And-Ones: Rockets, Sacre, Austin
The Rockets will make a bid to host the All-Star Game writes Jonathan Feigen on the Houston Chronicle and are preparing to make their case for either the 2020 or 2021 festivities.
Just recently, Feigen writes, the league sent the Rockets and other select teams information related to the bidding process. The team ultimately granted the privilege to host the week-long celebration will set out to make the most out of an excellent economic opportunity.
In 2013, the last time the Rockets hosted the event, the game generated roughly $60MM in direct spending and a near $100MM economic impact. The city of Houston also hosted All-Star Weekend in 2006 and 1989.
There’s more news from the NBA world today:
- Having recently signed his first professional contract since being ceremonially drafted in the 2014 NBA Draft, Isaiah Austin has passed all physicals and is set to make his Adriatic League debut, reports Sportando via DjordjeMatic on Twitter.
- Former Lakers big man Robert Sacre has signed on to play in Japan, writes Kaz Nagatsuka of the Japan Times. The 27-year-old spent four seasons in Los Angeles.
- It appears that Vitor Faverani could be on the move, tweets international basketball reporter David Pick. Faverani, who last suited up for the Celtics, has requested release from his current ACB League club in order to sign with FC Barcelona Basquet.
Week In Review: 1/7/17 – 1/14/17
After a whirlwind week of teams racing to waive players before the January 7 deadline, this past week marked a change of pace as the dust settled. Here’s a look at the biggest headlines from the past seven days:
News
- Guard Derrick Rose was absent from the Knicks‘ Monday night matchup
- Initially reported to seek a buyout, Mike Dunleavy Jr. ultimately decided to play for the Hawks.
- Veteran point guard Pablo Prigioni officially retired. Prigioni last played for the Clippers in 2015/16.
- Retired big man Kevin Garnett will serve as a consultant with the Clippers and Bucks.
- The new BIG3 basketball league has landed Allen Iverson as a player/coach.
Signings
- Days after waiving him on his non-guaranteed deal, the Nuggets signed Alonzo Gee to a 10-day contract.
- The Sixers signed point guard Chasson Randle to a 10-day contract.
- The Nets signed veteran forward Quincy Acy to a 10-day contract.
Waivers
- The Nets waived former first overall pick Anthony Bennett (who promptly went on to sign in Turkey).
Rumors
- The Hawks claim that Paul Millsap is no longer on the trade market and have told him he won’t be traded.
- Veteran point guard Rajon Rondo has been open about his uncertain future with the Bulls.
- The Kings are said to be committed to offering DeMarcus Cousins a $200MM extension.
- Big man Alexis Ajinca has been frustrated with his lack of playing time with Pelicans.
- Newly signed Pelicans big man Donatas Motiejunas spoke at length about free agency saga with Rockets.
- Sharpshooter Klay Thompson says he’s on board with signing an extension to stay with Warriors.
- The Cavaliers need a playmaker, not necessarily a point guard, says GM David Griffin.
- The latest victim of the Sixers‘ frontcourt logjam has been Jahlil Okafor.
Mavs Notes: Bogut, Nowitzki, Cuban
The 2016/17 hasn’t gone well for either Andrew Bogut or the Mavs and the latest realization that Bogut’s lingering hamstring injury will keep him sidelined certainly doesn’t help. Earlier today, Rick Carlisle told the media that he will hold Bogut out of Sunday’s contest and “for the foreseeable near future”.
Already limited to just 22 of Dallas’ 39 games this season, Bogut hasn’t had much of an impact on a Mavs team that’s limped out of the gates to a 12-27 record.
Though a healthy Bogut wouldn’t necessarily change the Mavs’ fate, it could play a role in whether the team is able to trade him, and if so, what they could expect in return.
There’s more out of Dallas:
- A recent uptick in production has ESPN’s Tim MacMahon speculating that Dirk Nowitzki is close to returning to form following the strained right Achilles tendon issue that plagued him at the beginning of the season. Though his 13.2 points per game fall well short of his career numbers, that figure could soon rise if the 38-year-old is truly close to full strength for the Mavs.
- There are plenty of reasons why the 2016/17 campaign has been a disappointing one for Mavs fans. Tim Cowlishaw of the Dallas News recently examined who might be to blame for the lost season. Cowlishaw feels ownership and management haven’t made the most of the draft, opting instead to pursue big fish via free agency.
- Vocal Mavs owner Mark Cuban would be in support of the NBA eventually expanding or relocating to Mexico City. “I like it down here,” he told Eddie Sefko of the Dallas News. “I would love a team down here.[…] It’s not all that far compared to Portland or Boston.”
Hoops Rumors Originals: 1/7/17 – 1/14/17
The Hoops Rumors staff published their fair share of original content this week, take a look through the best pieces to hit the press since last Saturday:
- As the January 7 deadline to waive players on non-guaranteed contracts passed, 29 individuals breathed sighs of relief. Arthur Hill published a team-by-team list of players who saw their partially-guaranteed deals become fully guaranteed for the rest of the 2016/17 season.
- Many of the non-guaranteed players waived prior to January 7 were let go in order to free up roster flexibility down the stretch. How? As of January 5, teams are officially allowed to sign players to 10-day contracts. Luke Adams recently announced that the Hoops Rumors 10-Day Contract Tracker is back for the 2016/17 season.
- Atlanta’s 60-win power quintet is no longer. Dana Garauder takes a good look at the respective fantasy basketball value of each of the All-Stars that made that Hawks team so great.
- Things have gone sideways in New York, at least as far as point guard Derrick Rose is concerned. After his disappearing act last Monday, we polled readers how long they think he’ll last.
- The NBA’s Ted Stepien rule prohibits NBA teams from dealing first-round picks in consecutive years. Luke Adams meticulously constructed a list of the teams who thus aren’t eligible to trade 2017/18 firsts.
- In the latest edition of our Trade Candidate series, Dana Garauder explored Mavs center Andrew Bogut’s value as an asset as well as possible destinations where he could end up.
- It seems like last century the Suns made headlines acquiring Magic superstar Penny Hardaway to pair with Jason Kidd. Austin Kent breaks down the failed Backcourt 2000 experiment and the cultural significance thereof.
- In our weekly roundup of the best content from the NBA blogosphere, Will Joseph featured several impressive features including this one from Silver Screen & Roll breaking down Brandon Ingram‘s potential for the Lakers.
- As always, we opened the floor for our readers to discuss some of the most interesting headlines from around the league. Here are a few of the topics that were featured in Community Shootarounds:
- The Hawks have decided to not trade Paul Millsap after all. Are they handling the situation appropriately?
- NBA games can slow to a halt in the final two minutes. Should the league consider addressing this?
- Don’t forget to submit your questions for this weekend’s mailbag. If you have any questions regarding rules or transactions, we want to answer them!
Hoops Rumors Retro: Penny Hardaway To The Suns
The mandate at Hoops Rumors is to consolidate news from throughout the professional basketball world, but nobody ever specified from which decade. Join us as Austin Kent, a grown man with a binder of 1996/97 NBA trading cards beside his desk, cannonballs down the rabbit hole of nostalgia to give significant trades of yesteryear the modern media treatment.
It’s early August 1999 and the world is racing to prepare for the turn of the millennium. Jerry Colangelo, owner and president of the Phoenix Suns, has other plans.
Sure, the 59-year-old Godfather of Phoenix Basketball reads the papers, he watches the news – but while rest of the country braces for the pandemonium of Y2K, Colangelo and the executive team with whom he manages the organization decide to take the offensive.
The wheels are in motion for a scheme so grand and so bold that it will get the Suns to the top of a mountain they’ve longed to climb since the franchise – and Colangelo along with it – first hit the scene in 1969.
They call it: Backcourt 2000.
The Penny Hardaway that takes a seat at the press conference announcing his arrival in Arizona isn’t the one that you might remember – the last Lil Penny TV spot aired several years prior – but he isn’t the tragic hero that you’ve grown to mourn either.
Not yet at least.
In 1999, Hardaway is coming off a decent lockout-shortened 1998/99 campaign, an abbreviated season in which he suited up for every game. That bold 50 you see in the ‘G’ column of his Basketball Reference profile means more than just league leader – it means hope.
To recap, Hardaway was named to the All-NBA 1st team two times before his 25th birthday. Put another way it’s even more impressive; after winning the Rookie of the Year award in 1994, he finished 1995 and 1996 as one of the top two guards in the NBA. Not bad, young blood1.
What came after the early accolades but before his exit from Orlando is all too familiar. In the first year after Shaquille O’Neal’s departure, Hardaway would miss 23 games to injury. The following season a pair of knee surgeries would limit him to just 19 total.
At the time of the injuries, few knew what to make of the All-Star’s frequent stints on the sidelines. Doctors barely knew what the future would hold for NBA players with degraded knee cartilage, never mind teammates or fans.
“Nobody bonded with me at that time,” Hardaway has since told SLAM. “No support. It was weird. Nobody would say, ‘Hey man, are you OK?’ Nothing. It was more that people thought I was faking.”
Suffice it to say, Hardaway’s once meteoric star faded as quickly as it appeared on the NBA horizon. In its wake, a once beloved superstar with an elite ceiling but mysteriously compromised body.Read more
Atlantic Notes: Noah, Sullinger, Sixers
It may have taken a while to work into a good routine with the Knicks but Joakim Noah is playing his best basketball of the season, writes Marc Berman of the New York Post. Over the course of the last 11 contests, the 31-year-old is averaging 8.0 points and 10.2 rebounds per game.
Helping to light a fire under Noah, it seems, have been match ups with his former team. The Knicks center has posted averages of 14.0 points and 12.0 rebounds per in two games against the Bulls, most recently on Thursday night.
Though Noah continues to nurse a sore shoulder, his ability to contribute will play a factor in whether the Knicks decide to be buyers or sellers at the deadline.
That’s not it out of the Atlantic Division:
- It was easy for Raptors fans to get excited about the news that Jared Sullinger has been cleared to practice, but general manager Masai Ujiri has reiterated that he has plenty of work to do yet. Sullinger will have a tough time working back into game shape this time of year, tweets Josh Lewenberg of TSN, and could even spend some time in the D-League working on his conditioning.
- After a bumpy return to the lineup, 22-year-old Nerlens Noel is “definitely satisfied” with his role in Brett Brown‘s Sixers‘ rotation, writes Keith Pompey of the Philadelphia Inquirer. Of course Noel’s minutes didn’t come from thin air, earlier this week we wrote about Jahlil Okafor‘s demotion and the DNP-CDs that have come with it. Worth noting, writes Bob Cooney of the Philadelphia Inquirer, is that Philly has managed to hit its stride defensively. “If this program is going to go anywhere close to where we want it, it’s going to have to start with the defense,” Brown told Cooney. “There is no way around that.“
- The Celtics made it their mission to get Al Horford a win in his first game against the Hawks team with which he played nine seasons, writes Chris Forsberg of ESPN. While the C’s would ultimately accomplish their goal thanks to an Isaiah Thomas buzzer beater, the veteran Horford was surprised to hear so many boos in his return to Philips Arena.
Southeast Notes: Hezonja, Wall, Heat
Second-year shooting guard Mario Hezonja will get a shot at reclaiming his spot in the Magic rotation, writes Josh Robbins of the Orlando Sentinel. The 21-year-old slipped out of head coach Frank Vogel‘s core lineup in mid-November.
For the next little while at least, expect Hezonja to back up starting small forward Aaron Gordon when the Magic elect to run a small ball lineup with Jeff Green at the four. After racking up 13 DNP-CDs in the first 40 games of the season, Hezonja will take what he can get.
“I’m 300% ready,” Hezonja said Friday. “I’ve got to use that in a smart way and manage all that energy. I’ve got to manage it in the right way so the team wins.”
In another piece, John Denton of the Magic’s website, explores other ways Vogel is shaking up his lineup – including returning Nikola Vucevic to the starting lineup.
There’s more new out of the Southeast Division today:
- The Magic should pay, and perhaps overpay, to keep Serge Ibaka in Orlando, writes Brian Schmitz of the Orlando Sentinel. Schmitz argues that the 27-year-old big man has been the team’s best player on both ends of the floor. Ibaka has averaged 15.5 points and 7.2 rebounds per game through Orlando’s first 40.
- An MRI on John Wall‘s right-hand pinkie finger came back negative, says Stephen Whyno of the Associated Press. The Wizards guard is expected to play through the injury so long as he’s able to properly stabilize it and that it doesn’t impact his shot. “One thing I know about John, being around him for the six or seven months now, he is as tough as they come,” head coach Scott Brooks said. “He’s going to put himself out there, which is definitely something that I admire.”
- Danuel House, Sheldon McClellan and Daniel Ochefu have been able to breath easier since Tuesday, writes Candace Buckner of the Washington Post. January 10 marked the day that the three undrafted rookies saw their partially guaranteed contracts become guaranteed with the Wizards. Buckner discusses their frames of mind prior to the deadline.
- The Heat are doing their due diligence when it comes to fielding trade offers, so Ira Winderman of the Sun Sentinel went so far as to break down each major player’s case as an available asset.
Northwest Notes: Thunder, McCollum, Thibodeau
Though he’s played sparingly for the Thunder since making his return, the addition of Cameron Payne has made head coach Billy Donovan‘s job setting each game’s active lineup that much harder. With Payne in the mix, players like Kyle Singler and Semaj Christon have been inactive, writes Erik Horne of The Oklahoman.
Horne relays that Thunder coaches generally decide close to the morning shootaround which of their players will be inactive for the upcoming game. In some scenarios, as was recently the case with Victor Oladipo, those decisions are delayed until later in the day to accommodate for the fluctuating status of injured players.
“As a coach you always want every guy to dress, for every guy to play and be available, but we can’t do that,” Donovan says. “The decisions are a little bit easier because of the kind of guys we have on our team.”
There’s more out of the Northwest Division:
- Veteran Brandon Rush didn’t disappoint when called to produce for the Timberwolves, writes Kent Youngblood of the StarTribune. Rush’s ability to knock down threes and stretch the floor did not go unnoticed by his coach and teammates while he filled in for Zach LaVine. “That shows how valuable he is,” Minnesota big man Karl-Anthony Towns said. “And how professional he is, to be ready for the moment he was needed.” With LaVine’s status still uncertain, Rush could be featured prominently once again.
- The Timberwolves are showing progress on the defensive end of late, Youngblood writes in a separate piece for the StarTribune. Youngblood cites the team’s eighth-best net rating (plus-2.3) since December 13 as a sign that things are turning around. “One game doesn’t solve everything for us,” says Tom Thibodeau, a head coach renowned for his defense. “But I like the direction we’re moving in now.”
- At the halfway point of the 2016/17 campaign, Ryan McDonald of the Deseret News evaluates the Jazz. The team was considered a potential playoff contender during the offseason and McDonald concludes that thanks in part to the depth of their roster, Utah is not only on track to make the postseason for the first time since 2012, but to potentially claim home-court advantage in the first round.
- It’s time to seriously consider C.J. McCollum among the league’s best shooters, says Zach Lowe for ESPN. Given McCollum’s first rate pull-up jumper, Lowe is ready to lump the Trail Blazers guard in with the likes of Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and Kyle Korver.
NBA D-League Assignments/Recalls: 1/13/17
Here are the D-League moves from throughout the NBA today:
- The Sixers have assigned Richaun Holmes to their D-League affiliate in Delaware, tweets Derek Bodner of Philadelphia Magazine. The 23-year-old hasn’t seen game action for the Sixers since December 14. In two games with the 87ers this month, Holmes has averaged 12.0 points and 7.5 rebounds per game.
- The Rockets have recalled forward Kyle Wiltjer tweets Mark Berman of Fox 26. Wiltjer has averaged 20.8 points per game for the Rio Grande Valley Vipers in 12 games so far this season.
- The Warriors have sent Patrick McCaw and Kevon Looney to their D-League affiliate, says the team in an official press release. The pair will join Damian Jones who is already on assignment with the Santa Cruz Warriors.
Central Notes: Ellenson, KCP, Rondo, Shumpert
While the absence of Jon Leuer has hurt a Pistons team desperate to regain its footing in the East, it has opened an opportunity for first-round pick Henry Ellenson to play meaningful minutes for once. This week Ellenson checked into a game in the first half for the first time this season writes Pistons.com editor Keith Langlois.
“It felt different, for sure,” the 20-year-old Pistons big man told Langlois of the matchup against the Kings. “It felt good to be out there, to be a part of the rotation. […] For me, personally, it was nice to get some of that action.”
Pistons coach Stan Van Gundy reiterated how important it will be to have Ellenson available as the team returns to health in the coming days. Leuer is expected to be sidelined for at least two more games.
“We need all hands on deck,” Van Gundy said, before clarifying that while the rookie may be relied upon more than he has been thus far, it’s unlikely he’ll see “great big minutes” for the Pistons.
Elsewhere in the Central Division:
- The Pistons haven’t played up to a standard that Van Gundy is happy with, writes Rod Beard of The Detroit News, but the head coach believes that his team is capable of it. “I thought the early part of the year — probably the second 10 games or so — we got to where we were playing at a high level and we haven’t been able to gain a rhythm since then,” Van Gundy said. “This last 20 games, I haven’t done a good enough job of getting us to play at the level we’re capable of playing at“.
- The results of Kentavious Caldwell-Pope‘s Friday MRI are in and the shooting guard suffered a Grade 2 left rotator cuff strain. The team’s official press release states that he’ll be doubtful for the Pistons through the weekend, with his status continually reevaluated and updated.
- Point guard Rajon Rondo called his punitive benching by Bulls head coach Fred Hoiberg a “slap in the face,” writes Vincent Goodwill of CSN Chicago, but the veteran also says that the decision wasn’t unexpected.
- The Cavaliers will insert Iman Shumpert into the starting lineup in place of DeAndre Liggins, says Sam Amico of NEO Sports Insiders. Liggins and Shumpert have shared time at the position since starter J.R. Smith broke his thumb.
