Raptors Notes: Offseason, Roster, DeRozan, Casey
The Raptors have now lost 10 consecutive playoff games to the Cavaliers, dating back to 2016, and while Toronto’s latest postseason struggles will renew calls to blow up the roster, Eric Koreen of The Athletic argues that the right move may be to keep the core intact going forward.
While he acknowledges that making no dramatic changes to the roster or coaching staff wouldn’t be an easy sell, given the frustration level in Toronto, Koreen points to the development of young players like OG Anunoby and Pascal Siakam as one reason for optimism. Koreen also suggests there’s a level of trust between the players and coaches – including, but not limited to, Dwane Casey – which could be fractured if the club brings in someone new.
Finally, Koreen observes that it’s not exactly an ideal time for the Raptors to go shopping in free agency or on the trade market, given the expensive, multiyear contracts for players like Kyle Lowry, DeMar DeRozan, Serge Ibaka, and Jonas Valanciunas. Any of those deals would be easier to move in a trade a year from now, when they’re closer to expiring.
Here’s more on the Raptors, with their offseason now underway:
- Dave Feschuk of The Toronto Star makes an argument similar to Koreen’s, suggesting the Raptors’ roster still has some upside, given its young talent. Both Feschuk and Koreen write that DeRozan may have to spend even more time this summer working on his three-point range to become a more well-rounded player. Koreen adds that DeRozan needs to work on moving without the ball, while Feschuk identifies defense as a possible area of improvement for the star guard.
- In offseason preview pieces, Jeff Zillgitt of USA Today, Sean Deveney of The Sporting News, and Tim Bontemps of The Washington Post examine what’s next for the Raptors.
- It’s not fair for Dwane Casey to take the fall after leading the Raptors to a 59-win season, but moving on from Casey is a gamble the team may need to take, writes Michael Grange of Sportsnet.ca.
- It would be a surprise if Casey is still the Raptors’ head coach when the 2018/19 season gets underway, according to Dave Feschuk of The Toronto Star, who wonders if a new voice could “demand more” from DeRozan.
Draft Notes: Ponds, Lakers, Grizzlies, Cavaliers
The NBA draft lottery is still a week away, but teams have already started bringing in prospects for pre-draft workouts. Those workouts are especially important for early entrants who are still testing the waters, since they’re a great opportunity for those players to find out where they stand with NBA teams.
One of those players is St. John’s guard Shamorie Ponds, who entered the draft process this spring as a sophomore, and will have until May 30 to decide whether to withdraw and return to school for his junior year. According to Adam Zagoria of ZagsBlog.com (Twitter link), Ponds has already worked out for the Celtics, and has auditions for the Nets and Cavaliers lined up this weekend.
Here are a few more draft-related updates, with a focus on workouts:
- The Lakers worked out six prospects on Monday, bringing in Udoka Azubuike (Kansas), Keita Bates-Diop (Ohio State), Rob Gray (Houston), Jalen Hudson (Florida), Jo Lual-Acuil Jr. (Baylor), and Caleb Martin (Nevada) for a look, according to a team release.
- The Grizzlies are holding a draft workout on Tuesday for C.J. Anderson (Massachusetts), Leron Black (Illinois), Terence Davis (Ole Miss), Rob Gray (Houston), Jemerrio Jones (New Mexico State), and Nick King (Middle Tennessee State), the club announced in a press release.
- The Cavaliers brought in San Diego State prospect Jalen McDaniels for a 1-on-1 workout before Game 3 of the Eastern Conference Semifinals, a league source tells Michael Scotto of The Athletic (Twitter link).
- In a full article for The Athletic, Scotto spoke to several NBA evaluators to get their thoughts on some of this year’s top New York-born prospects, including Mohamed Bamba, Hamidou Diallo, and Rawle Alkins.
Knicks Notes: Fizdale, Hernandez, Mudiay, Kanter
Building a productive relationship with Kristaps Porzingis and devising a plan for his three point guards are among the questions facing new Knicks coach David Fizdale, Marc Berman of the New York Post writes. Fizdale plans to travel to Latvia in the near future to meet with his franchise player, who is rehabbing his knee injury there.
Juggling the minutes of Emmanuel Mudiay, Frank Ntilikina and Trey Burke will be a challenge for the ex-Grizzlies coach, Berman continues. Learning from his mistakes in Memphis, particularly in the way he dealt with veteran center Marc Gasol, is another thing Fizdale must do in order to be a success in New York, Berman adds.
In other Knicks-related news:
- Former Magic assistant coach Jay Hernandez is a name to watch as Fizdale selects his staff, Michael Scotto of The Athletic tweets. He has a solid reputation in player development and player relationships after working with several NBA players as a trainer, Scotto adds.
- Mudiay said the coaching change has energized the team, as he told Berman in a separate story. “Nobody has played with him yet over here except Troy Williams. But I’m not the only one excited. Everyone else is, too,’’ he said. Mudiay believes Fizdale, a point guard during his playing days, can help with his development.
- Center Enes Kanter, who exchanged barbs with LeBron James this season, playfully challenged the Cavaliers superstar to sign with the Knicks during a Twitter Q&A session, Ian Begley of ESPN relays. “You really want to be king of New York? Come and prove it. I’ll see you July 1st, brother,” Kanter said in the Twitter video. James is expected to opt out of his contract this summer but the Knicks are an extreme long shot, considering their salary-cap issues and their rebuilding status.
Hawks Narrow Coaching Search To Four Finalists
MAY 7, 10:44pm: Pierce’s previously-reported second interview with the Hawks will take place on Tuesday, Marc Spears of The Undefeated tweets.
MAY 6, 6:39pm: The Hawks have narrowed down their list of head coaching candidates to four finalists, reports Michael Cunningham of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. According to Cunningham, Sixers assistant Lloyd Pierce, Trail Blazers assistant Nate Tibbetts, Hornets assistant Stephen Silas, and Celtics assistant Jay Larranaga remain in the running.
[RELATED: 2018 NBA Head Coaching Search Tracker]
Pierce has emerged this weekend as a frontrunner for the position, with a Saturday report indicating he’d get a second interview for the job. Earlier today, we heard that Pierce would meet with Hawks ownership early this week, and could receive a job offer if that meeting goes well.
However, the Hawks are considering three other assistants from around the NBA, including Tibbetts, who has already met with team owner Tony Ressler, according to Cunningham. A source with knowledge of the Hawks’ plans tells Cunningham that Pierce’s own meeting with Ressler hasn’t yet been officially scheduled, adding that it’s premature to view him as a lock for the job over Atlanta’s other finalists.
As Cunningham details, David Fizdale interviewed with the Hawks and met with Ressler as well, but reached an agreement on Thursday to become the Knicks’ new head coach, taking him out of the mix for Atlanta.
Shortly after the Hawks parted ways with Mike Budenholzer, a report indicated that the team was looking to find an up-and-coming coach who could evolve along with Atlanta’s young roster. As such, it’s perhaps no surprise that none of the team’s finalists – Pierce, Tibbetts, Silas, and Larranaga – have held a permanent head coaching job in the past.
Community Shootaround: Pistons’ Future
Pistons owner Tom Gores announced Monday that Stan Van Gundy would not return as head coach and president of basketball operations for the final year of his contract.
Van Gundy resisted making changes that Gores requested, most notably replacing GM Jeff Bower. Gores finally decided after weeks of deliberation to go in another direction.
Van Gundy upgraded the roster during his four seasons with the organization but he and Bower made too many missteps along the way. The biggest problem for the next GM or president of basketball operations is that the Pistons have major cap issues that will hamstring efforts to make necessary improvements.
The trio of Blake Griffin, Andre Drummond and Reggie Jackson could carry the team to the playoffs next season, provided they stay relatively injury-free and the supporting cast is upgraded. That would require a leap of faith. Griffin and Jackson have been nagged by injuries in recent years.
Upgrading the roster could be an even taller task. The Pistons are locked into a couple of bad contracts (Jon Leuer, Langston Galloway) for two more seasons. The stretch provision used to eat up Josh Smith‘s contract gobbles up another $5.33MM in each of the next two years.
The Pistons also don’t have a first-round pick, courtesy of the Griffin deal, unless they get extremely lucky and move into the lottery. They have the mid-level exception and a $7MM trade exception to work with but that won’t help much. It’s tough to imagine another team willing to take on either Griffin’s contract or Jackson’s deal, though the next exec might give it a whirl.
A more viable option would be to deal Drummond, packaged with a bad contract, and essentially hit the reset button. That won’t sit well with fans who have seen their team reach the playoffs once since 2009.
They could also gauge the market value of some younger players like Stanley Johnson and Luke Kennard.
That brings us to our question of the day: If you were the Pistons GM, what moves would you make to revive the franchise?
Please take to the comments section to voice your opinion. We look forward to what you have to say.
Northwest Notes: Thibodeau, Exum, Hood, George
Timberwolves coach and president of basketball operations Tom Thibodeau shook up his coaching staff Monday by cutting ties with three assistants, Jon Krawczynski of The Athletic reports. The most notable of the cuts is player development coach Vince Legarza, who worked closely with center Karl-Anthony Towns. Shooting coach Peter Patton and assistant video coordinator Wes Bohn are the other coaches who will not return. Towns was not given prior notice of Legarza’s departure, Krawczynski continues. Thibodeau may not replace all of those coaches since he has told some people that he’d like to downsize, Krawczynski adds.
In other notable developments around the Northwest Division:
- Jazz point guard Dante Exum has a strained left hamstring and his status for the remainder of the series against the Rockets is uncertain, Shams Charania of Yahoo Sports tweets. Exum underwent an MRI and further evaluation Monday after he suffered the injury in Game 4. Exum and Ricky Rubio, who also has a hamstring injury, will not play in Game 5 on Tuesday, the team tweets.
- There’s no chance guard Rodney Hood will return to the Jazz as a free agent, Tony Jones of the Salt Lake Tribune tweets. Hood will be a restricted free agent if he receives a $3.47MM qualifying offer from the Cavaliers. Otherwise, he’ll be unrestricted.
- The Thunder are willing to pay the steep cost of retaining free agent Paul George, according to Brett Dawson of The Oklahoman. George will likely sign a max contract in free agency this summer. The team wants to remain competitive, even if it means footing the bill for $260MM in salary and luxury-tax penalties, Dawson adds.
Van Gundy Disappointed, Wants To Coach Again
7:52pm: Van Gundy was willing to give up his front office duties and just coach the team next season, Rod Beard of the Detroit News tweets.
“When it came down to this, I was perfectly willing to only go in one role and to give up the front office and go into (just) coaching. I didn’t fight to hang on to that at all,” he told Beard.
5:40pm: Stan Van Gundy said he’s disappointed but not bitter that the Pistons cut ties with him on Monday, Vince Ellis of the Detroit Free Press tweets. Owner Tom Gores parted ways with Van Gundy as both head coach and president of basketball operations when they couldn’t come to an agreement on proposed changes Gores wanted to make.
Van Gundy, who was entering the final year of his five-year contract, admitted he wanted to fulfill the rest of the contract and sees how much the team could improve next season with Blake Griffin, Andre Drummond and Reggie Jackson playing together regularly. The Pistons traded for Griffin in late January when Jackson was sidelined with an ankle injury and Griffin sat out the last eight games with an ankle injury. The trio only played four games together.
“To not get a chance to coach a full season after the (Griffin) move we made is disappointing to me. I’m not bitter and I was treated well,” Van Gundy told Ellis. “I’ve got no complaints.”
Van Gundy also said he would like to coach again if he found something to his liking. “If the right situation came along, I wouldn’t dismiss it,” he said. “I’m not going out on the terms I would like.”
That comes somewhat as a surprise, considering that Van Gundy told Hoops Rumors and other reporters in April that he was set for life and would probably retire if he didn’t return next season.
Pistons Notes: Stackhouse, Budenholzer, Armstrong, More
Jerry Stackhouse and Mike Budenholzer are two of the prominent names to look out for in the Pistons’ coaching search, Vince Ellis of the Detroit Free Press tweets. Detroit parted ways with coach and president of basketball operations Stan Van Gundy on Monday. Stackhouse is a former Detroit player and served as the Raptors’ G League coach this past season. Stackhouse met with the Knicks before they hired David Fizdale and also surfaced as a candidate for the Magic and Hornets’ jobs. Budenholzer, the former Hawks coach, is arguably the top experienced head coach on the market. Former Cavaliers GM David Griffin is another name to watch as the Pistons seek a new front office leader, Ellis adds.
Former Cavaliers coach Mike Brown, ex-Warriors coach Mark Jackson and ex-Pacers and Magic coach Frank Vogel could also be coaching candidates. Rod Beard of the Detroit News writes. Chauncey Billups has previously been mentioned as a possible front office candidate, Sean Deveney of the Sporting News notes. Spurs assistant James Borrego and former Cavaliers coach David Blatt are among the other names to watch in the coaching search, Deveney adds.
In other news involving the Pistons-Van Gundy split:
- Player agent and former Bulls executive B.J. Armstrong could be a candidate for a front-office position, Vincent Goodwill of NBC Sports Chicago tweets. Armstrong has strong ties to Pistons chairman Arn Tellem and is a Detroit native. Goodwill adds.
- Point guard Reggie Jackson was blindsided by the news of Van Gundy’s departure, Rod Beard of the Detroit News tweets. Jackson told Beard he was “stunned by the whole thing…it’s difficult right now to take the whole thing in.” Fellow point guard Ish Smith told Beard he would miss Van Gundy, adding that “he was really instrumental to my growth as a player.” (Twitter links)
- Van Gundy’s coaching replacement needs to build the attack around the skills of Blake Griffin, Kevin Pelton of ESPN argues. His front office replacement will have to come up with creative ways to upgrade the roster around him despite salary-cap restraints, Pelton adds.
- Griffin had some positive things to say about Van Gundy earlier Monday before the news of his departure broke. He made the comments during a podcast, which were relayed by USA Today’s Andrew Joseph. “He’s actually a very cool guy. Very nice guy. Funny. And actually genuinely cares about people. That’s kind of rare.”
Pistons Seek Experienced Exec To Replace Van Gundy
Former NBA agent and current franchise chairman Arn Tellem will be involved in the process and could have an expanded role in business operations but is not a candidate to replace Van Gundy as president or Jeff Bower as GM, Wojnarowski continues. Bower’s continuing role was apparently the main point of contention between Gores and Van Gundy, with Gores pushing for front-office changes and Van Gundy offering resistance.
Bower, who has run the day-to-day operations since Van Gundy took over, met separately with Gores last week, Wojnarowski adds. Like Van Gundy, he was also entering the final year of his five-year contract.
Brent Barry, currently a broadcaster with TNT, is a candidate for a front office role but it’s unlikely he would be hired to run the show, given Gores’ desire to hire a more experienced hand, according to Wojnarowski. The Warriors were interested in hiring Barry to a front office position last summer but his TV commitments prevented him from making the move, ESPN’s Zach Lowe reports. Once Barry’s TV obligations are fulfilled, the Pistons will have competition for his services, Lowe adds (Twitter link).
2018 NBA Offseason Salary Cap Digest: Los Angeles Clippers
A year ago at this time, Chris Paul, Blake Griffin, and DeAndre Jordan were all still members of the Clippers. Now, Paul and Griffin are long gone, and it’s possible that Jordan – who holds a player option – will follow them out the door. The Clippers are in the midst of a transition period, and while they still don’t project to have a ton of cap room this summer, parting ways with Paul and Griffin created some long-term flexibility.
Here’s where things currently stand for the Clippers financially, as we continue our Offseason Salary Cap Digest series for 2018:
Guaranteed Salary
- Danilo Gallinari ($21,587,579)
- Tobias Harris ($14,800,000)
- Lou Williams ($8,000,000)
- Boban Marjanovic ($7,000,000)
- Sam Dekker ($2,760,095)
- Jawun Evans ($1,378,242)
- Sindarius Thornwell ($1,378,242)
- Carlos Delfino ($650,000) — Waived via stretch provision
- Miroslav Raduljica ($252,043) — Waived via stretch provision
- Total: $57,806,201
Player Options
- DeAndre Jordan ($24,119,025)
- Austin Rivers ($12,650,000)
- Milos Teodosic ($6,300,000)
- Wesley Johnson ($6,134,520): Will be exercised
- Total: $49,203,545
Team Options
- None
Non-Guaranteed Salary
- Patrick Beverley ($5,027,028)
- C.J. Williams ($1,378,242)1
- Total: $6,405,270
Restricted Free Agents
- Montrezl Harrell ($1,839,228 qualifying offer / $1,839,228 cap hold): Bird rights
- Total: $1,839,228
Unrestricted Free Agents / Other Cap Holds
- Avery Bradley ($13,213,484): Bird rights
- No. 12 overall pick ($3,179,248)2
- No. 13 overall pick ($3,020,246)3
- Total: $19,412,978
Projected Salary Cap: $101,000,000
Projected Cap Room: $13,182,757
- With four veterans holding player options, there are a number of potential scenarios in play for the Clippers’ cap outlook this summer. For our cap projection, we’ve counted the team’s seven guaranteed salaries, Beverley’s non-guaranteed salary, cap holds for the two lottery picks, and Rivers’ and Johnson’s player-option salaries. The Clips’ total team salary in that scenario is $87,817,243.
- This projection assumes that Jordan and Teodosic both opt out, which is far from a lock. If either player opts in, L.A. will most likely operate as an over-the-cap team, barring other trades and/or cuts.
- If they want to clear as much cap room as possible for a run at a star, the Clippers could technically get up to about $33.7MM without trading or stretching guaranteed salaries. However, that would mean trading their first-round picks, waiving Beverley, and counting on all three of Jordan, Rivers, and Teodosic to opt out. That’s probably not realistic.
Footnotes:
- Williams’ exact contract details, including guarantee info, aren’t yet known.
- This pick, acquired from the Pistons, is top-three protected, so the Clippers would lose it if it jumps into the top three in the draft lottery. It could also end up as low as No. 14 ($2,869,353).
- The Clippers are 13th in the draft lottery standings. They could end up picking as high as No. 1 ($8,095,595) and as low as No. 14 ($2,869,353).
Note: Rookie scale cap holds are estimates based on salary cap projections and could increase or decrease depending on where the cap lands.
Salary information from Basketball Insiders was used in the creation of this post. Photo courtesy of USA Today Sports Images.
