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Warriors, Harrison Barnes Halt Extension Talks

Harrison Barnes has decided against an extension with the Warriors, GM Bob Myers told reporters today, including Sam Amick of USA Today (Twitter link). The sides were facing a November 2nd deadline to reach a deal that would keep Barnes out of restricted free agency next summer. Barnes said he prefers to focus on this season and defending Golden State’s championship and seems “very comfortable” with the idea of ending negotiations until July, observes Tim Kawakami of the Bay Area News Group (Twitter link).

Barnes said a month ago that extension talks were going well shortly after Adrian Wojnarowski of Yahoo Sports reported that he had turned down a four-year, $64MM offer. That offer came before he changed agents, switching from Jeff Wechsler of 24/7 Sports Management to Jeff Schwartz of Excel Sports Management. Myers made it clear over the summer that he wanted to sign the former No. 7 overall pick to an extension, though co-owner Joe Lacob more recently told Kawakami that while he’d like to see the team do an extension with Barnes, he’d be OK with him ending up in restricted free agency.

Next season’s projected maximum salary for a player with Barnes’ level of experience is $20.4MM, though that number stands to escalate if the cap ends up higher than the projected $89MM, as some around the league reportedly believe it will. Golden State already has $74.8MM in guaranteed salary for 2016/17, including partial guarantees for Jason Thompson and Shaun Livingston. The cap hold for Barnes, worth more than $9.683MM, would make it difficult, if not impossible, for the Warriors to pursue max level free agents while waiting to re-sign Barnes next summer, as the Spurs did with Kawhi Leonard‘s restricted free agency this year. A sign-and-trade would represent the most logical path to a marquee free agent addition for Golden State, and Kawakami speculated that the Warriors would be better positioned for sign-and-trades if they inked Barnes to an extension.

Barnes had a breakthrough season last year under coach Steve Kerr, who moved him back into the starting lineup after he’d spent a year coming off the bench behind Andre Iguodala. He still averaged the same number of minutes per game, but he posted better scoring and rebounding averages, and he improved his three-point shooting from 34.7% to an elite 40.5%.

The former University of North Carolina player is still just 23, with room for improvement, as I noted when I profiled Barnes’ extension candidacy, suggesting that $16-18MM a year would satisfy both sides. That was before news surfaced that Barnes had turned down Golden State’s offer of $16MM annual salaries.

And-Ones: Carlisle, Cap, Rosters, Tskitishvili

A growing sentiment around the league held that Rick Carlisle might leave the Mavericks, given the team’s uncertain future as a playoff contender and the distinct possibility that several attractive coaching jobs will come open next summer, according to Chris Mannix of SI.com. It nonetheless appears he’d like to stay put, as Carlisle and the Mavs are reportedly deep in negotiations toward an extension. Mavs owner Mark Cuban essentially confirmed in a radio appearance on ESPN Radio 103.3 in Dallas today that the sides are working toward a deal, as Tim MacMahon of ESPNDallas.com relays (Twitter link).

“When you’ve got a great coach, you want to keep him around, so we’re working on making that happen,” Cuban said.

See more from around the NBA:

  • Many league executives and agents believe the salary cap will escalate to $95MM for 2016/17, a higher figure than the league’s last projection of $89MM, reports Sean Deveney of The Sporting News. One GM who spoke to Deveney expressed worry that all the money on the line will lead to players looking out for themselves and pointed to this summer’s increase in long-term deals as evidence that teams were looking to avoid that.
  • NBA opening night rosters feature 100 players from outside the United States, one off last year’s record total of 101, the NBA announced. The University of Kentucky boasts more former players on the rosters than any other school, with 21, followed by Kansas, with 19, as Adam Zagoria of SNY.tv points out.
  • Nikoloz Tskitishvili, the former No. 5 overall pick who briefly attempted an NBA comeback with the Clippers this fall, is engaged in a dispute with his Chinese team and close to signing with Champville in Lebanon instead, as Sportando’s Emiliano Carchia details. Tskitishvili signed earlier this month with Fujian, international journalist David Pick reported.

Hornets Formally Add D-League Team For 2016/17

The D-League will expand for the 2016/17 season to include a one-to-one affiliate for the Hornets in Greensboro, North Carolina, the D-League and the Hornets jointly announced today via press release and in a press conference. The news is no surprise, as Jeff Mills of the Greensboro News & Record reported this weekend that Greensboro would be the location for the D-League club, and the Hornets had targeted 2016/17 as their timetable for partnering with a D-League team. Charlotte is one of 11 NBA teams without a D-League affiliate this season.

“This is an important step for our franchise,” Hornets owner Michael Jordan said in the team’s statement. “Having our own team will allow us to use the NBA D-League in a more efficient and worthwhile way. By operating our own club, it will be a seamless transition for our players, coaches and front office when we assign a player because the NBA D-League team will follow the same principles and run the same sets as the Hornets. Placing the team in Greensboro also allows us to expand the Hornets’ brand to another city in our region that has a great basketball tradition.”

Charlotte used the D-League sparingly last season, making only two assignments. They signed D-Leaguer Elliot Williams to a 10-day contract in February, but otherwise, the Hornets had no other D-League ties as they shared the Fort Wayne Mad Ants with a dozen other NBA franchises.

The new Hornets affiliate will be the 20th D-League team, though a decent chance exists that the league will add more before the start of 2016/17, since several other NBA teams have expressed a desire to have one-to-one affiliates. The Hornets will run both the business and basketball operations for the club, becoming the 11th NBA franchise to own a D-League team outright.

Knicks, Nets Lead East In Newcomers

The Knicks and Nets might not have made any particularly splashy acquisitions, but they certainly engineered their share of changes. The two New York teams lead the Eastern Conference with eight newcomers apiece for the 2015/16 season, meaning that the majority of the players on their respective rosters weren’t there at the end of 2014/15. Some will be familiar to fans in the Big Apple, as the Nets signed Andrea Bargnani and Shane Larkin away from the Knicks. Still, both teams in the NBA’s largest market will feature decidedly different-looking teams as the season begins.

By contrast, the roster in the East’s second largest market is nearly intact from the end of last season. Rookies Bobby Portis and Cristiano Felicio are the only players who weren’t around for the team’s playoff exit last spring, though new coach Fred Hoiberg will bring a fresh approach.

See the newcomers in the Eastern Conference and how the teams stack up in terms of roster turnover:

Knicks (8) — Arron Afflalo, Jerian Grant, Robin Lopez, Kyle O’Quinn, Kristaps Porzingis, Kevin Seraphin, Sasha Vujacic, Derrick Williams.

Nets (8) — Andrea Bargnani, Wayne Ellington, Rondae Hollis-Jefferson, Shane Larkin, Chris McCullough, Willie Reed, Thomas Robinson, Donald Sloan.

Hornets (7) — Nicolas Batum, Tyler Hansbrough, Aaron Harrison, Spencer Hawes, Frank Kaminsky, Jeremy Lamb, Jeremy Lin.

Pistons (7) — Aron Baynes, Steve Blake, Reggie Bullock, Darrun Hilliard, Ersan Ilyasova, Stanley Johnson, Marcus Morris.

Pacers (7) — Chase Budinger, Rakeem Christmas, Monta Ellis, Jordan Hill, Glenn Robinson III, Myles Turner, Joe Young.

Raptors (7) — Anthony Bennett, Bismack Biyombo, DeMarre Carroll, Cory Joseph, Norman Powell, Luis Scola, Delon Wright.

Sixers (7) Richaun Holmes, Carl Landry, Kendall Marshall, T.J. McConnell, Jahlil Okafor, Nik Stauskas, Christian Wood.

Celtics (5) — R.J. Hunter, Amir Johnson, David Lee, Jordan Mickey, Terry Rozier.

Hawks (5) — Tim Hardaway Jr., Justin Holiday, Lamar Patterson, Tiago Splitter, Edy Tavares.

Bucks (4) — Chris Copeland, Greg Monroe, Greivis Vasquez, Rashad Vaughn.

Cavaliers (4) — Jared Cunningham, Richard Jefferson, Sasha Kaun, Mo Williams.

Heat (4) — Gerald Green, Josh Richardson, Amar’e Stoudemire, Justise Winslow.

Magic (4) — Mario Hezonja, Shabazz Napier, Jason Smith, C.J. Watson.

Wizards (4) — Alan Anderson, Jared Dudley, Gary Neal, Kelly Oubre.

Bulls (2) — Cristiano Felicio, Bobby Portis.

Central Notes: Hoiberg, Parker, Jefferson, Boatright

Fred Hoiberg chose the Bulls in part because of their ability not just to win now but to have sustained success for the future, Iowa State athletics director Jamie Pollard tells K.C. Johnson of the Chicago Tribune. Indeed, long-term thinking is a key for Hoiberg’s Bulls, as the coach has taken a decidedly less-aggressive approach than Tom Thibodeau, his predecessor, leading Jimmy Butler to remark that Hoiberg “really cares about how our body feels,” as Johnson relays. In all, Hoiberg has brought more calm and collaboration to the Bulls, Johnson writes.

“There are days where he just talks and relates to us. That’s big,” Taj Gibson said. “Sometimes, guys come in a little down. It’s good to have a coach that comes to you and says, ‘It’s all right. Things are going to happen. I’ve been there.'”

Another change for the Bulls this season is an opening night roster with 15 players, breaking a longstanding tradition of starting with less than the maximum number of players allowed. See more from around the Central Division:

Atlantic Notes: Raptors, ‘Melo, Ndour, Nets

The Raptors made a concerted effort to upgrade their defense during the offseason, though the offense is now showing holes, as Mike Ganter of the Toronto Sun details. In any case, new free agent arrival DeMarre Carroll believes the Raptors can indeed show the sort of defensive improvement this season that the franchise was going for, as Ganter relays.

“A lot of guys aren’t capable of playing defense,” Carroll said. “Sometimes you’re a guy that just can’t play defense. They just don’t have the effort to play defence. All of these guys are capable of playing defense. Kyle Lowry, I think he’s a great defender. He’s underrated. Just bringing me in and bringing more guys in like Bismack [Biyombo] and Cory [Joseph], we can kind of help guys. We can kind of feed off them, and they can feed off us.”

See more from the Atlantic Division:

  • Carmelo Anthony admits in no uncertain terms that living in New York comes with some degree of frustration, as a Vice Sports video makes clear (objectionable language warning), but ‘Melo isn’t backing away from his enthusiasm about the Knicks, notes Marc Berman of the New York Post.
  • The Knicks aren’t expected to reunite with summer-leaguer Maurice Ndour, even though they have an open roster spot and Ndour is on waivers from the Mavs, Berman writes in the same story. New York reportedly tried to convince Ndour to break his deal with Dallas this summer. In any case, New York is ineligible to claim Ndour off waivers, since his Mavs deal was for three years and the Knicks can’t claim anyone on more than a two-year contract.
  • The YES Network and the Nets reached a new local television rights deal, the team announced. The agreement, which will kick in for the 2017/18 season, will give the team “substantially more” than $40MM a year and repair a revenue stream that lagged far behind local TV deals for other large-market teams, reports NetsDaily. The deal carries well into the 2020s, NetsDaily adds.
  • The Nets allowed a trade exception worth $1,120,920 to expire when they failed to use it by the end of Saturday, notes Eric Pincus of Basketball Insiders (Twitter link). It was a vestige of the deal that sent Marquis Teague to the Sixers.

Mavs, Rick Carlisle Close To Extension Deal

8:21am: The proposed five-year extension the sides are negotiating would run until 2021, according to Eddie Sefko of the Dallas Morning News, so that means the five years would start after this season.

4:49pm: The Mavericks and Rick Carlisle are nearing a deal as they hold advanced discussions about what would be a five-year extension, reports Marc Stein of ESPN.com (Twitter link). Carlisle’s contract status beyond this season has been up in the air. Carlisle signed a four-year deal before the 2012/13 season, though at least one report at the time indicated that it included a team option for 2016/17. In any case, the sides have yet to resolve Carlisle’s contractual future with the Mavericks beyond this coming June, even though owner Mark Cuban said a few weeks ago that he and Carlisle shared interest in continuing their partnership for the long term. Mavs president of basketball operations Donnie Nelson said this past spring that Carlisle could remain with Dallas as long as he wanted to, Stein points out.

Carlisle, who turns 56 on Tuesday, is the president of the NBA Coaches Association and one of the most respected in his field. He guided the Mavs to the NBA title in 2011 and has held the job since May 2008, making him the third longest-tenured head coach in the NBA.

He won Coach of the Year honors for the Pistons in 2002, his first season as an NBA coach. Carlisle led Detroit to back-to-back 50-win seasons before a four-year tenure with the Pacers. He’s 619-431 over 13 full seasons as an NBA head coach, though that doesn’t include a 57-58 postseason record. For Dallas, he’s gone 338-220 in the regular season and 27-26 in the playoffs.

Pelicans Claim Ish Smith Off Waivers

TUESDAY, 7:18am: The move was a waiver claim, not a signing, as Eric Pincus of Basketball Insiders (Twitter link) and the RealGM transactions log show, so Smith is on a one-year, non-guaranteed, minimum salary contract.

6:02pm: New Orleans announced that it has signed Smith, and doesn’t say anything about a waiver claim. Either way, Smith is with the Pelicans now, though the terms of his contract could be different if the team signed him rather than claiming him.

MONDAY, 4:10pm: The Pelicans have claimed Ish Smith off waivers from the Wizards, reports Shams Charania of Yahoo Sports (Twitter link). That means the Sixers took a pass on claiming him, a move Philadelphia was reportedly considering. New Orleans inherits the one-year deal that’s for the minimum salary without guaranteed money that Smith signed before the start of camp with the Wizards.

Smith was waived Saturday by the Wizards, along with four other players. He spent much of the first half of last season with the Thunder, but he looked especially strong as he played 25 games down the stretch with the Sixers, averaging 12.1 points, 6.1 assists and 2.8 turnovers in 27.1 minutes per contest. In five preseason games with the Wizards, his averages were 2.2 points, 4.0 assists and 1.0 turnover in 11.5 minutes.

The signing brings the Pelicans up to the roster limit of 15. Smith gives the Pelicans some added depth at point guard with Norris Cole on the club’s inactive list, according to the opening-night rosters released by the league on Monday night. Cole suffered a high ankle sprain during training camp and could be out several more weeks.

Teams Set Opening Night Rosters

NBA teams have finalized their opening night rosters and sent copies to the league, the NBA announced via press release. The deadline for teams to do so was 4pm Central today. That led to a flurry of movement as front offices worked to drop from the 20-man preseason limit to the 15-man regular season maximum. No team pulled off more moves today than the Sixers, as they waived five players who were with the team for the preseason and quickly signed and waived another to grab his D-League rights.

The Rockets, Knicks, Magic, Suns start the season with 14 players, but all other NBA teams are at 15. That means 446 players are under contract to start the NBA season.

Eddie Scarito of Hoops Rumors has been keeping track of these rosters as they’ve developed throughout the offseason, and now each of our 2015/16 rosters has been updated for opening night. Click here to see links to the roster for each of the NBA’s 30 teams, with listings of every player’s guarantee status, how each player initially joined his team, and other biographical data.