Central Notes: Vasquez, Love, Budinger
Greivis Vasquez is just 4 for 29 from behind the 3-point line thus far this season, but the Bucks aren’t fretting about the offseason trade acquisition, notes Charles F. Gardner of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
“He’s a vet. He understands he’s got to shoot his way through this. His teammates are telling him to keep shooting,” Kidd said. “If it helps him, I ended my career without making a shot. Hopefully that makes him feel better.”
Kidd was making a self-deprecating reference to his 0 for 17 performance in the final 10 games of his career. With the Bucks possessing a 4-3 record and apparently in a jovial mood, they aren’t the only ones with a relatively carefree attitude to start the season. See more from the Central Division:
- Kevin Love is carrying a looser demeanor and he and LeBron James seemingly have a much more open dialogue than they did last season, observes Jason Lloyd of the Akron Beacon Journal. Love, despite rumors that he would bolt, was the first of the major Cavs free agents to recommit to the team this past summer, as I noted when I examined the team’s offseason accomplishments earlier today.
- Chase Budinger, a summer trade pickup, was struggling to find his role on the Pacers leading up to Monday’s game, as Candace Buckner of the Indianapolis Star examines, and coach Frank Vogel absorbs responsibility for it. “I haven’t really called Chase’s number very much at all,” Vogel said. “I told him a couple days ago that’s on me. I got to make sure we’re taking advantage of his skill set more.”
- The Bulls received approval from the village board in suburban Hoffman Estates, Illinois for their plan to place a one-to-one D-League affiliate there starting next season, writes K.C. Johnson of the Chicago Tribune. The lease agreement for the team to use the Sears Centre in Hoffman Estates isn’t final, but it’s expected to become so, according to Johnson, who adds that the Bulls have called a press conference for Wednesday. Presumably, a formal announcement about the D-League team will take place at that point.
Pelicans Sign Jimmer Fredette
12:20pm: It’s a non-guaranteed contract, according to Ian Begley of ESPNNewYork.com (Twitter link).
TUESDAY, 11:39am: The signing is official, the Pelicans announced via press release, adding that they indeed received league approval for a 16th roster spot.
2:39pm: The team has submitted its application for a hardship provision, Reid writes in a full story. Coach Alvin Gentry said uncertainty remains until the league grants approval for the 16th roster spot, adding that the Pelicans hold Fredette in high regard, but Reid hears from sources who confirm that the Pelicans will indeed sign Fredette, pending NBA approval, which could come as early as Tuesday.
11:43am: The team is in the process of applying for the hardship provision, as John Reid of The Times Picayune hears (Twitter link), so it would appear the signing has still yet to occur.
MONDAY, 10:23am: The Pelicans are signing Jimmer Fredette using the hardship provision for a 16th roster spot, reports Shams Charania of Yahoo Sports (Twitter link). The team hasn’t made an announcement, but Charania indicates the move has already taken place. The former college star and 10th overall pick had started the season in the D-League with the Knicks affiliate shortly after the Spurs released him from their training camp roster last month. New Orleans, the team for which Fredette played last year, has been dealing with a rash of injuries for several weeks, and Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo Sports reported Friday that Kendrick Perkins is expected to miss the next three months.
Fredette, who made his reputation at BYU as a dead-eye shooter from behind the arc, made just 18.8% of his 3-point attempts for the Pelicans last season, and he didn’t impress during the small sample size of San Antonio’s preseason, going 2 for 10 from the floor and 0 for 3 from 3-point range. Still, New Orleans is in need of healthy players, with Perkins joining Norris Cole, Tyreke Evans and Quincy Pondexter among those currently shelved with long-term injuries. Omer Asik is questionable for Tuesday’s game. Teams need four players who are expected to miss at least two weeks to qualify for the extra roster spot via hardship, so New Orleans fits the bill.
The Pelicans are set to become the second team to use a hardship provision this season. The Sixers last week signed Phil Pressey to become their 16th man. It’s temporary relief, as both the Pelicans and Sixers would have to apply for another hardship provision after 10 days. If the league denies them, the teams would have to cut back to 15 men, though they could elect to keep Fredette and Pressey and offload other players instead. It’s unclear if Fredette is receiving any guaranteed money on his deal.
Fredette is also joining Pressey as the second D-League call-up of the season. New York’s D-League team picked Fredette second overall in the D-League draft on November 1st, after the Jazz affiliate took Jeff Ayres. Fredette, the once-heralded prospect, said recently that he hadn’t heard from Knicks team president Phil Jackson or coach Derek Fisher about joining New York’s NBA roster, which includes an open spot.
Do you think Fredette will stick with the Pelicans for this season, or will he be gone as soon as the team returns to health? Leave a comment to tell us.
Southeast Notes: Durant, Wittman, Dedmon, Payne
Kevin Durant didn’t give the media much to go on as he spoke this morning in Washington, where the Thunder will play the Wizards tonight, but he elaborated on the remark in which he called the attention he received the last time he played in Washington “disrespectful,” as The Oklahoman’s Anthony Slater relays. The Wizards showed a photo of Durant edited to depict him in a Wizards jersey on their scoreboard when the Thunder visited Washington last season, but Durant doesn’t pin any blame on the adulation from Washington fans.
“Nah, I’m not saying there’s anything wrong with what the fans do,” Durant said. “Me, I’m just thinking as a player on the other side. Fans gonna do what they gonna do. I appreciate all the support going our way. But I’m just looking at it as an opposing player and if I was on that team and they came in here and did that, I wouldn’t like it. But the fans, hey, they support us. Throughout the whole league, they make it what it is.”
See more on the Wizards and other news from the Southeast Division:
- Several people around the league wonder if the Wizards would let Durant decide the fate of coach Randy Wittman if the former MVP wants to sign with the team next summer, according to Chris Mannix of SI.com. Wittman’s contract is partially guaranteed for 2016/17.
- Magic center Dewayne Dedmon is seeing a more clearly defined role under new coach Scott Skiles, including spot starts while Nikola Vucevic deals with a bruised right knee, as Cody Taylor of Basketball Insiders examines. Dedmon is entering the final season of his contract.
- The Hawks drafted Adreian Payne 15th overall last year but traded him midway through his rookie season to the Timberwolves, a move that caught him off guard, he admits to Chris Vivlamore of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. He wasn’t in Atlanta long, and D-League assignments took him away from the team for much of his time on the Hawks roster, but he said he still learned plenty from the veterans on the Hawks, Vivlamore notes.
Offseason In Review: Cleveland Cavaliers
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
- Matthew Dellavedova: One year, $1.47MM. Signed qualifying offer.
- LeBron James: Two years, $46.975MM. Signed via Non-Bird rights. Includes 15% trade kicker and a player option for the second year.
- Richard Jefferson: One year, $1.499MM. Signed via minimum-salary exception.
- James Jones: One year, $1.499MM. Signed via minimum-salary exception.
- Sasha Kaun: Two years, $2.61MM. Signed via taxpayer mid-level exception.
- Kevin Love: Five years, $113.212MM. Signed via Bird rights. Fifth year is a player option.
- Iman Shumpert: Four years, $40MM. Signed via Bird rights. Fourth year is a player option.
- J.R. Smith: Two years, $10.4MM. Signed via Bird rights. Second year is is partially guaranteed for $2.2MM.
- Tristan Thompson: Five years, $82MM. Signed via Bird rights.
- Mo Williams: Two years, $4.295MM. Signed via taxpayer mid-level exception. Second year is a player option.
Extensions
- None
Trades
- Acquired cash from the Trail Blazers in exchange for Mike Miller, Brendan Haywood, Cleveland’s 2020 second-round pick and the better of the 2019 second-round picks that Cleveland owns from the Lakers and Timberwolves.
- Acquired the rights to 2015 draftees Cedi Osman and Rakeem Christmas, as well Minnesota’s 2019 second round pick, in exchange for the rights to Tyus Jones, the No. 24 overall pick in this year’s draft.
- Acquired the Lakers’ 2019 second-round pick in exchange for the rights to Christmas.
Waiver Claims
- None
Draft Picks
- Cedi Osman (Round 2, 31st overall). Playing overseas.
- Rakeem Christmas (Round 2, 36th overall). Traded to the Pacers in July.
- Sir’Dominic Pointer (Round 2, 53rd overall). Signed with D-League.
Camp Invitees
- Quinn Cook — Waived.
- Jack Cooley — Waived.
- Jared Cunningham: One year, $981K. Non-guaranteed.
- Austin Daye — Waived.
- Michael Dunigan — Waived.
- Chris Johnson — Waived.
- Nick Minnerath — Waived.
- D.J. Stephens — Waived.
Departing Players
Rookie Contract Option Decisions
- None

The homecoming of LeBron James brought about cataclysmic change to a team that was already in flux, as GM David Griffin, just a few months into the job, spent several months transforming a roster midway through a rebuild into one designed to contend immediately. It was a process not without hiccups, with the Rookie of the Year award of Andrew Wiggins standing in sharp contrast to the disappointing, injury-marred campaign of Kevin Love, for whom the Cavs surrendered the 2014 No. 1 overall pick. Still, as the team entered the 2015 offseason, it was clear that Griffin and company had found the pieces necessary for the team to win the championship that has eluded Cleveland for decades, so long as the team could get through a postseason with better health than the Cavs had this past spring. The task this summer was to retain those players.
Nine Cavs became free agents July 1st, and none more prominent than James. Love, Tristan Thompson, J.R. Smith, Iman Shumpert and Matthew Dellavedova were the other rotation players from last season who hit the market. It wasn’t easy, and it wasn’t cheap, but the Cavs re-signed every one of them. The first of the deals came with the player whose future in Cleveland appeared most in doubt.
Love always insisted that he was committed to the Cavs for the long term from the time he arrived via trade, but rumors persisted all season. The Lakers and, at times, the Celtics were the teams most prominently mentioned in connection with the power forward from UCLA whose performance fell off in his first season with Cleveland. Doubts even surfaced about Cleveland’s own willingness to re-sign Love for the max. James and Love didn’t immediately hit it off on the court or off, with James going so far as to send social media messages, like his “fit-out”/”fit-in” tweet, that spoke to the issues between them. The two nonetheless resolved whatever differences they had in an offseason meeting, and on July 1st, the opening day of free agency, Love and the Cavs reached agreement on a five-year max deal.
The same day, the Cavs were reportedly close to a deal with another talented power forward, but the team’s back-and-forth with Thompson proved to be the most persistent offseason storyline in the NBA. Love’s five-year deal gave the Cavs more leverage than they otherwise would have had, and their power to match all offers also loomed large. Initial reports indicated that James wouldn’t talk about re-signing until Thompson did, but James quietly re-signed shortly after the July Moratorium on another two-year max deal with a player option — giving him the continued opportunity to influence the Cavs’ decision-making and catch the wave of the rising salary cap.
Thompson’s options dwindled along with the number of teams with cap room to give him the max offer he sought, but with agent Rich Paul reportedly having heard that he would have multiple max offers to choose from if Thompson were to hit unrestricted free agency next season, it seemed like Thompson would sign his qualifying offer to go that route, particularly given the rise in the salary cap that made it less of a sacrifice than such a move normally is. However, Thompson and Paul stunned the NBA when they let the qualifying offer expire on October 1st, and while Thompson said he was prepared to hold out all season, it seemingly took only a slight concession from the Cavs to reel him in shortly before opening night.
Thompson’s negotiation wasn’t the only one that took an unusually long time. Smith languished in free agency until striking a deal in late August that will give him a salary of about $1.4MM less than what he would have made if he’d picked up his player option. Again, the Cavs had more leverage the longer Smith waited, as the pool of suitors with cap flexibility shrunk, and the team’s deals with Shumpert, in particular, along with Dellavedova, Mo Williams and Richard Jefferson gave Cleveland plenty of other options on the wing. Smith did guarantee himself about $800K more over the life of his two-year deal than he would have seen in one season had he exercised his option, but that did little to help him save face, and the Cavs wound up with some much-needed tax relief as Smith signed for less than what he surely intended.
The Cavs wisely back-loaded their deal with Shumpert, so even though he’s making $40MM over four years, his salary is slightly less than $9MM this season. Cleveland is in line to pay more than $170MM combined in taxes and payroll, a figure that the team’s decision to keep camp invitee Jared Cunningham into the regular season exacerbates. It explains why the Cavs essentially punted on Brendan Haywood‘s unusually valuable contract, flipping it to Portland for little more than the power to create a trade exception. That exception still allows the Cavs to acquire an eight-figure salary at some point between now and the end of next July, though it’s not quite as powerful a trade chip as the Haywood contract was. The Cavs, with their soaring tax penalties in mind, would prefer not to use the exception until the summer, when a higher salary cap and tax line kick in, but it remains an insurance policy should the team hit a bumpy patch, as Chris Haynes of the Northeast Ohio Media Group and the Cleveland Plain Dealer explained to us.
The Cavs explored bargain options to fill out the roster, as the lure of playing with LeBron and competing for a championship proved attractive to free agents. Williams suggested that he essentially allowed the Cavs to name their price for his return, ultimately signing for the majority of the taxpayer’s mid-level exception. The rest of that exception went to longtime draft-and-stash prospect Sasha Kaun, the only rookie on this year’s Cavs. Cleveland, with near-term success the top priority, traded out of the first round, shipped the rights to second-rounder Rakeem Christmas to the Pacers, and decided against signing second-rounders Cedi Osman or Sir’Dominic Pointer.
Still, the team’s core is young enough that essentially skipping a draft shouldn’t be a problem, as David Zavac of SB Nation’s Fear the Sword suggested to us. One recent draft pick, Dellavedova, impressed in the Finals, but he came back at the value of his qualifying offer, with the Cavs again benefiting from the power of restricted free agency, a power they won’t have if they continue to focus almost exclusively on the present.
Minimum-salary veterans Jefferson and James Jones help populate a bench that coach David Blatt was reluctant to turn to in the playoffs last season, but depth will be a key as LeBron ages and with Shumpert and Kyrie Irving still out with injury. A revamped bench won’t make up for major injuries come postseason time, like the ones to Irving and Love last spring, but as the Spurs have shown in recent years, minutes management can help limit the risk of injury and exhaustion for top players. Proper management of the well-stocked roster is seemingly the last hurdle for these Cavs, and for as much as Griffin has done in the past year and a half, it falls on Blatt and the players to deliver a title.
Eddie Scarito contributed to this post. The Basketball Insiders salary pages were used in the creation of it.
Western Notes: Cousins, Belinelli, Green, Wolves
The Kings, losers of six in a row and just 1-7 on the season, are planning a players-only meeting, DeMarcus Cousins told reporters, adding that the team’s issues are “not at all” about on-court matters, as Jason Jones of The Sacramento Bee relays. Cousins cautioned that he believes in “every single person in this [locker] room,” Jones notes, though the looming question surrounds his relationship with coach George Karl, who’s used seven different starting lineups in the team’s eight games.
“Everything I can’t really speak on,” Cousins said. “We got some issues that we got to carve out. Can’t really speak on that. But one thing is, us players, we got to stick together. And just with that, that’ll get us through most battles. We got some issues in-house we need to figure out.”
Rudy Gay suggested on-court issues were at play, saying the team’s offensive and defensive schemes require examination, The Bee’s Ailene Voisin tweets. While we wait to see how the latest drama in Sacramento plays out, see more on the Kings amid the latest from the Western Conference:
- Manu Ginobili and Marco Belinelli have known each other since they were teenagers and they forged an uncommonly tight bond that Ginobili has missed since Belinelli departed the Spurs for the Kings in free agency this past summer, observes Tom Orsborn of the San Antonio Express-News. Spurs coach/president Gregg Popovich seems to wish he could have kept the Italian-born shooting guard. “I just miss his presence,” Popovich said, according to Orsborn. “He was a great guy. He was a great teammate. Great sense of humor, again he was a great teammate, a real smart player. We all miss him.”
- The release of Erick Green leaves the Nuggets shorthanded at point guard, but coach Michael Malone is confident that the team has enough ball-handling at other positions to make up for it, as Christopher Dempsey of The Denver Post examines. The Nuggets had a chance to put that theory to the test when Jameer Nelson missed Monday’s win over the Blazers with injury. In any case, Denver remains high on Green. “He lives in the gym, everyone in this building has a positive impression of Erick, not just him as a player but him as a person,” GM Tim Connelly said. “He’s a fantastic person, and he’s going to be back in the NBA, ASAP. He’s a guys we’ll keep close tabs on. You never close the door, especially for a guy who has done as much as Erick and worked as hard as he has.”
- Austin Peters of Upside & Motor categorizes eight Timberwolves on rookie contracts into tiers, with Karl-Anthony Towns and Andrew Wiggins in their own class at the top and Gorgui Dieng joining Adreian Payne as those Peters views as long shots to make an impact.
Timeline Of Moves That Gave Teams 16 Players
The NBA has occasionally granted teams the power to carry more than 15 players during the regular season in the past, but the league has been especially willing to give teams an extra man over the past calendar year. Fittingly, the NBA allowed 16 roster moves that left teams with 16 players last season. Philadelphia’s addition of Phil Pressey last week represented the 17th time in a one-year span that a roster swelled past the usual limit. The trend shows no signs of slowing down now that the one-year anniversary of last year’s first 16th roster spot has passed, with the Pelicans having applied for a hardship provision to add Jimmer Fredette as an extra man.
The hardship provision, designed to allow for injury relief, isn’t the only way a team can carry a larger-than-normal roster. Teams have the power to do so to compensate for the loss of players on lengthy suspensions, and that’s what the Sixers did on numerous occasions last season after they suspended Andrei Kirilenko for failing to report after a trade. The Bucks did the same, signing Jorge Gutierrez to a pair of 10-day contracts while Larry Sanders was on suspension. The Grizzlies had several players out with illness when they signed Kalin Lucas and Hassan Whiteside, augmenting what had been a 14-man roster, but that opportunity came about because Nick Calathes was suspended, not because of injury or illness.
None of last year’s 16th men are still with their respective teams, which makes sense, since extra roster spots are temporary measures. Still, a few noteworthy names dot the list below, including Whiteside, who joined the Heat and blossomed into a key player just days after the Grizzlies let him go. Here’s a timeline of teams adding 16th players over the past year:
- November 6th, 2014 — Pacers sign A.J. Price.
- November 7th, 2014 — Thunder sign Ish Smith.
- November 19th, 2014 — Grizzlies sign Kalin Lucas, Hassan Whiteside (initially had 14 players).
- November 29th, 2014 — Timberwolves sign Jeff Adrien.
- January 7th, 2015 — Sixers trade for Jared Cunningham (waived the same day).
- January 16th, 2015 — Sixers sign Larry Drew II.
- January 26th, 2015 — Sixers sign Larry Drew II (second 10-day contract).
- January 28th, 2015 — Bucks sign Jorge Gutierrez.
- February 5th, 2015 — Sixers sign Tim Frazier.
- February 7th, 2015 — Bucks sign Jorge Gutierrez (second 10-day contract).
- March 10th, 2015 — Lakers sign Jabari Brown.
- March 19th, 2015 — Timberwolves sign Sean Kilpatrick.
- March 21st, 2015 — Lakers sign Jabari Brown (second 10-day contract).
- April 3rd, 2015 — Lakers sign Dwight Buycks.
- April 7th, 2015 — Timberwolves sign Arinze Onuaku.
- April 13th, 2015 — Lakers sign Vander Blue.
- November 4th, 2015 — Sixers sign Phil Pressey.
- Soon — The Pelicans will reportedly sign Jimmer Fredette.
Eastern Notes: Nets, Beal, Durant, Young
Nets GM Billy King has made exploratory trade calls in response to the team’s 0-7 start, as he told reporters today, including Newsday’s Roderick Boone (Twitter link). It would be tough for Brooklyn to engineer a deal before December 15th, the date most of the players signed this past offseason become eligible to be traded, but the GM isn’t hiding from the blame even as he conceded a quick fix is unlikely, Mike Mazzeo of ESPNNewYork.com relays (ESPN Now link).
“I’m not sitting in here shirking accountability,” King said. “… It stops at me. I’m the GM. You make decisions along the way, and it’s my job now to figure it out and turn it around. … It doesn’t happen overnight. We knew when we traded [the first-round] picks and went down this road that if it doesn’t go well you have to dig yourself out of it, and that’s what we’re doing now.”
See more from the Eastern Conference:
- Kevin Durant called the less-than-subtle affection that surrounded him during the Thunder’s game at the Wizards last season “disrespectful,” and Bradley Beal concurs, notes J. Michael of CSNMidAtlantic.com. “It is disrespectful because he plays for Oklahoma City,” Beal said. “He doesn’t play for Washington.” The Wizards have made no secret of their desire to attract Durant, a D.C. native, to Washington, and, for what it’s worth, Durant’s friend John Wall said he and the former MVP worked out together over the summer, notes Jorge Castillo of The Washington Post (on Twitter).
- Beal echoed many of the sentiments of Joakim Noah in praising Billy Donovan, their former college coach who’s now the bench boss for the Thunder, as The Oklahoman’s Anthony Slater observes. “He’s always been like a second Dad to me,” Beal said of Donovan. “He’s a family first guy and granted me a lot of freedom. We talk a lot.” Noah and Beal are both poised for free agency in the summer, but the Wizards can match offers for Beal, who’s said he has no desire to leave Washington.
- The Celtics have recalled James Young from the D-League, the team announced (Twitter link). Young’s assignment, already his second on the season, lasted just one day. Rookie Jordan Mickey, whom the team sent to Maine with Young, remains with the D-League club.
Elliot Williams To Join Warriors D-League Team
Five-year NBA veteran and Hornets camp cut Elliot Williams will sign with the D-League affiliate of the Warriors, his agent tells Adam Johnson of D-League Digest (Twitter link). The Santa Cruz Warriors still hold his D-League rights from his time with their squad last season. The No. 22 overall pick from the 2010 draft went up and down between Santa Cruz and the NBA last season, when he signed five 10-day contracts with three NBA teams.
The Hornets were one of them, and they gave him a partial guarantee of $80K when he signed with Charlotte this past summer. That was slightly more than the $75K the team gave rookie Aaron Harrison, but the team kept Harrison and released Williams at the end of the preseason. Williams saw action in only two preseason games for Charlotte, averaging 5.5 points in 13.0 minutes per contest.
Santa Cruz is also adding Daniel Orton, another former first-round pick who last appeared in the NBA during the 2013/14 season, reports Marc J. Spears of Yahoo Sports (Twitter link). It’s yet more talent for a team that won the D-League championship last spring, matching the NBA title that the parent club won, but Williams and Orton have no direct ties to Golden State and remain free to sign with any NBA franchise.
Southwest Notes: Thornton, Matthews, Grizzlies
Marcus Thornton signed with the Rockets this summer knowing that he wasn’t assured a spot in the rotation, much less a starting job, but he felt as though the team was a strong match for his skills and was willing to bet he could boost his value on a one-year deal, as Jonathan Feigen of the Houston Chronicle examines. Coach Kevin McHale elected to go small and promote Thornton to the starting five after the team’s first two games, Feigen notes, a move that’s paid dividends, since Thornton has been the team’s second leading scorer so far.
“It’s been great,” Thornton said. “It’s been a long time since I’ve been in an offense with coaches that have the ultimate confidence in you. When a coach has the ultimate confidence in you, it’s easy to go out there and play, let the chips fall where they may. If you mess up, get back, get it again. It’s great when you have guys that share the ball, too. It’s fun.”
See more from the Southwest Division:
- Agent Jeff Austin thought six teams would aggressively court Wesley Matthews in free agency this past summer if he were healthy, but only two went hard after him, according to TNT’s David Aldridge, who writes in his Morning Tip column for NBA.com. One was the Mavericks, who reportedly wound up lifting the value of their deal with Matthews from $57MM to the max of about $70MM after DeAndre Jordan reneged on his decision to sign with Dallas. Both the Raptors and Kings were apparently talking to Matthews before he agreed to join the Mavs, so it’s unclear which of them went farther than the other.
- The Grizzlies have no shortage of issues, but poor performances and a lack of cohesion from Marc Gasol, Mike Conley and coach Dave Joerger are far and away the most troublesome, opines Chris Herrington of The Commercial Appeal.
- The Pelicans don’t have a lot of assets to trade, aside from their future draft picks, but even amid a bleak outlook for this season thanks to their injury-hit 0-6 start, their future remains bright, SB Nation’s Tom Ziller believes. That said, New Orleans is the only NBA team without a rookie, as we pointed out.
- We rounded up news on the Spurs earlier today.
Sixers, Lakers Lead NBA In Rookies
The Sixers have been focused on the future at the expense of the present from the moment GM Sam Hinkie took control in the spring of 2013, and this season is yet another example of the philosophy. Five Sixers, representing one-third of the opening-night roster, had never played an NBA regular season game before this season tipped off. That’s more rookies than any other team in the league, though in a practical sense, only four of them will be seeing any action this season, since Joel Embiid remains sidelined. Still, it illustrates just how much more tomorrow counts compared to today as far as Philadelphia is concerned.
It’s tough to make such a conclusion about the team with the next greatest number of rookies, however. Kobe Bryant, at 37 years old, isn’t about to cede the spotlight, even though the Lakers have four first-year players. Julius Randle, were it not for the appearance he made on opening night last year before his season-ending injury, would be the fifth. The purple-and-gold are clearly preparing for a post-Kobe future, even if their longtime star is still very much a part of the team and leads all Lakers in shot attempts so far this season.
The Pelicans clearly have an eye on the future, with Anthony Davis having signed a new five-year extension this summer, but they’re the only team in the NBA without a rookie. That’s cold comfort for injury-plagued New Orleans, which has the same 0-6 record as the Sixers do.
Nearly half the teams in the NBA have a pair of rookies, which makes sense, since that matches the number of rounds in the draft. Still, not every team among the 14 that have two rookies is simply carrying its 2015 draftees. Bucks rookie Damien Inglis was a 2014 draftee, but injury kept him from playing last season. He, like Embiid and Willie Reed of the Nets, have been under contract with NBA teams during the regular season in years past, so technically they have multiple years of service, but they had yet to appear in a regular season game before opening night this year.
Here’s a look at the rookies on each NBA team:
Five rookies
- Sixers — Joel Embiid, Richaun Holmes, T.J. McConnell, Jahlil Okafor, Christian Wood
Four rookies
- Lakers — Anthony Brown, Marcelo Huertas, Larry Nance Jr., D’Angelo Russell
Three rookies
- Celtics — R.J. Hunter, Jordan Mickey, Terry Rozier
- Jazz — Trey Lyles, Raul Neto, Tibor Pleiss
- Nets — Rondae Hollis-Jefferson, Chris McCullough, Willie Reed
- Pacers — Rakeem Christmas, Myles Turner, Joe Young
- Timberwolves — Nemanja Bjelica, Tyus Jones, Karl-Anthony Towns
- Trail Blazers — Cliff Alexander, Pat Connaughton, Luis Montero
Two rookies
- Bucks — Damien Inglis, Rashad Vaughn
- Bulls — Cristiano Felicio, Bobby Portis
- Hawks — Lamar Patterson, Edy Tavares
- Heat — Josh Richardson, Justise Winslow
- Hornets — Aaron Harrison, Frank Kaminsky
- Kings — Willie Cauley-Stein, Duje Dukan
- Knicks — Jerian Grant, Kristaps Porzingis
- Mavericks — Justin Anderson, Salah Mejri
- Nuggets — Nikola Jokic, Emmanuel Mudiay
- Pistons — Darrun Hilliard, Stanley Johnson
- Raptors — Norman Powell, Delon Wright
- Rockets — Sam Dekker, Montrezl Harrell
- Spurs — Boban Marjanovic, Jonathon Simmons
- Thunder — Josh Huestis, Cameron Payne
One rookie
- Cavaliers — Sasha Kaun
- Clippers — Branden Dawson
- Grizzlies — Jarell Martin
- Magic — Mario Hezonja
- Suns — Devin Booker
- Warriors — Kevon Looney
- Wizards — Kelly Oubre
No rookies
- Pelicans
