open camp with 13 players on fully guaranteed contracts, shooting guard Bryce Dejean-Jones on a deal that’s partially guaranteed for $50K, plus non-guaranteed deals with wing players Chris Douglas-Roberts, Sean Kilpatrick and Corey Webster. Power forward Jeff Adrien, also on a non-guaranteed pact, is the team’s other player in camp, giving the Pelicans an 18-man roster.
  • October 3rd — Backup center Alexis Ajinca suffers a right hamstring strain in the preseason opener for New Orleans. The team announces two days later that it expects him to miss four to six weeks. He misses the rest of the preseason but returns in time for the regular season opener.
  • October 7th — Starting center Omer Asik suffers a right calf strain in practice. The team announces the next day that Asik is expected to miss three weeks. He hasn’t played yet, though a chance exists that he will Saturday, tweets John Reid of The Times Picayune.
  • October 9th — The Pelicans sign center Greg Smith, who played for the Mavericks last season.
  • October 10th — The team voids its contract with Smith, who failed his physical.
  • October 11thJerome Jordan, who played for the Nets last season, signs a non-guaranteed deal with the Pelicans.
  • October 11th — Backup point guard Norris Cole suffers a high left ankle sprain in practice. He’s reportedly expected to miss six to eight weeks.
  • October 12th — Small forward Luke Babbitt, a candidate to start, strains his left hamstring in a preseason game. Three days later, the Pelicans announced that he would be out indefinitely. He hasn’t made it back yet, but like Asik, he may also play in Saturday’s game, Reid notes in the same tweet.
  • October 13th — The Pelicans sign Mirza Begić, a 7’1″ center from Bosnia and Herzegovina who’d never been in the NBA before. He spent last season playing in Spain and Slovenia. His deal is non-guaranteed. The move takes New Orleans to 20 players, the preseason limit.
  • October 15th — New Orleans waives Webster. The roster goes down to 19.
  • October 15th — The Pelicans sign former University of New Orleans point guard Bo McCalebb, an NBA neophyte. It’s a non-guaranteed deal with a partial guarantee of $50K that would go into effect if he sticks for opening night. The roster goes back to 20.
  • October 16th — Begic hits waivers, dropping the roster to 19.
  • October 16th — The Pelicans sign point guard Nate Robinson, who’d been a free agent since a pair of 10-day contracts with the Clippers expired last spring. That takes the roster up to 20 players again.
  • October 16th — New Orleans waives Jordan, knocking the roster down to 19 once more.
  • October 20th — Swingman and occasional point guard Tyreke Evans undergoes right knee surgery that’s expected to keep him out six to eight weeks.
  • October 23rd — The Pelicans waive Douglas-Roberts and Kilpatrick. The roster is at 17.
  • October 24th — McCalebb goes on waivers before his partial guarantee kicks in. The team also releases Adrien and Dejean-Jones. That leaves New Orleans at 14 players, one below the regular season limit.
  • October 26th — The Pelicans claim Ish Smith and his non-guaranteed contract off waivers from the Wizards. The well-traveled point guard was briefly a Pelican last season but never suited up for the team. He finished the season with the Sixers, playing well. The move gives New Orleans 15 players.
  • October 26th — Dejean-Jones clears waivers, forcing the Pelicans to eat his partial guarantee of $50K.
  • October 27th — Gentry increases the minutes restriction on Holiday to 20, as Reid detailed. Holiday sits out the opening game of the regular season, the first of a back-to-back for the Pelicans. Robinson starts at point guard at plays 19 minutes. Smith comes off the bench to play 38 minutes.
  • October 28th — Holiday starts and plays 21 minutes, slighly exceeding his increased minutes limit. Smith plays close to 29 minutes off the bench. Robinson, in a reserve role, appears for only four minutes.
  • October 29th — The Pelicans waive Robinson, and the roster goes back to 14.
  • October 30th — Point guard Toney Douglas, who played for the Pelicans last year and whom they waived in July, re-signs with New Orleans. Again, the roster reaches 15 players.

The Pelicans, with playoff aspirations, sit 0-2 heading into their home opener Saturday against the Warriors in a rematch of Tuesday’s opener at Golden State. Still, for all their woes, Anthony Davis remains unhurt, so it could be much worse.

The RealGM transactions log was used in the creation of this post.

Latest On Wizards, Bradley Beal Extension Talks

The Wizards fully intend to sign Bradley Beal to a maximum-salary contract, but they prefer to do so next summer instead of before Monday’s deadline for an extension, a source told Sean Deveney of The Sporting News. The team reportedly offered an extension worth less than the max, and earlier it appeared Washington wanted some non-guaranteed salary involved in any max deal. Beal recently expressed confidence that the sides would work something out before the extension deadline but said he would be fine with either outcome.

The latest news makes sense, given the financial motivation the Wizards have to hold off. Beal’s cap hold for next summer is $14.2MM, and that number sticks on the books until the sides agree to terms. Beal’s projected maximum salary is $20.4MM, and signing him to that figure for next season would give the team almost no flexibility to sufficiently build a roster around Beal, John Wall and a maximum salary free agent addition such as Kevin Durant, as I explained. Keeping Beal unsigned would allow the Wizards to sign other free agents first before circling back to Beal and signing him for the max using Bird rights. It’s a strategy the Spurs used with Kawhi Leonard that freed them to sign LaMarcus Aldridge and others this summer, and the Pistons are going the same route with Andre Drummond for next year.

Beal and agent Mark Bartelstein don’t have to play along, but while they could pursue an offer sheet that would take Beal to unrestricted free agency as soon as 2018, Washington would almost certainly match. He could unilaterally reach unrestricted free agency in 2017 if he signs his qualifying offer, but the qualifying offer is worth only about $7.471MM.

Ken Berger of CBSSports.com reported in May that the Wizards were ready to do a max deal with the former No. 3 overall pick, and that, coupled with a report from J. Michael of CSNWashington.com last year that the Wizards were already planning to do an extension with Beal, seemed to signal that he’d sign this summer. It appears Washington’s plan has changed since then, as Michael noted in August.

Do you think Beal is worth the max? Leave a comment to let us know.

Central Notes: Noah, Tellem, LeBron, Harris

Joakim Noah set the record straight Friday, telling reporters that he didn’t ask Bulls coach Fred Hoiberg to remove him from the starting lineup. Hoiberg indicated in an interview with Grantland’s Zach Lowe that Noah had done so, as Nick Friedell of ESPNChicago.com and K.C. Johnson of the Chicago Tribune relay (Twitter links).

“I never said I want to come off the bench,” Noah said. “I said I will do what’s best for the team.”

The coach didn’t directly say that Noah had requested the move, though that was the interpretation that Lowe took from the remark (Twitter link). In any case, Noah, a 2016 free agent, obviously would prefer to start, but in spite of the benching and Hoiberg’s comment, he isn’t upset with the coach, Johnson notes (All Twitter links). “The truth is I think I’m more effective playing the 5. And Pau [Gasol] is the same. And we have two very good 4s. So this makes sense,” Noah also said. See more from the Central Division:

  • Pistons owner Tom Gores continues to enthusiastically support coach/executive Stan Van Gundy, and he also suggested that owners around the league regard the addition of former agent Arn Tellem as a coup, citing comments his fellow owners made to him, notes Keith Langlois of Pistons.com. Tellem became vice chairman of Palace Sports and Entertainment, the parent company of the Pistons, over the offseason. “Most of the owners were wondering, how the heck did we get Arn? He lives in great weather, he’s probably the most renowned NBA agent ever, he knows everybody in basketball – and we convinced him to come to Detroit,” Gores said. “That was the good secret in the room. ‘How the hell did you do that, Tom?”
  • The upgrades the Cavs made to their bench during the offseason stand to give LeBron James a better chance to rest, but he still expects to play in 82 games after appearing in only 69 last year, observes Sam Amico of AmicoHoops.net.
  • The Cavs appear to be questioning the potential of Joe Harris after an up-and-down preseason, Amico adds in the same piece. Harris has a fully guaranteed deal for this season, but next season’s salary is non-guaranteed.

Pelicans Sign Toney Douglas

FRIDAY, 11:49pm: The deal is official, the team announced via press release.

THURSDAY, 3:44pm: The Pelicans have agreed to a deal with point guard Toney Douglas, Jeff Zillgitt of USA Today reports (Twitter link). Marc Stein of ESPN.com first reported that the two sides were in discussions. New Orleans just waived Nate Robinson, which cleared a roster spot to add Douglas. The Pelicans roster count is now back at the regular season maximum of 15 players.

Douglas, 29, is no stranger to the Pelicans franchise, having signed a pair of 10-day contracts and a multiyear deal with New Orleans last season. The Pelicans waived Douglas in July rather than guarantee his salary for 2015/16, which led the former 29th overall pick to sign with Indiana. Douglas cleared waivers from the Pacers this week after being released by the team.

The point guard appeared in 12 contests for the Pelicans last season, averaging 4.3 points, 1.8 rebounds, and 2.0 assists in 14.8 minutes per night. His career numbers through 309 career regular season games are 7.6 points, 2.2 rebounds, and 2.2 assists to accompany a slash line of .405/.352/.816.

Jodie Meeks To Miss 12-16 Weeks

The Pistons expect Jodie Meeks to miss the next 12 to 16 weeks as he recovers from a broken right foot, the team announced via press release. Meeks underwent surgery Thursday for what the team is calling a non-displaced fracture of the fifth metatarsal, an injury he suffered in Wednesday’s game. Detroit has a full 15-man roster, and no one on it has any non-guaranteed salary, so making a move to offset the loss of Meeks would present a challenge.

Meeks appeared for an 11-minute stint in Detroit’s opener and had played six minutes in the game in which he got hurt. A stress reaction in his lower back helped limit Meeks to only 60 games last season, his first with Detroit after he signed a three-year, $18.81MM deal in one of Stan Van Gundy‘s first moves as Pistons president of basketball operations in the summer of 2014. Meeks averaged 24.4 minutes per game last season and shot 34.9% from three-point range, both numbers that were markedly lower than the ones he posted in 2013/14 with the Lakers.

Former No. 8 pick Kentavious Caldwell-Pope is the starter at shooting guard, where Meeks plays, and the Pistons have Reggie Bullock and Stanley Johnson who can play there, too, notes Vince Ellis of the Detroit Free Press (Twitter link). Rookie swingman Darrun Hilliard will be active tonight, Ellis adds, but it’s unclear if he’s in the mix for minutes.

The Pistons are also without Brandon Jennings for the first several weeks of the season, but they’d have to endure two more significant injuries to qualify for a hardship provision of a 16th roster spot. The injuries to Meeks and Jennings aren’t expected to sideline either of them for the entire 2015/16 season, so Detroit couldn’t get a disabled player exception, either. The Pistons have their $2.814MM room exception available, but few, if any, remaining free agents would warrant that sort of money.

Sixers Pick Up Options On Embiid, Noel, Stauskas

The Sixers have exercised their team options for 2016/17 on Joel Embiid, Nerlens Noel and Nik Stauskas, the team announced. League sources told Keith Pompey of the Philadelphia Inquirer the moves would happen shortly before they took place. The news comes as no shock, as Pompey notes, though it represents a noteworthy vote of confidence for Embiid, to whom the Sixers are committing a salary of $4,826,160 for that season without him having played a single regular season game yet. Noel will make more than $4.384MM and Stauskas will see about $2.993MM on their 2016/17 options, as our post on Upcoming Rookie Scale Option Decisions shows, adding in excess of $12MM to Philadelphia’s payroll and doubling the team’s salary commitments for that season.

Teams are facing a Monday deadline for rookie scale team options like these. The vast majority of the these options are exercised, even in cases in which players have yet to blossom, though rarely does a highly touted prospect’s career begin as inauspiciously as Embiid’s has. Philadelphia committed the third overall pick to him last year, knowing that he’d already suffered a broken foot. He wound up missing all of 2014/15, and a follow-up surgery is expected to cost him the entire 2015/16 season, too.

Noel’s option was much more of an open-and-shut case. He, like Embiid, missed his first year under contract with the Sixers because of injury, but the 2013 No. 6 pick delivered last season, finishing third in Rookie of the Year voting and averaging 9.9 points and 8.1 rebounds in 30.8 minutes per game. He’ll be up for a rookie scale extension next summer.

Stauskas, another former top-10 pick, struggled in his rookie season last year as a member of the Kings, shooting just 32.2% from 3-point range after connecting on 44.1% of his 3-pointers in college. He came to Philadelphia via offseason trade, and while injuries forced him to miss the preseason and the first game of the regular season for the Sixers, he’s probable for tonight’s contest, according to Pompey.

One more matter the Sixers have until Monday to resolve is whether to grant a rookie scale extension to Tony Wroten, though little suggestion exists that they’ll sign him to one, so he’s likely set for restricted free agency in July. The Sixers also have a team option on Hollis Thompson for 2016/17, but a decision on that isn’t due until the summer because he’s not on a rookie scale contract.

Are the Sixers wise to be patient with Embiid? Leave a comment to tell us.

Offseason In Review: Memphis Grizzlies

Hoops Rumors is in the process of looking back at each team’s offseason, from the end of the playoffs in June right up until opening night. Trades, free agent signings, draft picks, contract extensions, option decisions, camp invitees and more will be covered as we examine the moves each franchise made over the last several months.

Signings


Extensions

  • None

Trades


Waiver Claims

  • None

Draft Picks


Camp Invitees


Departing Players


Rookie Contract Option Decisions


Courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

Courtesy of USA Today Sports Images

Nothing the Grizzlies did or realistically could have accomplished this summer was as significant as the re-signing of Marc Gasol was. Granted, no real doubt ever emerged that the Spanish center with longstanding Memphis connections would re-sign, even though he maintained at least some level of mystery in his comments leading up to free agency. That disappeared when Marc Stein of ESPN.com reported that Gasol had no plans to meet with other suitors, like the Spurs and Knicks. Grizzlies officials traveled to Spain to hash out a deal, and while it took longer than a true open-and-shut negotiation might, Gasol recommitted to the Grizzlies, and vice versa, through 2019 at the maximum salary, with Gasol given the choice for a another max season in 2019/20.

He’ll turn 35 in January of that season, but even though he might not be as productive as he is now at the back end of the deal, it was one the Grizzlies had to make. Gasol had just made a leap as an offensive player, lifting his points per game from 14.6 in 2013/14, when he tied his career best, to a new high of 17.4 in 2014/15, and while he had a corresponding decline in his defensive performance, it showed his versatility. He can adapt his style as the Grizzlies see fit over the next five years, and Memphis may indeed ask for a different contribution from Gasol as the team’s core ages and particularly once Zach Randolph, now 34, is no longer a reliable inside scoring force.

It’s difficult, if not impossible, to accurately predict what the salary cap will look like by the time Gasol’s deal runs to term, since the players and owners could decide to tear up the collective bargaining agreement in 2017. Still, it’ll almost certainly be significantly higher than the $70MM it is now, suggesting that as Gasol’s game declines, so will the percentage of the cap his salary occupies.

Days before Gasol reached free agency, Grizzlies GM Chris Wallace signaled that he was already operating under the assumption that Gasol would be back, using a trade exception Memphis created in the Jeff Green deal to absorb Luke Ridnour for no salary in return and flipping Ridnour for Matt Barnes. Perhaps no acquisition would fit as well into the character of the Grizzlies than the rough-and-tumble Barnes, and surely trading for the 35-year-old small forward was a signal that Memphis has no intention of making major changes. That Barnes has added a more reliable 3-pointer to his game is significant, too. He canned 136 3-pointers last season, a career mark, and his 36.2% accuracy was close to his best. That will help the Grizzlies, as notoriously short on floor spacing as they are, but the team would be misguided to expect Barnes to mimic Kyle Korver.

Memphis tried to acquire additional outside shooting, reportedly pursuing Danilo Gallinari at the time of the draft and apparently engaging in talks with the Nets about Joe Johnson at around the same point. No such deal materialized, and if one criticism of the Grizzlies offseason exists, it’s that the team failed to acquire a three-point shooter with a long track record of success or, Barnes notwithstanding, the potential to become one. The Grizzlies could have used the No. 25 overall pick in this year’s draft on R.J. Hunter, who went at No. 28 to the Celtics, or on Anthony Brown, whom the Lakers took 34th. Instead of those two sharpshooters, Memphis went with combo forward Jarell Martin, who shot 30.8% from behind the arc in his two years at LSU. Martin is a gifted scorer at the basket and a proficient rebounder, but he won’t solve the spacing issues in Memphis. Of course, it’s arguable whether Hunter or especially Brown are ready to play meaningful minutes for a team with legitimate title aspirations, so it’s tough to say the Grizzlies missed a realistic opportunity with their draft choice.

The Grizzlies didn’t address their shooting needs, but they did sufficiently fill the hole that Kosta Koufos left when he departed in free agency for the Kings. Memphis committed the full value of the $5.464MM mid-level exception to Brandan Wright, a remarkably efficient offensive player who’s posted PERs of 20 or better each of the past four seasons. He’s not the rebounder or defender that Koufos is, but he comes at an average annual value roughly $2.5MM cheaper than the deal Koufos signed with the Kings. The Grizzlies enter the season about $4MM shy of the luxury tax line, so while they could have afforded to retain Koufos at a price similar to what the Kings paid, it would have cost them flexibility that they instead have at their disposal this season in the continued hunt for outside shooting.

Otherwise, the Grizzlies essentially stood pat. They cycled through eight camp invitees and nearly kept one of them, Ryan Hollins, over Jarnell Stokes, the 35th overall pick from 2014. Memphis ultimately decided to retain Stokes over Hollins, even though the extra time it took to make that decision cost the Grizzlies two days’ worth of salary for Hollins, who stuck on the roster past Saturday’s deadline to cut non-guaranteed money without it counting against the cap.

It leads into a season in which the expectations and challenges are the same. The Grizzlies are still a member of the Western Conference elite, but they’re rarely thought of as the favorites to escape the West, much less win the NBA championship. That said, they’re close enough to the title that it’s worth a continued effort toward it, even as their core keeps aging. Mike Conley, the youngest member of that core, is set for free agency next year, and though multiple reports suggest he’ll quietly re-sign just as Gasol did, that’s not a given. It’s another reason why, in Memphis, tomorrow doesn’t matter nearly as much as today does.

Eddie Scarito contributed to this post. The Basketball Insiders salary pages were used in the creation of it.

And-Ones: Morris, Stephenson, D-League, Stretch

Markieff Morris didn’t have a lot to say when asked about playing apart from his brother, notes Paul Coro of the Arizona Republic. Morris seemingly vacated an offseason trade demand when he arrived at Suns camp in September, nearly three months after Phoenix irked him with the trade that sent his twin to Detroit.

“It is what it is. He’s at work. I’m at work. Same thing,” Morris said.

He also expressed no surprise that Marcus Morris is off to a strong start with the Pistons, Coro notes. See more from around the league:

  • Lance Stephenson has pleasantly surprised the Clippers so far, unexpectedly winning a starting job and rewarding the team for its extra diligence during the vetting process for the trade that brought him to L.A., as USA Today’s Sam Amick details. Clippers GM Dave Wohl made 61 calls to people who know Stephenson instead of the standard 20, according to Amick. “I don’t think we’ve ever made more [background] calls for a player in my life,” Clippers coach and president of basketball operations Doc Rivers said before Thursday’s game. “We had to make sure, but I’ve got to tell you that I’m really excited.”
  • Cartier Martin, whom the Pistons waived last week despite a fully guaranteed salary of nearly $1.271MM, and eight-year NBA veteran Ronnie Brewer are among the players signing D-League contracts that will funnel them to Saturday’s D-League draft, league sources tell Adam Johnson of D-League Digest (Twitter links). In Martin’s case, that means the Pistons elected not to claim his D-League rights. Hornets camp cut Sam Thompson is also signing with the D-League and heading to the D-League draft, a source tells Chris Reichert of Upside & Motor (Twitter link). Charlotte won’t have an affiliate until next year and thus couldn’t claim his rights.
  • The use of the stretch provision is down this year after a surge in 2014, but a Western Conference GM who spoke with Brian Windhorst of ESPN.com believes that over time, teams will more frequently use the mechanism to spread out the payment schedule for money owed to players. “The stretch provision was something that was really being underutilized until pretty recently. I don’t think some teams understood how it could be used as a benefit,” the GM said. “I think we’ll see it more in the future because with the salary cap going up, it will be easier to fit into your planning.”